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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> DPP v Luft [1976] UKHL 4 (26 May 1976) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1976/4.html Cite as: [1977] AC 962, [1976] UKHL 4 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1281
Lord
Diplock
Lord Salmon
Lord
Edmund-Davies
Lord
Fraser of Tullybelton
Lord
Russell of Killowen
house of lords
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS (APPELLANT)
v.
LUFT
AND ANOTHER (RESPONDENTS)
(on Appeal from a Divisional Court
of the Queen's Bench Division)
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS (APPELLANT)
v.
DUFFIELD (RESPONDENT)
(on Appeal
from a Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench Division)
[Consolidated
Appeals]
Lord Diplock
MY LORDS,
At the
Parliamentary General Election held in October 1974,
candidates
representing a political party known as The National
Front stood for election
in three Lancashire constituencies,
Blackley, Bolton East, and Bolton West.
In all three
constituencies candidates representing the Labour, Conservative
and
Liberal Parties were also standing for election, and in the Bolton
West
constituency there was a fifth canditdate who described
himself as a " More
Prosperous Britain " candidate.
The
respondents, Luft and Atkinson, were members of an
association
calling itself " The Greater Manchester
Anti-Fascist Committee". The
respondent, Duffield, was a
member of the " Bolton Anti-Fascist Commit-
tee ". All
three respondents were strongly opposed to the policies advocated
by
the National Front. In the course of the election campaign, Luft
and
Atkinson distributed in the Blackley constituency and Duffield
distributed
in the Bolton East and Bolton West constituencies
pamphlets urging voters
" Don't Vote National Front" and
accusing members of that political party
of being liars and
fascists.
Each of
the respondents was charged with offences under section 63 of
the
Representation of the People Act 1949 of incurring, without
authorisation
in writing of an election agent, the expense of
issuing publications with a
view to promoting or procuring the
election of a candidate at the parlia-
mentary election in the
constituency in which that respondent had distributed
pamphlets ;
and also with offences under section 95 of that Act of causing
to
be distributed for the like purpose a printed document which did not
bear
upon its face the name and address of the printer and
publisher.
The
charges against Luft and Atkinson were heard in the Manchester
City
Magistrates Court by the stipendary magistrate. He dismissed
them on the
ground that to constitute an offence under either
section, it was necessary to
prove an intention on the part of the
accused to promote or procure the
election of one particular
candidate only ; an intention to prevent the return
of one out of
three or more candidates did not suffice.
The
charges against Duffield were heard by the justices at the
Bolton
Magistrates Court. They took a different view of the law
from the stipendary
magistrate. The respondent. Duffield, was
convicted and fined £10 for each
offence.
Appeals
were brought by way of case stated against both decisions. They
were
heard together by the Divisional Court. The appeal against
the
acquittal of Luft and Atkinson was dismissed; that of Duffield
against his
2
conviction
was allowed. The Divisional Court certified that a point
of
general public importance was involved in their decisions,
namely: —
"
Whether on a prosecution under section 63 of the Representation of
"
the People Act 1949 it is necessary to prove that expense was in-
"
curred with a view to promoting or procuring the election of a
particu-
" lar candidate and insufficient to establish that
the view or motive of
" the person incurring the expense was
to prevent the election of a
" particular candidate."
Leave to
appeal, which had been refused by the Divisional Court, was
granted
by their Lordships' House in both cases and the appeals were heard
as consolidated appeals.
•
Section
63(1) of the Representation of the People Act 1949 is one of a
number
of sections designed to limit the amount of money which a candi-
date
and his supporters may spend on soliciting the votes of the electors
in
the constituency in which he is standing for election. It reads
as follows: —
(1) No
expenses shall, with a view to promoting or procuring the
"
election of a candidate at an election, be incurred by any person
other
" than the candidate, his election agent and persons
authorised in writing
" by the election agent on account—
" (a) of holding public meetings or organising any public display ;
or
"
(b) of issuing advertisements, circulars or publications ; or
" (c)
of otherwise presenting to the electors the candidate or his
"
views or the extent or nature of his backing or disparaging
"
another candidate:
" Provided that paragraph (c) of this subsection shall not—
" (i)
restrict the publication of any matter relating to the election
"
in a newspaper or other periodical; or
" (ii) . . '
Expenditure
under this subsection which has been authorised by the
election
agent of a candidate is treated as part of the election expenses
of
the candidate and counts against the maximum amount which may
be spent
on his behalf.
By
subsection (5) a person who incurs any expenses in contravention
of
this section is guilty of a corrupt practice.
