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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 >> Byrne & Ors v R. (Rev 1) [2021] EWCA Crim 107 (03 February 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2021/107.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Crim 107 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT SOUTHWARK
HHJ KORNER QC
T20167166 & T20147595
ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT BLACKFRIARS
HHJ RICHARDSON
T20167555 & T20187018
ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT SOUTHWARK
HHJ EADY
T20177014
ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT MAIDSTONE
HHJ GRIFFITH-JONES QC
T20157340
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FULFORD
MR JUSTICE HOLGATE
and
SIR RODERICK EVANS
____________________
James Francis BYRNE Dylan CREAVEN Andrew Stephen ROWE Sami RAJA Paul MOORE Michael MOORE Haydon DRISCOLL |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Jonathan Rose (instructed by Birds Solicitors) for the 2nd Appellant
Ms Anita Davies (instructed by Cartwright King Solicitors) for the 3rd Appellant
Ms Narita Bahra QC & Mr Nicholas James (instructed by Cartwright King Solicitors) for the 4th Appellant
Mr Colin Aylott QC (instructed by Sonn Macmillan Walker Solicitors) for the 5th Appellant
Ms Katy Thorne QC (instructed by Hodge, Jones & Allen Solicitors) for the 6th Appellant
Mr Nicholas James (instructed by Cartwright King Solicitors) for the 7th Appellant
Mr Mark Bryant-Heron QC, Ms Jane Osborne QC, Mr Angus Bunyan & Mr Edmund Fowler (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service, Specialist Fraud Division) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 1st, 2nd & 3rd December 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
This is the judgment of the court to which all members contributed.
Introduction
Byrne
Creaven and Rowe
Raja
Moore, Moore and Driscoll
The Principal Issue in the Case
(i) He had received no training in the duties of being an expert. He had failed to sign the expert's statement of understanding and the declaration of truth as required by Criminal Procedure Rule 19.4 (j) and (k) at the outset of the case.
(ii) He considered it was appropriate to withhold important concessions from the defence that, inter alia, qualified his evidence, most particularly in respect of the existence of possible secondary markets for carbon credits.
(iii) He seemingly held no relevant academic qualifications (he sat 3 A levels but could not recall if he passed any of them). He had no qualifications relevant to carbon credits and pension schemes. He had not conducted an independent review of or analysed the carbon credits market.
(iv) He had been involved in "copying and pasting" from witness statements to give the false impression that questions had been asked of him by police officers when he had formulated the questions himself.
(v) He had made no attempt to comply with his other obligations as an expert witness, which included his failure to retain records and to reveal material as required, inter alia, by Part 19 of the Criminal Procedure Rules and the Criminal Practice Direction 19A.5 (a) and (f). This included an absence of any details of the relevant meetings he attended and his working materials. He had not retained the documentation which he was provided by the police, some of which he claimed had been destroyed by a leak.
"In R v Alex Pabon (2018) EWCA Crim 420 Lord Justice Goss said this by way of a postscript: 'This case stands as a stark reminder of the need for those instructing expert witnesses to satisfy themselves as to a witness' expertise and to engage (difficult though it sometimes may be) an expert of a suitable calibre'. Time was to show that Andrew Ager is not an expert of a suitable calibre. I have no doubt that he knows a lot about the carbon credit market and from that angle alone his evidence could be seen to be reliable. In fact, in this case, it certainly looked for a time as though there would be little challenge to what he had to say. But an expert's duties go far beyond that and it became glaringly apparent in the hearing in the jury's absence that he had little or no understanding of what those duties were or why they were important".
"We are considering past cases to identify any in which Andrew Ager appeared as an expert witness and will consider any action necessary once these have been fully reviewed. Mr Ager will not be used as an expert witness in any future cases".
The Individual Cases
Byrne
32. He was asked to comment on an article from the website of the Financial Services Authority ("FSA") dated 25 May 2012 which indicated that investing in carbon credits came with great risks and was generally only suitable for the most experienced and knowledgeable investors. However, the article went on to suggest that VERs were increasingly being promoted to investors, albeit the authors of the article counselled "[…] you should make your own checks to find out whether there is demand for carbon credits of this type on the indirect, secondary market, as we are concerned there is not". Ager queried whether the article was genuine, but it was established it had been published on the FSA website. Ager did not agree that they were being promoted as suggested. Similarly, as regards a small number of articles which tended to indicate optimism vis-à-vis the carbon credit market, he said they were written at a time when it was not realised the extent of the impending market collapse.
"No one, for example, has sought to dispute Mr Ager's evidence about the two types of markets in carbon credits, that is to say the CERs, the regulated ones and the voluntary credits, the VERs. Nor have they sought to dispute his evidence of what they actually cost at the relevant time. But what is disputed is whether during the period of the indictment there was agreement amongst experts in this area of the potential rewards from investment in carbon credits, and as you know various articles were produced by the defence […]."
