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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Balchin v Hampshire Constabulary [2001] EWCA Civ 538 (5 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/538.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 538 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM PORTSMOUTH COUNTY COURT
(Miss Recorder Miskin)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Thursday 5th April 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE HALE
and
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
____________________
WAYNE BALCHIN |
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- and - |
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CHIEF CONSTABLE OF HAMPSHIRE CONSTABULARY |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
M O'Neill Esq (instructed by Messrs Coffin Mew & Clover for the Respondent)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HENRY:
"Since arrest involves trespass to the person and any trespass to the person is prima facie tortious, the onus lies on the arrestor to justify the trespass by establishing reasonable and probable cause for the arrest. ... One word about the requirement that the arrestor... should act honestly as well as reasonably. In this context it means no more than that he himself at the time believed that there was reasonable and probable cause, in the sense that I have defined it above, for the arrest... The test whether there was reasonable or probable cause for the arrest... is an objective one, namely whether a reasonable man, assumed to know the law and possessed of the information which in fact was possessed by the defendant, would believe that there was reasonable and probable cause. Where that test is satisfied, the onus lies on the person who has been arrested ... to establish that his arrestor ... did not in fact believe what ex hypothesi he would have believed had he been reasonable. ... In the nature of things this issue can seldom seriously arise.
Next, as to procedure. In arresting [or] detaining... a suspected felon, a person is acting in furtherance of the administration of justice. It is a well-settled rule of procedure that the question whether he is acting reasonable is one to be decided by the judge. It may be that this rule reflects the judicial distrust of Jacobinism among juries at the formative period of this branch of English law; but it can at least be rationalised on the ground that the judge, by reason of his office and his experience, is better qualified that a juryman to determine what conduct is reasonable or unreasonable in furtherance of the administration of justice. In those days, however, the jury was the only tribunal which at common law was competent to determine disputed issues of fact. If there was conflicting evidence as to what had happened, that is what the conduct of the defendant in fact was, the jury alone was competent to resolve the conflict. But when what had happened was established whether by uncontradicted evidence or, in the case of conflict, by the jury's finding of fact, it was for the judge to rule whether the defendant's conduct was reasonable or unreasonable. This is still the position today where an action for false imprisonment... arising out of the arrest [or] detention... of a suspected felon is tried by judge and jury. It is for the judge to decide what facts given in evidence are relevant to the question of whether the defendant acted reasonably. It is thus for him to decide, in the event of a conflict of evidence, what finding of fact is relevant and requisite to enable him to decide that question. A jury, however, is entitled to base findings of fact only on the evidence called before it, and, as in any other jury trial, it is for the judge in an action for false imprisonment, to decide whether the evidence on a relevant matter does raise any issue of fact to fit be left to the jury. If there is no real conflict of evidence, there is no issue of fact calling for determination by the jury. This applies not only to the issues of fact as to what happened on which the judge has to base his determination whether the defendant acted reasonably, but also to the issue of fact whether the defendant acted honestly, which, if there is sufficient evidence to raise this issue, is one for the jury (see Herniman -v- Smith). For the reasons already indicated, however, where there is reasonable and probable cause for an arrest ... the judge should not leave this to the jury except in the highly unlikely event that there is cogent positive evidence that despite the actual existence of reasonable and probable cause, the defendant himself did not believe that it existed (see Glinski -v- McIver)."
a) the burden of proof is on the police to justify the arrest;b) to do so, they must satisfy the judge that a reasonable man, assumed to know the law and possessed of the information that the arresting officer had, would believe that there was a reasonable or probable cause for the arrest;
c) while the above question is a question of law for the judge, it is a question he can only answer on agreed facts or uncontradicted evidence or, where the evidence is conflicting, by the jury's explicit finding of fact;
d) it is for the judge to decide what finding of fact is "relevant or requisite", and whether the evidence on a relevant matter does raise an issue of fact to go to the jury.
"1. At 01.05 hours on 23rd December 1995, PC McCarty, PC Foster and Sergeant Fryatt attended 5 Frank Judd Court, St. George's Road. PC McCarty had received a report of a male hitting a female at the premises.
2. On arrival at 5 Frank Judd Court the door was answered by a man who said that there had been a fight but that it was over now. He invited the officers in.
3. Immediately inside the door is a narrow flight of stairs leading up to a landing from which the various rooms of the premises rooms lead off.
4. The officers entered the lounge where they saw the Claimant who was pacing around and holding a baby. The claimant was sweating profusely and was clearly agitated. He had an aggressive demeanour.
5. Also inside the lounge was Sharon Samuel who was crying and shaking. She was suffering from a fresh head injury which consisted of a large red swelling in the centre of her forehead.
6. PC McCarty explained why the officers had attended the premises. The Claimant sat down and said, 'It's over now, why don't you just fuck off'.
7. PC McCarty took Miss Samuel downstairs in order to talk to her without the Claimant being present. The Claimant remained upstairs with PC Foster and Sergeant Fryatt. While the Claimant was with Sergeant Fryatt and PC Foster, he slammed the door in Sergeant Fryatt's face and when Sergeant Fryatt warned him that he believed a breach of the peace had been caused, the Claimant replied 'Fuck off, it's nothing to do with you'. Sergeant Fryatt again warned the Claimant about his behaviour and when he did so, the Claimant walked up to Sergeant Fryatt so that his face was only 4 to 6 inches from Sergeant Fryatt's face and said to him, 'Yeah, and what, you'll fucking nick me, well nick me then'.
