[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Thompson, R v [2013] EWCA Crim 988 (25 June 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/988.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 988 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM Plymouth Crown Court
Recorder Levene
T20110017
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WILKIE
and
MR JUSTICE KING
____________________
Regina |
||
- and - |
||
Jayne Ann Thompson |
____________________
Mr Tregilgas-Davey (instructed by Kelcey and Hall Solicitors) for the Defence
Hearing dates : Friday 24th May 2013
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford :
Introduction
Eaglerock Associates Limited
Between 1st day of March 2009 and the 26th day of May 2009 dishonestly made false representations to Rachel and Simon Ballamy by invoices that stated that Value Added Tax totalling £5907.15 was due, when in fact Eaglerock Associates Limited were not VAT registered and no monies arising out of the invoices was to be accounted to Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs AND furthermore that Jayne Anne Thompson and William Henry George White being a director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of Eaglerock Associates Limited or a person purporting to act in such a capacity and the offence being committed with their consent or connivance are also guilty of the offence by virtue of Section 12 Fraud Act 2006.
The Background
The charges
The Grounds of Appeal against Conviction
Bad character
"The weight which you attach to her character is entirely up to you although it is harsh it is true as Mr Sapiecha says, we are all born with good characters and if that were the end of it no-one would ever get a conviction. But although it will add weight it cannot decide whether or not the Defendant did as alleged. So far as the disqualification is concerned members of the jury I am not speaking as a company lawyer here. I am merely speaking as someone giving you practical guidance on how to approach the various matters in front of you. If I were you I should hold that that had nothing to do with anything you have to decide. It is clear that both companies were not well run, did not trade particularly efficiently and there is criticism to be made, we will stick with the Defendant on this, there are criticisms to be made of the way in which she discharged her duties as a company director and that is really all that the voluntary disqualification has to do with anything. It does not have anything to do with the issue of dishonesty or anything with which she was charged on this indictment."
The standard of proof
"So the prosecution brings the case. The prosecution has to prove it and the prosecution has to prove it so that you are sure. Simple word. Nothing less than being sure will do. If you are sure the Defendant is guilty your verdict is guilty. If you are sure the Defendant is innocent your verdict is not guilty. But if you are not sure, if you are not sure that the Defendant is guilty then your verdict is not guilty."
"Now it is essential to bear in mind again as I am sure you know that the prosecution bring this case and the prosecution have to prove it. The Defendant does not have to prove anything and I will come back to that point when we come to that letter that was sent to her asking for her answers to a few questions. But she does not have to prove anything. The prosecution has to prove the lot.
Remember that the prosecution have to prove this case by adducing evidence [ ]
The Defendant I should remind you, does not have to prove anything [ ]"
"I will say right at the beginning if you think and different words have been used, if you think she was a mere figurehead, if you think she was a stooge, if you think that she knew nothing and merely did what she was told then although company directors do have responsibilities and she may well have been closing her eyes to them she was not dishonest and she was not consenting or conniving because she knew nothing and if you think she knew nothing that is the end of it. When you are considering who to believe and what to believe there is no magic in this. You are bring your, the 12 of you your collective, your collective experience of life to bear. You look at the witnesses, you look at the facts, you use common sense, you discuss it and in due course with a bit of luck you reach a consensus about who to believe and who not to believe."
"Then counsel read out to you a number of references. Of those references I will say nothing because I have already dealt with the question of the Defendant's character. All I will say is that you will give those references and there are a lot of them and they are from people who speak very highly of her and it is quite right, they know her better than you do. It is up to you to say what weight you will give to the references that you have heard read to you but it is not the end of the matter to say they know her better than you do. They have not listened to the evidence and you have and it is your decision how much weight you attach to those references. If you think having listened to those references, I really have real doubt about whether she is the sort of person either to dishonestly make false representations or to consent or connive, to or connive in the making of those misrepresentations if you think it makes it less likely then there will be a doubt, there may well be a doubt and the verdict is not guilty."
