CA115 Attorney General -v- Lee [2016] IECA 115 (20 April 2016)

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Cite as: [2016] IECA 115

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Judgment
Title:
Attorney General -v- Lee
Neutral Citation:
[2016] IECA 115
Court of Appeal Record Number:
2015 164
Date of Delivery:
20/04/2016
Court:
Court of Appeal
Composition of Court:
Peart J., Hogan J., Costello J.
Judgment by:
Peart J.
Status:
Approved
Result:
Dismiss
Judgments by
Link to Judgment
Concurring
Peart J.
Hogan J., Costello J.
Hogan J.
Peart J., Costello J.




THE COURT OF APPEAL

RECORD NUMBER: 2015/164 CA

Peart J.
Hogan J.
Costello J.


IN THE MATTER OF PART II OF THE EXTRADITION ACT, 1965,

AS AMENDED





BETWEEN:

ATTORNEY GENERAL
APPLICANT/RESPONDENT
AND

PATRICK LEE

RESPONDENT/APPELLANT


JUDGMENT OF MR JUSTICE MICHAEL PEART ON THE 20TH DAY OF APRIL 2016:
1. By Order made and perfected on the 23rd March 2015, Edwards J. being satisfied of the matters referred to in s. 29 of the Extradition Act, 1965 ordered inter alia that the appellant be committed to prison to await the order of the Minister for his extradition pursuant to a request made by the United States of America on the 15th August 2011 for the purpose of a trial there in respect of 51 alleged counts, being 29 counts of Wire Fraud, 6 counts of Unlawful Money Transactions, and 16 counts of Aggravated Identity Theft.

2. No element of any of the offences is alleged to have been committed outside the territory of the United States of America, and specifically for the purposes of this appeal in the State (i.e. Ireland), even though it has been established by the appellant that on the dates on which it is alleged that a small number of the offences were committed he was outside the United States, and in all likelihood in the State.

3. Nevertheless the single ground of appeal being pursued by the appellant is that his extradition in respect of all the alleged offences is prohibited under s. 15 of the Act of 1965, as originally enacted which provides:-

      “15. - Extradition shall not be granted where the offence for which it is requested is regarded under the law of the State as having been committed in the State”. [Emphasis added]
4. I should mention in passing that a new s. 15 has been substituted by s. 27 of the European Arrest Warrant (Application to Third Countries and Amendment) and Extradition (Amendment) Act 2012, but it is the original section which is in play in the present proceedings, since the amended section only came into effect some eleven months after the date of the Request for extradition of the appellant.

5. Section 15 gives effect to Article 7 of the European Convention on Extradition of 13th December 1957 which provides:-

      “Article 7 - Place of Commission:

        1. The requested Party may refuse to extradite a person claimed for an offence which is regarded by its law as having been committed in whole or in part in its territory or in a place treated as its territory.

        2. When the offence for which extradition is requested has been committed outside the territory of the requesting Party, extradition may only be refused if the law of the requested Party does not allow prosecution for the same category of offence when committed outside the latter Party’s territory or does not allow extradition for the offence concerned.”

6. Given the terms of s. 15 of the Act of 1965 the net question for determination is whether the offences for which the appellant’s extradition is requested are offences which under the law of the State are regarded as having been committed in the State, even though the authorities in the U.S. do not allege that any element of any of the offences was committed outside the U.S..

7. Essentially the counts for which his extradition is sought arise from what the prosecutor alleges was a mortgage fraud scheme perpetrated in the United States by the appellant between July 2005 and May 2007. This allegation is summarised very briefly at para. 4 of the affidavit sworn by Sandra Bower on the 26th April 2011 as follows:-

      “In summary, Lee and others bought multi-family properties in Massachusetts and converted them into condominiums; “straw buyers” (i.e. individuals who take title to real estate and in whose name mortgage loans are secured for those purchases, but who have no intention to live in the properties or to repay the mortgage loans) were recruited to purchase the condominium units; and lenders issued mortgage loans based on false information about the straw buyers and the properties, including forged real estate appraisals prepared by Mr Lee. After the transactions closed, Lee and his associates shared in the proceeds of the loans, the mortgages went unpaid and the properties were foreclosed. Lee received about $1 million in gross receipts for his participation in the scheme”.
8. The same affidavit sets out an extensive account of how this mortgage fraud is alleged to have been planned and executed, and the trial judge’s judgment contains a large extract from same. It is unnecessary for me to set out that same detail in the present judgment. Neither is it necessary to set out the full detail of the offences comprised within the three groups of offences, as the trial judge has helpfully done.

