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ASSOCIATED OCTEL COMPANY LTD, R v. [1996] EWCA Crim 1237 (29th October, 1996)
No:
9601377/X5
IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL
CRIMINAL
DIVISION
Royal
Courts of Justice
The
Strand
London
WC2
Tuesday
29th October 1996
B E F O R E :
LORD
JUSTICE KENNEDY
MR
JUSTICE MCKINNON
and
MR
JUSTICE JOHNSON
- - - - - - - - - - - -
R E G I N A
- v -
ASSOCIATED
OCTEL COMPANY LTD
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Computer Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Tel No: 0171 831 3183 Fax No: 0171 831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
- - - - - - - - - - - -
MR
JL HAND QC
appeared on behalf of the Appellant
MR
HUGH CARLISLE QC and MR A LONG
appeared on behalf of the Crown
- - - - - - - - - - - -
JUDGMENT
(
As
Approved by the Court
)
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Crown Copyright
Tuesday
29th October 1996
MR
JUSTICE MCKINNON: On 20th December 1995, in the Crown Court at Chester, the
appellant pleaded guilty to count 1, failing to ensure the safety at work of
employees, and on 22nd January 1996 pleaded guilty to count 2, conducting an
undertaking so as to expose persons to risk. On 2nd February 1996 the appellant
was fined £75,000 on each count and was ordered to pay £142,655.33
prosecution costs.
The appellant appeals against sentence by leave of the single judge.
This appeal raises a short but important point as to costs in criminal
cases. The appellant owns and operates premises at Ellesmere Port in Cheshire
where it manufactures additives for petrol. On 1st February 1994, as a result
of some failure in the appellant's plant, ethyl chloride escaped into the
atmosphere, vaporised and ignited, causing a serious fire which severely
damaged the ethyl chloride plant.
The Health and Safety Executive investigated the incident. It is the costs
of that investigation which are in dispute. The learned judge heard argument on
the question of costs. The learned judge considered the details of the costs
claimed totalling £142,655.33. There was no dispute about the total legal
costs in the sum of £42,295.96.
The Health and Safety Executive's costs were divided into four parts:
(i)
inspectors costs and disbursement £31,928.74.
(ii)
photographic costs, £2,011.10.
(iii)
Health and Safety laboratory costs, £57,005. (iv) costs of model of the
plant £9,364.53. The total was £100,359.37. Incidently, to the
advantage of the plaintiff, an error in the calculations set out in that
schedule has saved the appellant some £11,000.
The appellants disputed only the cost of the model and the Health and
Safety laboratory costs.
The judge heard submissions on those points. It was not part of Mr. John
Hand QC's submissions below, on behalf of the appellant, that there was no
entitlement to any such costs as a matter of principle. It was argued on behalf
of the prosecution that the serious incident at the appellant's plant required
thorough investigation before the bringing of any charge could be considered.
That extended to the circumstances giving rise to the fire, and the scientific
investigation that followed.
Mr. Hand submitted that the question of costs had to be approached on what
was fair and right in the circumstances. He submitted that it was unnecessary
to have a model of the plant, unless it was to assist the jury in a contested
trial. He challenged the £57,005 for laboratory tests, making the
following points:
(i)
the prosecution had not persisted in a number of points made in the case
summary of December 1994. That was the result of investigative work done by the
appellant.
(ii)
no criticism was made of the appellant's electrical systems. The criticisms
that were made earlier were wholly unfounded.
(iii)
Mr. Hand complained that the Health and Safety Executive expert's conclusion,
as to a flange having moved apart through corrosion, was not pursued and had
not identified the right problem. Mr. Hand said that the appellant ought not to
have to pay for that part of the laboratory testing.
No authorities were cited to the learned judge. In relation to costs he
said this:
"In
relation to costs, I am asked to say that all the expenses claimed in the
schedule which I have looked at with great care ought not to be paid by the
defence. But the answer to that seems to me to be a simple and a
straightforward one. It is this: if this kind of incident occurs, it has to be
properly and carefully investigated. No stone must be left unturned in the
investigation of a case of this nature. And, if that costs £142,655.33
pence, well, sobeit. I do not see why the taxpayer should pick up that
particular bill. Accordingly, I am going to order that the entire sum I have
mentioned, which are the prosecution costs in this matter, be paid by the
defendant company."