The guilty plea of the co-accused White
"You should have copies of the indictment in your bundle. Although the indictment is a formal, legal document what you have to decide is in this case pretty straightforward. The charge is fraud and the two counts are the same. I will not take you through the law on each of them. You do not need to consider Mr White because Mr White has pleaded guilty [ ]"
Incorrect defence
"Now the defence say well they only got, they only paid what they thought they were going to pay. The prosecution say no. If you present someone with a bill for, for example £8,700 plus VAT of £1,300 you are making a representation and in this case it would be a false one because Eagle Rock was not registered for VAT, you are making a representation you are in effect saying £8,700 goes to me, £1,300 goes to the Government. That is the tax you are paying. You as the consumer. Clearly if they had said £8,700 to us. We are not VAT registered but we want £1,300 worth of VAT the customer would say on your bike. I'm not paying that. So say the prosecution the clear representation here is that there is VAT to be paid, that the company is VAT registered and the customers as you heard from Mrs Ballamy, the customers relied on that." (Our emphasis)
Adverse inferences
1. Why was the VAT number 838 0516 26 placed on the documents in question?
2. Do you accept that the VAT number 838 0516 26 belongs to your former business, Rosswell Associates Ltd?
3. Why do the documents in question claim that VAT was being paid by Mr and Mrs Ballamy and collected by Eaglerock Associates Ltd when that was clearly not the case?
4. Into which bank account was (sic) the cheques made out by Mr and Mrs Ballamy paid? Please supply the account number and sort code.
5. If Eaglerock Associates Ltd was never registered for VAT purposes then please explain what happened to the payments collected from Mr and Mrs Ballamy?
6. Do you accept that the (VAT) payments collected by Eaglerock Associates Ltd from Mr and Mrs Ballamy were not paid to HMRC?
7. Do you accept that Mr and Mrs Ballamy would never have handed over the sums of money that they did had they been aware that Eaglerock Associates Ltd were not registered for VAT?
8. Is there anything else that you wish to add?
"Then she is asked the questions and what she told you was this, not that she took legal advice but that she asked Mr White what she should do about these questions and whether he told her giving her his own personal advice or whether he told her because he went off and asked a solicitor and passed on what the solicitor had said or whether he merely told her that he had spoken to a solicitor, the fact remains that the answering of questions like that is always the responsibility of the person who is asked them.
However the Defendants say, sorry, the prosecution say she could have given answers on day one. What she has done is she has waited until the trial to come out with it. The first question for you to consider is whether she could reasonably have been expected to answer the questions. It is a matter for you but sometimes "I do not know, I can't remember, I haven't go a clue" is a perfectly acceptable answer. Certainly one I often give myself. What were the circumstances prevailing at the time? Well she had received that letter. She presumably knew that there was trouble afoot with the company. It was her legal right to remain silent and she had been told of that and she is perfectly entitled to decline to it. Usually you might expect an innocent person to give her response as soon as possible. So she was told that it might harm her defence if she failed to mention when questioned something which she later relied on in court. The point of the caution is to remind her of her rights and to explain how her silence could count against her.
You need to consider whether the case was sufficiently strong to demand a response from her. Well you can read the whole letter and you can decide whether or not there was a case for her to answer. You may ask yourself was that the reason why she did not answer because you need to consider her reason for remaining silent. She has told you why she remained silent. It is up to you to say whether you think that that is good enough. End of the matter. Or whether it is something which indicates that there was something more than that behind it. I have to say members of the jury these questions are very general and in fact we now know the answers and most of the answers are I do not know and some of the answers are not in dispute in any event. Do you accept that VAT was not paid? No-one is suggesting that it was. So you need to consider whether it would be reasonable in all the circumstances prevailing at the time for her to have mentioned those matters in reply to that letter.