9. The ground of appeal now relied upon has its genesis in Point of Objection 9 raised in the High Court in the following terms:

      “9. Without prejudice to the foregoing some of the allegations in the extradition request the subject matter of the within proceedings refer to alleged offences committed whilst the Respondent was present and residing in Ireland and as such it is alleged the acts were committed inside the territory [of the] requested State, Ireland.”
10. As noted by the trial judge in his judgment at para. 5.2, the appellant was with the leave of the court permitted to argue this ground on an expanded basis namely:
      “That all of the offences the subject matter of the request are not extraditable offences in that the territoriality bar created by s. 15 of the Act of 1965 as originally enacted applies to all of the offences in this case, and not just those covered by Ground 9 as originally pleaded, i.e. those committed when the respondent was outside of the requesting state”.
11. The essence of the objection raised under s. 15 of the Act of 1965, and which is the subject of the appeal now, is if the offence(s) for which extradition is sought is/are offences which because they were committed in the State or are regarded as having been committed in the State, are capable of being prosecuted by the DPP in the State, then extradition was prohibited. The trial judge noted in his judgment that under the expanded ground permitted the Court had to consider whether the appellant was alleged to have committed the alleged offences under Irish law as opposed to necessarily committing them in the State. He went on to state that it was being contended that offences in respect of which this State claims an extra-territorial jurisdiction qualify as offences which are in the words of s. 15 “regarded under the law of the State as having been committed in the State”, and that in this regard that question must be considered by reference to the date upon which the Request for extradition is made, and not by reference to the date upon which the offences are alleged to have been committed. In other words, the Court must consider whether the offences said to have been committed in the period 2006-2007 give rise to offences in respect of which the State claims an extra-territorial jurisdiction as of 11th August 2011.

12. In this regard the appellant relies upon offences created by sections 71, 71A, and 72 of the Criminal Justice Act 2006, as amended by the Criminal Justice (Amendment) Act, 2009 (effective from 22nd July 2009), read in conjunction with s. 74 of the same Act, and/or also an offence under s. 7 of the Criminal Justice (Money Laundering and Terrorist Offences) Act, 2010 (commenced 15th July 2010). He submits, as he did in the High Court, that offences committed under these provisions are prosecutable in the State even though they were committed in another state, since Ireland has asserted an extra-territorial jurisdiction in respect of such offences by the date of this Request for extradition on 11th August 2011.

13. It is important at this point to state that the issue in controversy must not be confused or conflated with the issue of correspondence which is dealt with under s. 10 of the Act of 1965. Before extradition may be ordered correspondence, or double criminality as it is sometimes referred to, must be established. This means that it must be established that the acts or omissions alleged to give rise to the offences for which extradition is sought would, if committed in this State on the date of the Request, give rise to an offence in the State. A person may not be extradited to face trial for an act or omission allegedly committed by him in the requesting state which is not a criminal act or omission if done in this State. The extra-territoriality bar under s. 15 fulfils a very different purpose. Where an act committed outside the State is “regarded under the law of the State as having been committed in the State”, extradition is prohibited not because the act is not criminal under Irish law as in the case of a lack of correspondence or double criminality, but rather because (a) it is a criminal act under Irish law, and (b) it is regarded as having been committed in the State (e.g. because it occurred on an Irish registered ship or Irish registered aircraft outside the State at the time) and for that reason the offence may be prosecuted in this State by the DPP should she so decide. As the trial judge pointed out in his judgment, there is an important distinction to be made between an offence which is regarded as having been committed in the State, and an offence committed in another state over which some extra-territorial jurisdiction to prosecute it is claimed under Irish law. In the latter case there is no question of the offence being regarded as having been committed in the State. It is one clearly committed outside the State, but in respect of which under Irish law a jurisdiction is retained to prosecute it.

14. As far as correspondence is concerned, the trial judge was satisfied that each of the offences for which extradition is sought in the Request corresponded to an offence in the State for the purpose of s. 10 of the Act. While that finding is not the subject of the present appeal, the argument in relation to the extra-territoriality issue in this appeal was linked to some extent to the question of correspondence. This is so in circumstances where for the purposes of establishing correspondence for each of the three groups of offences, the Attorney General, as applicant, put up a number of candidate offences here including offences under s. 72 of the Act of 2006 as amended, already referred, and even though the trial judge was satisfied to find correspondence established by only one of the candidate offences put up for his consideration, he stated that for each group of offences correspondence can be established by each of the candidates offered. The appellant relies to an extent on the fact that the offence under s. 72 of the Act of 2006 was therefore found to correspond for the purpose of s. 10 of the Act of 1965, and argues that the respondent cannot at the same time argue for the purposes of s. 15 of the same Act, that it does not. That suffices for the moment to indicate the scope for some confusion or conflation of the two issues - correspondence and extra-territoriality.

