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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Barnes (as former Court Appointed Receiver) v The Eastenders Group & Anor (Rev 1) [2014] UKSC 26 (08 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2014/26.html Cite as: [2015] AC 1, [2014] BPIR 867, [2014] UKSC 26, [2015] 1 AC 1, [2014] Lloyd's Rep FC 461, [2014] 2 Cr App R 19, [2014] 3 All ER 1, [2014] WLR(D) 194, [2014] 2 WLR 1269, [2014] HRLR 15 |
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Easter Term
[2014] UKSC 26
On appeal from: [2012] EWCA Crim 2436
Barnes (as former Court Appointed Receiver) (Appellant) v The Eastenders Group and another (Respondents)
Appellant David Perry QC Martin Evans (Instructed by Peters & Peters Solicitors LLP) |
1st Respondent Geraint Jones QC Marc Glover (Instructed by Rainer Hughes Solicitors) |
|
2nd Respondent Michael Parroy QC Rupert Jones (Instructed by CPS Proceeds of Crime Unit) |
LORD TOULSON (with whom Lady Hale, Lord Kerr, Lord Wilson and Lord Hughes agree)
Introduction
"Every natural or legal person is entitled to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions. No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law and by the general principles of international law.
The preceding provisions shall not, however, in any way impair the right of a State to enforce such laws as it deems necessary to control the use of property in accordance with the general interest or to secure the payment of taxes or other contributions or penalties."
i) The CPS was to pay the receiver's remuneration and disbursements, subject to an assessment by the taxing authority of the Crown Court under the Criminal Procedure Rules.
ii) The CPS was to pay the legal costs incurred by the receiver in the exercise of his functions as receiver.
iii) The parties were to lodge further evidence and submissions as to whether sums previously retained by the receiver should be repaid to the companies. (There is a potential argument that some of the expenses incurred by the receiver in the course of running the companies would have been incurred by them in any event, but on this appeal the court has not been concerned with points of that kind.)
iv) The CPS was to pay the companies' litigation costs in respect of the various applications relating to the receivership order.
Issues
Facts
"It is through these companies that the non-duty and non-VAT paid alcohol is sold onto the legitimate market. It is probable that these companies also conduct legitimate trade, in the sense that they buy and sell duty and VAT paid goods as well. However I do not know the ratio of legitimate to illegitimate activity."
"The remuneration and expenses of the Receiver shall be paid out of the Receivership Property and in accordance with the letter of agreement as exhibited to the witness statement of Alan Brown made on 3 December 2010."
"We are writing to enquire whether you would be prepared to act as a management receiver pursuant to section 48 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2010 in the above case of which the Crown Prosecution Service has conduct.
You will appreciate that your appointment is dependent on an order being made by the Crown Court. This letter sets out the terms upon which we propose to seek your appointment. These terms will form part of the order for your appointment. In addition, your appointment is subject to the Framework Agreement between the Crown Prosecution Service and the panel of approved receivers, to the provisions of Part 60 of the Criminal Procedure Rules and to the 'Capewell Guidelines' laid down by the Court of Appeal in Capewell v Customs & Excise Commissioners [2005] 1 All ER 900."
"It is alleged that much of the fraudulent activity has been facilitated through a company known as Eastenders Cash and Carry plc and various subsidiary companies in Slough, Barking, Croydon, Birmingham and Coventry.
Clearly, the effective management of these companies and their stock is an urgent priority if you are appointed…The extent to which the companies can be allowed to be allowed to continue trading will clearly be of fundamental importance…given the urgent necessity to prevent any further fraudulent trading and loss to the Exchequer."
"Your remuneration costs and expenses are to be drawn from the assets of the defendants under your management in accordance with section 49(2)(d) of the Proceeds of Crime Act and the decision of the House of Lords in Capewell v HM Revenue & Customs [2007] UKHL 2. You are reminded that you will have a lien over the defendants' assets for payment of your fees and that the Crown Prosecution Service does not undertake to indemnify you in relation to your fees in the event that there are insufficient assets within the defendant's estate. Your remuneration, costs and expenses are to be paid in accordance with the Framework Agreement referred to above and any deviation must be agreed in writing with the Crown Prosecution Service."
