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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Qema v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2012] EWHC 1146 (QB) (02 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/1146.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1146 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Besnik Qema |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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News Group Newspapers Limited |
Defendant |
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Mark Warby QC and Victoria Jolliffe (instructed by Simons, Muirhead & Burton) for the Defendant
Hearing date: Wednesday 29th February 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Sharp:
Introduction
The Claimant's pleaded case
Further events pre and post conviction
"He [the Claimant] will say I can't do this but for your sake I'll do it but I won't carry drugs in my pocket. I say please do this, he will ask his friend who are dealing in drugs, I don't know his friend to bring the drugs up to the hotel and then give it to [the Claimant]…
He [Claimant] did get drugs from his friend but his friend brought the drugs up to the meeting…
Q: "Do you know where the faked passports came from? A: From some Moroccan guy. Q: Did he get them or did Maz [Mr Mahmood] get them? A: No no, no he get them. They did together and the passports he did get them. Q: Right. A: From some Moroccan guy there's nothing necessary (inaudible) he made them ok, he knew somebody obviously you probably know. Q: I just want to distinguish the difference between him bring[ing] drugs to Maz and the passports to Maz as opposed to Maz giving you things to give to him to take back to Maz. A: I couldn't give to him […] but his friends will give to him ok?... Q: His own friends? A: Yeah his own friends. Q: Nothing to do with you, nothing to do with Maz. A: Exactly yeah."
"The Prosecution no longer believes that Gashi can be put forward as a witness of truth. Indeed for the reasons given the prosecution does not have any confidence that it can rebut the suggestion that Gashi was or may have been instrumental in instigating the plot to kidnap Victoria Beckham.
If it was or might have been Gashi who suggested this very high profile target to these defendants (about which there is great concern), albeit enthusiastically endorsed by them, no prosecution of this case could or should proceed. The whole edifice upon which it is built crumbles."
"There is a real possibility that, in the light of:-
- Fresh evidence concerning the circumstances in which Mr Qema came to commit the offences and the role of Mr Gashi, the journalist's source, in those offences, and/or
- Material non-disclosure (prior to interview and the entering of a plea) [by the prosecution] of matters affecting the credibility of the key prosecution witness, the journalist Mazher Mahmood.
the Crown Court will set aside the pleas of guilty and stay any further proceedings against Mr Qema as an abuse of the process."
The Claimant's case on absence of reasonable and probable cause
"The 3rd Requirement
22. The classic definition of this element of the tort is set out per Hawkins J in Hicks v Faulkner (1878) 8 QBD 167 at 171 as approved by the House of Lords in Herniman v Smith [1938] AC 305 at 316:
"An honest belief in the guilt of the accused based upon a full conviction founded upon reasonable grounds of the existence of the state of circumstances which, assuming them to be true, would reasonably lead any ordinary prudent and cautious man placed in the position of the accuser, to the conclusion that the person charged was probably guilty of the crime imputed."
23. Did [Mr Mahmood] in his role as prosecutor have an honest belief in the case he was making against the Claimant? If the answer is no (which on the facts alleged he did not as the crimes were manufactured by [Mr Mahmood/Gashi] then the Claimant will have established [absence of] reasonable and probable cause.
24. Whilst it is right that the Claimant was guilty of criminal conduct [Mr Mahmood]'s state of mind was not honest, his intent was malicious as he was seeking to entrap the Claimant in order to create a newspaper story about the crimes of a man who would not otherwise have committed those crimes but for the actions of [Mr Mahmood] and Gashi/Aurora.
25. But even if the answer to the Hicks test was "yes" due to the Claimant's "criminality" then a further objective question arises. Was [Mr Mahmood]'s role as a prosecutor and the role he played in relaying misleading and incomplete information to the police objectively reasonable? If the answer is "no" (as per the Claimant's case) then the Claimant will have established a lack of reasonable and probable cause."
The Defendant's case on reasonable and probable cause
"It is denied that the prosecution was without reasonable and probable cause. There was ample cause for prosecuting the Claimant. He had performed criminal acts with the necessary intent, and the Defendant through [Mr Mahmood] and KA knew this. The Claimant admitted his guilt to his lawyers; he later admitted it to the Court, both by pleading guilty to the charges against him and by admitting, via his Counsel in mitigation of sentence that he was a "willing participant" in the criminal activity. He admitted his guilt to the CCRC. Further he admits in the [Particulars of Claim] (paragraph 26 and elsewhere) and [Voluntary Particulars] (paragraph 24) that he carried out the criminal conduct for which he was convicted. Even if, contrary to what is pleaded above, it is an abuse for the state in the form of the police and/or the CPS to initiate and pursue proceedings against the Claimant it would not follow that the prosecution was without reasonable and probable cause. Still less would it follow that the Defendant acted without reasonable and probable cause."
Discussion
i) "From the most express malice, the want of probable cause cannot be implied. A man, from malicious motives, may take up a prosecution for real guilt, or he may, from circumstances which he really believes, proceed upon apparent guilt: and in neither case is he liable to this kind of action": Johnstone v Sutton (1786) 1 Term Reports 510, 545;
ii) "The importance of observing this rule cannot be exaggerated…It behoves the judge to be doubly careful not to leave the question of honest belief to the jury unless there is affirmative evidence of the want of it": Glinski at 744 per Viscount Simonds.
