BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Allpress & Ors v R. [2009] EWCA Crim 8 (20 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/8.html Cite as: [2009] 2 Cr App R (S) 58, [2009] EWCA Crim 8, [2009] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 58, [2009] Lloyd's Rep FC 242, [2009] Crim LR 363 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
200006003 D2 200103019 D2 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WOOLWICH CROWN COURT,
SOUTHWARK CROWN COURT, CARDIFF CROWN COURT
AND BIRMINGHAM CROWN COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
MRS JUSTICE RAFFERTY DBE
and
MR JUSTICE MADDISON
____________________
SYLVIA ALLPRESS DEBORAH SYMEOU MIGUEL CASAL PAUL WINTER MORRIS STEPHEN MARTIN |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
||
R |
Respondent |
____________________
A Bird and D Connolly for the Prosecution in the case of Allpress
T Owen QC and A Bodnar for the Defence
A Bird and D Connolly for the Prosecution in the case of Symeou
T Owen QC and A Bodnar for the Defence
D Farrell QC for the Prosecution in the case of Casal
A M Shaw QC and P Lawton for the Defence
A Bird for the Prosecution in the case of Morris
Z Ali and N Rimmer for the Defence
D Aubrey QC and R Griffiths for the Prosecution in the case of Martin
Hearing dates: 25 November 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
"Where any payment or other award in connection with drug trafficking is received jointly by two or more persons acting as principals to a drug trafficking offence as defined in section 1(3) of the Drug Trafficking Act 1994, does the value of each person's proceeds of drug trafficking within the meaning of section 4(1)(b) of that Act include the whole of the value of such payment or award?"
"1. Has the defendant (D) benefited from the relevant criminal conduct?
2. If so, what is the value of the benefit D has so obtained?
3. What sum is recoverable from D?"
Summary of the appeals
"The defendant acted as courier, taking parcels of money from La Gran Columbia to TTT Money Corp. Over the indictment period the defendant carried parcels of cash totalling £9,842,949.99 in value.
The defendant was paid a total of £66,148 in wages and disbursements by Carranza-Reyes. To the knowledge of the prosecution he received no other payment or reward for the services which he provided to the money transfer operation save that he ran his café business from the premises."
May and others: General principles
"12. In the trio of cases recently decided by the House of Lords a number of matters were made plain:
(1) The legislation is intended to deprive the defendants of the benefit they have gained from the relevant conduct within the limits of their available means. It does not operate by way of fine: May, paragraph 48(1); Jennings, paragraph 13.
(2) The benefit gained is the total value of the property or pecuniary advantage gained, not the particular defendant's net profit: May, paragraph 48(1).
(3) In considering what is the value of the benefit which the defendant has obtained, the court should focus on the language of the statute and apply its ordinary meaning (subject to any statutory definition) to the facts of the case: May, paragraph 48(3) and (4); Jennings paragraph 13.
(4) "Obtained" means obtained by the relevant defendant: Jennings, paragraph 14.
(5) A defendant's acts may contribute significantly to property or to a pecuniary advantage being obtained without that defendant obtaining it: Jennings, paragraph 14.
(6) Where two or more defendants obtain property jointly, each is to be regarded as obtaining the whole of it. Where property is received by one conspirator, what matters is the capacity in which he receives it, that is, whether for his own personal benefit, or on behalf of others, or jointly on behalf of himself and others. This has to be decided on the evidence: Green, paragraph 15. By parity of reasoning, two or more defendants may or may not obtain a joint pecuniary advantage; it depends on the facts."
