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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Deuss v The Attorney General for Bermuda & Anor (The Court of Appeal of Bermuda) [2009] UKPC 38 (04 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2009/38.html Cite as: [2010] 1 All ER 1059, [2009] UKPC 38 |
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[2009] UKPC 38
Privy Council Appeal No 0015 of 2009
JUDGMENT
Johannes Deuss v The Attorney General for Bermuda and The Commissioner of Police for Bermuda
From the Court of Appeal of Bermuda |
before
Lord Phillips Lord Scott Lord Brown Lord Mance Lord Neuberger
|
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY |
LORD PHILLIPS |
ON |
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4 November 2009 |
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Heard on 2 April 2009 |
Appellant |
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Respondent |
Claire Montgomery QC |
|
Rory Field |
Instructed by (Peters and Peters) |
|
Barrie McKay
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|
|
Howard Stevens |
|
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Instructed by (Charles Russell LLP on behalf of DPP Bermuda) |
LORD PHILLIPS:
Introduction
i) "deliberately handling stolen property" contrary to article 416 of the Criminal Code between 19.10.2000 and 14.12.2001;
ii) "deliberately/habitually laundering" contrary to article 420 of the Criminal Code between 14.12. 2001 and 5.9.2006;
iii) "being in charge of a criminal organisation" contrary to article 140 of the Criminal Code between 19.10.2000 and 5.9.2006.
"WHEREAS it has been shown to the undersigned, one of Her Majesty's Magistrates that JOHANNES CHRISTIAAN MARTINUS AUGUSTINUS MARIA DEUSS is accused of the Extradition Crimes of Handling Stolen Property, Deliberate/Habitual Laundering, and Being in Charge of Criminal Organisation within the jurisdiction of The Kingdom of the Netherlands
AND WHEREAS Information has been presented to me which would in my opinion, authorise the issue of a warrant for the arrest of a person accused of committing a corresponding offence within the jurisdiction of Bermuda
AND WHEREAS there is information that the said JOHANNES CHRISTIAAN MARTINUS AUGUSTINUS MARIA DEUSS is or is believed to be in or on his way to Bermuda:
THIS IS THEREFORE to command you forthwith, in Her Majesty's Name, to arrest the said JOHANNES CHRISTIAAN MARTINUS AUGUSTINUS MARIA DEUSS and bring him before one of her Majesty's Magistrates sitting at the Magistrates' Court in the City of Hamilton to be further dealt with according to law, for which THIS SHALL BE YOUR WARRANT."
The 1870 Act
"Where an arrangement has been made with any foreign state with respect to the surrender to such state of any fugitive criminals, Her Majesty may, by Order in Council, direct that this Act shall apply in the case of such foreign state.
Her Majesty may, by the same or any subsequent order, limit the operation of the order, and restrict the same to fugitive criminals who are in or suspected of being in the part of Her Majesty's dominions specified in the order, and render the operation thereof subject to such conditions, exceptions, and qualifications as may be deemed expedient.
Every such order shall recite or embody the terms of the arrangement, and shall not remain in force for any longer period than the arrangement."
"When an order applying this Act in the case of any foreign state has been published in the London Gazette, this Act (after the date specified in the order, or if no date is specified, after the date of the publication), shall, so long as the order remains in force, but subject to the limitations, restrictions, conditions, exceptions, and qualifications, if any, contained in the order, apply in the case of such foreign state. An Order in Council shall be conclusive evidence that the arrangement therein referred to complies with the requisitions of this Act, and that this Act applies in the case of the foreign state mentioned in the order, and the validity of such order shall not be questioned in any legal proceedings whatever."
"The term 'extradition crime' means a crime which, if committed in England or within English jurisdiction, would be one of the crimes described in the first schedule to this Act.
The term 'fugitive criminal' means any person accused or convicted of an extradition crime committed within the jurisdiction of any foreign state who is in or is suspected of being in some part of Her Majesty's dominions..."
"'extradition crime', in relation to any foreign state, is to be construed by reference to the Order in Council under section 2 of the Extradition Act 1870 applying to that state as it had effect immediately before the coming into force of this Act and to any amendments thereafter made to that Order."
LIST OF CRIMESThe following list of crimes is to be construed according to the law existing in England, or in a British Possession, (as the case may be), at the date of the alleged crime, whether by common law or by statute made before or after the passing of this Act:
Murder, and attempt and conspiracy to murder.
