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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> R v Morris [1984] UKHL 1 (13 October 1984) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1984/1.html Cite as: [1983] 3 All ER 288, [1984] UKHL 1, [1983] 3 WLR 697, [1984] AC 320 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/243
Anderton (Respondent.)
v.
Burnside (A.P.)(Appellant)
(On Appeal from a Divisional Court of the
Queen's Bench Division)
Regina
(Respondent)
v.
Morris (Appellant.)
(On Appeal from the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division))
(Consolidated Appeals)
JUDGMENT
Die Jovis 13° Octobris 1983
Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to
whom was
referred the Cause Anderton against Burnside and
Regina
against Morris, That the Committee had heard Counsel as
well
on Wednesday the 20th as on Thursday the 21st days of
July
last upon the Petition and Appeal of James Burnside of
17
Keswick Court, Langley, Middleton, in the County of
Greater
Manchester praying that the matter of the Order set
forth
in the Schedule thereto, namely an Order of a
Divisional
Court of Her Majesty's High Court of Justice of the 5th
day
of November 1982, might be reviewed before Her Majesty
the
Queen in Her Court of Parliament and that the said Order
might
be reversed, varied or altered or that the Petitioner
might have
such other relief in the premises as to Her
Majesty the Queen in
Her Court of Parliament might seem
meet; as also the Petition and
Appeal of David Alan Morris
of Flat 3, 79 Grafton Road, Acton,
London W3 praying that
the matter of the Order set forth in the
Schedule thereto,
namely an Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal
(Criminal
Division) of the 24th day of March 1983, might be
reviewed
before Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of Parliament
and
that the said Order might be reversed, varied or altered
or
that the Petitioner might have such other relief in
the
premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court
of
Parliament might seem meet (which said Appeals were by an
Order
of the House of the 7th day of June last Ordered to be
Consolidated);
and Counsel having been heard on behalf of
Cyril James Anderton
and Asda Stores Limited (on behalf of
Her Majesty) the Respondents
to the said Appeals; and due
consideration had this day of what
was offered on either
side in this Cause:
It is Ordered and Adjudged, by
the Lords Spiritual and
Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her
Majesty the Queen
assembled. That the said Orders, of a Divisional
Court of
Her Majesty's High Court of Justice of the 5th day
of
November 1982, and of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal
(Criminal
Division) of the 24th day of March 1983 complained
of in the said
Appeals be, and the same are hereby, Affirmed
HOUSE OF LORDS
ANDERTON (RESPONDENT)
v.
BURNSIDE
(A.P.) (APPELLANT)
(ON APPEAL FROM A DIVISIONAL COURT OF THE QUEEN'S
BENCH DIVISION)
REGINA (RESPONDENT)
v.
MORRIS
(APPELLANT)
(ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL
DIVISION)
(CONSOLIDATED APPEALS)
Lord Fraser of
Tullybelton
Lord Edmund-Davies
Lord Roskill
Lord Brandon of
Oakbrook
Lord Brightman
LORD FRASER OF TULLYBELTON
My Lords,
I have had
the advantage of reading in draft the speech
prepared by my noble
and learned friend, Lord Roskill. I entirely
agree with it, and
for the reasons given by him I would answer
the certified
questions in the way he proposes, and I would dismiss
both
appeals.
LORD EDMUND-DAVIES
My Lords,
Having had
the advantage of reading in draft form the
speech prepared by my
noble and learned friend, Lord Roskill, I
too would answer the
questions certified in these appeals in the
manner indicated by
him and dismiss both appeals.
- 1 -
LORD ROSKILL
My Lords,
These two
consolidated appeals, one from the Court of
Appeal (Criminal
Division), the other from the Divisional Court,
have been brought
by leave of your Lordships' House in order that
controversial
questions of law arising from the dishonest practice
of label
switching in connection with shoplifting in supermarkets
may be
finally decided. These matters have been in controversy
for some
time and have been the subject of judicial decisions
which are not
always easy to reconcile as well as disagreement
between
distinguished academic lawyers.
The facts
giving rise to these appeals are simple. Morris,
the appellant
from the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division), on the
30th October
1981 took goods from the shelves of a supermarket.
He replaced the
price labels attached to them with labels showing
a lesser price
than the originals. At the checkout point he was
asked for and
paid those lesser prices. He was then arrested.
Burnside, the
appellant from the Divisional Court, was seen to
remove a price
label from a joint of pork in the supermarket and
attach it to a
second joint. This action was detected at the
checkout point but
before he had paid for that second joint which
at that moment bore
a price label showing a price of £2.73
whereas the label
should have shown a price of £6.91 1/2. Burnside
was then
arrested.