"In the case of Management and Enforcement Receivers in criminal confiscation cases, the Receiver will be remunerated from the sums that they may realise from the sale of the assets over which they are appointed [subject to an immaterial exception]. To the extent [that] there is any shortfall, the Contracting Bodies will not agree to grant indemnities either in full or in part."
Statutory Framework
"1) If the court appoints a receiver under section 48 it may act under this section on the application of the person who applied for the restraint order.
2) The court may by order confer on the receiver the following powers in relation to any realisable property to which the restraint order applies -
a) power to take possession of the property;
b) power to manage or otherwise deal with the property;
c) power to start, carry on or defend any legal proceedings in respect of the property;
d) power to realise so much of the property as is necessary to meet the receiver's remuneration and expenses.
…
4) The court may by order authorise the receiver to do any of the following for the purpose of the exercise of his functions-
a) hold property;
b) enter into contracts;
c) sue and be sued;
d) employ agents;
e) execute powers of attorney, deeds or other instruments;
f) take any other steps the court thinks appropriate.
5) The court may order any person who has possession of realisable property to which the restraint order applies to give possession of it to the receiver.
…
8) The court must not –
a) confer the power mentioned in subsection (2) (b) or (d) in respect of property, or
b) exercise the power conferred on it by subsection (6) in respect of property.
unless it gives persons holding interests in the property a reasonable opportunity to make representations to it.
…
9) The court may order that a power conferred by an order under this section is subject to such conditions and exceptions as it specifies."
35. Section 61 provides:
"If a receiver appointed under section 48…-
a) takes action in relation to property which is not realisable property,
b) would be entitled to take the action if it were realisable property, and
c) believes on reasonable grounds that he is entitled to take the action,
he is not liable to any person in respect of any loss or damage resulting from the action, except so far as the loss or damage is caused by his negligence."
"(1) An appeal lies to the Supreme Court from a decision of the Court of Appeal on an appeal under section 65.
(2) An appeal under this section lies at the instance of any person who was a party to the proceedings before the Court of Appeal.
(3) On an appeal under this section the Supreme Court may –
i. confirm the decision of the Court of Appeal, or
ii. make such order as it believes is appropriate."
"Any amount due in respect of the remuneration and expenses of a receiver so appointed shall, if no sum is available to be applied in payment of it under section 81 (5) above, be paid by the prosecutor or, in a case where proceedings for an offence to which this Part of this Act applies are not instituted, by the person on whose application the receiver was appointed."
"(1) This rule applies where the Crown Court appoints a receiver under section 48 or 50 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002…
(2) The receiver may only charge for his services if the Crown Court-
a) so directs; andb) specifies the basis on which the receiver is to be remunerated.…
(4) The Crown Court may refer the determination of a receiver's remuneration to be ascertained by the taxing authority of the Crown Court…
(5) A receiver appointed under section 48 of the 2002 Act is to receive his remuneration by realising property in respect of which he is appointed, in accordance with section 49(2)(d) of the 2002 Act.
(6) A receiver appointed under section 50 of the 2002 Act is to receive his remuneration by applying to the magistrates' court officer for payment under section 55(4)(b) of the 2002 Act."
Domestic Case Law
"55. I entirely accept that an acquitted (or indeed unconvicted) defendant must for these purposes be treated as an innocent person… I cannot accept, however, that for this reason it must be regarded as disproportionate, still less arbitrary (another contention advanced by the respondents), to leave the defendant, against whom restraint and receivership orders have been made, uncompensated for such loss as they may have caused him – unless, of course, by establishing 'some serious fault' on the prosecutor's part he can bring himself within the strict requirements of section 89.
56. It is common ground that acquitted defendants are not, save in the most exceptional circumstances, entitled to compensation for being deprived of their liberty whilst on remand or indeed for any other heads of loss suffered through being prosecuted. In my judgment it is no more unfair, disproportionate or arbitrary that they should be uncompensated too for any adverse effects that restraint and receivership orders may have had upon their assets."
