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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 >> Filmer v Director of Public Prosecutions [2006] EWHC 3450 (Admin) (01 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2006/3450.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 3450 (Admin), [2007] RTR 28 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FULFORD
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FILMER | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | (DEFENDANT) |
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MISS O LYCOURGOU (instructed by CPS Reading) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
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Crown Copyright ©
"On Monday 7th February 2005 at Reading in the County of Berkshire drove a motor vehicle, namely a Ford Fiesta F83 SBP on a public place, namely parking area of Humphries, Basingstoke Road, Reading after consuming so much alcohol that the proportion of it in your breath exceeded the prescribed limit.
Contrary to section 5(1)(A) of the Road Traffic Act 1988 and Schedule 2 to the Road Traffic Offenders Act 1988."
"(a) The defendant drove a Ford Fiesta motor vehicle on the parking area of Humphries Tyres and Exhaust, Basingstoke Road, Reading on 7th February 2005 at about 2.30 am. At the time he was an employee of that firm.
(b) He was arrested at the scene having provided a positive breath test.
(c) Subsequently, at Reading Police Station he provided two specimens of breath for analysis on an intoximeter machine; both readings indicating 101 micrograms of alcohol in 100 mls of breath -- in excess, therefore, of the legal limit of 35 micrograms.
(d) While the parking area of Humphries was private property it was a public place for the purpose of the Road Traffic Act because the public used that area variously to park at night (although none were parked there at the time of the defendant's arrest), to turn vehicles or as pedestrians."
Having set out those conclusions, the Justices highlighted parts of the evidence called before them by the prosecution as follows:
"7. During the prosecution case we heard evidence from, in particular, Acting Sergeant Clevely about the public place aspect of the case. He told us that the car park had an entrance and exit with no barriers and was, outside ordinary trading hours, used as a pedestrian shortcut, a turning circle for vehicles on the Basingstoke Road and for parking by locals during the evening and at night.
The pedestrian shortcut was not the using of the car entrance and exit because that route merely ran parallel to the pavement. The route taken by pedestrians was to walk from the car entrance or exit to the far side of the garage and then jump over the wall onto some waste land and vice versa.
Some photographs showing the premises were produced in evidence and are annexed marked "A"."
"At 0230 hours on Monday 7th February 2005 I was on duty in full uniform in company with PC4959 Holmes in a marked police vehicle. At this time as we were travelling along the Basingstoke Road towards Reading town centre I saw a white Ford Fiesta registration F83 SBP parked on the forecourt of Humphries Tyre Centre with a male stood nearby having come out of the building itself. The forecourt itself is an open area of tarmac which is accessible to vehicles at two points but which has a brick wall partially across the front. Curious as to this male's actions at this time of the night we parked up next to the vehicle and I got out to speak with the male." [My emphasis].
"As it was never previously suggested that people jumped over the wall or walked in the forecourt or that cars used the forecourt as [a] turning circle or as somewhere to park, it was not reasonable to expect the defendant to guess what public user (if indeed there was any) was going to be adduced and then call witnesses to show that no such user took place."
"We considered that such applications for adjournments were a matter for us to decide in the interests of justice, balancing the rights of the prosecution and defence. We considered that the defence should have brought such evidence to court on the public place issue as they wished. As Mr Ley had remarked, it was on that very point that the defendant had been allowed to change his plea from guilty to not guilty.
On Mr Ley's point that Acting Sergeant Clevely's statement did not include details of his knowledge of the public use of the car park, our Legal Advisor advised us in open court, and we accepted his advice, that it was not necessary for disclosure papers to include every detail of the prosecution case and in this regard it was important not to confuse advance disclosure in summary proceedings on the one hand with trial at Crown Court on the other. At the Crown Court the detailed prosecution case would be set out in full in committal papers and any material served as additional evidence. As far as the case before us was concerned, we noted that the charge itself made it clear that the prosecution proceeded on the basis that it was [a] public place on which the defendant was driving and it was obvious that the prosecution would seek to prove that.
We refused the application to adjourn the case."
"Having considered the evidence relevant to the element in dispute we find that it was a public place because the evidence given by Acting Sergeant Clevely was that the public used the forecourt of Humphries either to park, as a place to turn a vehicle or as a pedestrian. He said he had personal experience of this as he regularly patrolled the area, both day and night -- we find this evidence wholly convincing."
"(a) Was our refusal of the defence application for an adjournment at the close of the prosecution case a proper exercise of our discretion?
(b) Was it "Wednesbury unreasonable" to accept the police evidence that the park area of Humphries was a public place for the purpose of the Road Traffic Act?"
The Arguments on This Appeal
The Application to Adjourn
"It is elementary that if a charge is being made against a person, he must be given a fair chance of meeting it. That often means he must be given documents necessary for the purpose."
"Everyone charged with a criminal offence has the following minimum rights:
(a) to be informed . . . in detail of the nature and cause of the accusation against him ... "
"Article 6(1) requires, as indeed does English Law, that the prosecution authorities should disclose to the defence all material evidence in their possession for or against the accused." (Fitt v United Kingdom [2000] 30 EHRR 480 at paragraph 44).
Against that background, the appellant submits he was not provided with an adequate or indeed any opportunity to consider and meet the evidence the prosecution relied on as regards public use; he was taken completely by surprise; and he lost a real opportunity of calling rebuttal evidence.
The Sufficiency of the Evidence
The Respondent's Arguments
My Analysis
"The forecourt itself is an open area of tarmac which is accessible to vehicles at two points but which has a brick wall partially across the front."
In my judgment, that clearly set out that this was an area that was readily accessible to the public, either on foot or by motor vehicle.
"A Magistrates' Court does not have to state its reasons for convicting a defendant in the form of a judgment reciting the charges, the evidence and all their findings of fact. The essence of the exercise is to inform the defendant why he has been found guilty and this [can] usually be done in a few simple sentences." (See Archbold, 2006 edition, 16-75. See also James Edward Pulham v Crown Prosecution Service CO/3948/99, Monday 17th April 2000, and in particular paragraphs 17 and 20).
Additional reasons need only be supplied if an appeal such as this is launched.