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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 >> Voros v The District Courts of Sopron, Gyor and Zalaegerszeg, Hungary [2012] EWHC 518 (Admin) (12 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2012/518.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 518 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Péter Vörös |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The District Courts of Sopron, Gyor and Zalaegerszeg, Hungary |
Respondents |
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Mr Daniel Sternberg (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 1 March 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Keith:
Introduction
Ground 1: Particularity
"If the warrant … does not conform to the requirements set out in section 2, it will not be a Part 1 warrant within the meaning of that section and Part 1 will not apply to it."
In such circumstances, any order for extradition founded upon it is liable to be quashed. In this ground of appeal, it is contended that the information given in EAW1 and EAW2 does not identify in sufficient detail or with sufficient clarity what Mr Vörös is alleged to have done or the circumstances in which he is alleged to have committed the offences, and that the information relating to the first, second and fifth offences in EAW3 does not identify the place where the offences are alleged to have been committed. No such allegation is made any longer in respect of the particulars given for the offences to which EAW4 and EAW5 relate.
"… set out a description, not in legal language, of how the alleged offence is said to have occurred. In particular, the description must include when and where the offence is said to have happened and what involvement the person named in the warrant had … The person sought by the warrant needs … to have an idea of the nature and extent of the allegations against him in relation to that offence. The amount of detail may turn on the nature of the offence." (Emphasis supplied)
And in Balint v Municipal Court in Prague, Czech Republic [2011] EWHC 498 (Admin), Jackson LJ said at [28] about the information required by section 2(4)(c):
"In examining the conduct alleged in the warrant and any further information the court must not be pedantic or overly technical. Instead, the court must make reasonable allowance for (a) the fact that methods of particularising criminal offences differ from one jurisdiction to another and (b) the fact (if it be the case) that the warrant has been translated from a foreign language into English."
"On 22 July 2008 Imre József Tóth, a resident of Kószeg, concluded loan and option contract No. 2008022097-ZZ with Erste Leasing Car Financing Ltd. for financing the purchase of an Opel Astra H car with traffic registration number LEW-139, effected by him on the same day.
The purchase price of the car was 4,050,000 HUF out of which the person against whom criminal complaint was filed paid 415,000 HUF as own fund to the trader and undertook to pay the outstanding amount of 3,635,000 HUF of the loan within a term of 120 months.
After the conclusion of the contract Imre József Tóth complied with his payment obligations on two occasions and on 16 September 2008 the car was seized in the framework of enforcement proceedings conducted by Asztalos and Co. Bailiff Office (9700 Szombathely, Fó tér 15, 1st floor 1).
After the seizure of the car in the enforcement proceedings Imre Jószef Tóth did no longer pay any instalment for the loan taken.
In the course of the proceedings Imre József Tóth told that he had no intention to buy a car, according to his knowledge he had signed a loan agreement as a surety for the request of Zoltán Erdélyi, a resident of Szakony. Mr Erdélyi even showed him an employment certificate, according to which he was an employee of a company in Csepreg. At the car trading company in Sopron he had signed several documents which, as he confessed, he had failed to read. He had not seen the car bought by him and had not pay any instalment. He also told that he had neither asked nor received any money from Zoltán Erdélyi or any other person. As to the public notary document No. K22015-0/1013/2008/2/0 he stated that its content was unknown to him and that he had never been to the office of dr Mónika Bálint, notary public.
According to the data obtained, Péter Biró – a resident of Táplánszentkereszt – instituted enforcement proceedings No. 107.V.1655/2008 against in respect of a claim of 1,000,000 HUF. That case concerned an authorisation issued on 17 September 2008 by Imre József Tóth for Péter Vörös, a resident of Ják, authorising Péter Vörös to act for Imre József Tóth with full power in that case.
As to the authorisation of 17 September 2008. presented to him during his interrogation as a consecutive suspect, Imre József Tóth declared that its content and the circumstances of its creation were totally unknown to him and that the authorisation was not signed by him.
Árpád Asztalos independent bailiff sold the car at auction sale held on 24 September 2008."
"On 10 October 2008 Péter Vörös – a resident of Ják, Széchenyi u. 115 – concluded loan agreement No. BCMH08/037318 with the Budapest Autófinanszirozási Ltd. for financing the purchase on the same day of a Citroen C4 car with registration number JTZ-233. The purchase and the conclusion of the contract took place in Sopron at the Gerencsér Autóhaz Llc. (9400 Sopron, Gyori ut 50/C.)
The purchase price of the car was 2,350,000 HUF out of which the person against whom a criminal complaint was filed paid 235,000 HUF as own fund and in respect of which he undertook to pay the outstanding amount in a term of 120 months.
After the conclusion of the contract Péter Vörös did not comply at all with his payment obligations. On 14 November 2008, upon the request of Ilona Rinkó, in enforcement proceedings No. 156.HV.V.594/2008/9. Tamás Horváth independent bailiff sold the car for 2.4 million HUF under the effect of an auction sale but outside an auction.
On 20 December 2008 the Budapest Autófinanszirozási Ltd. issued the car registration card for the buyer Royal-Ker Llc. and on 19 January 2009 it cancelled the contract with Péter Vörös.
Based on the available data, in light of the apparent proximity of the above dates, there is a well-founded suspicion that when Péter Vörös bought the car and asked loan from the Budapest Autófinanszirozási Ltd. he already knew that in the enforcement proceedings to be instituted later by Ilona Rinkó based on a declaration acknowledging a debt, signed by Péter Vörös, the car would be seized by the bailiff."
Ground 2: Dual criminality
"The conduct also constitutes an extradition offence in relation to the category 1 territory if these conditions are satisfied –
(a) the conduct occurs in the category 1 territory;
(b) the conduct would constitute an offence under the law of the relevant part of the United Kingdom if it occurred in that part of the United Kingdom;
(c) the conduct is punishable under the law of the category 1 territory with imprisonment or another form of detention for a term of 12 months or a greater punishment (however it is described in that law)."
The issue for the district judge was whether the offences in the five warrants satisfied the requirement of dual criminality in section 64(3)(b). It is contended the judge was wrong to rule that the offences in EAW1, EAW2 and EAW3 satisfied that requirement, though it is accepted that the offences in EAW4 and EAW5 did so. In view of my conclusion about the lack of particularity of the offence in EAW1, I need not consider the offence in EAW1 in that context.
Grounds 3, 4 and 5: Double jeopardy, abuse of process and invalidity
(i) where a person is charged with an offence which is the same in fact and law as an offence of which he has previously been acquitted or convicted (autrefois acquit or convict), and
(ii) where a person is charged with an offence which is founded on "the same or substantially the same facts" as an offence for which he has been tried, and where the court would normally consider it right to stay the prosecution as an abuse of its process and the prosecution could not show that there were "special circumstances" why another trial should take place.
Either way, someone can benefit from the rule against double jeopardy only if there has been a previous trial. Mr Vörös has not previously been tried for any of these offences.
Conclusion