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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Kelly, R (on the application of) v Warley Magistrates Court & Anor [2007] EWHC 1836 (Admin) (31 July 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2007/1836.html Cite as: [2007] EWHC 1836 (Admin), [2008] 1 WLR 2001, (2007) 171 JP 585, [2008] Crim LR 643, [2008] WLR 2001, [2008] 1 Cr App R 14, [2008] Lloyd's Rep FC 37, [2008] 1 Cr App Rep 14 |
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ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MITTING
____________________
The Queen on the Application of Kelly |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Warley Magistrates Court - and - The Law Society |
Respondent Interveners |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr R Tedd and Mr T Watkin (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Crown Prosecution Service
Mr David Perry QC (instructed by the Legal Services Department) for the Law Society
Hearing dates: 20 June & 6 July 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws :
INTRODUCTORY
THE FACTS
"The defence provide details within 14 days to the prosecution (ie by 5 October 2006) of their witnesses to enable the prosecution to consider any issues in relation to making applications to admit bad character information under the provisions of the Criminal Justice Act 2003".
The claimant's representative questioned whether such a direction could lawfully be made. A further case management hearing took place on 24 November 2006. Deputy District Judge Stott enquired what were the reasons why the earlier disclosure direction had not been complied with, as it had not. The answer given was that s.34 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 ("the 2003 Act"), introducing s.6C into the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 ("the 1996 Act") which would in terms impose a requirement of such disclosure, had not yet been brought into force. I shall set out the terms of s.6C (and other material statutory provisions, forthcoming and in force) in due course.
THE STATUTES
"In order to manage the trial, the court may require a party to identify
(a) which witnesses he intends to give oral evidence;…(f) what written evidence he intends to introduce;(g) what other material, if any, he intends to make available to the court in the presentation of the case;(h) whether he intends to raise any point of law that could affect the conduct of the trial or appeal…"
"Any power to make… Criminal Procedure Rules is to be exercised with a view to securing that –
(a) the criminal justice system is accessible, fair and efficient, and(b) the rules are both simple and simply expressed."
"6C(1) The accused must give to the court and the prosecutor a notice indicating whether he intends to call any persons (other than himself) as witnesses at his trial, and if so –
(a) giving the name, address and date of birth of each such proposed witness, or as many of those details as are known to the accused when the notice is given;(b) providing any information in the accused's possession which might be of material assistance in identifying or finding any such proposed witness in whose case any of the details mentioned in paragraph (a) are not known to the accused when the notice is given."
I need not read the balance of the section. Then s.11:
"(1) This section applies in the three cases set out in subsections (2), (3) and (4).
...
(4) The third case is where the accused –
...
(b) at his trial calls a witness (other than himself) not included, or not adequately identified, in a witness notice.
(5) Where this section applies –
(a) the court or any other party may make such comment as appears appropriate;(b) the court or jury may draw such inferences as appear proper in deciding whether the accused is guilty of the offence concerned."
"prepare a code of practice which gives guidance to police officers, and other persons charged with the duty of investigating offences, in relation to the arranging and conducting of interviews of persons –
...
(b) who are included as proposed witnesses in a notice given under section 6C."
The code of practice there envisaged has not yet been promulgated; indeed the consultation process which by s.21A(4) (which I need not set out) must precede it has not yet been concluded.
"(1) In criminal proceedings evidence of the bad character of a person other than the defendant is admissible if and only if -
(a) it is important explanatory evidence,(b) it has substantial probative value in relation to a matter which -(i) is a matter in issue in the proceedings, and(ii) is of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole..."
THE PRINCIPAL ISSUE
SUBSIDIARY ARGUMENTS
(1) The enactment of a comprehensive statutory scheme (ss.6C, 11 and 21A of the 2003 Act) for the disclosure of witness details, sanctions for failure to disclose, and a code of guidance for police conduct in relation to such disclosed material) is a powerful indicator that in criminal litigation such disclosure, at any rate by the defence, should not be required under other provisions (the CrPR), which are not comprehensive and do not provide for proper sanctions in the event of failure to comply. It is to be noted, as I have said, that no code of practice has been issued under s.21A, the envisaged consultation process has not been completed, and the primary provisions contained in ss6C and 11 are not yet in force. Mr Perry submits that it is to be inferred that the legislature has proceeded on the premise that there exists no other statutory power to require and enforce such disclosure in criminal cases; the new code is, or will, be exhaustive as well as comprehensive.
(2) There was no substantial justification for the deputy district judge's direction in case management terms. Checks on the proposed defence witnesses could be undertaken during the forthcoming trial.
(3) The assumption of a power to make such a direction pays insufficient regard to the complexities of the solicitor/client relationship in criminal cases, especially if (as is contended was done here) the order is intended to bind the legal representative. In particular the solicitor may be required to disclose matters which are confidential to the client, and that would be highly damaging. This submission by Mr Perry touches, but is not as I understand it limited to, issues of LPP and LP.
