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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Procurator Fiscal v. MacKenzie [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_6 (25 January 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_6.html
Cite as: [2006] HCJAC 06, [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_06, 2006 GWD 8-144, [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_6, 2006 SCCR 75, [2006] HCJAC 6

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Abernethy

Lord McEwan

Sheriff Principal C.G.B. Nicholson

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] HCJAC 6

Appeal No: XJ1231/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD ABERNETHY

 

in

 

BILL OF ADVOCATION

 

by

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, Paisley

Complainer;

 

against

 

ELIZABETH MACKENZIE

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: A. Stewart, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent

Respondent: C. Shead; Gordon Ritchie & Co., Paisley

 

25 January 2006

 

[1] On 5 August 2005 the respondent in this Bill of Advocation appeared at Paisley Sheriff Court for trial on a charge of having contravened section 7 of the Road Traffic Act 1988 on 19 March 2005. In the absence of an essential Crown witness on the morning of the trial the complainer moved the Sheriff to adjourn the trial or, alternatively, to part hear it. The Sheriff refused those motions and deserted the proceedings simpliciter. This Bill seeks to challenge those decisions by the Sheriff.

[2] The factual circumstances and the reasons for the Sheriff's decision are set out by him in his Report to this court in the following terms:

"The Minutes show that this case first called at Paisley Sheriff Court on 31st March 2005 when the Respondent pled not guilty. An Intermediate Diet was assigned for 21st July 2005 and a Trial Diet was assigned for 5th August 2005 and the Respondent was ordained to appear at both diets.

On 21st July 2005 at the Intermediate Diet the Respondent maintained her plea of not guilty and the case was continued to the Trial Diet.

On 5th August there were a number of cases calling for trial before me. My notes for that day indicate that the Court commenced sitting at 10.05 a.m. and the Court was asked to adjourn briefly at 10.25 a.m.

The Court resumed at 10.50 a.m. and the present case called at 11.08 a.m., immediately after I had granted a warrant in an unrelated case.

Mr Ritchie appeared for the Respondent and confirmed that she was adhering to her plea of not guilty and that he was ready to proceed to trial.

The Procurator Fiscal Depute moved to adjourn the Trial due to the absence of one of two witnesses properly cited by the Crown. I was advised that the absent witness was essential and that the witness, a Police Officer, was on standby awaiting a call from the Complainer's Depute to confirm that his attendance at Court was indeed required. I understood that the absent witness was attending a driving training course at a location within a short driving distance of the Court, that he had a mobile but that his mobile was not responding to calls from the Procurator Fiscal Depute's Office.

Mr Ritchie for the Respondent was instructed to oppose said motion which he did. He indicated that he had initially been told that neither of the Crown witnesses were present but that in any event the absent witness was well aware that he (the witness) was on standby and might be expected to attend Court at short notice. He argued that the onus was on the witness to make sure that he was contactable. He further advised me that his client, the Respondent, was suffering from stress and stress related illness and had been so suffering since being charged on 19th March 2005.

He went on to argue that his position might have been different had the Crown moved for a warrant in respect of the absent witness.

At 11.15 a.m. I decided to adjourn the trial and the Court until later that morning and indicated that I would allow the Crown a further 30 minutes to locate and make contact with the absent witness.

The case called before me again at 11.50 a.m. at which time I was advised by the Complainer's Depute that despite further efforts the absent witness could still not be contacted. The college at which the training course was being effected had been contacted but advised that the car in which the absent witness was being trained had no car radio. The motion to adjourn the trial was renewed.

Mr Ritchie for the Respondent renewed his opposition to that motion.

The Complainer then made a motion to have the trial part heard. This motion was also opposed by the Respondent's agent on the basis that the motion had not been made at the outset.

The Complainer's Depute then made a further motion to adjourn the trial. My notes do not indicate that the motion was made on the basis of an adjournment until later in the day but that the motion was to adjourn the trial 'at this stage', which I took to mean until a later date.

I refused that motion and asked if there was any further motion on behalf of the Crown. There was none.

Accordingly I decided to desert the case simpliciter. This I did at 11.58 a.m.

It appeared to me that the absent witness had been properly cited and there was nothing to indicate any problem regarding his attendance when the case called at the Intermediate Diet stage.

The arrangements whereby that witness was to be contacted on his mobile to secure his attendance at Court, were this trial to proceed that morning, were entirely a matter of convenience to that witness and certainly not to the Court or to the Respondent.

The onus to ensure his attendance at Court lay entirely with the witness. It was obvious that although he was to be contactable via his mobile telephone he could not be so contacted.

The case had not called before me until 11.08 a.m. that morning. The citation was for the attendance of the witness at Court at 10.00 a.m. that morning.

I had allowed the Crown a further 30 minutes (from 11.15 a.m.) during the course of the morning to make contact with the witness. The Crown was unsuccessful although the whereabouts of the witness was known to the extent at least that he was attending a driving training course at a nearby college.

In reaching my decision and in exercising my discretion I took account of the nature of the offence, the history of the case and the effect of a further delay on the Respondent who was I was told suffering from stress and stress related illness as a consequence of being charged with the alleged offence earlier in the year, and accorded each of said factors such weight as seemed appropriate to me."