European Case Law
"the Court must determine whether a fair balance was struck between the demands of the general interest of the community and the requirements of the protection of the individual's fundamental rights. The search for this balance is inherent in the whole of the Convention and is also reflected in the structure of article 1."
"Having regard to these considerations, the Court is not persuaded that the applicant was required to bear an individual and excessive burden through having to fund the costs and expenses incurred by the receiver . . . It is true that the applicant was ultimately acquitted of the charges brought against him. However, it is equally true that at the time of the execution of the Restraint and Receivership Orders there was a case against him which required to be answered, and necessary steps had to be taken to preserve assets in respect of which he had more than a peripheral interest. In these circumstances, and having regard also to the absence of any arbitrariness in the impugned decisions, the Court does not consider that the authorities can be said to have failed to strike a fair balance between the applicant's property right and the general interests of the community."
The government in Andrews accepted that there had been an interference with the applicant's right to the peaceful enjoyment of his property. The applicant argued that there had been a deprivation of his property within the meaning of the second sentence of A1P1. The court considered that the initial seizure had been an exercise of control over the use of the property, in order to ensure that it would be available for payment of revenue owed by him in the event of his conviction, and that payment of the receiver's costs out of the property should be regarded as part of the exercise by the state of the rights reserved to it under the second paragraph of A1P1 and therefore served a legitimate aim. I have no difficulty with the court's view that there was a legitimate aim, but that is different from the question whether there was a deprivation of assets. The court seems to have regarded the payment of the receiver as money spent on the preservation of the applicant's property and therefore not a deprivation; in other words, expenditure of funds for the benefit of the property was not to be regarded as a deprivation. That would account for the court's emphasis on the fact that "the proper administration of the affairs of the company was obviously in the applicant's own interest" and that he was consulted by the receiver in the monitoring of the company. If so, that was a conclusion on the particular facts of that case, rather than a principle of law of general application, and its relevance was to the court's judgment about whether the applicant was required to bear an individual and excessive burden.
Judgment of Underhill J
"But the situation seems to me fundamentally different where the adverse effect on the third party is the result not of his sharing property rights with the alleged offender but of his property being treated, wrongly and without sufficient evidence, as property in which the alleged offender has an interest. It does not seem to me that the public interest justification endorsed in Hughes has any application to such a case: the third party's assets are simply confiscated to fund the execution of an order that should not have been made in the first place."
Judgment of Mitting and Edwards-Stuart JJ
1) Before assets could properly be made the subject of a receivership order, there must be reasonable cause to believe that the alleged offender had benefited from his criminal conduct (section 40(2)(b) of POCA) and there must be a good arguable case for treating particular assets as the realisable property of the defendant (CPS v Compton).
2) The first condition was not satisfied on either 6 or 23 December 2010 and the second was not satisfied on 23 December 2010.
3) It was true that deprivation of the companies' property to pay the remuneration and expenses of the receiver was authorised by law "in a superficial sense", in that it is a settled principle of receivership law that a receiver is entitled to be paid his remuneration and assets out of the assets he is appointed to receive and manage.
4) However, that proposition was subject to an important caveat: the conditions upon which a restraint order may be made and a receiver appointed must first be satisfied. If they are not, there is no lawful basis for the appointment of a receiver in respect of property belonging to an alleged offender, still less property belonging to a third person.
5) In order to determine the issue of lawfulness for the purpose of the second rule under A1P1, the court must look to the "underlying lawfulness of the receiver's appointment".
6) The bare fact that the receiver had been appointed by order of a court was not sufficient to authorise the deprivation: Frizen v Russia.
Judgment of Laws LJ
A1P1: discussion
"No one shall be deprived of his possessions except in the public interest and subject to the conditions provided for by law [and by the general principles of international law]."
As the court recognised, the reference to international law is irrelevant in the case of a taking by a state of the property of its own nationals. The critical questions are those addressed by Laws LJ: (1) whether the proposed taking is in accordance with "conditions provided for by law"; (2) if so, whether the measure relied upon to justify the taking has a legitimate aim; (3) if the first and second conditions are each satisfied, whether the taking strikes a fair balance between the general interest of the community and the requirements of the protection of the companies' right to peaceful enjoyment of their possessions.
