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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 >> Canham, R (On the Application Of) v Director of Public Prosecutions [2021] EWHC 3361 (Admin) (10 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/3361.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3361 (Admin) |
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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 QUEEN (on the application of HAYLEY CANHAM) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS |
Defendant |
____________________
John McGuinness QC (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27 October 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Whipple J :
Introduction
Background Facts
ACCT Guidance
Other reports into suicides at HMP Woodhill
i) A Report by the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman Nigel Newcomen CBE dated May 2013 (the "PPO Report"),
ii) A report by Her Majesty's Senior Coroner dated December 2015, following the inquest into the death of another prisoner, Daniel Byrne (the "SC Report"),
iii) The report by HM Chief Inspector of Prisons following an unannounced inspection of HMP Woodhill, dated January 2016 (the "HMCIP Report").
iv) The Safer Custody Review dated 18 February 2016 undertaken by the NOMS National Safer Custody Delivery Manager (the "Safer Custody Review"),
v) A number of reports by the Senior Coroner for Milton Keynes (Mr Tom Osborne) to prevent future deaths, including the report dated 8 August 2014 into the death of Sean Brock ("PFD reports").
i) A joint review at the request of the Governor of HMP Woodhill, the local NHS England Commissioners and the healthcare provider at the prison, dated 31 March 2016 (the "Joint Review"),
ii) The report by HM Chief Inspector of Prisons following an unannounced inspection of HMP Woodhill, dated April 2018 (the "second HMCIP Report").
iii) The report by Stephen Shaw which was commissioned in February 2017 and reported in May 2017 on the prevention of self-inflicted deaths and self-harm at HMP Woodhill (the "Shaw Report"),
iv) An MoJ report issued in 2019 but based on research in 2015 (the "MoJ report").
The Shaw report was put in evidence in this judicial review, the other later reports were not.
The Decision
The Court's Approach
"Authority makes clear that a decision by the Director not to prosecute is susceptible to judicial review: see, for example, R v Director of Public Prosecutions, Ex p C [1995] 1 Cr App R 136 . But, as the decided cases also make clear, the power of review is one to be sparingly exercised. The reasons for this are clear. The primary decision to prosecute or not to prosecute is entrusted by Parliament to the Director as head of an independent, professional prosecuting service, answerable to the Attorney General in his role as guardian of the public interest, and to no one else. It makes no difference that in practice the decision will ordinarily be taken by a senior member of the Crown Prosecution Service, as it was here, and not by the Director personally. In any borderline case the decision may be one of acute difficulty, since while a defendant whom a jury would be likely to convict should properly be brought to justice and tried, a defendant whom a jury would be likely to acquit should not be subjected to the trauma inherent in a criminal trial. If, in a case such as the present, the Director's provisional decision is not to prosecute, that decision will be subject to review by senior Treasury counsel who will exercise an independent professional judgment. The Director and his officials (and senior Treasury counsel when consulted) will bring to their task of deciding whether to prosecute an experience and expertise which most courts called upon to review their decisions could not match. In most cases the decision will turn not on an analysis of the relevant legal principles but on the exercise of an informed judgment of how a case against a particular defendant, if brought, would be likely to fare in the context of a criminal trial before (in a serious case such as this) a jury. This exercise of judgment involves an assessment of the strength, by the end of the trial, of the evidence against the defendant and of the likely defences. It will often be impossible to stigmatise a judgment on such matters as wrong even if one disagrees with it. So the courts will not easily find that a decision not to prosecute is bad in law, on which basis alone the court is entitled to interfere. At the same time, the standard of review should not be set too high, since judicial review is the only means by which the citizen can seek redress against a decision not to prosecute and if the test were too exacting an effective remedy would be denied."
"… this court can be persuaded to act if and only if it is demonstrated to us that the Director of Public Prosecutions acting through the Crown Prosecution Service arrived at the decision not to prosecute:
(1) because of some unlawful policy (such as the hypothetical decision in Blackburn not to prosecute where the value of goods stolen was below £100); or
(2) because the Director of Public Prosecutions failed to act in accordance with her own settled policy as set out in the Code, or
(3) because the decision was perverse. It was a decision at which no reasonable prosecutor could have arrived."
"[46] We distil the additional propositions from the authorities and the principles underlying them:
(1) Particularly where a CPS review decision is exceptionally detailed, thorough and in accordance with CPS policy, it cannot be considered perverse: L's case 177 JP 502, para 32.
(2) A significant margin of discretion is given to prosecutors: L's case, para 43.
(3) Decision letters should be read in a broad and common sense way, without being subjected to excessive or overly punctilious textual analysis.
(4) It is not incumbent on the decision-makers to refer specifically to all the available evidence. An overall evaluation of the strength of a case falls to be made on the evidence as a whole, apply prosecutorial experience and expert judgment."
