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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> O'Connell, R (on the application of) v The Parole Board & Anor [2009] EWCA Civ 575 (23 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2009/575.html Cite as: [2009] ACD 55, [2009] 1 WLR 2539, [2009] WLR 2539, [2009] EWCA Civ 575 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
(LORD JUSTICE LATHAM & MR JUSTICE SIMON)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
and
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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R (ON THE APPLICATION OF DAVID O' CONNELL) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE PAROLE BOARD & ANR |
Respondent |
____________________
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Mr S Kovats & Mr B Jaffey (instructed by Treasury Sols.) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
"death or serious personal injury, whether physical or psychological" [section 224(3)]:
"Extended sentence under section 257 may be imposed on an offender over the age of 18 for an offence committed after 3 April 2005, which is a "specified offence" but not a "serious offence". Schedule 15 to the 2003 Act provides for specified offences which are violent or sexual offences; they are not serious offences if they are punishable by a maximum prison term of less than ten years. The court must impose an extended sentence if it considers that there is a significant risk to members of the public of serious harm occasioned by the Commission by the offender of further specified violent or sexual offences" [section 227(1B)].
"1. Does Article 5(4) apply to a person serving an extended sentence imposed under s. 227 of the 2003 Act as soon as he has served one half of the appropriate custodial term?
2. Did article 5(4), or alternatively the common law, entitle [the appellant] to an oral hearing before the Parole Board in the circumstances of the case?
3. What is the appropriate test for the Parole Board to apply under s. 247(3) of the 2003 Act when determining whether it remains necessary for the protection of the public that the prisoner should be confined?"
"The question raised by the first issue is whether detention during the second half of the custodial period of an extended sentence under the 2003 Act is justified by the original sentence, so that there is no separate authority for the detention engaging Article 5(4) or whether in the second half of the custodial period, detention is justified on a fresh legal basis, that is the decision of the Parole Board not to direct release."
I should here set out the material provisions of Article 5:
"1. Everyone has the right to liberty and security of person. No one shall be deprived of his liberty save in the following cases and in accordance with a procedure prescribed by law: (a) the lawful detention of a person after conviction by a competent court;"
Then I may go to paragraph 4:
"Everyone who is deprived of his liberty by arrest or detention shall be entitled to take
proceedings by which the lawfulness of his detention shall be decided speedily by a court and his release ordered if the detention is not lawful."
"14. It seems to me, having considered all these authorities, that the question as to whether or not Article 5(4) is engaged is not answered by any formal analysis of the original order of the court in cases such as the present. The question is whether, bearing in mind its purpose, namely to prevent arbitrariness, it has a function to perform and the particular circumstances of the case in question. In the present case, the decision as to whether or not to direct release is critical to the claimant's entitlement to release after he has served one half of the custodial period. That decision is capable of being an arbitrary decision unless controlled by a mechanism which is Article 5(4) compliant. In other words there is a clear purpose to be served by the Article in this context, in exactly the same way as it has a function to perform in the case of indeterminate sentences."
Accordingly Latham LJ, with whom Simon J agreed, answered question 1 in the affirmative.
"81. Cogently though these judgments are reasoned, and broadly sympathetic though I am to the conclusions they arrive at, I have finally come to regard them as mistaken. In the end they seem to me to involve widening the reach of article 5(4) beyond its proper limits, certainly beyond its hitherto recognised scope. Article 5(4) cannot be held to apply merely because it would be useful if it did -- because 'it has a function to perform', 'a clear purpose to be served': O Connell [2008] 1 WLR 979, para 14. There is suggested to be a risk of arbitrariness in the operation of the parole system if the Secretary of State can overrule the Parole Board on the question of risk. But the Secretary of State's decision is, of course, judicially reviewable and, if found arbitrary or irrational, it will be struck down. There was, indeed, an irrationality challenge in this very case but it failed before the judge and permission to appeal was refused in respect of it. There is nothing intrinsically objectionable (certainly in Convention terms) in allowing the executive, subject to judicial review, to take the parole decision, notwithstanding that it involves rejecting another body's recommendation. In one sense it may be said to be putting the cart before the horse. And, as we said in Clift, it is indefensibly anomalous. But it is not contrary to article 5(4).
82. There was no need for the Parole Board to have been involved in the process at all: a state could perfectly lawfully, and consistently with the Convention, leave the entire question of release, whether absolutely or on licence, and whether throughout the sentence or only after a given period, solely to the executive. Does then the fact that the United Kingdom has chosen to give the Parole Board a role in the process and statutory directions as to how to approach that role, and has chosen to fix precisely the period within a determinate sentence during which the prisoner is to be considered for parole (the period before which he cannot be released and after which he must be released), mean that article 5(4) is necessarily thereby engaged so that the board's decision must be final?
