APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Nimmo Smith
Lord Clarke
Lord Marnoch
|
[2008] HCJAC 11
Appeal No: XC232/07
OPINION OF LORD NIMMO SMITH
in
APPEAL UNDER SECTION 26(1) OF THE EXTRADITION ACT
2003
by
ALISTAIR IAIN CAMPBELL
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent.
|
Act: E Targowski, QC,
Caskie; Drummond Miller
Alt: A. D. R. Crawford, Advocate;
Crown Agent
26 February 2008
Introduction
[1] This is an appeal under section 26(1)
of the Extradition Act 2003 ("the 2003 Act") against an order made by the
Sheriff of Lothian and Borders at Edinburgh on 16 March
2007 that he
should be extradited to France, which is a category 1 territory
under the 2003 Act. On 2 May
2002 the
appellant had been convicted in his absence by a court in Boulogne-sur-Mer in respect of his complicity in the
transport, importation and possession of drugs and banned merchandise. He was sentenced, also in his absence, to a
period of nine years' imprisonment. He
did not appeal against either conviction or sentence. The Sheriff pronounced his order under section 21
of the 2003 Act at the conclusion of an extradition hearing upon a European
arrest warrant ("EAW") (referred to in the 2003 Act as a "Part 1 warrant")
presented by the relevant French authority to Edinburgh Sheriff Court under Part
1 of the Act. Recognition of the EAW was
sought so that the appellant might be surrendered to the French authorities to
serve the sentence imposed on him.
The relevant statutory
provisions
[2] Part 1 of the
2003 Act was enacted in discharge of the United Kingdom's duty to transpose
into national law the obligations imposed on it by the European Council
Framework Decision of 13 June 2002 on the European arrest warrant and the
surrender procedures imposed on it by the Member States (2002/584/JHA; OJ 2002
L190, p1) ("the Framework Decision"). As
Lord Bingham of Cornhill said in Dabas
v High Court of Justice in Madrid, Spain [2007] UK HL 6, [2007] 2 AC 31, at paragraph [4], Part 1 of the 2003 Act must be read
in the context of the Framework Decision.
Lord Bingham continued:
"This was conceived and adopted as a
ground-breaking measure intended to simplify and expedite procedures for the
surrender, between member states, of those accused of crimes committed in other
member states or required to be sentenced or serve sentences for such crimes
following conviction in other member states.
Extradition procedures in the past had been disfigured by undue
technicality and gross delay. There is
to be substituted 'a system of surrender between judicial authorities' and 'a
system of free movement of judicial decisions in criminal matters' (recital (5)
of the preamble to the Framework Decision).
This is to implement the principle of mutual recognition which the
Council has described as the cornerstone of judicial co-operation (recital (6)). The important underlying assumption of the
Framework Decision is that member states, sharing common values and recognising
common rights, can and should trust the integrity and fairness of each other's
judicial institutions.
[5] By
Article 34(2)(b) of the treaty on European Union, reflecting the law on
directives in Article 249 of the EC Treaty, framework decisions are
binding on member states as to the result to be achieved but leave to national
authorities the choice of form and methods. In its choice of form and methods a national
authority may not seek to frustrate or impede achievement of the purpose of the
decision, for that would impede the general duty of co-operation binding in
member states under article 10 of the EC Treaty. Thus while a national court may not interpret
a national law contra legem, it must 'do so as far as possible in the light of
the wording and purpose of the Framework Decision in order to attain the result
which it pursues and thus comply with Article 34(2)(b) EU' (Criminal
proceedings against Pupino (Case
C-105/03) [2006] QB 83, paras 43. 47)."
There are statements to similar effect in Office of the King's Prosecutor, Brussels v Cando
Armas [2006] 2 AC 1 and In Re Halili
(application for a writ of habeas corpus) [2008] UKHL 3.
[3] In addition
to the recitals referred to by Lord Bingham, we were asked in the course
of the hearing to consider the second paragraph of recital (12), which
provides:
"This Framework Decision does not
prevent a Member State from applying its constitutional
rules relating to due process, freedom of association, freedom of the press and
freedom of expression in other media."
We were also invited to consider provisions of
Articles 5 and 17. Article 5 provides
inter alia:
"The execution of the European arrest
warrant by the executing judicial authority may, by the law of the executing Member State, be subject to the following
conditions
1. where
a European arrest warrant has been issued for the purposes of executing a
sentence or a detention order imposed by a decision rendered in absentia and if the person concerned
has not been summoned in person or otherwise informed of the date and place of
the hearing which led to the decision rendered in absentia, surrender may be subject to the condition that the
issuing judicial authority gives an assurance deemed adequate to guarantee the
person who is the subject of the European arrest warrant that he or she will
have an opportunity to apply for a retrial of the case in the issuing Member
State and to be present at the judgment; ...."
Article 17 provides by paragraph 1: "A European arrest warrant shall be dealt
with and executed as a matter of urgency."
The following paragraphs provide time limits for the final decision on
the execution of the EAW, depending on whether or not the requested person
consents to his surrender. If he does
not, by paragraph 3 "the final decision on the execution of the European
arrest warrant should be taken within a period of 60 days after the arrest of
the requested person." Paragraph 7
provides:
"Where in exceptional circumstances a
Member State cannot observe the time limits
provided for in this Article, it shall inform Eurojust, giving the reasons for
the delay. In addition, a Member State which has experienced repeated
delays on the part of another Member State in the execution of European Arrest
Warrants shall inform the Council with a view to evaluating the implementation
of this Framework Decision at Member State level."
[4] By section 1
of the 2003 Act, Part 1 deals with extradition from the United Kingdom to the territories designated for
the purposes of that Part, referred to as category 1 Territories. Section 2 makes provision for a Part 1 warrant
and certificate. By subsection (1) the
section applies if the designated authority receives a Part 1 warrant in
respect of a person. By subsection (9)
the designated authority is the authority designated for the purposes of Part 1
by order made by the Secretary of State.
By the Extradition Act 2003 (Part 1 Designated Authorities) Order 2003 (S.I. 2003,
No 3109), made in exercise of the powers conferred by section 2(9) and
(10), the Crown Agent of the Crown Office was designated for the purposes of Part
1 of the Act. The National Criminal
Intelligence Service (NCIS) (now subsumed within the
Serious Organised Crime Agency (SOCA)) was similarly designated. By section 2(2) a Part 1 warrant is an arrest warrant which
is issued by a judicial authority of a category 1 territory which contains
certain statements, expressed in the alternative. The alternative which is relevant for present
purposes is that provided by subsection (2)(b), viz. the statement referred to in subsection (5) and the
information referred to in sub-section (6).
By subsection (5) the statement is one that (a) the person in
respect of whom the Part 1 warrant is issued is alleged to be unlawfully at
large after conviction of an offence specified in the warrant by a court in the
category 1 territory and (b) the Part 1 warrant is issued with a view to his
arrest and extradition to the category 1 territory for the purpose of being
sentenced for the offence or of serving a sentence of imprisonment or another
form of detention imposed in respect of the offence. By subsection (6), the information
includes (a) particulars of the person's identity, (b) particulars of the
conviction and (c) particulars of the sentence imposed under the law of the
category 1 territory in respect of the offence, if the person has been
sentenced for the offence. By section 2(7)
the designated authority, ie. the Crown Agent, may issue a certificate under
section 2 if he believes that the authority which issued the Part 1 warrant has
the function of issuing arrest warrants in the category 1 territory.
[5] Section 3
makes provision for arrest under a certified Part 1 warrant. By section 4(3) a person arrested under
a Part 1 warrant must be brought as soon as practicable before the appropriate
judge, who by section 67(1)(b) is in Scotland the Sheriff of Lothian and
Borders. By section 191(1) the Lord
Advocate must, inter alia, conduct
any extradition proceedings in Scotland.
Sections 7 and 8 relate to the initial hearing before the sheriff. Sections 9 to 21 relate to the extradition
hearing, which by section 68(1) is the hearing at which the sheriff is to
decide whether the person in respect of whom the Part 1 warrant was issued is
to be extradited to a category 1 territory in which it was issued. By section 9(2), at the extradition
hearing the sheriff has the same powers (as may be) as if the proceedings were
summary proceedings in respect of an offence alleged to have been committed by
the person in respect of whom the Part 1 warrant was issued. By section 10(2) the sheriff must decide
whether the offence specified in the Part 1 warrant is an extradition
offence. If so, by subsection (4) he
must proceed under section 11(1), which raises questions relating to bars to
extradition, as set out in sections 12 to 19.
In terms of section 11(1)(c), extradition may be barred by reason of "the
passage of time". Further provision
about the passage of time is made by section 14, which provides:
"A person's extradition to a category
1 territory is barred by reason of the passage of time if (and only if) it
appears that it would be unjust or oppressive to extradite him by reason of the
passage of time since he is alleged to have committed the extradition offence
or since he is alleged to have become unlawfully at large (as the case may
be)."
Section 11(3) provides that if the judge decides any of the
questions in sub-section (1) in the affirmative he must order the person's
discharge.
[6] By section
11(4), if he decides the questions in subsection (1) in the negative and the
person is alleged to be unlawfully at large after conviction of the extradition
offence, the sheriff must proceed under section 20, which contains various
questions, of which the following are relevant:
"(1) If
the judge is required to proceed under this section (by virtue of section 11)
he must decide whether the person was convicted in his presence. ...
(3) If
the judge decides [the question in subsection (1)] in the negative, he must
decide whether the person deliberately absented himself from his trial.
(4) If
the judge decides the question in subsection (3) in the affirmative he must
proceed under section 21."
Section 20(5) provides that if the sheriff decides the
question in subsection (3) in the negative he must decide whether the
person would be entitled to a retrial or (on appeal) to a review amounting to a
retrial, and by subsection (7) if he decides that question in the negative he
must order the person's discharge.
[7] By section
21(1), if the sheriff is required to proceed under that section (by virtue of
section 11 or 20) he must decide whether the person's extradition would be
compatible within the Convention rights within the meaning of the Human Rights
Act 1998. By subsection (2), if the
sheriff decides the question in subsection (1) in the negative, he must order
the person's discharge, but, by subsection (3), if he decides that question in
the affirmative he must order the person to be extradited to the category 1
territory in which the warrant was issued.
As will be seen, the sheriff answered the questions in section 11(1)(c),
read with section 14, in the negative, the question in section 20(1) in the
negative, the question in section 20(3) in the affirmative and the question in
section 21(1) in the affirmative, and as a result complied with the obligation
to order the appellant to be extradited to France, being the category 1
territory in which the warrant was issued.
At the appeal before us it was submitted that the sheriff should have
answered the question in section 11(1)(c), read with section 14, in the affirmative,
and in any event should have answered the question in section 20(3) in the
negative, the question in section 20(5) in the negative and thus at either
stage should have ordered the appellant's discharge. Despite a ground of appeal to that effect, it
was not argued before us that he should have answered the question in section
21(1) in the negative. This appeal is
therefore concerned with what may be called "the passage of time issue" and
"the deliberate absence from trial issue".
[8] Subsections
(1) and (3) of section 26 of the 2003 Act provide that if the sheriff orders a
person's extradition under Part 1, the person may appeal to this Court
against the order, and that an appeal under section 26 may be brought on a
question of law or fact. Section 27(1)
enables this Court, on an appeal under section 26, either to allow the
appeal or to dismiss the appeal.
Section 27 continues:
"(2) The
court may allow the appeal only if the conditions in subsection (3) or the
conditions in subsection (4) are satisfied.
(3) The
conditions are that -
(a) the
[sheriff] ought to have decided a question before him at the extradition
hearing differently;
(b) if
he had decided the question in the way he ought to have done, he would have
been required to order the person's discharge.
(4) The
conditions are that -
(a) an
issue is raised that was not raised at the extradition hearing or evidence is
available that was not available at the extradition hearing;
(b) the
issue or evidence would have resulted in the [sheriff] deciding a question
before him at the extradition hearing differently;
(c) if
he had decided the question in that way, he would have been required to order
the person's discharge.
(5) If
the court allows the appeal it must -
(a) order
the person's discharge;
(b) quash
the order for his extradition."
The chronology of
events
[9] Before the sheriff, and again before us,
the parties referred to an agreed chronology of events. This was further supplemented before us, in
response to questions from the bench. In
narrative form, the history is as follows.
[10] On 20
May 2000 a
lorry driver, Jeffrey Logan, was arrested near Calais when 117 kilograms of cocaine was
found in his trailer. Logan subsequently implicated the
appellant in the importation of this substance.
On 27 March 2001 the appellant, whose home address is
in Killin, Perthshire, was interviewed in Scotland by a French police officer and two United Kingdom customs officials. On 16 May 2001 a summons was served on the
appellant in Scotland to attend for an interview by a
judge in Boulogne-sur-Mer.
The appellant did not attend.
[11] The trial of Logan took place, in his presence, on 18
September 2001. He was convicted and sentenced
to imprisonment for seven years. On 18
October 2001
a summons was issued citing the appellant for trial in Boulogne-sur-Mer on 2 May
2002. This summons was served personally on the
appellant in Scotland on 2 December
2001. Thereafter the appellant sought legal advice
in Scotland and France; I discuss this below in the context
of the deliberate absence from trial issue.
[12] At the trial
on 2 May 2002 the appellant was not present. He was convicted in his absence and sentenced
to imprisonment for nine years. This
decision was intimated to the appellant personally on 4 November
2002 and was
acknowledged by him. The notification
contained intimation that he had ten days within which to appeal. He did not appeal and took no further steps
in relation to the proceedings in France, whether by obtaining legal advice in
Scotland or in France or otherwise.
[13] On 15
October 2003
an Interpol Difusion notice for the arrest of the appellant was received by
NCIS, under the then current procedure.
This procedure was overtaken by the transposition of the Framework
Decision into United Kingdom national law by the 2003 Act, which
was brought into force on 1 January 2004 by The Extradition Act 2003
(Commencement and Savings) Order 2003 (S.I. 2003 No 3103). We are informed that the equivalent French
legislation came into force on 11 March 2004.
On 15 September 2004 the first EAW was issued by the
appropriate French authority for the arrest of the appellant. This was sent to NCIS, who, it appears,
receive all requests for extradition from any jurisdiction in the United Kingdom.
NCIS certified it on 4 January 2005.
The appellant was arrested on this EAW by Tayside Police on 15 November
2005. On 16 November
2005,
however, he was released without being brought before the sheriff. It had been realised that the first EAW was
defective in that it had been certified under Part 1 of the 2003 Act by NCIS,
who had no authority to certify warrants for execution in Scotland.
[14] On 17 November
2005 a
second EAW was issued by the appropriate French authority. This cancelled and replaced the first
EAW. It was sent to NCIS on 18 November
2005, and
was passed by them (as the first EAW should have been), following communication
with the French authorities, to the International Co-Operation Unit (ICU) of
the Crown Office in Scotland on 9 January
2006. Thereafter the second EAW was considered in
the ICU and was finally certified on 3 August 2006.
It was issued by the ICU to Tayside Police for execution on 7 September
2006. After communication with the appellant's
then solicitor, the appellant attended voluntarily at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on 3 November
2006, when
the second EAW and certificate were served on him.
Procedural matters
[15] The appellant first appeared before
Sheriff Maciver at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on 3 November
2006. The sheriff answered in the affirmative the question
posed in section 7(2) of the 2003 Act, holding that the appellant was the
person in respect of whom the EAW was issued, and gave the appellant the
necessary information about consent to his extradition. The appellant did not consent and was allowed
bail pending the extradition hearing.
After an adjournment to allow time for preparation, the extradition
hearing commenced before Sheriff Stoddart on 19 December
2006.
[16] At the outset
the sheriff repelled an objection on behalf of the appellant to the form of the
certificate and thereafter answered in the affirmative the question posed in
section 10(2) of the 2003 Act, holding that the offence specified in the EAW
was an extradition offence, and in the negative all the questions posed in
section 11(1). In particular he held
that the appellant's extradition to France was not barred by reason of the
passage of time. The sheriff then moved
on to a consideration of section 20 of the 2003 Act. It was accepted that the appellant did not
attend at his trial, so the sheriff answered in the negative the question posed
in section 20(1). He then considered the
issue raised by section 20(3), namely whether the appellant deliberately
absented himself from his trial. After
hearing argument, he decided that this was a question of fact, and that in
terms of section 206 of the 2003 Act it was for the Lord Advocate to prove
beyond reasonable doubt that the absence of the appellant from his trial on 2 May
2002 was
deliberate. No evidence was led, and the
sheriff decided this issue on the basis of submissions, in the course of which
reference was made to various documents.
By a judgment delivered on 12 January 2007 the sheriff answered in the
affirmative the question posed in section 20(3).
[17] The final
stage in the sheriff's determination of the extradition request related to the
question posed by section 21(1) of the 2003 Act, the human rights issue. At the first stage of the extradition
hearing, the appellant had been represented by counsel. By the final stage the appellant had decided
to dispense with his services. It seems
that the appellant was of the view that he should have been called to give
evidence on the deliberate absence from trial issue. At the final stage he was represented by a
solicitor, who called him, with the sheriff's consent, to give evidence on a
number of factual matters. As will be
seen, the factual matters included some which might have been relevant to
determination of the deliberate absence from trial issue, even though the sheriff
had already decided that issue. By
judgment issued on 16 March 2007, the sheriff answered in the
affirmative the question posed in section 21(1) of the 2003 Act and ordered
that the appellant be extradited to France to serve his sentence.
[18] Before this
Court, the appellant was represented by different solicitors and counsel from
those who had represented him at the extradition hearing. Much of the incidental procedure before the
hearing of the appeal was taken up with an allegation that the appellant had
been defectively represented at the extradition hearing, under reference to Anderson v HM Advocate
1996 JC 29. In the written submissions
which the appellant's representatives were ordered to lodge it was alleged that
because of this defective representation there had been a "miscarriage of
justice" before the sheriff: an
expression derived from section 106(3) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. But when it was pointed out, at the start of
the hearing before us, that in terms of section 26(3) of the 2003 Act an
appeal under that section may be brought on a question of law or fact, and the
manner in which the conditions in subsections (3) and (4) are expressed
entitles this Court to re-examine the evidence led before the sheriff, and, where
appropriate, to hear fresh evidence, senior counsel for the appellant departed
from the Anderson approach. Instead, he moved us either to allow the appellant
to give evidence before us, or to allow an affidavit by the appellant to be
received.
[19] In relation to
the first part of the motion, counsel referred to the fact that the sheriff had
decided the deliberate absence from a trial issue without hearing evidence from
the appellant, albeit that the appellant did give evidence at the final stage,
when the human rights issue was under consideration. Counsel did not suggest that the appellant
would give evidence on any material matter on which he had not given evidence
before the sheriff, but said that there would be a difference of emphasis. It is no doubt competent for this Court,
having regard to the terms of section 27(4) of the 2003 Act, to hear fresh
evidence; and this was done, for
example, in La Torre v The Republic of Italy [2007] EWHC 1370 (Admin). But it remains a matter for the
exercise of the Court's discretion.
Given that the sheriff had found the appellant to be a credible and
reliable witness on matters of fact, and had made findings in fact on the basis
of the appellant's evidence which he accepted, that these findings in fact
included findings relating to the circumstances in which the appellant did not
attend the trial, and that it was not suggested that there would be any
difference in substance if he gave evidence before us, we decided to refuse the
motion. It did not seem appropriate to
allow the appellant to give evidence simply to put a different emphasis on
questions of fact which had already been established; counsel could, if so
advised, do this in his submissions.
This left the motion to allow the affidavit to be received. Given that it was directed, as counsel
informed us, to the Anderson issue,
which was no longer live, and otherwise for reasons similar to those given for
refusing the first part of the motion, we refused this part of the motion
also. We did, however, indicate that
this Court could and would have regard to the findings in fact made in the
sheriff's judgment of 16 March 2007, on the human rights issue, in
considering the appeal against the decision contained in his judgment of 12 January
2007 about
the deliberate absence from trial issue.
The deliberate absence
from trial issue
[20] Although the structure of the 2003 Act required
the sheriff to consider this issue after deciding the passage of time issue, I propose
to discuss it now because the events in question come earlier in the chronology
(although they are also to some extent relevant to the passage of time issue).
[21] The facts
found by the sheriff included the following.
As noted above, on 27 March 2001, the appellant was interviewed in Scotland by a French police officer and two United Kingdom customs officials. The appellant understood that he would be
asked to go to France to be interviewed by an examining
magistrate, and on 16 May 2001 a summons was served on him to
attend for such an interview on 22 May 2001.
On receipt of this summons, the appellant consulted a partner in a firm
of solicitors in Nairn. By letter dated 18 May
2001 this
partner gave advice, based on his understanding of the legal position in France, but also advised the appellant to
obtain further legal advice from a solicitor more knowledgeable than he
was. He suggested that the appellant
contact Messrs Levy & McRae, Solicitors, Glasgow. The appellant decided not to go to France for interview on 22 May
2001 and did
not do so. Thereafter he contacted a
partner in Messrs Levy & McRae. He
also learned from newspapers that Logan had been convicted and had received
a sentence of seven years' imprisonment.
[22] On 2 December
2001 the
appellant was served with a summons requiring him to attend for trial on 2 May
2002. The summons was in French, with an English
translation. The summons informed him of
the nature of the offences with which he was charged, the date and place of the
trial and his right to attend in person or to be represented by a lawyer, with
the possibility of representation free of charge. On receipt of this summons, the appellant
contacted Messrs Levy & McRae, and attended a consultation at their offices
in late April 2002. During the
consultation a telephone conference call was conducted with a lawyer in France.
The appellant was advised orally that if he did not attend his trial he
would be convicted in his absence and sentenced to imprisonment. He was also advised that if he did attend his
trial, the same consequences would follow.
He was told that any extradition proceedings (under the law as it then
stood) would not be straightforward. The
appellant formed the view that extradition was unlikely and hoped that no-one
in France would pursue the matter.
[23] The oral
advice given to the appellant was confirmed in a letter from Messrs Levy &
McRae to him dated 1 May 2002.
This letter contained the following passages:
"The advice which we received from
our French Agent was that you should not attend [the trial]. The consequences of not attending are that
the Court will condemn you in your absence.
The advice which we received from our French Agents, given the history
of the case, and the evidence apparently available, to the Judge, was that you
would be condemned, and would be immediately taken to Prison without the right
to suspend the sentence.
....
You have seen his [Logan's] evidence, and it appears to be
that the French authorities rely upon that evidence. Our French Agents indicate that the trial
will proceed in your absence. They
explained during our Conference Call that you will be condemned by
default. It is then for the French
authorities to proceed with extradition proceedings."
[24] The appellant
did not go to France for the trial on 2 May
2002, or
appeal after receipt on 4 November 2002 of formal notification of the
outcome of the trial. He took no further
steps in relation to the proceedings France, whether by obtaining legal advice
in Scotland or France or otherwise.
[25] The 2003 Act
does not offer an interpretation of the word "deliberately" in
section 20(3). In its ordinary
usage, the word connotes that the conduct in question is intentional and
follows prior consideration. This in
turn connotes possession of relevant information. In the case of a decision whether or not to
attend for a criminal trial, the relevant information may be taken to extend to
the nature of the charges, and the date and place of the trial: cf. Article 5 of the Framework Decision,
quoted at paragraph [3] above. The
relevant information might also be taken as extending to the possible
consequences of a failure to attend for trial.
[26] Senior counsel
for the appellant went further than this.
He submitted that, for a person deliberately to absent himself from
trial, there had to be a fully informed decision whether to absent himself or
not. If the decision was taken on advice
which was probably wrong, then it was tainted.
The advice which the appellant had received not to attend the trial was
bad advice. The appellant's position was
that he was innocent of the charges against him, and the correct advice should
have been to attend the trial to defend himself.
[27] Counsel
founded on Deputy Public Prosecutor of
the Court of Appeal of Montpellier v Wade
[2006] EWHC 1909 (Admin). In that case,
an English lorry driver was acquitted of drugs charges after trial in his
presence in Perpignan.
At a later date, at a hearing in his absence, the Court of Appeal in Montpellier overturned the acquittal and directed
a conviction. The French authorities
subsequently issued an EAW for his surrender by the English court. In an appeal against the decision of the
senior district judge not to order his extradition, the High Court
characterised the proceedings in Montpellier as a rehearing and therefore the
"trial" at which a conviction was substituted.
The Court went on to consider whether he had deliberately absented
himself from this trial. The senior
district judge, who had heard evidence about this issue, held that the
appellant was not aware of the nature of the Montpellier hearing, which constituted a
rehearing at which fresh evidence might be heard, and that he was not aware of
the consequences of not attending.
Moreover, he was given written advice by his French lawyer which
included the statement "you can ignore this appeal with all his [sic: sc.
its] consequences." In the course of his
judgment, with which Aikens J. agreed, May LJ said at
paragraph 15:
"In my judgment, deliberately
absenting yourself does not necessarily have overtones of deliberately evading
justice but the word 'deliberately' does involve enquiring into the person's
state of mind and it connotes a decision taken in the light of all material
information. Here, Mr Wade was
materially misinformed. That is no fault
of the French Court but it does, in my judgment, mean
that he did not deliberately absent himself within the terms of section 20(3)
of the 2003 Act."
[28] As counsel for
the Lord Advocate pointed out, the circumstances in the present case are very
different from those in Wade. The advice which the appellant received was,
it was agreed, as set out in the letter of 1 May 2002.
It may be taken from this letter that the French lawyer had had an
opportunity of considering "the evidence apparently available". Reference is made to Logan's evidence, and there may have been
other evidence implicating the appellant.
The French lawyer's advice, based on this consideration, was that, if
the appellant attended the trial, he "would be condemned", that is to say
convicted, and would be immediately taken to prison. This represented advice on the prospects of
success if the appellant faced trial, and there is nothing before us which
would entitle us to reach the view that it was other than good advice. The advice also was that the appellant should
not attend trial, in which event he would be convicted in his absence; but it
was "then for the French authorities to proceed with extradition proceedings",
under the procedures in force before the 2003 Act came into effect. The substance of this advice therefore was
that the appellant's best prospect of avoiding imprisonment would be to remain
in the United Kingdom and hope that he would not be
extradited. Indeed, as mentioned above,
the sheriff found in fact, having heard his evidence, that the appellant formed
the view that extradition was unlikely and hoped that no-one in France would pursue the matter. As counsel for the Lord Advocate put it, the
appellant simply chose to take his chance.
There is no possible basis for holding that he was materially
misinformed: on the contrary he and his
advisers had sufficient information to enable him to take an informed decision
as to whether to attend the trial. He
decided, no doubt on advice, not to attend.
In doing so he was fully aware of the possible consequences.
[29] Having regard
to the foregoing considerations, I am fully satisfied that the appellant had
deliberately absented himself from his trial, and I can see no good reason to
hold that the sheriff ought to have decided the deliberate absence from trial
issue differently.
The passage of time
issue
[30] The effect of section 14 of the 2003
Act is that the appellant's extradition to France is barred by reason of the
passage of time if (and only if) it appears that it would be unjust or
oppressive to extradite him by reason of the passage of time since he is
alleged to have become unlawfully at large.
Although there was some discussion before the sheriff as to whether the
starting point was an earlier date, before us the discussion proceeded on the
basis that the appellant was alleged to have become unlawfully at large on
4 November 2002 when he received intimation of the outcome of the trial on
2 May 2002. The latest date when
considering the passage of time is 3 November 2006, when the second EAW and certificate
were served on the appellant, and I proceed on this basis, though there is a
case to be made for the earlier date of 15 November
2005, when
the appellant was arrested on the first EAW. The history of events is as set out in the
agreed chronology (paragraphs [9] to [14] above) and the sheriff's findings in fact
(paragraphs [21] to [24] above), and I see no need to
repeat that history here.
It is important to note that there is no information, beyond what is set
out above, as to what was happening either in France or in the United Kingdom between any of the dates I have
given. We are not told what was being
done, or not done, whether what was done could have been done more quickly, or,
if so, what explanation there might be for not doing it more quickly.
[31] The sheriff
states in his report to us, after mentioning the relevant dates:
"But I could not characterise any of
the apparent periods of inactivity as significant, especially from the
standpoint of the appellant. He was not
prejudiced by the delay; he had remained at liberty until now. Nor could I characterise the actings of the
French authorities as 'dilatory', even if such a consideration were
significant."
Before us, senior counsel for the appellant took issue in
particular with the sheriff's finding that he was not prejudiced by the
delay. He submitted that the appellant
had lived at the same address in Killin for ten years, during which he had been
in regular employment as a lorry driver and agricultural contractor, and had supported
a wife and family. During the four-year
period between November 2002 and November 2006 he had developed a sense of
security. The French authorities were at
all material times aware of his home address.
He had not sought to avoid them.
In these circumstances it would be unjust and oppressive to order his
extradition.
[32] Section 14
of the 2003 Act has no direct antecedent in the Framework Decision. There are provisions about time limits and
procedures for the decision to execute an EAW in Article 17, parts of
which are quoted above at paragraph [3].
These provisions are, however, principally concerned with the conduct of
the executing judicial authority and not that of the issuing judicial
authority. Rather, section 14 has
its origins in earlier United Kingdom extradition statutes: see section 10 of the Fugitive Offenders
Act 1881, sections 8(3) and 9(3) of the Fugitive Offenders Act 1967 and
sections 11(3) and 12(2) of the Extradition Act 1989. In the case of extradition to a category 2
Territory, the relevant provision is now section 82 of the 2003 Act, which
is otherwise in the same terms as those of section 14; and I conclude that
Parliament intended that in considering a passage of time issue the same
considerations should apply to extradition to category 1 territories as
apply to extradition to category 2 territories. All these Acts are or were United Kingdom statutes, and it is clearly
desirable that there should be uniformity of construction and application of
the relevant statutory provisions in the various jurisdictions of the United Kingdom, so as to produce similar results in
cases where the facts are similar. It
seems to me to be inappropriate to approach the construction and application of
section 14 solely or mainly from the standpoint of our domestic law. The international dimension is inherent in
extradition law, and concepts of injustice and oppression must be considered in
that context. It is therefore
appropriate to consider various decisions to which we were referred, which
appear to me to give valuable guidance on the proper approach. I shall refer to them in chronological
order.
[33] In Union of India v Narang & Another [1978] AC 247 extradition of the two respondents
was sought in order to face criminal charges in India.
The House of Lords considered the provisions of section 8(3) of the
Fugitive Offenders Act 1967, which replaced those of section 10 of the
Fugitive Offenders Act 1881. In
considering how the Court should undertake the task of deciding whether it
would be unjust or oppressive to return a fugitive, Lord Keith of Kinkel
said at page 293:
"[T]he Court must survey the facts
and draw an inference, or form an opinion, as to whether or not it would be
unjust or oppressive to return the fugitive.
It should approach this task, I think, in the same way as it deals, for
example, with questions whether something is reasonable or whether there has
been negligence."
At page 294 he said:
"It must always be for the Court to
appraise the facts upon which it thinks it right to proceed, and form a
conclusion upon the matter of injustice and oppression without any presumption
in either direction."
[34] In Kakis v Government of the Republic of Cyprus [1978] 1 WLR 779 the House of
Lords had again to consider the provisions of section 8(3) of the 1967
Act, in a case where extradition of the appellant was sought to stand trial in
Cyprus on a charge of murder. In a
passage at pages 782-783, much quoted subsequently, Lord Diplock said:
"'Unjust' I regard as directed
primarily to the risk of prejudice to the accused in the conduct of the trial
itself, 'oppressive' as directed to hardship to the accused resulting from
changes in his circumstances that have occurred during the period to be taken
into consideration; but there is room for overlapping, and between them they
would cover all cases where to return him would not be fair. Delay in the commencement or conduct of
extradition proceedings which is brought about by the accused himself by
fleeing the country, concealing his whereabouts or evading arrest cannot, in my
view, be relied upon as a ground for holding it to be either unjust or
oppressive to return him. Any
difficulties which he may encounter in the conduct of his defence in
consequence of the delay due to such causes are of his own choice and
making. Save in the most exceptional
circumstances it would be neither unjust nor oppressive that he should be
required to accept them.
As
respects delay which is not brought about by the acts of the accused himself,
however, the question of where responsibility lies for the delay is not
generally relevant. What matters is not
so much the cause of such delay as its effect; or, rather, the effects of those
events which would not have happened before the trial of the accused if it had
taken place with ordinary promptitude.
So where the application for discharge under section 8(3) is based upon
the 'passage of time' under paragraph (b) and not on the absence of good faith
under paragraph (c), the Court is not normally concerned with what could be an
invidious task of considering whether mere inaction of the requisitioning
government or its prosecuting authorities which resulted in delay was
blameworthy or otherwise."
[35] Kakis was applied by this Court in Triplis, Petitioner 1998 SLT 186, by which time the relevant statutory
provision was section 11(3) of the Extradition Act 1989. Return was sought of the petitioner to Greece to stand trial on charges of theft
by housebreaking at commercial premises.
In delivering the Opinion of the Court, Lord Justice General Rodger said
at page 188:
"We are satisfied that the petitioner
has not shown that by reason of the passage of time between February 1984 and
January 1987 it would be unjust or oppressive to return him now to stand trial
in Greece. As we have explained, we
require to disregard the period between the end of 1984 and 1992 since the
petitioner left Greece in breach of the conditions of his
release and when he was aware of the allegations against him. So far as the remaining period is concerned,
it appears to us that some of the 'delay' may have been due to the need for the
extradition request to be considered properly, in the interest of the
petitioner as well as in the public interest.
We note in particular, however, that the petitioner does not suggest
that any delay has made it impossible for him to have a fair trial. We accept that the petitioner has settled in
this country and may even have had some reason to believe - wrongly as it
happens - that the Greek authorities were not actively pursuing him. But these or similar circumstances could
apply in many cases and in our view they do not in themselves make it unjust or
oppressive in this case for the petitioner to be returned to stand trial."
[36] Steblins v Government of Latvia [2006] EWHC 1272 (Admin) related to an
applicant whose extradition was sought in respect of an offence of burglary and
conspiracy to steal, an offence which he admitted. The request for extradition was made before
the 2003 Act came into force, so the Court had to consider the provisions of
section 11(3) of the 1989 Act.
Baker LJ, in a judgment with which Leveson J agreed, said at
paragraph 9 that one of the principles that was not in dispute was as
follows:
"Although unjust and oppressive are
terms which can overlap, the term 'unjust' is directed primarily to the risk of
prejudice to the accused and [sic: sc. in]
the conduct of the trial itself, whereas 'oppressive' is directed to hardship
to the accused from changes in his circumstances during the period to be taken
into consideration."
At paragraph 13 he agreed with the submission that each
case must be decided on its own facts, and that there was nothing on the
evidence in the case which went beyond "the routine disruption that inevitably
occurs when someone is extradited." At
paragraph 15 he said:
"The extradition provisions are based
on reciprocity. There is a strong public
interest, Community wide, that a person who has admitted committing an offence
in Latvia should be dealt with in that country
for it, just as someone who has burgled commercial premises in the United Kingdom and fled to Latvia should be returned to this country
to be dealt with here. I would therefore
refuse the application."
[37] We were
referred to several cases decided under the 2003 Act. The first of these was Austins v The Government of
Spain [2004] EWHC 2693 (Admin). In
that case the applicant had been convicted and sentenced in Spain for a drugs offence. While he was serving his sentence, he was
allowed a period of leave from the institution where he was detained, and
absconded, returning to the United Kingdom in January 1995. He was arrested on 12 February
2004. Laws LJ, in a judgment with which
Hallett J agreed, said:
"13. This
is not an easy case. In my judgment the
Spanish authorities could and should have proceeded with very much more
expedition than they did. They knew from
an early stage where the applicant was living in the United Kingdom.
I find it frankly bizarre that years could go by in which the process
ground to a halt simply for want of formal proof that the applicant was
unlawfully at large. But it is important
to remember that section 11(3)(b) [of the 2003 Act] was not enacted as a
means of imposing discipline on states making dilatory requests for
extradition. We are concerned, and only
concerned, with the question whether by force of the passage of time it would
be oppressive to return the applicant to Spain.
...
15. We
have to consider all the circumstances of the case as I have outlined
them. They include the circumstance that
this is not merely an instance of a man who refuses to return to a country
where he is to face trial. This
applicant had already been tried and sentenced.
In effect he had escaped from custody.
He knew perfectly well that he had a substantial time yet to serve. It seems to me that that dimension of the
case weighs heavily against the applicant.
16. I
have considered all the factors which I have described. In the end the matter is one of judgment, if
not impression. Looking at the whole
case, I have to say that in my view oppression is not shown here, and I would
decline this application."
[38] In Falanga v Office of the State Prosecutor, Court of Novara, Italy [2007] EWHC 268 (Admin) an EAW was
issued following the appellant's conviction in his absence of offences of
dishonesty. The appellant had absconded
from custody while serving a previous sentence.
The Court found that he deliberately absented himself from his trial in
full knowledge, given his experience of the Criminal Justice system in Italy, that he was waiving his right to
appear and defend himself. On the
passage of time issue, Stanley Burnton J, with whom Maurice Kay LJ agreed,
said at paragraph 23:
"[T]he European arrest warrant is
designed to be an expeditious and summary means of securing extradition as
between states who are parties to the European Convention on Human Rights,
where generally it may be assumed that those rights are complied with. Extradition cannot in my judgment be resisted
by pointing to matters which could have been the subject of evidence on the
part of the extraditing authority but were not, such as, in this case, the date
when it was learnt that Mr Falanga was in this country or by suggesting
that there may have been or may be breaches of the rights of an appellant under
the European Convention. Any allegations
made by the person whose extradition is sought must be properly supported by
evidence if they are to lead to a refusal of extradition."
[39] In La Torre, supra, Laws LJ, with whom Davis J agreed, said at paragraph 37:
"In my view the proper approach in
this area of the law is, with respect, relatively straightforward. I think that there is perhaps a danger that
in the search for a just result the court may be inclined to stray too far from
the words of the statute..."
After referring to the provisions of section 14 of the 2003
Act, and to Kakis, supra, he
continued:
"[T]he words of the Act do not
justify a conclusion that any delay not explained by the requesting State must
necessarily be taken to show fault on the State's part such as to entitle the
putative extradite to be discharged...
All the circumstances must be considered in order to judge whether the
unjust/oppressive test is met. Culpable
delay on the part of the State may certainly colour that judgment and may
sometimes be decisive, not least in what is otherwise a marginal case... And
such delay will often be associated with other factors, such as the possibility
of a false sense of security on the extraditee's part. The extraditee cannot take advantage of delay
for which he is himself responsible...
An overall judgment on the merits is required, unshackled by rules with
too sharp edges."
[40] In Goodyer, Gomes v Government of Trinidad and Tobago [2007] EWHC 2012 (Admin) Sedley LJ,
in delivering the Judgment of the Court, said at paragraph 19, in
addressing submissions about delay caused by the fault of an accused person and
delay caused by the fault of the requesting state:
"It seems to us more appropriate to
regard the respective faults of the offender and the state as merging at the
point where it is no longer reasonable for the requesting state not to have
located the offender. From that point it
becomes increasingly likely that the sense of security engendered by state
inaction will render extradition oppressive."
[41] Reference was
also made, more briefly, to Colda v Government of Romania [2006] EWHC 1150 (Admin), in which the Court accepted a submission that it was the appellant
"who chose, as she was entitled to, to exhaust all the appeal routes open to
her and chose not to return to Romania when the legal proceedings were finally
concluded."
[42] On the basis
of these authorities, counsel for the Lord Advocate submitted that, when
considering the passage of time issue, the focus should be on the effect that
it has had on the person whose extradition is sought. The focus is not on the passage of time
itself, and it therefore follows that this is not of itself sufficient to give
rise to injustice or oppression.
Accordingly, even the passage of a substantial period of time will not
be sufficient. Just as the passage of
time is not of itself sufficient, far less should the focus be on the reasons
for it. The Court should not direct its
attention to the question whether the reasons are culpable or simply
inevitable. The fact that there is no
explanation for the passage of time does not of itself give rise to a
conclusion that the passage of time is culpable; far less does it lead to the
conclusion that the passage of time gives rise to injustice or oppression: Austins,
supra. In so far as questions of
culpability may be relevant, this Court would require to have an evidential
basis for concluding that there was in fact culpability. In coming to such a view, this Court ought
not to view the question of the passage of time on the basis of experience of
the Scottish system, where the question is whether more than a reasonable time
has passed. What might be described as
culpable passage of time may well be associated with other factors, such as a
change in circumstances. In that event
the Court might well be able to conclude that there is injustice or
oppression: La Torre, supra, at para.
37. In the present case the appellant
did not say that the passage of time had been or was culpable. The argument was that there had been a
substantial delay, and the appellant had had a sense of security during that
period.
[43] I accept these
submissions. In the first place, having
regard to the authorities quoted above, especially Kakis, I do not regard this as a case in which the concept of
injustice is applicable. A person whose
extradition is sought in order to face trial may suffer injustice by reason of
delay, since the conduct of his defence may be prejudiced by delay, as is
commonly the case. This is not the case
here. Secondly, in applying the concept
of oppression when the extradition of the appellant is sought so that he may
serve his sentence, what has to be considered is whether this would cause
hardship to him as a result of changes in his circumstances that have occurred
during the period from November 2002 to November 2006. Time has of course passed, but there is no
basis in the evidence before us upon which it could be held that any of the
relevant authorities should be blamed for it.
No doubt the appellant hoped that the French authorities would not seek
his extradition to France, and that hope may have increased as
time has gone by, but he has never had reason to believe that the French
authorities had dropped the matter. The
information that we were given about his personal circumstances amounts to
saying that he has continued to live the same life as he has always done: there is no suggestion that he has materially
altered his position in the belief that the French authorities would not seek
his extradition. In so far as the
prospect of extradition may have been hanging over him, it could be said that
it has always been open to him to surrender voluntarily to the French
authorities, to serve his sentence and to get the whole affair over and done
with. To be required to serve a long
sentence of imprisonment is no doubt a hardship for the prisoner and for his
family; but that is inherent in such a punishment. As was pointed out in Triplis, these or similar circumstances could apply in many cases,
and they do not in themselves make it oppressive that the appellant should have
to go to France to serve his sentence. It is therefore difficult to see what
prejudice he could be said to suffer.
[44] Having regard
to the objectives of the Framework Decision and Part 1 of the 2003 Act, this
Court should in my opinion place great weight on considerations of mutuality
and international co-operation and should not lightly refuse to order
extradition: see Dabas, supra. In the present case, the appellant has been
convicted of a very serious drugs offence and has been sentenced to
imprisonment accordingly. I am not
persuaded, exercising my judgment as best I can, that the effect of the passage
of time on him, in his individual circumstances, is such that it could properly
be regarded as oppressive to extradite him.
I do not agree that the sheriff ought to have decided the passage of
time issue at the extradition hearing differently.
[45] I agree with
Lord Clarke's additional remarks about this issue.
Conclusion
[46] For these
reasons, in my opinion the appeal should be dismissed, and I so move your
Lordships.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Nimmo Smith
Lord Clarke
Lord Marnoch
|
[2008] HCJAC 11
Appeal No: XC232/07
OPINION OF LORD CLARKE
in
APPEAL UNDER SECTION 26(1) OF THE EXTRADITION ACT
2003
by
ALISTAIR IAIN CAMPBELL
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent.
|
Act: E Targowski, QC,
Caskie; Drummond Miller
Alt: A. D. R. Crawford, Advocate;
Crown Agent
19 February 2008
[47] I respectfully
agree with your Lordship in the chair, for the reasons given by your Lordship,
that this appeal should be dismissed. I
would merely wish to add the following observations in relation to the passage
of time issue.
[48] Whatever may
be the position in our domestic law, with regard to the application of our
common law of oppression to enforcement of warrants, as discussed in such cases
as Beglan 2002 SCCR923 and Waugh 2005 SLT 451, in the present
case, we are concerned with the application of statutory language, which in
substance, as your Lordship in the chair has indicated, has a long history in
the context of extradition law. That
context is important. In the case of Kakis v Republic of Cyprus [1978] 1 WLR779 the relevant
provision was section 8(3)(b) of the Fugitive Offenders Act 1967 which was to
the following effect:
"....the High Court ...may....order the
person committed to be discharged from custody if it appears to the Court that
....
(b) by reason of the passage of time
since he is alleged to have committed [the offence]...it would, having regard to
all the circumstances, be unjust or oppressive to return him".
It will be noted that the words "having regard to all the
circumstances" do not themselves appear in section 14 of the 2003
Act. I do not consider, however, that
the absence of those words means that section 14 of the 2003 Act has to be
interpreted in a manner, or to an effect, different from section 8(3)(b) of the
1967 Act and indeed it is clear, in my view, that the English authorities, to
which your Lordship in the chair has referred, which have considered the
provisions of section 14, have approached matters on that footing. In that respect the speech of Lord Russell of
Killowen in the case of Kakis, who
agreed with the speech of Lord Diplock, is instructive. His Lordship, at page 785 said this:
"I would only add this comment on
section 8(3)(b) of the statute. It is
not merely a question whether the length of time passed would make it unjust or
oppressive to return the fugitive.
Regard must be had to all the circumstances. Those circumstances are not restricted to
circumstances from which the passage of time resulted. They include circumstances taking place
during the passage of time which may (as I think here) give to the particular
passage of time a quality or significance leading to a conclusion that return
would be unjust or oppressive".
That passage appears to me, with respect, to emphasise
succinctly that the focus is not principally on the length of time that has
passed and the reasons for it, but rather on the demonstrable effect that any
such passage of time has had on the individual in question. In the present case the only effect that the
passage of time was said to have had on the appellant was that he had continued
to live his life as normal and that it produced a sense of security in him that
the French authorities would no longer be pursuing him. In my judgement any sense of security was a
false and unjustified sense of security, on the part of the appellant himself,
in a situation where there was no suggestion that the relevant authorities had
otherwise given him any reason to believe that they were no longer interested
in pursuing such a serious matter. The
dictum of Lord Justice General Rodger in the case of Triplis, to which your Lordship in the
chair refers, is particularly apposite in that regard.
[49] In the present
case the discussion before us ultimately focused on the passage of time having,
perhaps, been significantly contributed to by inaction for a period of time by
the United Kingdom authorities. As your Lordship in the chair has commented
there was simply no evidence before this Court which would entitle us to reach
the view that the delay was, in any sense, blameworthy, even if that were, as
Lord Edmund-Davies suggested in the case of Kakis at page 785, a relevant, though not of itself, conclusive
factor. In that connection it is
noteworthy that in the case of Steblins
v Government of Latvia [2007]
EWHC 1271 (Admin) the position apparently was that the Crown Prosecution
Service in England had lost the relevant file and
matters had been left in abeyance for some 41/2 years. In that situation Scott Baker L.J., at
para.14 said:
"It is certainly most regrettable
that the Crown Prosecution Service managed to lose the file and, as a result of
that, the extradition of the applicant is not sought as soon as it might have
been. But, in my judgement, he has
suffered no particularly significant disadvantage as a result of that".
That dictum, in my view, emphasises, again, that the focus
must be on the established effect of the passage of time on the person in
question.
[50] I have
already, in agreement with your Lordship in the chair, given reasons as to why
reliance on our domestic law of oppression is not appropriate in such
cases. It would be regrettable if in
this area of the law the approach to statutory language in an United Kingdom statute, giving effect to
international obligations, was to be different from that of the Courts in England.
There is, in my judgement, no good reason for there being any such
difference of approach. It should, in
any event, be noted that the two Scots cases dealing with our common law of
oppression in relation to execution of warrants, which were referred to in the
present case, namely Waugh and Beglan, are cases where the warrant was
one issued after the individual in question had submitted himself to trial and
had been convicted. Those cases are, for
that reason, in my opinion, in any event, clearly distinguishable from the
position in the present case.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Nimmo Smith
Lord Clarke
Lord Marnoch
|
[2008] HCJAC 11
Appeal No: XC232/07
OPINION OF LORD MARNOCH
in
APPEAL
by
ALISTAIR IAIN CAMPBELL
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent.
|
Act: E Targowski, QC,
Caskie; Drummond Miller
Alt: A. D. R. Crawford, Advocate;
Crown Agent
19 February 2008
[51] I respectfully
agree with everything your Lordship in the chair has said regarding the first
issue raised in this appeal and there is nothing I wish to add to your
Lordship's observations on that matter.
[52] As to the
second issue, however, I have perhaps encountered rather more difficulty than
have your Lordship and Lord Clarke. As
your Lordship has explained that issue concerns the proper construction and
application to the facts of this case of Section 14 of the Extradition Act
2003. Although that Section appears in
Part I of the Act which was intended, inter
alia, to implement the European Council Framework Decision of 13 June
2002, its
provisions do not emanate from that Decision but are rather a re-enactment of
provisions which appeared in earlier UK legislation. While, therefore, I readily accept that
Part I of the Act should in general be given a purposive construction so
as to further the "introduction of a new simplified system of surrender of
sentenced or suspected persons for the purposes of execution or prosecution of
criminal offences ...." (vide the
preamble to the Framework Decision), I have some difficulty in seeing how the
construction of this particular Section can be affected in that way. It is not suggested that its re-enactment was
inimical to the purposes of the Framework Decision or that it is in some way
incompatible with it. Indeed, having
regard to the terms of para. 1 of Article 17 of the Framework Decision
which states that "A European arrest warrant shall be dealt with and executed
as a matter of urgency", I consider it readily understandable that a lapse of time
prior to the execution of a Court warrant should in certain circumstances
continue to be seen as "oppressive".
This brings me to the peculiarity that Section 14 of the 2003 Act
in my opinion seeks to deal simultaneously with two entirely different situations,
viz. that obtaining pre-trial and
that obtaining post-trial or in other circumstances where the person in
question is "unlawfully at large". The
first of these is by far the more familiar and essentially involves consideration
of whether by virtue of the passage of time a person will be unable to get a
fair trial. The second, however,
involves, quite simply, the effect of the passage of time between the grant and
execution of a Court warrant where the only remaining objective is the
apprehension of the offender.
[53] Almost all the
English authorities cited to us - and I accept, of course, that this is a UK
Statute which should, if at all possible, be construed consistently throughout
the UK - concerned what I shall term the "first situation" and, for the reasons
given above, I, for my part, find these to be of really no assistance in
dealing with the present case. The dicta to be found in them, of however
high authority, are pronounced in a context which seems to me quite different
from that which we have to consider. That
leaves only three decisions - all decisions of the Divisional Court - where the issue was the same as
that arising in the present case, viz.
the effect of a lapse of time prior to execution of a Court warrant for
apprehension. In the first of these, Austins v
Spain [2004] EWHC 2693 (Admin), the
applicant was unlawfully at large for nine years. Lord Justice Laws, in delivering the Opinion
of the Court, distinguished, correctly in my view, the decision and reasoning
of the House of Lords in the earlier case of Kakis v Cyprus [1978] 1
WLR 779 (a "first situation" case) and at para. 15 summed up the position
in these terms,
"We have to consider all the
circumstances of the case as I have outlined them. They include the circumstance that this is
not merely an instance of a man who refuses to return to a country where he is
to face trial. This applicant had
already been tried and sentenced. In
effect he escaped from custody. He knew
perfectly well that he had a substantial time yet to serve. It seems to me that that dimension of the
case weighs heavily against the applicant."
In the next case, in order of time, Colda v Romania [2006] EWHC 1150 (Admin), the only
authority relied on was Kakis but the
period of time involved was in any event fairly short, being only some
16 months. The third and last of
this trilogy was Falanga v Italy [2007] EWHC 268 (Admin) in which,
as it seems to me, the decision of the Court is rested wholly on what was said
by Lord Diplock in Kakis. For the reasons given above and by Lord
Justice Laws in Austins I must respectfully take leave to
doubt the validity of that approach.
And, with all due respect to Lord Justice Laws' reasoning in Austins, while I can see that persons in the position of the appellant
do not readily enlist sympathy, I do not consider that they are on that account
wholly beyond the reach of oppression.
[54] As it seems to
me, therefore, in the tract of English authority cited to us, there has been
little analysis of the distinction between the two situations I have described
and, in so far as Lord Justice Laws did draw such a distinction, his reasoning
can hardly be regarded as either exhaustive or conclusive.
[55] Against that
background I make no apology for having recourse to Scottish authority on the
meaning of "oppression" in the present context, as most recently exemplified by
the decision of the Appeal Court in Waugh
v HM Advocate 2005 S.L.T. 451. In that case the Court suspended a warrant
for the apprehension of the Petitioner in regard to an outstanding sentence of
five months' imprisonment where there had been an unexplained delay of 12
months during which the warrant had not been executed. The basis of the Court's decision was oppression
and the Crown did not see fit to oppose the application. In the course of delivering the Opinion of
the Court the Lord Justice Clerk, at para. [17], said this:-
"If the offender is kept in suspense
during a prolonged period of delay and then has to serve the remainder of the
sentence, that delay constitutes an additional punishment. It might be that in certain circumstances
such a delay could be justified, even though the offender himself was not to
blame. That question can be decided if
and when it arises. No such
circumstances are put forward in this case."
[56] In my opinion,
standing the lack of clear or consistent authority elsewhere, there is no
reason why the approach of the Scottish Courts to this matter should not be
taken as a valuable guide to the meaning of oppression for purposes of Section
14 of the 2003 Act. It follows that a
change of circumstances on the part of the accused, while obviously relevant,
is not, in my view, a sine qua non of
relief. Much will plainly depend on the
facts of each case, not least, as I see it, on whether the delay or passage of
time is such as to engender in the mind of the wrongdoer the belief that the
State pursuing him has abandoned its quest.
[57] It remains
only to apply the foregoing reasoning to the circumstances of the present
appellant. In that connection, I am very
conscious that following notification of the French Court's decision a period
of three years passed without anything happening so far as the appellant was
concerned; and that, I suppose, in a
situation where he was entitled to think that matters would be progressed as a
matter of urgency. On the other hand,
the circumstances of the conviction and sentence following, as they did, on the
appellant's denying the Court the courtesy of his attendance, taken along with
the gravity of the offence and the length of the sentence imposed are factors
which clearly militate against any expectation that France would abandon
enforcement of the Court's decision.
With these competing considerations in mind, while I regard the issue
raised as narrow, I do not, on balance, consider that oppression has been made
out.
[58] In the result,
I agree with your Lordship in the Chair that this appeal should be refused.