15. The first question that arises is whether the s. 15 issue must be considered by reference to the law as it stood at the date(s) on which the alleged offences were committed i.e. between July 2005 - May 2007, or as it stood at the date on which the Request for extradition was received from the United States i.e. 11th August 2011. The trial judge addressed this question fully between paragraphs 8.9 - 8. 20 and concluded that the relevant date was the date of the alleged offences. At paragraph 8.18 et seq. he concluded as follows:

      “8.18. It is clear to this Court that when Article 7 of the 1957 Convention is considered in aid of the interpretation of s. 15, which is in any event clear in its terms, that section is concerned with a territoriality exception or bar to extradition i.e. that extradition shall not be granted where ‘the offence’ (in terms of the offending conduct constituting the offence) is committed in the State, or in a place regarded under the law of the State as being within the territory of the State.

      8.19. However, that is not the same thing as saying that in any case where Ireland asserts extra-territorial jurisdiction s. 15 is engaged. That is simply not so because Ireland does not assert extra-territorial jurisdiction solely, or even mainly, on the basis that offences committed abroad are regarded under the law of the State as having been committed within the territory of the State. In particular, it does not do so in the case of the extra-territorial jurisdiction in respect of offences contrary to sections 71, 71A, 72 of the Act of 2006, as amended by the Act of 2009 and/or s. 7 of the Act of 2010 (assuming just for the purposes of the argument that they are capable of being relied upon by the respondent).

      8.20. This Court has further concluded that the respondent cannot in fact seek to rely on [sections] 71, 71A, 72 of the Act of 2006, as amended by the Act of 2009 and/or s. 7 of the Act of 2010, because neither the Act of 2009 nor the Act of 2010, had been enacted when the offending conduct that now constitutes the offences the subject matter of the present extradition request was committed. As the applicant has pointed out, there is a constitutional prohibition on the retrospective penalisation of conduct. While thirty of the fifty one alleged offences, i.e. counts 6-10, 15-23, 29-33, 38-39, 43-49 and 54-55 were committed after 1st August 2006, the date on which the Act of 2006 came into force, s. 71 and 72 of that Act, as originally enacted, were much more restricted in their scope than they were post the amendments effected by the Act of 2009. In addition s. 71A of the Act of 2006 was only inserted by the Act of 2009.”

16. In my view the trial judge was correct to conclude that for a consideration of s. 15 the relevant law of the State must be the law as it stood at the date(s) of the alleged offences, since unlike s.10 (correspondence) the purpose of the prohibition on extradition in respect of an act regarded by the law of the State as having been committed in the State, even though not actually committed within the national territory as such, is to enable the DPP to prosecute the offence here, should she wish to do so. For that reason it cannot be the case that the Court would consider whether the act in question was an offence under Irish law on any date later than that on which it was allegedly committed, since that would be to retrospectively criminalise an act that was lawful on the date of its commission. As the trial judge pointed out, this would be constitutionally impermissible.

17. In his judgment, the trial judge looked at the provisions of s. 71 of the Act of 2006 as originally enacted, being the section as it existed at the date of the alleged offences, in the context of the appellant’s argument that it creates an extra-territorial offence which fits the allegations against the appellant, and is therefore captured by the s. 15 prohibition on surrender. It is one of the sections upon which the appellant relies for his argument that these offences for which extradition is requested come within the s. 15 prohibition on extradition. He relies also on s. 74 of the Act of 2006 which I shall come to.

18. Before proceeding further, I should make clear that it is no part of the case alleged against the appellant by the U.S. prosecutor that any part of the offences with which he is charged in the U.S. was done in Ireland or in any location or place that could be regarded as being Ireland. Neither is the appellant charged with any count of conspiracy to commit a criminal offence, even though there is no doubt that there were others allegedly involved with him in the mortgage fraud giving rise to the charges against the appellant.

19. Section 71 as originally enacted provides under a heading “Offence of conspiracy” as follows as relevant:-

"71(1) Subject to subsections (2) and (3), a person who conspires, whether in the State or elsewhere, with one or more persons to do an act:-

        (a) in the State that constitutes a serious offence, or

        (b) in a place outside the State that constitutes a serious offence under the law of that place and which would, if done in the State, constitute a serious offence

        is guilty of an offence irrespective of whether such act actually takes place or not.

      (2) Subsection (1) applies to a conspiracy committed outside the State if -

        (a) …

        (b) …

        (c) … or

        (d) the conspiracy is committed by an Irish citizen ….


      (3) Subsection (1) shall also apply to a conspiracy committed outside the State in circumstances other than those referred to in subsection (2), but in that case the [DPP] may not take, or consent to the taking of, proceedings for an offence under subsection (1) except in accordance with section 74 (3).

