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] | ||
Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Sheriff Court Decisions >> Procurator Fiscalm v. M [2008] ScotSC 31 (04 December 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotSC/2008/31.html Cite as: [2008] ScotSC 31 |
[New search] [Help]
by
SHERIFF D C W PYLE
in causa
PROCURATOR FISCAL,
against
M
The accused, who was born
in January 1991, pleaded guilty to an amended charge in a summary complaint in
the following terms:
"That between
As recorded in the
transcript of the proceedings, the presiding sheriff was told that during July
2007 the complainer, who is 18 years old, started receiving anonymous calls
from a male very late in the night. She did not recognise the caller's voice.
If she answered the call she received only one call each night. But if she
ignored the call her mobile telephone showed a number of missed calls
throughout the night from an unknown caller. The caller usually began the call
by saying, "Hi, [her Christian name], how are you doing?" He appeared to have a
local accent, although his voice seemed to be muffled. He then made sexually
suggestive comments to her and told her what he was doing sexually to himself
and what he would like to do to her. For example, he told her that she made him
hard and asked if she would like to watch him at work, and that he really liked
her tight bum (although it later transpired that this last comment was made to
the complainer's mother who took the call after her daughter complained to her
about them.) The calls went on throughout July and August 2007. The complainer
asked who the caller was and he said, "Try and guess." She became increasingly
worried as she was due to leave for university and felt vulnerable about being
away from home. The police were contacted and they were eventually able to trace
the calls to the accused, who was interviewed under caution. He said that the
complainer was a good friend of his, whom he had met at school. He admitted
making the calls and said that they were intended only as a joke between good
friends. He admitted that he said things like, "Fancy coming round for a shag?"
or "I'm feeling really horny". He admitted that he had said, "I really like
your tight bum." He also admitted that he probably said to her that he was
masturbating when speaking to her, but that he was not in fact doing so. He
said that he derived no sexual satisfaction from the calls and that he stopped
making them probably because he had run out of free minutes on his telephone.
In reply to caution and charge, he said, "It wasn't meant to be sexually
offensive."
The accused's solicitor
was understandably much concerned about whether it was appropriate that the
accused should be, in the common parlance, placed on the sex offenders register.
The presiding sheriff considered that it was a matter for his discretion and
held that he could not decide the matter without further detailed submissions
and, perhaps, a proof in mitigation. In order to save time at a later date, he
also decided to call for a social enquiry report and community service
assessment.
When the case called
before me, I was told by the accused's solicitor that he intended to lead
evidence in support of his submission that the accused should not be placed on
the register. I expressed some misgivings about that approach unless it was
being maintained that there was a dispute between the Crown and the accused
about the narrative which had already been given or what was to be said in
mitigation. I heard submissions about that, at the end of which it became clear
that the Crown did not accept the following defence contentions:
I decided to allow
evidence to be led. There was a joint minute which allowed in evidence the
statements given to the police by the complainer and her mother. The accused
gave evidence and, obviously, was subject to cross-examination. I found him
generally to be a credible and reliable witness whom I thought was still
somewhat bemused about the mess he was now in. He was obviously an intelligent
young man. It would easy to conclude that his behaviour reflected immaturity,
but that would have to be reconciled with his success in his Higher
examinations in which he had achieved outstanding grades and which could not
have been achieved without dedicated work over a number of years. Other than
the fact of his behaviour which he had accepted was a crime, I detected no sign
in his demeanour of sexual deviance. I was therefore driven to the conclusion
that, as he said in evidence and had said to the police, he thought that his
behaviour was a joke. What could possibly be funny about his conduct is
impossible for me to say; in my view the complainer and her mother were well
entitled to conclude that what had occurred was a matter of the utmost
seriousness It was almost inevitable that the conduct would cause distress to
the complainer, never mind her parents.
I can well understand why
the Crown decided not to lead the complainer and her mother in evidence - they
had surely endured enough in having to explain the circumstances to the police.
It did, however, mean that their evidence as contained in the statements was
not the subject of cross-examination. It was therefore always likely that the
evidence of the accused would be more persuasive, which indeed was the case. In
saying that, I should not wish to suggest that the complainer or her mother had
not told the truth as they saw it to the police, but it is not uncommon for
witnesses to accept that such statements can be subject to modification after
cross-examination without in any way altering the fundamental truth of their
evidence. Indeed, that was the situation here, in that I was able to accept
much of what the accused said without diluting in any meaningful way the
essence of the charge against him.
