BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?

No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Duncan v. Procurator Fiscal, Hamilton [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_27 (07 May 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_27.html
Cite as: [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_27, 2008 SLT 666, 2008 GWD 16-287, 2008 SCCR 629, [2008] HCJAC 27, 2008 JC 355

[New search] [Help]


APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Johnston

C.G.B. Nicholson, CBE, QC,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008HCJAC 27]

Appeal Nos: XJ 1269/07

XJ1270/07

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by C.G.B. NICHOLSON, CBE, QC

 

in

 

APPEALS AGAINST SENTENCE

 

in causa

 

LINDA ELIZABETH DUNCAN

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, HAMILTON

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: Paterson, Solicitor Advocate; Purdie & Co

Respondent: McKenna, A.D.; Mackay, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

 

 

7 May 2008

 

Background

[1] The appellant, Linda Duncan, has appealed against custodial sentences which were imposed by two different sheriffs at Hamilton Sheriff Court on 26 September 2007 in respect of charges on two related complaints. The background to the imposition of those sentences is somewhat complicated, but it appears to be as follows.

[2] On 14 September 2006 the appellant went to trial before Sheriff Smart at Hamilton Sheriff Court on a complaint containing two charges of breach of the peace, the offences in question having been committed on, respectively, 7 August 2005 and 5 June 2006. Each of the charges involved disorderly conduct directed at members of [a named family] who resided at [a named address] in Wishaw. The appellant was found guilty of both charges after trial; and what the sheriff did then was to make an antisocial behaviour order ("ASBO") for a period of 10 years. That order prohibited the appellant from "conducting herself in a disorderly manner, shouting, swearing, uttering threats to [members of the aforementioned family] all residing at [the aforementioned address] in Wishaw and placing them in a state of fear and alarm". The sheriff also deferred sentence until 17 January 2007 for the appellant to be of good behaviour. On that date she further deferred sentence until 26 July 2007. She was then told that the appellant had been charged with a breach of section 9(1) of the Antisocial Behaviour Etc (Scotland) Act 2004, and she accordingly adjourned the case so that she could be advised of the outcome of that charge. In the result Sheriff Smart ultimately came to pass sentence in respect of the two charges of breach of the peace on 26 September 2007.

[3] Before coming to describe the sentences which were imposed by Sheriff Smart on that date it will be helpful to set out the progress of the charge under section 9(1) of the 2004 Act. That charge refers to the ASBO made by Sheriff Smart on 14 September 2006, and it goes on to allege that, on 12 April 2007, and in breach of the order, the appellant behaved in a disorderly manner at [the aforementioned address] in Wishaw, and uttered threats to [members of the aforementioned family]. The charge also sets out that this took place while the appellant was subject to a bail order which had been granted on 18 August 2006. The appellant maintained a plea of not guilty to the charge but, on 6 August 2007, she was found guilty after a trial which took place before Sheriff Stewart. He obtained various reports and, on 26 September 2007, he sentenced the appellant to three months imprisonment of which one month was attributed to the bail aggravation. In passing, we note that Sheriff Stewart appears to have been influenced to a significant extent by the fact that the appellant had "flouted the bail order of 18 August 2006". However, he seems to have taken that approach upon the mistaken view that the offence with which he was dealing had been committed on 14 September 2006, that is to say less than one month after bail had been granted. In fact, of course, 14 September 2006 was the date when Sheriff Smart made the ASBO, and the offence which was before Sheriff Stewart took place, some seven months later, on 12 April 2007. It is also, we consider, somewhat surprising that the bail aggravation in question was ever libelled at all given that it must, we think, have been superseded by the subsequent ASBO. However, we need not trouble ourselves further with those matters since, as will be seen, we consider that there is a more significant flaw in the whole proceedings in this case.

[4] Returning to the deferred sentences which were before Sheriff Smart, she was advised on 26 September 2007 of the disposal selected earlier that day by Sheriff Stewart in respect of the offence under the Antisocial Behaviour Act, and she was also provided with copies of the various reports which had been before him at the time of sentence. She then proceeded to sentence the appellant to a period of three months imprisonment on each of the breach of the peace charges, and she directed that those sentences should be served consecutively to each other, making a total of six months imprisonment. Those sentences were to commence on 26 September, being the same commencement date as the sentence imposed by Sheriff Stewart. The result of that is that, on that date, the appellant was effectively sentenced to a total period of six months imprisonment, and not nine months, as was suggested by Mr Paterson who appeared on behalf of the appellant at the appeal hearing. It appears that, following on the imposition of the sentences on 26 September 2007, the appellant in fact spent some 15 days in custody before being released on interim liberation on 11 October 2007.

[5] To complete this description of the background to the appeal we should note that the written submissions presented by Mr Paterson effectively canvassed three broad grounds of appeal. One was that it was incompetent for Sheriff Smart to make the sentences for the breach of the peace charges consecutive since that had the effect of exceeding the maximum sentence available for a single complaint. That ground is obviously sound (Nicholson v Lees 1996 SCCR 551), and it was subsequently accepted as such by the advocate depute. Mr Paterson's second ground of appeal was that, for various reasons, it was inappropriate for custodial sentences to be selected at all; and his third ground of appeal was that it was excessive for the ASBO to have been made for as long as ten years. In the course of our preparation for the hearing of this appeal, however, we detected what we considered to be a more fundamental flaw in relation to the competency of the proceedings in this case. It is always, of course, pars judicis for a court to take note of any apparent incompetency in proceedings even when that has not been raised by the parties; and, accordingly, we voiced our concerns at an early stage in the appeal hearing, giving both Mr Paterson and the advocate depute an opportunity to comment. At that stage, of course, our concerns were merely tentative.

 

The competency of the sheriff's disposal on 14 September 2006

[6] Our concerns arise from the fact that, when Sheriff Smart was dealing for the first time with the two charges of breach of the peace in September 2006, she made an ASBO and, at the same time, deferred sentence in respect of the two charges which were before her. We note that an ASBO is a sentence for the purposes of an appeal (Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, section 234AA(10)); and that means that what the sheriff did was to pass sentence in respect of the charges before her while simultaneously deferring sentence on the same charges. In our opinion, that is plainly incompetent. We are unaware of any authority to the effect that it is incompetent for a court to impose a sentence in respect of a charge or charges while, at one and the same time, deferring sentence so that the nature and extent of that sentence can be considered at a later date: but, in our opinion, the reason for that lack of authority must be that what we have just said is blindingly obvious. Our view is also, we note, echoed in the statutory provision which enables a court to make an ASBO.

 

The statutory provision

[7] The statutory provision enabling a court to make an ASBO is to be found in what is now section 234AA of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. Subsection (1) of that section provides that, where an offender is convicted of an offence, and where certain other conditions (which are satisfied in the present case) apply:

".... the court may, instead of or in addition to imposing any sentence which it could impose, make an antisocial behaviour order in respect of a person (the 'offender')."

For present purposes the important words in this provision are "instead of or in addition to imposing any sentence which it could impose". In the present case the order was plainly not made instead of imposing any other sentence but, at the same time, it was plainly not made in addition to imposing another sentence. It is quite clear to us that, by its careful wording, the statutory provision which we have quoted is entirely consistent with our view as to the competency of combining a sentence with a deferment of sentence.

 

The consequences of the sheriff's disposal

[8] In our opinion the disposal selected by Sheriff Smart in September 2006 can have at least two undesirable - indeed unacceptable - consequences. The first involves the possibility of a kind of double jeopardy.

[9] In that connection we note that the 2004 Act itself contains express provision to avoid the possibility of double jeopardy. Section 9(3) provides that, if the "thing done" by a person subject to an ASBO itself constitutes an offence (a "separate offence"), and the person concerned is charged with the separate offence, that person will not be liable to be proceeded against for an offence under section 9(1). In other words, in such circumstances the Crown must elect whether to proceed against the person concerned for the separate offence or for an offence under section 9(1) of the Act (see Gordon v Griffiths 2007 SCCR 349). The situation envisaged by section 9(3) is not, of course, the situation which we have here. However, it seems to us that similar considerations apply since, in a case like the present one, the consequence of having an ASBO and a deferred sentence running concurrently will be, as happened here, that the convicted person will be at risk of receiving a more severe sentence for the original offence in respect of which the ASBO was made if, during the course of the operation of the ASBO, an incident occurs which constitutes an offence under section 9(1). That, in our view, is a consideration which confirms that section 234AA(1) of the 1995 Act was deliberately drafted in the terms which we have set out above so as to avoid just that possible outcome.

[10] A further consequence relates to rights of appeal. As noted above, it is clear that the making of an ASBO may competently be the subject of an appeal (1995 Act, section 234AA(10)). It is also clear that an order deferring sentence may itself be the subject of an appeal (1995 Act, section 175(2)(c)). However, what is not provided for in the statute is a right of appeal against the making, or the terms, of an ASBO in circumstances where, by the deferment of sentence, there has been no final disposal of the charge or charges which are said to have justified the making of the order in the first place. Having regard to the view which we have formed on the matter of competency, the absence of any such provision is unsurprising: but the disposal selected by Sheriff Smart has had unfortunate consequences in relation to rights of appeal. In the present cases the ASBO was not made the subject of appeal until after Sheriff Smart's final disposal of the complaint on 26 September 2007, that is to say, just over a year after the order had been made, presumably on the view that no appeal would be competent until the cases had been finally disposed of. That cannot be what was intended by section 234AA(10), and it is at least possible that the appellant may have been caused prejudice thereby.

 

The consequences of our thinking

[11] Having tentatively reached the foregoing conclusions prior to the hearing of this appeal we explained them to parties at the beginning of the hearing which took place on 12 March 2008, having apologised for the fact that we had been unable in the circumstances to forewarn them of our concerns. Both Mr Paterson and Ms McKenna, who was the advocate depute on that occasion, indicated to us that they saw force in the provisional view on the matter of competency which we had formed at that stage, though there was some uncertainty as to what the consequences should be if effect were to be given to that view. We, for our part, indicated that we would not take a final view at that time, and that we would instead take the appeals to avizandum so as to enable us to consider the whole matter at greater leisure. We also indicated that, if that further consideration gave rise to additional problems, we would put the appeals out for a further hearing so that we could be addressed in more detail by parties.

[12] In the result, we came to the conclusion, while preparing the Opinion of the Court, that we would welcome further assistance from parties as to the consequences which should flow if we were to adhere to our tentative view that the course adopted by Sheriff Smart on 14 September 2006 was fundamentally incompetent. We were also conscious of the possibility that, having had more time to consider the position, either, or both, of the parties might now wish to take issue with our tentative view on that matter. Accordingly, the appeal was put out for a further hearing which took place on 18 April 2008. On that occasion the Crown was represented by Mr Mackay, A.D.

 

The further hearing

[13] At the further hearing, both Mr Paterson and the advocate depute advised us that, having considered the matter further, they were satisfied that what we have hitherto referred to as our tentative view on competency is correct. We also remain of that view, and it therefore follows that we now formally state it as our opinion that the disposal selected by Sheriff Smart on 14 September 2006, namely the making of an ASBO and, at the same time, a deferment of sentence, was incompetent. Having reached that conclusion, however, it is then necessary to consider what its consequences are in respect of the sentences imposed by Sheriff Smart and by Sheriff Stewart on 26 September 2007.

[14] What makes this case particularly difficult is the fact that each of the parts of the disposal selected by Sheriff Smart on 14 September 2006 was, on its own, perfectly competent. In the circumstances presented to her at that time it was competent for her to make an ASBO; and, given the facts in this case, that would probably have been a reasonable disposal. By the same token, it would have been competent for her to defer sentence for good behaviour, and that too would probably have been a reasonable disposal in the circumstances. What she could not competently do, as we have found, was to order both of these disposals simultaneously.