      (4) …

      (5) … ”

20. I repeat that it is no part of the U.S. case against the appellant that he took part in any conspiracy with another or others to commit wire fraud, engage in unlawful money transactions or aggravated identity theft. The charges against him are not such inchoate offences. He is not charged with conspiracy. He is charged with those substantive offences committed solely in the U.S.

21. In my view the mere fact that there is on the statute books here an offence of conspiracy to do a criminal act in a place outside the State, and regardless of whether that conspiracy takes place here or elsewhere, and that this applies in certain circumstances including as in this case where the perpetrator is an Irish citizen, does not mean that this State enjoys a jurisdiction to try the substantive offences with which the appellant is charged where, though he is an Irish citizen, all the acts constituting the offences were allegedly committed only in the U.S. The State has not laid claim to any such wide extra-territorial jurisdiction over substantive offences committed outside the State, even where they are committed by an Irish citizen. What exists are some provisions which create for example the offence of conspiracy where that conspiracy may have been hatched abroad and to do some criminal act abroad by an Irish citizen. Such an offence may be prosecuted here by the DPP. That, as I have said, is very different from an offence committed in the State, or in a location regarded under Irish law as having been committed in the State. As the trial judge stated in his judgment at paragraph 8.23::-

      “that does not mean that the actions are regarded under the law of the State as having been committed in the State; it merely makes such extra-territorial actions on the part of an accused an extra-territorial criminal offence in the State”.
22. In so far as the appellant relies in similar vein upon the offence created by s. 72 of the Act of 2006, I agree with the trial judge that it does not avail the appellant since it is not alleged against him that he did in the State any act for the purpose of enhancing the ability of any other person to commit or facilitate a serious offence in a place outside the State. Even if one accepts the evidence as a matter of probability that between 29th March 2007 and 24th June 2007 (being dates on which it is alleged that some offences were committed) the appellant was in this State, that does not mean that he must be assumed to have done some act here by which the fraud or other of the offences were advanced. No such allegation is made against him. This Court must confine itself to the facts alleged in the Request for extradition, and not assume other facts.

23. It is also necessary to look at s. 74 of the Act of 2006. It does not matter for present purposes whether one looks at it as first enacted, or in its amended form by virtue of s. 11 of the Act of 2009 since the part relied upon by the appellant is common to both. Section 74(1) as first enacted provided:

      “74. (1) Proceedings for an offence under section 71 or 72 in relation to an act committed outside the State may be taken in any place in the State and the offence may for all incidental purposes be treated as having been committed in that place. [Emphasis added]
24. The trial judge stated that his analysis of the offence created by s. 71 and the conclusion which he reached that the offence did not come within the s. 15 exception to extradition was supported by the terms of s. 74 above. The appellant on the contrary submits that it supports his argument regarding extra territoriality and that in particular the words “may for all incidental purposes be treated as having been committed in that place” should be widely interpreted so as to include ‘for the purpose of extradition’. It is submitted that proceedings for extradition is within a broad meaning of “incidental purposes”. I cannot agree with that submission. I agree with the trial judge’s conclusion in this regard.

25. In my view the only sensible way of considering the phrase “for all incidental purposes” is to do so by viewing it in the context of that section, and not as some phrase thrown in for some general and unspecified purpose. The phrase is first of all preceded by the conjunction “and” which clearly indicates that its purpose and meaning is connected or linked to what goes before. What goes before is a reference to an offence under section 71 or 72. I have described such offences already and I will not repeat what I have said as to the nature of those offences. But given my conclusion as to the nature of the offence under s. 71, where a person may have conspired with others somewhere outside the State to do some act outside the State which constitutes a serious offence both in that other place and under the law of the State, and where the DPP decides to bring a prosecution in respect of the offence, it is necessary and logical that for procedural purposes related to prosecuting the offence there be a provision such as s. 74 so that the person after he/she has been arrested may be lawfully brought before a District Court, and charged with the offence. Without s.74 it would not be possible to know which District Court would have jurisdiction to deal with the matter for the purposes of remand, book of evidence, return for trial and so forth since the offence will not by definition have been committed within any particular District. Those are purposes which are very clearly “incidental” to the proceedings being brought in respect of the offence. The use of the conjunction “and” makes it very clear that the “incidental purposes” are purposes which are incidental to such a prosecution. In my view the meaning contended for by the appellant is contrived, and would go far beyond the clear context in which the phrase is used in the section. If the appellant’s meaning was correct it would render the word “incidental” superfluous, since the phrase “all purposes” might equally have been used. All the words chosen by the Oireachtas must be given a meaning, and in my view the use of the word “incidental” has a limiting effect, and that limitation is to the context of the section, and therefore to the proceedings referred to in the section. No absurdity results. The meaning is clear and necessary, and emerges from the very words used.

