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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 >> Twigg v R. [2019] EWCA Crim 1553 (13 September 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2019/1553.html Cite as: [2019] WLR(D) 512, [2020] Crim LR 174, [2019] EWCA Crim 1553, [2020] RTR 10, [2019] WLR 6533, [2019] 1 WLR 6533 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT DERBY
HHJ SHANT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JULIAN KNOWLES
and
SIR JOHN ROYCE
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TWIGG |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Mr Andrew Vout (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12 July 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Singh:
Introduction
The Facts
Grounds of Appeal
The Respondent's Submissions
Material legislation
"(1) If a person causes the death of another person by driving a mechanically propelled vehicle on a road or other public place without due care and attention, or without reasonable consideration for other persons using the road or place, and—
…
(ba) he has in his body a specified controlled drug and the proportion of it in his blood or urine at that time exceeds the specified limit for that drug,
…
he is guilty of an offence."
"(1) In the course of an investigation into whether a person has committed an offence under section 3A … of this Act a constable may, subject to the following provisions of this section and section 9 of this Act, require him—
(a) to provide two specimens of breath for analysis by means of a device of a type approved by the Secretary of State, or
(b) to provide a specimen of blood or urine for a laboratory test.
…
(2) A constable may make a requirement under this section to provide specimens of breath only if—
(a) the requirement is made at a police station or a hospital,
(b) the requirement is imposed in circumstances where section 6(5) of this Act applies, or
(2C) Where a constable has imposed a requirement on the person concerned to co-operate with a relevant breath test at any place, he is entitled to remain at or near that place in order to impose on him there a requirement under this section.
(3) A requirement under this section to provide a specimen of blood or urine can only be made at a police station or at a hospital; and it cannot be made at a police station unless—
(a) the constable making the requirement has reasonable cause to believe that for medical reasons a specimen of breath cannot be provided or should not be required, or
(b) specimens of breath have not been provided elsewhere and at the time the requirement is made a device or a reliable device of the type mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above is not available at the police station or it is then for any other reason not practicable to use such a device there, or
(bb) a device of the type mentioned in subsection (1)(a) above has been used (at the police station or elsewhere) but the constable who required the specimens of breath has reasonable cause to believe that the device has not produced a reliable indication of the proportion of alcohol in the breath of the person concerned, or
(bc) as a result of the administration of a preliminary drug test, the constable making the requirement has reasonable cause to believe that the person required to provide a specimen of blood or urine has a drug in his body, or
(c) the suspected offence is one under section 3A, 4 or 5A of this Act and the constable making the requirement has been advised by a medical practitioner or a registered health care professional that the condition of the person required to provide the specimen might be due to some drug;
but may then be made notwithstanding that the person required to provide the specimen has already provided or been required to provide two specimens of breath.
(4) If the provision of a specimen other than a specimen of breath may be required in pursuance of this section the question whether it is to be a specimen of blood or a specimen of urine and, in the case of a specimen of blood, the question who is to be asked to take it shall be decided (subject to subsection (4A)) by the constable making the requirement.
(6) A person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to provide a specimen when required to do so in pursuance of this section is guilty of an offence.
(7) A constable must, on requiring any person to provide a specimen in pursuance of this section, warn him that a failure to provide it may render him liable to prosecution." (Emphasis added)
"…(2) Evidence of the proportion of alcohol or any drug in a specimen of breath, blood or urine provided by or taken from the accused shall, in all cases (including cases where the specimen was not provided or taken in connection with the alleged offence), be taken into account and, subject to subsection (3) below, it shall be assumed that the proportion of alcohol in the accused's breath, blood or urine at the time of the alleged offence was not less than in the specimen…
(4) A specimen of blood shall be disregarded unless-
(a) it was taken from the accused with his consent and either—
(i) in a police station by a medical practitioner or a registered health care professional; or
(ii) elsewhere by a medical practitioner; or
(b) it was taken from the accused by a medical practitioner under section 7A of the Road Traffic Act 1988 and the accused subsequently gave his permission for a laboratory test of the specimen."
