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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> London Borough of Barnet v Kamyab [2021] EWCA Crim 543 (15 April 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2021/543.html Cite as: [2021] Crim LR 699, [2021] WLR(D) 224, [2021] 1 WLR 4860, [2021] EWCA Crim 543, [2021] 2 Cr App R (S) 53, [2021] WLR 4860 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HARROW CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge Cole
S20150033
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SOOLE
HER HONOUR JUDGE TAYTON QC,
sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
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THE LONDON BOROUGH OF BARNET |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HAMID KAMYAB |
Respondent |
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Nathaniel Rudolf QC (instructed by Janes Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 17 March 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Edis:
Introduction
a. The scope of the decision of this court in R. v. Panayi [2019] EWCA Crim 413; and
b. The powers of this court when determining a prosecutor's appeal against a confiscation order made in the lower court. These are a matter of statute, and there is currently a Law Commission Consultation in progress considering the current provisions, see Confiscation of the Proceeds of Crime After Conviction, Consultation Paper 249, published September 2020. We consider that there is a lacuna in these powers which requires consideration, and this is an opportune moment at which to analyse the current prosecutor's appeal. That Paper points to the problems in the current approach to confiscation proceedings, of which this case may be another example, see especially Chapters 7 and 10. The sixth anniversary of Mr. Kamyab's conviction in the Magistrates' Court has recently passed. The fifth anniversary of the failure of his appeal against conviction and the setting of a confiscation timetable is a few months ahead.
Facts
"…you the Defendant, being the owner of 24 Llanvanor Road, London NW2 2AP ('the Land') did fail to comply with an enforcement notice served on 1 April 2010 by [LBB] pursuant to part VII of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 as amended ('the Notice'). The Notice took effect on 5 May 2010 requiring compliance by 5 September 2010. A new compliance date was set by the Planning Inspector of 27 September 2011. [LBB] subsequently extended the compliance period to 1 June 2013 to meet the requirements of the Notice. On or before the 4 February 2014 you failed to take steps required by the Notice, namely:
1. Cease the use of the land as nine units of residential accommodation.
2. The permanent removal from the house of all but one set of kitchen facilities, all but three bathrooms and locks from all separation doors."
The confiscation proceedings
11. By his skeleton argument (2 October 2018), Counsel for LBB contended for benefit in the revised sum of £455,414. In his skeleton argument (14 January 2019) Counsel for Mr. Kamyab acknowledged that there was "…a period of time in which the respondent had obtained rent as a result of or in connection with his criminal conduct in failing to observe the terms of the enforcement notice once the periods for compliance had passed, but contended that its start date was 1 April 2014 and the end date 10 February 2015 or various alternative later dates. This was an admission that his benefit was not limited to the rent received in respect of 4 February 2014. Indeed, that rent was asserted not to be part of the benefit.
"On or about 18 February 2016, you being the owner of [the property] breached an Enforcement Notice issued by the London Borough of Islington in respect of unauthorised developments at [the property] by failing to comply with the remedial action required in Schedule 4 of the Enforcement Notice…"
"(1) If the court is proceeding under section 6 this section applies for the purpose of –
(a) deciding whether the defendant has benefited from conduct, and
(b) deciding his benefit from the conduct.
(2) The court must –
(a) take account of conduct occurring up to the time it makes its decision;
(b) take account of property obtained up to that time".
"In cases where a defendant has benefited from a criminal lifestyle, the court must determine how much he has benefited from his general criminal conduct. If he does not have a criminal lifestyle, the court must determine whether he has benefited from the particular criminal conduct. In both cases, the first stage is to identify the benefit: see ss. 6(4), 8 and 76. s.8(2) requires the court to 'take account of conduct occurring up to the time it makes its decision' in the confiscation proceedings" : per Beatson LJ at [6(3)].
"In our judgment, the conduct is criminal, whether or not charged, once the time for compliance with the enforcement notice has elapsed, here after 19 June 2008, and it remains criminal, so that the order need not be limited to the period ending on 2 February 2009": [66].
The Judge's ruling
"the natural meaning of "on or before 4 February" means a single day, either on 4th February, or a day before that".
"…in that "on or before" shuts out anything subsequent, which "on or about" might not. However, both forms mean on a single day, in my view."
