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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Lappin, R (on the application of) v HM Customs & Excise [2004] EWHC 953 (Admin) (30 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/953.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 953 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF BRENDAN LAPPIN | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
HM CUSTOMS AND EXCISE | (DEFENDANT) |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR J PUZEY (instructed by Customs and Excise, Manchester) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) The Respondent [the Customs and Excise] to serve its case upon the Appellant by the 31st March 2003.
(2) The Appellant to serve any experts report by the 12th May 2003.
(3) The respondent to serve any reply to the Appellant's expert by the 9th June 2003.
(4) The experts to meet and attempt to agree a joint report by the 30th June 2003.
(5) The hearing to be listed for two days at Caernarfon Crown Court on the 7th and 8th July 2003."
"I am of course here on the basis that the hearing is expected to proceed and I am prepared to deal with it on that basis but of course, your Honour will appreciate that to some extent I do so with my hands tied behind my back because for reasons which are entirely at the door of the defence and in no way at the door of the court or the prosecution it has not been possible for the defence to instruct an expert in time to look at the data on which the prosecution report is based or to conduct any independent tests on the money and so with hesitation but having hesitated nevertheless I propose to your Honour a compromise course which would be this, that all the evidence in the case, both prosecution and defence other than the expert evidence is dealt with on this occasion, the case goes part heard and the expert evidence is dealt with on a subsequent occasion which would mean that the time here today is not wasted but would give the defence the opportunity for their own expert to carry out investigations which might in the long run lead to less rather than more court time being taken up. Well, that is my application. I am in your Honour's hands."
"It suffices to say that more than four months ago on the 28th February of this year His Honour Judge Elystan Morgan set out a number of directions in order to ensure that this matter could be tried today and tomorrow. Unfortunately, your client ... has totally ignored those directions and he now asks that the matter be adjourned in order for him to do what he ought to have been doing back in March, that is to say instructing an expert. This court has set aside two days for this hearing. It would be quite wrong now for those two days to be wasted or for this matter to be further adjourned. Procedures are set out by the court in order to ensure speedy trials. If a party ignores the steps set out by the court then he or she cannot expect the matter to be adjourned, so we will proceed."
"(a) At 2.25 am on Sunday 21st October 2001 at Holyhead Port, Anglesey, police officers stopped and searched a Mazda motorcar pursuant to the provisions of the Prevention of Terrorism Act 2000. The appellant was the driver of the said motor car and the front seat passenger was Bruno Di Ruzza.
(b) Prior to the search the Appellant was asked by the police officer whether there was a large amount of money in the motor car. The Appellant replied, 'Yes, £40,000 under the driver's seat'. The Appellant admitted that it was his money and stated he had it with him 'to buy stuff for Christmas but I didn't find anything'. A plastic bag containing £39,990.00 in used bank notes was found under the seat.
(c) The bag and a sample of 828 bank notes were examined by a scientist.
(d) The amount of cocaine contamination found on the bank notes was higher than contamination typically found on bank notes taken at random from general circulation in the UK.
(e) Giving an address in Armagh, Northern Ireland, the Appellant had registered with the Value Added Tax Central Unit with effect from the 11th May 1994. Return forms for each quarter from 31st July 1996 until 30th April 2002 were issued to him but had not been returned by him.
(f) The Appellant gave evidence on oath. He testified that the money had been taken by him from Armagh to London in order to purchase confectionery.
(g) We did not believe the Appellant's explanation for being in possession of the money.
(h) There was no oral or documentary evidence to support the Appellant's explanation for his possession of the money.
(i) There was no evidence from Bruno Di Ruzza.
9. We were sure that the money represented the Appellant's proceeds of drug trafficking and dismissed the appeal."
"The opinion of the High Court is sought as to whether the Court breached the Appellant's right to a fair trial under Article 6(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms by refusing his application for an adjournment so that he could instruct an expert to analyse the seized bank notes and review the report of the Respondent's expert."
"1. A fair hearing meant there should be equality of arms. That meant the defence should have had a reasonable opportunity to present his case. The court should not permit one party to rely on an expert and not the other ...
2. A fair hearing meant that the appellant should have had the right to participate effectively in a criminal trial. By parity of reasoning that applies to [what is agreed to be] a civil trial such as the present.
3. Where a fair trial makes expert evidence indispensable, the court, he submits, should call such evidence or allow legal aid to do so."