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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Tovey & Anor v R [2005] EWCA Crim 530 (09 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/530.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Crim 530 |
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(2) 2004/5542/A5 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(1) HER HON JUDGE M-J MOWAT OXFORD CROWN COURT AND
(2) HIS HON JUDGE COTTLE EXETER CROWN COURT
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON
and
MR JUSTICE GROSS
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DAVID TOVEY & PETER JOHN SMITH |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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R |
Respondent |
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Mr Stephen Mooney (instructed by ) for the Appellant Smith
Mr Mark Ellison (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 7 February 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Background
"Count 2 is the count that sets the tariff, it is the sample count of repeated indecent assaults over a substantial period of years. On that count the sentence will be five years."
"The trial proceeded on the uncontested basis that the evidence of all 17 incidents was relevant and admissible. There really was, in my view in this case, a striking similarity between all the offences – that phrase much used by lawyers was utterly apt in this particular case.
I am well aware of the authority that says a man may be sentenced only for crimes he has admitted or crimes of which he has been convicted, but in my view to sentence on that basis in this particular case for just two out of 17 incidents would be such an affront to common sense that I am not prepared to do it, and I sentence on the last two counts on the basis that they are two specimens of the 17."
"2. The problems which we have sought to address here arise in cases where the offending conduct of the defendant is repeated many times – too many individual offences to be accommodated in a single trial. Formerly, such offending was dealt with by way of an indictment charging offences which were regarded as specimens of a wider range of offending. This pragmatic arrangement was thrown into disarray by the decision of the Court of Appeal in [Canavan]. In that case, Lord Bingham LCJ held that it offended a fundamental principle of sentencing for the defendant to be sentenced not only for the four specific offences of which he has been convicted after a trial, but also for other offences of which the four were specimens; offences of which the defendant had been neither convicted, nor to which he had pleaded guilty nor agreed to have taken into consideration.
3. The logic and correctness in principle of that decision cannot be faulted and we do not seek to do so. The decision does, however, pose an intractable dilemma for prosecutors and the Courts in cases such as multiple thefts and multiple frauds. In essence, it counter-poses the inability of a Court to deal with an indictment with hundreds of separate counts with the inability to sentence for the totality of offending in the absence of a decision on each instance of offending. The problem is an important one, because the consequence of the impracticability of prosecuting the full extent of the dishonest offending in such cases is that the vast majority of such offending will not be prosecuted and the offenders will escape the appropriate sanction. We have been told that the practice of Fraud Squads faced with this problem is to charge merely a handful of offences, making no attempt to reflect the full criminality in any given case. Clearly, this is not a desirable solution. From the judiciary, we have heard that the present law is found to be "pedantic and unworkable" and the senior judges, whom we have consulted, recognise that "very real and inherent difficulties" exist.
4. Under the present system (where there is a limit to the number of separate counts, each containing a single offence that can be managed within a jury trial) it is not possible to give full respect to each of the following two fundamental principles. To some degree, one is bound to yield to the other. The principles are:
i) The defendant should only be sentenced for that which they have admitted, or which has been proved following a trial in which both sides can be examined on the evidence.
ii) It should be possible to sentence for the totality of an individual's offending, the defendant should not escape just punishment because the procedure cannot accommodate this."
i) that all issues that go to guilt must, if not admitted, be proved to a jury/magistrate.ii) there are strict limitations on the inclusion of more than one offence in any single charge – count.
iii) there are limits to the number of separate counts or charges that can be managed within a trial.
"(1) We recommend the extension of the ambit of the offences of Fraudulent Trading in section 458 of the Companies Act 1985, to the non-corporate fraudulent trader. This would allow an individual to be prosecuted in a single count for the activity of fraudulent trading, although that activity may be made up of a number of otherwise discrete offences.
(2) Where a defendant has been indicted in the Crown Court on a count citing conduct which under existing law may be regarded as a "continuous offence", we recommend the use of special verdicts as a means of better informing judges, for the purpose of sentencing, of the extent of offending of which the jury is sure.
(3) Where there are allegations of repetitious offending which are not apt to be described as a continuous offence but which, prior to Kidd, could have been dealt with by means of specimen counts we recommend a two stage trial procedure. The first stage of the trial will take place before judge and jury in the normal way, on an indictment containing specimen counts. In the event of conviction on one or more counts, the second stage of the trial may follow, in which the defendant would be tried by judge alone. The judge will, at that stage, determine question of guilt in respect of any scheduled offences linked, at a pre-trial hearing, to a specimen count of which the defendant has been convicted."
"[The defendant] may be sentenced only for an offence proved against him (by admission or verdict) or which he has admitted and asked the court to take into consideration when passing sentence: see Anderson [1978] A.C. 964. If, as we think, these are basic principles underlying the administration of the criminal law, it is not easy to see how a defendant can lawfully be punished for offences for which he has not been indicted and which he has denied or declined to admit.