Creaven and Rowe
Raja
Moore, Moore and Driscoll
"Well, in so far as Mr King's evidence suggested that from his perspective as a wholesaler he believed that there was a secondary market for VERs, you may think that given Mr Ager's undisputed expert evidence he, Mr King, and others who may have thought the same were simply wrong or misguided in those thoughts."
"No other expert was called to contradict Mr Ager's evidence, and insofar as he was cross-examined on behalf of the two Moore brothers, you may think that the questions asked were calculated to clarify his evidence rather than to challenge (the) substance of what he was saying. In particular, he wasn't challenged when he said that there was no secondary market for VERs, which, once bought, were in reality valueless. Having said that, you don't have to accept all that, he said, if, after considering all the evidence, you are not persuaded by it."
Other Expert Evidence
The Grounds of Appeal Against Conviction
The Ager Ground of Appeal: Submissions
The Ager Ground of Appeal: Discussion
"55. English law is "characteristically pragmatic" as to the test for establishing expertise: Bingham LJ (as he then was), in R v Robb [1991] 93 Cr App R 161, at p.164, immediately before citing Lord Russell of Killowen CJ's observations in Silverlock [1894] 2 QB 766, at 771:
" ....It is true that the witness who is called upon to give evidence founded on a comparison of handwritings must be peritus ; he must be skilled in doing so; but we cannot say that he must have become peritus in the way of his business or in any definite way. The question is, is he peritus? Is he skilled? Has he an adequate knowledge? Looking at the matter practically, if a witness is not skilled the judge will tell the jury to disregard his evidence. There is no decision which requires that the evidence of a man who is skilled in comparing handwriting, and who has formed a reliable opinion from past experience, should be excluded because his experience has not been gained in the way of his business......"
56. That said, however the expertise is acquired, the expert must be confined to matters within his area/s of expertise. In Robb, Bingham LJ went on to express the risk otherwise (at p.166):
" ...We are alive to the risk that if, in a criminal case, the Crown are permitted to call an expert witness of some but tenuous qualifications the burden of proof may imperceptibly shift and a burden be cast on the defendant to rebut a case which should never have been before the jury at all. A defendant cannot fairly be asked to meet evidence of opinion given by a quack, a charlatan or an enthusiastic amateur....""
"31. ... the law is now clearly established and can be simply stated as follows. Where fresh evidence is adduced on a criminal appeal it is for the Court of Appeal, assuming always that it accepts it, to evaluate its importance in the context of the remainder of the evidence in the case. If the court concludes that the fresh evidence raises no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused it will dismiss the appeal. The primary question is for the court itself and is not what effect the fresh evidence would have on the mind of the jury. That said, if the court regards the case as a difficult one, it may find it helpful to test its view by asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial, might reasonably have affected the decision of the jury to convict ..."
The Submission of No Case to Answer (Michael Moore)
Bad Character Application by Creaven
"SCHEDULE OF UNFIT CONDUCT TO THE DISQUALIFICATION UNDERTAKING GIVEN BY ANDREW STEPHEN ROWE
Solely for the purposes of the CCDA and for any other purposes consequential to the giving of a disqualification undertaking, I do not dispute the following matters:
- I was a director of Hildon Green Energy Markets Limited
- Which went into liquidation on 10 May 2013
- With assets of Nil
- Liabilities of £4,729,864
- A deficiency as regards creditors of £4,729,864
- And share capital of £1
- Making a total deficiency of £4,729,865
MATTERS OF UNFITNESS
Whilst acting as a de facto director of Hildon Green Energy Markets Limited ("HGEM"), I caused and/or allowed HGEM to market and sell carbon creditors (sic), being Voluntary Emission Reductions ("VERs"), to its customers between June 2011 and 01 November 2011 as an investment opportunity on the basis that the value of the VERs will increase in value and be sold for a profit in the future, which is highly unlikely. Specifically:
- HGEM bought the VERS from its suppliers at an average of £2.52 per carbon credit.
- HGEM knew that its suppliers had purchased the VERs at an average cost of £1.44 per carbon credit.
- HGEM charged its customers an average of £6.85 per carbon credit representing a mark up of 376% on what its supplier paid for the carbon credit.
- HMEM made sales of 92,929 carbon credits totalling £570,804.
- The Official Receiver, the Financial Conduct Authority and HM Revenue & Customs, have been unable to identify a genuine secondary market for VERs. As a result investors are unlikely to be able to see their VERs and will make a loss."
"101 Defendant's bad character
(1) In criminal proceedings evidence of the defendant's bad character is admissible if, but only if—
[…]
(d) it is relevant to an important matter in issue between the defendant and the prosecution,
(e) it has substantial probative value in relation to an important matter in issue between the defendant and a co-defendant,
[…]
(3) The court must not admit evidence under subsection (1)(d) or (g) if, on an application by the defendant to exclude it, it appears to the court that the admission of the evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it.
