H321
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] | ||
High Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Kelly & Anor -v- District Judge Ann Ryan [2013] IEHC 321 (09 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2013/H321.html Cite as: [2013] IEHC 321 |
[New search] [Help]
Judgment Title: Kelly & Anor -v- District Judge Ann Ryan Neutral Citation: [2013] IEHC 321 High Court Record Number: 2012 436 JR Date of Delivery: 09/07/2013 Court: High Court Composition of Court: Judgment by: Hogan J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2013] IEHC 321 THE HIGH COURT [2012 No. 436 J.R.] BETWEEN MARY KELLY AND DECLAN BUCKLEY APPLICANTS AND
DISTRICT JUDGE ANN RYAN RESPONDENT AND
PATRICK HALPIN NOTICE PARTY JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Hogan delivered on the 9th July, 2013 1. To what extent, if at all, has the right of the private prosecutor to prosecute an indictable offence being affected by the wholescale amendment of the Criminal Procedure Act 1967 by the Criminal Justice Act 1999, and the abolition of the traditional preliminary examination before the District Court? This is one of the many difficult questions raised in this application for judicial review. The issues arise in the following way. 2. The notice party, Mr. Patrick Halpin, swore two informations as common informer which were laid before the District Court. Acting on foot of these complaints made by Mr. Halpin, the District Court (District Judge Ryan) granted leave on 5th March, 2012, to issue summonses against the applicants, Mary Kelly and Declan Buckley, alleging offences of dishonesty under s. 6 of the Criminal Justice (Theft and Fraud Offences) Act 2001 (“the 2001 Act”). The summonses were themselves issued pursuant to s. 10(4) of the Petty Sessions (Ireland) Act 1851 (“the 1851 Act”). This sub-section provides that:-
4. The complaint then continues by alleging:-
5. Mr. Murphy wrote a letter of complaint to Mr. Buckley and received a reply showing clearly that both accused had known that a receiver was to be installed at the time of the meeting and had deliberately concealed this knowledge from us. Mr. Murphy cannot recover the professional fees due to him and he would not have participated in the meeting had he been aware of the situation and neither would I. Loss was thereby caused to us both…”
6. Given the importance (and, to some degree, the novelty) of the issues at stake here, counsel for the Director, Mr. O’Malley, appeared as amicus curiae at my invitation and his submissions were of considerable assistance. At an earlier stage of the proceedings the applicant sought discovery of any contacts which had taken place between the private prosecutor and the Director. It emerged from an affidavit very fairly sworn on behalf of the Director that there had in fact been so such contacts. The Director’s submissions were accordingly confined to arguing that the right of private prosecution had survived the enactment of the Constitution and the amendments effected by the Criminal Justice Act 1999. Mr. O’Malley was also anxious to observe that the Director had yet to take any position whatever regarding the merits or otherwise of this particular private prosecution. 7. Against this background we may now consider the relevant statutory provisions of the 2001 Act. The relevant statutory provisions of the 2001 Act
(2) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on conviction on indictment to a fine or imprisonment not exceeding five years or both.”
(b) the accused, on being informed by the Court of his or her right to be tried with a jury, does not object to be tried summarily, and (c) the Director of Public Prosecutions consents to the accused being tried summarily for the offence.” 10. One critical feature of the applicants’ submissions is that the right of private prosecution in respect of an indictable offence of this kind has been effectively abolished by reason of the enactment of the Criminal Justice Act 1999 (“the 1999 Act”) and that this legislative development had effectively overtaken the decision of the Supreme Court in The State (Ennis) v. Farrell [1966] I.R. 107. 11. In The State (Ennis) v. Farrell the Supreme Court held that the right of private prosecution had indeed survived the enactment of the Constitution. The applicants nonetheless submitted that this decision had been entirely predicated on the existence of the preliminary examination procedure as it existed at that date and as was preserved by the Criminal Procedure Act 1967. They contend that everything changed following the enactment of the 1999 Act, which to all intents and purposes abolished the traditional practice of holding a preliminary investigation in the District Court to determine if sufficient grounds existed for sending forward a person for trial on indictment to either the Circuit Court of the Central Criminal Court. Before examining this issue, it is necessary first to set out the terms of a number of statutory provisions. 12. Section 4A (as inserted by s. 9 of the 1999 Act) provides:-
(b) the case has been dealt with s. 13…. (3) Where the prosecutor refuses to give a consent required under subsection (2) in relation of an indictable offence, the District Court shall strike out the proceedings against the accused in relation to that offence. (4) The striking out of proceedings under subsection (3) shall not prejudice the institution of proceedings against the accused by the prosecutor. (5) The accused shall not be sent forward for trial under subsection (1) until the documents mentioned in subsection (4)B(i) have been served on the accused.”
