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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 >> Director of Public Prosecutions v Bholah (Mauritius) [2011] UKPC 44 (20 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2011/44.html Cite as: [2012] Lloyd's Rep FC 406, [2012] 1 WLR 1737, [2011] UKPC 44 |
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[2011] UKPC 44
Privy Council Appeal No 0059 of 2010
JUDGMENT
The Director of Public Prosecutions (Appellant) v A.A. Bholah (Respondent)
From the Supreme Court of Mauritius
before
Lord Phillips
Lord Brown
Lord Kerr
Lord Wilson
Sir Malachy Higgins
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD KERR
ON
20 December 2011
Heard on 6 October 2011
Appellant Geoffrey Cox QC Simon Gledhill Ms Sulakshna Beekarry (Instructed by Royds Solicitors) |
Respondent Simon Stafford-Michael Ms Rosa Zaffuto (Instructed by Blake Lapthorn Solicitors) |
LORD KERR:
"THAT in or about the month of April in the year two thousand and one, at Delphis Bank Ltd, in the District of Port Louis, 1. AHMUD AZAM BHOLAH, 32 years, residing at Morcellement Antelme, Forest Side and 2. MOHAMMED IRFAN MOHAMMED LAFFIR, 31 years, residing at Boulet Rouge, Riche Mare, Flacq, both Directors at Apparel Exports Ltd., did wilfully and unlawfully transfer from Mauritius property which in whole, directly represents, the proceeds of crime, where the said. 1. Ahmud Azam Bholah and 2. Mohammed Irfan Mohammed Laffir had reasonable grounds to suspect that the property was derived in whole directly or indirectly from a crime.
PARTICULARS OF CHARGE
That in or about the month of April 2001, the said 1. Ahmud Azam Bholah and 2. Mohammed Irfan Mohammed Laffir did transfer outside Mauritius a sum of USD 1,822,968.40 from Delphis Bank account no 4170599, operated by them at the Delphis Bank Ltd., Port Louis Branch, which said sum of money are the proceeds of crime."
Facts
Statutory framework
"(1) Any person who …
(b) receives, possesses, conceals, disguises, transfers, converts, disposes of, removes from or brings into Mauritius any property which is, or in whole or in part directly or indirectly represents, the proceeds of any crime, where he suspects or has reasonable grounds for suspecting that the property is derived or realized, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly from any crime, shall commit an offence."
"In any proceedings against a person for an offence under this section, it shall be sufficient to aver in the information that the property is, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly the proceeds of a crime, without specifying any particular crime, and the Court, having regard to all the evidence, may reasonably infer that the proceeds were, in whole or in part, directly or indirectly, the proceeds of a crime" (emphasis supplied)
"The description in the information of any offence in the words of the law creating such offence, with the material circumstances of the offence charged, shall be sufficient."
"Every person who is charged with a criminal offence …
(b) shall be informed as soon as reasonably practicable, in a language that he understands, and in detail, of the nature of the offence;"
The case for the appellant
The respondent's case
The decision of the Supreme Court
"[Counsel's] contention was … that, since the "predicate offence" (i.e. the crime that generated the proceeds which became the subject matter of the money laundering offence) is not an element of the money laundering offence, it need not be averred and therefore the need for particulars thereof does not arise."
"This reasoning appears to us, however, to be fundamentally flawed. The offence under section 17(1)(b) of ECAMLA with which the accused stood charged was the transfer of property - money - which represented the proceeds of a crime where he had reasonable grounds to suspect that the money was derived from a crime. The elements of the offence were accordingly (1) the transfer of the money by the accused (2) the fact that that money represented the proceeds of a crime and (3) circumstances showing that the accused had reasonable grounds to suspect that the money was derived from a crime.
…
Since it was an element of the offence that the money was the proceeds of a crime, the accused had a right under section 10(2)(b) of our Constitution to have that element particularised by a statement as to what that crime consisted of, such as to enable him to prepare his defence ad in particular to consider how to rebut the prosecution evidence that the money was the proceeds of such a crime."
Discussion
"… shall ensure that a conviction for money laundering under this Article is possible where it is proved that the property … originated from a predicate offence, without it being necessary to establish precisely which offence."
