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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Haque v R [2011] EWCA Crim 1871 (26 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/1871.html Cite as: [2011] Crim LR 962, [2012] 1 Cr App R 5, [2011] EWCA Crim 1871 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT SNARESBROOK
HHJ JOSEPH QC
T20090594
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE STADLEN
and
MR JUSTICE SWEENEY
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MOHAMMED ENAMUL HAQUE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE CROWN |
Respondent |
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Ms. S. Fawcett appeared for the Respondent.
Hearing date: 14th June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper:
Putting a person in fear of violence by harassment contrary to section 4(1) of the Protection from Harassment Act 1997.
Mohammed Haque between the 3rd day of January 2009 and the 12th day of January 2009 caused Mohammed Nazrul Islam to fear that violence would be used against him by his course of conduct which he knew or ought to have known would cause fear of violence to Mohammed Nazrul Islam on each occasion in that between the 3rd day of January 2009 and the 12th day of January 2009 you sent threatening emails and letters.
(1) A person whose course of conduct causes another to fear, on at least two occasions, that violence will be used against him is guilty of an offence if he knows or ought to know that his course of conduct will cause the other so to fear on each of those occasions.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the person whose course of conduct is in question ought to know that it will cause another to fear that violence will be used against him on any occasion if a reasonable person in possession of the same information would think the course of conduct would cause the other so to fear on that occasion.
(3) It is a defence for a person charged with an offence under this section to show that—
(a) his course of conduct was pursued for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime,
(b) his course of conduct was pursued under any enactment or rule of law or to comply with any condition or requirement imposed by any person under any enactment, or
(c) the pursuit of his course of conduct was reasonable for the protection of himself or another or for the protection of his or another's property.
(4) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable—
(a) on conviction on indictment, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years, or a fine, or both, or
(b) on summary conviction, to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or a fine not exceeding the statutory maximum, or both.
(5) If on the trial on indictment of a person charged with an offence under this section the jury find him not guilty of the offence charged, they may find him guilty of an offence under section 2.
(6) ...
Mohammed Haque between the 3rd day of January 2009 and the 12th day of January 2009 caused Mohammed Nazrul Islam to fear that violence would be used against him by his course of conduct which amounted to harassment and which he knew or ought to have known would cause fear of violence to Mohammed Nazrul Islam on each occasion in that between the 3rd day of January 2009 and the 12th day of January 2009 [he] sent threatening emails and letters.
The facts
…. if you have any or all of the above and you do not hand them over to me in the next seven days I will commence a systematic onslaught on you the like of which will make you shit your pants…" (6 January)
… I swear on my son, no matter how many pigs you call I will come and do some serious damage to you. If I don't find you I will look for your fake Muslim son…I don't want to kill you as it is too good for you. I want to extract each and every teeth you have left one at a time. Now here's the payoff, I will not be using any anaesthetic. You fucking cunt…
… One more thing so long as Sis is or will be in the Bari you and your children are not allowed to enter the compound. If they do I will break your fucking legs… (10 January)
… I swear on my son, no matter how many pigs you call I will come and do some serious damage to you. If I don't find you I will look for your fake Muslim son… (10 January)
The Protection from Harassment Act 1997
(1) A person must not pursue a course of conduct—
(a) which amounts to harassment of another, and
(b) which he knows or ought to know amounts to harassment of the other.
(1A) A person must not pursue a course of conduct—
(a) which involves harassment of two or more persons, and
(b) which he knows or ought to know involves harassment of those persons, and
(c) by which he intends to persuade any person (whether or not one of those mentioned above)—
(i) not to do something that he is entitled or required to do, or
(ii) to do something that he is not under any obligation to do.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the person whose course of conduct is in question ought to know that it amounts to or involves harassment of another if a reasonable person in possession of the same information would think the course of conduct amounted to or involved harassment of the other.
(3) Subsection (1) or (1A) does not apply to a course of conduct if the person who pursued it shows—
(a) that it was pursued for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime,
(b) that it was pursued under any enactment or rule of law or to comply with any condition or requirement imposed by any person under any enactment, or
(c) that in the particular circumstances the pursuit of the course of conduct was reasonable.
1) A person who pursues a course of conduct in breach of section 1(1) or (1A) is guilty of an offence.
(2) A person guilty of an offence under this section is liable on summary conviction to imprisonment for a term not exceeding six months, or a fine not exceeding level 5 on the standard scale, or both
(1) An actual or apprehended breach of section 1(1) may be the subject of a claim in civil proceedings by the person who is or may be the victim of the course of conduct in question.