The Challenge
i) the decisions not to prosecute A and/or B for gross negligence manslaughter,
ii) the decision not to prosecute C for a breach of s 7 of the HSWA 1974, and
iii) the decisions not to prosecute either of the MoJ or NOMS for corporate manslaughter.
1. Each decision was incompatible with the procedural duty in Article 2. The question whether a prosecution should take place is one for the Court. It is not, in this context, a Wednesbury irrationality challenge. The remaining grounds are in the alternative.
2. Each decision failed to take into account relevant considerations.
3. Each decision gave irrational weight to certain relevant considerations.
4. Each decision contained material errors of law.
5. Each decision was irrational.
Issues
i) Assuming (without deciding) that Article 2 is engaged on the facts of this case, is the Court required to take a different approach to the review of the decision to prosecute than if Article 2 was not engaged?
ii) Was the decision not to prosecute A or B for gross negligence manslaughter wrong in law?
iii) Was the decision not to prosecute C for breach of s 7 HSWA 1974 wrong in law?
iv) Was the decision not to prosecute MoJ or NOMS for corporate manslaughter wrong in law?
Issue 1: Article 2 ECHR
" … the judicial system required by Art.2 must make provision for an independent and impartial official investigation procedure that satisfies certain minimum standards as to effectiveness and is capable of ensuring that criminal penalties are applied where lives are lost as a result of a dangerous activity if and to the extent that this is justified by the findings of the investigation."
Issue 2: Gross Negligence Manslaughter
Issue 3: Breach of s 7 HSWA 1974
"It shall be the duty of every employee while at work –
(a) to take reasonable care for the health and safety of himself and of other persons who may be affected by his acts or omissions at work; and
(b) as regards any duty or requirement imposed on his employer or any other person by or under any of the relevant statutory provisions, to co-operate with him so far as is necessary to enable that duty or requirement to be performed or complied with."
"In general, prosecution of an individual will be warranted in cases where there have been personal act(s) or failing(s) by an individual, and it would be proportionate to prosecute, bearing in mind the nature and extent of the breach and the risk to health and safety arising from it. In considering risk, the EPS states that enforcement action should be focused on those who are responsible for the risk and are best placed to control it."
"What is 'reasonable care' and 'necessary to enable' needs to be considered in the context of the employer's provisions. For example, a machine operator who has received inadequate training might be considered to have acted reasonably in all the circumstances if he/she removes a guard from a machine and continues to use it, and this is the generally accepted and condoned practise in the company. In other circumstances the same act might be considered unreasonable, if the employee has received proper training, if the guard in question is sufficient, and if removal of guards is neither accepted or condoned in the company."
"These are all management failings rather than failings of those tasked with implementing the process and ones that I can take in to account. Whilst the officers each failed in certain respects, I do not believe that their failures amount to failures to take reasonable care in the context of the system that they were working within. In reaching this decision I had regard to Appendix 1 of the HSE Operational Circular 130/08 in relation to prosecuting individuals, in particular whether the suspects had taken reasonable care in the context of the employer's provisions."
"Whilst the suspects each failed in certain respects, I have to ask myself whether that amounted to a failure to take reasonable care in the context of the system they were working within. I am drawn to conclude on the available evidence that cannot be proved."
"The Defendant agrees that the issues of cross-deployment and unfamiliarity with Mr Fenlon do not apply to [senior healthcare assistant] C, whereas they did to [senior officers] A and B. The Defendant considered whether her failure to make an urgent mental health referral amounted to taking reasonable care. The evidence shows that she agreed with [senior officer] A to increase his observations to 2 per hour and she also believed that an ACCT review would take place on the afternoon of 3rd March at which all the issues surrounding Mr Fenlon would be discussed and appropriate decisions would be taken, including any necessary referrals. The evidence also shows that she was covering 2 wings that morning and that the medical team were short-staffed (only 4 of the 6 Mental Health Team posts were filled, one of whom was on leave on 3rd March). When considering whether [senior healthcare assistant] C had failed to take reasonable care for the health and safety of Mr Fenlon under s.7 HSWA the Defendant is entitled to take in to account the provision of her employer as set out in the HSE guidance. The Defendant concluded that a prosecution would not be in accordance with the HSE policy."
Issue 4: Corporate Manslaughter
"In order for there to be a realistic prospect of conviction, the prosecution is required to prove the following:
a) That the way an organisation's activities are managed or organised:
i. Caused a person's death; and
ii. Amounted to a gross breach of the duty of care owed to the deceased;
b) An organisation can only be guilty if the way its activities are managed or organised by its senior management is a substantial element in the breach of the company's duty of care"
"Having regard to all the evidence and information available to me I have concluded that there is no evidence that senior management within either the MoJ or NOMS have failed in their duty of care to … Mr Fenlon. Consequently, I do not believe that there is a realistic prospect of conviction of the MoJ or NOMS for corporate manslaughter".
Conclusion