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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Rostron & Anor, R. v [2003] EWCA Crim 2206 (16 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/2206.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Crim 2206 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JACK
SIR RICHARD ROUGIER
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R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
TERRY ROSTRON AND JOHN MARK COLLINSON |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS K HARGREAVES appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"The prosecution case, as you know, is based on the evidence of the golf club professional. He has been there 30 years and can be presumed to know the rules of the club. His evidence was that, under the rules or the practice that was carried out on the course, if you cannot find your ball because you have driven it into the lake, for example, you have had your five minutes to look for it and you cannot find it, not surprisingly, you are deemed to have surrendered it to the club, and so it becomes the property of the club. Of course, as the golf professional said to you, if you find somebody else's ball conveniently on the course, the club do not mind if you pick that up and use it as your own. Because you are there legitimately on the course, you have paid your sub or you have paid your money for the day and you are legitimately playing golf. But it is a quite different matter if you are on the course, walking the course, and you are not playing golf and have no permission to be there. Then there is no licence, he said, for you to pick up a ball and appropriate it, as the lawyers call it. So, much then for the ownership point."
That, of course, is only a reference to the way in which the prosecution case was presented.
"The defence ... say ... that the golf balls did not belong to the golf club; that they had been abandoned by the golfers and therefore the defendants were perfectly entitled to go in and pick them up and treat them as their own to sell to others."
That, indeed, was the defence presented, supported not only by evidence from the defendants themselves, but by others who were called on their behalf.
"Property shall be regarded as belonging to any person having possession or control of it, or having in it any proprietary right or interest (not being an equitable interest arising only from an agreement to transfer or grant an interest)."
"The simple question in the case ... Was there evidence to justify the conviction for theft of those balls by the appellant?"
That also seems to us to be the first and central question to be answered in the present case.
"One must observe at this stage that it is difficult to see how the appellant could genuinely have believed the golf balls had been abandoned. No doubt they had been abandoned by their original owner, but as every law student learns when studying the criminal law, on the authority of a well-known case called Hibbert and McKiernon, for the purposes of theft the owners of a golf courses are regarded as having the property and control of lost balls for their own purposes."