Section 3 also provides that is an offence to breach an injunction granted under section 2.
(1) A court sentencing or otherwise dealing with a person ("the defendant") convicted of an offence may (as well as sentencing him or dealing with him in any other way) make an order under this section.
(2) The order may, for the purpose of protecting the victim or victims of the offence, or any other person mentioned in the order, from . . . conduct which—
(a) amounts to harassment, or
(b) will cause a fear of violence,
prohibit the defendant from doing anything described in the order.
(1) This section applies for the interpretation of sections 1 to 5A.
(2) References to harassing a person include alarming the person or causing the person distress.
(3) A "course of conduct" must involve—
(a) in the case of conduct in relation to a single person (see section 1(1)), conduct on at least two occasions in relation to that person, or
(b) in the case of conduct in relation to two or more persons (see section 1(1A)), conduct on at least one occasion in relation to each of those persons.
(3A) A person's conduct on any occasion shall be taken, if aided, abetted, counselled or procured by another—
(a) to be conduct on that occasion of the other (as well as conduct of the person whose conduct it is); and
(b) to be conduct in relation to which the other's knowledge and purpose, and what he ought to have known, are the same as they were in relation to what was contemplated or reasonably foreseeable at the time of the aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring.
(4) "Conduct" includes speech.
(5) References to a person, in the context of the harassment of a person, are references to a person who is an individual.
Ingredients of the offence against section 4(1) charged against the appellant
Lesser offence
Curtis
C was convicted of putting a person in fear of violence by harassment (Protection from Harassment Act 1997 s.4(1)) and causing danger to road users (Road Traffic Act 1988 s.22A(1)). The prosecution was based on six incidents [over a period of some 9 months] which occurred while C and the complainant [both police officers] were living together. It was alleged that C followed a course of conduct in which he used or threatened violence against the complainant which caused her to fear that violence would be used against her and that C knew or ought to have known that his course of conduct would cause her so to fear. In one incident C and the complainant were travelling in a car; the complainant said that while she was driving at about 60mph, C pulled the handbrake putting the car into a skid. C accepted that there were a few sporadic incidents in the course of a volatile relationship, but denied that there was any nexus or connection with the incidents which allowed them to be described as a course of conduct. There were arguments because C conducted long telephone conversations with his wife. The complainant thought that he felt guilty about leaving his wife and said that he was jealous and possessive. His behaviour was bad when he had been drinking. The judge, while rejecting a submission of no case to answer, referred to the "insecurity on both sides" and that "both were being somewhat childish … there appear to have been a series of domestic disagreements which have arisen. Neither may have acted in an exemplary fashion in relation to each of them."
20. The "course of conduct" identified in section 4(1) is a course of conduct which amounts to harassment of another. That follows, in our judgment, from the definition in section 1(1)(a), confirmed in section 2 by the reference to "a course of conduct in breach of section 1(1)". Section 1 is headed "Prohibition of harassment". The 1997 Act describes itself as "an Act, to make provision for protecting persons from harassment and similar conduct". On a trial on indictment, the jury may find a defendant guilty of an offence under section 2, as an alternative, on a charge under section 4, which demonstrates that both are concerned with a course of conduct amounting to harassment. The issue is whether, on the evidence, the appellant had pursued a course of conduct in relation to Donna which amounted to harassment of her. If he did, there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the "fear" element in section 4(1).
23. ... but they were not directed that it was necessary for the prosecution to establish that the course of conduct amounted to harassment.
For the prosecution, Mr Cranmer-Brown submitted that the prosecution are required to prove only that there was a course of conduct which causes another to fear. That inevitably constitutes harassment, he submitted.
26. The importance of these issues should not, however, deflect from the need to establish, as was accepted in Pratt, that the relevant course of conduct amounts to harassment.
Courts are well able to recognise the boundary between conduct which is unattractive, even unreasonable, and conduct which is oppressive and unacceptable. To cross the boundary from the regrettable to the unacceptable the gravity of the misconduct must be of an order which would sustain criminal liability under section 2.
29. To harass as defined in the Concise Oxford Dictionary, Tenth Edition, is to "torment by subjecting to constant interference or intimidation". The conduct must be unacceptable to a degree which would sustain criminal liability and also must be oppressive. We respectfully agree with the analysis of Lord Phillips MR, with whom Jonathan Parker LJ and Lord Mustill agreed, in Thomas v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 1233:
"[29] Section 7 of the 1997 Act does not purport to provide a comprehensive definition of harassment. There are many actions that foreseeably alarm or cause a person distress that could not possibly be described as harassment. It seems to me that s.7 is dealing with that element of the offence which is constituted by the effect of the conduct rather than with the types of conduct that produce that effect.
