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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Mehta v R. [2012] EWCA Crim 2824 (31 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2012/2824.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Crim 2824 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HHJ Wide QC
T20107543
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BONEY QC (SITTING AS A JUDGE
OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CRIMINAL DIVISION)
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SUBHASH MEHTA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Mr M Hick and Miss J Osborne (instructed by CPS Central Fraud Group) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 31 October 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Toulson:
Introduction
"STATEMENT OF OFFENCE
CONSPIRACY TO DEFRAUD, contrary to Common Law
PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE
SUBHASH MEHTA, PARMINDER KULLAR and others unknown between the first day of June and ninth day of November 2007 conspired together to defraud NatWest Plc of monies advanced by way of unsecured loans."
Facts
Pre-trial proceedings
"Having spoken to my learned friend Mr Cox, who is representing Mr Mehta, he takes the view, and I fully understand this and welcome it, that bearing in mind Murphy's pleas to those essentially 4 substantive counts, that if the jury found that Mr Mehta was dishonestly involved in 1 or more of those transactions, then on the facts of this case that would inevitably constitute a conspiracy. I am very content to accept that and to be frank, I think it is a very sensible approach on the facts of this case…In those circumstances our proposal is simply for a one count indictment which would be in the terms of the first count of the amended indictment."
The trial
"You will also hear that there were others involved in this. You will see stills from CCTV coverage in the bank in which you will see other individuals. So we say there were others involved. One of those, in particular, and perhaps the most important of those, was a gentleman called Mr Murphy."
"It says, "Mr Metha, Mr Kullar and others unknown", between those dates conspired to defraud Natwest plc of monies advanced by way of unsecured loans. Just so I am 100 per cent clear, I hope clearly we are saying Mr Mehta and Mr Kullar are involved in this dishonest agreement together, but we also say, I hope this was very clear, that Mr Murphy is also involved in the dishonest agreement, and I hope that was clear from what I said earlier. In relation to others unknown, over and above Mr Murphy, what the prosecution say is this: that there must have been others involved in this, for example production of payslips, we have heard about people going to [inaudible] House, we have heard about this entourage, you have seen people on the CCTV. But we say there must clearly, have been others involved beyond Mr Mehta, Mr Kullar and Mr Murphy, but we cannot say which of those individuals specifically that you could be sure was a party to this dishonest agreement, only that you can be sure there clearly are others involved."
The summing up
"Are we sure that at some time between the dates in the indictment the defendant agreed with another or others that loan applications which were false, in that each would contain incorrect information about the applicant's income, would be made to the Natwest Bank, intending that the agreement would be carried out by one or more parties to the agreement?"
If so, their verdict would be guilty. If not, their verdict would be not guilty.
"The prosecution submit that it is obvious what was going on; Mr Mehta, in pursuit of a common agreement to do so with others, was getting loans from the bank Natwest by providing false income information. Those others included Murphy, but the crown submit that you can also draw the sure conclusion that there must have been other people involved whose precise identity and role cannot be identified, and other people party to the agreement; for example members of Mr Metha's entourage, people working at Pentax House, producers of the bogus payslips."
The sentence
The grounds of appeal
1. He suggested that Murphy was a possible participant in the conspiracy alleged by the prosecution, although there was no evidential foundation for finding that Murphy was party to a conspiracy which extended beyond the Murphy-related transactions.
2. He suggested that the payslip producers were possible participants in the conspiracy, although that had not been suggested to the jury until the end of prosecuting counsel's closing speech and there was insufficient evidential foundation for such a finding.
3. He suggested that the appellant's "entourage" or staff at Pentax House may have been participants, although that had never been properly advanced or explored and there was insufficient evidence for such a finding.
4. He gave an open textured direction, which would have allowed the jury wrongly to include customer applicants themselves as possible participants in the alleged conspiracy.
1. on the acquittal of Kullar, there was no proper basis for the jury to find that there was any conspiracy between the appellant and anyone other than Murphy;
2. the jury must have been sure, and were properly entitled to find, that there was a corrupt arrangement between the appellant and Murphy which came within the scope of what was alleged in the indictment, but which did not extend beyond the Murphy-related loans.
Potential conspirators other than Kullar, Murphy and the appellant
The appellant and Murphy
1. A conspiracy requires that the parties to it have a common unlawful purpose or design.
2. A common design means a shared design. It is not the same as similar but separate designs.
3. In criminal law (as in civil law) there may be an umbrella agreement pursuant to which the parties enter into further agreements which may include parties who are not parties to the umbrella agreement. So, A and B may enter into an umbrella agreement pursuant to which they enter into a further agreement between A, B and C, and a further agreement between A, B and D, and so on. In that example, C and D will not be conspirators with each other.
"I employ an accountant to make out my tax return. He and his clerk are both present when I am asked to sign the return. I notice an item in my expenses of £100 and say: "I don't remember incurring this expense". The clerk says: "Well, actually I put it in. You didn't incur it, but I didn't think you would object to a few pounds being saved." The accountant indicates his agreement to this attitude. After some hesitation I agree to let it stand. On those bare facts I cannot be charged with 50 others in a conspiracy to defraud the Exchequer of £100,000 on the basis that this accountant and his clerk have persuaded 500 other clients to make false returns, some being false in one way, some in another, or even all in the same way. I have not knowingly attached myself to a general agreement to defraud."
"In essence an agreement to supply fake wristbands to the Isle of Wight festival 2007 only was a different agreement in principle and a different thing from a much wider agreement. As the judge held on the evidence, each of these respondents was only established to have been involved in acquiring and selling wristbands for the 2007 Isle of Wight Festival. The Crown alleged a widespread conspiracy going back to 2005 upon the amended indictment. There was, we think, no evidence that these respondents were a party to any agreement to act unlawfully in 2005 and for practical purposes 2006 also, or any evidence that they agreed to be party to anything other than activities at the Isle of Wight festival in 2007."
"Where, on a person's trial on indictment for any offence except treason or murder, the jury find him not guilty of the offence specifically charged in the indictment, but the allegations in the indictment amount to or include (expressly or by implication) an allegation of another offence falling within the jurisdiction of the court of trial, the jury may find him guilty of that other offence or of an offence of which he could be found guilty on an indictment specifically charging that other offence."
"…the evidence of the overt acts pursuant to the conspiracy to rob had no relevance to the conspiracy to steal, because they showed an intention by those who carried out the agreement to rob to do something other than follow the intentions of those who had started by agreeing to steal."
"In our judgment he has fallen into the error of thinking that a conspiracy to steal is merely a lesser form of a conspiracy to rob. It is a different agreement. There has to be another agreement if a conspiracy to steal is to become a conspiracy to rob. That is why, in our judgment, section 6 of the 1967 Act has no application."
"It necessarily follows however that there must have been a separate agreement at some time after the original agreement to steal had been made to substitute robbery for stealing."
"If the indictment alleges that the defendant entered into a conspiracy to rob on a particular occasion and the evidence shows only that he entered into a conspiracy to steal on another, different, occasion, then, certainly, section 6(3) does not apply. …If, however, the indictment alleges that the defendants, on a particular occasion, entered into a conspiracy to rob and the evidence shows that, on that occasion, they agreed only to steal, then, it is submitted, section 6(3) does apply. Just as an allegation of robbery necessarily includes an allegation of theft so an allegation of conspiracy to rob includes an allegation of conspiracy to steal.
…
If, on a charge of conspiracy to rob, the prosecution proved all the elements of the alleged agreement except the intent to use force or the threat of force, it is submitted that the jury would be entitled to convict the defendants of conspiracy to steal."