The appellant's grounds of appeal state that it was wrong in principle or
manifestly excessive to order the appellant to pay the entire Health and Safety
Executive's costs of investigation and preparation in the sum of
£100,359.37, because by doing so, the learned judge failed properly to
exercise his discretion by not considering what costs were justly and
reasonably to be paid by the appellant, pursuant to s.18 of the Prosecution of
Offences Act 1985.
Mr. Hand makes three submissions to this Court: (i) that the appellant
ought to pay the costs of any court appearances after it had been charged,
including the costs of assembling the evidential material for presentation to
the court at such hearings, but the appellant ought not to have to pay the
costs of creating that evidential material. Thus, according to Mr. Hand's
submission, the prosecution's costs of investigation prior to preparing the
evidence for presentation at trial are not recoverable.
(ii)
that, if the appellant is liable to pay investigation costs, then such costs
should be limited to the costs relating to the allegations as presented to the
court and not to allegations made earlier which had since been abandoned or not
pursued.
(iii) that the court in exercising its discretion as to what was "just and
reasonable" was bound to look critically at the extent of the investigations
and the necessity for some of the expenditure in preparing the case. One
example of such expenditure was the model of the plant, the cost of which bore
no relationship to the assistance derived from it by the court.
The power to award costs is contained in s.18(1) of the Prosecution of
Offences Act 1985 which reads so far as relevant to this appeal, as follows:
"Where
...
...
(c)
any person is convicted of an offence before the Crown Court;
the
court may make such order as to costs to be paid by the accused to the
prosecutor as it considers just and reasonable."
A
very similar provision, in s.2(2) of the Costs in Criminal Cases Act 1973, was
considered in
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant Ltd
(1983) 5 Cr.App.R. (S.) 349, (Divisional Court Kerr L.J. and Webster J.). The
relevant part of s.2(2) reads:
"On
the summary trial of an information, a magistrates' court shall on conviction
have power to make such orders as to costs to be paid by the accused to the
prosecutor as it thinks just and reasonable."
That
was a case in which the defendant had pleaded guilty to a number offences
under the Food Hygiene Regulations 1970. The magistrates' ordered the defendant
to pay the costs of the prosecutor, including preparatory work carried out by
the prosecutor's senior legal officer, but disallowed any amount in respect of
time spent by the prosecutor's environmental health officer, who carried out
the inspection which led to the proceedings. It was held that, pursuant to
s.2(2), the amount ordered to be paid may include an amount in respect of the
time of the officer or person who investigated the alleged offence,
notwithstanding that the officer was a salaried official of the prosecuting
body. Kerr L.J. said at p.352 (referring to the magistrates):
"Not
only did they have a discretion to award these costs but
prima
facie
costs of this kind should be awarded."
Kerr
L.J. mentioned the case of
R
v. Maher
(1983) 5 Cr.App.R.(S.) 39 and said at p. 353:
"This
arose out of a different and more restricted provision than s.2(2) of the Costs
in Criminal Cases Act 1973..."
Kerr
L.J. concluded, at p.353, saying this:
"If
they [referring to the magistrates] find... that all the time and trouble of
the investigating officer had been due to the offences committed by this
respondent, then it would be right to award the whole of these costs."
Maher
was concerned with the provisions of s.4(1) of the same Act which reads:
"Where
a person is prosecuted or tried on indictment before the Crown Court the court
may-
(a)
if the accused is convicted, order him to pay the whole or any part of the
costs incurred in or about the prosecution and conviction, including any
proceedings before the examining justices."
We
may interpolate that s.4(1) of the 1973 Act has been replaced by s.18(1) of the
1985 Act, so as to give the Crown Court the same power to award costs as s.2(2)
of the 1973 Act gave to magistrates' court. The power to award costs in all
criminal courts is now the same, as set out in s.18 of the 1985 Act.
