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] | ||
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Nicholas (Chairman of Mora Oil Ventures Lt) v. Magistrate Rambachan & Anor (Trinidad & Tobago) [2009] UKPC 1 (12 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2009/1.html Cite as: [2009] UKPC 1 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Nicholas (Chairman of Mora Oil Ventures Lt) v. Magistrate Rambachan & Anor (Trinidad & Tobago) [2009] UKPC 1 (12 January 2009
(2) Krishna Persad Respondents
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL
Delivered the 12th January 2009
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers
Lord Rodger of Earlsferry
Baroness Hale of Richmond
Lord Carswell
Lord Mance
Introduction
The facts
"Because of the urgent need to obtain funds to pay wages, taxes, Royalties Operating Expenses, VAT and loans, the Operator made an appeal to Dr. Persad, Mora's Chief Executive Officer for action regarding the June Cash Call …who exercised his discretion in this matter and satisfied the June Cash Call to ensure production could continue without interruption, and payments made on time."
The charges
i) fraudulently taking the sum in respect of which the cheque was drawn from Mora Oil contrary to section 21(1)(b) of the Larceny Act (fraudulent conversion);
ii) uttering a forged cheque, contrary to section 9(1) of the Forgery Act;
iii) forging a cheque, contrary to section 4(2) of the Forgery Act.
"(1) Any person who
…
(b) being a director, member or officer of any body corporate or public company, fraudulently takes or applies for his own use or benefit, or for any use or purposes other than the use or purposes of such body corporate or public company, any of the property of the body corporate or public company;
…
is liable to imprisonment for seven years."
""property" includes any description of real and personal property, money, debts and legacies, and all deeds and instruments relating to or evidencing the title or right to any property, or giving a right to recover or receive any money or goods, and also includes not only such property as has been originally in the possession or under the control of any person, but also any property into or for which the same has been converted or exchanged, and anything acquired by the conversion or exchange, whether immediately or otherwise;"
"3. (1) For the purposes of this Act, "forgery" is the making of a false document in order that it may be used as genuine,…and forgery with intent to defraud or deceive, as the case may be, is punishable as in this Act provided.
(2) A document is false within the meaning of this Act if the whole or any material part thereof purports to be made by or on behalf or on account of a person who did not make it nor authorise its making; or if, though made by or on behalf or on account of the person by whom or by whose authority it purports to have been made, the time or place of making, where either is material, …is falsely stated therein
…
4. (2) Any person who, with intent to defraud, commits forgery of any of the following documents is liable to imprisonment for fourteen years:
(a) any valuable security or assignment thereof or endorsement thereon or, where the valuable security is a bill of exchange, any acceptance thereof;
…
9.(1) Any person who utters any forged document, seal or die is guilty of an offence and liable to the same punishment as if he himself had forged the document, seal or die."
The proceedings below
"23.(1) When all the witnesses on the part of the prosecutor and of the accused person, if any, have been heard, the Magistrate shall, if, upon the whole of the evidence, he is of opinion that no prima facie case of any indictable offence is made out, discharge him; and in such case any recognisance taken in respect of the charge becomes void.
(2) If, upon the whole of the evidence, the Magistrate is of opinion that a prima facie case for any indictable offence (whether an offence with which the accused is charged or otherwise) is made out, he shall grant his warrant for the commitment of the accused person to prison, there to be detained until brought to trial upon any indictment which may be preferred against him, or until discharged in due course of law."
"In every case in which a Magistrate discharges an accused person on a preliminary enquiry, he shall, if required to do so by the Director of Public Prosecutions, transmit forthwith to him the record of the proceedings, and if the Director of Public Prosecutions, on perusing and considering the evidence, is of opinion that the accused ought not to have been discharged, he may apply to a Judge of the High Court for a warrant for the arrest and committal for trial of the accused person."
On 18 December 2003 the Director was requested by Mr Nicholas to exercise his powers pursuant to this provision. The Director wrote to him on 3 March 2004 refusing this request. He said that he had read the evidence and concurred in the ruling of the Magistrate.
"37. Persad was charged with fraudulently taking money belonging to Mora Oil and converting it to a use other than that of the company. He was not charged with converting the cheques. I think that this is the error into which the judge fell when he relied on what Lord Goddard had said in Davenport to arrive at his decision that the magistrate had made an error of law in finding that there could be no taking of property for the purposes of the charge under section 21(1)(b)."
"23. On evidence I would be prepared to accept that the prosecution had established that the cheques were drawn on the account of Mora Oil and that Persad had no authority to sign the cheques on behalf of Mora Oil. That however is not sufficient to establish the case. The concern I have, apart from the issue as to whether 'property' was taken, is whether the prosecution has been able to show that the property taken was converted to a use other than that of Mora Oil.
24. In the very letter from which the inference can be drawn that Persad signed the cheques, an equally credible inference is that the cheques were issued for the purpose of discharging Mora Oil's obligation under the operations agreement. I cannot say with any certainty that the cheques were used for that purpose. It might be inferred but the prosecution had the opportunity to give that evidence and did not. If the cheques were used for a purpose other than that of Mora Oil's, this has not been shown on the evidence so that the prosecution has not established a main ingredient of the charge."
This observation proved to be the foundation of Hamel-Smith JA's conclusion that the Magistrate had reached a correct result in ruling that no prima facie case had been made out in relation to the forgery charges. He did not consider that the question of whether or not Dr Persad's mandate to sign cheques had been validly withdrawn was the critical issue. He advanced and endorsed what he considered to lie at the heart of the Magistrate's reasoning:
"43. … what the magistrate had in mind was that any intent to defraud was overtaken by the agreement that Persad's intention was to ensure the continuance of the project even if it meant breaching the terms of the resolution and not in any way to defraud the company. This is consistent with the fact that there is no suggestion that the funds were used other than for the benefit of Mora Oil under the operations agreement.
44. However, it is difficult to imagine a properly instructed jury, looking at the prosecution evidence as a whole, finding that there was a dishonest intent on the part of Persad. A key ingredient of the offence would have been absent. The evidence in the letter which serves to negative any dishonest intent arises on the prosecution case and there is no onus on Persad to provide any further explanation."
Conclusions