26. The Court has been referred to the judgment of McKechnie J. in Attorney General v. Pocevicius [2015] IESC 59. The Attorney General submits that the case is on all fours with the present case and supports the conclusions reached by the trial judge. The appellant submits that the decision is one reached ‘per incuriam’, given that there is no reference in the judgment to the decision of the High Court in Attorney General v. Garland []IEHC 90, and it does not appear from the judgment that the s. 15 issue was fully argued. It is submitted that if on the other hand the decision in Pocevicius is to be regarded as correct and binding, then the decision of the High Court in Garland must be wrong, but that if so it is surprising that the Attorney General did not appeal that decision.

27. In my view, though the Court has been informed by the Attorney General that in Pocevicius her written submissions to the Supreme Court referred to the Garland case, the latter is distinguishable on its facts from the former. The same issue under s. 15 of the Act of 1965 arose, but the offences at issue were very different. In particular, unlike Pocevicius and indeed unlike the present case, the offence in Garland was of conspiracy to commit counterfeit acts outside the territory of the United States. It is so different a factual background that it is unsurprising that it is not referred to in the judgment of McKechnie J. in Pocevicius in the Supreme Court. It was of little or no relevance, and I reject any suggestion that the judgment in Pocevicius is ‘per incuriam’ on that account.

28. The facts in Pocevicius are materially similar to the present case, and support the conclusions of the trial judge in the present case which were reached before the delivery of judgment in the Supreme Court in Pocevicius. It was never suggested by the Norwegian authorities that while he was in Ireland he did any act in connection with the offence for which his extradition was sought. The same can be said in the present case. It is also noted by McKechnie J. in his judgment that the authorities in Norway had never stated that they intended to prosecute him even if the offence was committed while he was in Ireland. He stated his conclusions on the s. 15 issue as follows:

      "68. From the evidence it is clear that Norway is not suggesting that whilst in Ireland, the respondent committed any act or engaged in any action referable to the subject offence. Further they have never stated that they intend to prosecute him even if the offence was committed in Ireland. Section 15 of the 1965 Act would not permit this. What they are saying however is that even if the evidence does not establish that he was in Norway on the relevant date, they are nonetheless entitled to and 10 the prosecution against on the charge(s) as outlined. I believe they are so entitled and that s. 15 of the Act is no bar to extradition by reason of same.

      69. The net issue on this ground of objection is whether the offence for which the respondent’s surrender is sought is regarded under Irish law as having been committed in the State. If it is, he cannot be extradited under s. 15 of the 1965 Act.

      70. What is immediately striking about the section [old s. 15] is its specific reference to the subject offence having been “committed” in this jurisdiction: it therefore covers such circumstance, but no other. This means that the section is no bar to extradition if an offence is “prosecutable” here or indeed even, if the offence is “prosecutable” in this jurisdiction. It only prohibits extradition if the specific offence, for which extradition is sought, has been committed here. “Committed” in this sense must mean committed “wholly” or “entirely” in Ireland. Therefore, even if elements of the offence were said to have been carried out in Ireland, this would not be sufficient to invoke the provisions of the section.”

29. I agree with the Attorney General’s submission that in fact s. 15 is not concerned with extra-territorial offences as such, where this State might claim a jurisdiction to prosecute an offence committed outside this State, and that the purpose of s. 15 is to prohibit extradition where it is sought to prosecute an offence which was committed in this State (or in a place regarded as being within this State), and therefore where the DPP may wish to prosecute the offender in this State. I am satisfied that my conclusions are consistent with the plain meaning of Article 7 of the Convention, and the section itself. I believe the purpose of old s. 15 of the Act to be clear and unambiguous when looked at carefully, and that the meaning sought to be attributed to it by the appellant is strained and incorrect.

30. I agree with the conclusions reached by the trial judge, and would therefore dismiss this appeal.



JUDGMENT of Mr. Justice Gerard Hogan delivered on the 20th day of April 2016

1. As the relevant facts and issues have been helpfully stated in the judgment which Peart J. has just delivered, I propose to proceed immediately to the difficult legal issues which arise in this appeal.

2. As Peart J. has pointed out, it is plain that the offences with which the appellant has been charged all in fact occurred entirely within the territory of the United States. These offences are substantive offences relating to an alleged mortgage fraud scheme which, it is contended, was carried out by Mr. Lee, an Irish citizen, entirely within the territory of the United States.

3. The difficulty which arises in this appeal stems from the fact that s. 15 of the Extradition Act 1965 (“the 1965 Act”) provides that:-

4. For completeness, it should be observed that this deeming provision is not contained in the new version of s. 15 of the 1965 Act which was substituted by s. 27 of the European Arrest Warrant (Application to Third Countries and Amendment) and Extradition (Amendment) Act 2012. Since the present case pre-dates the coming into force of this new version of s. 15, it is agreed for present purposes that it is original version of s. 15 of the 1965 Act which is the applicable provision.

