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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Morphy, R v [2006] EWCA Crim 2698 (26 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/2698.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Crim 2698 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON
and
SIR JOHN BLOFELD
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
SANDRA MORPHY | ||
GERALD DAVIDSON MORPHY |
____________________
Wordwave International Ltd (a Merrill Communications Company)
190 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone 020-7421 4040
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
THE APPLICANT GERALD MORPHY was not represented
MISS KATE MALLISON appeared on behalf of THE CROWN
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Thursday 26 October 2006
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: I will ask Mr Justice Grigson to give the judgment of the court.
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON:
"For the purposes of this Part of the Act a person benefits from an offence if he obtains property as a result of or in connection with its commission and his benefit is the value of the property so obtained."
The judge ruled that the Morphys had benefited by the whole of the sum paid to the prostitute. He rejected the defence argument that the Morphys only benefited from the £30 rent that the girls paid to them per day.
"Therefore, in my view, the proper definition of 'obtaining' here, having considered various aspects of this case with some care now, and having gone through them with counsel, is that the Morphys did indeed obtain the sums which were paid to the prostitutes, but I do not accept the officer's calculation. It has to be re-calculated. He has calculated on £90 per girl, and the section 71 evidence does not support that."
"On the basis of that statement, therefore, the prosecution argues that Mr Gokal equally has obtained for the purposes of section 71 the whole sum of £548 million, which he caused to be obtained by the Gulf Group. It is, however, important to note that the defendant in Rees was, as Auld J pointed out, charged under section 15 of the Theft Act and in that section the word 'obtains' has a particular meaning which is specifically there stated to be applied for the purposes of that section.
It may well be that where the question under section 71(4) of the 1988 Act is whether the defendant has obtained property as a result of or in connection with the commission of that offence under section 15 of the Theft Act, obtains in section 71(4) does indeed, as Auld J ruled, carry the meaning that he attributed to it, the meaning which he drew from the underlying offence of which the defendant in that case had been convicted.
I do not, however, find it easy to see that that reasoning follows where the offence that is the basis of the compensation claim is not a section 15 offence. In those circumstances, as here, I do not see any obvious reason for reading the Theft Act definition as found in 15(2) of the Act into the Criminal Justice Act of 1988. Indeed, the fact that that definition is said to be specific to that section would suggest that the ordinary meaning of the word 'obtains' is not set out in section 15(2) of the Theft Act. I therefore hold that the phrase 'if he obtains' in section 71(4) of the 1988 Act requires what can fairly be described as an obtaining by the defendant."
That quotation is taken from the judgment of this court in R v Patel [2000] 2 Cr App R(S) 10. In fact the confiscation order in Gokal was the subject of an appeal. No criticism was made in the course of that appeal of Buxton J's approach either by the prosecution or the defence. The court accepted (albeit implicitly) that it was right.
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: Is it a matter that strictly need concern us? The question of whether there are realisable assets is strictly one for a Certificate of Inadequacy going back to the Crown Court. Is that right?
MR DONNE: Yes. I do not have any instructions on that. If the appeal had failed, then Mrs Morphy could have applied for a Certificate of Inadequacy.
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON: The Commission say that she has no assets at all, in which case, if that is accepted, it is simply a waste of money, is it not, for this court to make an order which is inevitably going to fail?
MR DONNE: Those are my instructions.
MISS MALLISON: My Lord, my instructions are that the assets have all gone. One does not know how. The term in default for the sum of £24,000 odd will be eighteen months, and if the defence are going to argue that they would like a Certificate of Dissipation of the assets, then the Crown would like an order of disclosure of their means because the Crown are concerned that this amount of money just seems to have slipped through their fingers.
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON: Sorry, you are talking about "they". There are two appellants. Gerald Morphy, as far as we know, is not here and is not represented.
MR DONNE: He is in Thailand and has been for some time.
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON: You cannot simply lump them together. If you have read the Commission's report, which I am sure you have done, Mrs Morphy is reported as saying that he has gone and taken the assets with him.
MISS MALLISON: Those who sit behind me have not been able to find any assets either for him either, so to that extent -- forgive me for lumping them both together -- but the position is that we cannot find the money. What I am going to ask the court to do is that if in fact the defence on behalf of Mrs Morphy are going to ask for some certification that the monies have been dissipated, we would like some directions given as to the disclosure of her finances and how the money has come to be dissipated because the properties were in joint names and I am not clear as to how, therefore, one person could have got hold of all of the money without any reference to the other person's interest.
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: Let us consider what our function here is. We have considered an appeal against the confiscation order. We have quashed the order, we have substituted in each case an order for just over £24,000. It is right that we must as part of our order set a default term of imprisonment of eighteen months. Is there anything more that strictly it is within our jurisdiction or our proper function to do?
MISS MALLISON: I do not think there is, my Lord.
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: If the appellants wish to contend that they do not have the assets to meet the order in the sum which is now specified by this court, there is a proper procedure in place for them to apply, not to us but to a lower court.
MISS MALLISON: My Lord, that is right.
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: It sounds to the court as though that is the right course to adopt.
MISS MALLISON: It rather took me by surprise that anyone would think otherwise. I assume that this will be a preclude to Mrs Morphy making the appropriate application.
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: That will be for her to decide. So there is nothing more that is required of us?
MR DONNE: No, thank you.
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: Can I thank you both for your assistance and in particular for the commendable brevity and succinctness of your submissions?
MR DONNE: My Lord, Mrs Morphy is not legally aided. Can I ask for a defendant's costs order to be assessed?
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS: Yes, we will grant such an order.
MR DONNE: Thank you.