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Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Clarke v. Member In Charge, Terenure Garda Station [2001] IESC 91; [2002] 2 ILRM 11 (1 November 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2001/91.html Cite as: [2001] 4 IR 171, [2001] IESC 91, [2002] 2 ILRM 11 |
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1. The
undisputed facts in this case appear to be as follows. The applicant was
arrested at 7.45 a.m. on the 14th April 2000 on suspicion of robbery and
conveyed to Terenure Garda Station where he was detained under the provisions
of S.4 of the Criminal Justice Act 1984. (hereto “the 1984 Act”)
2. In
her affidavit grounding these proceedings, the applicant’s solicitor,
Grainne Malone, said that she was contacted in respect of his detention and
that it was indicated to the Gardai that she would be visiting the garda
station within 30 minutes. On her arrival at the station, she saw the
applicant being taken by car to the District Court at Tallaght, Co. Dublin.
3. The
applicant had on a previous occasion pleaded not guilty to another offence with
which he had been charged, which charge was listed for hearing at the District
Court in Tallaght on the same morning i.e., 14th April 2000. His solicitor
attended in the District Court on his behalf that morning and submitted to the
District Judge that the applicant’s detention was unlawful. The District
Judge was told that the Garda involved in the prosecution of the case was not
in court and was asked to put the matter back to second calling. That
application having been acceded to, the applicant was then detained in a cell
in the District Court. At 1 o’clock he was brought back to Terenure
Garda Station where his detention was purportedly extended under the 1984 Act
for a further six hours. He was then brought back to Terenure Garda Station
where the case was called again at approximately 3 p.m.. The District Judge
said that he did not have any power to inquire into the legality of Mr. Clarkes
detention and adjourned the matter to the 3rd May 2000. The applicant was then
brought back to Terenure Garda Station.
4. Later
that day, an application was made to the High Court (Laffoy J) for an order in
accordance with Article 40.4.2º of the Constitution that the respondent
produce before the court at 6 o’clock in the afternoon the body of the
applicant and certify in writing the grounds of his detention. The respondent
having certified that he was being lawfully detained pursuant to S.4(2) of the
Criminal Justice Act 1984, the learned High Court judge, after hearing
arguments by counsel, concluded in an ex-tempore judgment that the effect of
the removal of the applicant from Terenure Garda Station for the purpose of his
attendance in the District Court at Tallaght rendered his detention at 4 p.m.
that afternoon - presumably the time at which the application for a
conditional order was made - invalid. She accordingly ordered the
applicant’s release from detention.
5. From
that judgment and order, the respondent has now appealed to this court. It is
conceded on his behalf that, the applicant having been at liberty since the
making of the order in the High Court, no issue as to his detention now arises.
It was, however, submitted on his behalf that the court should nonetheless
entertain the appeal, having regard to the decision of this court in
In
Re Swann and Others
[1981] IR 395. It was said that the issue as to whether the respondent was in
lawful detention during the relevant periods was of “real concern”
to the Director of Public Prosecutions and to all those charged with
responsibility for the investigation and prosecution of serious crime.
6. The
Attorney General (the relevant prosecuting authority in the case of the
particular offences) appealed to this court. Not surprisingly, there was no
appearance by, or on behalf of the applicants and this court (O’Higgins
C.J., Griffin J and Kenny J.) held that the absolute orders of certiorari and
habeas corpus, made without any opportunity having been afforded to the
respondents of being heard, could not stand. As to the jurisdiction of the
court to hear the appeal in those extremely unusual circumstances, the learned
Chief Justice said
8. I
have to say, with great respect, that I find it difficult to understand how
that passage had any application to the facts which were before the court in
In
Re Swann.
In the latter case, there was no question of the court being in any position
to make the form of order contemplated by Walsh J. The order under attack -
that of the Peace Commissioner authorising the detention of the master and crew
- had long since expired, unlike the sentence of imprisonment in the
State
(Browne) -v- Feran
where the balance of the sentence remained to be served and, as Walsh J pointed
out, a fresh warrant of execution could have been issued.
9. It
is again, with respect, difficult to understand how that would justify this
court in entertaining an appeal from the grant of a
habeas
corpus
application where there is no question of a person having to serve out the
unexpired period of his sentence.
10. It
should, of course, be noted that, since the applicants did not appear and were
not represented on the hearing of the appeal in
In
Re Swann,
the court did not have the benefit of any arguments in response to the
submission on behalf of the State that an appeal lay.
11. More
recently, this court dealt with an appeal from a finding by the High Court that
the detention of the applicant pursuant to S.30 of the Offences Against the
State Act 1939 was unlawful. At the time the appeal came before this court,
the period of detention had long since expired and, accordingly, the same
considerations arose as in this case. In his judgment (with which Hamilton
C.J., Barrington J, myself and Murphy J agreed,) O’Flaherty J said
12. The
report in that case gives no indication as to what arguments were advanced to
the court. As a member of the court, my recollection is that the correctness
in point of law of the decision in
Re
Swann
was not canvassed in any way. Nor was any argument advanced on behalf of the
applicant in the present case to the effect that
Re
Swann
was wrongly decided. Since, however, it raises a question of general
importance as to the jurisdiction of this court to entertain cases which are
beyond argument moot and render purely advisory opinions which will not in any
way affect the rights of any persons before this court or the High Court, I
would expressly reserve the question as to whether
In
Re Swann
and
Lavery
-v- Member in Charge, Carrickmacross Garda Station
were correctly decided. I would be further of the view that, if such a
situation should arise in the future, the court hearing the appeal,
irrespective of any lack of enthusiasm on the part of the respondent to make
the point, should decline to hear the appeal without hearing arguments as to
whether those authorities were correctly decided. I fully appreciate, however,
that that would be a matter for the court which hears the appeal.