8. PC McCarty asked Miss Samuel whether the injury to her head had been caused by the Claimant and she told him that it had, she also told him that she was all right and that she did not want to make a complaint.
9. While PC McCarty was talking to Miss Samuel, the Claimant came downstairs and said to her, 'Don't tell them my name'.
10. Miss Samuel then went upstairs and the Claimant and PC McCarty followed. PC McCarty attempted to talk to the Claimant but the Claimant walked away and when PC McCarty followed him he slammed an internal door in PC McCarty's face. The Claimant also came towards PC McCarty in a threatening way and moved his head as if to head-butt PC McCarty who stepped back. PC McCarty saw that the Claimant was still very agitated and that he was breathing deeply and that his eyes were glazed. PC McCarty honestly decided that a breach of the peace had already occurred and that there was a risk of a further breach of the peace if the Claimant was not arrested. He did not arrest the Claimant immediately because he thought that if the Claimant were arrested inside and resisted arrest then it might be difficult to get him down the narrow flight of stairs. The Claimant asked PC McCarty to go outside with him and once they were outside, PC McCarty arrested him.
11. During the arrest the Claimant struggled both before and after handcuffs were applied.
12. At the police station the Claimant was brought before the Custody Officer who was Sergeant Wells. PC McCarty gave Sergeant Wells a complete history of what had happened in the house. He also told Sergeant Wells that the Claimant had been very emotional and aggressive, that the Claimant had struggled when arrested, that it had been necessary to restrain him using handcuffs and that the Claimant had continually pulled against the handcuffs using his weight.
13. Sergeant Wells noticed that the Claimant was sweating, very emotional and agitated and that his eyes were glazed. Sergeant Wells thought that the Claimant smelled of drink and that he was drunk. The Claimant was seen by Dr Pickstock who reported to Sergeant Wells that the Claimant would not allow her to make a proper examination and that he should go to the hospital when he was more co-operative.
14. At 04.58 hours the Claimant was spoken to by Sergeant Wells. At that time the Claimant was unco-operative, very aggressive and emotional.
15. At 05.10 hours Sergeant Wells noticed that the Claimant had calmed down and so he released him from custody."
"... whether or not the police had reasonable grounds for believing - because this was the ground they gave for making the arrest - that a breach of the peace was threatened or imminent."
She had before her the "list of agreed facts," and her judgment suggests that she used this as a frame of reference for what appears to a largely extempore judgment. She was to some extent paraphrasing the agreed facts, but analysis of the judgment shows that most of the agreed facts find their way into the judgment. The most significant omission related to number 10, and the sentence which follows after the description of Mr Balchin slamming an internal door in PC McCarty's face and approaching him as though threatening to head-butt him: he "... was still very agitated, and was breathing deeply, and... his eyes were glazed". We will return to this sentence and its significance later.
"... when our officers are called to domestic incidents ... we invariably try our best to calm the situation down, and that may involve warning people what the likely outcome is of their behaviour. ... That does not mean I have made a decision at that point to or not to make an arrest. ... when we deal with domestic violence incidents we try to calm both parties down to get a clearer picture of what has happened. On this occasion it was very difficult to calm Mr Balchin down."
The judge should not have drawn that inference against the Sergeant, particularly in the light of No. 10: she should have referred the question to the jury.
"PC McCarty honestly decided that a breach of the peace had already occurred and that there was a risk of a further breach of the peace if the claimant were not arrested"
Despite that being agreed, the judge chose to find that
"I am left with the overwhelming impression that ... any possible or real reason for the arrest was not based [on the fear of attack on mother and baby] but on the fact that [the claimant] was behaving in a way that was difficult."
Later the judge was to revert to this theme, when, having said that PC McCarty arrested because he was frightened for the safety of Miss Samuel and the baby, she simply held: "In my judgment the evidence does not support that proposition". The judge had no jurisdiction to disbelieve PC McCarty. By her judgment as expressed she had identified an issue as to his credibility. That issue could only be resolved by the jury. She should have referred the matter to the jury.
"was still clearly very agitated, his eyes were glazed, and he was breathing deeply ... he was still clearly very upset and aggravated, and I felt if I did not remove him from the premises that there would be further trouble"
PC McCarty remembered Mr Balchin shouting on arrest
"I just want to hold my kid, you can't arrest me, I've calmed down."
PC Foster also heard him claim that he had calmed down, and gave evidence that he had not, and that when he had asked PC McCarty to come outside, he was aggressive, still very agitated, and his eyes were glazed. After arrest and handcuffing he struggled quite violently. Sergeant Fryatt gave evidence that he was minded to arrest Mr Balchin to minimise the risk to his family, but saw that PC McCarty had done it. He described his abuse and shouting and screaming and violence on arrest. In short, there was a lot of evidence that he had not calmed down. All of these matters should have been left to the jury for them to decide.