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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> R. v Steer [1986] UKHL 6 (02 July 1986)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1986/6.html
Cite as: [1986] UKHL 6, [1988] AC 111, [1987] 2 All ER 833, [1987] 3 WLR 205

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JISCBAILII_CASE_CRIME

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/247

    Regina
    v.

    Steer (Respondent)
    (On Appeal from the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division))

    JUDGMENT

    Die Jovis 2° Julii 1987

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom was
    referred the Cause Regina against Steer, That the Committee
    had heard Counsel on Thursday the 30th day of April last upon
    the Petition and Appeal of the Chief Constable of the
    Humberside Constabulary, County Police Headquarters, Queen's
    Gardens, Kingston-upon-Hull, Humberside, praying that the
    matter of the Order set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely
    an Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)
    of 16th May 1986, might be reviewed before Her Majesty the
    Queen in Her Court of Parliament and that the said Order might
    be reversed, varied or altered or that the Petitioner might
    have such other relief in the premises as to Her Majesty the
    Queen in Her Court of Parliament might seem meet; and Counsel
    having been heard on behalf of Dennis Steer, the Respondent to
    the said Appeal; and due consideration had this day of what
    was offered on either side in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and
    Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty the Queen
    assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's Court of
    Appeal (Criminal Division) of 16th May 1986 complained of in
    the said Appeal be, and the same is hereby, Affirmed; That the
    Certified Question be answered by a Declaration that:

    "Upon the true construction of section l(2)(b) of the
    Criminal Damage Act 1971 the prosecution are required to
    prove that the danger to life resulted from the
    destruction of or damage to property; it is not
    sufficient for the prosecution to prove that it resulted
    from the act of the defendant which caused the
    destruction or damage:"

    and that the said Petition and Appeal be, and the same is
    hereby, dismissed this House: And it is further Ordered That
    three-quarters of the costs of the Respondent incurred in
    Lincoln Crown Court be paid out of Central funds pursuant to
    section 16 of the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985; And it is
    also further Ordered, That the Cause be, and the same is
    hereby, remitted back to the Court of Appeal (Criminal
    Division) to do therein as shall be just and consistent with
    this Judgment.

    Cler: Parliamentor:

    Judgment: 2.7.87

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    REGINA
    v.

    STEER

    (RESPONDENT)

    (ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL

    DIVISION))

    Lord Bridge of Harwich
    Lord Griffiths
    Lord Ackner
    Lord Oliver of Aylmerton
    Lord Goff of Chieveley


    LORD BRIDGE OF HARWICH

    My Lords,

    In the early hours of 8 June 1985 the respondent went to
    the bungalow of his former business partner, David Gregory,
    against whom he bore some grudge. He was armed with an
    automatic .22 rifle. He rang the bell and woke Mr. and Mrs.
    Gregory, who looked out of their bedroom window. The respondent
    fired a shot aimed at the bedroom window. He then fired two
    further shots, one at another window and one at the front door.
    Fortunately no one was hurt. It was never suggested that the
    first shot had been aimed at Mr. or Mrs. Gregory.

    Arising from this incident the respondent was arraigned on
    an indictment containing three counts. He pleaded not guilty to
    possession of a firearm with intent to endanger life, contrary to
    section 16 of the Firearms Act 1968 (count 1) and to an offence
    of damaging property with intent, contrary to section 1(2) of the
    Criminal Damage Act 1971, which was alleged in the particulars as
    originally framed as having been committed "intending by the said
    damage to endanger the lives of David Gregory and Tina Gregory
    or being reckless as to whether the lives of David Gregory and
    Tina Gregory would be thereby endangered" (count 2). He pleaded
    guilty to a separate offence of damaging property, contrary to
    section 1(1) of the Act of 1971 (count 3).

    Section 1 of the Act of 1971 provides:

    "(1) A person who without lawful excuse destroys or
    damages any property belonging to another intending to
    destroy or damage any such property or being reckless as to
    whether any such property would be destroyed or damaged
    shall be guilty of an offence.