13. I
turn now to the question raised in the instant appeal. Section 4 of the 1984
Act provides
inter
alia
that
14. Section
7(2) provides for the making of regulations which include provision for the
assignment to the member of a Garda Siochana in charge of a Garda Siochana
station or to some other member, of responsibility for overseeing the
application of the regulations at that station.
15. The
submission on behalf of the applicant, which was successful in the High Court,
is that these provisions require the applicant to be physically detained in the
garda station itself during the period of his detention and that his being
absent from the station, even though he remains in the custody of a member of
the Gardai attached to the station, for any period of time, means that the
detention has come to an end and that his continued detention is, accordingly,
unlawful.
16. That
submission succeeded in the High Court. I am, however, satisfied that it was
not well founded. While the 1984 Act and the regulations made thereunder
seriously abridge a person’s right to liberty and should be strictly
construed, that does not mean that they have to be interpreted in the manner
proposed on behalf of the applicant. Neither the 1984 Act nor the regulations
provide, either expressly or by implication, that the period of detention
authorised thereunder comes to an end where the removal of the person from the
Garda station is required for some other legitimate purpose, in this case his
attendance at the District Court in Tallaght. Accordingly, the detention
envisaged in S.4(2) continued in this case during the period that the applicant
was brought to the District Court in Tallaght in order to comply with the order
of the District Court which had adjourned the case until that day.
17. That
conclusion is reinforced by subsections (8) and (8A) of S.4 of the 1984 Act
which provide that
18. The
draughtsman of these subsections has clearly proceeded on the assumption that,
where a person is absent from the garda station for the purposes mentioned in
either subsection, he continues to be lawfully detained pursuant to S.(2).
Otherwise, the provision that the time during which he is absent from the
station is to be excluded in reckoning the period of detention would be
superfluous. If the submission advanced on behalf of the applicant was well
founded, the draughtsman would have expressly provided that the detention
authorised by subsection (2) should be regarded as continuing during his
absence from the station for either of the purposes mentioned, but should be
excluded in reckoning the period of detention permitted by the section. It
follows inevitably that, in a case such as the present, the detention should be
regarded as continuing while the applicant is necessarily absent from the garda
station, but should not be excluded in reckoning the period of detention
permitted by the section.
19. That
conclusion is also supported by a passage in the judgment of the Court of
Criminal Appeal in
The
People -v- Farrell
[1978] IR 13. In that case, a person had been detained under S.30(3) of the
Offences Against the State Act 1939 which provides that
20. In
that case, the evidence was that the applicant, who had been arrested under the
provisions of that section and taken to the garda station at Ballyshannon where
he was detained, had agreed to travel in a Garda patrol car with Garda officers
for the purpose of pointing out various places which he had mentioned to them.
He was accordingly absent from the garda station from
21. To
the same effect are the observations of Henchy J in this court in
The
State
(Walsh) -v- Maguire
[1979] IR 373 at p.386 as follows
22. As
subsequently pointed out in
The
People (DPP) -v- Kelly No. 2,
[1983] 1 IR 1, the situation might be otherwise if it could be shown that the
removal of a person detained under those provisions from one garda station to
another was
mala
fide
and was done for the purpose either of harassment or of isolating him from
assistance or access to which he would properly be entitled. That does not
arise in the present case.
23. The
wording of the relevant provisions of the Offences Against the State Act 1939
under consideration in those cases differs in only one significant respect from
that now under consideration, i.e., the power to remove the person arrested
“to some other convenient place”. However, it is clear from the
passages which I have cited that in both cases the temporary absence of the
detainee in the care and custody of the Gardai, even where he was not in what
could be described as a “convenient place”, did not, in the
particular circumstances, bring the detention to an end.
24. I
would allow the appeal and substitute for the order of the High Court an order
allowing the cause shown and discharging the conditional order of Habeas Corpus.
25. I
fully agree with the judgment which has been given by the Chief Justice, both
as to the lawfulness of the detention of the Applicant and as to the fact that
the appeal should be allowed. I write very briefly only on the question of the
mootness of the point decided. Clearly any consideration of this issue is, in
the context of the present appeal obiter. As the Chief Justice points out the
correctness of the decision of this Court in
Re
Zwann
[1981]
IR 395 was not argued. It would not be appropriate to deliver a dissenting
judgment.
26. It
seems at least possible that the judgment
in
Zwann
is
susceptible
to
misunderstanding. The Chief Justice is undoubtedly correct when he says that
the passage quoted by him from page 169 of the judgment of Walsh J in
State
(Browne) v Feran
[1967]
IR 147 had no application to the facts which were before the court in
Zwann.
That passage deals with the power of the Court to ensure the recommittal to
detention of a person who has been erroneously released. No such question
arose in
Zwann.
It is not clear, however, that O’Higgins C.J., at page 401 of his
judgment had that passage in mind, though it certainly commences on page 169,
which is the page citation given in the judgment. It seems to me that
O’Higgins C.J. may have been referring to an earlier passage in the
judgment of Walsh J, where the latter learned judge had treated at length the
proper appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court, the actual point to which
the judgment in
Zwann.
was directed.
27. Whether
the passage in
Zwann
is liable to misinterpretation - and admittedly the citation is ambiguous - the
point of substance remains. I agree that it merits considered treatment on
another occasion. On that future occasion, it may be opportune to have regard
to the case of
Condon
v Minister for Labour
[1981] IR 62.