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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Gordon & Anor v. Procurator Fiscal Dundee [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_45 (27 July 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_45.html
Cite as: 2007 SCCR 349, 2008 JC 87, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_45, [2007] HCJAC 45, 2007 SLT 954, 2007 GWD 26-452

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Nimmo Smith

C.G.B. Nicholson, CBE, QC,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJAC 45

Appeal Nos: XJ 1317/06

XJ 1316/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by C.G.B. NICHOLSON, CBE, QC

 

in

 

APPEALS UNDER SECTION 174 OF THE CRIMINAL PROCEDURE (SCOTLAND) ACT 1995

 

in causis

 

(1) JOHN GORDON

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, DUNDEE

Respondent:

 

and

 

(2) DONALD CONWAY

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, DUNDEE

Respondent:

 

 

_______

 

 

Appellant: Shead; Purdie and Co;

Respondent: Bain, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

27 July 2007

 

Background

[1] The present appellants were each charged, on separate complaints, with a breach of an antisocial behaviour order ("ASBO") contrary to section 9(1) of the Antisocial Behaviour Etc. (Scotland) Act 2004 ("the Act"). In the case of John Gordon, the ASBO had been made at Dundee Sheriff Court on 16 May 2006, and the breach was alleged to have taken place on 15 September 2006. In the case of Donald Conway the ASBO had been made at Dundee Sheriff Court on 13 December 2005, and the breach was alleged to have taken place on 10 June 2006.

[2] The precise details of those charges are not of importance for present purposes. What is of importance is that in each case an identical plea to the competency of the charge was taken. Those pleas were argued before the sheriff, by the same solicitor representing both accused, in a single hearing which took place at Dundee Sheriff Court on 19 September 2006. The sheriff repelled the plea to competency in each case but granted leave to appeal to this Court. In the circumstances we heard both appeals together; and at the hearing both appellants were represented by the same counsel. At the conclusion of the hearing we refused the appeals and indicated that our reasons would be given in writing at a later date. Those reasons now follow.

[3] The point at issue before the sheriff, and again before ourselves, arises from the fact that each appellant was originally charged by the police with a charge of breach of the peace and with a contravention of section 9(1) of the Act. In the case of John Gordon that took place on 15 September 2006, and in the case of Donald Conway it took place on 10 June 2006. Subsequently, as has already been noted above, each accused was charged on complaint solely with a contravention of section 9(1). In each case the charge of breach of the peace and the charge of contravention of section 9(1) of the Act both arose from the same species facti. Putting it shortly for the moment, the submission advanced on behalf of the appellants was that the present proceedings are fundamentally null in that the Crown has acted otherwise than in accordance with the terms of section 9(3) of the Act. To understand that submission it is necessary to have regard to the relevant statutory provisions.

 

The statutory provisions

[4] Section 9(1) of the Act provides:

"Subject to subsection (3), a person who -

(a) is subject to an antisocial behaviour order or an interim order; and

(b) without reasonable excuse, does anything that the order to which the

person is subject prohibits the person from doing,

shall be guilty of an offence."

Subsection (3) provides:

"If -

(a) otherwise than under subsection (1), the thing done by the person

constitutes an offence (a 'separate offence'); and

(b) the person is charged with the separate offence,

the person shall not be liable to be proceeded against for an offence under subsection (1)."

The remaining provisions of section 9 set out various matters which a court may take into account when sentencing for a 'separate offence'. These include the fact that the person in question was subject to an ASBO at the time when the new offence was committed. The existence of that ASBO must, however, be libelled in the indictment or complaint.

 

Submissions

[5] Mr Shead's submissions on behalf of the appellants began with the proposition that, in the absence of any provision to the contrary, the word "charged", as used in subsection (3)(b), must include a charge by the police. Consequently, where, as in the present cases, a person has been charged by the police with a breach of the peace and a contravention of section 9(1), with both charges arising from the same alleged facts, it will not be competent for the Crown to proceed against that person for the offence under subsection (1). In support of that submission Mr Shead noted that in practice it is commonplace for the police to charge a person in advance of reporting the matter in question to the procurator fiscal. In that situation, he submitted, it must be supposed that the Parliament had that practice in mind when passing what is now subsection 9(3)(b), and therefore intended that the word "charged" should include a charge at the instance of the police. Accordingly, he submitted that, on a sound construction of the subsection, a person who has been charged by the police with a contravention of section 9(1) and with a breach of the peace arising from the same facts and circumstances cannot thereafter be competently proceeded against by the Crown in respect of the offence under subsection (1). Mr Shead recognised, correctly in our view, that the underlying purpose of subsection (3) is to avoid the double jeopardy which would arise if a person were to be liable to be convicted twice in respect of, in effect, the same actings or course of conduct; but he submitted that the protection against that will arise both where a person has been charged at the instance of the Crown with a section 9(1) offence and a "separate offence" and also where such charges have been at the instance of the police.

