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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 >> Marland v Director of Public Prosecutions [2023] EWHC 1046 (Admin) (04 May 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/1046.html Cite as: [2023] 2 Cr App R 5, [2023] ACD 82, [2023] EWHC 1046 (Admin), [2023] Crim LR 744 |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
2 Redcliff St, Bristol, BS1 6GR |
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B e f o r e :
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KEVIN MARLAND |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Respondent |
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Ben Lloyd (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 1 March 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Steyn DBE :
Introduction
a. on 30 August 2021, "assault by beating" upon Melanie Clarke; and
b. on 30 August 2021, "assault by beating" upon Rose Griffin.
Not guilty pleas were entered to both charges and the matters were listed for trial at Bristol Magistrates' Court on 7 February 2022.
"Were we able to convict the appellant of battery:
(i) On the basis of his evidence and explanation that he grabbed Ms Clarke's shoulders in order to guide her to his car because he was concerned that she was walking down a busy road at dusk whilst intoxicated?
(ii) Having considered and rejected in the absence of any evidence that the conduct of the appellant fell outside that of implied consent in daily life, or within the context of his relationship with Ms Clarke?"
The Grounds of Appeal
a. The magistrates have failed to properly consider and apply the doctrine of implied consent;
b. The determination that the facts as found by the magistrates did not satisfy the doctrine of implied consent is Wednesbury unreasonable; and/or
c. The magistrates have failed to properly consider whether the prosecution have proven the necessary intent.
The Case Stated
"2. … The disputed issues of fact noted on the Preparation for Effective Trial form in respect of charge 1 were:
'did the appellant grab Ms Clarke's neck and push her to the floor or raise his fists?'
He accepted, due to her intoxication, he took hold of her shoulders to guide her to the car.
3. On 7th February 2022 we tried the charges and heard evidence that
The incident took place on the 30th August 2021 at approximately 8.30pm. The time of the event was accepted but the evidence given about the location differed slightly.
We heard evidence from Ms Griffin to say she saw them close together and there was 'a lot of grabbing' and that Ms Clarke was 'forcefully pushed to the floor'. She described seeing the appellant empty Ms Clarke's handbag and run off.
The appellant in his evidence accepted Ms Clarke had left the pub after he had made a sarcastic comment to her. In his evidence the appellant stated that Ms Clarke had 'sent text messages criticising him for leaving her to walk home alone'[.] When he arrived in the pub car park Ms Clarke had disappeared and he could not see her. He went home and drove back and saw Ms Clarke in his headlights and pulled over. The appellant accepted he was frustrated but was not angry and wanted to make sure she was safe. In evidence the appellant said it was pitch black, she was extremely intoxicated and he wanted to 'reason with her to get her home'. He stated 'I grabbed her by both shoulders and took her to the car six feet away[.] She didn't want to go, I let go and she fell on her bottom. I grabbed her when she didn't want to be grabbed. I've assaulted her but with a reasonable excuse."
Ms Clarke made a statement withdrawing her support of a prosecution and did not give evidence at the trial.
We found the following facts:
a) The appellant and Ms Clarke were in a relationship and at the time of the incident were living together.
b) The appellant and Ms Griffin, the witness, were not known to each other.
c) The witness may have been mistaken by what she thought she saw. The light conditions had to be considered and the witness was driving at 30mph when she says she saw the incident. The Bench could not be certain exactly what she could have seen from where she was driving.
d) By his own admission in evidence the appellant accepted that he grabbed Ms Clarke by both shoulders, knowing she did not consent to this, and took her to the car, knowing she did not want to go. He let go of her and she fell to the floor. His actions caused her to fall to the floor.
…
5. The court was not referred to any authorities.
OPINION
We were of the opinion that:
The Appellant intentionally applied unlawful force to Ms Clarke causing her to fall. The Appellant knew she did not consent to this contact and it was not reasonable under the circumstances." (Emphasis added.)