[15] In that situation, Mr Paterson suggested to us that we might quash the ASBO but leave the deferment of sentence standing. We are not attracted by that suggestion. It would, of course, have the consequence that the proceedings before Sheriff Stewart were inept, and the sentence imposed by him would have to be quashed. However, that would then leave a wholly unrealistic situation surrounding the circumstances in which Sheriff Smart ultimately came to impose custodial sentences on 26 September 2007. It is clear that she selected the sentences which she did almost entirely on the basis that, by that date, the appellant had been convicted and sentenced for a breach of the ASBO which she had made a year earlier. But, of course, if that ASBO is in effect to be regarded as pro non scripto, its breach can no longer be regarded as the basis for the selection of sentences by Sheriff Smart. It is possible that, if the ASBO had never been made, the events which gave rise to the breach proceedings might have been prosecuted in a different way, possibly as a breach of the peace. However, we simply do not know if that would have been the case; and we consider that it would be improper for us to speculate on such a matter. For all of these reasons, we do not consider that the proposal advanced by Mr Paterson is one which we should adopt. In that regard, we should also add that it is one which involves a degree of "second-guessing" as to the course which Sheriff Smart might have taken in September 2006 had she been aware at that stage that she could either make an ASBO or defer sentence, but could not do both.

[16] A different suggestion was advanced by the advocate depute. He suggested that we might consider it appropriate to quash the whole disposal selected by Sheriff Smart on 14 September 2006 (with, of course, the consequential quashing of all that followed thereafter), and then to substitute a new sentence for the original breaches of the peace, possibly in the form of a new ASBO. We are not attracted by that suggestion either. The breaches of the peace which led to the making of an ASBO by Sheriff Smart are now quite old, having been committed in August 2005 and June 2006, and we venture to doubt whether such elderly offences could properly be seen as providing an acceptable basis for an ASBO in 2008. In that connection, we note that, in terms of section 234AA(2)(d) of the 1995 Act, one of the factors to which regard must be given before an ASBO is made is that:

"... the court is satisfied, on a balance of probabilities, that the making of an [ASBO] is necessary for the purpose of protecting other persons from further antisocial behaviour by the offender."

Given the age of the offences here, coupled with the possibility that the appellant's circumstances and attitudes may well have changed for the better in the course of the last two or so years, and also having regard to the fact that, as noted earlier, the appellant has in fact spent some 15 days in custody in respect of this matter, we do not consider that it would even be possible now to make a realistic assessment of the kind required by subsection (2)(d).

[17] The problem which has arisen in this case is, in our experience, quite novel. Very often an incompetent sentence can be dealt with on appeal simply by quashing it and substituting something which is competent: but, for the reasons which we have given above, we do not consider that such a course is open to us in this case. Similarly, where only part of a sentence is incompetent (for example, in the present case, Sheriff Smart's order that the sentences of three months' imprisonment imposed by her on 26 September 2007 should be consecutive to each other), an appeal court can put matters right simply by quashing the incompetent part of the sentence. Again, for reasons which we have already given, such a course is not open to us in this case, not least on account of the fact that it was the whole disposal selected by Sheriff Smart in September 2006 which was incompetent.

[18] In all the circumstances we have come to the conclusion that an essentially pragmatic solution is called for here. It is clear that the behaviour which led to the appellant's appearances before the sheriffs in Hamilton was wholly unacceptable; but, having spent some 15 days in prison as a result, she has not entirely escaped punishment, and to that extent justice has been done. That being so, we have decided that what we will do in this case is simply to quash as incompetent the whole disposal selected by Sheriff Smart on 14 September 2006, and we shall make no further order in respect of the convictions which were recorded on that date. The consequence of that is that the sentences of imprisonment which were imposed by Sheriff Smart and by Sheriff Stewart on 26 September 2007 will be treated as quashed on the basis that they followed on proceedings which ought not to have taken place.

[19] We should say that this outcome is in many respects unsatisfactory, but we consider that it has been forced upon us in the very special circumstances of this case. To an extent, the appellant has enjoyed a measure of good fortune as a result. We trust, however, that she will have learned a lesson from all that has taken place, and we hope that she will understand that serious consequences may well follow were there to be any repetition in future of the conduct which led to the present appeals.

[20] Finally, we simply wish to add that the problems which have arisen in this case might have been avoided if Sheriff Smart's disposal on 14 September 2006 had been made the subject of an appeal by way of a Bill of Suspension. We consider that such a Bill would have been bound to succeed, and in that event, of course, the incompetent disposal would have been quashed with the case then going back to Sheriff Smart to re-sentence in a competent manner. In the circumstances, however, we do not criticise those acting for the appellant for not having detected this avenue of appeal.

 


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_27.html