"...Chapter II of the Constitution reflects the values of, and is in part derived from, the European Convention: Neeyamuthkhan v Director of Public Prosecutions [1999] SCJ 284(a); Deelchand v Director of Public Prosecutions [2005] SCJ 215, para 4.14; Rangasamy v Director of Public Prosecutions (Record No 90845, 7 November 2005, unreported). It is indeed noteworthy that the European Convention was extended to Mauritius while it was still a Crown Colony, before it became independent under the 1968 Constitution: see European Commission of Human Rights, Documents and Decisions (1955-1957), p 47. Thus the rights guaranteed to the people of Mauritius under the European Convention were rights which, on independence, "have existed and shall continue to exist" within the terms of section 3. This is a matter of some significance: while Mauritius is no longer a party to the European Convention or bound by its terms, the Strasbourg jurisprudence gives persuasive guidance on the content of the rights which the people have enjoyed and should continue to enjoy."
"Proof of other offences is not required
(1) To avoid doubt, it is not necessary, in order to prove for the purposes of this Division that money or property is proceeds of crime, to establish:
(a) a particular offence was committed in relation to the money or property; or
(b) a particular person committed an offence in relation to the money or property"
"(5) In any prosecution for [a money laundering] offence …
(a) it is not necessary for the prosecution to prove that the accused knew or believed that the property was the proceeds of a particular serious offence or a particular class of serious offence"
"The judge [Sullivan J] made the point that in ordinary civil proceedings fraud and illegality must be specifically pleaded with reasonable particularity and went on to express the view in para 25 that it would be surprising if a claimant in civil proceedings who had to allege criminal conduct as a necessary part of his claim was not required to give the respondent and the court at least some particulars of what that conduct was said to be. He concluded that Parliament had deliberately steered a careful course between requiring the Director to prove the commission of a specific criminal offence or offences by a particular individual or individuals and allowing her to make wholly unparticularised allegations of 'unlawful conduct' of the kind that would require a respondent to justify his lifestyle. I agree. It seems to me that it is essential if there is to be a fair trial that the respondent should know the case against him in sufficient detail to enable him to prepare properly to meet it."
"In short, we do not consider that Parliament can have intended a state of affairs in which, in any given instance, no particulars whatever need be given or proved of a cardinal element in the case, namely the criminal conduct relied on. It is a requirement, to use Sullivan J's expression, of elementary fairness."
"We consider that in the present case the Crown are correct in their submission that there are two ways in which the Crown can prove the property derives from crime, (a) by showing that it derives from conduct of a specific kind or kinds and that conduct of that kind or those kinds is unlawful, or (b) by evidence of the circumstances in which the property is handled which are such as to give rise to the irresistible inference that it can only be derived from crime."
"(1) A person commits an offence if he . . . (c) has possession of criminal property."
And section 340(3) provides:
"(3) Property is criminal property if
(a) it constitutes a person's benefit from criminal conduct or it represents such a benefit (in whole or part and whether directly or indirectly), and
(b) the alleged offender knows or suspects that it constitutes or represents such a benefit."
"Useful comparison can also be made with English law. Counsel for the respondent very fairly referred us to certain dicta from the judgment of the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) in [R v W (N) [2009] 1 WLR 965 which, he fairly conceded, went somehow contrary to his submissions. In that case the defendant faced 33 counts charging different offences of money laundering and in order to bring home any of these offences the Crown had to prove that the funds involved constituted "criminal property" within the meaning of section 340 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002. That section defined criminal property as property which, inter alia, constituted a person's benefit from "criminal conduct" which was itself defined as conduct which constituted an offence in any part of the United Kingdom or would constitute an offence there if it occurred there. The appellate court upheld the Crown Court Judge's ruling, on a submission of no case to answer, that it was not sufficient for the Crown to show, by reference to the large sums involved and the defendant's want of any apparent means of substance, as well as other relevant evidence, that the money in question could have no lawful origin: It was incumbent on the Crown to show what particular criminal conduct, or at least what type of criminal conduct, had generated the benefit which the alleged criminal property represented."
Conclusions