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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Byrne v. Conroy [1997] IEHC 10; [1998] 3 IR 1; [1997] 2 ILRM 99 (22nd January, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1997/10.html Cite as: [1998] 3 IR 1, [1997] 2 ILRM 99, [1997] IEHC 10 |
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1. A
single question arises for determination in this application. It is this. Is
the offence in respect of which it is sought to extradite the Applicant to
Northern Ireland a revenue offence? If it is, then the Applicant must be
released. If it is not, he must be extradited to Northern Ireland since no
other grounds have been advanced which would justify his release.
2. The
Applicant is a farmer. He is aged 44 years and normally resides with his wife
and twelve children at Strandfield House, Mount Pleasant, Dundalk, Co. Louth.
There he farms 130 acres and also operates a lairage facility on the farm for
livestock which are destined for export from the nearby port of Greenore.
3. On
the 19th April, 1995 the Applicant was arrested at his home on foot of a
warrant issued in Northern Ireland and endorsed for execution in the State by
the Respondent who is a Deputy Commissioner of An Garda Siochana.
4. The
warrant was dated the 21st December, 1994 and was issued by Francis Gerald
Harty, a Resident Magistrate and Justice of the Peace in Northern Ireland.
5. The
warrant named Douglas Fraser Neish as the Complainant. He is described as a
Senior Investigation Officer of Her Majesty's Customs and Excise Investigation
Division with an address at Vigilant House, 72/76 Inchinnan Road, Paisley,
Scotland. The Applicant in these proceedings is identified in the warrant as
the Defendant. The warrant is couched in the following terms:
6. Following
his arrest, the Applicant was brought before the District Court and on the 31st
May, 1995 an application for his extradition to Northern Ireland to answer the
charge set forth in the warrant was heard and determined. The District Court
made an Order for his extradition.
7. On
the 2nd June, 1995 the present proceedings were commenced. They seek an Order
directing the Applicant's release pursuant to the provisions of Section 50 of
the Extradition Acts, 1965 to 1994.
8. It
is common case that the Applicant's alleged co-conspirators have been brought
before the Courts of Northern Ireland and have pleaded guilty to charges
arising out of conduct identical with that which underlies the charge alleged
against the Applicant. On the 7th February, 1992 at Belfast Crown Court,
Morris James Lutton, David Thompson Lutton and Sean Gerard Stanley were
sentenced.
9. It
is also common case that the prosecuting authorities in Northern Ireland allege
that between the 1st June, 1986 and the 4th August, 1988 the Applicant was
engaged in a scheme to subvert the Agricultural Levies (Export Control)
Regulations, 1983 of the United Kingdom, which regulations were made pursuant
to obligations imposed under Articles 38, 39 and 235 of the Treaty of Rome and
pursuant to Council Regulations (EEC) 729/1970 and (EEC) 974/1971, superceded
by Council Regulation (EEC) 677/85 consolidating the foregoing and by Council
Directive 81/77/EEC.
10. These
regulations established a scheme the purpose of which was to ensure, as far as
practicable, that all farmers within the European Economic Community (as it
then was), now the European Union, would be selling the same produce at the
same price irrespective of fluctuations in exchange rates between the Member
States.
11. Such
a result was sought to be achieved by adjusting in a negative or a positive way
the price of agricultural produce as it crossed the borders between individual
Member States of the European Union.
12. The
Applicant accepts that the Affidavit of George Nicholas Dixon sworn on the 3rd
April, 1996 which has been filed on behalf of the Respondent contains an
accurate description of the functioning of the scheme of levies and
compensations established by the Agricultural Levies (Export Control)
Regulations, 1983. It is that scheme which the Applicant is alleged to have
conspired to breach. The relevant paragraphs from that Affidavit read as
follows:
13. The
Applicant contends that the gravamen of the charge which has been laid against
him in Northern Ireland is one of conspiracy to avoid paying sums of money to
the Government of the United Kingdom which he was required by the law of that
jurisdiction to pay upon the export from the United Kingdom to the Republic of
Ireland of grain. He contends that these monies were collectable by the
Government of the United Kingdom on behalf of the European Union. This he
contends is a revenue offence as defined in the Extradition Acts.
14. Section
50 of the Extradition Act, 1965 as amended by the Extradition Amendment Act,
1994 insofar as it is relevant reads as follows:
15. The
term 'revenue offence' is defined in the definition section of the 1965 Act as
amended by the 1994 Act as follows:
16. The
Applicant accepts that he must establish that the offence in respect of which
it is sought to extradite him is a revenue offence, if he wishes to obtain an
Order directing his release under Section 50 of the Act.
17. I
must make a finding as to whether or not the offence charged is a revenue
offence as defined in the Act. This is something which falls to be determined
as a matter of Irish law. In the present case affidavit evidence has been
furnished to me setting forth the views of both lawyers and economists on the
topic. Whilst these may be of some help they are not determinative of the
question. That is a matter of Irish law.
