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 High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Patel v Patel & Ors [2017] EWHC 3229 (Ch) (07 December 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2017/3229.html Cite as: [2017] EWHC 3229 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
YASHWANT DAHYABHAI PATEL |
Claimant |
|
- and – |
||
(1) GIRISH DAHYABHAI PATEL (2) JAYSHREE PATEL (3) RANJANBALA PATEL (4) NIRJA JAIN |
Defendants |
____________________
Mr. William Boyce, Q.C. (instructed by Stevens & Bolton LLP) appeared on behalf of the First Defendant
Ms. Constance McDonnell (instructed by IBB Solicitors) appeared on behalf of the Second, Third and Fourth Defendants
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MARCUS SMITH:
Introduction
The Probate Proceedings
Admissions by the Defendants
Relevant principles relating to mitigation and penalty
"A contempt of court is not a wrong done to another party to the litigation. It is an affront to the rule of law itself and to the court."
- Whether the claimant has been prejudiced by the contempt, and whether the prejudice is capable of remedy
- The extent to which the contemnor has acted under pressure
- Whether the breach of the order was deliberate or unintentional
- The degree of culpability
- Whether the contemnor was placed in breach by reason of the conduct of others
- Whether the contemnor appreciated the seriousness of the breach
- Whether the contemnor has cooperated. A genuine offer following judgment but before sentence to co-operate in the provision of information is capable of being a serious mitigating factor
- Whether the contemnor has admitted his contempt and has entered the equivalent of a guilty plea. By analogy with sentencing in criminal cases, the earlier the admission is made, the more credit the contemnor is entitled to be given
- Whether the contemnor has made a sincere apology for his contempt
- The contemnor's previous good character and antecedents
- Any personal mitigation advanced on his or her behalf.
"The custody threshold
11. A sentence of imprisonment should only be imposed if a custodial sentence only is justified. The custodial sentence must be for a fixed term, and the maximum is two years: s.14(1) Contempt of Court Act 1981. The Court may impose an unlimited fine or order sequestration: s.14(2).
12. The custody threshold has not been defined, but in R. v. Montgomery [1995] 2 Cr App R 23 Potter LJ said "an immediate custodial sentence is the only appropriate sentence to impose upon a person who interferes with the administration of justice, unless the circumstances are wholly exceptional". In Shorey, in which the defendant had admitted knowingly proffering false evidence in an affidavit (which he had then corrected at an early stage in the proceedings), Green J. said at para 46:
"I start by considering the intrinsic severity of the contempt. In the present case the Defendant has admitted proffering knowingly false evidence in an affidavit. This was part of the perpetuation of a series of false and misleading statements designed to subvert the due administration of justice. My necessary starting point is that this was a serious infringement committed deliberately and with knowledge, with the specific intent of undermining judicial proceedings. A Court would be remiss if it did not conclude that this is the sort of conduct where in many instances the custody threshold will prima facie be passed. In my view this particular case hovers at or fractionally beyond the custody threshold. I can contemplate many more serious infringements; but that does not undermine the seriousness of the contempt of Court which is before the Court. My starting point, therefore, is that in principle a custodial sentence would prima facie be appropriate." [emphasis supplied]
13. A term of imprisonment should be as short as possible commensurate with the gravity of the contempt and the need to deter the contemnor and coerce compliance: Official Receiver v. Brown at para 19.
Reduction where contemnor has not experienced prison
14. It has been suggested that the Court should bear in mind the desirability of keeping offenders, and particularly first-time offenders, out of prison, by reference to the criminal authorities R. v. Kefford [2002] 2 Cr App R (S) 106 and R. v. Seed and Stark [2007] 2 Cr App R (S) 69 (cited to the Court in Templeton Insurance). Templeton Insurance itself was cited to Eder J. in Otkritie v. Gersamia in 2015 in support of this submission, but in fact in Templeton Insurance the Court of Appeal does not appear to have been impressed by the submission. At para 45 of his judgment in that case (with which Black and Lewison L.J.J. agreed) Rix L.J. referred to personal mitigation factors and said "It is not so much that the appellants are first time offenders who are unlikely to offend again. That must be true of many such defendants".
15. However, two more recent cases suggest that the Court will give more weight to this factor. In Shorey, Green J. was prepared to give "modest weight" to the fact that the defendant had no previous convictions, because he recognised that this was a common factor for alleged contemnors in civil proceedings (at para 49 of the judgment). Most recently, in November 2017, in Official Receiver v. Brown, HHJ Simon Barker, Q.C. stated at para 20 that "in line with general sentencing principles, if the appropriate period of imprisonment under consideration is 12 months or less, the court should further consider whether a shorter term will sufficiently meet the sentencing objectives, especially if the contemnor has not previously experienced imprisonment". In that case, the Judge reduced a term of 12 months by 4 months expressly in recognition of the fact that Mr Brown had not previously experienced prison: para 52.
Reduction for guilty plea
16. There should also be a discount of up to one-third in any custodial sentence where the contemnor has admitted guilt, consistently with the approach taken in cases of criminal contempt: see Sentencing Council Guidelines Reduction in Sentence for Guilty Plea (2007)…"
Pausing there, Mr. Boyce, Q.C. referred me to more recent Guidelines, to similar effect. It is these, later, Guidelines that I have regard to.