Relationship between the receiver and the CPS
"the 'unjust' element in 'unjust enrichment' is simply a 'generalisation of all the factors which the law recognises as calling for restitution' [a citation from the judgment of Campbell J in Wasada Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales (No 2) [2003] NSWSC 987 at [16], quoting Mason & Carter, Restitution Law in Australia (1995), 59-60]. In other words, unjust enrichment is not an abstract moral principle to which the courts must refer when deciding cases; it is an organising concept that groups decided authorities on the basis that they share a set of common features, namely that in all of them the defendant has been enriched by the receipt of a benefit that is gained at the claimant's expense in circumstances that the law deems to be unjust. The reasons why the courts have held a defendant's enrichment to be unjust vary from one set of cases to another, and in this respect the law of unjust enrichment more closely resembles the law of torts (recognising a variety of reasons why a defendant must compensate a claimant for harm) than it does the law of contract (embodying the single principle that expectations engendered by binding promises must be fulfilled)."
"In English law, an enforceable contract may be formed by an exchange of a promise for a promise, or by the exchange of a promise for an act . . . but when one is considering the law of failure of consideration and of the quasi-contractual right to recover money on that ground, it is, generally speaking, not the promise which is referred to as the consideration, but the performance of the promise."
"Failure of the consideration for a payment . . . means that the state of affairs contemplated as the basis or reason for the payment has failed to materialise or, if it did exist, has failed to sustain itself."
"caution in judicial acceptance of any all-embracing theory of restitutionary rights and remedies founded upon a notion of 'unjust enrichment'. To the lawyer whose mind has been moulded by civilian influences, the theory may come first, and the source of the theory may be the writing of jurists not the decisions of judges. However, that is not the way in which a system based on case law develops; over time, general principle is derived from judicial decisions upon particular instances, not the other way around."
Disposal
Lessons for the future
"it is essential that the duty of candour laid upon any applicant for an order without notice is fully understood and complied with. It is not limited to an obligation not to misrepresent. It consists in a duty to consider what any other interested party would, if present, wish to adduce by way of fact, or to say in answer to the application, and to place that material before the judge. That duty applies to an applicant for a restraint order under POCA in exactly the same way as to any other applicant for an order without notice. Even in relatively small value cases, the potential of a restraint order to disrupt other commercial or personal dealings is considerable. The prosecutor may believe that the defendant is a criminal, and he may turn out to be right, but that has yet to be proved. An application for a restraint order is emphatically not a routine matter of form, with the expectation that it will routinely be granted. The fact that the initial application is likely to be forced into a busy list, with very limited time for the judge to deal with it, is a yet further reason for the obligation of disclosure to be taken very seriously. In effect the prosecutor seeking an ex parte order must put on his defence hat and ask himself what, if he were representing the defendant or a third party with a relevant interest, he would be saying to the judge, and, having answered that question, that is what he must tell the judge."
I would qualify that only by saying that it is not acceptable that such an application should be forced into a busy list, with very limited time for the judge to deal with it, except in the comparatively rare case of a true emergency application where there is literally no opportunity for the prosecution to give the court sufficient notice for any other arrangement to be made. In that case, the judge will need to consider what is the minimum required in order to preserve the situation until such time as the court has had an adequate opportunity to consider the evidence.
Order made under s 49(2)(d) of POCA and Crim.PR 60.6(5)
(1) Subject to the condition set out in (2) below, the receiver shall, in relation to any property to which the above receivership order is expressed to apply, have powers to realise so much of it as is necessary to meet his or her remuneration and expenses and to recover them out of the proceeds of its realisation.
Order made under s 49(9) of POCA
(2) The condition referred to in (1) above is that, in the event that it is hereafter determined, whether on appeal or by way of application for variation or discharge of this order, that any property to which the above receivership order is expressed to apply is not arguably held by the defendant and so should not have been made subject to the above receivership order, the powers in (1) above shall not extend to such property and, to the extent that in consequence the said powers do not enable the receiver to recover his remuneration and expenses in full or in part, the applicant for this order do pay him in respect of them.
LORD HUGHES