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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 >> Stott, R (On the Application Of) v The Secretary of State for Justice [2017] EWHC 214 (Admin) (15 February 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2017/214.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 214 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR BRIAN LEVESON)
MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of FRANK STOTT) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR JUSTICE |
Defendant |
____________________
Rosemary Davidson (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor's Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date : 02 February 2017
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Brian Leveson P :
The facts
The structure of custodial sentences
"226A Extended sentence for certain violent or sexual offences: persons 18 or over
(1) This section applies where—
(a) a person aged 18 or over is convicted of a specified offence (whether the offence was committed before or after this section comes into force),
(b) the court considers that there is a significant risk to members of the public of serious harm occasioned by the commission by the offender of further specified offences,
(c) the court is not required by section 224A or 225(2) to impose a sentence of imprisonment for life, and
(d) condition A or B is met.
(2) Condition A is that, at the time the offence was committed, the offender had been convicted of an offence listed in Schedule 15B.
(3) Condition B is that, if the court were to impose an extended sentence of imprisonment, the term that it would specify as the appropriate custodial term would be at least 4 years.
(4) The court may impose an extended sentence of imprisonment on the offender.
(5) An extended sentence of imprisonment is a sentence of imprisonment the term of which is equal to the aggregate of—
(a) the appropriate custodial term, and
(b) a further period (the 'extension period') for which the offender is to be subject to a licence.
(6) The appropriate custodial term is the term of imprisonment that would (apart from this section) be imposed in compliance with section 153(2).
(7) The extension period must be a period of such length as the court considers necessary for the purpose of protecting members of the public from serious harm occasioned by the commission by the offender of further specified offences, subject to subsections (8) and (9).
(8) The extension period must not exceed—
(a) 5 years in the case of a specified violent offence, and
(b) 8 years in the case of a specified sexual offence.
(9) The term of an extended sentence of imprisonment imposed under this section in respect of an offence must not exceed the term that, at the time the offence was committed, was the maximum term permitted for the offence.
(10) In subsections (1)(a) and (8), references to a specified offence, a specified violent offence and a specified sexual offence include an offence that—
(a) was abolished before 4 April 2005, and
(b) would have constituted such an offence if committed on the day on which the offender was convicted of the offence.
(11) Where the offence mentioned in subsection (1)(a) was committed before 4 April 2005—
(a) subsection (1)(c) has effect as if the words 'by section 224A or 225(2)' were omitted, and
(b) subsection (6) has effect as if the words 'in compliance with section 153(2)' were omitted …"
i) Convicted of a specified offence (in this case, rape of a child, pursuant to paragraph 106 of Schedule 15 to the 2003 Act);
ii) The court finds that the offender poses a significant risk of serious harm to the public occasioned by the commission of further specified offences;
iii) The court is not required to impose a life sentence, pursuant to s. 224A or s. 225(2) of the 2003 Act; and
iv) Either, at the time that the offence was committed, the offender had been convicted of an offence specified in Schedule 15B to the 2003 Act, or the appropriate custodial term of any extended sentence is at least four years.
"246A Release on licence of prisoners serving extended sentence under section 226A or 226B
(1) This section applies to a prisoner ('P') who is serving an extended sentence imposed under section 226A or 226B.
(2) It is the duty of the Secretary of State to release P on licence under this section as soon as P has served the requisite custodial period for the purposes of this section if—
(a) the sentence was imposed before the coming into force of section 4 of the Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015,
(b) the appropriate custodial term is less than 10 years, and
(c) the sentence was not imposed in respect of an offence listed in Parts 1 to 3 of Schedule 15B or in respect of offences that include one or more offences listed in those Parts of that Schedule.
(3) In any other case, it is the duty of the Secretary of State to release P on licence in accordance with subsections (4) to (7).
(4) The Secretary of State must refer P's case to the Board—
(a) as soon as P has served the requisite custodial period, and
(b) where there has been a previous reference of P's case to the Board under this subsection and the Board did not direct P's release, not later than the second anniversary of the disposal of that reference.
(5) It is the duty of the Secretary of State to release P on licence under this section as soon as—
(a) P has served the requisite custodial period, and
(b) the Board has directed P's release under this section.
(6) The Board must not give a direction under subsection (5) unless—
(a) the Secretary of State has referred P's case to the Board, and
(b) the Board is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public that P should be confined.
(7) It is the duty of the Secretary of State to release P on licence under this section as soon as P has served the appropriate custodial term, unless P has previously been released on licence under this section and recalled under section 254 (provision for the release of such persons being made by section 255C).
(8) For the purposes of this section—
'appropriate custodial term' means the term determined as such by the court under section 226A or 226B (as appropriate);
'the requisite custodial period' means—
(a) in relation to a person serving one sentence, two-thirds of the appropriate custodial term, and
(b) in relation to a person serving two or more concurrent or consecutive sentences, the period determined under sections 263(2) and 264(2)."
"28 Duty to release certain life prisoners
…
(6) The Parole Board shall not give a direction under subsection (5) above with respect to a life prisoner to whom this section applies unless—
(a) the Secretary of State has referred the prisoner's case to the Board; and
(b) the Board is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public that the prisoner should be confined.
