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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Johnson v Westminster Magistrates' Court [2019] EWHC 1709 (Admin) (03 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2019/1709.html Cite as: [2020] Crim LR 458, [2020] 2 All ER 271, [2019] EWHC 1709 (Admin), [2019] 2 Cr App R 30, [2019] ACD 94, [2019] 1 WLR 6238, [2019] WLR 6238, [2019] WLR(D) 391 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE HON. MR JUSTICE SUPPERSTONE
____________________
ALEXANDER BORIS DE PFEFFEL JOHNSON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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WESTMINSTER MAGISTRATES' COURT |
Defendant |
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- and - |
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(1) BREXIT JUSTICE LIMITED (2) MARCUS BALL |
Interested Parties |
____________________
(instructed by BCL Solicitors LLP) for the Claimant
Jonathan Auburn (instructed by GLD) for the Defendant
Jason Coppel QC and Anthony Eskander
(instructed by Bankside Commercial) for the Interested Parties
Hearing date: 7 June 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Rafferty and Mr Justice Supperstone :
This is the judgment of the court:
Introduction
The facts alleged
i) that between 21 February 2016 and 23 June 2016 as a holder of public office namely a Member of Parliament and whilst acting as such the claimant wilfully neglected his duty and/or wilfully misconducted himself by endorsing and making statements which were false and misleading, without justification concerning the cost of European Union membership, thereby abusing public trust in his public office;
ii) that between 21 February 2016 and 8 May 2016 as a holder of public office, namely the Mayor of London and whilst acting as such, the claimant wilfully neglected his duty and/or wilfully misconducted himself by endorsing and making statements which were false and misleading, without justification, concerning the cost of European Union membership thereby abusing public trust in his public office;
iii) that between 18 April 2017 and 3 May 2017 as a holder of public office namely a Member of Parliament, and whilst acting as such, the claimant wilfully neglected his duty and/or wilfully misconducted himself by endorsing and making statements which were false and misleading, without justification, concerning the cost of European Union membership thereby abusing public trust in his public office.
Legal Framework
i) a public officer acting as such
ii) wilfully neglects to perform his duty and/or wilfully misconducts himself
iii) to such a degree as to amount to an abuse of the public's trust in the office holder
iv) without reasonable excuse or justification.
The decision of the DJ
"27. ACTING AS SUCH
33. I have considered Mr Darbishire's [counsel for the defendant] skilfully argued submissions but at this stage I am considering only whether there is prima facie evidence, which will be made available before trial, of the necessary ingredients of this aspect of the offence. I consider that the defence arguments set out above are trial issues to be determined following service of all the evidence. That stage has not yet been reached…
34. WILFULLY NEGLECTS TO PERFORM HIS DUTY/OR WILFULLY MISCONDUCTS HIMSELF
42. I do not accept [the Claimant's submissions] for the purpose of considering whether there is prima facie evidence of this aspect of the offence. I accept that the public offices held by Mr Johnson provide status but with that status comes influence and authority.
43. I am satisfied there is sufficient to establish prima facie evidence of an issue to be determined at trial of this aspect. I consider the arguments put forward on behalf of the proposed defendant to be trial issues."
Grounds of Challenge
The Parties' Submissions and Discussion
No public law challenge
"22. In any event [the lay magistrate] was obliged to come to a judicial conclusion on whether or not to issue either or both summonses, and that required a review of whether there were prima facie evidence of the ingredients of the common law offence. We have set them out. Had he conducted a rigorous analysis of the legal framework, he could not reasonably have concluded that there was such. …
26. This case shouted out for legal advice to a lay magistrate. That advice should have been that he should consider the letters of summer 2013 to which we have referred, the interstices of which would have led him to read back to letters of summer 2012. Such a course would have shown beyond peradventure that to issue those summonses would be Wednesbury unreasonable."
The threshold test
"(1) The magistrate must ascertain whether the allegation is an offence known to the law, and if so whether the essential ingredients of the offence are prima facie present; that the offence alleged is not time-barred; that the court has jurisdiction; and whether the informant has the necessary authority to prosecute.
(2) If so, generally the magistrate ought to issue the summons, unless there are compelling reasons not to do so – most obviously that the application is vexatious (which may involve the presence of an improper ulterior purpose and/or long delay); or is an abuse of process; or is otherwise improper.
…
(4) Whether the applicant has previously approached the police may be a relevant circumstance."
For example, a refusal by the police to proceed with the matter may demonstrate that it is hopeless.
