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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Jones v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_35 (27 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_35.html
Cite as: [2007] HCJAC 35, 2007 SCCR 291, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_35, 2007 SLT 685, 2007 GWD 21-353, 2008 JC 78

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Philip

Lord Penrose

[2007] HCJAC35

XC712/06

 

.

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD MACFADYEN

 

in

 

APPEAL

 

Under section 74 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995

 

by

 

GRANT JONES

APPELLANT;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

RESPONDENT

 

___________

 

 

 

 

Act: Nicolson; Wilson McLeod.

Alt: Young, A.D.; Crown Agent.

 

1 June 2007

Introduction

[1] The appellant was indicted at the instance of the respondent on two charges, of theft by housebreaking and wilful fireraising. He lodged a minute under section 71(2) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 ("the 1995 Act") objecting to the admissibility of evidence of what he said when interviewed by the police. A preliminary diet to deal with that minute took place before the sheriff at Edinburgh on 1 and 2 October 2006. Evidence was led from the two police officers, PC Gordon Couper and PC David Black, who interviewed the appellant, and submissions were made on behalf of the appellant and the respondent. The sheriff repelled the objection raised in the minute. Leave to appeal was granted.

Section 14

[2] The issue raised by the appellant involves the construction of section 14 of the 1995 Act. That section regulates "Detention and questioning at police station". It provides inter alia as follows:

 

"(1)

Where a constable has reasonable grounds for suspecting that a person has committed or is committing an offence punishable by imprisonment, the constable may, for the purpose of facilitating the carrying out of investigations ―

 

 

(a)

into the offence; and

 

 

(b)

as to whether criminal proceedings should be instigated against the person,

 

 

detain that person and take him as quickly as is reasonably practicable to a police station or other premises and may thereafter for that purpose take him to any other place and, subject to the following provisions of this section, the detention may continue at the police station or, as the case may be, the other premises or place.

 

(2)

Detention under subsection (1) above shall be terminated not more than six hours after it begins or (if earlier) ―

 

 

(a)

when the person is arrested;

 

 

(b)

when he is detained in pursuance of any other enactment; or

 

 

(c)

where there are no longer such grounds as are mentioned in the said subsection (1),

 

 

and when a person has been detained under subsection (1) above he shall be informed immediately upon the termination of his detention in accordance with this subsection that his detention has been terminated.

 

...

 

 

(7)

Where a person is detained under subsection (1) above, a constable may ―

 

 

(a)

without prejudice to any relevant rule of law as regards the admissibility in evidence of any answer given, put questions to him in relation to the suspected offence; ..."

 

The circumstances

[3] On 13 March 2006 PC Couper spoke to the appellant about a matter unrelated to the charges with which this appeal is concerned. The appellant implicated another youth, TMcC, in that matter. The following day, PCs Couper and Black were engaged in investigating the related charges of housebreaking and fireraising mentioned respectively in charges 1 and 2 of the present indictment. At 13.20 hours that day, other officers detained TMcC in connection with the fireraising. At 14.05 PCs Couper and Black detained the appellant under section 14 of the 1995 Act. He was detained in respect of the housebreaking charge (Charge 1). The six hour maximum period of detention available under section 14 thus began at that time. He was taken to Drylaw Police Station, where the detention procedure was completed and he was cautioned.

[4] Because TMcC had been detained first and was a juvenile, PCs Couper and Black decided to interview him first. The attendance of a parent had to be arranged. Between 16.45 and 17.30 hours, the interview with TMcC took place. When the officers released TMcC, he informed them of stolen property relevant to their inquiries, which was said to be in the appellant's house.

[5] Following the interview with TMcC, PCs Couper and Black carried out some research on the police computer prompted by information provided by him. They then regarded it as a matter of priority to search the appellant's house for the stolen property alleged to be there. They searched the house with the consent of the appellant's mother, and found the stolen property. They then returned to Drylaw Police Station, and had something to eat before commencing an interview with the appellant.

[6] The interview began at 19.30 hours. The appellant was duly cautioned. He was questioned first about a break-in at a school on 22 February 2006. That was the matter on which information had been obtained from TMcC. At 19.35 hours the appellant was arrested in respect of the school break-in. Normal arrest procedures were carried through and the appropriate forms were completed.

[7] Between 19.35 and 20.40 hours, as a result of information about other crimes provided by the appellant, the officers took the appellant out in a police vehicle so that he might identify the loci of those other crimes.