"In that case the appellant had bought five consignments of drugs from a Hong Kong supplier and sold them on to an African buyer, from whom in each case he had received the purchase price which he had paid on to the supplier. The proceeds of sale, the court of appeal held (p 102), were not profit made in the sale but the sale price. The court regarded as clear (p 104) that where there is a chain of contracts each purchase price is a payment. The court went on to observe, obiter (p 104), that this result could not be avoided by treating the intermediary as a postman, and that those acting as a conduit should not be treated differently. But this, with respect, is more problematical: under the 1986 Act the first question was always whether, on the facts (and allowing permissible inferences) the defendant had benefited by the receipt of any payment or other reward, which a mere intermediary might possibly not…"
"R v Simpson (David) [1998] 2 Cr App R (S) 111 is a more difficult case. Simpson pleaded guilty to conspiring to posses the proceeds of drug trafficking. He had made five trips to Ireland taking with him a total of £2.5m, the proceeds of drug trafficking. He had been paid £25-30,000 for each trip and on arrest en route to Dublin had £540,000 with him. The trial judge found that he had benefited from drug trafficking to the extent of £3m. He assessed the proceeds of drug trafficking (p 116) as equivalent to the aggregate value of the drug deals and not the aggregate value of the rewards paid to the money launderers for their money laundering, basing himself on R v Simons above. The court of appeal, following R v Banks, above, accepted (pp 117-118) that there might be multiple recovery for the same sum passed through the hands of successive dealers, but found no reason ( p 118) to construe the definition of proceeds of drug trafficking as requiring as a pre-condition that property or other rewards should pass to a defendant. It may be agreed that words, not in the statute, should not be read into it. But the question under sections 2(3) and 4(1) of the 1994 Act is whether a defendant has received any payment or other reward in connection with drug trafficking, and this would ordinarily require a payment or reward to him, whether on his own or jointly."
"D ordinarily obtains property if in law he owns it, whether alone or jointly, which would ordinarily connote a power of disposition or control, as where a person directs a payment or conveyance of property to someone else. He ordinarily obtains a pecuniary advantage if (among other things) he evades a liability to which he is personally subject. Mere couriers or custodians or other very minor contributors to an offence, rewarded by a specific fee and having no interest in the property bought with the proceeds of sale, are unlikely to be found to have obtained that profit. It may be otherwise with money launderers."
"In its opinion in R v May, the committee endeavoured to explore the meaning of section 71(4) [of CJA 1988]. It refers, without repetition, to what it there said. …The focus must be and remain on the language of the subsection. The committee regards the meaning of the subsection as in substance the same as the equivalent provisions of the drug trafficking legislation…the rationale of the confiscation regime is that the defendant is deprived of what he has gained or its equivalent. He cannot, and should not, be deprived of what he had never obtained or its equivalent, because that is a fine. This must ordinarily mean that he has obtained property so as to own it, whether alone or jointly, which would ordinarily connote a power of disposition or control, as where a person directs a payment or conveyance of property to someone else."
Arguments for a different approach in cases of money laundering
Money Laundering Offences – a special category?
CJA 1988, s93A (Assisting another to retain the benefit of criminal conduct) |
CJA 1988, s93B (Acquisition, possession or use of proceeds of criminal conduct) |
CJA 1988, s93C (Concealing or transferring proceeds of criminal conduct) |
DTA 1994, s49 (Concealing or transferring proceeds of drug trafficking) |
DTA 1994, s50 (Assisting another person to retain the benefit of drug trafficking) |
DTA 1994, s51 (Acquisition, possession or use of proceeds of drug trafficking) |
POCA 2002, s 327 (Concealing criminal property, etc.,) |
POCA 2002, s328 (Being concerned in an arrangement facilitating the acquisition, retention, use or control of criminal property) |
POCA 2002, s329 (Acquisition, use and possession of criminal property) |
Terrorism Act 2000, s15 (Fund raising for the purposes of terrorism) |
Terrorism Act 2000, s16 (Use and possession of money or other property for the purposes of terrorism) |
Terrorism Act 2000, s 17 (Being concerned in an arrangement by which money or other property is to be made available to another which may be used for the purposes of terrorism) |
Terrorism Act 2000, s18 (Being concerned in an arrangement facilitating the retention or control by or on behalf of another person of terrorist property) |
The legal nature of cash
"In most cases money cannot be followed. When sovereigns or banknotes are paid over as currency, so far as the payer is concerned, they cease ipso facto to be the subjects of specific title as chattels. If a sovereign or banknote be offered in payment it is, under ordinary circumstances, no part of the duty of the person receiving it to enquire into title. The reason of this is that chattels of such a kind form part of what the law recognises as currency, and treats as passing from hand to hand in point, not merely of possession, but of property. It would cause great inconvenience to commerce if in this class of chattel an exception were not made to the general requirement of the law as to title."
"But the exception is not extended beyond the limits which necessity imposes. If money in a bag is stolen, and can be identified in the form in which it was stolen, it can be recovered in specie. Even if it has been expended by the person who has wrongfully taken it in purchasing some particular asset, that asset, if capable of being earmarked as purchased with the money, can be claimed by the true owner of the money. This is a principle not merely of equity, but of the common law."