In
Maher,
another division of this Court held that an order for a convicted person to pay
the costs of the prosecution under s.4(1) of the 1973 Act may relate only to
those items of expenditure which might be the subject of an order for the
payment of the costs of the prosecution out of central funds under s.3(3) of
the 1973 Act. It was limited to costs incurred by the prosecutor and not to
costs falling on public funds generally. Such items as jury expenses and
overtime payments to, and travelling expenses of, officers engaged in the
investigation, were disallowed.
Mr. Hugh Carlisle QC, on behalf of the prosecution, the respondent to this
appeal, submitted that the decision in
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
had been regarded as settled law by prosecutors who daily recovered the costs
of investigations leading to criminal prosecutions in appropriate cases.
Mr. Hand had, in the course of preparing for this appeal, discovered the
case of
R
v. Seymour
(1988) 9 Cr.App.R.(S.) 395, which was referred to in neither Archbold nor
Blackstone.
Seymour
contained comments which were inconsistent with
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
.
Mr. Carlisle submitted that if those comments were to be regarded as good law,
then
Seymour
would have immediate and far-reaching implications. He submitted that
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
was correctly decided. Mr. Hand submitted the approach in
Seymour
was to be preferred.
In
Seymour
the defendant was fined for damaging a scheduled monument by ploughing certain
of his fields to a depth which resulted in the destruction of an unknown
quantity of Roman remains. The defendant had received £127,000 in
compensation, following the making of a preservation order which cancelled the
existing planning consent for development of the land. The Crown Prosecution
Service conducted the prosecution. As part of its costs it was awarded
£3,674.22, being the costs of English Heritage in investigating the
matter. Stocker L.J., in giving the judgment of the Court, said at page 401:
"We
have been referred to the case of Maher... That case was decided under the
former Act- the Costs in Criminal Cases [Act] 1973. At the time this hearing
took place the relevant Act was the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985, so that
it does not follow that the views expressed by the court in the case of
Maher
necessarily apply to costs incurred under different legislation. However, we
are minded to accept that the principle is probably the same."
The
learned Lord Justice then set out s.18(1)(c) of that Act and continued:
"In
our view not only the case of
Maher
but, it would seem to us, the reality and common sense of the situation,
indicate that costs should be confined to the 'costs of the prosecution'
itself and not to costs of investigations leading up to the prosecution,
particularly where the body carrying out those investigations is not the same
body as either the police or the Crown Prosecution Service."
The difficulty about
Seymour
is that the wording of s.4(1) of the 1973 Act is quite different from the
wording of s.18(1) of the 1985 Act. Mr. Carlisle submitted that the comments on
costs in
Seymour
were plainly made
per
incuriam
because (i)
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
was not cited to the court; (ii) they failed to take into account the
difference in the provisions of the 1985 Act. These dealt not with "the costs
incurred in or about the prosecution" as in s.4 of the 1973 Act (see
Maher)
but generally, as in ss.2 and 3 of the 1973 Act which are similar to s.18(1) of
the 1985 Act. Prior to the 1985 Act there was provision for the Health and
Safety Executive, for example, to recover costs from central funds, whereas
there was now no such provision and unless the Health and Safety Executive
recovered from the appellant, they would recover from no one; (iii) in
Seymour
the investigation was carried out not by the prosecutor, the CPS, but by
English Heritage. Here, the prosecutor was indeed the Health and Safety
Executive acting through an inspector and instructed lawyers; (iv) in any
event, the language used in
Seymour,
"minded to accept" and "probably the same" was indicative not of a definitive
ruling but of a comment which was not necessary for the actual decision and was
therefore not part of the
ratio
decidendi
,
since the court was anyway intending, as a matter of discretion, to reduce the
amount of costs awarded, which it went on to do.
Mr. Hand submitted that although
Maher
concerned the differently worded s. 4(1) of 1973 Act, the Court in
Seymour
were correct to regard the principle in respect of s.18 of the 1985 Act as
being the same. The court was correct, in other words, to place some constraint
on the scope of what is "just and reasonable". In the absence of the
possibility of the sort of detailed scrutiny which taxation might allow, it
achieved a sensible balance between the parties to make the appellant liable
only for the costs of preparing the evidence which had resulted from the
investigation, for presentation at trial.
In our judgment, the submissions of Mr. Carlisle are plainly correct. In
so far as
Seymour
and
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
conflict, we prefer
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
.