The only
relevant difference between the two cases is that
Burnside was
arrested before he had dishonestly paid the lesser
price for the
joint of pork. Morris was arrested after he had paid
the relevant
lesser prices. Morris was tried in Acton Crown Court
on two
charges of theft contrary to section 1(1) of the Theft Act
1968. A
third count of obtaining property by deception contrary to
section
15 of that Act appeared in the indictment but the learned
Assistant
Recorder did not take a verdict upon it and ordered that
count to
remain on the file. Morris appealed. The Court of
Appeal (Criminal
Division) (Lord Lane C.J., O'Connor L.J. and
Talbot J.) dismissed
his appeal in a reserved judgment given on the
8th March 1983 by
the learned Lord Chief Justice.
Burnside
was convicted at Manchester Magistrates Court on
the 27th January
1982 on a single charge of theft contrary to
section 1(1) of the
Theft Act. He appealed by way of case stated.
On the 5th November
1982, the Divisional Court (Ackner L.J. and
Webster J.) dismissed
the appeal.
Both the
Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) and the
Divisional Court
granted certificates. The former certificate read
thus:
"If a
person has substituted on an item of goods displayed in
"a
self-service store a price label showing a lesser price for
"one
showing a greater price, with the intention of paying
"the
lesser price and then pays the lesser price at the till
"and
takes the goods, is there at any stage a 'dishonest
"appropriation'
for the purposes of section 1 of the Theft
"Act 1968 and if
so, at what point does such appropriation
"take place."
- 2 -
The certificate in the latter case reads:
"If a
person has substituted on an item of goods displayed in
"a
self-service store a price label showing a lesser price
"for
one showing a greater price, with the intention of
"paying
the lesser price, and then pays the lesser price at
"the till
and takes the goods, is there at any stage a
"'dishonest
appropriation' for the purposes of section 1 of
"the Theft
Act 1968."
The two
certificates though clearly intended to raise the
same point of
law are somewhat differently worded and, with
respect, as both
learned counsel ultimately accepted during the
debate before your
Lordships, do not precisely raise the real issue
for decision, at
least in the terms in which it falls to be decided.
My Lords,
in his submissions for the appellants, which were
conspicuous both
for their clarity and their brevity, Mr. Denison
Q.C. urged that
on these simple facts neither appellant was guilty
of theft. He
accepted that Morris would have had no defence to
a charge under
section 15(1) of obtaining property by deception 'for
he
dishonestly paid the lesser prices and passed through the
checkpoint
having done so before he was arrested. But Morris, he
said, was
not guilty of theft because there was no appropriation by
him
before payment at the checkpoint sufficient to support a
charge of
theft, however dishonest his actions may have been in
previously
switching the labels.
Mr.
Denison pointed out that if, as he accepted, an offence
was
committed against section 15(1) and if the prosecution case
were
right, Morris would be liable to be convicted of obtaining
property
by deception which he had already stolen - a situation
which
learned counsel suggested was somewhat anomalous.
As regards
Burnside, Mr. Denison submitted that for the
same reason there was
no appropriation before his arrest sufficient
to support a charge
of theft. He also submitted that Burnside's
actions however
dishonest would not support a charge of
attempting to obtain
property by deception contrary to section 15(1)
since his
dishonest act was no more than an act preparatory to
obtaining
property by deception and was not sufficiently proximate
to an
attempt to obtain property by deception.
My Lords,
if these submissions be well founded it is clear
that however
dishonest their actions, each respondent was wrongly
convicted of
theft. The question is whether they are well
founded. The answer
must depend upon the true construction of
the relevant sections of
the Theft Act 1968 and it is to these that
I now turn. For ease of
reference I set them out:
"1.-(1)
A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly
"appropriates
property belonging to another with the
"intention of
permanently depriving the other of it; and
'"thief and
'steal' shall be construed accordingly.
"(2)
It is immaterial whether the appropriation is made
"with a
view to gain, or is made for the thief's own
"benefit.
- 3 -
"(3)
The five following sections of this Act shall have
"effect as
regards the interpretation and operation of this
"section
(and, except as otherwise provided by this Act,
"shall apply
only for the purposes of this section).
