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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG v Davis [2001] JRC 189 (03 September 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2001/2001_189.html Cite as: [2001] JRC 189 |
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2001/189
ROYAL COURT
(Samedi Division)
3rd September 2001
Before: |
F.C. Hamon, Esq., Commissioner, sitting alone. |
The Attorney General
-v-
Kevin Roger Davis
3 counts of: |
Causing a false alarm of fire to be given to the Fire Service, contrary to Article 16 of the Fire Service (Jersey) Law, 1958 (counts 1, 2 and 3). |
7 counts of: |
Maliciously setting fire to property of another, contrary to Article 17 (2) of the Fire Service (Jersey) Law, 1958 (counts 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11). |
1 count of: |
Causing malicious damage (count 6). |
Preliminary application for an Order that counts 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11 should be tried before an assize, on the ground that, if proven, they would constitute the common law offence of arson.
M. St. J. O' Connell, Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate Mrs. S. A. Pearmain for the accused.
JUDGMENT
THE Commissioner:
1. Kevin Davis was indicted on the 22nd June, 2001, on eleven counts, ten of which are brought under the provisions of the Fire Service (Jersey) Law, 1958, as amended. The remaining count is one of malicious damage. Counts 1 to 3 are contraventions relating to false fire alarms and Article 16 of the Law. There is no dispute that there is no right to trial by jury on these 3 counts. Count 6 is the count of malicious damage. It is a common law offence and is to be tried by a jury.
2. The dispute lies with counts 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10 and 11. Each of these counts alleges the malicious setting fire to property belonging to another, contrary to Article 17 (2) of the Fire Service (Jersey) Law, 1958. It is alleged on each of these counts that on different dates in 2000 certain property of Seymour Services Ltd was maliciously set fire to. The property on 2 of the counts is a waste paper basket and on each of the other counts, a pillow case, a bed sheet, furniture and towels.
3. Advocate Pearmain makes application for a jury trial on these counts. Article 1 of La Loi (1864) Réglant la Procédure Criminelle states:
4. Advocate Pearmain argues, quite rightly, that Article 17 (2) of the Fire Service (Jersey) Law is a major offence carrying a serious maximum penalty, namely that:
She argues that because there is the ingredient in the statutory offence of the common law crime of arson, the accused has a right to choose his form of trial.
5. At this point I do not concede the argument is in any way assisted by invoking Article 16 of the Interpretation (Jersey) Law, 1954 which reads:
6. That article gives the Attorney General the right to choose a mode of prosecution. But, it is the right of the Partie Publique and not that of the accused, who is merely protected by ensuring that he is not punished for a crime and a contravention arising out of the same offence. It is a form of double jeopardy protection for the accused, but a form of choice for the Crown.
7. The two leading cases that we have looked at are those of AG-v-Pennington (1970) JJ 1349, and AG-v-Weston (1979) JJ 141. In Pennington, which involved an infraction of the Housing (Jersey) Law, 1949, the defendant argued that the Court had an inherent right to order the mode of trial in all criminal and quasi-criminal cases and that the most appropriate mode of trial for that case was an Assize. The argument was strenuously opposed by the Attorney General of the day and the Court entered into a very comprehensive background to the way in which trials for common law offences, i.e. crime ou délit, and statutory offences or contraventions, had been dealt with over a very long period of time.
In the course of its judgment, the Court said at 1353:
The Court continued its careful analysis of the criminal procedures and stated at 1357:
The Court reached a decision that the Law of the Island makes no provision for a trial by jury for an offence created by Article 14 paragraph 1(C) of the Housing (Jersey) Law 1949, which is a contravention.
8. I might, perhaps, explain that distinction drawn by pointing out that, for example, the Loi (1884) sur les Matières Explosives says that any person charged under the law shall be dealt in conformity with the dispositions of the 1864 law. That is an exception but it does not make a rule.
9. AG-v-Weston followed the case of Pennington but, for the first time, argument was taken on earlier cases referred to in the Pennington case. The Court said at page 143:
10. Advocate Pearmain readily conceded that Pennington and Weston were not on all fours with the present case. But her argument narrowed to one major submission, namely that the offences in the counts that are presently before me are all offences having the same ingredient as the common law offence of arson and, because of that, the accused is entitled to choose his mode of trial.
11. She relied strongly on PG-v-Nicolle and Harper and to the careful trawling by the defence counsel in the Weston application, where a decision in cases was shown to be in direct contrast to the statement made by the Court in Pennington, that no case has been found which would tend to show that a person brought before the Inferior Number, no matter how he was presented and charged with a statutory offence, was ever tried by a jury.
Advocate Pearmain drew consolation in the judgment at 148, which reads:
12. I agree with Crown Advocate O'Connell that they could be distinguished, but that a comment by the Attorney General of the time cannot establish a legal precedent. The certainty of the Court in reaching its decision in Weston is unarguable. However, Advocate Pearmain turned to PG-v-Nicolle and Harper, where she said that a clear precedent had been created. In my judgement, after careful consideration of it, that case is not in point. Nicolle and Harper were arrested and brought before the Inferior Number. Both applied for trial by jury in respect of one of the allegations made against them. This was opposed by the Attorney General. The Court heard argument - one has no inkling of what that argument was - and went on:
This was a procedural point under Article 14. The matter was referred to the Police Court, as it then was, and on 11th January, 1949, some two months later, it came back to the Royal Court for a jury trial. Even if submissions of law were made in Nicolle and Harper there is no way of discerning what those arguments were.
13. In my view, in this case, the Attorney General has decided to prosecute under a statutory provision, so he has brought a contravention before the Court, which is no less a contravention because it contains the elements of the common law offence of arson. Accordingly, while I am very grateful to Advocate Pearmain for the care that she has taken to prepare her case and indeed to both counsel for the lucidity of their arguments, I dismiss the application.