5. The appellant’s case, essentially, is that there exists under Irish law an offence which regards the conduct alleged, if done by an Irish citizen, as an offence which was committed in this State, even if the actus reus of the offence in question was entirely committed abroad. This is because the sweep of the conspiracy offences provided by s. 71 of the Criminal Justice Act 2006 (“the 2006 Act”) is such that it would criminalise the conduct alleged in the present case if done abroad by an Irish citizen.

6. The particular difficulty which then arises is that s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act provides:

      Proceedings for an offence under s. 71 or s. 72 in relation to an act committed outside the State may be taken in any place in the State and the offence may for all incidental purposes be treated as having been committed in that place.”
7. Here, then, is the core of Mr. Lee’s argument. First, the conduct alleged here would, if committed by an Irish citizen, be regarded as an offence under s. 71 of the 2006 Act, even if it was actually committed entirely within the United States. Second, by virtue of the deeming provisions contained in s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act, the offence is one which is regarded as having been committed in Ireland. Third, it follows - or, at least, so the argument runs - that extradition cannot be granted in view of the prohibition contained in s. 15 of the 2006 Act.

8. As Edwards J. recognised in his judgment of the High Court, there is a difference between the assertion of extra territorial jurisdiction on the one hand and the deeming of offences actually committed outside the State to have been committed within the State on the other. The extra-territorial jurisdiction of this State is governed by Article 29.8 of the Constitution which provides that:

      The State may exercise extra-territorial jurisdiction in accordance with the generally recognised principles of international law.”
9. It follows, therefore, that the State can exercise this extra-territorial jurisdiction in accordance with the generally recognised principles of international law. As the Supreme Court explained in Re Article 26 and the Criminal Law (Jurisdiction) Bill 1975 [1977] I.R. 129, 149 the Permanent Court of International Justice had previously clarified in the Lotus Case (1927) P.C.I.J. Ser. A, No.10 that every State had the power to legislate with extra-territorial effect in the sense that:
      …it may enact that acts or omissions done outside its borders are criminal offences which may be successfully prosecuted within its borders….provided that the events, acts or persons to which its enactment applies bear upon the peace, order and good government of the legislating State….”
10. Acting on these principles of international law is clear, therefore, that the Oireachtas was entitled to legislate with extra-territorial effect so that a conspiracy offence committed abroad by an Irish citizen is constituted as an offence under our law. This is precisely what has occurred in the case of s. 71 of the 2006 Act. The particular difficulty which arises in the present case results from the fact that, for some purposes at least, an offence under s. 71 committed abroad by an Irish citizen is now deemed to have been committed in Ireland by virtue of s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act, even though, shorn of the artificiality inherent in this deeming provision, the offence remains in substance an extra-territorial offence.

11. A similar deeming provision is to be found in s. 15 of the 1965 Act, since extradition is to be refused if the offence in question is “regarded” under Irish law as having been committed in this State, irrespective of whether it was in fact so committed or not. It is both the existence and the interaction of these twin legislative deeming provisions which presents the difficult question of statutory interpretation which arise on this appeal. It is, accordingly, necessary at this juncture to say something about the nature of statutory deeming offences.

The nature of deeming clauses
12. The use of deeming clauses by the Oireachtas in legislation is, of course, an established technique of statutory drafting, since it is often useful in the context of such drafting to treat for statutory purposes state of affairs A as if it were indeed state of affairs B, even if it is not so in fact. The Supreme Court has, however, made it clear that where such clauses are utilised, then the question becomes whether the deeming clause operates for all purposes, or just for some specific purpose or purposes: see generally Erin Executor and Trustee Co. Ltd. v. Revenue Commissioners [1998] 2 I.R. 287. As Barron J. pointed out in his judgment in Erin Executors ([1998] 2 I.R. 287, 302-303), the question of the extent of the deeming provision is ultimately a matter of statutory construction. I applied the Erin Executors principle as a judge of the High Court in my judgment in Ó hAonghusa v. DCC plc
[2011] IEHC 300, [2011] 3 IR 348.

13. As it happened, the deeming provisions at issue in both Erin Executors and Ó hAonghusa were held to be limited in their effect and operation. In Erin Executors, a provision of the Value Added Tax Act 1972 deemed a reversionary interest to have been self-supplied by the taxpayer so that it became taxable for this purpose, even though, as Barron J. stated “it is not being supplied in fact” and this reversion “ is not deemed to have been supplied for any other purpose.”

14. The Supreme Court accordingly rejected the argument advanced by the Revenue Commissioners to the effect that once the VAT had been paid on the self-supply, the reversionary interest no longer remained part of the business assets of the taxpayer. Had the Oireachtas intended any other result, “it would have said so in clear terms”: [1998] 2 I.R. 287, 303. Here it can be seen that the Supreme Court fully recognised the artificialities inherent in deeming clauses and the limits to such clauses.

