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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Writtle v Director of Public Prosecutions [2009] EWHC 236 (Admin) (20 January 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/236.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 236 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SIMON
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SVETLANA WRITTLE | Claimant | |
v | ||
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | Defendant |
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Ms D Chanteau (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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"The appellant had assumed that Sergeant Nestling would accept that he was mistaken in giving instructions to blow like a balloon and also to blow for between ten and fifteen seconds."
This point is repeated in paragraph 11 of Mr Bell's skeleton argument:
"It was anticipated at trial that Sergeant Nestling would have accepted that his instructions as to how to blow into the machine were wrong."
We should say it was not Mr Bell who conducted the hearing before the Magistrates, but Mr Freeman.
"We were satisfied that Sgt Nestling's evidence came as no surprise to the defence and we wondered why the defence had not addressed their concerns over the nature of his evidence, prior to the commencement of the trial on 25th April."
This is a reference to the CCTV recording which had been handed over to the defence in February and which formed the only basis for Dr Trafford's report. As the case stated expresses it:
"Sergeant Nestling gave evidence regarding the questions he put to Ms Writtle and his explanation of the procedure. He had been cross-examined by the defence, who had sight of the CCTV and Sgt Nestling's statement, well in advance of the trial date. We did not feel that the interests of justice would be served by admitting this statement."
"24. In April 2005 the Criminal Procedure Rules came into effect. By 15th April they were in force. They have effected a sea change in the way in which cases should be conducted, but it appears from what has happened in this case that not everyone has appreciated the fundamental change to the conduct of cases in the Magistrates' Courts that has been brought about by the rules. The rules make clear that the overriding objective is that criminal cases be dealt with justly; that includes acquitting the innocent and convicting the guilty, dealing with the prosecution and the defence fairly, respecting the interests of witnesses, dealing with the case efficiently and expeditiously, and also, of great importance, dealing with the case in a way that takes into account the gravity of the offence, the complexity of what is in issue, the severity of the consequences to the defendant and others affected and the needs of other cases. Rule 1.2 imposes upon the duty of participants in a criminal case to prepare and conduct the case in accordance with the overriding objective, to comply with the rules and, importantly, to inform the court and all parties of any significant failure, whether or not the participant is responsible for that failure, to take any procedural step required by the rules.
25. Rule 3.2 imposes upon the court a duty to further that overriding objective by actively managing the case.
26. The pertinent part relevant to what happened in this case is the early identification of the real issues. It is, it seems to us, clear that what should have happened is that at the first hearing of a case of this kind, after the entry of the plea of not guilty, the defendant should have been asked first what was in issue. At that stage and at the first hearing, he should then have been asked what witnesses did he need."
In my judgment, Miss Calder's submissions, which emphasised the obligation of the prosecution to prove its case in its entirety before closing its case, and certainly before end of the final speech for the defence, had an anachronistic, and obsolete, ring. Criminal trials are no longer to be treated as a game, in which each move is final and any omission by the prosecution leads to its failure. It is the duty of the defence to make its defence and the issues it raises clear to the prosecution and to the court at an early stage. That duty is implicit in rule 3.3 of the Criminal Procedure Rules, which requires the parties actively to assist the exercise by the court of its case management powers, the exercise of which requires early identification of the real issues. Even in a relatively straightforward trial such as the present, in the magistrates' court (where there is not yet any requirement of a defence statement or a pre-trial review), it is the duty of the defence to make the real issues clear at the latest before the prosecution closes its case."
My Lord Lord Justice Maurice Kay agreed with the substance of those remarks.