It is said that the trial judge, in the light of the jury's verdict, can form his own judgment of the evidence he has heard on the extent of the offending conduct beyond the instances specified in individual courts. But this, as it was put in Huchison (1972) 56 Cr.App.R. 307 at 309; [1972] W.L.R. 398 at 400 is to "deprive the appellant of his right to trial by jury in respect of the other alleged offences". Unless such other offences are admitted, such deprivation cannot in our view be consistent with principle."
The First Recommendation of the Law Commission
The Second Recommendation of the Law Commission
"Here the prosecution's case was, we understand, set out in a schedule with dates and amounts indicating what was involved. Undoubtedly, each line in the schedule could have been charged as a separate offence, but had they been so charged, on average the amount involved would have been about £15. Even if there had been 10 informations, the amount would still be under £200. It simply would not represent the overall criminality, which, as we have already indicated, amounted to a sum in excess of £1300. Specimen counts or specimen informations are no longer a possibility, in the light of the relatively recent decisions of this Court and of the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division. To have 94 separate informations would have rightly been regarded as oppressive."
"The rule against duplicity… had always been applied in a practical, rather than a strictly analytical, way for the purpose of determining what constituted one offence. Where a number of acts of a similar nature committed by one or more defendants were connected with one another, in the time and place of their commission or by their common purpose, in such a way that they could fairly be regarded as forming part of the same transaction or criminal enterprise, it was the practice as early as the eighteenth century to charge them in a single count of indictment. "
"It is not an essential characteristic of a criminal offence that any prohibited act or omission, in order to constitute a single offence, should take place once and for all on a single day. It may take place, whether continuously or intermittently, over a period of time."
"If a thief walks around a house putting a series of articles into his swag bag, it is clear that he commits a separate theft with each appropriation. He could be charged with theft of any one of the articles appropriated. But it makes sense and involves no unfairness to the offender if he is charged with a single theft of all the articles taken on that occasion. It is regarded as a single 'activity' and it is legitimate to charge one activity in a single information even though it may involve more than one act."
"It was entirely possible for magistrates to decide which trees were cut down illegally and which were not, and to impose penalties by reference to those findings. The mere fact that a number of issues may arise in the course of the trial does not turn one activity into two or more activities and thus render the information bad for duplicity… the question of duplicity is one of fact and degree…"
The Third Recommendation of the Law Commission
Other Solutions
A different way of framing the indictment
"(2) an indictment for a specific offence shall not be open to objection in respect of its form if it is framed in accordance with a form of indictment for that offence for the time being approved by the Lord Chief Justice."
"(i) Every indictment shall contain and shall be sufficient if it contains, a statement of the specific offence or offences with which the accused person is charged, together with such particulars as may be necessary for giving reasonable information as to the nature of the charge.
(ii) Notwithstanding any rule of law or practice, an indictment shall, subject to the provisions of this Act, not be open to objection in respect of its form or contents if it is framed in accordance with the rules under this Act."
Any steps that have been taken would need to comply with s.3.
Peter Smith
Introduction
He was sentenced on the same day:
i) counts 1 and 4, to three years' imprisonment on each, and onii) count 2, to five years' imprisonment.
All sentences were to be concurrent, so his sentence was a total of five years' imprisonment.
The Allegation
The Indictment
"the picture that is painted by the evidence in this case and by those verdicts is that, from when C was about six or seven years of age until she was ten and three-quarters, you systematically and frequently abused her in just the way that she described on that video; it did not vary. Certainly there are worse cases of sexual abuse than this one in the sense that there was no actual penetration of her; but what you did was a terrible breach of trust that was placed in you to care for this girl. She was a little girl who looked upon you as a grandparent, and in doing what you did to her you destroyed something that was very precious to her. The details of a case like this are beyond the comprehension of most ordinary, decent people; and you must now pay for what you did.
I take into account in assessing the length of the sentence that you must inevitably serve, your age, the fact that you are of previous good character; your health is not good, and you are a family man, and your family will miss you greatly; and you are a former prison officer who is about to enter the prison system in a very different role."
"Count 2 is the count that sets the tariff in this case; it is the sample count of repeated indecent assaults over a substantial period of years. On that count the sentence will be five years. On counts 1 and 4 the sentences will be three years, all the counts running concurrently – all the sentences running concurrently."
Conclusion
David Tovey
Introduction
The Facts
Sentencing
"I am fortified in this conclusion by the fact that it was, on his own evidence, in company with his white girlfriend of nine years' standing, that he was driving around the countryside noting or getting her to note, the car numbers of a significant number of people who as it turned out were black or brown or dark looking. That someone could be responsible for or party to noting descriptions on such jottings like 'nigs', 'niggers', 'Pakis', 'Paki bastard', 'black bastard', signifies to me certainly emotions of gut racism or at the very least somebody taking pleasure in a private or shared episode of racist abuse."
The Appeal
Conclusion