    - 1 -

    (2) A person who without lawful excuse destroys or
    damages any property, whether belonging to himself or
    another -

    1. intending to destroy or damage any property or being
      reckless as to whether any property would be
      destroyed or damaged; and

    2. intending by the destruction or damage to endanger
      the life of another or being reckless as to whether
      the life of another would be thereby endangered;

    shall be guilty of an offence.

    (3) An offence committed under this section by destroying
    or damaging property by fire shall be charged as arson."

    It is to be observed that the offence created by subsection
    (2), save that it may be committed by destroying or damaging
    one's own property, is simply an aggravated form of the offence
    created by subsection (1), in which the prosecution must prove, in
    addition to the ingredients of the offence under subsection (1), the
    further mental element specified by subsection (2)(b). In this case
    presumably count 2 was intended to relate to the damage done by
    the shot fired at the bedroom window and count 3 to the damage
    done by one or other or both of the other two shots. It is also
    significant to note the maximum penalties attaching to the three
    offences charged. For an offence under section 16 of the Act of
    1968 it is 14 years' imprisonment, for an offence under section
    1(2) of the Act of 1971 life imprisonment, for an offence under
    section 1(1) of the Act of 1971 10 years' imprisonment.

    At some stage in the trial the particulars of count 2 were
    amended by deleting the words alleging an intent to endanger life
    and leaving only recklessness in that regard as the mental element
    relied on to establish the offence under section 1(2). The
    prosecution, it appears, presented the case on the footing that
    counts 1 and 2 were alternatives and, if the case had been left to
    the jury, the judge would presumably have directed them that, if
    they found that the respondent intended to endanger the lives of
    Mr. and Mrs. Gregory they should convict on count 1, but if they
    found that he was merely reckless with regard to such danger,
    they should acquit on count 1 and convict on count 2.

    At the conclusion of the case for the prosecution, however,
    counsel for the respondent submitted that there was no case to
    answer on count 2 on the ground that, in so far as the lives of
    Mr. and Mrs. Gregory had been endangered, the danger had not
    been caused by the damage done to the bungalow, but by the shot
    fired from the respondent's rifle. Of course, it is obvious that
    any danger to life in this case was caused by the shot from the
    rifle itself, not by any trifling damage done to the bedroom
    window or to any property in the bedroom. But the judge rejected
    counsel's submission and accepted the submission made for the
    Crown that the phrase in section l(2)(b) of the Act of 1971 "by
    the destruction or damage" refers on its true construction not only
    to the destruction or damage to property as the cause of the
    danger to life on which the mental element in the aggravated
    offence under the subsection depends, but also to the act of the

    - 2 -

    defendant which causes that destruction or damage. On the basis
    of the judge's ruling the respondent changed his plea to guilty on
    count 2. He appealed against conviction on the ground that the
    judge's ruling was erroneous. The Court of Appeal (Criminal
    Division) (Neill L.J., Peter Pain and Gatehouse JJ.) allowed the
    appeal, but certified that their decision involved a question of law
    of general public importance in the following terms:

    "Whether, upon a true construction of section 1 (2)(b) of the
    Criminal Damage Act 1971, the prosecution are required to
    prove that the danger to life resulted from the destruction
    of or damage to the property, or whether it is sufficient for
    the prosecution to prove that it resulted from the act of
    the defendant which caused the destruction or damage."

    The Crown now appeals by leave of your Lordships' House.

    We must, of course, approach the matter on the footing,
    implicit in the outcome of the trial, that the respondent, in firing
    at the bedroom window, had no intent to endanger life, but
    accepts that he was reckless as to whether life would be

    endangered.


