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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 >> Beaumont, R. v [2014] EWCA Crim 1664 (18 July 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/1664.html Cite as: [2015] 1 Cr App R (S) 1, [2014] EWCA Crim 1664 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BONEY QC
(Sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
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LISA TRACEY BEAUMONT |
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(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Law appeared on behalf of the Crown
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MR JUSTICE HAMBLEN: On 29th July 2013, at Reading Crown Court, the appellant pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud. On 6th September 2013 she was sentenced by His Honour Judge Grainger to 14 months' imprisonment suspended for 18 months, with a three month curfew requirement and 200 hours unpaid work on each count concurrently. On 24th January 2014 the same judge imposed a confiscation order against the appellant in the sum of £17,675.57 to be paid within six months with a period in default of nine months' imprisonment. The judge also imposed a compensation order against the appellant in addition to the confiscation order in the sum of £17,675.57 to be paid to Insite Managed Services Ltd within 18 months. Her co-accused were Jarrod Spence and his partner, Christina Rowland. Jarrod Spence pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud and was sentenced to three years' imprisonment on each count concurrently. Christina Rowland pleaded guilty to two counts of fraud and was sentenced to three years' imprisonment on each count concurrently.
"(5) Subsection (6) applies if -
(a) the Crown Court makes both a confiscation order and an order for the payment of compensation under section 130 of the Sentencing Act against the same person in the same proceedings, and
(b) the court believes he will not have sufficient means to satisfy both the orders in full.
(6) In such a case the court must direct that so much of the compensation as it specifies is to be paid out of any sums recovered under the confiscation order; and the amount it specifies must be the amount it believes will not be recoverable because of the insufficiency of the person's means."
"What the Judge wanted to do, we are satisfied, was to achieve a result in which the defendant was not required to pay more than the sum she had stolen. That was the correct approach because there was here, unlike many other cases, no hint of a suggestion that the defendant's benefit, for the purposes of POCA 2002, exceeded what she had stolen from her employers. In particular, although this was, by statute, a criminal lifestyle case, because the defendant had been convicted of three or more offences from which she had benefited (section 75(2)(b) & 75(3)), there was no suggestion that any of the statutory assumptions available under section 10 ought to be applied in her case to show a benefit greater than the total of the thefts to which she pleaded guilty. Given that, we consider that if the judge had been afforded the opportunity to think about it, he would have regarded this as a clear case in which the interests of the losing employers should prevail over those of the taxpayer generally, so that, if legally possible, the defendant's ill-gotten gains should be disgorged in the direction of the losers rather than into the public purse. This was entirely possible legally. The route is signposted by subsections 13(5) and (6). What justice required in this case was an order under section 13(6) for the losers to be paid their compensation out of the confiscation order. That was open to the Judge, since on the evidence, Miss Bygrave did not have the means to pay both confiscation and compensation."
"The learned judge was not referred to the line of decisions in this Court where the Court has dealt with the question of when a compensation order will or may require a matrimonial home to be sold. In the case of Harrison (1980) 2 Cr App R (S) 313 (CA) this Court said that because of the complications involved with the matrimonial home, particularly when it was in joint names, as a general rule the matter should be left to the civil remedies of the injured party. In the case of Blackmore (1984) 6 Cr App R (S) 244 (CA) the Court said it was unreasonable to make a compensation order that would necessitate the sale of the matrimonial home where there was a large family involved that would have to be found accommodation. It again said that civil remedies were appropriate. In the case of Butt (1986) 8 Cr App R (S) 216 (CA) it was said that such an order was generally inappropriate, especially when it resulted in homelessness."
"In that kind of situation the courts have said on a number of occasions that it is inappropriate by way of compensation order to order the sale of a family house in this way. There may of course be exceptional circumstances where money obtained by fraud can be traced to an investment in the purchase of a house. Then it may be that different considerations would apply. But in ordinary circumstances this course should not be taken. There have been a series of decisions including that of Harrison ... Blackmore ... and Butt .... There is also a discussion of this court, Hackett ... decided on October 13, 1988, where Henry J giving the judgment of the court repeated the reasons that have always been emphasised by this Court why that kind of order should not be made."