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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Morfitt, R v [2017] EWCA Crim 669 (25 May 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/669.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Crim 669 |
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ON APPEAL FROM PETERBOROUGH CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ENRIGHT
T20120266
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Mrs Justice Carr DBE
and
His Honour Judge Kinch Q.C.
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R. |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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John Robert Morfitt |
Appellant |
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Mr Duncan O'Donnell (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 7 April 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Lindblom:
Introduction
The facts
The confiscation proceedings
"9.6 Assumptions.
Expenditure.
i. The Crown accepts that the defendant does have a criminal lifestyle and therefore the assumptions will be applied.
ii. The defendant was in possession of 123 grams of cocaine with a purity of 91% which is very close to importation level and therefore can assume [sic] he played a leading role in the supply of controlled drugs.
iii. To receive cocaine with such a high purity suggests that he has been supplying cocaine for a considerable time and had an extensive supply network which would have taken many years to build the business.
iv. The defendant made "no comment" to all questions put to him during interview under caution and has not indicated the extent of his dealing.
v. If the defendant was supplying cocaine to the value of £12,300.00 per month then the yearly amount would be £147,600.00.
vi. The assumptions under the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 allow the proceedings to cover the period of six years from the relevant date being the date of charge in this case the 28th August 2012.
vii. Over the six year period the defendant would have benefited to the amount of £885,600.00.
viii. To be fair to the defendant allowing time to build up the supply business I will cover a period of three years therefore the benefit received during this period would be £442,800.00."
"9.6 Assumptions
Expenditure
i) The defendant disputes that he had a criminal lifestyle.
ii) The defendant accepts that he was found guilty of such activity.
iii) The defendant does not accept this assumption and would ask that the Crown points to evidence from the substantive proceedings to support such an assumption.
iv) The defendant accepts that he answered no comment to questions put to him as is his right.
v) The defendant disputes this assumption and would again ask that the Crown points to evidence from the substantive proceedings to support such an assumption.
vi) The defendant accepts that the Proceeds of Crime Act allows the proceedings to cover the period of six years predating charge. However, the defendant maintains that at no point either during the substantive proceedings nor these subsequent confiscation proceedings have the Crown provided evidence to support an assumption that he was involved in such activities for a period of six years.
vii) The defendant disputes this calculation.
viii) The defendant disputes this calculation."
The grounds of appeal
The respondent's notice
Trial counsel's letters to the court
"[The appellant] consented to everything that was agreed and placed before the Judge. One area in which there was no agreement was between the crown and the defence concerned the issue of the reduction of the realisable assets by the [£8,000] which was the outstanding amount of capital contribution to the legal aid order. The Learned Judge accepted the submissions made on Mr Morfitt's behalf and the realisable amount was reduced further by this sum. So where there was no agreement, the matter was aired before the Judge."
The issues before us
The first issue the prosecution's approach
The second issue the consequences of the appellant's consent
"34. Additionally, the appellant was not representing that he had assets of £110,000. He was prepared to agree that figure as a matter of compromise to avoid additional potential liability. Similarly, the prosecution were not representing by this agreement that the appellant had no more than £110,000. This was in effect a consent order in which the appellant had bought off risk, both as to the amount of the confiscation order and the period he would be allowed to meet it. ."
He went to say (in paragraphs 35 and 36):
"35. In other jurisdictions, those who have entered into consent orders may set them aside on very narrow grounds. We do not exclude the possibility in the arena of confiscation orders that such circumstances might conceivably arise. But we do not consider that they arise where the essence of the complaint is that, in seeking to secure the best deal available, erroneous advice was given to one of those who was party to the agreement, save in the most exceptional circumstances. We would not wish to identify exhaustively what those circumstances might be but, in our judgment, there would need to be a well-founded submission that the whole process was unfair. We do not consider that the circumstances of this case come close to that.
36. We see no warrant for reading over generally the approach that has developed in appeals against conviction based upon erroneous advice into confiscation proceedings. There is a fundamental difference between sentence and conviction. On an appeal against conviction, where it is suggested that erroneous legal advice resulted in a guilty plea, the court may allow the appeal and then a trial will take place. The defendant will be either acquitted or convicted and, if convicted, he will be given an appropriate sentence. On a successful appeal against sentence, the matter is not sent back to the court with the issue, as it were, at large. This court can vary a sentence but it cannot increase it. So if [counsel for the appellant] were correct, an appellant in Mr Hirani's position could appeal to this court, having agreed the confiscation order on a false basis, and seek to set it aside, but in doing so he would deny the prosecution the possibility of contending for a higher figure. In other words, the prosecution would in effect be bound by the agreement from which the appellant, on this hypothesis, had been released. That would, in our judgment, be an undesirable not to say extremely odd result."
"15. We entirely agree with and endorse what was said in [Hirani]. There may be good reasons from his view for a defendant to enter into a consent order even if he may for the purposes of sentencing have put forward an inconsistent basis of plea. Thus the court will not save in exceptional circumstances go behind the consent even if it is subsequently asserted that it was based on erroneous advice. There may be other remedies available to the defendant if he can show that there was negligence."
In that case, however, the prosecution had accepted that critical facts were not known to the defence, and that, if they had been, those representing the appellant might have argued that he should not be regarded as having benefited from the full value of the cannabis resin he had been minding. Thus the Court of Appeal could not be satisfied that the same order would otherwise have been either agreed or made.
"50. It is to be remembered that under POCA the court must itself decide whether the convicted person has benefited from his particular criminal conduct. The power to make a confiscation order arises only where the court has made that determination. A defendant's consent cannot confer jurisdiction to make a confiscation order. This is particularly so where the facts on which such a consent is based cannot as a matter of law support the conclusion that the defendant has benefited. On the other hand, if it is clear from the terms on which a defendant consents to a confiscation order, that he has accepted facts which would justify the making of an order, a judge, provided he is satisfied that there has been an unambiguous acceptance of those facts from which the defendant should not be permitted to resile, will be entitled to rely on the consent. This is so not because the defendant has consented to the order. It is because his acceptance of facts itself constitutes evidence on which the judge is entitled to rely. Provided the acceptance of the facts is unequivocal, and particularly where it is given after legal advice which proves to be sound, the judge need not mount a further investigation. It should be emphasised, however, that this is because the judge can in those circumstances himself be satisfied on the evidence that the basis for making a confiscation order has been made out."
After referring (in paragraphs 51 and 52) to the decisions of this court in Revenue and Customs Prosecutions Office v Mitchell [2009] 2 Cr. App. R. (S.) 463 and R. v Bell [2011] EWCA Crim 6 Lord Kerr said (in paragraph 53):
"53. On the same basis it would be manifestly unfair to require the appellants in this case to be bound by their consent to the confiscation orders when, as points out in para 45 above, the only possible explanation for the consent was that it was given under a mistake of law. ".
The third issue what should be done now, if the appeal succeeds?
Conclusion