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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Aubeeluck v The State of Mauritius (Mauritius) [2010] UKPC 13 (21 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2010/13.html Cite as: [2010] UKPC 13 |
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[2010] UKPC 13
Privy Council Appeal No 0075 of 2009
JUDGMENT
Gangasing Aubeeluck v The State of Mauritius
From the Supreme Court of Mauritius
before
Lord Phillips
Lord Rodger
Lord Walker
Lord Brown
Lord Clarke
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
Lord Clarke
on
21 July 2010
Heard on 28 April 2010
Appellant Siddhartha Hawoldar Yanilla Moonshiram (Instructed by MA Law LLP) |
Respondent Satyajit Boolell DPP Mrs Sulakshna Beekarry (Instructed by Royds LLP) |
LORD CLARKE:
Introduction
The convictions
The sentences
The appeal to the Supreme Court
The grounds of appeal to the Judicial Committee
i) whether the delay of 11 years since the commission of the offences infringes the appellant's right to a fair hearing within a reasonable time under section 10 of the Constitution, such that the court should not now require him to serve a sentence of imprisonment;
ii) whether, having regard to the provisions of the Dangerous Drugs Act 2000, the application of the principle of 'la peine la plus douce' requires that he should not be required to serve such a sentence; and
iii) whether the sentence of three years imposed by the Magistrate and in effect upheld by the Supreme Court on appeal breaches the principle of proportionality enshrined in section 7 of the Constitution.
The Constitution
"2 Constitution is supreme law
This Constitution is the supreme law of Mauritius and if any other law is inconsistent with this Constitution, that other law shall, to the extent of the inconsistency, be void.
7 Protection from inhuman treatment
(1) No person shall be subjected to torture or to inhuman or degrading punishment or other such treatment.
10 Provisions to secure protection of law
(1) Where any person is charged with a criminal offence, then, unless the charge is withdrawn, the case shall be afforded a fair hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial court established by law."
The DDA 1986 and the DDA 2000
"28 Unlawful dealing with dangerous drugs
(1) Subject to section 38, every person who unlawfully -
(a) (i) has in his possession, smokes, consumes or administers to himself or to any other person any drug specified in subsection (2);
…
shall commit an offence and shall on conviction be liable to a fine which shall not exceed 5,000 rupees and to imprisonment for a term which shall not exceed 8 years;
(b) sells … any drug specified in subsection (2) shall commit an offence and shall on conviction be liable to a fine which shall not exceed 50,000 rupees and to penal servitude for a term which shall not exceed 12 years.
(2) This section shall apply to
…
(b) … gandia …"
"the use of –
(a) 'or' means that the penalties are to be inflicted alternatively;
(b) 'and' means that the penalties may be inflicted alternatively or cumulatively;
(c) 'together with' means that the penalties are to be inflicted cumulatively."
Section 11(1) of the Criminal Code provides that the punishment of penal servitude is imposed for life or for a minimum term of 3 years.
Proportionality
"In other words, though the state may impose punishment, the effect of that punishment must not be grossly disproportionate to what would have been appropriate."
"This does not mean that the judge or the legislator can no longer consider general deterrence or other penological purposes that go beyond the particular offender in determining a sentence, but only that the resulting sentence must not be grossly disproportionate to what the offender deserves."
As the Board sees it, that is the principle which the Supreme Court has correctly applied in the cases referred to in Bhinkah.
"The minimum penalty would be considered disproportionate in cases wherein 'the imposition of a mandatory minimum sentence would be startlingly or disturbingly inappropriate with respect to hypothetical cases which could be foreseen as likely to arise commonly' (Miller and Cockriell v R [1977] 2 SCR 680 per Laskin CJ) and 'where the minimum sentence would be disproportionate in relation to the degree of seriousness of the offence, with no exceptional circumstances available to the court to weigh down the scale (Madhub).
Applying these principles to the present case, we find that the minimum 5 year penalty under section 301A of the Criminal code is not disproportionate in itself but would be so, if indiscriminately applied without taking into account factors which would mitigate the seriousness of the offence for which the legislature regarded it important to impose a minimum ceiling. It would not be appropriate in all the foreseeable hypothetical cases likely to arise, where the minimum 5 year mandatory sentence would prove to be 'so excessive as to outrage standards of decency'; (Miller and Cockriell v R per Laskin CJ).
Delay
"18. If one asks the fundamental question, does the period which elapsed here between the appellant's arrest in April 1997 and the dismissal of his appeal to the Supreme Court on 20 January 2006 give ground for real concern as to whether this case has been heard and completed within a reasonable time, there can surely be only one answer: yes. Thus it is necessary for the respondent state to explain and justify what appears overall to be an excessive lapse of time. As Boolell makes clear, the Board is concerned particularly with, first, the complexity of the case, secondly, the conduct of the defendant, and thirdly, the manner in which the case has been dealt with by the state's administrative and judicial authorities. As already stated, this case involved absolutely no complexity; it was about as straightforward as any serious conspiracy can be. As for the conduct of the defendant, whilst it is plain that the appellant was entirely content for those proceedings to take their own leisurely course from beginning to end, there was no question of his engaging in the sort of reprehensible conduct which the Board found had contributed so largely to the even longer lapses of time in Boolell's case. There, as the Board observed at para 37, "the appellant was bent on dislocating the course of the trial and prolonging the proceedings by every means within his power".
20. Overall their Lordships feel driven to conclude that the judicial authorities here cannot sensibly be regarded as having honoured the reasonable time guarantee provided for by section 10 of the Constitution. True, the appellant was wholly complaisant in every successive delay which occurred: never once does he appear to have sought to hasten matters, for example by enquiring when he might finally expect to hear the result of his appeal. He was, of course, on bail at all times since 17 June 1998 and he seems to have been entirely content to postpone the final day of judgment, about which he can hardly have been optimistic. That, however, can provide no answer to the constitutional challenge. If it was no answer in Boolell (where the Board found "the conduct of the defendant was altogether reprehensible and contributed very largely to the lapse of time"), it certainly provides none here. It is to be acknowledged that the delay in Boolell was significantly longer even than in the present case – 12 years elapsed between Boolell's statements to the police under caution and his conviction by the Intermediate Court (his subsequent appeal to the Supreme Court being dismissed just 14 months later). It was, indeed, that quite extraordinary delay which impelled the finding there of a constitutional breach notwithstanding earlier authority that the defendant cannot ordinarily complain of delay of which he himself was the author. Again, however, the yet longer delay in Boolell's case obviously cannot serve to justify the passage of nearly nine years between this appellant's arrest and the dismissal of his appeal against conviction."
"[un]acceptable that the prison sentence imposed by the Intermediate Court should be put into operation some 15 years after the commission of the offence unless the public interest affirmatively required a custodial sentence, even at this stage."
The Board in Boolell set aside the sentence of six months imprisonment and substituted for it a fine of Rs 10,000. By contrast, in Elaheebocus the Board took the view that the appellant's criminality was very much greater than in Boolell and reduced the original sentence of 4 years by 6 months.
La peine la plus douce
CONCLUSION