Section
95(1) reads as follows: —
" (1) A person shall not—
" (a)
print or publish, or cause to be printed or published, any
bill,
" placard or poster having reference to an election or
any printed
" document distributed for the purpose of
promoting or pro-
" curing the election of a candidate, or
" (b)
post or cause to be posted any such bill, placard or poster as
"
aforesaid, or
" (c)
distribute or cause to be distributed any printed document
"
for the said purpose,
"
unless the bill, placard, poster or document bears upon the face
"
thereof the name and address of the printer and publisher."
By subsection (3) a contravention of this section is made an illegal practice.
Before
1948 the predecessor of section 63(1) had been section 34(1) of
the
Representation of the People Act 1918. This was in the
following terms: —
" (1)
A person other than the election agent of a candidate shall not
"
incur any expenses on account of holding public meetings or issuing
"
advertisements, circulars or publications for the purpose of
promoting
" or procuring the election of any candidate at a
parliamentary election,
" unless he is authorised in writing
to do so by such election agent."
D.P.P. v Luft
3
Its
application to facts very similar to those in the instant appeals had
been
considered by the Court of Criminal Appeal in R. v.
Hailwood [1928] 2 K.B.
277. In that case, during a
parliamentary by-election in which there were
three candidates,
Conservative, Liberal and Labour, the accused had in-
curred
expenses on account of issuing publications which were
antagonistic
to the Conservative candidate and advised the
constituents not to vote for
him, but did not in express terms
advise them to vote for either of the other
candidates. It was
held by the court that this constituted an offence under
section
34(1). In delivering the judgment of the court, Avory J. said: —
" It
is now suggested that, in a case like the present, where there are
"
three candidates representing three different political parties,
Con-
" servative, Liberal and Labour, if a person who is not
authorised by
" the election agent of a candidate incurs
expenses of the kind in
" question he cannot be convicted
under the section, which prohibits
" the incurring of the
expenses for the purpose of promoting or pro-
" curing the
election of ' any candidate ', unless it be shown definitely
"
that he had the intention of promoting or procuring the election of
"
one of these three candidates in particular. The answer to that
sug-
" gestion is that the expression ' any candidate' in the
section is not
" limited to one candidate only, since it is
provided by the Interpreta-
" tion Act. 1889 (52 & 53
Vict. c. 63), section 1 subsection (1)(b), that
"
words in the singular shall include the plural. It is further said
that the
" appellant is not liable, inasmuch as while he
endeavoured to prevent
" the election of one of the
candidates, he did not directly promote
" or procure the
election of any of them. If, however, a person has done
"
what is forbidden by the section for a purpose which must have the
"
effect of promoting or procuring the election of a candidate or
candi-
" dates then there can be no question that he has
committed an offence
" under the section."
In the
view of the Divisional Court in the instant case, the difference
in
language between section 34(1) of the 1918 Act and section
63(1) of the 1949
Act and, in particular, the substitution of the
words " with a view to promo-
" ting or procuring
the election of a candidate " for the corresponding
words
" for the purpose of promoting or procuring, the
election of any candidate"
gave to the new section a
meaning which had the effect of overruling the
decision in R.
v. Hailwood.
In their
Lordships' view, so far as the meaning of the subsection is
con-
cerned no significance can be attached to these substitutions
(which I have
italicised). The substantive alteration to section
34(1) of the 1918 Act which
was affected by section 63(1) of the
1949 Act was to add to the matters upon
which expenses could not
be incurred without the written authority of an
election agent. In
order to make this addition the draftsman found it
necessary to
re-arrange the order of words which his predecessor had adopted
in
section 34(1). In this re-arrangement the retention of the phrase "
for the
" purpose of " would have been inelegant as a
matter of draftsmanship as
compared with the use of the equivalent
phrase " with a view to " to convey
the same meaning.
Similarly the substitution of " a " for " any "
was called
for as a matter of draftsmanship by the subsequent
references to " the can-
" didate " and "
another candidate ". In my view these substitutions
are
stylistic only. The substituted words mean the same as those
which fell to
be construed in R. v. Hailwood.
The
construction placed by the Court of Criminal Appeal on section
34(1)
of the Act of 1918 had stood unchallenged for twenty years
by the time
what is now section 63(1) of the 1949 Act was first
enacted by section 42(1)
of the Representation of the People Act
1948. Had Parliament intended to
overrule it, it would have done
so explicitly and not inferentially by the sub-
stitution of one
phrase for another which is apparently synonymous. R.
v.
Hailwood remains strong persuasive authority ; but it is still
for your
Lordships to decide for yourselves whether it is right
and governs the instant
appeals.