18. The
Applicant contends that the Court in undertaking its task ought to adopt a
strict approach to the construction of the statutory provisions upon which he
relies in seeking his release. He says the definition of revenue offence must
be strictly construed and no gloss put upon it. He points out that as recently
as 1994 the 1965 Act was amended and that had the legislature desired to
exclude offences of the type involved here concerning MCAs from the revenue
offence exception it could have done so. It did not. He submits that the
offence charged is a revenue offence since it is one brought in connection with
taxes duties or exchange control.
19. In
my view, absent any obligation imposed on the Court by European law, the
Applicant is correct when he asserts that the Court ought to adopt a strict
approach to the construction of the statutory provisions in question.
20. The
Extradition Act trenches upon personal liberty and any enactment which has that
effect must, in my view, be construed strictly. This approach to the
construction of an extradition statute is not by any means peculiar to the law
of this State. Such an approach has been approved by judicial authorities in
England and Wales. For example, in
Tzu
Tsai Cheng v The Governor of Pentonville Prison
1973 AC 931 Lord Simon of Glaisdale said:
21. Whilst
Lord Simon's speech constituted the principal minority view of the Law Lords in
that case, the above quoted principles were not dissented from by the other
members of their Lordships House. These views of Lord Simon were cited with
approval by Stuart-Smith LJ in
R.
v. Chief Metropolitan Magistrate ex parte Secretary of State for the Home
Department
(1989) 1 AER 151. He pointed out that although in a minority, that did not
matter for the statements of principle set forth by Lord Simon.
22. Kilner
Browne J. in delivering the judgment of the Divisional Court in
R
v The Governor of Pentonville Prison ex parte Khubchandani
(1980) 71 Crim. App. R 241 said:
23. These
authorities satisfy me that in approaching the construction of the relevant
provisions of the Extradition Act and absent any obligation of construction
imposed by European law, I must do so in accordance with the rules of strict
construction.
24. The
effect of this means that I am not permitted to put any gloss upon the words
used in the Act and must assume that the words and phrases are used in their
ordinary and natural meaning.
26. Finally,
on this topic I refer to
Maxwell
on Interpretation of Statutes
(12th edition) at p. 239, where it is stated that
28. I
propose to apply these rules in my consideration of the Applicant's case.
However, as will become clear later in this judgment, I am not convinced that
this is the correct approach to take in a case such as this given the
obligations imposed on this Court by European law as enunciated both in the
Treaties, Regulations, Directives and the jurisprudence of the European Court
of Justice.
29. For
the moment, however, I will adopt the strict constructionist approach which is
of course more beneficial to the Applicant. I will therefore examine whether
on such a basis the offence charged against him falls within the revenue
exception permitted by Section 50 of the Act.
30. In
seeking to ascertain whether the offence charged is a revenue offence or not I
must look to its true nature. (See
State
(Hully) v. Hynes
100 ILTR 145 and
Buchanan
v. McVeagh
(1954) IR 106).
31. The
charge in respect of which it is sought to extradite the Applicant is that of
conspiracy to defraud the Intervention Board for Agricultural Produce of
Monetary Compensation Amounts due to it. These amounts became payable pursuant
to the provisions of the Agricultural Levies (Export Control) Regulations,
1983. These are Regulations made by the Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and
Food in the United Kingdom. The Regulations recite as follows:-
32. Amongst
the agricultural products which are set forth in the Schedule to these
Regulations are cereals.
33. These
Regulations revoked an earlier set of Regulations known as the Agricultural
Levies (Export Control) Regulations, 1981.
34. As
is clear from the recitals to these 1983 Regulations, they were made by the
relevant Ministers in the United Kingdom Government pursuant to powers on that
behalf contained in Section 2(2) of the European Communities Act, 1972. That
same Act by Section 6 thereof set up the Board known as the Intervention Board
for Agricultural Produce. As is clear from the terms of Section 6(1) of the
United Kingdom European Communities Act, 1972, that Board is charged, subject
to the direction and control of the Ministers, with such functions as are from
time to time determined in connection with the carrying out of the obligations
of the United Kingdom under the Common Agricultural Policy of the Economic
Community. Subsection (2) of the same section provides for Orders in Council
being made which enables that Board to arrange for its functions to be
performed by other bodies on its behalf. Section 6(4) provides that
agricultural levies of the Economic Community, so far as they are charged on
goods exported from the United Kingdom or shipped as stores, are to be paid to
and recoverable by the Board. The same subsection permits Ministers to make
such provisions supplementary to any directly applicable Community provision as
the Ministers consider necessary for securing the payment of any agricultural
levy so charged, including provision for the making of declarations or the
giving of other information in respect of goods exported, shipped as stores,
warehoused or otherwise dealt with.