"2.-(1)
A person's appropriation of property belonging to
"another is
not to be regarded as dishonest -
"(a)
if he appropriates the property in the belief that he
"has in
law the right to deprive the other of it, on behalf
"of
himself or of a third person; or
"(b)
if he appropriates the property in the belief that he
"would
have the other's consent if the other knew of the
"appropriation
and the circumstances of it; or
"(c)
(except where the property came to him as trustee
"or
personal representative) if he appropriates the property
"in
the belief that the person to whom the property belongs
"cannot
be discovered by taking reasonable steps.
"(2)
A person's appropriation of property belonging to
"another
may be dishonest notwithstanding that he is willing
"to pay
for the property.
"3.-(1)
Any assumption by a person of the rights of an
"owner amounts
to an appropriation, and this includes, where
"he has come by
the property (innocently or not) without
"stealing it, any
later assumption of a right to it by keeping
"or dealing with
it as owner.
"(2)
Where property or a right or interest in property
"is or
purports to be transferred for value to a person
"acting in
good faith, no later assumption by him of rights
"which he
believed himself to be acquiring shall, by reason
"of any
defect in the transferor's title amount to theft of
"the
property.
"4.-(1)
'Property' includes money and all other property,
"real or
personal, including things in action and other
"intangible
property."
It is to
be observed that the definition of "appropriation"
in
section 3(1) is not exhaustive. But section 1(1) and section
3(1)
show clearly that there can be no conviction for theft
contrary to
section 1(1) even if all the other ingredients of the
offence are
proved unless "appropriation" is also
proved.
The
starting point of any consideration of Mr. Denison's
submissions
must, I think, be the decision of this House in
Lawrence
[1972] AC 626. In the leading speech, Viscount
Dilhorne
expressly accepted the view of the Court of Appeal
(Criminal
Division) in that case that the offence of theft involved
four
elements, (1) a dishonest (2) appropriation (3) of property
belonging
to another, (4) with the intention of permanently
depriving the
owner of it. Viscount Dilhorne also rejected the
argument that
even if these four elements were all present there
could not be
theft within the section if the owner of the property
in question
had consented to the acts which were done by the
- 4 -
defendant.
That there was in that case a dishonest appropriation
was beyond
question and the House did not have to consider the
precise
meaning; of that word in section 3(1).
Mr.
Denison submitted that the phrase in section 3(1) "any
"assumption
by a person of the rights (my emphasis) of an owner
"amounts
to an appropriation" must mean any assumption of "all
"the
rights of an owner". Since neither respondent had at the
time
of the removal of the goods from the shelves and of the
label
switching assumed all the rights of the owner, there was
no
appropriation and therefore no theft. Mr. Jefferies Q.C. for
the
prosecution, on the other hand, contended that the
rights in this
context only meant any of the rights. An
owner of goods has
many rights - they have been described as "a
bundle or package of
"rights". Mr. Jefferies contended
that on a fair reading of the
subsection it cannot have been the
intention that every one of an
owner's rights had to be assumed by
the alleged thief before an
appropriation was proved and that
essential ingredient of the
offence of theft established.
My Lords,
if one reads the words "the rights" at the opening
of
section 3(1) literally and in isolation from the rest of the
section,
Mr. Denison's submission undoubtedly has force. But the
later
words "any later assumption of a right" in subsection (1)
and
the words in subsection (2) "no later assumption by him
of rights"
seem to me to militate strongly against the
correctness of the
submission. Moreover the provisions of section
2(l)(a) also seem to
point in the same direction. It follows
therefore that it is enough
for the prosecution if they have
proved in these cases the
assumption by the respondents of any
of the rights of the owner
of. the goods in question, that is to
say, the supermarket
concerned, it being common ground in these
cases that the other
three of the four elements mentioned in
Viscount Dilhorne's speech
in Lawrence had been fully
established.
My Lords,
Mr. Jefferies sought to argue that any removal
from the shelves of
the supermarket, even if unaccompanied by
label switching, was
without more an appropriation. In one
passage in his judgment in
Morris's case, the learned Lord Chief
Justice appears to have
accepted the submission, for he said at
page 31D of the record ".
. . . It seems to us that in taking the
"article from the
shelf the customer is indeed assuming one of
"the rights of
the owner, the right to move the article from its
"position
on the shelf to carry it to the checkout ....".