Manslaughter.
Counterfeiting and altering money and uttering counterfeit or altered money.
Forgery, counterfeiting, and altering, and uttering what is forged or counterfeited or altered.
Embezzlement and larceny.
Obtaining money or goods by false pretences.
Crimes by bankrupts against bankruptcy law.
Fraud by a bailee, banker, agent, factor, trustee, or director, or member, or public officer of any company made criminal by any Act for the time being in force.
Rape.
Abduction.
Child stealing.
Burglary and housebreaking.
Arson.
Robbery with violence.
Threats by letter or otherwise with intent to extort.
Piracy by law of nations.
Sinking or destroying a vessel at sea, or attempting or conspiring to do so.
Assaults on board a ship on the high seas with intent to destroy life or to do grievous bodily harm.
Revolt or conspiracy to revolt by two or more persons on board a ship on the high seas against the authority of the master."
"6. Where this Act applies in the case of any foreign state, every fugitive criminal of that state who is in or suspected of being in any part of Her Majesty's dominions, or that part which is specified in the order applying this Act (as the case may be), shall be liable to be apprehended and surrendered in manner provided by this Act, whether the crime in respect of which the surrender is sought was committed before or after the date of the order, and whether there is or is not any concurrent jurisdiction in any court of Her Majesty's dominions over that crime.
(Paragraph 3)
7. A requisition for the surrender of a fugitive criminal of any foreign state, who is in or suspected of being in the United Kingdom, shall be made to a Secretary of State by some person recognised by the Secretary of State as a diplomatic representative of that foreign state.
(Paragraph 4(1))
A Secretary of State may, by order under his hand and seal, signify to a police magistrate that such a requisition has been made, and require him to issue his warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive criminal.
(Paragraph 4(2). "Senior District Judge (Chief Magistrate)…or another District Judge (Magistrates' Courts") has been substituted for "police magistrate" here and in the following provisions.)
If the Secretary of State is of opinion that the offence is one of a political character, he may, if he think fit, refuse to send any such order, and may also at any time order a fugitive criminal accused or convicted of such offence to be discharged from custody.
(Paragraph 4(3)
8. A warrant for the apprehension of a fugitive criminal, whether accused or convicted of crime, who is in or suspected of being in the United Kingdom, may be issued—
1. by a police magistrate on the receipt of the said order of the Secretary of State, and on such evidence as would in his opinion justify the issue of the warrant if the crime had been committed or the criminal convicted in England; and
(Paragraph 5(1)(a)
2. by a police magistrate or any justice of the peace in any part of the United Kingdom, on such information or complaint and such evidence or after such proceedings as would in the opinion of the person issuing the warrant justify the issue of a warrant if the crime had been committed or the criminal convicted in that part of the United Kingdom in which he exercises jurisdiction.
(Paragraph 5(1)(b) "police magistrate" has been deleted)
Any person issuing a warrant under this section without an order from a Secretary of State shall forthwith send a report of the fact of such issue, together with the evidence and information or complaint, or certified copies thereof, to a Secretary of State, who may if he think fit order the warrant to be cancelled, and the person who has been apprehended on the warrant to be discharged.
(Paragraph 5(2))
A fugitive criminal, when apprehended on a warrant issued without the order of a Secretary of State, shall be brought before some person having power to issue a warrant under this section, who shall by warrant order him to be brought and the prisoner shall accordingly be brought before a police magistrate.
(Paragraph 5(3))
A fugitive criminal apprehended on a warrant issued without the order of a Secretary of State shall be discharged by the police magistrate, unless the police magistrate, within such reasonable time as, with reference to the circumstances of the case, he may fix, receives from a Secretary of State an order signifying that a requisition has been made for the surrender of such criminal.
(Paragraph 5(4))
9. When a fugitive criminal is brought before the police magistrate, the police magistrate shall hear the case in the same manner, and have the same jurisdiction and powers, as near as may be, as if the prisoner were brought before him charged with an indictable offence committed in England.
(Paragraph 6(1) Words after "as if" substituted by "the proceedings were a summary trial of an information against him for an offence committed in England and Wales")
The police magistrate shall receive any evidence which may be tendered to show that the crime of which the prisoner is accused or alleged to have been convicted is an offence of a political character or is not an extradition crime.
