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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Reynolds v. Procurator Fiscal [2002] ScotHC 2 (14 February, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2002/2.html Cite as: [2002] ScotHC 2 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Kirkwood Lord Nimmo Smith Lord Weir
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Appeal No: 1858/00 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD KIRKWOOD in NOTE OF APPEAL to the Competency and Relevancy by SHAUN GEORGE REYNOLDS Appellant; against PROCURATOR FISCAL, Linlithgow Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: Shead; Adams Whyte
Respondent: S. Woolman, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent
14 February 2002
"The Court in respect that the accused SHAUN GEORGE REYNOLDS has failed to appear to answer the foregoing complaint after being duly cited/ordained to appear at this diet, grants warrant to apprehend the said accused".
The trial diet, which had been fixed for 30 June, did not take place, the case not being called. The warrant was duly executed and the appellant appeared from custody on 14 July. On that date a new trial diet was fixed for 18 August and an intermediate diet was fixed for 26 July, the appellant being remanded in custody. At the new intermediate diet on 26 July the appellant's solicitor tendered a plea to the competency of the proceedings. The court continued the intermediate diet and a debate took place on 2 August.
"150.-(1) This section applies where the accused in a summary prosecution fails to appear at any diet of which he has received intimation, or to which he has been cited other than a diet which, by virtue of section 148(5) of this Act, he is not required to attend.
(2) The court may adjourn the proceedings to another diet, and order the accused to attend at such diet, and appoint intimation of the diet to be made to him.
(3) The court may grant warrant to apprehend the accused."
"(2) Where at an intermediate diet the court concludes that the case is unlikely to proceed to trial on the date assigned for the trial diet, the court -
(a) shall, unless having regard to previous proceedings in the case it
considers it inappropriate to do so, postpone the trial diet; and
(b) may fix a further intermediate diet.
(3) Subject to subsection (2) above, the court may, if it considers it appropriate to do so, adjourn an intermediate diet."
"It is a cardinal rule of our criminal procedure that a criminal diet is, and must be made, peremptory, and that, if the diet is not called or duly adjourned or continued on the date in the citation, the instance falls (Hume, vol. ii, 263, 264; Alison, vol. ii, 343, 344; Macdonald, (4th ed), 471). The rule has again and again been rigorously enforced, its non-observance being treated as involving a fundamental nullity requiring that any conviction which has followed should be quashed."
In summary proceedings trial diets and intermediate diets are creatures of statute and the common law does not provide authority for the holding of diets in summary cases (Vannet v. Milligan 1998 S.C.C.R. 305). Intermediate diets were introduced in 1980 with a view to avoiding the waste of court time and inconvenience to the public caused by cases not proceeding at trial diets which had been fixed. Section 150(1) and (3) of the 1995 Act provides that if the accused in a summary prosecution fails to appear at a diet which he is required to attend, the court "may grant warrant to apprehend the accused", but the section, which is not restricted to intermediate diets, does not contain any reference to the effect on the court proceedings of granting a warrant. In particular, there is no provision stating what effect, if any, the granting of a warrant at an intermediate diet is to have on the trial diet. If it had been intended that the granting of a warrant at an intermediate diet would have the effect of discharging the trial diet a specific provision to that effect could have been inserted. The advocate depute submitted that once a warrant had been granted it could not be known when the accused would be able to be apprehended and that was put forward as the reason why the grant of the warrant should have the effect of automatically discharging the trial diet.