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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Heatherall v Procurator Fiscal Edinburgh [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_25 (15 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2012/2012HCJAC25.html Cite as: 2012 SLT 583, [2012] HCJAC 25, 2012 GWD 8-141, 2012 SCL 521, [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_25 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord BracadaleLord Osborne
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[2012] HCJAC 25XJ572/10OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
In the Appeal by
JAMES GERALD PATRICK HEATHERALL Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, EDINBURGH Respondent: _______
|
For the Appellant: Shead, Lenehan; Beaumont & Co, Edinburgh
For the Crown: Stewart QC, AD, McGuire; Crown Agent
15 February 2012
Introduction
[1] On 26 April 2010 at Edinburgh sheriff court the
appellant appeared on complaint on the following charge:
"On 1st August 2009 at High Street, Penicuik you ... did assault [complainer] ... and did expose your naked penis and thereafter seize her by the body and repeatedly thrust your naked penis against her."
The Crown accepted his plea of guilty to an amended charge of breach of the peace by exposing his naked penis to the complainer.
[2] This appeal was heard along with Hay
v HM Adv [2012 HCJAC 28].
The disposal appealed against
[3] The
sheriff fined the appellant £225. That sentence is not appealed against. The
sheriff also determined, in terms of paragraph 60 of Schedule 3 to the Sexual
Offences Act 2003, that there was a significant sexual aspect to the appellant's
behaviour in committing the offence. The effect of that determination is that
the appellant is subject to the notification requirements of the 2003 Act for a
period of five years.
The appellant
[4] The appellant was born in 1988. He has previous convictions for public order offences and assault, none of which was sexual in nature.
The circumstances
[5] On the agreed Crown narrative, the incident
occurred around closing time outside a public house in the centre of Penicuik.
As the complainer, aged 28, was leaving the premises, she saw the appellant.
He had his penis exposed. He was holding it in both hands towards her. She
was embarrassed. To try to embarrass the appellant and make him stop, she made
a comment about his penis. The appellant continued to expose himself and said
to her "What are you going to do?" She complained to the police. They
detained the appellant shortly afterwards.
[6] The plea in mitigation was to the effect
that the appellant had been very drunk. He did not know the complainer. He
had been with friends and had exposed his penis to them as a joke. There had
been no sexual element in his behaviour.
The sheriff's reasons
[7] The sheriff decided that the appellant's
conduct had displayed a significant sexual aspect. It had been directed
towards a member of the public who was not known to him. He had persisted in
it after the complainer had rebuked him.
The appeal
[8] The
appellant lodged a note of appeal to the effect that there had been no
significant sexual aspect to the charge to which he pled guilty. He then
lodged a devolution minute, a bill of suspension and additional grounds of
appeal. He avers (a) that the relevant provisions of the 2003 Act violated his
rights under articles 6 and 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights and
that the Lord Advocate's prosecution of it was therefore ultra vires;
and (b) that in terms of section 57(2) of the Scotland Act 1998 the Sexual
Offences Act 2003 (Commencement) (Scotland) Order 2004 itself was ultra
vires and therefore that the sheriff's order was incompetent.
Submissions for the appellant
[9] Counsel for the appellant submitted that
article 6(3)(a) gave the appellant the right to be informed in detail of the
nature of the accusations against him, which included their legal
characterisation (Pelissier v France Application no 25444/94, 25 March
1999). The Crown was obliged to give him notice that his conduct might be
regarded as having a significant sexual aspect. Its failure to do so violated
his rights under articles 6(1) and (3)(a). The scheme of the Act, by which
offenders were subject to the notification requirements with no possibility of
review, represented a disproportionate interference with the appellant's rights
under article 8. The Supreme Court's reasoning in R(F) v Secretary
of State for Justice ([2011] 1 AC 331) applied by extension to offenders who were subject to
the notification requirements for a finite period. In prosecuting the
appellant, accepting the guilty plea and impliedly moving for sentence the Lord
Advocate violated the appellant's Convention rights. For the same reason the
2004 Order itself was also ultra vires. The sheriff's order was
incompetent. On a proper construction of paragraph 60, the sheriff could not
properly have held that the appellant's conduct had a significant sexual
aspect. The word "significant" connoted a threshold to ensure that persons
convicted were not too readily treated as sex offenders.