(Paragraph 6(2)
10. In the case of a fugitive criminal accused of an extradition crime, if the foreign warrant authorising the arrest of such criminal is duly authenticated, and such evidence is produced as (subject to the provisions of this Act) would, according to the law of England, justify the committal for trial of the prisoner if the crime of which he is accused had been committed in England, the police magistrate shall commit him to prison, but otherwise shall order him to be discharged.
(Paragraph 7(1) sentence after "England" replaced by "make a case requiring an answer by the prisoner if the proceedings were for the trial in England and Wales of an information for the crime")
. . .
11. If the police magistrate commits a fugitive criminal to prison, he shall inform such criminal that he will not be surrendered until after the expiration of fifteen days, and that he has a right to apply for a writ of Habeas corpus.
Upon the expiration of the said fifteen days, or, if a writ of Habeas corpus is issued, after the decision of the court upon the return to the writ, as the case may be, or after such further period as may be allowed in either case by a Secretary of State, it shall be lawful for a Secretary of State, by warrant under his hand and seal, to order the fugitive criminal (if not delivered on the decision of the court) to be surrendered to such person as may in his opinion be duly authorised to receive the fugitive criminal by the foreign state from which the requisition for the surrender proceeded, and such fugitive criminal shall be surrendered accordingly.
It shall be lawful for any person to whom such warrant is directed and for the person so authorised as aforesaid to receive, hold in custody, and convey within the jurisdiction of such foreign state the criminal mentioned in the warrant; and if the criminal escapes out of any custody to which he may be delivered on or in pursuance of such warrant, it shall be lawful to retake his in the same manner as any person accused of any crime against the laws of that part of Her Majesty's dominions to which he escapes may be retaken upon an escape.
(Paragraph 8)
12. If the fugitive criminal who has been committed to prison is not surrendered and conveyed out of the United Kingdom within two months after such committal, or, if a writ of Habeas corpus is issued, after the decision of the court upon the return to the writ, it shall be lawful for any judge of one of her Majesty's Superior Courts at Westminster, upon application made to him by or on behalf of the criminal, and upon proof that reasonable notice of the intention to made such application has been given to a Secretary of State, to order the criminal to be discharged out of custody, unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary.
(Paragraph 10)
"All powers vested in, and acts authorised or required to be done by, a Police Magistrate or any Justice of the Peace in relation to the surrender of fugitive criminals in the United Kingdom, under the Extradition Acts 1870 and 1873, are hereby vested in, and may in Bermuda be exercised and done by, any magistrate, in relation to the surrender of fugitive criminals under the said Acts."
"Extradition may also be granted at the discretion of the State applied to in respect of any other crime for which, according to the laws of both the Contracting Parties for the time being in force, the grant can be made"
Their Lordships will refer to this as "the extension clause". The extension clause left it open to the United Kingdom to add crimes to the list in Schedule 1 to the 1870 Act, thereby extending the number of extradition crimes in respect of which extradition could be granted, provided always that signatories to extradition treaties made such crimes extraditable under their own laws. Parliament periodically added further statutes to the list in Schedule 1. These included the Theft Act 1968.
"The core of this procedure is a judicial hearing before a metropolitan magistrate at Bow Street, whose function is to determine whether the evidence adduced against the accused on behalf of the foreign state requiring his surrender would have been sufficient to justify his committal for trial in England if the crime in respect of which the requisition has been made had been committed there."
"The other procedure for which the Act provides is the precautionary arrest of the fugitive criminal to prevent him from fleeing the country before the requisition for his surrender has been received by the Secretary of State and signified to the metropolitan magistrate. This is the procedure by provisional warrant under section 8(2). The warrant may be issued not only by a metropolitan magistrate but also by any justice of the peace. It is issued on the same kind of information or complaint supported by the same kind of evidence as would justify its issue if the crime alleged had been committed in England. The informant or complainant may be a private individual acting on his own initiative. He need not be acting on behalf of any police or governmental authority of the foreign state where the crime is alleged to have been committed. The warrant requires the person alleged to be a fugitive criminal to be brought before the magistrate or justice of the peace by whom it was issued; but if issued by a justice of the peace he must, when the alleged fugitive criminal is brought before him, issue a further warrant ordering the prisoner to be brought before a metropolitan magistrate.