So, always subject to the
foregoing general remarks, I was able to accept the following points in
mitigation of the accused's conduct:
The accused's solicitor
submitted that there was no "significant sexual aspect" to the accused's
conduct. The preamble to the Act showed that Parliament had not intended that
offenders like the accused should be on the sex offenders register. It was
significant that sexual intercourse between an offender under 20 years and a
girl under 16 years was excluded from those offenders who should be on the
register. Reference was made to
In her brief but as always
precise submission, the procurator fiscal depute argued that the essence of the
charge to which the accused had admitted his guilt was the sexual nature of the
comments he had made. For that reason, the charge contained a "significant
sexual aspect" and therefore required notification under the Act.
Section 80 of the Sexual
Offences Act 2003 provides that a person is subject to the notification
requirements of the Act if, inter alia, he is convicted of an offence listed in
Schedule 3, in which there is a separate list for
"An offence in Scotland
other than is mentioned in paragraphs 36 to 59 [being the list of offences
described above] if the court, in imposing sentence or otherwise disposing of
the case, determines for the purposes of this paragraph that there was a
significant sexual aspect to the offender's behaviour in committing the
offence."
It is obvious that the
crime to which the accused pleaded guilty had a sexual aspect to it. The issue
therefore is whether the sexual aspect is "significant". In my opinion, it is
not. Before I set out my reasoning for that conclusion, I must, with the
greatest respect, disagree with the sheriff who presided over the earlier
hearing: I do not agree with him that the issue is one for the exercise of discretion;
it is in my view a question of law - a question of statutory construction.
The rules of statutory
construction are all subject to the overall task which is to ascertain the
intention of Parliament expressed in the language under construction (Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in R v
Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions, Ex p. Spath
Holme Ltd [2001] 2 AC 349, 395, HL).
It seems to me that the
rule of construction which is particularly apposite to the present case is the
one known as ejusdem generis, as
described by Lord Campbell in R v Edmundson (1859) 28 LJM.C 213, at p215:
"I accede to the principle
laid down... that, where there are general words following particular and
specific words, the general words must be confined to things of the same kind
as those specified."
I agree with the accused's
solicitor that it is significant that Parliament decided that there should be
excluded from the list the statutory offence of unlawful intercourse with a
girl under 16 where the offender was under 20. To that should be added other
exclusions from the list, such as an offence of abuse of a position of trust
under Section 3 of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 2000 where the offender
was under 20. It is in my view plain that the common denominator in the list is
an element of sexual deviance (or sexual disorder or deviance - see
Indeed, a failure generally
to employ the ejusdem generis rule to
Schedule 3 would mean that it would be open to a court to use paragraph 60 to
have a 19 year old man subjected to the notification requirements where he had
unlawful intercourse with a girl under 16. That would surely be contrary to the
clear intention of Parliament.
There is, in my opinion,
support for the view I have reached in
"There are of course
public indecency offences - particularly many cases of indecent exposure of the
genitalia - which may be committed for sexual gratification and which may demonstrate a sexual disorder
or deviance in which the public protection elements of the legislation under
consideration in these appeals may be highly relevant [my italics]... In my
opinion, the extent to which those committing an offence of public indecency - with its broad ambit including those who may
not be sexual offenders in any real sense [again, my italics] - should be... subject to the notification requirements,
is properly one for the legislature to define..."
Given that I have found
that there was no underlying element of sexual disorder or deviance in the
accused's conduct, however reprehensible it undoubtedly was, it follows that it
does not fall within the ambit of paragraph 60.
I should also add that,
while it does not form part of my reasoning, I gain some comfort that I have
reached the correct decision in this case from the terms of the social enquiry
report. My initial thought was that it was inappropriate to look at the report
at this stage, given that the practice has always been to decide whether the
notification requirements are necessary at the point of conviction and not at
the point of sentence which is invariably later. (This is because the relevant
date for notification purposes is the date of conviction (Section 82(6)) But I
now consider that such an approach is too restrictive given that paragraph 60 requires
that I must determine that there was a significant sexual aspect to the
offender's behaviour in committing the offence at the point of "imposing
sentence or otherwise disposing of the case". (See