BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Blackwood, R v [2012] EWCA Crim 390 (05 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2012/390.html Cite as: [2012] 2 Cr App R 1, [2012] EWCA Crim 390 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM CROYDON CROWN COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KENNETH PARKER
and
MR JUSTICE LINDBLOM
____________________
Regina |
Respondent |
|
- v - |
||
Romaine Blackwood |
Appellant |
____________________
Miss C Purnell (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown
Hearing date : 14 February 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The facts in greater detail
The legal framework
"2(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court of Appeal:
(a) shall allow an appeal against conviction if they think that the conviction is unsafe …
(2) In the case of an appeal against conviction the Court shall, if they allow the appeal, quash the conviction.
(3) An order of the Court of Appeal quashing a conviction shall, except when under section 7 below the appellant is ordered to be retried, operate as a direction to the court of trial to enter, instead of the record of conviction, a judgment and verdict of acquittal."
"7(1) Where the Court of Appeal allow an appeal against conviction and it appears to the Court that the interests of justice so require, they may order the appellant to be retried …."
"(2) The Court of Appeal may, on ordering a retrial, make such orders as appear to them to be necessary or expedient –
(a) for the custody or, subject to section 25 of the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994, release on bail of the person ordered to be retried pending his retrial …."
Subsections (3) and (3A) deal with the more complicated position of a person who immediately before the determination of his appeal was liable to be detained pursuant to provisions of the Mental Health Act 1959. Subsection (4) brings in the provisions of Schedule 2 concerning matters of procedure and sentence at the retrial itself.
Discussion
"It is well recognised that a court of record has power to alter a judgment or order which it has made within certain limits. The limits set in general appear to be that the power to alter the judgment ceases when the judgment is, in the words of the civil courts, drawn up. In other words, the general principle seems to be that once the judgment has been finally recorded, then the inherent power to vary it is lost. We are satisfied from the arguments before us, and indeed from our own experience, that that rule has been extensively applied in the criminal courts in the past. …
We think that the same principles ought to apply to this court, and so we have investigated, partly with the assistance of counsel and partly by making our own inquiries within the internal organisation of the court, to determine the appropriate equivalent moment at which proceedings in this court reach that degree of finality when no further change in the decision of the court is possible. …
When a judgment of this court is given, the registrar is required by the rules to notify the decision to a variety of people. By rule 15 of the Criminal Appeal Rules 1968 it is provided as follows:
'(1) The registrar shall, as soon as practicable, serve notice of any determination by the court or by any judge of the court under section 31 of the Act on any appeal or application by an appellant on – (a) the appellant; (b) the Secretary of State; (c) any person having custody of the appellant; (d) in the case of an appellant detained under the Mental Health Act 1959 the responsible authority. (2) The registrar shall, as soon as practicable, serve notice on the proper officer of the court of trial of the order of the court disposing of an appeal or application for leave to appeal.
It is to be observed that the formality required of the registrar under that rule is in no sense the making of a record. What the registrar is required to do, and does do, when he performs his duties under rule 15, is to give notice to interested parties of what the order of the court has been. Accordingly, it does not seem to us that it would be right or appropriate to pick upon the moment when these notices are issued as being the moment when the record is made up, because they are, as I have endeavoured to describe, in no sense a record. However, by order of the Lord Chancellor following the creation of the Crown Court, there is published a Crown Court Manual which contains specific provision as to what is to be done by the court of trial on receipt of notification from the registrar under rule 15. What the Crown Court Manual requires is that the officer of the court of trial on receiving notice of the determination of this court from the registrar, shall record the determination so transmitted to him. …
There is, therefore, for the first and really the only time the making of a formal record of the determination of this court, and we think that the proper interpretation of the position, so far as the matter presently under review is concerned, is that the court of trial is the court that maintains a formal record of proceedings in this court, and it is enabled to maintain such records by the registrar performing the duty cast upon him under rule 15. Consequently when the question arises, as it arises in this case, of the court's power to make a change in any decision or order which it has pronounced, the vital question is whether that decision or order has been recorded by the proper officer at the court of trial pursuant to the directions to which I have just referred" (940B-941E).
Conclusion