    Under both limbs of section 1 of the Act of 1971 it is the
    essence of the offence which the section creates that the
    defendant has destroyed or damaged property. For the purpose of
    analysis it may be convenient to omit reference to destruction and
    to concentrate on the references to damage, which was all that
    was here involved. To be guilty under subsection (1) the defendant
    must have intended or been reckless as to the damage to property
    which he caused. To be guilty under subsection (2) he must
    additionally have intended to endanger life or been reckless as to
    whether life would be endangered "by the damage" to property
    which he caused. This is the context in which the words must be
    construed and it seems to me impossible to read the words "by the
    damage" as meaning "by the damage or by the act which caused
    the damage." Moreover, if the language of the statute has the
    meaning for which the Crown contends, the words "by the
    destruction or damage" and "thereby" in subsection (2)(b) are mere
    surplusage. If the Crown's submission is right, the only additional
    element necessary to convert a subsection (1) offence into a
    subsection (2) offence is an intent to endanger life or recklessness
    as to whether life would be endangered simpliciter.

    It would suffice as a ground for dismissing this appeal if the
    statute were ambiguous, since any such ambiguity in a criminal
    statute should be resolved in favour of the defence. But I can
    find no ambiguity. It seems to me that the meaning for which
    the respondent contends is the only meaning which the language
    can bear.

    The contrary construction leads to anomalies which
    Parliament cannot have intended. If A and B both discharge
    firearms in a public place, being reckless as to whether life would
    be endangered, it would be absurd that A, who incidentally causes
    some trifling damage to property, should be guilty of an offence
    punishable with life imprisonment, but that B, who causes no
    damage, should be guilty of no offence. In the same
    circumstances, if A is merely reckless but B actually intends to

    - 3 -

    endanger life, it is scarcely less absurd that A should be guilty of
    the graver offence under section 1(2) of the Act of 1971, B of the
    lesser offence under section 16 of the Firearms Act 1968.

    Counsel for the Crown did not shrink from arguing that
    section 1(2) of the Act of 1971 had created, in effect, a general
    offence of endangering life with intent or recklessly, however the
    danger was caused, but had incidentally included as a necessary,
    albeit insignificant, ingredient of the offence that some damage to
    property should also be caused. In certain fields of legislation it
    is sometimes difficult to appreciate the rationale of particular
    provisions, but in a criminal statute it would need the clearest
    language to persuade me that the legislature had acted so
    irrationally, indeed perversely, as acceptance of this argument
    would imply.

    It was further argued that to affirm the construction of
    section 1(2)(b) adopted by the Court of Appeal would give rise to
    problems in other cases in which it might be difficult or even
    impossible to distinguish between the act causing damage to
    property and the ensuing damage caused as the source of danger
    to life. In particular it was suggested that in arson cases the jury
    would have to be directed that they could only convict if the
    danger to life arose from falling beams or similar damage caused
    by the fire, not if the danger arose from the heat, flames or
    smoke generated by the fire itself. Arson is, of course, the prime
    example of a form of criminal damage to property which, in the
    case of an occupied building, necessarily involves serious danger to
    life and where the gravity of the consequence which may result as
    well from recklessness as from a specific intent fully justifies the
    severity of the penalty which the Act of 1971 provides for the
    offence. But the argument in this case is misconceived. It is not
    the match and the inflammable materials, the flaming firebrand or
    any other inflammatory agent which the arsonist uses to start the
    fire which causes danger to life, it is the ensuing conflagration
    which occurs as the property which has been set on fire is
    damaged or destroyed. When the victim in the bedroom is
    overcome by the smoke or incinerated by the flames as the
    building burns, it would be absurd to say that this does not result
    from the damage to the building.

    Counsel for the Crown put forward other examples of cases
    which he suggested ought to be liable to prosecution under section
    1(2) of the Act of 1971 including that of the angry mob of
    striking miners who throw a hail of bricks through the window of
    the cottage occupied by the working miner and that of people who
    drop missiles from motorway bridges on passing vehicles. I believe
    that the criminal law provides adequate sanctions for these cases
    without the need to resort to section 1(2) of the Act of 1971.
    But if my belief is mistaken, this would still be no reason to
    distort the plain meaning of that subsection.