"The defendant…is charged with a single offence that on the [4th] February 2014 he breached an enforcement notice…"
a. it was obvious to everyone that Mr. Kamyab's benefit was not limited to a single day and could not possibly have been;
b. he had never suggested otherwise during two long trials in which the history of events was relevant;
c. he had made an admission through his counsel in a skeleton argument that his benefit extended over a longer period than one day;
d. there was no procedural unfairness caused by any defect in the summons in dealing with the case on its real factual basis.
Developments since the judge's ruling
"On 18 May 2017 at [the Property] you did fail to comply with the requirements of an Enforcement Notice served on you as the owner of the Property, which required you to cease using the property as self-contained flats by 9 March 2013, contrary to s. 179(2) of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990".
"40. In giving the judgment of the court, Males LJ held that the charge must be interpreted as relating to a criminal offence on a single day (18 February 2016): "the Council chose to charge by reference to a single day" (paras 18 and 19 of the judgment). It further followed, as the court went on to hold, that for the purposes of the confiscation proceedings the benefit was confined to the rent received on that one day.
"41. Such an outcome, on so literalistic a reading of the charge, can scarcely appeal to a sense of the merits: although it has to be said that (not least in the drafting of a summons or an indictment) sometimes technicality has to prevail. But in any event the present case is, in our opinion, plainly distinguishable from Panayi.
"42. In Panayi (and against a background of uncertainty as to when compliance was being demanded or extended) the only reference dates in the charge were the date when the Enforcement Notice was actually issued (which would not be the actual time by which compliance was required to take place) and the date of the rejection of the challenge to the refusal to issue the Certificate of Lawfulness. In the present case, however, the summons did indeed identify the date from which the (criminal) non-compliance had started: that is, 9 March 2013. Although the summons is undoubtedly clumsily drafted, it thereby sufficiently, in our judgment, identifies the start date (9 March 2013).
"43. In our view, the charge was sufficiently worded."
"Throughout, therefore, the appellant knew the case he had to meet. So even if there were technical deficiencies in the drafting of the summons they are not fatal.": [43].
"…between two specified dates, the termini usually being on the one hand the date when compliance with the enforcement notice first became due and on the other hand a date not later than when the information was laid, or of course some earlier date if meanwhile the enforcement notice had been complied with" (p.128E-F).
"(4) A person benefits from conduct if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with the conduct.
"(7) If a person benefits from conduct his benefit is the value of the property obtained".
"…his receipt of the rents derived from his prohibited conduct in ceasing to desist from his use of the property for twelve self-contained flats, contrary to the requirements of the Enforcement Notice. His conduct was criminal conduct and the rents were obtained as a result of or in connection with such conduct, and so were benefit for the purposes of section 76 of the 2002 Act": [55].
"Ultimately, therefore, the issue of whether an offence is of a continuing or a once and for all nature turns on the wording and effect of the relevant legislation."
"Under the current provisions, by contrast, the offence is not committed at a single point in time. As pointed out at [36] of Sanger, "the offence is committed "at any time" after the end of the period for compliance with an enforcement notice." After the period for compliance has expired, the offence is in that sense a continuing one. In our judgment, that explains why Singh J at [31] of Sangar identified that what the prosecution had to prove included that "the time for complying with the enforcement notice had expired" rather than having to prove that it had expired on a particular day. We respectfully endorse that approach. Put in other words, under the current provisions the focus shifts from the moment of expiry of the period for compliance to the period of alleged criminal contravention. What matters, and what the prosecution must prove, is that the period for compliance has expired so that the defendant was under an obligation not to contravene the notice: the exact moment at which it expired is no longer of critical or defining importance."
The positions of the parties on this appeal
a. The information used the words 'on or before' a particular date; and was comparable to the language of 'on or about' the particular date in Panayi.
b. Unlike Roth, Panayi and the present case involved a contested trial. Whilst accepting that the summons identified the start of the breach as 1 June 2013, this was a point of dispute at the trial in the Magistrates Court, and again on appeal against conviction in the Crown Court, and again in the confiscation proceedings.
c. The summons did not use either of the forms approved by the House of Lords in Hodgetts, to which decision the judge had expressly referred.
d. It was immaterial that a defendant otherwise knows the nature of the case against him. What matters is whether or not, on the proper interpretation of the summons, the prosecuting authority has chosen to confine the charge to the commission of an offence on a single day.