35. Section
6(5) provides that agricultural levies of the Economic Community, so far as
they are charged on goods imported into the United Kingdom are to be levied,
collected and paid and the proceeds dealt with, as if they were Community
customs duties and in relation to those levies certain enactments are to apply.
These enactments are the general provisions of the Customs and Excise Act of
1952 and certain provisions of the Import Duties Act, 1958. These are to apply
as if, in connection with any such Community arrangements the Commissioners of
Customs and Excise are charged with the performance, on behalf of the Board or
otherwise, of any duties in relation to the payment of refunds or allowances on
goods exported or to be exported from the United Kingdom.
36. Finally,
under Section 6(8) of the European Communities Act, 1972 the term 'agricultural
levy' is defined as including
"any
tax not being a customs duty, but of equivalent effect, that may be chargeable
in accordance with any such Community arrangements as aforesaid"
.
37. It
is clear from the definition of agricultural levy which is contained in the
1983 Regulations that in order to qualify for that definition the levy must be
a tax or charge, not being a customs duty, chargeable under Community
arrangements on agricultural products or on goods which are processed from
agricultural products and are the subject of arrangements under Article 235 of
the EEC Treaty.
38. From
this definition contained in the 1983 Regulations it is clear that the whole
notion of the agricultural levy has its roots in arrangements brought about by
European Community obligations.
39. The
most relevant of these obligations is to be found in Regulation 729/70 on the
financing of the Common Agricultural Policy. Article 1 of that Regulation set
up the European Agricultural Guidance and Guarantee Fund (EAGGF). That Fund
formed part of the budget of the Communities and comprised two sections,
namely, the Guarantee Section and the Guidance Section. The Guarantee Section
was obliged to finance refunds on exports to third countries and intervention
intended to stabilise the agricultural markets. The Guidance Section was
obliged to finance common measures adopted in order to achieve the
objectives set out at
Article 39(1)(a) of the Treaty including structural adaptation necessary for
the proper working of the common market.
40. Article
8 of the same Regulation required each Member State in accordance with national
provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action to take the
measures necessary to
41. The
Member States were obliged to inform the Commission of the measures taken for
those purposes and in particular of the state of the administrative and
judicial procedures.
42. The
Common Agricultural Policy was a corner stone of the Treaty of Rome and the
objectives of that Policy are contained in Article 39 thereof. Regulation
729/70 imposed obligations on every Member State in relation to the financing
of the EAGGF. The obligation to operate the system of MCAs is one which was
applicable to every Member State. These obligations involved the harmonisation
of prices throughout the European Union. The relevant paragraphs from the
Affidavit of George Nicholas Dixon, which I have already cited in this
judgment, indicate how that was done.
43. The
Applicant contends that having regard to the definition of agricultural levy
which is set forth in Section 6(8) of the United Kingdom European Communities
Act, 1972 and in Regulation 1(2) of the 1983 Regulations, there can be no doubt
but that what was involved in the instant case was a tax and therefore falls
within the revenue exemption contained in Section 50 of the Extradition Act,
1965 as amended. Reliance is placed upon the fact that the very definition of
agricultural levy both in the Act and the Regulations is expressly described as
a tax. The Applicant says that tax is defined by the Oxford dictionary as
"a
compulsory contribution to the support of Government, levied on persons,
property, income, commodities, transactions, etc. now at fixed rates mostly
proportional to the amount to which the contribution is levied"
.
He contends that this approach must involve a finding in his favour. He
gleans support for this proposition by reference to an Affidavit of Kevin J.
Finnegan, who is a Queen's Counsel practising at the Bar of Northern Ireland.
It was Mr Finnegan who appeared as Defence Counsel in the trial of the
Applicant's co-conspirators. In a very short Affidavit he expresses the
opinion that the charge laid against the Applicant is one in connection with
taxes, duties or exchange control as defined under Section 3(1) of the
Extradition Act, 1965 and is therefore a revenue offence falling within the
scope of Section 50 of the Act. He furthermore relies on an Affidavit sworn by
Alan Matthews, who is the Head of the Department of Economics at Trinity
College, Dublin. In the course of that Affidavit Professor Matthews says
45. Whilst
of course I pay attention to these expressions of opinion, they are nothing
more than that, one coming from a member of the Inner Bar of Northern Ireland
and the other from a Professor of Economics. The issue which I have to
determine in this case is an issue of Irish law in respect of which opinion
evidence from the two experts named is of comparatively little value or
relevance.
46. It
appears to me that having regard to the European genesis of the agricultural
levies in question, I must have regard to any decisions of the European Court
of Justice which may have a bearing on the question. These decisions are, of
course, binding upon me and consequently are of infinitely greater weight,
importance and relevance than opinions of experts, whether in economics or law,
and whether cited by the Applicant or the Respondent. In my view there are a
number of decisions of the European Court which have a bearing upon my
consideration of this matter.