CJA 1988 and DTA 1994
"For the purposes of this Part of this Act a person benefits from an offence if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with its commission and his benefit is the value of the property so obtained."
"For the purposes of this Act, a person has benefited from drug trafficking if he has at any time (whether before or after the commencement of this Act) received any payment or other reward in connection with drug trafficking carried on by him or another person."
"(4) Subject to the following provisions of this section, for the purposes of this Part of this Act the value of property (other than cash) in relation to any person holding the property-
(a)where any other person holds an interest in the property, is-
(i) the market value of the first-mentioned person's beneficial interest in the property less
(ii) the amount required to discharge any encumbrance (other than a charging order) on that interest; and
(b) in any other case, is its market value.
(5) References in this Part of this Act to the value at any time (referred to in subsection (6) below as "the material time") of any property obtained by a person as a result of or in connection with the commission of an offence are references to-
(a) the value of the property to him when he obtained it adjusted to take account of subsequent changes in the value of money; or
(b) where subsection (6) below applies, the value there mentioned,
whichever is the greater.
(6) If at the material time he holds-
(a) the property which he obtained (not being cash); or
(b) property which, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly represents in his hands the property which he obtained,
the value referred to in subsection (5)(b) above is the value to him at the material time of the property mentioned in paragraph (a) above or, as the case may be, of the property mentioned in paragraph (b) above so far as it represents the property which he obtained, but disregarding any charging order."
DTA 1994 s7(1), (2) and (3) contained similar provisions.
"But the question under 2(3) and 4(1) of the 1994 Act is whether a defendant has received any payment or other reward in connection with drug trafficking, and this will ordinarily require a payment or reward to him, whether on his own or jointly."
POCA 2002
"(4) A person benefits from conduct if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with the conduct.
(5) If a person obtains a pecuniary advantage as a result of or in connection with conduct, he is to be taken to obtain as a result of or in connection with the conduct a sum of money equal to the value of the pecuniary advantage.
(6) References to property or a pecuniary advantage obtained in connection with conduct include references to property or a pecuniary advantage obtained both in that connection and some other.
(7) If a person benefits from conduct his benefit is the value of the property obtained."
"(1) Property is all property wherever situated and includes-
(a) money;
(b) all forms of real or personal property;
(c) things in action or intangible or incorporeal property.
(2) The following rules apply in relation to property –
(a) property is held by a person if he holds an interest in it;
(b) property is obtained by a person if he obtains an interest in it;
(c) property is transferred by one person to another if the first one transfers or grants an interest in it to the second;
(d) references to property held by a person include references to property invested in his trustee in bankruptcy…
(e) references to an interest held by a person beneficially in property include reference to an interest which would be held by him beneficially if the property were not so vested;
(f) references to an interest, in relation to land in England and Wales or Northern Ireland, are to any legal estate or equitable interest or power;
…
(h) references to an interest, in relation to property other than land, include references to a right (including a right to possession)."
"Sections 79-81 set out how the Court is to work out the value of property held by a person, the value of property obtained from criminal conduct and the value of a tainted gift. These sections broadly reproduce the property valuation principles set out in the earlier legislation."
"…there is no doubt that a bailor, who has delivered goods to a bailee to keep them on account of the bailor, may still treat the goods as being in his own possession, and can maintain trespass against a wrong doer who interferes with them. It was argued, however, that this was a mere legal or constructive possession of the goods, and that in the Bills of Sale Act the word "possession" was used in a popular sense, and meant actual or manual possession. We do not agree with this argument. It seems to us that goods which have been delivered to a baileee to keep for the bailor, such as a gentleman's plate delivered to his banker, or his furniture warehoused at the Pantechnicon, would, in a popular sense, as well as in a legal sense, be said to be still in his possession."
"Bailment eludes precise definition because the term covers a host of legal relationships which have as a common denominator only that one is in possession of another's chattel. Possession is the salient feature, but the forms and incidents of bailment are miscellaneous…The bailment may be for the benefit of the bailor e.g., a deposit, or for that of the bailee, e.g., a loan."
The cash courier
The cash custodian
The money launderer through the banking system
Postscript