15. As just indicated, I adopted this general approach in my judgment in Ó hAonghusa. In that case I held that a provision of the Liability for Defective Products Act 1991 was deemed to be relevant provision of the Statute of Limitation Acts solely for the purposes of the application of the date of knowledge and running of time rules, but for no other purpose. It followed that the general limitation period prescribed by the 1991 Act (three years) had not been reduced to two (as had been done with personal injuries claims by more recent amendments to the Statute of Limitations). As I put it ([2011] 3 IR 348, 354):

      The deeming provision goes no further than this. It does not deem s. 7(1) of the 1991 Act to be a provision of the Statute of Limitations for all purposes. It follows that the principal limitation period remains that of three years. Any other conclusion would mean that the limitation period contained in one statute (i.e., the 1991 Act) might be taken to have been obliquely and indirectly amended by the amendments effected in respect of another statute (i.e., the Statutes of Limitation Acts), in the absence of a general collective interpretation clause such that deemed the 1991 Act to be part of the Statute of Limitations for all purposes.”
16. In passing I might observe that the limits of the deeming provisions at issue in Erin Executors and Ó hAonghusa were clear or, at least, could be fairly discerned by objective analysis. For all the reasons I will later set out, it is much more difficult to say the same about s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act.

17. The English courts have also struggled with deeming provisions, often in the context of complex revenue statutes where the use of deeming provisions is a common drafting technique, especially in aid of intricate anti-avoidance measures. While the specific facts of those tax cases are irrelevant to the detail of the issues in the present appeal, the statements of principle concerning the interpretation of such statutory provisions are nonetheless helpful. In Inland Revenue Commissioners v Metrolands (Property Finance) Ltd [1981] 1 W.L.R. 637, Nourse J. stated ([1981] 1 W.L.R. 637, 646):

      When considering the extent to which a deeming provision should be applied, the court is entitled and bound to ascertain for what purposes and between what persons the statutory fiction is to be resorted to. It will not always be clear what those purposes are. If the application of the provision would lead to an unjust, anomalous or absurd result then, unless its application would clearly be within the purposes of the fiction, it should not be applied. If, on the other hand, its application would not lead to any such result then, unless that would clearly be outside the purposes of the fiction, it should be applied.”
18. This was developed by Peter Gibson J. in Marshall v. Kerr (1993) 67 T.C. 56, 79 where he stated:
      For my part, I take the correct approach in construing a deeming provision to be to give the words used their ordinary and natural meaning, consistent so far as possible with the policy of the Act and the purposes of the provisions so far as such policy and purposes can be ascertained; but if such construction would lead to injustice or absurdity, the application of the statutory fiction should be limited to the extent needed to avoid such injustice or absurdity, unless such application would clearly be within the purposes of the fiction. I further bear in mind that, because one must treat as real that which is only deemed to be so, one must treat as real the consequences and incidents inevitably flowing from or accompanying that deemed state of affairs, unless prohibited from doing so.”
19. These principles were also applied by Neuberger J. in Jenks v Dickinson [1997] S.T.C. 853, 878 where he stated:

It appears to me that the observations of Peter Gibson J….. in Marshall indicate that, when considering the extent to which one can 'do some violence to the words' and whether one can 'discard the ordinary meaning', one can, indeed one should, take into account the fact that one is construing a deeming provision. This is not to say that normal principles of construction somehow cease to apply when one is concerned with interpreting a deeming provision; there is no basis in principle or authority for such a proposition. It is more that, by its very nature, a deeming provision involves artificial assumptions. It will frequently be difficult or unrealistic to expect the legislature to be able satisfactorily to [prescribe] the precise limit to the circumstances in which, or the extent to which, the artificial assumptions are to be made.”

20. I will return later to the application of these provisions in the present case: it is sufficient to say that these English cases mirror the general approach found in Erin Executors, namely, that the courts should be wary of being compelled by the internal logic of such clauses to arrive at artificial results beyond the specific intendment of the deeming clause itself.

The effect of the deeming clause contained in s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act
21. Turning next to an analysis of s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act, it will be seen that it consists of two subjunctive clauses, each of which seeks to accomplish separate things. The first subjunctive clause provides that proceedings for an offence under s.71 of the 2006 Act “may be taken in any place in the State”. This provision was necessary to give the appropriate venue for any prosecution in “any place in the State” in respect of any extra territorial offence arising under s. 71 of the 2006 Act. The second subjunctive clause deems the offence “as having been committed in that place”, albeit that this deeming provision is only “for all incidental purposes”.