. . .
The purpose of this provision is clear. A person arrested on a provisional warrant is not at that stage subject to extradition at all and may never become so. He becomes subject to extradition only when a requisition for his surrender has been received by the Secretary of State. Although the provisional warrant charges him with an offence committed abroad the charge is as yet inchoate. It is not yet the subject of the judicial hearing for which the Act provides. There may never be a requisition for his surrender or, if there is, it may not be for the same crime as that with which the provisional warrant charges him or it may be for other crimes as well. He ought not to be kept in custodial limbo indefinitely, entitled neither to a hearing of the case against him nor to be set at liberty. So the magistrate is required to fix a date by which either those charges which alone can be the subject matter of the hearing must be formulated or the prisoner be discharged."
"Now it is important to observe that the legal proceedings in this country depend entirely upon the Secretary of State issuing his order to proceed. It is true that, without such an order, a provisional warrant may be issued for the arrest of the fugitive under section 8(2). But if the Secretary of State decides not to issue an order to proceed, he may cancel that warrant and order the fugitive to be discharged from custody (under section 8).The Secretary of State has a discretion whether to issue an order to proceed, and the question whether the offence is of a political character is only one of the matters which he may take into account in considering the exercise of his discretion. But since, as we have already observed, the Act which confers his powers upon the Secretary of State only applies subject to the limitations, etc, if any, contained in the Order in Council (which incorporates the Treaty), he can only act within that framework. Accordingly he has to consider, before issuing an order to proceed, whether the requisition and the documents presented with it comply with the terms of the Treaty. If he satisfies himself that this is so, then (subject to any question of the offence being of a political character) he issues his order to proceed.
Once he does so, however, the effect of the order to proceed is that proceedings are launched before the police magistrate in this country. As we read the statute, these proceedings are not only proceedings under English law; but they do not involve any consideration of foreign law at all, unless such evidence forms part of evidence tendered to show that the relevant crime is an offence of a political character. The first step in those proceedings is the issue by the magistrate of a warrant for the apprehension of the fugitive criminal. In the case of a full warrant, all that is required of the magistrate is (1) that he should have received the order to proceed, and (2) that he should be sufficiently satisfied on the evidence that the issue of the warrant will be justified if the crime had been committed, or the criminal convicted, in England. For this purpose, the magistrate is not concerned with foreign law at all. Consistent with that, the order to proceed issued by the Secretary of State refers only to an offence identified in terms of English law, which is selected by him with reference to the crime of which the fugitive is accused or convicted by the foreign law. In the case of an accused person, the magistrate is concerned only with the question whether the evidence reveals conduct which would justify the issue of the warrant if the acts had been done in England, and will as a matter of practice consider that question with reference to the English crime or crimes specified in the order to proceed.
So also with the hearing before the magistrate, if the warrant for the fugitive's apprehension is issued and he is apprehended. The same English procedure is still continuing, launched pursuant to the order to proceed. The evidence which the magistrate shall receive is, in the case of an accused person, that which may be tendered to show that the crime of which the prisoner is accused is (1) an offence of a political character, or (2) is not an extradition crime. The definition of extradition crime in section 26 of the Act is 'a crime which, if committed in England or within English jurisdiction, would be one of the crimes described in the first schedule to the Act', which are of course all offences by English law. In our judgment, it is plain from this definition that the word 'crime' in it must refer to conduct of the fugitive which is complained of, and cannot relate to the foreign offence. So all that the magistrate is concerned with (apart from the question of a political offence) is evidence tendered to show that the conduct complained of is not an offence by English law. In practice, the relevant offence or offences are those specified in the order to proceed. He is not authorised to receive any evidence of foreign law, unless such evidence is relevant to the question whether the offence is one of a political character. Exactly the same construction must, we consider, be placed on the words of the opening paragraph of section 10, which we have already quoted. Under that paragraph, in the case of an accused person, apart from considering whether the foreign warrant is duly authenticated, the magistrate has only to consider whether the evidence would justify the committal for trial of the prisoner if the crime of which he is accused, i.e. the conduct complained of, had been committed in England. There is, in our judgment, no warrant in section 10 of the Act for the magistrate to consider any question of foreign law. Indeed if the magistrate decides to commit the fugitive to prison, the form of committal warrant authorised by the Act refers only to the fugitive having been accused of the commission of crime by recital of the crime or crimes specified by the Secretary of State in his order to proceed.
