KYLE, SECTION 74 APPEAL BY AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_45 (14 September 2017)


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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> KYLE, SECTION 74 APPEAL BY AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_45 (14 September 2017)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2018/[2018]_HCJAC_45.html
Cite as: 2018 GWD 27-341, [2018] HCJAC 45, [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_45, 2019 SCCR 1

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Menzies
Lord Turnbull
[2018] HCJAC 45
HCA/2017/449/XC
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LADY DORRIAN, the LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in
SECTION 74 APPEAL
by
RAYMOND KYLE
against
HER MAJESTY’S ADVOCATE
Appellant
Respondent
Appellant: Mackintosh; McCusker McElroy & Gallanagh
Respondent: Fraser AD; Crown Agent
14 September 2017
[1]       The appellant and a co-accused are charged with being concerned in the supply of a
Class A drug, namely Diamorphine. A First Diet on 10 July was continued to 17 July for
evidence of a police constable, PC Scott Sweetin, and for debate on a preliminary issue
raised by the defence challenging the admissibility of certain evidence upon which the
prosecution rely. That evidence related to the finding by police of bags of brown powder in
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2
the appellant’s house, following an entry which was forced for the preservation of life or
property. This turned out to be heroin and the recovery provided the evidential basis for the
charge. Following the finding of this item, the police immediately took no further action
other than to obtain a search warrant.
[2]       The sheriff ruled that the evidence was admissible, and this appeal relates to that
decision. It was maintained that (a) the officers did not have sufficient grounds for forcing
entry to the property; and (b) that in any event, once they had entered the property and
found no-one there, the police should have left, and the actions which led to the recovery of
the drugs being neither reasonable nor necessary, the evidence should not be admitted.
[3]       The circumstances were that PC Sweetin had been allocated a missing persons
inquiry of a “high risk” nature which is a categorisation given when there is understood to
be a fear of risk to the life and safety of the individuals concerned. With a colleague he went
to the property. He was unable to gain entry to the property, there being no response to his
knocking, and he could not see into it. He was aware that there was a dog inside, because he
could hear it barking. Inquiry with the neighbours indicated that the occupiers had not been
seen since the missing persons report had been made. PC Sweetin was advised by his
superior officer that there had been threats made against the individuals concerned. He was
instructed to gain entry. In evidence he stated that he did so because he understood he had
common law powers to do so if there were concerns for the safety of individuals, and he
wished to check that no harm had come to the persons who were the subject of the missing
persons inquiry. He considered that they could be lying hurt inside the property. It is
important to note that the officers were not investigating a crime, but proceeding on the
basis of concern for life and safety of individuals. It is also important to note that the sheriff
was satisfied that they were acting in good faith. Against that background the officer forced
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3
entry. Counsel submitted that the appropriate test for whether PC Sweetin was entitled to
force entry in the circumstances of this case could be found in Paton v Dunn 2012 SCCR 441,
paragraph 9:
“We note the opinion of the court in Turnbull v Scott that there is no absolute rule
that police officers may only enter private premises if they have a warrant or
statutory authority to do so; that, in the absence of such authority, their right
depends on the circumstances; and that one of the important circumstances is
whether they are acting in the execution of their duty. … It is plain that
circumstances will regularly occur in which it will be appropriate for police
officers to implement their duty to protect life by taking reasonable steps designed
to achieve that end. The question will generally be whether the police officers had
reasonable grounds for taking the intrusive step they did of forcing entry to a
private dwelling.”
In our view the sheriff was entitled to conclude that there were reasonable grounds for
doing so in this case.
[4]       Once inside the property, the officers found that the front door had been barricaded
by a sofa. They found that the back door was similarly barricaded. This, incidentally, might
well have given an increased basis for concern. The officers found dog faeces and urine in
the living room, the number of these suggesting that the dog had been there untended for
some time, at least a day. They looked in the rooms and found no one. In the kitchen,
PC Sweetin gave the dog some water, and decided to look for food for the dog. He also
decided to look for documents which might disclose the whereabouts of the individuals. He
opened a cupboard and found the brown powder which turned out to be heroin. It was
accepted that had the officers found documents lying about that would have been within the
acceptable limits of what they were entitled to do. It was also accepted in relation to both
parts of the argument that the threshold for intervention for the preservation of life or
property was not the same as that for the investigation of crime. However, it was submitted
that opening a cupboard either to look for documents or to feed the dog went beyond it.
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4
We are unable to accept that argument. In assessing the actions of the police it remains
relevant that they were not investigating a crime, as is the fact that they were acting in good
faith in this regard. They had lawfully entered the property in pursuit of their duty to
protect life and in our view looking in the cupboard for dog food or documents to help
trace the occupants- was not unreasonable and did not constitute an unlawful invasion of
the occupiers’ privacy.
[5]       Even if we were in error in reaching this latter conclusion, the minimal nature of the
intrusion once inside the property, and the whole circumstances, would have made the
actions readily excusable.



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