22. The effect of the second subjunctive clause is to convert for certain legislative purposes what is in truth an extra territorial offence into an offence which has now been legislatively deemed for “all incidental purposes” to have been committed in the State. I cannot help observing that this second subjunctive clause is at once both unnecessary and confusing. It is unnecessary, because once venue is established and provided for (as it has been done in the first subjunctive clause), there is in fact no need to deem an extra territorial offence as one which has been committed in the State. But more to the point, the language is confusing and, I think, not necessarily helpful.

23. Section 74(1) of the 2006 Act provides that the offence “may, for all incidental purposes, be treated as having been committed in” the State. I agree, of course, that the court must have regard to the fact that the word “incidental” is used in the adjectival sense, thus cutting down the scope of the deeming provision. The offence is, accordingly, not one which has been deemed for all purposes to have been committed in the State.

24. But, it might nonetheless be asked, incidental to what and for what purposes? The deeming provision presumably deems this to be incidental to the place of venue. It seems to follow that in the case of prosecution in this State of the s. 71 offence, the offence is deemed to have been committed within the State, precisely because the fact of prosecution is, in this context at least, incidental to the choice of venue for the purposes of prosecution. But beyond this it is extremely difficult to say for what other purposes the offence is deemed to have been committed within the State. It is, however, sufficient to state that the offence has been deemed for at least some purposes to have been committed within the State.

The inter-action of s. 15 of the 1965 Act with s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act
25. At this point the inter-action of s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act with the provisions of s. 15 of the 1996 Act assumes an importance. Section 15 of the 1965 Act prohibits extradition where the offence is “regarded” by the law of the State as “having been committed in the State.” This is, of course, a deeming provision because for this purpose it is irrelevant whether the offence was in fact committed in the State: what matters is whether it is regarded by our law as having been so committed within the territory of the State.

26. If, therefore, one asks whether an offence committed under s. 71 of the 2006 Act is regarded by our law as having been committed in the State, the bare, literal words of s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act seem to command a positive (if admittedly qualified) answer: the offence is one “regarded” by our law as having been committed in Ireland, at least for certain purposes.

27. In the present case, however, I do not think that such a literal construction would be appropriate. It is perhaps one thing to treat statement of affairs A as if it were state of affairs B for one particular statutory purpose, even though this is not the case as a matter of fact. It is, however, quite another thing to pile one deeming provision from one legislative era upon another quite different deeming provision enacted some time later. The appellant’s argument effectively says that because the first deeming provision in question (namely, s. 74(1) of the 2006 Act) provides that A must be treated as if it were B, while the second deeming provision in question (namely, s. 15 of the 1965 Act) provides that B must be treated as it were C, it follows that the joint operation and interaction of these deeming provisions is such that A must then be treated for this quite different statutory purpose as if it were C.

28. While the appellant’s argument has something of a mathematical symmetry about it, the precepts of statutory interpretation are not branches of the laws of mathematics and, as

Holmes so famously observed, it would be a mistake to treat them as such. This is especially so given the artificiality which is inherent in a statutory deeming provision. The present case well illustrates how the inter-action of two different such deeming provisions in quite different statutory contexts is such that, if followed in some quasi-mathematical linear progression, it is liable to produce results which were never legislatively intended or envisaged: this, after all, is the very point which was made by both Barron J. in Erin Executors and by Neuberger J. in Jenks.

29. It is true that statutory provisions governing extradition arrangements should, in general, at least, be construed rigorously, if admittedly not quite with the same strictness which might apply in the case of criminal statutes. But I consider that this Court is nonetheless free to depart from a strictly literal construction when this is the product of separate and necessarily artificial assumptions made for drafting purposes in two quite different statutes which are not in pari material and where all of this leads to results which could not have been intended or foreseen by the Oireachtas. This was the very freedom claimed in the context of deeming provisions by Peter Gibson J. in his judgment in Marshall and I consider that a similar freedom might conveniently be claimed here.

Conclusions
30. It follows, therefore, that I consider that the prohibition on extradition contained in s. 15 of the 1965 Act should be interpreted as applying only to offences which are actually regarded by the law for all purposes as having been committed in this State. On this construction s. 15 does not apply to offences such as that created by s. 71 of the 2006 Act which are, in substance, extra-territorial offences committed on the territory of another state by Irish citizens, even if such offences are deemed for certain purposes by quite different statutory provisions to have been committed in this State, especially perhaps for the purposes of conferring jurisdiction as to venue.

31. While the matter does not at all arise in the present case, I would nonetheless observe that quite different considerations may well apply in the special case of offences committed outside the territory of the State on Irish-registered vessels and aircraft.

32. In these circumstances I agree that the appeal should be dismissed and that the order made by Edwards J. in the High Court should be affirmed.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IECA/2016/CA115.html