[…]"
and
"Assumption of truth in assessment of relevance or probative value
"(1) Subject to subsection (2), a reference in this Chapter to the relevance or probative value of evidence is a reference to its relevance or probative value on the assumption that it is true.
(2) In assessing the relevance or probative value of an item of evidence for any purpose of this Chapter, a court need not assume that the evidence is true if it appears, on the basis of any material before the court (including any evidence it decides to hear on the matter), that no court or jury could reasonably find it to be true."
and
"112 Interpretation of Chapter 1
(1) In this Chapter—
"bad character" is to be read in accordance with section 98;
[…]
"important matter" means a matter of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole;
[…]"
"98 "Bad character"
References in this Chapter to evidence of a person's "bad character" are to evidence of, or of a disposition towards, misconduct on his part, other than evidence which—
(a) has to do with the alleged facts of the offence with which the defendant is charged, or
(b) is evidence of misconduct in connection with the investigation or prosecution of that offence."
"I have reached the conclusion that this undertaking in itself is not of substantial probative value. It would simply open up more issues, satellite to this case, which the jury would be in no position to determine without a great deal of other evidence about HGEM. The undertaking provides no conclusive answers to any of the issues relating to HGEM which might bear upon the separate question of Mr Rowe's involvement and knowledge in relation to Agon. The undertaking is not a conviction for fraud or anything else. It is not a determination by the court. It does not admit knowledge by Mr Rowe, and Mr Rowe, I would add, was in any event an actual director of Agon and there is plentiful material upon which the jury can reach a conclusion about Mr Rowe's involvement in Agon."
i) The judge ought to have dealt with "Matters of Unfitness" in the Undertaking describing HGEM's business model as evidence to do with the facts alleged in respect of count 1 and therefore admissible in any event, without having to be admitted as bad character evidence;
ii) In relation to s. 101(1)(e), the judge had erred in treating the undertaking as not having substantial probative value. The fact that the evidence did not provide conclusive answers on Rowe's involvement in HGEM did not make it inadmissible under gateway (e). Likewise, the conclusion that the material would open up satellite issues which could not be resolved by the jury without a good deal more evidence about HGEM, was not a proper basis for refusing the application under that gateway.
iii) The judge's error in refusing to admit the evidence of the undertaking rendered the conviction on count 1 unsafe. Rowe's case at the trial had been that Creaven was entirely to blame for the wrongdoing at Agon, being the person responsible for the business and with expertise in trading carbon credits. Creaven had been seriously prejudiced by being prevented from undermining that case by relying upon the undertaking about trading by HGEM. The other evidence in the trial against Creaven is insufficient to conclude that the conviction is otherwise safe. The convictions under count 2 and 3 are tainted by this flaw in the trial.
Discussion
i) It is necessary to distinguish between "simple relevance" and "substantial value". The term "substantial probative value" must mean that the evidence has an enhanced capability of proving or disproving a matter in issue;
ii) Under section 101(1)(e) (read together with section 112(1)), the court must consider whether the evidence has substantial probative value, not in isolation, but in relation to a matter which is in issue between the co-defendants and is of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole. This is particularly so where the bad character evidence relates not to the bare fact of a conviction, but to detailed allegations of previous behaviour and where there are multiple factual issues between co-defendants;
iii) The phrase "more than trivial probative value" used, for example, in Apabhai, is capable of being misleading. If "trivial probative value" is taken as including evidence which is barely probative, the statutory term "substantial" may be deprived of its intended meaning, which requires evidence to be more than merely probative or relevant. It is important that this threshold for gateway (e) is not understated. It seeks to ensure as far as possible that the probative strength of the evidence removes the risk of unfair prejudice.
iv) Because section 101(1)(e) enables evidence to be led to prove bad character based on allegations, a jury may be required to make a multiplicity of judgments about a co-accused's behaviour on other occasions before reaching their conclusion about the guilt of either defendant of the offence charged. This increased scope for satellite litigation is not a ground for excluding evidence falling within gateway (e), but, "for these reasons, it is important … that sight is not lost of the rigour of the statutory test of substantial probative value upon a matter in issue between the defendants which is of substantial importance in the context of the trial as a whole" (at [40]).
v) This is a fact-sensitive issue to be addressed in the context of the trial as it appears at the time the application is determined. It may, for example, be appropriate to consider in some cases whether the evidence sought to be adduced under gateway (e) adds significantly to other, more probative evidence on the same issue.
Conclusion on appeals against conviction
The Renewed Application by Creaven for Leave to Appeal Against Sentence
"In my judgement consecutive sentences for counts 1 and 3 are appropriate. Nothing less will provide proper punishment for what were successive enterprises, both of great seriousness involving large sums of money. You could have stopped with Agon, you chose to go on and do even worse with Lanyard. I must and do take into account totality. The sentence is less than it would have been if I was passing individual sentences for each fraud."
"The Guideline would suggest starting points in excess of 7 years for both of the relevant counts, and a deduction for totality reduces the actual sentence to 13 years."