The law
"But so widely drawn a principle must inevitably be subject to exceptions. For example, children may be subjected to reasonable punishment; people may be subjected to the lawful exercise of the power of arrest; and reasonable force may be used in self-defence or for prevention of crime. But, apart from these special instances where the control or constraint is lawful, a broader exception has been created to allow for the exigencies of everyday life. Generally speaking, consent is a defence to battery; and most of the physical contacts of ordinary life are not actionable because they are impliedly consented to by all who move in society and so expose themselves to the risk of bodily contact. So nobody can complain of the jostling which is inevitable from his presence in, for example, a supermarket, an underground station, or a busy street; nor can a person who attends a party complain if his hand is seized in friendship, or even if his back is, within reason, slapped: see Tuberville v Savage (1669) 1 Mod 3. Although such cases are regarded as examples of implied consent, it is more common nowadays to treat them as falling within a general exception embracing all physical contact which is generally acceptable in the ordinary conduct of daily life. …
Among such forms of conduct, long held to be acceptable, is touching a person for the purpose of engaging his attention, though of course using no greater degree of physical contact than is reasonably necessary in the circumstances for that purpose. … But a distinction is drawn between a touch to draw a man's attention, which is generally acceptable, and a physical restraint, which is not. … Furthermore, persistent touching to gain attention in the face of obvious disregard may transcend the norms of acceptable behaviour, and so be outside the exception. We do not say that more than one touch is never permitted; for example, the lost or distressed may surely be permitted a second touch, or possibly even more, on a reluctant or impervious sleeve or shoulder, as may a person who is acting reasonably in the exercise of a duty. In each case the test must be whether the physical contact so persisted in has in the circumstances gone beyond generally acceptable standards of conduct; and the answer to that question will depend upon the facts of the particular case." (Emphasis added.)
"A police officer may wish to engage a man's attention, for example if he wishes to question him. If he lays his hand on the man's sleeve or taps his shoulder for that purpose, he commits no wrong. … But if, taking into account the nature of his duty, his use of physical contact in the face of non-cooperation persists beyond generally acceptable standards of conduct, his action will become unlawful; and if a police officer restrains a man, for example by gripping his arm or his shoulder, then his action will also be unlawful, unless he is lawfully exercising his power of arrest." (Emphasis added.)
"Where consent is in issue, the burden of disproving it is on the prosecution (Donovan [1934] 2 KB 498). The two principal questions that may arise in this context are: (1) Did the complainant in fact consent (expressly or by implication) to what was done; and (2) if so, do public policy considerations invalidate that consent?
Whether consent was given is usually a simple question of fact, but we are all 'deemed' to consent to various harmless or unavoidable contacts with our fellow citizens which for that reason cannot be unlawful (Wilson v Pringle [1986] 2 All ER 440)." (Emphasis added.)
"The mental element necessary to constitute guilt is the intent to apply unlawful force to the victim. We do not believe that the mental element can be substantiated by simply showing an intent to apply force and no more.
What then is the situation if the defendant is labouring under a mistake of fact as to the circumstances? What if he believes, but believes mistakenly, that the victim is consenting, or that it is necessary to defend himself, or that a crime is being committed which he intends to prevent? He must then be judged against the mistaken facts as he believes them to be. If judged against those facts or circumstances the prosecution fail to establish his guilt, then he is entitled to be acquitted.
…
The reasonableness or unreasonableness of the defendant's belief is material to the question of whether the belief was held by the defendant at all. If the belief was in fact held, its unreasonableness, so far as guilt or innocence is concerned, is neither here nor there. It is irrelevant."
Ground 1: Did the magistrates fail properly to consider and apply the doctrine of implied consent?
"In my judgment, in acting as he did, the officer who had had in mind the steepness of the steps in the garden and had wanted 'to steady her for her own safety' can properly be said to have acted in conformity with 'generally acceptable standards of conduct'."
Ground 2: Was it Wednesbury unreasonable to conclude that the doctrine of implied consent did not apply?
Ground 3: Did the prosecution fail to prove intent to apply unlawful force?
Conclusion