With the
utmost respect, I cannot accept this statement as
correct. If one
postulates an honest customer taking goods from a
shelf to put in
his or her trolley to take to the checkpoint there
to pay the
proper price, I am unable to see that any of these
actions
involves any assumption by the shopper of the rights of
the
supermarket. In the context of section 3(1), the concept
of
appropriation in my view involves not an act expressly or
impliedly
authorised by the owner but an act by way of adverse
interference
with or usurpation of those rights. When the honest
shopper acts
as I have just described, he or she is acting with
the implied
authority of the owner of the supermarket to take the
goods from
the shelf, put them in the trolley, take them to the
checkpoint
and there to pay the correct price, at which moment the
property
- 5 -
in the
goods' will pass to the shopper for the first time. It is
with the
consent of the owners of the supermarket, be that
consent express
or implied, that the shopper does these acts and
thus obtains at
least control if not actual possession of the goods
preparatory,
at a later stage, to obtaining the property in them
upon payment
of the proper amount at the checkpoint. I do not
think that
section 3(1) envisages any such act as an "appropriation",
whatever
may be the meaning of that word in other fields such as
contract
or sale of goods law.
If, as I
understand all of your Lordships to agree, the
concept of
appropriation in section 3(1) involves an element of
adverse
interference with or usurpation of some right of the
owner, it is
necessary next to consider whether that requirement is
satisfied
in either of these cases. As I have already said, in my
view mere
removal from the shelves without more is not an
appropriation.
Further, if a shopper with some perverted sense of
humour,
intending only to create confusion and nothing more, both
for the
supermarket and for other shoppers, switches labels, I do
not
think that that act of label switching alone is without more
an
appropriation, though it is not difficult to envisage some
cases of
dishonest label-switching which could be. In cases such
as the
present, it is in truth a combination of these actions, the
removal
from the shelf and the switching of the labels which
evidences
adverse interference with or usurpation of the right of
the owner.
Those acts, therefore, amount to an appropriation and
if they are
accompanied by proof of the other three elements to
which I have
referred, the offence of theft is established.
Further if they are
accompanied by other acts such as putting the
goods so removed
and re-labelled into a receptacle, whether a
trolley or the
shopper's own bag or basket, proof of appropriation
within section
3(1) becomes overwhelming. It is the doing of one
or more acts
which individually or collectively amount to such
adverse
interference with or usurpation of the owner's rights
which
constitute appropriation under section 3(1) and I do not
think it
matters where there is more than one such act in which
order the
successive acts take place, or whether there is any
interval of
time between them. To suggest that it matters whether
the
mislabelling precedes or succeeds removal from the shelves is
to
reduce this branch of the law to an absurdity.
My Lords,
it will have been observed that I have
endeavoured so far to
resolve the question for determination in
these appeals without
reference to any decided cases except
Lawrence which alone
of the many cases cited in argument is a
decision of this House.
If your Lordships accept as correct the
analysis which I have
endeavoured to express by reference to the
construction of the
relevant sections of the Theft Act, a trail
through a forest of
decisions, many briefly and indeed inadequately
reported, will
tend to confuse rather than to enlighten. There are
however some
to which brief reference should perhaps be made.
First,
McPherson (1972). Your Lordships have had the
benefit of a
transcript of the judgment of Lord Widgery C.J. I
quote from page
3 of the transcript:
"Reducing
this case to its bare essentials we have
this:
"Mrs. McPherson in common design with the
others takes
"two
bottles of whisky from the stand, puts them in her
"shopping
bag; at the time she intends to take them out
"without paying
for them, in other words she intends to
"steal them from the
very beginning. She acts dishonestly
"as the jury found, and
the sole question is whether that is
"an appropriation of the
bottles within the meaning of
"section 1. We have no
hesitation whatever in saying that it
"is such an
appropriation and indeed we content ourselves
"with a
judgment of this brevity because we have been
"unable to
accept or to find any argument to the contrary,
"to suggest
that an appropriation is not effective in those
"simple
circumstances."
That was
not, of course, a label switching case, but it is a plain
case of
appropriation effected by the combination of the acts of
removing
the goods from the shelf and of concealing them in the
shopping
bag. McPherson is to my mind clearly correctly decided
as
are all the cases which have followed it. It is wholly
consistent
with the principles which I have endeavoured to state in
this
speech.
It has
been suggested that Meech (1974) 1 Q.B. 549, Skipp
(1975)
Crim. L.R. 114 - your Lordships also have a transcript of
the
judgment in this case - and certain other cases are
inconsistent
with McPherson. I do not propose to examine
these or other cases
in detail. Suffice it to say that I am far
from convinced that
there is any inconsistency between them and
other cases as has
been suggested once it is appreciated that
facts will vary
infinitely. The precise moment when dishonest
acts, not of
themselves amounting to an appropriation,
subsequently, because of
some other and later acts combined with
those earlier acts, do
bring about an appropriation within section
3(1), will necessarily
vary according to the particular case in
which the question arises.