"…These Guidelines suggest that the level of reduction should be gauged on a sliding scale ranging from a recommended one third (where the guilty plea was entered at the first reasonable opportunity in relation to the offence for which sentence is being imposed), reducing to a recommended one quarter (where a trial date has been set) and to a recommended one tenth (for a guilty plea entered at the 'door of the court' or after the trial has begun).
Unconditional release
17. A person committed is entitled to unconditional release after serving half of the sentence: s. 258 Criminal Justice Act 2003. This must be made clear by the Court in its judgment: Official Receiver v. Brown at para 18…"
Pausing again, I take this opportunity to emphasise this fact for the purposes of this judgment.
"…Suspension of sentence
18. A sentence of imprisonment may be suspended, in the exercise of the Court's inherent jurisdiction (and see CPR r. 81.29). This is a matter for the Court's discretion. Suspension may be appropriate to secure compliance with the Court's orders (which is not applicable in this case), or taking into account cogent personal mitigation including admissions and remorse. Recent cases in which suspended sentences have been imposed include…"
I omit the various sub-paragraphs to paragraph 18. Finally, paragraph 19 states:
19. If a custodial sentence is suspended, it is essential to specify the terms of the suspension. HHJ Simon Barker QC noted in Official Receiver v. Brown at para 21 that "a feature of suspending a sentence is that the deterrent effect is emphasised, at least over the period of suspension".
"In all cases, the court should consider whether committal to prison is necessary, what is the shortest time necessary for such imprisonment, whether the sentence of imprisonment can be suspended, and that the maximum sentence which can be imposed on any one occasion is two years."
The fraudulent claim that was the Probate Proceedings
The warning letter
The conduct during the committal proceedings
Personal mitigation of the Second, Third and Fourth Defendants
The position of the First Defendant
- It was accepted that the First Defendant's conduct had been serious and persistent, and that it had affected other: paragraph 22
- But he had admitted his contempt and sought to cooperate with the Claimant to agree the factual basis for the sentence; he had entered the equivalent of a guilty plea and had therefore saved witnesses from having to give evidence as well as saving a considerable amount of court time and resources; he had made a genuine apology for his conduct: paragraph 23
Pausing there, the point was made against the First Defendant that no apology had been extended to the Claimant. I make no finding one way or the other as to whether an apology from the First Defendant to the Claimant is appropriate or not. What I do say is this: it is not a matter that goes one way or the other to the question of guilt or sentence. I consider that there has been, both through his evidence and through his counsel, an apology for his conduct to the court, and it is that which matters.
- The First Defendant has no previous convictions or antecedents
- Various "character references" were produced on behalf of the First Defendant. These I have read, and taken fully into account
- As a result of his contempt before this court, the First Defendanthas lost his good character and his standing within the community. That is no small personality to pay for a man of 66 years, who was quite obviously well respected and well regarded within his community. The public humiliation of these events will continue to bear heavily upon him: paragraph 26
- The wider proceedings have also caused a great deal of stress and anxiety for the First Defendant's immediate family, his wife and children. The extent that his conduct in the probate proceeding has contributed to that is something that Mr Patel bitterly regrets: paragraph 27
Length of individual sentences for specific grounds of contempt and concurrency
Authorities on penalty
Sentence: the Second, Third and Fourth Defendants
- Your good character
- The fact that the threat of the prison door is, in your cases, a very considerable one
- The fact that you have provided real help to the Claimant in understanding the nature of the dishonest scheme that constituted the Probate Proceedings. I accept that you were secondary participants in that scheme and derived no personal benefit from it. I accept also that the First Defendant had some influence on your decision to participate in that dishonest scheme, albeit I weigh against that the fact that you are also responsible adults who ought to have been capable of refusing to do the wrong things the First Defendant asked you to do
- I also take into account the very sincere apologies that you have advanced in evidence and through your counsel
"20. Further, in line with general sentencing principles, the appropriate period of imprisonment under consideration is 12 months or less. The court should further consider whether a shorter term would sufficiently meet the sentencing objectives, especially if the contemnor has not previously experienced imprisonment.
21. If the court has decided that a prison sentence is necessary, and has also decided on the appropriate term, it should then consider whether that sentence should be suspended. A feature of suspending a sentence is that the deterrent effect is emphasised, at least over the period of suspension. Suspension may be for up to two years, but is not usually more than 18 months for a prison sentence of 12 months or less."
"The Second Defendant's adult son and daughter live with her and she works with her son in his business. The severe impact of these proceedings on the Second Defendant's daughter has been referred to above. The Second Defendant is sole next of kin for her elderly mother, whom she visits daily in the nursing home.
The Third Defendant is 68 years old and has health problems relating to her mobility. She is deeply troubled by her own contempt.
The Fourth Defendant's life has fallen apart. The impact upon her, and indeed her husband, of losing their baby, which may have been as the result of travelling to the UK in November 2016, which she felt she had to do, is impossible to assess, particularly since it now seems that the Fourth Defendant will not have children, either naturally or by adoption. Further, the impact of an immediate custodial sentence upon her would be particularly harsh, not least because her home is now in Australia. It is very likely that she will lose her job and probably also her marriage, as well as any chance of having children, as a result of her admission of contempt of court."
Sentence: the First Defendant