[3] Before us the learned Advocate-Depute submitted that in refusing the Crown motions and deserting the proceedings simpliciter in the purported exercise of his discretion the Sheriff had erred in law. He had not applied the proper test and had reached a decision which no reasonable sheriff applying that test would have reached. The effect of deserting the proceedings simpliciter was that the case was brought to an end completely: it was incompetent for the prosecutor to raise a fresh libel (Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, section 152). Such a decision must be justified in the interests of justice. Here the proceedings had been conducted expeditiously. The alleged offence was committed on 19 March 2005, there had been no delays and the trial diet was to take place on 5 August. This was the first time that there had been any difficulty in what had hitherto been the smooth progress of the case. It was the first trial diet and the first time an adjournment had been sought. The Sheriff's decision had been taken just before midday and there was, according to the Advocate-Depute, no other business for the court that day. It was therefore wholly unreasonable for the Sheriff not to have adjourned at least until early afternoon to see if the witness could be made available. The Advocate-Depute referred to the case of Tudhope v Lawrie 1979 J.C. 44 and, in particular, to that part of the Opinion of the Court delivered by Lord Cameron at pages 49-50. In that passage reference was also made to the judgment of Lord Justice General Emslie in the earlier case of Skeen v McLaren 1976 S.L.T. (N) 14. Those cases set out the proper approach to be taken by the court in exercising its discretion in a case such as this. The Advocate-Depute also referred to Renton & Brown's Criminal Procedure, 6th edition, para. 21-09. He submitted that the Sheriff had not followed the proper approach. He had not addressed his mind to any prejudice which would or might be suffered respectively by the accused, the Crown and the public as a result of his decision. In any event, he had seriously erred in his balancing of that prejudice. In all the circumstances the Bill should be passed.

[4] Mr. Shead, counsel for the respondent, submitted that before the Court could pass the Bill it had to be satisfied that no reasonable sheriff could have exercised his discretion in the way that the Sheriff did here. That was a high test. In the last paragraph of his Report (which we have quoted above) the Sheriff had shown that he understood and had addressed his mind to the issues. That was a difficulty for the Crown which had not been overcome. The Court should refuse to pass the Bill.

[5] It was common ground that the decision on a matter of this kind is one for the Sheriff's discretion. However, in order properly to exercise that discretion he must address his mind to three questions. First, he must consider whether the granting or refusal of the motion will be prejudicial to the accused, the respondent in this case, and if so what is the probable extent of that prejudice. Secondly, he must consider whether the granting or refusal of the motion will be prejudicial to the prosecutor, the complainer in this case, and if so what is the probable extent of that prejudice. Thirdly, he must consider whether the granting or refusal of the motion will be prejudicial to the public interest independently of any prejudice to the accused or the prosecution in the particular case, and if so what is the probable extent of that prejudice. Moreover, the Sheriff must give proper weight and balance to any prejudicial consequences that would or might follow from his decision. Authority for these propositions is to be found in the cases of Skeen v McLaren and Tudhope v Lawrie referred to above.

[6] In his Report the Sheriff says that in reaching his decision and in exercising his discretion he took account of the nature of the offence, the history of the case and the effect of a further delay on the respondent who was, he was told, suffering from stress and stress related illness as a consequence of being charged with the alleged offence earlier in the year, and accorded each of these factors such weight as seemed appropriate to him.

[7] We have come to the conclusion, however, that the Sheriff's decision cannot stand. Even if it could be said that the Sheriff had addressed his mind to the three questions mentioned above, about which we have considerable doubt, we are quite satisfied that he has materially erred in the relative weight to be given to, and the balance to be struck between, the prejudicial consequences that would follow from his decision.

[8] This was the first trial diet in this case and, accordingly, it was the first time an adjournment of the trial had been sought. Until then the proceedings had run smoothly and without delay. There was a number of cases due to call for trial that day before the Sheriff. No one would know with any precision how long each case would take. It was therefore only sensible that the witness, a police officer who was on duty nearby, should be put on standby. It would have been an unnecessary waste for him to have come to court at the beginning of the day and perhaps stayed there all day. It was obviously preferable that he should attend to his normal police duties and only come to court when required to do so. For that to work, of course, it was necessary that he should be contactable. What appears to have happened, however, was that at the critical moment he had been sent out for driving training in a car which did not have a radio. That was certainly unfortunate and should not have happened. It was, however, not yet midday and there was apparently no remaining court business that day. In these circumstances was the failure of the witness to attend so serious as to justify the Sheriff refusing the motion to adjourn, either until later that day or to another day, or to have the trial part heard and then going on to desert the proceedings simpliciter?

[9] The Sheriff was of the view that an adjournment would cause stress to the respondent. He was told that she had been suffering from stress and stress related illness as a consequence of being charged with the alleged offence. However, he was not told, nor were we, what the nature and degree of that stress and stress related illness were. It is not surprising that the respondent, like many people charged with criminal offences, should find the proceedings stressful. That is perfectly understandable. The consequence of refusing the Crown motions and deserting the proceedings simpliciter, however, was that the prosecution would be brought to an end for good. The prosecutor would not be able to raise a fresh libel. Moreover, the offence with which the respondent was charged, a contravention of the Road Traffic Act 1988 section 7, was certainly not trivial and it is not in the public interest for such charges not to be proceeded with in the absence of good reason. The consequences of refusing the motion to adjourn were therefore in our opinion seriously prejudicial both to the complainer and to the public interest. Having regard to all the circumstances and balancing these considerations, we are quite satisfied on the information available that any additional stress which the respondent was likely to suffer by granting the motion either to adjourn or to part hear the trial did not, and could not reasonably be said to, outweigh the prejudice to the complainer and the public interest caused by refusing to adjourn or to part hear the trial and deserting the proceedings simpliciter.

[10] We shall therefore sustain the plea in law for the complainer, repel the pleas in law for the respondent, pass the Bill, recall the Sheriff's interlocutor of 5 August 2005 and remit the case to the Sheriff to proceed as accords.

 


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