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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 >> Mensah, R (On the Application Of) v Crown Court at Manchester [2023] EWHC 2372 (Admin) (10 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2023/2372.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 2372 (Admin) |
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DIVISIONAL COURT
Royal Courts of Justice |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY
B E T W E E N :
____________________
THE KING | ||
on the application of | ||
ONASIS MENSAH | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
CROWN COURT AT MANCHESTER | Defendant | |
- and - | ||
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | Interested Party |
____________________
THE DEFENDANT did not appear and was not represented.
MR D BRAMHALL appeared for the Interested Party.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY:
Introduction
Statutory framework
"The appropriate court may, at any time before the expiry of a time limit imposed by the regulations, extend, or further extend, that limit; but the court shall not do so unless it is satisfied:
(a) that the need for the extension is due to
(i) the illness or absence of the accused, a necessary witness, a judge or a magistrate;
(ii) a postponement which is occasioned by the ordering by the court of separate trials in the case of two or more accused or two or more offences; or
(iii) some other good and sufficient cause; and
(b) that the prosecution has acted with all due diligence and expedition."
The facts
"Regrettably due to a number of other priority trials taking precedence in the court's list, particularly in the courtroom to which this case had been allocated, it was regrettably necessary to vacate the trial from the list yesterday afternoon and the matter was adjourned to today to be re-fixed and for an application in relation to custody time limits which are due to expire today, 18th July
I do bear in mind the guidance afforded by [the relevant case law] but as in each of those authorities it is made clear the reality is that each case where the court has to consider this difficult issue has to be looked at on its own unique facts and looking at the prevailing situation for the court at that given time
I am satisfied that the cause of the adjournment in this case goes beyond any lack of what might be regarded as normal adequacy of resources. The current situation is such that any amount of resources which might realistically be expected in times when the court has an increased flux in the volume of work could not meet the exceptional circumstances which presently exist
There is, as is well known, currently recruitment for a proportionately large number of Circuit Judges and court staff with the intention that within months there should within this court alone be the ability to run considerably larger numbers of trial courts. From the information that has been provided to me for this particular case, accommodation was sought at Crown Square, Bolton, Liverpool, Chester and none of the courts were able to accommodate the trial. This court, as I have already indicated, had four priority trials to accommodate on the same day which are more aged than this case and involve a greater degree of vulnerability so far as the parties and witnesses are concerned."
The parties' submissions
Discussion
"30. In R v Manchester Crown Court Ex Parte McDonald [1999] 1 WLR 841, Lord Bingham of Cornhill CJ (with whom Collins J agreed) approved statements in earlier authorities to the effect that neither the seriousness of the offence nor the shortness of the extension sought could be a good and sufficient cause for an extension. At p.846, Lord Bingham CJ identified three overriding purposes of the custody time limit regime, to which any judge considering an application to extend under section 22(3) must give full weight:
'(1) to ensure that the periods for which unconvicted defendants are held in custody awaiting trial are as short as reasonably and practically possible; (2) to oblige the prosecution to prepare cases for trial with all due diligence and expedition; and (3) to invest the court with a power and duty to control any extension of the maximum period under the regulations for which any person may be held in custody awaiting trial'.
31. At pp 847-8 Lord Bingham CJ said this:
'While it is possible to rule that some matters, such as those we have just mentioned, are incapable in law of amounting to good and sufficient cause for granting an extension, there is an almost infinite variety of matters which may, depending on the facts of a particular case, be capable of amounting to good and sufficient cause. It is neither possible nor desirable to attempt to define what may or may not amount to good and sufficient cause in any given case, and it would be facile to propose any test which would be applicable in all cases. All must depend on the judgment of the court called upon to make a decision, which will be made on the peculiar facts and circumstances of the case in question, always having regard to the overriding purposes to which we have made reference above.
'The courts have held, although reluctantly, that the unavailability of a suitable judge or a suitable courtroom within the maximum period specified in the regulations may, in special cases and on appropriate facts, amount to good and sufficient cause for granting an extension of a custody time limit '"
"The courts cannot ignore the fact that available resources are limited. They cannot ignore the fact that occasions will occur when pressures on the court will be more intense than they usually are. In such a situation it is important that the courts and the parties strive to overcome any difficulties that occur. If they do not do so, that may debar the court from extending custody time limits."
"(a) the likely duration of the delay before trial; (b) whether there has been any previous extension of the CTL; (c) the age and antecedents of the defendant; (d) the likely sentence in the event of conviction; a defendant should rarely be kept in custody if he had served, or come close to serving, the likely sentence were he convicted; (e) the underlying reasons why bail was refused; (f) any particular vulnerabilities of the defendant which make remand in custody particularly difficult."
Postscript