(7) A life prisoner to whom this section applies may require the Secretary of State to refer his case to the Parole Board at any time—
(a) after he has served the relevant part of his sentence; and
(b) where there has been a previous reference of his case to the Board, after the end of the period of two years beginning with the disposal of that reference; and
(c) where he is also serving a sentence of imprisonment or detention for a term, after he has served one-half of that sentence;
and in this subsection 'previous reference' means a reference under subsection (6) above or section 32(4) below."
The ECHR
"The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Convention shall be secured without discrimination on any ground such as sex, race, colour, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, association with a national minority, property, birth or other status."
"1. Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law: (a) the lawful detention of a person after conviction by a competent court….
4. Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful. …"
"(1) Do the matters complained of come within the ambit of a right protected by the Convention?
(2) Was there a difference in treatment in respect of that right between the complainant and others put forward for comparison?
(3) If so, was the difference in treatment on one or more of the proscribed grounds under article 14?
(4) Were those others in an analogous situation?
(5) Was the difference in treatment objectively justifiable in the sense that it had a legitimate aim and bore a reasonable relationship of proportionality to that aim?"
The ambit of Article 14
"15. It was argued by the Secretary of State that each of the appellants was lawfully detained after conviction by a competent court. Article 5(1)(a) was therefore satisfied. The sentences imposed by the court were not themselves criticised as discriminatory, and could have been challenged had they been so. Those sentences provided lawful authority for detention of the appellants until such time as, under domestic law, they became entitled to release: R (Giles) v Parole Board [2003] UKHL 42, [2004] 1 AC 1. At that point continued detention would become unlawful (R v Governor of Brockhill Prison, Ex p Evans (No 2) [2001] 2 AC 19), but not before. Article 5(4) had no part to play in implementing the sentence before release. It followed that discriminatory implementation of the sentence, however extreme and unjustifiable, was not within the ambit of article 5.
16. This argument is in my judgment a mixture of the true and the false. I would agree that the sentences passed on the respective appellants satisfied article 5(1)(a) and provided lawful authority for the detention of the appellants until such time as, under domestic law, their detention became unlawful. Giles established that a prisoner sentenced to a determinate term of years cannot seek to be released at any earlier time than that for which domestic law provides. During the currency of a lawful sentence, article 5(4) has no part to play. But the Secretary of State's argument founders, in my opinion, on a failure to recognise both the importance, in our system, of the statutory rules providing for early release and the close relationship between those rules and the core value which article 5 exists to protect.
17. The Convention does not require member states to establish a scheme for early release of those sentenced to imprisonment. Prisoners may, consistently with the Convention, be required to serve every day of the sentence passed by the judge, or be detained until a predetermined period or proportion of the sentence has been served, if that is what domestic law provides. But this is not what the law of England and Wales provided, in respect of long-term determinate prisoners, at the times relevant to these appeals. That law provided for a time at which (subject to additional days of custody imposed for disciplinary breaches) a prisoner must, as a matter of right, be released, and an earlier time at which he might be released if it was judged safe to release him but at which he need not be released if it was not so judged.
18. A number of grounds (economy and the need to relieve over-crowding in prisons) have doubtless been relied on when introducing pre-release schemes from determinate sentences such as those under consideration here. But one such consideration is recognition that neither the public interest nor the interest of the offender is well served by continuing to detain a prisoner until the end of his publicly pronounced sentence; that in some cases those interests will be best served by releasing the prisoner at the earlier, discretionary, stage; and that in those cases prisoners should regain their freedom (even if subject to restrictions) because there is judged to be no continuing interest in depriving them of it. I accordingly find that the right to seek early release, where domestic law provides for such a right, is clearly within the ambit of article 5, and differential treatment of one prisoner as compared with another, otherwise than on the merits of their respective cases, gives rise to a potential complaint under article 14."
"Suppose that for a given offence the law prescribed a minimum penalty of six years' imprisonment for men, three years for women. That, Mr Pannick QC readily acknowledged, would clearly constitute a direct breach of article 5 (probably without the need to invoke article 14) and be unlawful. If, however, the law prescribed the same sentence for both, but then provided that women but not men are to be released at the halfway stage, that, he must argue, is beyond the reach of the Convention. It cannot be so and it is not so because the core value protected by article 5 is liberty and, where the penal system includes a parole scheme, liberty is dependent no less upon the non-discriminatory operation of that than on a fair sentencing process in the first place."
Article 14 and "other status"
"I do not think that a personal characteristic can be defined by the differential treatment of which a person complains. … Is [Mr Clift's] classification as a prisoner serving a determinate sentence of 15 years or more (but less than life) a personal characteristic? I find it difficult to apply so elusive a test. But I would incline to regard a life sentence as an acquired personal characteristic and a lifer as having an 'other status', and it is hard to see why the classification of Mr Clift, based on the length of his sentence and not the nature of his offences, should be differently regarded. I think, however, that a domestic court should hesitate to apply the Convention in a manner not, as I understand, explicitly or impliedly authorised by the Strasbourg jurisprudence, and I would accordingly, not without hesitation, resolve this question in favour of the Secretary of State and against Mr Clift."
The analogy with other relevant prisoners
Objective justification
Conclusion
William Davis J :