We say that for the reasons given by Mr. Carlisle. It is our conclusion that
Seymour
was, indeed, decided
per
incuriam
,
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
not being cited to the Court. Thus, we hold that the costs of the prosecution,
for the purposes of s.18(1) of the 1985 Act, may include the costs of the
prosecuting authority in carrying out investigations with a view to the
prosecution of a defendant where a prosecution results and the defendant is
convicted.
Mr. Hand submitted that the case of
R
v. Burt ex parte Presburg
[196o] 1 QB 625 supported his argument that
Maher
was right in concluding that there was no difference in principle between the
provisions of the then equivalent of s.18(1) of the 1985 Act and s.4(1) of the
1973 Act. We need say no more about that case than that it was not concerned
with the costs of investigations leading to a prosecution but solely with the
cost to the prosecution of a police officer attending court to give evidence.
We then turn to Mr. Hand's second submission. Mr. Carlisle's answer to
this submission is that the learned judge was entitled to hold that the serious
incident at the appellant's plant required a proper and careful investigation.
The evidence obtained assisted the prosecution properly to review the
appellant's expert evidence and to consider the pleas tendered. The fact that
the prosecution eventually decided to modify its case after discussion with the
appellant was not itself reason for denying or reducing costs which on any view
were incurred. On the contrary, as Mr. Carlisle submitted, the compromise
reached saved both court time and the costs of a contested hearing. Mr.
Carlisle submitted that such a conclusion was in the public interest and it was
just and reasonable to order the whole of the Health and Safety Executive's
costs to be paid since they all arose out of the incident for which the
appellant was responsible. We agree with Mr. Carlisle's submissions. The Health
and Safety Executive's costs were incurred directly arising out of the incident
which had to be investigated thoroughly and with care. The appellant had
completely failed to show that part of the investigation should not have been
carried out or that the Health and Safety Executive's costs were manifestly
excessive. We heard detailed argument as to the particular ways in which the
prosecution modified its case. We agree with Mr. Carlisle's submissions that
the prosecution, far from abandoning its original case, was content to present
the case in ways that were, as a matter of detail, different from the original
case summary, in order to save the very great cost of resolving outstanding
issues in a contested trial. That gave the appellant no proper basis for saying
that the whole or any part of the investigation costs should be disallowed.
As to the model, acceptable pleas were not offered until 10 days before
the hearing, by which time the model would anyway have had to be made. The
model might well have assisted a jury, which was the expected form of trial in
this case if acceptable pleas had not been forthcoming.
What the learned judge did was correctly to apply the law in accordance
with
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
.
We do not see that he fell into error.
We would not wish to leave this case without making the following
observations:
(i)
the prosecution should serve upon the defence, at the earliest time, full
details of its costs, so as to give the defence a proper opportunity to
consider them and to make representations upon them, if appropriate. Although
the respondent's schedule in this case was served only a few days before the
hearing, Mr. Hand did not complain about that, nor did he seek an adjournment
or intimate that he had any difficulty in dealing fully with the issue of
costs. After all, the appellant, with all the expertise at its disposal, was in
the best position to assess what a proper investigation would cost.
(ii)
if a defendant, once he has been served with a schedule of the prosecution's
costs wishes to dispute the whole or any part of the schedule he should, if
possible, give proper notice to the prosecution of the objections proposed to
be made or, at least, make it plain to the court precisely what those
objections are.
It may be, in the exceptional case, that a full hearing for the objections
to be resolved would need to be held. There is no provision for taxation of the
prosecution's costs in a criminal case. No doubt taxation of such costs would
be a more satisfactory way of resolving disputes where they arise. As it is,
such disputes fall to be resolved in cases such as the present by applying the
principles in
Neville
v. Gardner Merchant
.
We are not to be taken as criticising counsel in this case. We are not,
but the plain fact is that the learned judge was presented with a limited area
of objection to the prosecution's schedule of costs. It is clear that the
learned judge did consider the objections made. We have no doubt that he was
entitled to reject them because they completely failed to show that all or any
part of the time and trouble of the Health and Safety Executive's investigating
team had not been due to the offences committed by the appellant.
For those reasons, this appeal must fail and is dismissed.
© 1996 Crown Copyright
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