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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Gill, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 976 (20 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/976.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Crim 976 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JAY
MR JUSTICE BUTCHER
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REX |
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KURAN GILL |
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[Post judgment Note: REPORTING RESTRICTIONS: THE PROVISIONS OF SECTION 82 OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 2003 NO LONGER APPLY IN VIEW OF THE CONCLUSION OF THE RE-TRIAL ON 11 JULY 2023] |
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Mr. J. Bide-Thomas appeared on behalf of the Crown.
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE EDIS:
The issue
The appeal
The law
"7 Power to order retrial.
(1) Where the Court of Appeal allow an appeal against conviction ... and it appears to the Court that the interests of justice so require, they may order the appellant to be retried.
(2) A person shall not under this section be ordered to be retried for any offence other than—
(a) the offence of which he was convicted at the original trial and in respect of which his appeal is allowed as mentioned in subsection (1) above;
(b) an offence of which he could have been convicted at the original trial on an indictment for the first-mentioned offence; or
(c) an offence charged in an alternative count of the indictment in respect of which no verdict was given in consequence of his being convicted of the first-mentioned offence.
8 Supplementary provisions as to retrial.
(1) A person who is to be retried for an offence in pursuance of an order under section 7 of this Act shall be tried on a fresh indictment preferred by direction of the Court of Appeal, ... but after the end of two months from the date of the order for his retrial he may not be arraigned on an indictment preferred in pursuance of such a direction unless the Court of Appeal give leave.
(1A) Where a person has been ordered to be retried but may not be arraigned without leave, he may apply to the Court of Appeal to set aside the order for retrial and to direct the court of trial to enter a judgment and verdict of acquittal of the offence for which he was ordered to be retried.
(1B) On an application under subsection (1) or (1A) above the Court of Appeal shall have power—
(a) to grant leave to arraign; or
(b) to set aside the order for retrial and direct the entry of a judgment and verdict of acquittal, but shall not give leave to arraign unless they are satisfied—
(i) that the prosecution has acted with all due expedition; and
(ii) that there is a good and sufficient cause for a retrial in spite of the lapse of time since the order under section 7 of this Act was made.
(2) The Court of Appeal may, on ordering a retrial, make such orders as appear to them to be necessary or expedient—
(a) for the custody or, subject to section 25 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, release on bail of the person ordered to be retried pending his retrial; or
(b) for the retention pending the retrial of any property or money forfeited, restored or paid by virtue of the original conviction or any order made on that conviction.
(3) If the person ordered to be retried was, immediately before the determination of his appeal, liable to be detained in pursuance of an order or direction under Part V of the Mental Health Act 1959 or under Part III of the Mental Health Act 1983 (other than under section 35, 36 or 38 of that Act),—
(a) that order or direction shall continue in force pending the retrial as if the appeal had not been allowed; and
(b) any order made by the Court of Appeal under this section for his custody or release on bail shall have effect subject to the said order or direction.
(3A) If the person ordered to be retried was, immediately before the determination of his appeal, liable to be detained in pursuance of a remand under section 36 of the Mental Health Act 1983 or an interim hospital order under section 38 of that Act, the Court of Appeal may, if they think fit, order that he shall continue to be detained in a hospital or mental nursing home, and in that event Part III of that Act shall apply as if he had been ordered under this section to be kept in custody pending his retrial and were detained in pursuance of a transfer direction together with a restriction direction.
(3B) If the person ordered to be retried—
(a) was liable to be detained in pursuance of an order or direction under Part 3 of the Mental Health Act 1983;
(b) was then made subject to a community treatment order (within the meaning of that Act); and
(c) was subject to that community treatment order immediately before the determination of his appeal, the order or direction under Part 3 of that Act and the community treatment order shall continue in force pending the retrial as if the appeal had not been allowed, and any order made by the Court of Appeal under this section for his release on bail shall have effect subject to the community treatment order.
(4) Schedule 2 to this Act has effect with respect to the procedure in the case of a person ordered to be retried, the sentence which may be passed if the retrial results in his conviction and the order for costs which may be made if he is acquitted."
"5. The section has been considered in a number of authorities from which for present purposes, and focusing essentially on subsections (1B)(b)(i), we distil the following summary:
(1) The purpose of the section is to ensure that the retrial take place as soon as possible. The purpose is intended to be achieved by a focus on arraignment. Once arraignment has taken place, the case will be back under judicial control and the matter can be left to the judge to ensure that the retrial occurs at the earliest practical opportunity.