"On 16 April 1781, an English squadron under the command of Admiral Johnstone was lying off the island of St Jago in the West Indies when it was attacked in great force by a French squadron. The English beat it off and the French sailed away. Admiral Johnstone ordered his ships to slip their cables and follow them. They formed in line of battle and bore down on the French at sunset, but, darkness coming on, the French got away. One of the English ships was the Isis, commanded by Captain Sutton. She had been much damaged in the battle. Her foretopmast had been wrecked. On that account Captain Sutton did not obey the order to slip cable immediately it was given and did not keep up with the line of battle. The admiral then charged Captain Sutton before a court-martial with two charges: (i) disobedience to orders in not slipping his cable; (ii) for delaying and obstructing the public service in that he fell astern and did not keep up with the line of battle. At the court-martial Captain Sutton was honourably acquitted of both charges. He then brought an action against Admiral Johnstone for malicious prosecution. The jury at Guildhall found in his favour and awarded him £6,000 and their verdict was upheld in the Exchequer. The Court of Exchequer held that there was probable cause for prosecuting him on the first charge of disobedience to orders, but not on the second charge of delaying the public service…the decision was reversed by the Exchequer Chamber and the House of Lords. The reasons are contained in the celebrated opinion of Lord Mansfield CJ and Lord Loughborough CJ. They were of opinion that there was probable cause for both charges, both the disobedience and the obstructing the public service."
"Under all these circumstances, it being clear that the orders were given, heard, and understood; that in fact they were not obeyed; that, by not being obeyed, the enemy were enabled the better to sail off; that the defence was an impossibility to obey - a most complicated point - under all these circumstances, we have no difficulty to give an opinion that in law the commodore had a probable cause to bring the plaintiff to a fair and impartial trial."
"…what is meant by reasonable and probable cause. It means that there must be cause (that is, sufficient grounds; I shall hereafter in my speech not always repeat the adjectives "reasonable" and "probable") for thinking that the plaintiff was probably guilty of the crime imputed: Hicks v. Faulkner.
This does not mean that the prosecutor has to believe in the probability of conviction: Dawson v. Vandasseau [Vansandau]. (1863) 11 W.R. 516, 518. The prosecutor has not got to test the full strength of the defence; he is concerned only with the question of whether there is a case fit to be tried. As Dixon J. (as he then was) put it, the prosecutor must believe that "the probability of the accused's guilt is such that upon general grounds of justice a charge against him is warranted": Commonwealth Life Assurance Society Ltd. v. Brain. Perhaps the best language in which to leave the question to the jury is that adopted by Cave J. in Abrath v. North Eastern Railway Co.: "Did [the defendants] honestly believe the case which they laid before the magistrates?"
"I venture to think that there is a danger that a jury may be misled by a question in the form left to them in the present case in which the word "guilty" is used without any qualification. The defendant at the trial is usually pressed, as he was in the present case, to declare that he no longer believes that the plaintiff was guilty. Where, as here, the defence was not called on at the criminal trial, and the only new factor for the defendant to weigh is the trial judge's ruling that there was no case to go to the jury, or no case on which it would be safe for them to convict, the jury in the civil case may ask themselves whether that would be enough to cause an honest man to change his belief. They may not appreciate, unless they are carefully directed in the summing-up, that there is a substantial difference between a case that warrants the making of a charge and one that survives the test of cross-examination with sufficient strength left in it to require consideration by a jury which is concerned only with guilt beyond reasonable doubt. In the course of his cross-examination in the present case the defendant assented to the proposition that "you must not prosecute anybody for an offence in this country unless you as the officer honestly believe that he is guilty of that offence," and said that on September 29, 1955, he did believe that the plaintiff was guilty. It would have been sufficient if he had replied that he believed that he had a good enough case to warrant a prosecution."
"…the word "guilty" is apt to be misleading. It suggests that, in order to have reasonable and probable cause, a man who brings a prosecution, be he a police officer or a private individual, must, at his peril, believe in the guilt of the accused. That he must be sure of it, as a jury must, before they convict. Whereas in truth he has only to be satisfied that there is a proper case to lay before the court, or in the words of Lord Mansfield, that there is a probable cause "to bring the [accused] to a fair and impartial trial": see Johnstone v. Sutton. …"
"Upon this matter it is not possible to generalise, but I would accept as a guiding principle what Lord Atkin said in Herniman v. Smith [1938] A.C. 305] that it is the duty of a prosecutor to find out not whether there is a possible defence but whether there is a reasonable and probable cause for prosecution."
"60. Even if Hedley was a prosecutor, his alleged conduct in "setting up" Emanuele would not diminish the fact that Emanuele, by permitting himself to succumb to temptation, had provided even to Hedley, reasonable and probable cause for his prosecution. Further, there is not and could not be said to be evidence of a lack of belief in reasonable or probable cause, see Commonwealth Life Assurance Society Ltd v Brain (supra).
