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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> McWilliam v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2002] ScotHC 43 (04 April 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2002/43.html Cite as: [2002] ScotHC 43 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord Hamilton Lord Reed Lord Drummond Young
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Appeal No: 75/02 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD HAMILTON in PETITION TO THE NOBILE OFFICIUM by ANDREW McWILLIAM formerly known as Peter Syme Petitioner; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Petitioner: C. Shead; Bennett & Robertson
Respondent: R. McCreadie, A.D.; Crown Agent
4 April 2002
"These classical descriptions of the power have been accepted by this court as authoritative in all cases in which the scope of its power under the nobile officium has been called in question, and as the cases show, have been interpreted to mean that the power will only be exercised where the circumstances are extraordinary or unforeseen, and where no other remedy or procedure is provided by the law."
He then referred to two examples of the exercise of the jurisdiction and continued:
"In both of these cases the power was exercised because no procedure or remedy of any kind was available to the petitioners."
The present application in substance seeks to review the designated part of the life sentence imposed by the trial judge against the law as it now falls to be applied in light of O'Neill v H.M. Advocate. That circumstance cannot be said to be exceptional. The fact that the petitioner did not pursue his appeal to a hearing does not make it so. Although it is now suggested that the advice on which his decision to abandon was taken was unsound even on the law as then understood, it was, as appears from the petition, advice expressed by counsel in writing and on which the petitioner had been further advised by his solicitor. The somewhat special circumstances of McIntosh v H.M. Advocate in terms of the conveyance of advice are thus not replicated here. More importantly, when McIntosh was decided the provisions now contained in Part XA of the 1995 Act (as amended) were not then enacted and the court did not advert to the possibility of a reference being made to the court by the Secretary of State under the statutory provisions then in force nor to Windsor, Petitioner 1994 SCCR 59 (where it was recognised, albeit in the context of an appeal against conviction having been heard and refused, that the existence of a reference procedure excludes resort to the nobile officium). In any event the earlier statutory provisions are not identical to those now contained in Part XA and it may be that practice was also different. However that may be, there is now a procedure available to the petitioner which may result in the reference of his case to the High Court by the Commission. Where an original appeal has been finally disposed of, even where it has been deemed to have been dismissed by the court on abandonment rather than dismissed or refused following a hearing, the invocation of reference procedure appears to us to be the appropriate first step before any nobile officium jurisdiction is exercised. That may take further time and involve further expense. But these considerations do not warrant an inappropriate exercise of that exceptional jurisdiction.