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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> X, Re [2004] EWHC 861 (Admin) (22 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/861.html Cite as: [2004] 3 All ER 1077, [2004] ACD 51, [2005] QB 133, [2004] 3 WLR 906, [2004] EWHC 861 (Admin) |
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QUEENS BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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IN THE MATTER OF "X" | ||
AND IN THE MATTER OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1988 |
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Mr Huw Davies appeared on behalf of the applicant (Z Limited)
Judgment
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Crown Copyright ©
Davis J :
Introduction
The legal issue as to jurisdiction
"(a) any property held by the defendant; and
(b) any property held by a person to whom the defendant has directly or indirectly made a gift caught by this Part of this Act."
Section 74(4) provides as follows:
"(4) Subject to the following provisions of this section, for the purposes of this Part of this Act the value of property (other than cash) in relation to any person holding the property—
(a) where any other person holds an interest in the property, is—
(i) the market value of the first-mentioned person's beneficial interest in the property, less
(ii) the amount required to discharge any incumbrance (other than a charging order) on that interest; and
(b) in any other case, is its market value."
Section 77 provides as follows by subsections (1) to (9):
"(1) The High Court may by order (referred to in this Part of this Act as a 'restraint order') prohibit any person from dealing with any realisable property, subject to such conditions and exceptions as may be specified in the order.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of subsection (1) above, a restraint order may make such provision as the court thinks fit for living expenses and legal expenses.
(3) A restraint order may apply—
(a) to all realisable property held by a specified person, whether the property is described in the order or not; and
(b) to realisable property held by a specified person, being property transferred to him after the making of the order.
(4) This section shall not have effect in relation to any property for the time being subject to a charge under section 78 below.
(5) A restraint order—
(a) may be made only on an application by the prosecutor;
(b) may be made on an ex parte application to a judge in chambers; and
(c) shall provide for notice to be given to persons affected by the order.
(6) A restraint order—
(a) may be discharged or varied in relation to any property; and
(b) shall be discharged when proceedings for the offence are concluded.
(7) An application for the discharge or variation of a restraint order may be made by any person affected by it.
(8) Where the High Court has made a restraint order, the court may at any time appoint a receiver—
(a) to take possession of any realisable property, and
(b) in accordance with the court's directions, to manage or otherwise deal with any property in respect of which he is appointed,
subject to such exceptions and conditions as may be specified by the court; and may require any person having possession of property in respect of which a receiver is appointed under this section to give possession of it to the receiver.
(9) For the purposes of this section, dealing with property held by any person includes (without prejudice to the generality of the expression)—
(a) where a debt is owed to that person, making a payment to any person in reduction of the amount of the debt; and
(b) removing the property from Great Britain."
"(1) This section applies to the powers conferred on the High Court by sections 77 to 81 above or on the Court of Session by sections 90 to 92 below, or on a receiver appointed under this Part of this Act or in pursuance of a charging order.
(2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, the powers shall be exercised with a view to making available for satisfying the confiscation order or, as the case may be, any confiscation order that may be made in the defendant's case the value for the time being of realisable property held by any person by the realisation of such property.
(3) In the case of realisable property held by a person to whom the defendant has directly or indirectly made a gift caught by this Part of this Act the powers shall be exercised with a view to realising no more than the value for the time being of the gift.
(4) The powers shall be exercised with a view to allowing any person other than the defendant or the recipient of any such gift to retain or recover the value of any property held by him.
(5) An order may be made or other action taken in respect of a debt owed by the Crown.
(6) In exercising those powers, no account shall be taken of any obligations of the defendant or of the recipient of any such gift which conflict with the obligation to satisfy the confiscation order."
"The powers there referred to are powers which the Act gives including the power to make the variation sought in this case. The purpose is clear. It is to make available the value of realisable property to satisfy the confiscation order. Realisable property, for present purposes, means 'property held by the defendant' (section 74(1)(a)). All the frozen moneys fall within this net.
Subsection (4) expressly protects those third parties who may have an interest in any of the realisable property. 'Mrs W' does not have an interest in the frozen moneys, save perhaps as to £10,000.
Subsection (6) seems plain. Assuming that 'obligation' includes debts, the satisfaction of the confiscation order takes priority. As 'obligations' is given no special meaning in the definition sections of the Act, the assumption is justified. Support for this view of the legislative purpose is also to be found in the provisions concerning receivers, realisation of property and priorities on bankruptcy in, for example, sections 78, 79, 80, 81 and 84.
Mr Stephens, for 'Mrs W', drew my attention to In re Peters [1988] 1 QB 871, [1988] 3 All ER 46 and the analogy there drawn with Mareva injunctions. He submitted that under that jurisdiction the court would permit bona fide debts to third parties to be paid as they fell due. There is one fundamental difference between the two jurisdictions which did not concern the court in In re Peters but which is vital here. The object of Mareva injunctions is not to give any priority or advantage to the plaintiff over other creditors of the defendant. The provisions to which I have referred in the 1988 Act do give priority to the satisfaction of the confiscation order at least over general creditors. If that is the overall purpose of the Act, it must be wrong to make any order at an intermediate stage which might thwart such purpose, quite apart from section 82(6)."