(4) The interests of the witnesses themselves have not been considered. They may legitimately expect their personal details will be kept confidential until they step into the witness box. Without a firm legal foundation for the order, it may therefore breach their rights arising under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights ("ECHR"). Knowledge that such an order may be made may act as a powerful deterrent against witnesses coming forward to assist the defence. This Article 8 theme was more extensively developed by Mr de Mello for the claimant, who also prayed in aid Article 14, on the footing that prosecution witnesses are treated differently from witnesses for the defence. He submitted also that there was a want of "equality of arms" within the principles of ECHR Article 6.
LITIGATION PRIVILEGE AND LEGAL PROFESSIONAL PRIVILEGE
"44. Litigation privilege exists because it is in the public interest that litigants should seek and obtain confidential advice in respect of actual or contemplated litigation. There is no such privilege where the communications are not made in the usual course of the solicitor's retainer because, for example, they are made in furtherance of a crime or fraud…
45. In the normal course of proceedings a solicitor will interview and obtain proofs of evidence from all manner of potential witnesses for use in actual or prospective litigation. Both the information given and the identity of the person supplying it are confidential and privileged unless and until the privilege is waived by that person giving evidence in the proceedings or some other equivalent action. This was and is recognised in the common form claim to privilege contained in the former affidavit of documents as well as in the present disclosure statement in neither of which was or is the name of the witness who has given the proof revealed."
"52. Litigation privilege relates to communications at the stage when litigation is pending or in contemplation. It is based on the idea that legal proceedings take the form of a contest in which each of the opposing parties assembles his own body of evidence and uses it to try to defeat the other, with the judge or jury determining the winner. In such a system each party should be free to prepare his case as fully as possible without the risk that his opponent will be able to recover the material generated by his preparations. In the words of Justice Jackson in Hickman v Taylor (1947) 329 US 495, 516, 'Discovery was hardly intended to enable a learned profession to perform its functions either without wits or on wits borrowed from the adversary'."
"The principle which runs through all these cases, and the many other cases which were cited, is that a man must be able to consult his lawyer in confidence, since otherwise he might hold back half the truth. The client must be sure that what he tells his lawyer in confidence will never be revealed without his consent. Legal professional privilege is thus much more than an ordinary rule of evidence, limited in its application to the facts of a particular case. It is a fundamental condition on which the administration of justice as a whole rests."
LPP of course extends to the giving and taking of legal advice in contexts far away from litigation, as well as for the purposes of litigation. But in the arena of adversarial litigation the rationale of LP and LPP rests in the need to protect the confidentiality which a litigant must enjoy in the materials which he or his lawyers prepare for the presentation of his case. So much is demonstrated by the passage I have cited from Lord Taylor, and also by what in Three Rivers Lord Rodger went on to say about "legal advice privilege". After citing Scottish authority of the 17th century he continued (at paragraph 54):
"[T]he public interest justification for the privilege is the same today as it was 350 years ago: it does not change, or need to change, because it is rooted in an aspect of human nature which does not change either. If the advice given by lawyers is to be sound, their clients must make them aware of all the relevant circumstances of the problem. Clients will be reluctant to do so, however, unless they can be sure that what they say about any potentially damaging or embarrassing circumstances will not be revealed later. So it is settled that, in the absence of a waiver by the client, communications between clients and their lawyers for the purposes of obtaining legal advice must be kept confidential and cannot be made the subject of evidence."
And there is a wealth of other authority, much of it cited by Lord Scott of Foscote and Lord Carswell in Three Rivers. We may with respect take it, certainly for present purposes, that the imperative force of LP and LPP is in effect the same. If there were no confidentiality such as both rights protect, and every litigant were liable to disclose the building blocks of his case stage by stage as they were developed, the scope for witnesses being discouraged, false points being taken, and the truth being distorted would surely be very greatly increased.
PROPOSED JUSTIFICATIONS OF THE DIRECTION TO DISCLOSE
"A party who wants to introduce evidence of a non-defendant's bad character... under section 100 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 must apply in the form set out in the Practice Direction and the application must be received by the court officer and all other parties to the proceedings -
(a) not more than 14 days after the prosecutor has complied or purported to comply with section 3 of the Criminal Procedure and Investigations Act 1996 (disclosure by the prosecutor); or
(b) as soon as reasonably practicable, where the application concerns a non-defendant who is to be invited to give (or has given) evidence for a defendant."
It is submitted (obviously enough) that if the prosecution are to make a proper and timely decision whether to seek leave to put in a defence witness's bad character, they must clearly have available the identity and basic details of the witness. Unless that material is in their hands in advance there will be undesirable and unacceptable mid-trial delays which will be wholly inimical to the overriding objective and contrary at least to the spirit of Part 35.2.