"(1) In any proceedings the court may refuse to allow evidence on which the prosecution proposes to rely to be given if it appears to the court that, having regard to all the circumstances, including the circumstances in which the evidence was obtained, the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it."
(2) Nothing in this section shall prejudice any rule of law requiring a court to exclude evidence."
Analysis
"In their Lordships' opinion the test to be applied in considering whether evidence is admissible is whether it is relevant to the matters in issue. If it is, it is admissible and the court is not concerned with how the evidence was obtained. While this proposition may not have been stated in so many words in any English case there are decisions which support it, and in their Lordships' opinion it is plainly right in principle."
"There can be no difference in principle for this purpose between a civil and a criminal case. No doubt in a criminal case the judge always has a discretion to disallow evidence if the strict rules of admissibility would operate unfairly against an accused. … If, for instance, some admission of some piece of evidence, e.g., a document, had been obtained from a defendant by a trick, no doubt the judge might properly rule it out."
"Outside this limited field in which for historical reasons the function of the trial judge extended to imposing sanctions for improper conduct on the part of the prosecution before the commencement of the proceedings in inducing the accused by threats, favour or trickery to provide evidence against himself, your Lordships should, I think, make it clear that the function of the judge at a criminal trial as respects the admission of evidence is to ensure that the accused has a fair trial according to law. It is no part of a judge's function to exercise disciplinary powers over the police or prosecution as respects the way in which evidence to be used at the trial is obtained by them. If it was obtained illegally there will be a remedy in civil law; if it was obtained legally but in breach of the rules of conduct for the police, this is a matter for the appropriate disciplinary authority to deal with. What the judge at the trial is concerned with is not how the evidence sought to be adduced by the prosecution had been obtained, but with how it is used by the prosecution at the trial."
"… The fairness of a trial according to law is not all one-sided; it requires that those who are undoubtedly guilty should be convicted as well as that those about whose guilt there is any reasonable doubt should be acquitted. However much the judge may dislike the way in which a particular piece of evidence was obtained before proceedings were commenced, if it is admissible evidence probative of the accused's guilt it is no part of his judicial function to exclude it for this reason."
"The same applies to the use of material [in the sense of real] evidence obtained directly as a result of torture; the use of such evidence obtained by treatment which is contrary to Article 3 but falls short of torture is not, on the other hand, contrary to Article 6 unless it is shown that the breach of Article 3 had a bearing on the outcome of the proceedings, that is, had an impact on the conviction or sentence."
"It would, it seems to me, be a most extraordinary consequence if, where the Act of 1972 lays down a careful and statutory procedure for requiring a suspected motorist to provide specimens of breath and for analysing them and presenting them before a court, it is possible to disregard that procedure altogether. I cannot believe that that was the intention of the legislature."
"In my judgment, it is plain that section 10(2) is referring to specimens taken in accordance with the statutory procedure laid down under section 8 of the Act. There must be read into the section as implicit in it, after the words 'specimen of breath, blood or urine provided by the accused', the words 'pursuant to the provisions of this Act.' That must include a reference in particular, to the procedure laid down under section 8 of the Act. So read, in my judgment, section 10 of the Act takes effect in a sensible manner and precludes any of the startling consequences which flow from Mr Lofthouse's argument [for the Prosecution]. It follows that I, for my part, am unable to accept Mr Lofthouse's primary submission made in response to Mr Sellick's argument".
"Apart from the detailed provisions of the Act, there is nothing in Morris v Beardmore [1981] AC 446 which supports the general principle that conviction for an offence under section 6(1) will be invalid if the evidence by which it is proved has been obtained unlawfully."
"In the present case … the offence of which the accused now stands convicted is not the offence of failing to provide a specimen of breath. It is the offence of driving with excess alcohol in his breath, and the specimen was only evidence, important but not in itself conclusive, tending to show he had committed that offence. Moreover it was 'evidence subsequently obtained from the accused himself relating to an offence that [had] already been committed by him,' and as such it would be capable of falling with[in] the judge's exclusionary jurisdiction."
"It is a well established rule of English law, which was recognised in R v Sang, that (apart from confessions as to which special considerations apply) any evidence which is relevant is admissible even if it has been obtained illegally."
He then cited the passage in Kuruma which we have already quoted above. Lord Fraser therefore rejected the submission that the evidence was inadmissible. In those circumstances he did not find it necessary to place any reliance on the provision of section 10(2) of the 1972 Act that evidence of the proportion of alcohol in a specimen of breath "shall, in all cases, be taken into account …", which is similar to section 15(2) of the RTOA 1988. He said:
"As at present advised, I do not think those words can make evidence admissible if it would not be admissible under the general law. I am inclined to read them as referring only to a specimen 'provided pursuant to the provisions of this Act.' "
"A constable must, on requiring any person to provide a specimen in pursuance of this section, warn him that a failure to provide it may render him liable to prosecution."
"The effect of Robert Goff LJ's reasoning is, quite clearly, that the results of the breath, blood or urine test are only admissible on a prosecution for driving with excess alcohol if the procedural requirements of what are now sections 7 and 8 of the Road Traffic Act 1988 have been fully complied with. His conclusion at p 361B as to the correct construction of section 10(2) of the Road Traffic Act 1972 [now section 15(2) of the Road Traffic Offenders Act 1988] was necessary for the decision in the case, since the very argument mounted by the prosecutor was to the effect that the results of the second and third tests had been properly admitted by the justices even though the statutory procedure had been departed from. The conclusion reached by Robert Goff LJ was, accordingly, part of the ratio decidendi of his judgment."
"… It should be remembered that the legislation, contrary to the general traditions of the criminal law but for good and pressing social reasons, compels a suspected person to provide evidence against himself. It is, therefore, in our judgment, not surprising that a strict and compulsory code is laid down and a set of pre-conditions which must be fulfilled before any specimen produced by the defendant, which may condemn him at the hearing of the charge against him, can be adduced in evidence: no matter that there may be some instances where breach of the code occasions no discernible prejudice."
"There were therefore two different causes possibly for the defendant's condition of which in my judgment the constable had to be made directly aware. …
When section 8(3)(c) was enacted, I have not the slightest doubt, Parliament intended that there should be a clear indication from a doctor to a police officer at a police station in circumstances such as this of the doctor's view as to the possible cause of a defendant's condition as found by him at the police station – by a clear indication I mean a clear oral statement by the doctor to the police officer of his opinion. Here obviously there was none."
"Section 7 of the Road Traffic Act 1988 does not in terms provide that a failure to comply with section 7(3) has the consequence that the results of the analysis of a blood sample cannot be given in evidence. That is why the appellant's advocate at trial and the district judge approached the matter through section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 that is in contrast, for example, with the provisions of section 54 of the Road Traffic Offenders Act 1988 [this appears to be a typographical error for section 15(4)]. That provides that the specimen of blood should be disregarded, unless it was taken with the consent of an accused and was taken by a medical practitioner or registered healthcare professional. The general position in English law is that evidence obtained illegally remains admissible, even in criminal cases. That is why its exclusion is argued by reference to section 78 of the 1984 Act. In the overwhelming majority of cases it may be that a failure to comply with section 7(3) of the Road Traffic Act 1988, before requiring an accused to provide a specimen of blood, will have the result that all evidence of that specimen will be excluded. But it is not necessarily so. The facts that this case, where on any view the constable concerned bent over backwards to try to assist the appellant in difficult circumstances, provides an example where exclusion under section 78 would not have been appropriate."
Conclusion