4
In the
argument before this House, counsel for the respondents did not
seek
to rely upon any difference in meaning between " with a view to
" and
"for the purpose of". Both phrases, he said,
referred to the dominant
intention of the accused in doing the act
complained of. The expression
dominant intention is borrowed from
cases which turned on the meaning of
the words " with a view
of giving such creditor a preference over the other
"creditors"
in section 48(1) of the Bankruptcy Act 1883. The law as to
fraudulent
preference in bankruptcy had been the subject of judicial
con-
sideration long before the passing of the Bankruptcy Act 1883
and, as
appears from the speeches in Sharp v. Jackson [1889]
A.C. 419, the courts,
including this House, were much influenced
by the previous law as to
fraudulent preference in the
construction they gave to the section. For that
reason I do not
regard these cases as a reliable guide to the construction of
section
63(1) of the Representation of the People Act 1949. To speak of
a
dominant intention suggests that a desire to achieve one
particular purpose
can alone be causative of human actions;
whereas so many human actions
are prompted by a desire to kill two
birds with one stone. For my part I
prefer to omit the adjective "
dominant". In my view the offence under
section 63(1) to (5)
is committed by the accused if his desire to promote or
procure
the election of a candidate was one of the reasons which played
a
part in inducing him to incur the expense.
It was
next argued for the respondents that the rule of construction
in
section 2(1)(b) of the Interpretation Act 1889,
that " words in the singular
" shall include the plural
" has no application to the words " a candidate "
in
the context of promoting or procuring his election since a
contrary
intention does appear from that context. When the Act was
passed and at
all times thereafter all parliamentary
constituencies have been single-member
constituencies, though at
the passing of the Act this was not the case with
all local
government elections, to which section 63 also applies. So
the
context required the plural in the case of local government
elections. As
respects parliamentary elections, while it is true
to say that it is not possible
to " procure the election "
in any constituency of " candidates " in the plural,
the
subsection deals with promoting the election of a candidate as well
as
procuring his election, and it does so disjunctively. In my
view promoting
as distinct from procuring the election of a
candidate means improving his
chances of being elected ; and in a
parliamentary constituency for which there
are more than two
candidates this can be accomplished for " candidates "
(in
the plural) by persuading electors in the constituency not to vote
for one
of their rivals.
My Lords,
where there are more than two candidates for a constituency,
to
persuade electors not to vole for one of those candidates in
order to prevent
his being elected must have the effect of
improving the collective prospect
of success of the other
candidates though it may be uncertain which one of
them will
benefit most. So in anyone sophisticated enough politically to
want
to intermeddle in a parliamentary election at all, an intention to
prevent
the election of one candidate will involve also an
intention to improve the
chances of success of the remaining
candidate if there is only one, or of one
or other of the
remaining candidates if there are more than one, although
the
person so intending may be indifferent as to which of them will
be
successful.
So I would answer the certified question: —
" On
a prosecution under section 63 of the Representation of the
"
People Act 1949 it is not necessary to prove that the expense was
"
incurred with the intention of promoting or procuring the election
of
" one particular candidate but it is sufficient to
establish an intention
" on the part of the person incurring
the expense to prevent the election
" of a particular
candidate or particular candidates."
In the
instant case it was found as a fact by the Bolton justices that
the
pamphlets were distributed by the respondent Duffield for the
purpose of
5
procuring
or promoting the election of a candidate other than the
National
Front candidate even though those documents did not
support a particular
candidate. The respondents Luft and Atkinson
did not go into the witness
box to give direct evidence of their
intentions but left these to be inferred
from the prosecution's
evidence as to what they had done. Although the
stipendary
magistrate has not been so explicit as the justices, a
similar
finding of fact as to the intentions of Luft and Atkinson
is in my view
implicit in the way in which the case has been
stated by him; and counsel
for the respondents has not sought to
distinguish their cases from that of
Duffield.
For the
reasons I have given these findings as to the intentions of
the
respondents are sufficient in my opinion to support their
convictions for
offences under section 63 and section 95 of the
Act. For the sake of
completeness, however, it is necessary to
deal briefly with an alternative
contention for the respondents
under section 63 that was raised for the first
time in your
Lordships' House and does not figure in the judgment of
the
Divisional Court.
This
contention is that since the pamphlets do not positively
recommend
support for any of the candidates representing political
parties other than
the National Front, the only way in which they
can be brought within the
ambit of section 63 is as publications "
disparaging another candidate".
The argument proceeds that in
the immediately preceding phrase, " present-
" ing to
the electors the candidate or his views or the extent or nature of
his
" backing " a distinction is drawn between the
candidate on the one hand
and his views or backing on the other ;
that a similar distinction was intended
to be drawn when the word
" candidate " alone was used in reference to
disparagement;
and that criticism of the personal character or conduct of
the
candidate divorced from any criticism of the political views that he
held
was all that was covered by the paragraph. "
Disparaging" is not the
antonym of " presenting ".