"45 It is accepted that the statute does not contain any express words that abrogate the taxpayer's common law right to rely upon legal professional privilege. The question therefore becomes whether there is a necessary implication to that effect. A necessary implication is not the same as a reasonable implication as was pointed out by Lord Hutton B (A Minor) [2000] AC 428, 481. A necessary implication is one which necessarily follows from the express provisions of the statute construed in their context. It distinguishes between what it would have been sensible or reasonable for Parliament to have included or what Parliament would, if it had thought about it, probably would have included and what it is clear that the express language shows that the statute must have included. A necessary implication is a matter of express language and logic not interpretation.
46 In the present case the statutory language falls a long way short of meeting this criterion..."
In Bowman v Fels [2005] 1 WLR 3083 the Court of Appeal had to decide whether provisions contained in the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 were effective to authorise disclosures which would override legal professional privilege. After citing the passage from Lord Hobhouse's speech in Morgan Grenfell which I have just set out, Brooke LJ giving the judgment of the court referred to the provisions in question and continued:
"87… Much stronger language would have been required if S.328 could be interpreted as bearing a necessary implication that legal professional privilege was to be overridden. As Lord Hoffman said in Ex parte Simms [2000] 2 AC 115, 131...: 'Fundamental rights cannot be overridden by general…words'".
"(2) At any stage in any cause or matter to which this rule applies, the Court may, if it thinks fit for the purpose of disposing fairly and expeditiously of the cause or matter and saving costs, direct any party to serve on the other parties, on such terms as the Court shall think just, written statements of the oral evidence which the party intends to lead on any issues of fact to be decided at the trial.
(3) Directions given under paragraph (2) may – (a) make different provision with regard to different issues of fact or different witnesses; (b) require any written witness statement served to be signed by the intended witness; (c) require that statements be filed with the Court.
(5) ... [U]nless the Court otherwise orders, where the party serving the statement does call such a witness at the trial – (a) the party may not without the consent of the other parties or the leave of the Court lead evidence from that witness the substance of which is not included in the statement served, except in relation to new matters which have arisen in the course of the trial; (b) the Court may, on such terms as it thinks fit, direct that the statement served, or part of it, shall stand as the evidence in chief of the witness or part of such evidence; (c) whether or not the statement or any part of it is referred to during the evidence in chief of the witness, any party may put the statement or any part of it in cross-examination of that witness.
(7) Where a party fails to comply with a direction given under paragraph (2) he shall not be entitled to adduce evidence to which such direction related without the leave of the Court.
(8) Nothing in this rule shall deprive any party [of his right] to treat any communication as privileged or make admissible evidence otherwise inadmissible."
"Counsel for the defendant put his primary objection in two ways. First, he said that on its true construction r.2A(8), which preserved the right to rely on privilege, allowed him to object on the grounds that the production of the statements would infringe his privilege not to disclose the contents of communications received from witnesses for the purposes of the litigation. Second, he said that if, as a matter of construction, the rule had the effect of overriding that privilege, it was ultra vires the Supreme Court Rule Committee under the Supreme Court Act 1981."
Hoffmann J stated (56h):
"There is no doubt that a party has a privilege which entitles him to refuse to disclose, whether by way of discovery or in oral evidence, the statements which have been made to him by potential witnesses or other persons for the purposes of litigation."
He cited examples, and observed (57B) that "[t]he privilege is therefore a strong one". His brief discussion of the vires of Order 38 r.2A, namely s.84 of the Supreme Court Act 1981, shows (by reference to an observation of Lord Denning MR in Re Grosvenor Hotel (No 2) [1965] Ch 1210, 1243) that s.84 did not empower rules which would infringe a litigation party's privilege against disclosure. The question, however, was whether Order 38 r.2A had that effect. Hoffmann J reasoned as follows (57j – 58d):
"Order 38 r.2A has the effect of empowering the court to make it a condition of a party's ability to lead oral evidence at the trial that he should have given prior notice of such evidence in the form of a written statement served on the other parties. It does not mean that he can be compelled to disclose any document or information. Anything which he does not wish to disclose he may still keep to himself. It is only if he wants to disclose the information by way of evidence at the trial that he may now be required as a precondition to disclose it in written form in advance. What the rule therefore does is to advance the moment at which a party must examine information he has gathered for the purposes of the trial and decide what he is going to use and what he is going to withhold...
In my judgment, therefore, the privilege which is preserved by Ord. 38 r.2A(8) is not infringed by a requirement for the service of statements under para. (2), nor does the making of the rule override the privilege. In my view the privilege remains intact and the rule merely regulates the practice and procedure of the court relating to the way in which oral evidence may be given. I accept, of course, that, in deciding what is a matter of practice and procedure and what is the general law of evidence, one must look at the effect of the rule rather than merely the way in which it is expressed. For example, a rule which prohibited a party from adducing any oral evidence whatever unless he had previously made discovery of information protected by privilege, whether he wanted to use such information in evidence or not, would clearly be an attempt to change the rules of evidence and discovery."
CONCLUSION
Mr Justice Mitting: