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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 >> Hibberd & Anor, R v [2009] EWCA Crim 652 (02 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/652.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Crim 652 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Southwark Crown Court
HHJ Gledhill QC
T2007/0790
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JACK
and
MRS JUSTICE SHARP DBE
____________________
Gary Hibberd and Timothy Allen |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr N Corre for the appellant Timothy Allen
Ms J Osborne for the Respondent
Hearing date: 26 February 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
Count 1 – Conspiracy to defraud, 4 years imprisonment
Count 2 – Conspiracy to defraud, 2 years imprisonment consecutive
Count 1 – Conspiracy to defraud, 2½ years imprisonment
Count 2 – Conspiracy to defraud, 1 years imprisonment consecutive
i) Causing or permitting RBS to provide loans and overdraft facilities to Vodka Bar Management Ltd ("VBM") and/or associated companies
ii) Misleading RBS as to their financial position and that of others.
"i. Causing or permitting Lombard North Central plc to grant lease purchase agreements to Vodka Bar Management Limited and/or associated companies
ii. Representing to Lombard North Central plc that invoices submitted pursuant to said lease purchase agreements were valid invoices for which payment was properly due under the terms of the agreement
iii. Representing to Lombard North Central plc that an extract of the minutes of a meeting between Vodka Bar Management Limited and Laurel Pub Company Limited was a valid document.
iv. Representing to Lombard North Central plc that Gary Hibberd was a member of the Laurel Pub Company Limited Board of Directors
v. Representing to Lombard North Central plc that a Direct Agreement dated 4 April 2003 between Lombard North Central plc, Laurel Pub Company Limited and Innovative Trading Limited was a valid document."
"A clear indication of financial impropriety or criminality arose in November 2002 when one of Vodka Bar Management's subsidiary companies Service Co Limited went into liquidation. Once an agreed civil judgment had been entered against Service Co, Vodka Bar Management announced that they were no longer prepared to support it. Consequently it went into liquidation owing over £75,000 to the Inland Revenue and £125,000 to Vodka Bar Management. The directors of Service Co were you Gary Hibberd and Timothy Allen, together with your two former co-defendants. The four of you of course were also directors of Vodka Bar Management."
" ... For some time before these offences were committed you were involved in the running of a number of licensed premises, principally in the London area. By 1998 you Gary Hibberd with others were running vodka bars trading under the name of Babushka. In July of that year Babushka was bankrupt. This was not the end of the vodka bar enterprise. The business continued as if nothing had happened under the new company name of Babushka Limited until 2002, with your brother Anthony Hibberd as the sole director. You Timothy Allen had been working for Gary Hibberd and the other directors of Babushka from about 1993, progressing from a disk jockey to a bar manager and eventually by 2001 a director of the company. It is clear that during 2001 you were preparing to replace Babushka Limited. You set up Vodka Bar Management Limited as a parent or holding company overseeing a structure of subsidiary companies representing the different licensed venues and handling payroll and administration duties. In February 2002 Babushka Limited had changed its name to Install 500 UK Limited, that company was wound up in May 2002 with debts amounting to over half a million pounds, £50,000 of which was said to be owed to Vodka Bar Management. Vodka Bar Management and the associated companies then took over where Babushka had left off".
"Background checks [prior to the RBS and Lombard agreements] uncovered a county court judgment against you Gary Hibberd in the sum of £68,000.
Nathan Patterson, the employee of Lombard dealing with the transaction was obviously concerned at this discovery, as indeed was Richard Clark at the Royal Bank of Scotland who happened to share an office with him. You denied any knowledge of that judgment, both Messrs Patterson and Clark accepted your lying explanation and put it down to error, they were both impressed by you Gary Hibberd. In Mr Patterson's own words he was: 'Convinced of his integrity.'
"So throughout 2002 and 2003 you funded your Vodka Bar business by obtaining large sums of money quite dishonestly from the Royal Bank of Scotland and Lombard. You persuaded both those institutions to lend through a combination of deceit, lies, forgery and eloquent persuasion. Both institutions were completely taken in by the pair of you, and to use a colloquialism, they were well and truly conned. Yes of course some of the money was used to run the bars, but a great deal of it was used to fund your extravagant lifestyles. You were unscrupulous in the way you persuaded the bank and Lombard to part with their money. … I appreciate that this is not a fraud of an individual causing enormous personal loss and distress.
These are not victimless crimes. The banks and their shareholders are most certainly losers, the losses are paid for in the long run by the public in general. In your pre-sentence report, Timothy Allen, you identified many of the victims of these offences: 'Many suppliers did not get paid and people lost their jobs.' I ought to add including your own employees. You also said: 'The money that was loaned could have been loaned to other companies and benefited other businesses.'"
"There are a number of serious aggravating features in this case. Firstly, the prolonged time over which the fraud took place. Secondly, the determination with which the frauds were committed, innumerable false representations and even resort to forgery. Thirdly, the large sums of money involved. Fourthly, that the money was not used wholly to keep the businesses going, but went to fund your lifestyles. Fifthly, in your case, Gary Hibberd, I am satisfied that but for you Timothy Allen would not have become involved. I have concluded that you have corrupted him, though of course he is his own man and not a vulnerable sheep of a man. You are also responsible in part for Karen Forester becoming involved. Though no doubt the lure of quick and enormous profits as she saw you were taking was a main reason for her becoming involved. She has learnt the lesson by the large loss that she has sustained."
"... you Gary Hibberd realised that there were large profits to be made and you paid yourself well and provided yourselves with the accoutrements of wealth such as top of the range cars, no doubt impressing everybody including Karen Forester as to your success. It was a charade."
"There has been, as is now clear, a good four year delay between the collapse of Vodka Bar Management early in 2004 and sentence today. There are a number of reasons for that delay. Firstly the length of time taken by the investigation of this serious and complex fraud, largely if not wholly investigated by one officer. Secondly, the delays between arrest and charging have been caused by the officer being ill, your solicitors asking for time because you were on holiday or unavailable, or they have not had chance to look at the documents, or the documents had not arrived and so on.
So taking a generous view, neither of those two reasons I have just set out can be laid at your door. The third reason for the delay, that is the delay between your charge and today was caused by the fact that until the very day of the trial both of you were saying that you intended to plead not guilty and contest these allegations. It follows that in these circumstances I do reduce the sentences I am about to impose, because of the delay and the pressures that you have lived under over that time. But of course the credit that I give you for that is certainly not as great as it could have been if other circumstances had prevailed."
"Mr Patterson came to regard Gary Hibberd as being more high level than Timothy Allen who dealt with the finer detail of documentation surrounding the deals."
In our view, the judge was entitled to draw the distinction that he did. Certainly, the disparity was not such that, by itself, it would justify this court intervening to lower the sentence.
"I accept that when you, Gary Hibberd, went into the vodka bar business and later when you, Timothy Allen, became involved, you did not intend to commit fraud. These businesses certainly the Babushka business began as a genuine business. Some of the bars did well, very well, others did not bring in the profits that you were hoping for. ...
I accept that part of the reason for committing these offences was to keep the businesses going in the hope that they would become very profitable indeed. I also accept that when the businesses were expanding, costs such as building costs and other unforeseen costs were far higher than anticipated, and that there was as a result a cash flow problem. Indeed that seems to have been compounded by Laurel who did not put in as much money as they had agreed to put in or you anticipated they would put in."
"A clear message of deterrence must be sent from this court, that those who dishonestly obtain money from financial institutions by fraud will be firmly punished."
"27. We turn to what should be the sentencing starting point for a conspiracy such as this. The maximum sentence for a conspiracy to defraud is 10 years' imprisonment, or a fine or both (see s.12 (3) of the Criminal Justice Act 1987). Here Mr Aylett [for the A-G] submits that the sums involved were such that, taken together with the other aggravating features, they should have caused the trial judge to think initially in terms of a sentence approaching the statutory maximum. In support of that submission he invited our attention to R v Trevor Clark (1998) 2 CAR (S) 95 where this court offered guidance in relation to thefts by employees. Having reviewed the number of decisions in other cases, Lord Justice Rose said (at page 100) that contested cases involving between £250,000 and £1 million will merit between five and nine years; cases involving £1 million or more will merit ten years or more. We derive considerable assistance from that authority because, in our judgment, there is a clear parallel between the breach of trust committed by an employee who steals money from her employers and that committed by those who seek and deliberately misuse investors' monies entrusted to them."
"28. We recognise that in this case there were three factors common to all offenders which were bound to cause the sentencing judge to move down from the statutory maximum when seeking an initial common starting point, namely -
1) The amount of money involved, although high, could have been even higher, as it was in one or two decided cases, and the conspiracy, although lengthy, did not last over long;
2) There was no deliberate targeting of small investors;
3) Although in part attributable to the activities of one or more of the offenders themselves there was a substantial delay between 1996 when all except Paulssen were arrested for this offence and October 2001 when the trial began.
29. Bearing those factors in mind, it seems to us that the sentencing starting part should have been, as Mr Aylett contended, 7 years' imprisonment."
"29. The maximum sentence permitted by statute is, of course, very rarely imposed, and nowadays when there has been a guilty plea, effectively never. Such sentences should be reserved for those cases which, at the end of the trial and within the statutory context, can fairly be regarded as crimes of the utmost gravity. It is sometimes loosely said that the maximum sentence should be reserved for the worst case of its kind, and from this, imaginative counsel for the defendant will urge examples of cases of greater criminality than the offence established against his client. The argument however is founded on the misapprehension that if a realistically more serious case can be imagined, the imposition of the maximum sentence is precluded. That is why we repeat, the maximum sentence permitted by statute is reserved not for the worst possible case which can realistically be conceived, but for cases which in the statutory context are truly identified as cases of the utmost gravity.
30. The principle is long established. In R v Amber and Hargreaves, unreported, November 24, 1975, but referred to in Current Sentencing Practice at A1-4CO1 a case involving offences of corruption in the context of bribery of prison officers, Lawton LJ observed:
'It is of course a principle of sentencing that maximum sentences should only be passed for the worst kind of offence. But it is to be borne in mind that when judges are asking themselves whether they should pass the maximum sentence, they should not use their imagination to conjure up unlikely worst possible kinds of case. What they should consider is the worst type of offence which comes before the court and ask themselves whether the particular case they are dealing with comes within the broad band of that type. Where the maximum sentence is low, the band may be wide.'
It is rare for sentencing decisions from the mid 1970s to continue to provide assistance over 30 years later. However the principle was recently endorsed in R v Butt [2006] 2 CAR (S) 364, where it was said that the "enunciation of principle bears repetition". We repeat and endorse the principle." (Underlining added)
"34. Mr Winter [counsel for Bright] submitted that the sentence ignored the appellant's personal mitigation. He drew attention to the appellant's age (63 years) his good character, his poor health, the medical condition of his wife, for whom he was caring before he started his sentence. He also submitted that the appellant lost literally everything for which he had worked, not least the destruction of the business which had soared to the heights from nowhere, not least because of his commitment and contribution to it. In summary, his life is in ruins. A maximum sentence, by definition, must have ignored all these elements of personal mitigation, and some allowance should have been made for them.
35. Our conclusion is that in this particular case not much, if any, allowance would be appropriate. It is not unknown for major white collar fraudsters - and that is what the appellant is – to be individuals of apparent impeccable rectitude and good character. Indeed this very reputation helps them to establish this standing in business which, for a variety of different reasons, later becomes the vehicle for fraud. At the time when he was committing these offences, he was a President of the Institute of Insurers, apparently a pillar of respectability. Suspicion would not fall on him, and if it did, could be brushed aside as unworthy. It is always sad to see a successful individual fall from heights which he has achieved through his own hard work. But the appellant's criminal behaviour means that all his wounds were and are self inflicted."
"It was suggested that some allowance should have been made for the delay between the first investigations with the appellant and the date of sentence. He was first interviewed in January 2002 by the liquidators of the company, and by the Financial Services Authority in November 2004. The prosecution, applying that term broadly, was not responsible for any delay. The investigation involved study of literally a million documents. During his interviews the appellant was concerned to conceal the truth rather than reveal it. The case therefore had to be prepared and it eventually proceeded as a trial. The practice of allowing a discount against sentence to a defendant who pleads guilty is pragmatic. In this case an honest response to the interview process, and an indication of a guilty plea, would have avoided a huge investigation and a mammoth trial. It would be absurd for the defendant whose criminal activity requires massive investigation and whose lies contribute to the delay in bringing him to justice, then to seek to take advantage of the delay as a feature in mitigation"
"38. ... we very much doubt whether it would have been appropriate to order any reduction. In the light of his age, and ill health, and his wife's ill health, some small reduction from the notional maximum might have been allowed as an act of mercy, but the judge was entitled to conclude that in view of the appellant's conduct, he had forfeited any mercy which the court might otherwise have extended to him.".
The Court went on to say:
"... the actual sentence has effectively made every possible allowance for these matters, and represents a relatively significant discount from the available maximum sentence. "
"Making allowances for the differences between the offending in this case and the offending in Paulssen, and taking account of the prevalence of the present type of offence and its character, we do not think that Paulssen suggests that the judge's sentence of six years was in any way out of line with an appropriate sentence. "
"[First] the prolonged time over which the fraud took place. Secondly, the determination with which the frauds were committed, innumerable false representations and even resort to forgery. Thirdly, the large sums of money involved."