If, however, the fugitive is committed to prison, the Act contemplates that he may seek to challenge that warrant by habeas corpus proceedings. In such proceedings, the prisoner may challenge the lawfulness of his committal to prison on any ground open to him. Those grounds are not restricted to matters arising out of the proceedings before the magistrate. For the lawfulness of his committal to prison depends not only upon the magistrate having acted lawfully, but also upon the Secretary of State having done so in issuing his order to proceed. Accordingly, at that stage, the prisoner may contend that the Secretary of State has not acted lawfully in issuing his order to proceed, for example, by not paying due regard to the provision of the relevant Order in Council (including the terms of the Treaty incorporated into it).
This, as we read it, is the statutory scheme for extradition of an accused person from this country, as set out in the Extradition Act 1870. The scheme is entirely sensible in that it leaves the question of compliance with the Treaty to the Secretary of State, subject only to consideration (so far as permissible) by the High Court in habeas corpus proceedings; and leaves to the magistrate matters appropriate to his consideration in accordance with ordinary English law and procedure. Of course, questions of foreign law must arise for consideration by the Secretary of State, and may arise for consideration by the High Court in habeas corpus proceedings. This is because, under the relevant Treaty, no fugitive can be extradited unless he has committed a crime specified in the Treaty. . .
It is at the stage of compliance with the Treaty that the awkward point arises that the relevant English and foreign crimes may not precisely correspond. But, on the authorities, precise correspondence is not required. The crucial question is whether the conduct complained of is both criminal by the foreign law within one of the crimes described in the foreign law list in the Treaty, and would, if committed in England, be criminal by English law within one of the crimes described in the English list in the Treaty (aw well as, of course, being an extradition crime within the Act)."
"The jurisdiction of the magistrate is derived exclusively from the statute. It arises when a person who is accused of conduct in a foreign state, which if he had committed it in England would be one described in the 1870 list (as added to and amended by later Extradition Acts), has been apprehended and brought before the magistrate under a warrant issued pursuant to an order made by the Secretary of State under section 7 or confirmed by him under the last paragraph of section 8.
At the hearing, sections 9 and 10 require that the magistrate must first be satisfied that a foreign warrant (within the definition in section 26 that I have already cited) has been issued for the accused person's arrest and is duly authenticated in a manner for which section 15 provides. Except where there is a claim that the arrest was for a political offence or the case is an exceptional accusation case, the magistrate is not concerned with what provision of foreign criminal law (if any) is stated in the warrant to be the offence which the person was suspected of having committed and in respect of which his arrest was ordered in the foreign state.
The magistrate must then hear such evidence, including evidence made admissible by sections 14 and 15, as may be produced on behalf of the requisitioning foreign government, and by the accused if he wishes to do so; and at the conclusion of the evidence the magistrate must decide whether such evidence would, according to the law of England, justify the committal for trial of the accused for an offence that is described in the 1870 list (as added to and amended by subsequent Extradition Acts) provided that such offence is also included in the extraditable crimes listed in the English language version of the extradition treaty. In making this decision it is English law alone that is relevant. The requirement that he shall make it does not give him any jurisdiction to inquire into or receive evidence of the substantive criminal law of the foreign state in which the conduct was in fact committed."
"In the principal treaty with Denmark, the list of crimes in respect of which surrender of fugitive criminals will be granted is confined to those contained in the 1870 list, and it was for crimes within this list alone that the Secretary of State's orders to proceed in the instant case were made. That is the reason why the magistrate had not, in my view, any jurisdiction in the instant case to make any findings of fact as to Danish substantive criminal law or to hear expert evidence about it.
It would have been otherwise if the conduct of which Nielsen was accused in Denmark had not been covered by any description of an English crime in the 1870 list but had been added to the list of extradition crimes by later Extradition Acts. For, in that event, it would only have been brought into the list of extradition crimes applicable to fugitive criminals from Denmark by the supplementary treaty of 1936 of which the relevant provision is the addition to article I of the principal treaty of the words:
'Extradition may also be granted at the discretion of the High Contracting Party applied to in respect of any other crime or offence for which, according to the laws of both (my emphasis) of the High Contracting Parties for the time being in force, the grant may be made.'