[6] In response, the advocate depute began by noting that the word "charged" is nowhere defined in the 2004 Act. In particular, she observed, that word is not defined so as to include charging of a suspect by the police. On the other hand, she drew our attention to the fact that in various other parts of the Act the word "charged" is used in a context which makes it plain that it must relate to a charge contained in proceedings instituted at the instance of the Crown. Examples of that are to be found in sections 45, 93, 111, 122 and 123. These are all provisions which set out a defence in respect of an offence created by the Act, and they are all expressed in terms such as "It shall be a defence for a person charged with an offence ... to show ... [a reasonable excuse, or whatever]". The advocate depute submitted that, since the opportunity to advance a special defence will arise only in the course of proceedings which have been instituted by the Crown, it is plain from the examples given that the word "charged", as used there, can only refer to a charge at the instance of the Lord Advocate or the procurator fiscal. That being so, she submitted, there can be no reason to conclude that the word was intended to have any different, or wider, meaning where it appears in section 9(3)(b). In other words, it was submitted, the word "charged", as used throughout the Act, simply means "proceeded against".

[7] The advocate depute went on to submit that, when the legislation was enacted, it cannot have been the intention of the Parliament to fetter the discretion of a procurator fiscal or the Lord Advocate. In that connection she referred to Huston v. Buchanan 1994 SCCR 512. That was a case in which the police had stated that they were taking no action against the accused. However, it was held on appeal that whatever the police may have said could not bind the Crown or constitute any bar to proceedings being taken by the Crown. The advocate depute recognised that the case of Huston was not concerned with a question of statutory interpretation. However, she submitted that the general principle enunciated in that case is of equal relevance and importance in cases like the present ones where a fettering of the Crown's discretion arises from a possible construction of a statutory provision. In practice, the advocate depute submitted, a charge at the instance of the police simply gives a suspect fair notice of what may follow thereafter, and provides that suspect with an early opportunity to make an exculpatory statement. It cannot foreclose the Crown's options. In that connection, the advocate depute also made reference to a passage in Gordon's Criminal Law (3rd ed.) p. 529 (para. 36.06) where, in relation to section 5(5) of the Criminal Law (Consolidation) (Scotland) Act 1995 (intercourse with girl under 16), it is said:

"In practice, therefore, a man may not be regarded as having been 'previously charged' with an offence unless he had previously stood trial for it."

She founded on this passage as support for the view that, in the absence of a clear definition to the contrary, the word "charged", when used in a statute, will not include a charge at the instance of the police.

 

Decision

[8] In our opinion, the submissions advanced by the advocate depute are to be preferred to those advanced on behalf of the appellants. Section 9(3) of the 2004 Act has, we think, been somewhat carelessly drafted and, simply as a matter of grammar, it may be capable of being construed in the manner proposed by Mr Shead. However, we are of opinion that, in the absence of a clear indication to the contrary, it cannot properly be construed so as to fetter the undoubted discretion of the Crown in relation to matters which are ultimately made the subject of court proceedings. The discretion accorded to the Crown in such matters is absolute in the absence of a clearly expressed restriction or limitation. Thus, for example, if, in circumstances different from those in the present appeals, the police were to charge someone in terms which were incompetent - possibly because they had founded the charge on a statutory provision which was no longer in force - it could not, in our view, be contended that the Crown would thereafter be prohibited from charging that person under the correct, and current, statutory provision. In our view, therefore, section 9(3) of the 2004 Act must be construed in a manner which preserves the Crown's discretion.

[9] It is important to add, however, that the construction of the subsection which we consider to be correct does not in fact cause any prejudice to an accused person. As was accepted by Mr Shead, and by the advocate depute, the purpose of the provision is plainly to avoid double jeopardy, that is to say a situation where an accused person would be at risk of being punished twice for what was in effect precisely the same conduct. Such a risk cannot arise solely by virtue of any charge or charges which may be proffered by the police: it will arise only in the course of proceedings at the instance of the Crown. But, in the present cases, the Crown has quite properly recognised that risk, and has given effect to the purpose of section 9(3) by libelling only a charge under section 9(1) in the complaints served on the appellants. In our opinion, those charges are not incompetent; and, having refused the appeals, we shall now remit both cases to the sheriff to proceed as accords.


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