"The property to which the Restraint Order applies is no longer to be considered a part of the defendant's estate. He holds only notional title to such property. All dealings with such property are to be held in abeyance until such time as the defendant is acquitted or a confiscation order is made and satisfied. Any doubt is removed by consideration of the purpose of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986, which is to be found in s 13 as follows:
' ... (2) subject to the following provisions of this section, the powers shall be exercised with a view to making available for satisfying the confiscation order or, as the case may be, any confiscation order that may be made in the defendant's case the value for the time being of realisable property held by any person by the realisation of such property ...
(6) in exercising those powers, no account shall be taken of any obligations of the defendant or of the recipient of any such gift which conflict with the obligation to satisfy the confiscation order.'
Here Mr M is a defendant. He has been charged with a drug trafficking offence. The High Court on two previous occasions has been satisfied that there exists a reasonable likelihood that he will be convicted. It has made a Restraint Order pursuant to s 8 of the Drug Trafficking Offences Act 1986. All property rights in the property to which the order relates lie in abeyance. The property can no longer be considered part of his estate until the outcome of his criminal trial."
Overall, that, submitted Mr Barnard, is the position here.
"Mr John Laws, for the Commissioners, points out that a court faced with the making or variation of a Restraint Order or a charging order is not concerned with the making of a confiscation order or a process of execution in satisfaction of such an order. It is concerned solely with the preservation of assets at a time when it cannot know whether the accused will or will not be convicted. Such a jurisdiction is closely analogous to that exercised by the courts in relation to Mareva injunctions and might, not accurately, be referred to as a 'drugs Act Mareva'. Under the Mareva jurisdiction the interest of the potential judgment creditor has to be balanced against those of actual creditors, whether secured or unsecured, and of the defendant himself who may succeed in the action and should be fettered in his dealing with his own property to the least possible extent necessary to ensure that the processes of justice are not frustrated.
Subsection (2) is consistent with such a purpose, subject to what Mr Laws described as a 'legislative steer', namely, that, so far as is reasonable taking account of the fact that the accused may be acquitted and that, unlike the position under the Mareva jurisdiction, there is no counter undertaking in damages although there is a discretionary power to award compensation under section 19 of the Act, the value of the realisable property shall be maintained in order that it may be available to satisfy any confiscation order.
The exercise of power to vary the Restraint Order by Nolan J was entirely consonant with this purpose. Mr Peters, as an unconvicted accused person who might be acquitted, was entitled to ask that his son's education should not be interrupted, that he himself should be adequately clothed and that he should be able to pay for the costs of his defence. But the anticipatory discharge of liabilities which could be expected to arise only if Mr Peters had either been acquitted or convicted and, in the event of conviction, his property had been made subject to a confiscation order is quite another matter and is wholly contrary to section 13(2) and indeed the underlying purpose of the protective provisions of the Act.
Insofar as there was a conflict between the court order made in the divorce proceedings and the Restraint Order made under the Act, it should have been resolved in favour of maintaining the restraint, leaving the son's education to be continued within the limits provided for by the order of Nolan J. But in fact no such conflict should have been allowed to arise. Mr Registrar Guest would not, I apprehend, have made his order, even with consent, if he had thought that Mr Peters had no assets."
"Although that power is in terms unlimited, it is clear that it must not be exercised so as unreasonably to diminish the value of the realisable property which is available to satisfy any confiscation order which may later be made."
The word "unreasonably" is to be noted.
"In my experience a Restraint Order does not, and properly does not, prevent the meeting of ordinary and reasonable expenditure. That which is or is not ordinary expenditure may vary from time to time."
"The provision in short, is not to be read as a requirement upon the court in all cases to appoint a receiver with full powers of sale and for the receiver then immediately to realise all assets. Rather the court and receiver are directed (at whichever stage the question arises) to seek to preserve the present value of the defendant's assets but plainly that cannot be the only relevant consideration, least of all before the defendant comes to be tried and whilst, therefore, he is to be presumed innocent. Rather, as In re Peters makes clear, a balance has to be struck between, on the one hand preserving the worth of the defendant's realisable property against the possibility that he may be convicted and a confiscation order made against him, and on the other hand allowing him meantime to continue the ordinary course of his life. The problem in In re Peters was in deciding just what expenses are reasonable, the point at which expenditure becomes dissipation. The difficulty in the present type of case is to decide whether certain assets ought properly to be retained so that the defendant may continue to enjoy them, not merely to the limited extent possible whilst in custody awaiting trial but in future were he ultimately to be acquitted and the Restraint Order and receivership accordingly discharged."
Disposition