(2) The section is structured in such a way that this court has no power to give leave to arraign out of time unless the cumulative sections of sections (1B)(b)(i) and (ii) are satisfied.
(3) 'Expedition' means promptness or 'speed'. 'Due' means 'reasonable' or 'proper'. The question of 'due expedition' relates to the arraignment, not to other aspects of the preparation for the retrial. Where the deadline has been missed, the court does not look simply at the end result, nor does the court conduct a minute examination of the systems employed in the offices and chambers of those involved in the prosecution. What is involved instead has been referred to as a broad 'post mortem'.
(4) The primary duty to ensure that the arraignment takes place within the time limit lies with the Crown Court concerned. However, all parties to the proceedings are also under a duty to co-operate to ensure that the defendant is re-arraigned within the two-month time limit.
(5) The requirement that the prosecution should have acted with "all due expedition" is less exacting than that for the extension of a custody time limit (where the requirement is 'with all due diligence and expedition').
See R v Coleman (1992) 95 Cr App R 345; R v Kimber [2001] EWCA Crim 643; R v Jones (Paul Garfield) [2002] EWCA Crim 2284, [2003] 1 Cr App R 20; and R v Dales [2011] EWCA Crim 134. Further citation of authority is unnecessary."
"To satisfy the court that this condition is met the prosecution need not show that every stage of preparation of the case has been accomplished as quickly and efficiently as humanly possible. That would be an impossible standard to meet, particularly when the court which reviews the history of the case enjoys the immeasurable benefit of hindsight. Nor should the history be approached on the unreal assumption that all involved on the prosecution side have been able to give the case in question their undivided attention. What the court must require is such diligence and expedition as would be shown by a competent prosecutor conscious of his duty to bring the case to trial as quickly, as reasonably and fairly as possible."
"(1) The overriding objective of this procedural code is that criminal cases be dealt with justly.
(2) Dealing with a criminal case justly includes —
(a) acquitting the innocent and convicting the guilty [...]
(f) dealing with the case efficiently and expeditiously; [...]"
"1.3 The court must further the overriding objective in particular when —
(a) exercising any power given to it by legislation (including these rules)."
The events following the 17 March 2023
"We write further to the successful appeal of the conviction by Kuran Gill in respect of the section 18 wounding intent offence and the retrial which must now take place. The Crown has sent a copy of the trial indictment to the Crown Court Digital Case System. Unfortunately, the reviewing lawyer sent an indictment containing only section wounding with intent offence, and then realised the alternative section 20 wounding needed to be added. The omission has been rectified and the correct indictment sent.
Please find enclosed a copy of the Court of Appeal ruling and directions and a copy of the defence letter sent today.
We would be grateful for the notification of the listing for re-arraignment."
"I do not think there is anything else to be said". Prosecution counsel then said, "The only procedural issue is with whether or not that it is appropriate that he be arraigned, given that the original convictions have been quashed and there is now a new indictment."
"We have all got used to arraignment taking place very much later than it might properly have done back in what I might call the old days. You and whoever defends will have ample leisure to consider whether he needs to be re-arraigned and my not putting that off will not make any difference at all. I will put, '? Does he need to be re-arraigned', on my note."
That concluded the discussion on that subject that day.
"This case was originally T20217128. It resulted in a conviction, now overturned in the Court of Appeal and sent back for retrial. I direct that all the material on T20217128 be transferred to this DCS file. D is on remand for this matter and CTL expires on 7/7/23. However, D is awaiting sentence on other matters [...] Query does he need to be re-arraigned."
"Good afternoon, At the hearing on 31 March the defendant Kuran Gill was listed but not arraigned. However, the order made by the Court of Appeal on 17 February was clear that the defendant should be arraigned within two months. Prosecution counsel would also like to refer the court to R v Llewellyn (Andrew) [2022] EWCA Crim 154. As such, we would be most grateful if the case could be listed before 17 April in order that all parties can comply with the Court of Appeal's directions and Kuran Gill can be arraigned."
"We write with reference to the above matter and in particular the email sent by the Crown on 6 April 2023, asking for an urgent listing of the case in respect of Kuran Gill, copy enclosed. Please can we now have an urgent response, given the listing must take place on 17/4/23."
Decision and discussion