Had it been necessary for the Danish Government to rely upon the supplementary treaty it would have been necessary for the magistrate to hear evidence of Danish law in order to satisfy himself that the conduct of the accused in addition to constituting in English law an extradition crime included among those subsequently added to the 1870 list, also constituted an offence that was treated as an extradition crime in Denmark.
Whether in an accusation case the police magistrate has any jurisdiction to make findings as to the substantive criminal law of the foreign state by which the requisition for surrender of a fugitive criminal is made will depend upon the terms of the arrangement made in the extradition treaty with that state. Some treaties may contain provisions that limit surrender to persons accused of conduct that constitutes a crime of a particular kind (for example, one that attracts specified minimum penalties) in both England and the foreign state. Accusation cases arising under extradition treaties that contain this kind of limitation I shall call 'exceptional accusation cases'. In an exceptional accusation case it will be necessary for the police magistrate to hear expert evidence of the substantive criminal law of that foreign state and make his own findings of fact about it."
"Your Lordships are concerned with the construction of an Act passed over a hundred years ago. I cannot accept that the legislature intended that it was to be part of the function of the police magistrate to preside over lengthy proceedings occupying weeks, and on occasions months, of his time hearing heavily contested evidence of foreign law directed to whether there had been due compliance with the many and varied obligations of the relevant Treaty. The inconvenience of such a procedure is well demonstrated by the current litigation. Had the challenges which the applicant wished to make been ventilated initially before the Divisional Court in habeas corpus proceedings, it is unlikely that the court would have permitted the lengthy oral evidence which the magistrate, as matters stood, felt himself obliged to hear. Certainly for the future, if your Lordships concur that the magistrate has no jurisdiction to decide either whether there has been an abuse of the process of the court, or whether the requirements of the Treaty have been satisfied, his powers being limited to those specified in sections 3(1), 8, 9 and 10, much time should be saved both in the magistrates' and in the Divisional Court."
All the other members of the Committee, which included Lord Goff, agreed with Lord Ackner. Although Lord Ackner did not expressly hold that Lord Diplock's qualification was wrong, it seems to their Lordships that this was implicit in his conclusion.
Discussion
(i) the issue of a provisional warrant by a justice of the peace;
(ii) the extradition hearing before the Senior District Judge or one of his colleagues;
(iii) a challenge to extradition in the High Court on an application for habeas corpus or judicial review.
"A person empowered to issue warrants of arrest under this section may issue such a warrant if he is supplied with such evidence as would in his opinion justify the issue of a warrant for the arrest of a person accused or, as the case may be, convicted within his jurisdiction and it appears to him that the conduct alleged would constitute an extradition crime."
Significantly, the words that their Lordships have emphasised do not appear in paragraph 5(1)(b) of Schedule 1.
"There is no requirement in the case of a provisional warrant that the offence alleged should be shown to be an extradition crime."
There is, however, no escaping the fact that the magistrate's jurisdiction is dependent upon there being in force an Order in Council under the 1870 Act in relation to the requesting state so that the magistrate should at least be satisfied of this.
Does the conduct alleged against the appellant constitute an extradition crime under the law of Bermuda?
The decision of the Court of Appeal
"43. The question whether the alleged offence of 'handling stolen property' is included in the statutory lists is complicated by the fact that when the reference to the Larceny Act 1861 in the schedule to the 1873 Act was replaced by 'the Theft Act 1968' (Theft Act 1968 Schedule 2 Part II) the 1870 Act was also amended, under the heading 'Consequential Repeals', by deleting various of the generic descriptions of crimes, including 'embezzlement and larceny' (Theft Act 1968 Schedule 3 Part III). The statutory list in the 1870/1873 Acts, therefore, as amended, no longer includes any generic category which even arguably could include the offence of 'handling stolen goods'.
44. However, the statutory list, as amended, includes 'any indictable offence under the Theft Act 1968' and 'handling stolen goods' is one such offence. A British magistrate would necessarily conclude, therefore, that the alleged offence was included in the statutory lists, in a case where the 1870/1873 Acts still applied and as a matter of English law."
The Court observed that the relevant provisions of the law of Bermuda were equivalent to those of the Theft Act.