"… [The magistrate] was obliged to come to a judicial conclusion on whether or not to issue either or both summonses, and that required a review of whether there were prima facie evidence of the ingredients of the common law offence. We have set them out. Had he conducted a rigorous analysis of the legal framework, he could not reasonably have concluded that there was such."
"The citizen enjoys the right to bring a private prosecution in England and Wales. It is an important safeguard against improper inaction by a prosecuting authority. It is, however, not unfettered…"
The ingredients of the offence
(1) "Acting as such"
"The question of whether an individual 'is acting as such' (as a public office holder when the misconduct occurs) is usually answered by determining the duties to which he or she is subject as a result of being required to carry out a state function."
(2) "Wilfully neglects to perform his duty and/or wilfully misconducts himself"
"There must be a breach of duty by the officer. It may consist of an act of commission or one of omission. …"
i) What is the position held?
ii) What duties are undertaken by the officer?
iii) Does their discharge fulfil a responsibility of government such that the public has a significant interest in the discharge additional to or beyond that of a person who might be directly affected by a serious failure in its performance?
"3.98 During the course of a referendum campaign it is the role of the campaigners to debate the relative merits of the arguments and claims being made by those campaigning for the opposing outcome. This ensures that voters understand the issues and positions on both sides of the referendum question. There is also a role for the media in analysing the claims made on both sides of the campaign and for voters themselves in ensuring that they have the information they feel they need to enable them to make an informed decision when casting their vote.
3.99 In a referendum there are at least two sides competing arguments, both of which are highly likely to be contested to some degree. Even official data can and will be presented by campaigners in a way that favours their argument – that is the nature of political campaigns. It will not always be possible to establish the truth about campaign claims in an independent truly objective sense."
Extending the ambit of the offence
"33. …There are two guiding principles: no one should be punished under a law unless it is sufficiently clear and certain to enable him to know what conduct is forbidden before he does it; and no one should be punished for any act which was not clearly and ascertainably punishable when the act was done. If the ambit of a common law offence is to be enlarged, it 'must be done step-by-step on a case-by-case basis and not with one large leap': R v Clark (Mark) [2003] 2 Cr App R 363, para 13."
Vexatious Prosecution
i) 2016: on the IP's crowdfunding website, now deleted, under the heading "What is the Plan?", sub-heading "objectives", listed objectives include funding a judicial review and other legal action to prevent Brexit, and prosecution of Vote Leave leaders based upon fraud, misconduct in public office, undue influence, and possibly inciting racial hatred. Under "Potential advantages of preventing Brexit", after a list of Vote Leave claims sits "I will not accept this because the campaign was based on lies … ignorance and emotion, not evidence".
ii) 19 July 2016: an extract from an interview with Business Insider reads: "The dream scenario would be a series of Leave politicians being prosecuted for …misconduct in public office…; prison sentences for politicians who have lied to the public and a second referendum… I am very much pro-Remain…."
iii) 20 July 2016: article in the Eastern Daily Press included a quotation attributed to the IP, "The team behind the campaign hopes that in proving that leave politicians have lied to the public it will be easier to call for a second referendum or annul the vote completely. "If we can prosecute them and step forward", Marcus [Ball] continues, "people will realise they have been lied to".
iv) 24 July 2016: news article, "… At the moment Brexit has a mandate but if they face criminal prosecutions then this will change", attributed to the IP.
v) 6 October 2016: interview with Legal Cheek, "My biggest responsibility is to raise far more funding for the case potentially more than £2 million… … … I've run out of personal credit card and bank overdraft funding after working for three months without a salary"
vi) 6 September 2018: Brexit Justice YouTube channel: "Hello Boris Johnson. My name is Marcus J Ball. I am a private prosecutor and I have a problem with lying politicians… which is why over the last 2 years it has been my legal team and I's job to build a private criminal prosecution case against you… … … which carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment… We have the research, the evidence, the legal team, the QCs opinion on side… as well as lots of journalists and national press, keen to cover the story. If we win this prosecution, we could establish a case precedent in the common law, making it illegal for elected representatives to lie to the public about how their money is spent…"
vii) 18 January 2019: article by Marcus Ball in the Metro: "…prosecuting politicians is the only way out of this Brexit mess".
viii) 13 March 2019: Twitter: "We must first address lying in politics before we can address Brexit itself. We are prosecuting Boris Johnson MP".
"I accept the defence submission that when the applicant commenced his consideration of whether to bring a private prosecution against the proposed defendant, some three years ago, there may have been a political purpose to these proceedings. However, the information for the summons was laid on the 28th February 2019 and that argument, in my view, is no longer pertinent."
Conclusion