Decision on the "single day" issue
"Throughout, therefore, the appellant knew the case he had to meet. So even if there were technical deficiencies in the drafting of the summons they are not fatal." : [43].
Disposal: the powers of this court
31. (1) If the Crown Court makes a confiscation order the prosecutor may appeal to the Court of Appeal in respect of the order.
(2) If the Crown Court decides not to make a confiscation order the prosecutor may appeal to the Court of Appeal against the decision.
...
32. (1) On an appeal under s. 31(1) the Court of Appeal may confirm, quash or vary the confiscation order.
(2) On an appeal under section 31(2) the Court of Appeal may confirm the decision, or if it believes the decision was wrong it may:
(a) itself proceed under section 6 (ignoring subsections (1) to (3)), or
(b) direct the Crown Court to proceed afresh under section 6.
(5) If a confiscation order is made against the defendant in proceedings for an offence (whether the order is made by the Crown Court or the Court of Appeal) the proceedings are concluded—
(a) when the order is satisfied or discharged, or
(b) when the order is quashed and there is no further possibility of an appeal against the decision to quash the order.
Some decisions on prosecution appeals
"My Lord the consequences are these. This is an appeal under s. 31(1): this confiscation order was made. Turning to s. 32, where a confiscation order is made, the court powers are to vary or to discharge, or uphold the confiscation order. What it cannot do is to remit the matter to the Crown Court, that is a power only available where an appeal is brought under s. 31(2), namely where no confiscation order has been made. What that means is that the task falls to my Lords to, in my submission, increase the value of the confiscation order to take account of the £140,000 that was the tainted gift."
"We have considered whether or not it would be appropriate for this court to attempt to vary the order. Tempted as we may be to delve into the minutiae of the schedules, this is a task which we fear we must delegate to a crown court judge who can hear the evidence afresh and detailed submissions upon it. "
The resolution of the principal argument before us on remedy
a. The confiscation proceedings are substantial and, depending on their outcome, there is a large potential gain for the public purse. If that turns out to be the case, it would be unjust for that gain to be retained by Mr. Kamyab. The enforcement notice is over a decade old in this case.
b. The problem is created by what appears to the court to be a less than perfect statutory appeal route which, it is to be hoped, may receive Parliamentary attention in the foreseeable future, with the advice of the Law Commission to assist in achieving improvements.
c. The problem should never recur. We have said in the clearest terms that disposing of confiscation proceedings on a preliminary issue of law is, as the powers of this court currently stand, a dangerous course and one which we do not expect to see again. Confiscation proceedings should be conducted so that this court can vary orders if the prosecution appeals successfully against them without having to conduct detailed fact-finding hearings. If Parliament chooses to bestow a power to remit proceedings to the Crown Court so that they can be continued to a conclusion, then this practice may change in appropriate cases.
d. The reason the judge fell into the error of proceeding as he did was his application of a decision of this court, Panayi, which is unlikely to be frequently followed in the future.
e. The prosecution is not solely culpable for what happened. They should have resisted the procedural suggestion that a preliminary issue should be tried, but they were not the sole authors of the problem.
a. The application for leave to appeal is granted. The court holds that the judge's ruling on law was wrong. The appeal is allowed.
b. The court will consider at a further hearing what the remedy should be and whether to vary the confiscation order made by the Harrow Crown Court, and will conduct a confiscation hearing in order to do so.
c. Directions for the conduct of that hearing will be given by Lord Justice Edis acting alone under Article 8 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (Appeals under Part 2) Order 2003 (SI 2003/82). A remote directions hearing for this purpose is to be fixed on a date before 23 April 2021. The parties are to attempt to agree directions, working towards a hearing date on the earliest available date after 5 July 2021, with an estimated length of hearing of 3 days. In default of agreement, a joint note indicating areas of disagreement is to be lodged by 4pm on the day prior to the directions hearing. The parties are to canvass dates with the Criminal Appeal Office listing officer before the directions hearing.
d. The prosecution will lodge a bundle of documents required for the hearing of the rest of the substantive appeal after discussion with Mr. Kamyab's legal team within 28 days of this judgment being handed down. The bundle is to be created digitally in a searchable pdf format, in which the digital page number matches that on the printed page. Hard copies will be created as directed by the court.