83. In my judgment not. The essential contrast struck by the European court is between on the one hand 'the administrative implementation of the sentence of the court', for example decisions regarding 'early or conditional release from a determinate term of imprisonment' (para 87 of the court's judgment in Stafford 35 EHRR 1121 set out at para 67 above) and on the other hand 'fixing the tariff' and later determining the length of post-tariff detention in life sentence cases. The administrative implementation of determinate sentences does not engage article 5(4); the decision when to release a prisoner subject to an indeterminate sentence does.
84. Cases such as Van Droogenbroeck 4 EHRR 443 and E v Norway 17 EHRR 30 to my mind ultimately weaken, not strengthen, the respondent's argument. As the court observed in Van Droogenbroeck (see para 68 above), the detention provided for there was 'striking for its relatively indeterminate character' -- analogous therefore to a life sentence considering the impact of article 5 on decisions whether or not to release. In the final analysis, it seems to me one thing to say that 'new issues affecting the lawfulness of the detention' (Strasbourg's core and oft repeated touchstone for determining when article 5(40 is engaged) arise when assessing dangerousness in the post-tariff period of a life sentence (there being otherwise no finite end to a term which, everyone agrees, in the great majority of cases was never meant to last for life); quite another to apply the same approach to the release of determinate sentence prisoners.
85. Certainly nothing in the Strasbourg jurisprudence affords any support for Mr Owen's contention that the two categories should be assimilated and, even were I too conclude that the European court might now be prepared, notwithstanding its earlier dicta and admissibility decisions on the point, to extend the reach of article 5(4) to encompass also determinate sentence prisoners once they become eligible for parole, I would feel bound, consistently with the approach dictated by R (Ullah) v Special Adjudicator [2004] 2 AC 323, 350, para 20 (and the many subsequent endorsements of that approach), to leave any such development to the European court itself."
Lord Rodger (paragraph 37), Lady Hale (paragraph 51) and Lord Carswell (paragraph 58) agreed with Lord Brown.
"47. As the Commission pointed out in paragraph 66 of its report, this system is fundamentally different from that — on which the court does not have to express an opinion on this occasion — of the conditional release of prisoners sentenced by a court to a period of imprisonment imposed by the court as being appropriate to the case."
"For the appellant Mr Fitzgerald QC submits that a longer than commensurate sentence which is imposed under subsection (2)(b) contains two distinct components. The first is the punitive component. The second is, as he put it, the preventative one. On his analysis the second part commences when the punitive part of the sentence expires. His argument is that the lawfulness of the preventative part of the sentence depends on whether the prisoner continues to present an unacceptable risk to the public throughout this period. He submits that, as dangerousness is liable to change over time, this is not something that a judge can predict at the time of sentencing. So, if the sentence is not to be regarded as arbitrary during the preventative part, its lawfulness requires to be re-determined by the Parole Board periodically in accordance with article 5(4) of the Convention as soon as the punitive part of it has been served."
"51. It is plain from this summary that the basic rule which the European Court laid down in De Wilde, Ooms and Versyp v Belgium continues to apply. Where the prisoner has been lawfully detained within the meaning of article 5(1)(a) following the imposition of a determinate sentence after his conviction by a competent court, the review which article 5(4) requires is incorporated in the original sentence passed by the sentencing court. Once the appeal process has been exhausted there is no right to have the lawfulness of the detention under that sentence reviewed by another court. The principle which underlies these propositions is that detention in accordance with a lawful sentence passed after conviction by a competent court cannot be described as arbitrary. The cases where the basic rule has been departed from are cases where decisions as to the length of the detention have passed from the court to the executive and there is a risk that the factors which informed the original decision will change with the passage of time. In those cases the review which article 5(4) requires cannot be said to be incorporated in the original decision by the court. A further review in judicial proceedings is needed at reasonable intervals if the detention is not to be at risk of becoming arbitrary.
52. I would hold that the present case falls within the basic rule. The review which article 5(4) requires was incorporated in the sentence which the judge passed under subsection (2)(b). This is because he fixed the period of the sentence which was needed to protect the public from serious harm. He was able to take this decision in the light of the information before him and, in the exercise of his ordinary powers of sentencing, to decide on the total length of the sentence which in all the circumstances was appropriate. As he was able to take this decision at the outset there is no risk that detention for the minimum period fixed by the sentence will become arbitrary. The appellant has no further right under article 5(4) to have his detention for the minimum period fixed by that sentence reviewed judicially."
Lord justice Maurice Kay:
Lord Justice Sullivan:
Order: Appeal dismissed