[30] The Act does not attempt to define the type of conduct that is capable of constituting harassment. "Harassment" is, however, a word which has a meaning which is generally understood. It describes conduct targeted at an individual which is calculated to produce the consequences described in s.7 and which is oppressive and unreasonable. The practice of stalking is a prime example of such conduct."
In the present case, the jury would have been entitled, if they saw fit, to conclude that, over the course of the relationship, the appellant's conduct was deplorable and worse than that of [the complainant]. The incidents were far from trivial and significant force was on occasion used. However, we cannot conclude that, in this volatile relationship, the six incidents over a nine month period amounted to a course of conduct amounting to harassment within the meaning of the statute.
4. Between August 2008 and March 2010, the appellant and the complainant, Sarah Bunn, were involved in a volatile relationship and lived together. They separated on many occasions during that period but reunited after a few hours or days. During separations, the appellant would stay with an elderly friend called Daphne. The charge under section 4 was based on six incidents between January 2009 and March 2010. The rapes were alleged to have occurred during the final incident on 6 March 2010. In his summing up, the judge summarised the evidence about the incidents in considerable detail. The complainant was a mature woman in good employment but was emotionally vulnerable.
25. Curtis was not cited to the judge. It has much in common with the present case; a volatile relationship, six incidents in that case over a four month period, outbursts of ill-temper and bad behaviour interspersed in considerable periods of affection.
29. … When bringing a charge under section 4 the prosecutor (and the judge when summing up) should have in mind the concept of harassment which is at the core of the 1997 Act, though the word is not used in section 4 and the explanation of harassment in Majrowski "stalkers, racial abusers, disruptive neighbours, bullying at work and so fourth" and in Thomas, where the practice of stalking was said to be a prime example. The section is not normally appropriate for use as a means of criminalising conduct, not charged as violence, during incidents in a long and predominantly affectionate relationship in which both parties persisted and wanted to continue.
30. … Description of a number of acts of violence spread over nine months during a close and affectionate relationship does not satisfy the course of conduct requirement or the requirement that it is conduct amounting to harassment.
26. In Curtis, the court found, at paragraph 31, that it must be established that the course of conduct was conduct amounting to harassment as defined in the authorities: Majrowski v Guy's and St Thomas's NHS Trust [2007] 1 AC 224, Thomas v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2001] EWCA Civ 1233, R v Hills [2001] 1 FLR 580 were cited
This decision is best explained by the court's obvious disdain for the criminal law being brought to bear on six incidents in a relationship between a couple (both police constables) who lived together for about 18 months, where the incidents were spread over a nine month period, and consisted of "spontaneous outbursts of ill-temper and bad behaviour, with aggression on both sides…interspersed…with considerable periods of affectionate life" (see [32])
Whilst the court's approach may be understandable, its analysis of the legal position is unsustainable. If it had ruled that no reasonable jury could have concluded that six incidents spread out over nine months could amount to a "course of conduct", that would have been one thing, but it did not do so. All the judge had done wrong was to omit to direct the jury that the course of conduct pursued by the defendant had to amount to harassment. Since, however, the jury by their verdict found that the defendant had pursued a course of conduct that had put the complainant in fear of violence on at least two occasions, they must inevitably have found that he pursued a course of conduct that amounted to harassment, as the Act specifically states that "harassing a person [includes] alarming the person or causing the person distress" (s.7(2) Archbold 2010 § 19-277g). It is inconceivable that the jury could have concluded that the complainant was caused to fear violence at the hands of the defendant without being caused either alarm or distress. The Act is constructed on the basis that the greater includes the less, which is why a conviction of the lesser offence of simple harassment is an available alternative to an allegation under section 4 (s.4(5)). A person who pursues a course of conduct (question of fact) which amounts to harassment of another (question of fact but includes alarming or distressing the other) is guilty of the basic offence (s.2). If his course of conduct causes his victim not just to be alarmed or distressed, but to fear violence on at least two occasions, then he is guilty of the aggravated offence (s.4). Like it or not, that is what the jury were satisfied of in this case.