[8] At 20.40 hours, the appellant was again interviewed under caution. He was shown the property retrieved from his house and admitted that he had obtained it from the school. He was then questioned about the housebreaking and fireraising with which the present indictment is concerned. At 21.00 hours he was cautioned and charged with those offences.

[9] PCs Couper and Black proceeded on the view that the appellant's detention under section 14 came to an end at 19.35 hours when he was arrested in respect of the school break-in. The appropriate forms were completed in accordance with that view. They regarded his status, when asked questions about the charges in the present indictment, as being that of a person under arrest in respect of another matter.

 

The appellant's submissions

[10] The primary submission advanced on the appellant's behalf was that the interview conducted between 20.40 and 21.00 hours was unlawful, because by then he had been detained for over six hours. The detention which commenced at 14.05 hours was not brought to an end by his arrest at 19.35 hours in respect of the school break-in. The reference in section 14(2)(a) to detention terminating when the detainee is arrested should be narrowly construed as relating to arrest in respect of the matter for which he had been detained. Section 14 detention was thus not terminated by arrest on another matter. The purpose of section 14 was to protect the detainee by placing a time limit on interrogation. To interview a detainee after the expiry of the six hour maximum period of detention was to deprive the detainee of that protection. The power to interview a detainee conferred by section 14(7)(a) expired on the expiry of the six hour period, and it followed that to interview a detainee after that time was unlawful.

[11] Mr Nicolson, for the appellant, cited a number of authorities in the course of his submissions, but accepted that none of them directly supported the contention which he advanced. We do not find it necessary to discuss these cases.

 

[12] The secondary submission advanced in the Minute before the sheriff and in the Note of Appeal was that, if the interview was lawful, it was unfair because of the procedures adopted by the police. Mr Nicolson did not elaborate that submission.

 

The Crown submissions

[13] The Advocate depute submitted that in the present case the detention period ended before the interview at 20.40 hours took place. It was brought to an end by the arrest of the appellant in respect of the school break-in. There was no reason to construe section 14(2)(a) as referring only to an arrest in respect of the same matter as was the subject of the detention. If it was not brought to an end by the arrest at 19.35 hours, it came to an end on the expiry of the six hour period at 20.05 hours. The appellant was therefore not under detention at the time of the interview. That, however, did not mean that the interview was unlawful. Section 14(7)(a) established the lawfulness of questioning a detainee while he is detained, but it has no bearing on the lawfulness of questioning a person who is not under section 14 detention. Section 14 conferred no right not to be questioned outwith the detention period. The questioning of the appellant after 20.40 hours was lawful. There was nothing in the circumstances to make it unfair.

 

Discussion

[14] The appellant's submissions are not well founded. As a matter of construction of section 14(2), we see no reason to read the reference to arrest in paragraph (a) as a reference only to arrest in respect of the same matter as the detention. Section 14(2) limits the period of detention to a maximum of six hours. It then lists three circumstances which may bring detention to an end after a shorter period. One of these is arrest, and it seems to us clear that the intention is that arrest, which provides an alternative justification for interference with the liberty of the subject, should bring detention to an end, whatever the reason for the arrest may be.

[15] In any event, in the present case, if the appellant's detention had not come to an end when he was arrested, it would have come to an end at 20.05 hours on the expiry of the six hour period. On any view, therefore, he was no longer subject to detention after 20.05 hours.

[16] The result of these considerations is that, when he was interviewed at 20.40 hours, the appellant was no longer a detainee under section 14, and the provisions of that section have no relevance to the lawfulness of the interview. At that time, he was under arrest for another matter. He was thus lawfully in police custody. He remained entitled to protection from unfair questioning, but there is no basis in section 14 for saying that the interview was unlawful.

[17] As we have already mentioned the Minute presented to the sheriff and the Note of Appeal advanced an alternative argument that because of the way the police conducted matters before, during and after the detention period the interview was unfair. That contention was not elaborated upon in oral submission. There is in our opinion no merit in it. We have set out in some detail the sequence of events, and there is nothing in it to support an inference that the police acted unfairly.

 

Result

[18] For the reasons which we have given we shall refuse the appeal and remit to the sheriff to proceed as accords.

[19] The Advocate depute moved us to extend the time bar to 9 July 2007 to enable the trial diet to proceed. We granted that motion.


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