In my view it is to be understood in its ordinary
and natural
meaning. A person may be disparaged by attacks upon the
political
views he holds as well as by attacks upon his personal conduct.
The
pamphlets in the instant case are obvious specimens of
disparagement.
Before
leaving the matter it is desirable to refer to two cases relied
upon
by the Court of Appeal in support of their view that in
section 63 the words
" a candidate " in the context of
promoting or procuring his election meant
only one particular
candidate and that consequently the certified question
ought to be
answered " Yes ". These were R. v. Tronoh Mines Ltd.
[1952] 1
AU E.R. 697 and Grieve v. Douglas-Home 1965 SLT 186. In the former case
the defendant, while a general
election was pending, published in a national
newspaper an
advertisement attacking the financial policy of the outgoing
Labour
government. McNair J. held that section 63 was not intended
to
prohibit expenditure incurred on advertisements designed to
support the
interest of a particular party generally in all
constituencies, at any rate at the
time of a general election and
not supporting a particular candidate in a
particular
constituency. He founded his judgment exclusively on the word-
ing
of paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of section 63(1). R.
v. Hailwood was not
referred to in the judgment or the
argument and the Court of Appeal in the
instant case are mistaken
in supposing that McNair J. made any reference to
the change from
" any candidate " in the 1918 Act to " a candidate "
in the
1949 Act. He did however accept as a reasonable and
possible construction
of section 63 that candidate was intended to
mean one candidate only. In
this, for the reasons that I have
given, I think that he was wrong, although
I cast no doubt upon
the correctness of the actual decision in the case.
Grieve
v. Douglas-Home was a case in which the complaint against
the
defendant was of a wholly different character and is not, in
my view, of any
assistance. It was relied upon by the Court of
Appeal for the statement by
Lord Migdale that the test of
intention is subjective and that what has to be
6
considered
is the intention or motive in the mind of the person " who
in-
curred the expense ". But this has never been disputed by
the Crown in the
instant case.
I would
therefore allow both of the appeals from the orders of the Divisional
Court so far as those orders dealt with charges under section 63 or
section
95(l)(c).
The order
made in the appeal by the respondent Duffield included also
the
quashing of his conviction upon a charge under section
95(1)(b) causing to be
posted a poster having reference to
the election, not bearing on its face the
name and address of the
printer. No argument had been addressed to the
Divisional Court
directed to this charge, the legal characteristics of which
are
different from those of the other charges. There is no reference to
it in
their reasons for judgment. In these circumstances counsel
for the appellant
is content not to invite this House to restore
the conviction on this charge,
but without conceding that it could
not have been sustained if argument had
been heard on it.
Lord Salmon
MY LORDS,
I have had
the advantage of reading in draft the speech prepared by my
noble
and learned friend, Lord Diplock. and for the reasons given by him
I
would allow these appeals.
Lord Edmund-Davies
MY LORDS,
I am in
respectful and unqualified agreement with the reasons developed
in
the speech of my noble and learned friend Lord Diplock for holding
that
these consolidated appeals should be allowed.
Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
MY LORDS,
I have had
the advantage of reading in print the speech of my noble and
learned
friend, Lord Diplock, and I agree with it.
I should
add that I do not exclude the possibility that there may
be
circumstances in which an intention to prevent the election of
a particular
candidate might form but an insignificant part of a
person's motives in
persuading electors not to vote for that
candidate. If a person believes that,
even in the absence of any
persuasion of electors by him, the number of
votes cast in the
election for that candidate would be so small as to give
him no
chance at all of being elected, the attempt to persuade electors
not
to vote for that candidate may be undertaken for some other
purpose such as
personal dislike or a desire to demonstrate a
paucity of popular support for
the policies of the candidate but
without any intention to promote the election
of the other
candidates or any of them. The possibility than anyone would
incur
expense for so limited a purpose is probably remote, but in a
case
where the court was left with a reasonable doubt whether that
was the
accused's purpose, it would in my opinion be bound to find
him not guilty
of an offence under section 63(1) or section 95(1)
of the Act.
I would
allow both the appeals so far as they relate to charges under
section
63 and section 95(l)(c).
7
Lord Russell of Killowen
MY LORDS,
I too have
had the advantage of reading in draft the speech to be delivered
by
my noble and learned friend, Lord Diplock. I agree with it, and I
would
therefore allow these appeals.
300292 DJ 896296 100 h/76 SiS