"47. We remind ourselves that under section 17 the 1870 Act extends to Bermuda 'in the same manner as if throughout this Act [Bermuda] were substituted for the United Kingdom or England, as the case may require', and that in both the 1870 and the 1873 Acts the List of Crimes in the schedules is prefaced by 'The following list of crimes is to be construed according to the law existing in England, or in a British possession (as the case may be) at the date of the alleged crime, whether by common law or by statute made before or after the passing of this Act'. This expressly authorised the Bermudian magistrate to consider whether the alleged offence was a crime under Bermudian law, and where the descriptions were generic this presented no difficulty. It is only when the relevant description is specific, as opposed to generic, that it can be argued that the list must be interpreted, even by a Bermudian magistrate, as specifying the English crime only.
…
50. In our judgment, these words require the Bermudian magistrate to have regard to the corresponding Bermudian legislation in relation to the specific crimes listed by reference to the United Kingdom Acts, and this approach is not inconsistent with the approach approved for the English magistrate in In re Nielsen. To hold otherwise would, it seems to us, be inconsistent with the object of section 17 of the 1870 Act and of the introductory words to the schedules of both Acts, that mutatis mutandis the Bermudian Magistrate should be the same position as his English counterpart. Moreover, by Article XVIII of the Treaty (quoted above) the United Kingdom agreed that its stipulations should apply in its foreign possessions 'but being based upon the legislation of the mother country shall only be observed on either side so far as they may be compatible with the laws in force in those … possessions'. The intention was clear, therefore, that extradition crimes should be defined by reference to the laws of the overseas territories, as well as of the 'mother country' concerned.
Discussion
"No amendment or repeal made by this Act in Schedule 1 to the Extradition Act 1870 or in the Schedule to the Extradition Act 1873 shall affect the operation of that Schedule by reference to the law of a British possession; but the repeal made in Schedule 1 to the Extradition Act 1870 shall extend throughout the United Kingdom."
Thus, the amendments relied upon by the Court of Appeal did not take effect so far as the operation of the Schedule "by reference to the law of Bermuda" was concerned. This suggests that the draftsman of the Theft Act did not consider that the Act could satisfactorily replace in the Schedule the generic descriptions that included "embezzlement and larceny" so far as the application of the Schedule to British Possessions was concerned. The Theft Act cannot, however, assist in the task of construing the meaning of "extradition crime", as applied to Bermuda, in the Extradition Act 1870, which was enacted nearly a century earlier. That task is not an easy one. It must, however, be the starting point in considering the meaning of the revised definition of "extradition crime" in the 1989 Act.
The position under the 1870 Act
"a crime which, if committed in Bermuda or within Bermudan jurisdiction, would be one of the crimes described in the first schedule to this Act"
"The following list of crimes is to be construed according to the law existing in England, or in a British possession (as the case may be), at the date of the alleged crime…"
Miss Montgomery submitted that the only significance of this provision was temporal – it made it clear that extradition could only be granted in respect of a crime in a requesting country if, at the time the crime was there committed, the conduct would also have been a crime in the country from which extradition was sought.
(i) What was the conduct alleged to be a crime in the foreign country?
(ii) Did that conduct constitute a crime under the law of Bermuda at the time that it was committed? If so,
(iii) Did the Bermudan crime fall within the generic description of one of the crimes in the schedule?
If the second and third questions were answered in the affirmative, the conduct of which the fugitive was accused constituted an "extradition crime".
"Furthermore the suggestion made by the Bermuda Court of Appeal that the magistrate in Bermuda could construe the reference in the list of crimes to 'any indictable offence under the Larceny Act 1861' to be equivalent to a reference to a Bermudian offence of receiving stolen goods is fraught with difficulty. It ignores the fact that receiving stolen goods was not necessarily an indictable offence under the Larceny Act 1861. Receiving was only indictable under section 91 of the Larceny Act 1861 if the original act of criminal acquisition was punishable as a felony. If the criminal act of acquisition was punishable summarily then under section 97 of the Larceny Act 1861, receiving that property was a summary only offence."
Miss Montgomery is correct in suggesting that the exercise might be difficult, but the difficulty was inherent in the system. Miss Montgomery's point would apply equally to determining whether conduct in a foreign country was an "extradition crime" in extradition proceedings commenced in the United Kingdom.
The position under the 1989 Act
The position in this case.