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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Welch v. The Attorney General (Antigua and Barbuda) [2013] UKPC 21 (09 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2013/21.html Cite as: [2013] UKPC 21 |
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[2013] UKPC 21
Privy Council Appeal No 0041 of 2012
JUDGMENT
Everton Welch (Appellant) v The Attorney General of Antigua and Barbuda (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of Antigua and Barbuda
before
Lord Hope
Lady Hale
Lord Kerr
Lord Wilson
Lord Hughes
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD KERR
ON
9 JULY 2013
Heard on 24 April 2013
Appellant Dr David Dorsett Ph.D Mr Fitzmore Harris (Instructed by MA Law (Solicitors) LLP) |
Respondent Justin Simon QC (Attorney General) Carla Brookes-Harris (Crown Solicitor) (Instructed by Charles Russell LLP) |
LORD KERR:
"Upon every conviction for murder, the court shall pronounce sentence of death provided that sentence of death shall not be pronounced on or recorded against a person convicted of an offence if it appears to the court that at the time when the offence was committed he was under the age of eighteen years; but in lieu thereof the court shall sentence him to be detained during Her Majesty's pleasure; and if so sentenced he shall be liable to be detained in such place and under such conditions as the Governor-General may direct "
"Any person who is unlawfully arrested or detained by any other person shall, subject to such defences as may be provided by law, be entitled to compensation for such unlawful arrest or detention from the person who made the arrest or effected the detention, from any person or authority on whose behalf the person making the arrest or effecting the detention was acting or from them both "
"21. The court directs that the claimant should be brought before a court at the earliest convenient time on an application to review the detention of the claimant at Her Majesty's Prison from 1993 to 2011 so that the court can make its pleasure known in relation to the continued detention of the claimant. It may well be that the time already served in prison by the claimant and his behaviour whilst in prison may earn him immediate release from prison, but this is to be determined by the court upon application by the claimant to the court to make known its pleasure."
"The question here is simply whether, on the hypothesis under consideration, the victims of the false imprisonment have suffered any loss which should be compensated in more than nominal damages. Exemplary damages apart, the purpose of damages is to compensate the victims of civil wrongs for the loss and damage that the wrongs have caused. If the power to detain had been exercised by the application of lawful policies it is inevitable that the appellants would have been detained. In short, they suffered no loss or damage as a result of the unlawful exercise of the power to detain. They should receive no more than nominal damages."
"There is no indication in the reports that the Board has been shown that any consideration was being given to the question as to how long it would be appropriate for the appellants to be detained or to their progress and development while they were in custody. They were given no reason to think that their detention was not to continue indefinitely. The possibility that this breach of their constitutional rights had a significant effect on them cannot be entirely ruled out. There is, therefore, something to be said for the view that an award of damages might be appropriate."
"'An award of compensation will go some distance towards vindicating the infringed constitutional right. How far it goes will depend on the circumstances, but in principle it may well not suffice. The fact that the right violated was a constitutional right adds an extra dimension to the wrong. An additional award, not necessarily of substantial size, may be needed to reflect the sense of public outrage, emphasise the importance of the constitutional right and the gravity of the breach and deter further breaches. All these elements have a place in this additional award Although such an award, where called for, is likely in most cases to cover much the same ground in financial terms as would an award by way of punishment in the strict sense of retribution, punishment in the latter sense is not its object. Accordingly, the expressions "punitive damages" or "exemplary damages" are better avoided as descriptions of this type of additional award."
"The relevant principles are not in doubt. Exemplary damages may be awarded in three categories of case: see per Lord Devlin in Rookes v Barnard [1964] AC 1129. The category which is relevant for present purposes is that there has been 'an arbitrary and outrageous use of executive power' (p 1223) and 'oppressive, arbitrary or unconstitutional action by the servants of the government' p 1226. In this category of case, the purpose of exemplary damages is to restrain the gross misuse of power: see AB v South West Water Services Ltd [1993] QB 507, 529 per Sir Thomas Bingham MR. It must be shown that the 'conscious wrongdoing by a defendant is so outrageous, his disregard of the claimant's rights so contumelious, that something more [than compensatory damages] is needed to show that the law will not tolerate such behaviour' as a 'remedy of last resort': see Kuddus v Chief Constable of Leicestershire Constabulary [2002] 2 AC 122 para 63 per Lord Nicholls."
"[I]t would not be appropriate to make an award both by way of exemplary damages and for breach of constitutional rights. When the vindicatory function of the latter head of damages has been discharged, with the element of deterrence that a substantial award carries with it, the purpose of exemplary damages has largely been achieved."