If you are sure it would have been reasonable for her to do so then you are entitled to consider what conclusion if any that pushes you towards. Having considered her explanation it is open to you to conclude I am not saying you should conclude it, open to you to conclude that the only sensible reason for her silence is at the time she had no answer to the questions put to her or none that would stand up to scrutiny. If you think that, then you may also conclude that the defence now put forward is a later invention and false. That is quite a big step but it is one that is open to you to take. You should only reach the conclusion that she knew that she had no answer if you are sure that it is a fair and proper conclusion to draw and you should not convict just because or even mainly because she chose to make no comment. Remember that the prosecution have to prove this case by adducing evidence and silence might be evidence but it can be ambiguous evidence and she has given her reason to you for the silence." (our emphasis)
The failure of the defence to call Jane Ann Tasker as a witness
"JAT is Jane Ann Tasker. He said that Jane Ann Tasker parted company with Eagle Rock on bad terms and took him to an employment tribunal. All other tings being equal I suppose it would be possible to call Hane Ann Tasker here and ask her to produce her passport or ask her what her name is. There are ways of getting witnesses to court. However you have had no document to put before you with Jane Ann Tasker's name on it that I know of and you will have to decide simply on he basis of what other witnesses tell you that there was somebody who had something to do with the paperwork in the company and generation of invoices whose initials were JAT as well as the Defendant and as did Gerent Meredith confirmed that the Claimant had a, that the Defendant had a busy lifestyle."
"Members of the jury one remark I made to you I should not have made. It was this: you remember I said we had not heard any evidence from Miss Chalice whose married name, married surname does not matter what it was began with a T? The Defendant I should remind you does not have to prove anything and in particular she does not have to call any particular witness to prove anything. There may be a perfectly good reason why she is not calling Miss Chalice. Do not speculate about that." (page 27)
Inferences and circumstantial evidence
"He realised it was me and Jayne took control of the conversation. I wanted to reach agreement for the balance to be paid in full or in part. Mr White answered. He was on the phone for a matter of seconds and then he put the Defendant on the phone. She was speaking with authority. She was quite firm, quite firm. She knew the situation about the judgment that we had obtained against the company and she made it clear she had no intention of paying. I got the impression that Jayne took the phone off Bill. I was in mid sentence. She was quite aggressive from the start.
Now members of the jury none of us was there to see when any of these documents was generated. There is no CCTV or anything like that. Almost everything you have to decide is a matter of inference and so you will look at perhaps minor episodes like the telephone conversation and decide whether it helps you in working out what it was that the Defendant was doing and what her role was in this company and there is one episode, the telephone conversation on which the prosecution rely."
"Now before checking with counsel I will remind you of this: you have to be sure and you have to be careful in a case where there is very little if any direct evidence. Sometimes in assault cases we see what happens on a CCTV. Sometimes we have evidence of somebody actually being caught forging a document. That, this is not one of these cases. You have got little bits of evidence here and there and it is up to you to work out what you think has been going on. I as the judge am very pleased that it is not my job. Now is there anything that counsel would like to raise? "
A circumstantial case requires judicial scrutiny and care. It is frequently the case that circumstances, proved or admitted, are of equivocal effect in the absence of a clinching or explanatory piece of evidence. In such cases the judge should assist the jury to identify the evidence of circumstances upon which the cogency of the prosecution case depends.
[ ]
Directions should include:
(1) an explanation of the nature and elements of the circumstantial case;
(2) a summary of the evidence in support of that case;
(3) a direction that the jury must decide what evidence they are sure they accept;
(4) a summary of the defence case as to the disputed evidence, the identification of evidence which may rebut the inference of guilt, and the disputed inferences;
(5) an explanation that speculation, or attempting to fit the evidence to a particular theory (by either side), is not the same as drawing an inference from reliable evidence; and
(6) a direction that the final question for the jury is whether the evidence they accept leads them to the conclusion, so that they are sure, that the defendant is guilty.
The pressure of time on the jury to reach a verdict
"Members of the jury do not bother about sitting in your places. If you could just move in because we are only going to be here for two seconds. I am very sorry to have to drag you all the way back over here and I hope it will be the last time. It has been drawn to my attention that we are now getting on to the end of the day and the week and this is also I understand your second week of jury service. Is that right? So you are not going to be here next week. It may not be what you want to hear but you are under no pressure of time. Take all the time you need because this is clearly a serious matter and if you can put out of your minds the time of the day and the day of the week that it is. You will not be, God willing, brought back here on Monday to finish the case but do not rush your deliberations. And that is all I wanted to say, thank you very much. "
Conclusions