47. The
second is that in the case of
Nordgetreide
v.
Hauptzollamt
Hamburg-Jonas
(1985) ECR 3127. In that case the European Court held that
49. As
I have already pointed out, the system under which they are operated in the
United Kingdom pursuant to Regulation 729/70 is by means of the provisions of
the European Communities Act, 1972 and the 1983 Regulations which are in suit.
The 1983 Regulations have as their object not the raising of revenue but the
facilitation of the free movement of goods in accordance with the Common
Agricultural Policy which is binding upon each Member State of the European
Community.
50. These
quotations coupled with the wording of Regulation 729/70 and the relevant
statutory provisions which are applicable in the United Kingdom appear to me to
establish the following propositions:-
51. It
follows from these conclusions that the agricultural levy which the Applicant
is alleged to have conspired not to pay, although called a levy and although
defined as being a tax in the 1983 Regulations and the 1972 Act, is not in fact
a tax in any real meaning of that term. The principal object of a tax is to
raise revenue. But that was not the object of the levy here. Rather it was to
implement the Common Agricultural Policy by facilitating the free movement of
cereal goods which fell within the ambit of that policy. My views in this
regard are supported by the dicta of the European Court of Justice and by the
fact that any loss occasioned by the activity of the Applicant was not that of
the United Kingdom but rather of the EAGGF which, as I have already pointed
out, was a fund set up by Regulation 729/70. Furthermore, it is clear that
MCAs need not always be a charge on either exports or imports but could be a
refund on either of these. Such is not a normal characteristic of a tax. I
therefore take the view that, as a matter of Irish law, the offence charged
against the Applicant is not a revenue offence.
52. In
order to come to this conclusion, I have analysed the true nature of the
offence charged. MCAs are not taxes, duties or exchange control measures.
Such a conclusion does not involve any departure from the strict
constructionist approach to the legislation.
53. But
I am far from satisfied that the strict or literal approach to the construction
of the Extradition Act is appropriate in the circumstances of this or similar
cases. My reasons for this arise from the following.
54. As
is already clear from this judgment, the whole genesis of the levy involved in
this case is founded in European law. The obligations imposed on all of the
Member States in respect of MCAs derive from European law. I have already
quoted from the relevant Articles of Directive 729/70 and the jurisprudence of
the European Court of Justice in that regard.
55. In
approaching the construction of the relevant provisions of the Extradition Act
in this case with its overlying European dimensions, the Court must, if
required, have regard to the dicta of the European Court of Justice concerning
the status of European Union law in this and indeed all other Member States.
56. Article
209A of the European Union Treaty inserted by Title 2 and Article E(77) of the
Maastricht Treaty provides:-
57. Most
recently in
Faccini
Dore v. Recreb
(1995) All England Law Reports European Cases, the European Court said:-
58. Each
Member State was obliged pursuant to Regulation 729/70 in accordance with
national provisions to take the measures necessary to prevent and deal with
irregularities and to recover sums lost as a result of irregularities or
negligence. This is so having regard to Article 8 of the Regulation which
itself has been the subject of judicial interpretation by the European Court of
Justice on a number of occasions. Two appear to me to be relevant. The first
is the decision of that Court in
Belgium
and Luxembourg v. Mertens
(1974) ECR. In that case the Court held that:-
59. In
the light of these observations it appears to me that, given the European
dimension to the instant case, the appropriate way to construe the relevant
provisions of the Extradition Act is to do so in a manner which is consistent
with the obligations of the State to the European Union. The obligation of this
country as a Member State of the European Union is to, inter alia, protect the
financial interests of that Union and this obligation would be impeded by, in
the case of an ambiguity, construing the relevant provisions of the Extradition
Act in a manner which would conclude that the offence charged against the
Applicant here is a revenue one and thereby prevent his extradition.
60. It
would follow from this approach that in the case of an ambiguity in the
legislation, the strict constructionist approach would have to give way to an
interpretation which would comply with the State's obligations in European law.
There is no such ambiguity here so the matter does not arise.
61. If,
however, there is an ambiguity, the Act must be construed in the manner set
forth in the preceding paragraph. A construction which would lead to the
conclusion that the offence charged is a revenue one would not be consistent
with this State's obligations as a member of the European Union.
62. I
therefore conclude that as a matter of Irish law the offence in respect of
which extradition is sought is not a revenue offence. This is so because it is
not one connected with taxes, duties or exchange control. Rather it is
connected with monetary compensation amounts which are not taxes or duties or
exchange control measures.
63. It
follows that this application fails. The Order sought is refused and the
Applicant's extradition to Northern Ireland may proceed as directed by the
District Court.