    Some reference was also made to damage caused by
    explosives. This is the subject of specific provision under the
    Explosive Substances Act 1883 as amended. The offence created
    by section 3(l)(a) of that Act as substituted by section 7(1) of the
    Criminal Jurisdiction Act 1975, of doing "any act with intent to
    cause ... by an explosive substance an explosion of a nature
    likely to endanger life, or cause serious injury to property"

    - 4 -

    obviates the need to resort to the Act of 1971 when explosives
    are used.

    The trial judge was, it seems, in large part persuaded to
    rule as he did in reliance on a sentence from the judgment of the
    Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) delivered by Parker L.J. in
    Reg. v. Hardie [1985] 1 WLR 64, 67, where he said in reference
    to the state of mind of a defendant who commits the actus reus
    of an alleged offence under section 1(2) of the Act of 1971:

    "If, when doing that act, he creates an obvious risk both
    that property will be destroyed and that the life of another
    will be endangered and gives no thought to the possibility of
    there being either risk, the requirements of the subsection
    are in our judgment clearly satisfied."

    The case of Hardie was concerned solely with the effect of self-
    administered tranquillising drugs on the state of mind of the
    defendant. It had nothing whatever to do with the issue of
    causation arising in the instant case. If I may say so without
    offence, the judge's error vividly illustrates the danger, which is
    particularly acute in the field of statutory construction, of reading
    a judicial dictum entirely out of context and treating the precise
    words used as relevant to the decision of an issue to which the
    author of the words had never applied his mind.

    I can well understand that the prosecution in this case
    thought it necessary and appropriate that, even if they could not
    establish the intent to endanger life necessary to support a
    conviction under section 16 of the Act of 1968, they should
    include a count in the indictment to mark in some way the
    additional gravity of an offence of criminal damage to property in
    which a firearm is used. But they had no need to resort to
    section 1(2) of the Act of 1971. A person who, at the time of
    committing an offence under section 1 of the Act of 1971, has in
    his possession a firearm commits a distinct offence under section
    17(2) of the Act of 1968: see Schedule 1 to the Act of 1968, as
    amended by section 11(7) of the Act of 1971. If the respondent
    had been charged with that offence in addition to the offence
    under section 1(1) of the Act of 1971, he must have pleaded guilty
    to both and, if the prosecution were content to accept that there
    was no intent to endanger life, this would have been amply
    sufficient to mark the gravity of the respondent's criminal conduct
    in the incident at the Gregory bungalow.

    I would accordingly dismiss the appeal. The certified
    question should be answered as follows:

    "Upon the true construction of section 1 (2)(b) of the
    Criminal Damage Act 1971 the prosecution are required to
    prove that the danger to life resulted from the destruction
    of or damage to property; it is not sufficient for the
    prosecution to prove that it resulted from the act of the
    defendant which caused the destruction or damage."

    - 5 -

    LORD GRIFFITHS

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    delivered by my noble and learned friend Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    For the reasons which he has given I agree that the appeal should
    be dismissed and I would answer the certified question in the way
    in which he has suggested.

    LORD ACKNER

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    delivered by my noble and learned friend Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    For the reasons which he has given I also agree that the appeal
    should be dismissed and the certified question answered in the
    manner indicated by him.

    LORD OLIVER OF AYLMERTON

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    delivered by my noble and learned friend Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    For the reasons which he has given I agree that the appeal should
    be dismissed and the certified question answered in the sense
    which he has indicated.

    LORD GOFF OF CHIEVELEY

    My Lords,

    I have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech
    delivered by my noble and learned friend Lord Bridge of Harwich.
    For the reasons which he has given I also agree that the appeal
    should be dismissed and the certified question answered in the
    manner indicated by him.

    -6 -


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