Submissions for the Crown
[10] The
advocate depute submitted that the appellant had been given fair notice by the
wording of the libel in its unamended form. His agent had the opportunity to
make submissions on whether the 2003 Act applied. The sheriff had been
entitled to conclude that there had been a significant sexual aspect to the
appellant's conduct.
Conclusions
[11] The Crown chose not to charge the appellant
with public indecency. In its original form, the complaint set out an
unmistakable charge of indecent assault. Conviction on that libel would
automatically have resulted in notification under the 2003 Act (Sch. 3, para
40).
[12] The present question arises only because of
the Crown's acceptance of the plea to breach of the peace. That greatly
reduced the seriousness of the charge. It also had the consequence that notification
was competent only if paragraph 60 of Schedule 3 was made out. In determining
that it did, the sheriff erred, in my view.
[13] In this case the incident seems to have been
caused by drink rather than by sexual urges. Although the appellant exposed
his penis, there was no sexual conversation of any kind. In my opinion this was
a straightforward breach of the peace on the part of a person who was drunk. It
appears that the Crown did not move the sheriff to apply paragraph 60. That
was the correct position, in my view. If there was a sexual element in the
appellant's behaviour, that element was not "significant" in the context of
paragraph 60.
Sexual Offences (Scotland) Act 2009
[14] With
effect from 1
December 2010,
section 8 of the Sexual Offences (Scotland) Act 2009 has created a new offence of sexual
exposure. The section provides as follows:
"(1) If a person ('A')-
(a) without another person ('B') consenting, and
(b) without any reasonable belief that B consents,
intentionally and for a purpose mentioned in subsection (2), exposes A's genitals in a sexual manner to B with the intention that B will see them, then A commits an offence, to be known as the offence of sexual exposure.
(2) The purposes are-
(a) obtaining sexual gratification,
(b) humiliating, distressing or alarming B."
The manner of exposure is sexual if a reasonable person, in all the circumstances, would consider it so (s.60(2)).
[15] Schedule 3 to the 2003 Act applies the
notification requirements to a person convicted of this offence if -
"(a) the offender, in respect of the offence, is or has been-
(i) sentenced to a term of imprisonment, or
(ii) admitted to a hospital, or
(b) the offender was 18 or over and the victim was under 18." (para 59L).
[16] These provisions were not in force at the
date of the conviction in this case.
[17] Section 8 of the 2009 Act is a specific list
offence in the sense in which I have used that expression in Hay v HM
Adv (supra, at para [5]). If the Crown were to consider, in
a case of this kind, that the exposure was sexual in nature, it could avoid the
issue that has arisen in this appeal by charging the accused under
section 8.
Disposal
[18] I propose to your Lordships that we should allow
the appeal in this case.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord BracadaleLord Osborne
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[2012] HCJAC 25XJ572/10OPINION OF LORD BRACADALE
In the Appeal by
JAMES GERALD PATRICK HEATHERALL Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, EDINBURGH Respondent: _______
|
For the Appellant: Shead, Lenehan; Beaumont & Co, Edinburgh
For the Crown: Stewart QC, AD, McGuire; Crown Agent
15 February 2012
[19] For the reasons given by your Lordship in
the chair, I agree that the disposal of this appeal should be as proposed by
your Lordship.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord BracadaleLord Osborne
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[2012] HCJAC 25XJ572/10
OPINION OF LORD OSBORNE
In the Appeal by
JAMES GERALD PATRICK HEATHERALL Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, EDINBURGH Respondent: _______
|
For the Appellant: Shead, Lenehan; Beaumont & Co, Edinburgh
For the Crown: Stewart QC, AD, McGuire; Crown Agent
15 February 2012
[20] I agree with the Opinion of your Lordship in
the Chair and have nothing further to add.