(b) in parts 2 and 3 of s. 13 – (i) the Director of Public Prosecutions, (ii) a person prosecuting the offence at the suit of the Director of Public Prosecutions, or (iii) a person authorised by law to prosecute the offence.”
(2) Save for a criminal prosecution in a court a summary jurisdiction is prosecuted by a Minister, Department of State or person (official or unofficial) authorised on that behalf by the law for the time being in force, all prosecutions in any court a summary jurisdiction will prosecuted at the suit of the Attorney General…” 16. Article 30.3 of the Constitution provides:-
15. This special definition of the term prosecutor – with differential definitions for different contexts - as effected by the 1999 Act gives a clear signal that the Oireachtas consciously decided not to abolish the system of private prosecution, even for indictable offences. It is true that no further practical step can be taken by a private prosecutor in relation to the prosecution of an indictable offence beyond the issuing of proceedings since it is at that point that the prosecution comes within the realm of Part 1A of the 1967 Act (as amended). It is at this point that the Director enjoys the monopoly as dominus litis. Counsel for the applicants, Mr. Murray S.C., nonetheless submitted that the changes effected by the 1999 Act in relation to the examination of preliminary offence were so far-reaching that they must be taken implicitly to have abolished the right of private prosecution. The argument was so powerfully advanced that it must command the respect of all who were privileged to hear it. Yet I am not persuaded that this is what the Oireachtas actually intended and I take this view for the following reasons. 16. First, if the right of private prosecution is to be abolished one would expect to see that this had been done by clear words. As O Dálaigh C.J. observed ([1966] I.R. 107, 121) in Ennis, the court “should require clear language to abolish the valuable right of private prosecution”. Besides, the presumption against unclear changes in the law would further counsel such an approach, since it is well established that clear words are required before the courts can properly hold that well established common law rights have been displaced or even abolished: see, e.g., the judgment of Henchy J. in Minister for Industry and Commerce v. Hales [1967] I.R. 67b at 76-77. Indeed, in Wedick v. Osmond & Sons [1935] I.R. 820, 852 Hanna J. invoked this very presumption before concluding that “clear and unmistakeable language” would be required to abolish the right of private prosecution. 17. Surprising as it may seem, there are, in fact, many individual instances of where the right of private prosecution has been entirely excluded by statute. A notable example is provided by s. 5(2) of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act 1990, which provides that:-
19. Nor is the fact that the common informer cannot actually do much more other than to launch the proceedings is itself a reason for holding that the right has been abolished. Here it must be recalled that since the very earliest days of the State, the effective control of all prosecutions on indictment has remained with the law officers, first the Attorney General (via s. 9(1) of the 1924 Act) and then subsequently the DPP (following the enactment of the 1974 Act), a control underscored by Article 30.3 of the Constitution. All that The State (Ennis) v. Farrell decided that the private prosecutor could conduct the prosecution up to the return for trial. But this fact was in itself regarded as important by the Supreme Court, for as O Dálaigh C.J. observed ([1966] I.R. 107, 122):-
21. Nor can it be said that the Supreme Court’s decisions in either Cumann Luthcleas Gael Teo. v. Windle [1994] 1 I.R. 525 or TDI Metro v. Delap (No.2) [2000] 4 I.R. 520 provide the applicants with any real assistance. It must be recalled that neither Cumann Luthcleas Gael nor TDI Metro were concerned a private prosecution in the classic or conventional sense of that term. Both of these cases were simply concerned with the right of particular statutory bodies to conduct a prosecution. Moreover, the right of such a body to pursue a prosecution derives entirely from statute, since as Finlay C.J. put it in Cumann Luthcleas Gael, there ([1994] 1 I.R. 525, 544) are no grounds for “implying a right in a body corporate to institute proceedings for an indictable offence by way of common informer”. These decisions cannot be regarded as having any direct bearing on the common law rights of common informers. 