61. The plaintiff would [therefore] necessarily fail to establish against any defendant a lack of reasonable or probable cause"
Mr Emanuele's other claims (including for negligence and abuse of process) were also struck out.
"Having regard to the fact that this is an application for summary judgment, it should be assumed for present purposes that Mr Emanuele could establish at trial that Mr Hedley was actuated by malice towards him. But could it be said that Mr Hedley's report to the police that Mr Emanuele had offered him a bribe was false information? Surely not; on Mr Emanuele's own case that is exactly what he had done.
This point overlaps the requirement of absence of reasonable and probable cause. On Mr Emanuele's own case, there was a reasonable and probable cause for the prosecution; he had committed the criminal action charged against him. It is true he did so under circumstances that amounted to entrapment, so that public policy required exclusion of the evidence necessary to establish his guilt. But that did not affect the fact that Mr Emanuele carried out an act that constituted the offence for which he was prosecuted. A finding of absence of reasonable and probable cause is therefore not open.
We note that counsel for Mr Emanuele submits that, if Mr Hedley was actuated by malice in relation to his client, "it is impossible to conclude that Hedley had reasonable and probable cause to prosecute or cause the prosecution". He says that "if Hedley was a cause of the prosecution and was actuated by malice, he necessarily lacked belief in reasonable and probable cause". This is fallacious. In Brain Dixon J spoke of a prosecutor acting "maliciously and without reasonable and probable cause". The point, of course, is that a person may be actuated by malice in performing an act but nonetheless have reasonable and probable cause for doing so. The claim of malicious prosecution, made in action SC994 of 1996, must fail, on legal grounds."
"… a malicious prosecutor… is in any event, and even though he does not believe in the guilt of the accused, immune from suit if the evidence on which he has acted turns out to be strong enough to sustain a conviction. That is as it should be, for a man who is guilty cannot complain of prosecution whatever the motives and beliefs of his prosecutor"
"It must always be remembered that, if a charge is genuine, the mere fact that the prosecutor has made an unfair use of it will not take away his protection. It may show malice, but it does not raise any inference of a belief that there was no reasonable or probable cause: see Turner v. Ambler by Lord Denman C.J."
"…where in the administration of criminal justice the information is laid by a particular police officer who is in charge of the prosecution and responsible if it is held to be malicious, but it is, as a matter of police organisation, obvious that he must act upon the advice and often upon the instruction of his superior officers and the legal department…What, my Lords, is the position of a police officer in such a case? …Can he rely on the legal advice given to him? ...It appears to me that, just as the prosecutor is justified in acting on information about facts given him by reliable witnesses, so he may accept advice upon the law given him by a competent lawyer. That is the course that a reasonable man would take and, if so, the so-called objective test is satisfied. Applying this principle to the case of a police officer who lays an information and prefers a charge, and at every step acts upon competent advice, particularly perhaps if it is the advice of the legal department of Scotland Yard, I should find it difficult to say that that officer acted without reasonable and probable cause."
"The law recognises that an official or private individual, who without justification sets in motion the criminal law against a defendant, is likely to cause serious injury to the victim. It will typically involve suffering for the victim and his family as well as damage to the reputation and credit of the victim. On the other hand, in a democracy, which upholds the rule of law, it is a delicate matter to allow actions to be brought in respect of the regular processes of the law. Law enforcement agencies are heavily dependent on the assistance and co-operation of citizens in the enforcement of the law. The fear is that a widely drawn tort will discourage law enforcement: it may discourage not only malicious persons but honest citizens who would otherwise carry out their civic duties of reporting crime. In the result malevolent individuals must receive protection so that responsible citizens may have it in respect of the hazards of litigation. The tort of malicious prosecution is also defined against the backcloth that there are criminal sanctions, such as perjury, making false statements to the police, and wasting police time, which discourage the mischief under consideration. Moreover, the tort must be seen in the context of overlapping torts, such as defamation and malicious falsehood, which serve to protect interests of personality.
The enquiry must proceed from the premise of the law as it stands. The tort of malicious prosecution is narrowly defined. Telling lies about a defendant is not by itself tortious: Hargreaves v. Bretherton [1959] 1 Q.B. 45. A moment's reflection will show what welter of undesirable re-litigation would be permitted by any different rule."
Note 1 . Including by the police in the course of two police investigations, one in 2003 and one in 2005 called Operation Canopus 1 and 2 which they mounted into Gashi’s allegations to discover whether there was a case to answer that Mr Mahmood had perverted the course of justice or committed criminal offences in the course of his work. Both concluded there was insufficient evidence to substantiate Gashi’s allegations.
[Back] Note 2 . It is this which appears to found the Claimant’s case on the circumstances of his entrapment, insofar as he did not already know it from his own involvement in the relevant events: see Further and Better Particulars: 1 a.
[Back] Note 3 In Voluntary Particulars provided in answer to a Part 18 Request for Further Information .
[Back] Note 4 Wicks v Fentham and anor (1791) 4 Term Reports 247 100 E.R. 1000; [Back]