The simple offence of harassment under s.2 of the Act requires, inter alia, (1) a course of conduct (2) which must amount to harassment of another. The more serious offence under s.4 requires that the victim is caused, by the course of conduct, to fear violence on at least two occasions. The court concludes that the s.4 offence requires proof also that the course of conduct has to amount to harassment. Section 4 does not expressly require that the course of conduct which causes the victim to fear violence constitutes harassment. Section 4 contains the stricter limitation that the course of conduct has to cause fear (it being insufficient even to frighten the victim as to what might happen (Henley)). Arguably s.4 represents a distinct offence focused not on harassment, but on the graver wrong of creating fear of violence. However, the court's preferred interpretation is one which construes s.4 in the broader context of the Act and sits more comfortably with the fact that s.2 is an included alternative offence. Furthermore, it is consistent with the approach that seems to have been taken in previous authorities holding that the victim has been put in "fear of violence by harassment ", such as Patel [2004] EWCA Crim 3284; [2005] 1 Cr. App. R. 27 (p.440) (emphasis added). Holding that the s.4 offence does not also require the course of conduct to constitute "harassment" would only be of practical significance if there are circumstances in which two or more incidents with a sufficient nexus caused a fear of violence without also being harassing. That would seem unlikely. On the relationship between ss.2 and 4 see generally the critique by E. Finch, "Stalking the Perfect Stalking Law: an Evaluation of the Efficacy of the Protection from Harassment Act 1997" [2002] Crim. L.R. 703.
In this case, the jury received adequate direction on the need for a "course of conduct", with the judge mentioning it no fewer than 29 times. The course of conduct must involve conduct on two or more occasions and there must be some nexus between them. The question of whether the incidents are sufficiently related to constitute a course of conduct has given rise to numerous appeals: Patel; Pratt v DPP; Lau v DPP [2000] Crim LR 580 DC; Hills [2001] 1 F.L.R. 580; [2001] Crim. L.R. 318 CA (Crim Div). That question turns on the facts of each case. Although there is no need for the events to be close in time or similar in nature, these are factors which are relevant, with others, in determining whether there is a sufficient nexus. In this case the Crown alleged that the nexus was that the complainant stood up to C when he threatened or used violence. Is there really any link here beyond the fact that the incidents involve the same victim?
The judge did not direct on the need for the course of conduct to amount to "harassment". There is no statutory definition of that term. The failure to define in the 1997 Act was intentional; the Act was designed to tackle "stalking", which can take many forms, some of them wholly unpredictable. In addition, the word "harassment" had been used in the Public Order Act 1986 and was familiar to the criminal courts. In this case, the court rejected the argument that by causing V fear by his course of conduct C had harassed her. Having referred to civil authorities and the dictionary definition, the court concludes that the additional element of harassment requires proof that "the conduct must be unacceptable to a degree which would sustain criminal liability and also must be oppressive" (at [21]). With respect, it is not clear that this assists. There is, surely, an element of circularity in saying that a course of conduct amounts to a crime of harassment if it is so unacceptable to be criminal. Nor, it is submitted, is it tremendously helpful to define the concept by reference to whether it is "oppressive and unreasonable".
The principal lesson of this case seems to be about the correct selection of charges. There are numerous types of offence where prosecutors might be tempted to try to elevate what look like plain assaults into something more. The same problem arises with some prosecutors trying to charge public order offences such as affray for what are mere assaults. Section 4 may be wider than common assault in terms of mens rea and because there is no need for the fear of immediate violence, but it has other restrictions.
Note also that whereas in this case numerous incidents are relied on and there are allegations of other offences, it is permissible to rely on the facts of those other alleged offences as forming part of a course of conduct amounting to harassment provided the Crown makes clear the nature of the allegations (Jones v DPP [2010] All E.R. (D) 230 (Feb)).
The refused applications for leave to appeal
Unbalanced and unfair summing-up
The fact that Nazrul Islam had not at any time phoned his younger brother to tell him that he did not have the passport or to speak to him in an attempt to resolve the situation;
The fact that Nazrul Islam wanted all communications (such as from Shahida Aziz) in written form without any good reason;
The fact that Mr. Haque had no reason to want to kill his own brother or to make serious false allegations about him;
That Mr. Haque, a man of previous good character, was Mr. Islam's younger brother and that he had never previously been violent towards him.
... the learned judge minimised the importance of the defence case by remarking as follows, at pp.41H-42B of the Summing Up:
"She (Shahida) insisted the defendant threatened no violence. She said, 'Nazrul is playing the victim.' That is an expression that I think, it is a matter entirely for you, was also used by the defendant. What you make of that is a matter entirely for you."