Of the
other cases referred to, I understand all your
Lordships to agree
that Anderton v. Wish (1981) 72 Cr. App. R. 23
was
rightly decided for the reasons given. I need not therefore
refer
to it further. Eddy v. Niman (1981) 73 Cr. App. R. 237 was
in
my view also correctly decided on its somewhat unusual facts.
I
think that Webster J., giving the first judgment, asked the
right
question at page 241 of the report, though, with respect, I
think
that the phrase "some overt act .... inconsistent with
the true
"owner's rights" is too narrow. I think that
the act need not
necessarily be "overt".
Kaur
v. Chief Constable of Hampshire (1981) 72 Cr. App. R.
359
is a difficult case. I am disposed to agree with the learned
Lord
Chief Justice that it was wrongly decided but without going
into
further detail I respectfully suggest that it is on any view
wrong
to introduce into this branch of the criminal law questions
whether
particular contracts are void or voidable on the ground of
mistake
or fraud or whether any mistake is sufficiently
fundamental to
vitiate a contract. These difficult questions should
so far as
possible be confined to those fields of law to which they
are
immediately relevant and I do not regard them as relevant
questions
under the Theft Act 1968.
My Lords,
it remains briefly to consider any relationship
between section 1
and section 15. If the conclusion I have
- 7 -
reached
that theft takes place at the moment of appropriation and
before
any payment is made at the checkpoint be correct it is
wrong to
assert, as has been asserted, that the same act of
appropriation
creates two offences one against section 1(1) and the
other
against section 15(1) because the two offences occur at
different
points of time; the section 15(1) offence is not
committed until
payment of the wrong amount is made at the
checkpoint while the
theft has been committed earlier. It follows
that in cases such as
Morris two offences were committed. I do
not doubt that it
was perfectly proper to add the third count
under section 15(1) in
this case. I think the Assistant Recorder
was right to leave all
three counts to the jury. While one may
sympathise with his
preventing them from returning a verdict on
the third count once
they convicted on the theft counts if only in
the interests of
simplification, the counts were not alternative as
he appears to
have treated them. They were cumulative and once
they were left to
the jury verdicts should have been taken on all
of them.
My Lords,
these shoplifting cases by switching labels are
essentially simple
in their facts and their factual simplicity should
not be allowed
to be obscured by ingenious legal arguments upon
the Theft Act
which for some time have bedevilled this branch of
the criminal
law without noticeably contributing to the efficient
administration
of justice - rather the reverse. The law to be
applied to simple
cases, whether in magistrates' courts or the
Crown Court, should
if possible be equally simple. I see no reason
in principle why,
when there is clear evidence of both offences
being committed,
both offences should not be charged. But where
a shoplifter has
passed the checkpoint and quite clearly has, by
deception,
obtained goods either without paying or by paying only
a lesser
price than he should, those concerned with prosecutions
may in
future think it preferable in the interests of simplicity to
charge
only an offence against section 15(1). In many cases of
that kind
it is difficult to see what possible defence there can be
and that
course may well avoid any opportunity for further
ingenious legal
arguments upon the first few sections of the Theft
Act. Of course
when the dishonesty is detected before the
defendant has reached
the checkpoint and he or she is arrested
before that point so that
no property has been obtained by
deception, then theft is properly
charged and if appropriation,
within the meaning I have attributed
to that word in this speech,
is proved as well as the other three
ingredients of the offence of
theft, the defendant is plainly
guilty of that offence.
My Lords,
as already explained I have not gone through all
the cases cited
though I have mentioned some. Of the rest those
inconsistent with
this speech must henceforth be treated as over-
ruled.
I would answer the certified questions in this way:
"There
is a dishonest appropriation for the purposes of the
"Theft
Act 1968 where by the substitution of a price label
"showing
a lesser price on goods for one showing a greater
"price, a
defendant either by that act alone or by that act
"in
conjunction with another act or other acts (whether done
"before
or after the substitution of the labels) adversely
"interferes
with or usurps the right of the owner to ensure
- 8 -
"that
the goods concerned are sold and paid for at
that
"greater price."
I would dismiss these appeals.
LORD BRANDON OF OAKBROOK
My Lords,
I have had
the advantage of reading in draft the speech
prepared by my noble
and learned friend, Lord Roskill. I agree
with it, and for the
reasons which he gives I would dismiss both
appeals.
LORD BRIGHTMAN
My Lords,
I would
dismiss these appeals for the reasons given by my
noble
and learned friend, Lord Roskill.
- 9 -