22. It is for these reasons that I would accordingly reject the argument that the 1999 Act had the effect of indirectly abolishing the right of private prosecutions. While it is true that the private prosecutor no longer has the right to have a preliminary examination conducted (because that system has itself been abolished), the common informer has the right to institute the prosecution, once the matter comes back before the District Court, the continuation of the prosecution is entirely contingent on whether the Director consents to summary trial or the sending forward of the accused for trial in the manner contemplated by Part IA. In the event that the Director has not so consent or direct, then the prosecutions must be struck out. Whether the applicants had a right to be heard before the issuing of the summonses 24. It is true that there are some circumstances where a person affected by administrative decisions with significant implications for their personal or corporate reputation may be entitled to be heard before such proceedings are commenced. The classic example here is where disciplinary proceedings are commenced against a professional person. The implications for the professional reputation of the professional concerned are regarded as so serious that the professional is entitled to be heard before such proceedings are formally put in train: see O Ceallaigh v. An Bord Altranais [2000] I.R. 54. One might not unreasonably draw a rough analogy with the situation of the present case where they suddenly find themselves charged with serious criminal offences to which they have had no opportunity to respond, even if in strictness a summons of this kind is simply “a process to compel the attendance of the person accused of the offence”: Attorney General (McDonnell) v. Higgins [1964] I.R. 374, 391, per Kingsmill Moore J. 25. Yet while not unsympathetic to their position, their claim, if allowed, would introduce an unworkable rule. Given the sheer volume of prosecutions in the District Court, the administration of criminal justice would simply grind to a halt if accused persons could claim – even if in the most exceptional circumstances – a right to be heard before a summons was issued. Indeed, it may be noted that in O’Ceallaigh itself, the Supreme Court refused to extend that very principle beyond disciplinary proceedings to court proceedings themselves, so that, for example, the professional is not entitled to be heard in advance of an application to this Court for an emergency order suspending the nurse from practice in accordance with s. 44 of the Nurses Act 1985: see, e.g., [2000] 4 IR 54, 134, per Geoghegan J. 26. It is for this single reason that I find myself coerced to the conclusion that the special rule articulated in O’Ceallaigh does not apply in the case of criminal prosecutions. Whether the information discloses an offence under s. 6 of the 2001 Act 28. These reservations notwithstanding, I nevertheless consider that I would not be justified in intervening by way of judicial review, at least at this juncture. It may be that further evidence will come to light and, moreover, it must be recalled that the District Court enjoys a wide power of amendment in respect of defects in summons: see O. 38, rr. 1 and 2 of the District Court Rules 1997. In any event, O. 38, r. 1 generally allows the prosecutor to tender evidence which is at variance with the terms of the complaint itself, subject to the discretion of the Court to allow disallow this where such would be prejudicial to the interests of the accused. 29. In these circumstances, I consider that it would be premature for this Court to interfere with a matter which so pre-eminently within the discretion of the District Court to examine and to consider. Whether the prosecution constitutes an abuse of process by reason of an improper motive 31. It is true that Mr. Halpin feels very strongly about this treatment by the Irish Bank Resolution Corporation, but the mere fact that he nurses a private grievance regarding his treatment by the IBRC does not in itself mean that the prosecution is tainted by improper motives or by malice. It may, for example, be assumed that a common informer who alleges that he was assaulted by another and who launches a private prosecution to this effect is also personally aggrieved and affronted by this behaviour. As Latham L.J. observed in Dacre v. City of Westminster Magistrates Court [2008] EWHC 1667, “it is inevitable that many private prosecutions will be brought with mixed motives”. 32. Likewise, in R. v. Bow Street Stipendiary Magistrate, ex p. South Coast Shipping Co. Ltd. (1993) Cr. App. Rep. 405 – perhaps the leading English authority on the point - the English High Court rejected the argument that a private prosecution was tainted merely by the presence of mixed motives. The decision in South Coast Shipping arose out of an incident on the River Thames when a pleasure boat was sunk following a collision with a dredger. Some 51 people lost their lives, including a Ms. Hadden. Ms. Hadden’s husband, Mr. Glogg, was one of those who sought a public inquiry. When this was not forthcoming, Mr. Glogg then commenced a private prosecution for manslaughter against the dredger’s owners. 33. In the High Court Lloyd L.J. rejected the argument ((1993) 96 Crim. App. Rep. 405, 409) that such mixed motives as might be ascribed to Mr. Glogg in themselves rendered abusive the private prosecution:
Whether the decision to issue the summons was unreasonable 36. Here it must be recalled that the Supreme Court confirmed in The State (Clarke) v. Roche [1986] I.R. 619 that the issuing of a summons pursuant to s. 10(4) of the 1851 Act did involve the exercise of judicial power. While it is true that by virtue of s. 1 of the Courts (No.3) Act 1986 (legislation which was enacted in the immediate aftermath of Clarke) the vast majority of summonses are now issued administratively on the application of, for example, members of An Garda Siochána, the fact remains that for 135 years all summons were issued through the judicial process. Even accepting that the system of administrative law and judicial review which obtained during this period was nothing as well developed as is the case now, it is nonetheless a singular fact that, with one possible exception, there appears to be no recorded case in this jurisdiction of where a summons has been quashed on grounds of reasonableness alone. 37. The one possible exception is a decision of Charleton J. which is recorded in The Irish Times, 2nd September, 2011, where he granted an order of prohibition restraining a private prosecution for perjury which was then pending in the District Court. The basis on which Charleton J. took this step are, however, not clear from the report and I am not sure that I can extrapolate any wider principle as a result. 38. Bearing in mind that the issuing of a summons is simply a procedural step which invites a response from the accused, it seems to me that it would require wholly exceptional circumstances before this Court could properly intervene to quash the decision to issue the summons. The fact that this Court has, subject to one possible exception, not previously intervened to quash a summons on this ground is in itself a singular fact which highlights the need for judicial caution. 39. It is true that the subject-matter of the complaint and the evidence led to justify it would appear at first blush to be tenuous – even trivial – yet the considerations just mentioned must make one hesitate to intervene on reasonableness grounds. It is true that there have been instances where the English courts have quashed summonses on these grounds, but these cases have been truly exceptional. 40. Thus, for example, in Stephenson v. McWhiter, The Times, 23rd January, 1989, the complainant alleged that the accused was guilty of the offence of blackmail by the mere act of tabling a proposal to exclude South African cricketers from the International Cricket Conference (this was during the apartheid-era South Africa). The Court quashed the summons, since as McNeill J. observed, how “a charge of blackmail can be founded on an agenda with resolutions for consideration is difficult to understand”. Likewise, in R. v. Bow Street Magistrates, ex p. Sakashita, Queen’s Bench Division, 15th October, 1996, a summons alleging assault was quashed in circumstances where it was clear that the private prosecutor accepted that no stage was the accused even in the room when the events giving rise to the assault took place. Another example is supplied by Dacre v. City of Westminster Magistrates Court [2008] EWHC 1667, [2009] 1 WLR 2241, a case where the private prosecutor had sought to prosecute a newspaper editor for publishing the name of a child contrary to the relevant legislation. The High Court nonetheless quashed the summons as an abuse of process given that she had evinced an intention herself to name the child in the course of the prosecution. It seems evident from the judgment of Latham L.J. that the prosecution was simply a vehicle which the private prosecutor would use to identify the child and thereby advance a political and ideological cause. 41. While acknowledging the existence of this jurisdiction, it must really be confined to cases where the private prosecutor himself admits that there is no evidence to found the prosecution (as in Sakashita) or where the overwhelming evidence is that the summons constitutes an abuse of process (as in Stephenson and Dacre). Tempting as it might be to interfere in the context of a private prosecution which, as I have already observed, appears to be based on somewhat slender evidence, I fear that I must ultimately conclude that to interfere by way of judicial review would be altogether too great an incursion into the domain of the District Court in respect of a core function which is ascribed to that Court. Conclusions
B. The mere fact that the private prosecutor, Mr. Halpin, seeks to assuage a private grievance regarding the conduct of IBRC does not in and of itself render abusive this private prosecution, since the vindication of private grievances is nearly always a motivation for the private prosecutor. C. While the evidence to support the prosecution seems slender and tenuous, I do not feel that I would be justified in taking a step which is (almost) unprecedented in this jurisdiction and to quash a summons on grounds of unreasonableness. This would represent a far-reaching intrusion into the exclusive domain of the District Court and it would require quite exceptional circumstances before this Court could take such a step. D. Having commenced the prosecution, in view of the provisions of s. 53 of the 2001 Act and Article 30.3 of the Constitution, no further step in that process can be taken without the express consent of the Director of Public Prosecution. Absent such positive consent, the prosecution must be dismissed by the District Court. |