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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Director of Revenue & Customs Prosecutions, R (on the application of) v Criminal Cases Review Commission [2006] EWHC 3064 (Admin) (05 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/3064.html Cite as: [2008] 1 All ER 383, [2006] EWHC 3064 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION)
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
and
MR JUSTICE BEAN
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THE QUEEN ON THE APPLICATION OF DIRECTOR OF REVENUE AND CUSTOMS PROSECUTIONS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION |
Respondent |
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Miss Beverley Lang QC and Miss Emma Dixon (instructed by CCRC) for the Respondent
Interested Parties: Mr Andrew Bodnar for Zafar Rizvi
Mr Ivan Krolick for Gulbir Rana Singh
Mr William Clegg QC and Miss Helen Lyle for Ussama El-Kurd
Mumtaz Ahmed did not appear and was not represented.
Liberty and the Crown Prosecution Service made submissions in writing.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay:
"A referral … shall be treated for all purposes as an appeal by the person under section 1 of the [Criminal Appeal Act 1968] …"
"Where, between conviction and appeal, there have been significant changes in the common law (as opposed to changes effected by statute) or in standards of fairness, the approach indicated requires the Court to apply legal rules and procedural criteria that were not and could not reasonably have been applied at the time."
"… the very well established practice of this Court, in a case where the conviction was entirely proper under the law as it stood at the time of trial, to grant leave to appeal against conviction only where substantial injustice would otherwise be done to the Defendant." (para 3)
The statutory framework
"(1) Where a person has been convicted of an offence on indictment in England and Wales, the Commission –
(a) may at any time refer the conviction to the Court of Appeal …"
"(1) A reference of a conviction … shall not be made under … section 9 … unless –
(a) the Commission consider that there is a real possibility that the conviction … would not be upheld were the reference to be made,
(b) the Commission so consider –
(i)… because of an argument, or evidence, not raised in the proceedings which led to it or on any appeal or application for leave to appeal against it … and
(c) an appeal against the conviction … has been determined or leave to appeal against it has been refused.
(2) Nothing in subsection (1)(b)(i) or (c) shall prevent the making of a reference if it appears to the Commission that there are exceptional circumstances which justify making it."
"(2) In considering whether to make a reference of a conviction … under … section 9 the Commission shall have regard to –
(a) any application or representations made to the Commission by or on behalf of the person to whom it relates,
(b) any other representations made to the Commission in relation to it, and
(c) any other matters which appear to the Commission to be relevant.
(3) In considering whether to make a reference under section 9 … the Commission may at any time refer any point on which they desire the assistance of the Court of Appeal to that Court for the Court's opinion on it; and on a reference under this subsection the Court of Appeal shall consider the point referred and furnish the Commission with the Court's opinion on the point."
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court of Appeal –
(a)shall allow an appeal against conviction if they think that the conviction is unsafe; and
(b)shall dismiss such an appeal in any other case."
Judicial supervision of the Commission's decisions
"The exercise of the power to refer accordingly depends on the judgment of the Commission, and it cannot be too strongly emphasised that this is a judgment entrusted to the Commission and to no one else." (at p.149d)
"We are not sitting as a court of appeal, but as a court of review, and it is no part of our duty to decide whether the Commission's conclusion was right or wrong, but only whether it was lawful or unlawful." (at p.169e)"
"Had the Commission decided to refer this case to the Court of Appeal, that would (if based upon a proper direction and reasoning) have been a reasonable and lawful decision. The decision not to refer was in our view equally reasonable and lawful. The question lay fairly and squarely within the area of judgment entrusted to the Commission. If that Court were to hold that a decision one way or the other was objectively right or objectively wrong, it would be exceeding its function. The Divisional Court will ensure that the Commission acts lawfully. That is its only role. To go further would be to usurp the function which Parliament has, quite deliberately, accorded to the judgment of the Commission." (at p.171g-h)
The references
"Following the decision of the House of Lords in Saik there is a real possibility that the Court of Appeal will conclude that [the] conviction is wrong in law."
"Against that background, the decision-making committee did not deem it necessary to consider the practice of the Court of Appeal on the exercise of its discretion not to refer."
Did the Commission err?
(1) The point of principle
"… if, for whatever reason, the Court concludes that the appellant was wrongly convicted of the offence charged, or is left in doubt whether the appellant was rightly convicted of that offence or not, then it must of necessity consider the conviction unsafe. The Court is then subject to a binding duty to allow the appeal. It can make no difference that the appellant might, if duly indicted, have been rightly convicted of some other offence. Where the condition in section 2(1)(a) as it now stands is satisfied, the Court has no discretion to exercise .... Our sole obligation is to consider whether a conviction is unsafe. We would deprecate resort to undue technicality. A conviction will not be regarded as unsafe because it is possible to point to some drafting or clerical error, or omission, or discrepancy, or departure from good or prescribed practice … But if it is clear as a matter of law that the particulars of offence specified in the indictment cannot, even if established, support a conviction of the offence of which the defendant is accused, a conviction of such offence must in our opinion be considered unsafe."
(2) The circumstances of the present references
(a) The practice of the CACD
"… this court's established practice for over 20 years not to grant an extension of time or leave to appeal because of a change in the law since trial."
"… the very firm hope that, in exercising the discretion under section 9 and the judgment conferred by section 13(1)(a), the [Commission] may think it right to take into account this court's practice in refusing leave because of a change in the law …"
"… we have not been able to discern from the authorities what is meant by 'substantial injustice': we regard it as too vague for our purposes and in one or two instances would have to question the outcome."
(b) The road to Ramzan
"Before finding out about the certification and petition in Saik, the Crown had indicated, by their skeleton in the cases before us, dated … 15 September 2005, that, subject to the view of this Court, the Crown felt obliged not to oppose Ramzan's appeal and the other applicants' applications or the quashing of their convictions. The discovery, however, that the Ali point, through Saik, may be subject to the views of their Lordships … has … led them to rethink their position … "
And (at para 13):
"At present, it seems to us that if the Saik petition is refused, then the first thoughts of the Crown, which were that the appeal and the applications will have to be granted and convictions quashed, may well be the ultimate result."
"At the time we made our decision, we had well in mind the stance taken by the [Director] and the Court of Appeal in Ramzan the previous year … The Court of Appeal had not referred to any practice of refusing extensions of time in change of law cases. The Court of Appeal had not queried or criticised our decision to refer Mr Ramzan's case. We assumed that the [Director] and the Court of Appeal would take the same view in other Saik appeals. The Commission had been in contact with the Criminal Appeals Office on a number of occasions, discussing the timing of appeals, and the position of co-defendants, and had not been given any indication that the position had changed since the hearing of Ramzan in September 2005 … It was only after these cases had been referred that the Commission was made aware of the change of stance on the part of the [Director] and the Court of Appeal towards the Saik appeals."
Further observations on these four references
Conclusion