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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 >> Sumal, R (On the Application Of) v Leicester Crown Court [2024] EWHC 1982 (Admin) (31 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2024/1982.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 1982 (Admin) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE KING on the application of SONYA SUMAL |
Claimant |
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-and- |
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LEICESTER CROWN COURT |
Defendant |
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-and- |
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CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE |
Interested Party |
____________________
The Defendant did not appear and was not represented
The Interested Party did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 16 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE SWIFT
A. Introduction
"JUDGE SPENCER: Right. Now, what's the bail position with Ms Sumal?
MR LYNCH: She has been on unconditional bail, from my understanding.
JUDGE SPENCER: Well, she's not anymore given the length of time away the trial is. So, there will certainly be a condition of residence. I want to hear more about her. First of all, where does she live? Does she have family? Does she have children? What's the position?
MR LYNCH: She does, yes. And if you –
JUDGE SPENCER: Go and talk to her if you want.
MR LYNCH: No, your Honour, I have the details here. Forgive me.
JUDGE SPENCER: Right. There will be a condition of residence.
MR LYNCH: It's 15 Melton Avenue. Oh, maybe I should go and talk to her.
JUDGE SPENCER: Yeah, I think perhaps you should. (pause)
MR LYNCH: Well thank for the extra time. The address of residency will be 16 Uplands Avenue
JUDGE SPENCER: What is it now?
MR LYNCH: This is the address now.
JUDGE SPENCER: Right. 16?
MR LYNCH: 16 Uplands Avenue.
JUDGE SPENCER: Yeah.
MR LYNCH: Postcode DE23 1FY.
JUDGE SPENCER: Is that actually in Derby or not?
MR LYNCH: That is in Derby, yes. Your Honour, can I also raise your attention –
JUDGE SPENCER: Well, hold on. Right. That's now a condition of your bail. You understand Madam? You must be there. Don't go moving without applying to the court. You understand? Tell me about her children, ages.
JUDGE SPENCER: There's one child, I believe one five years old. Forgive me.
JUDGE SPENCER: 5-year-old child who's at school in Derby.
MS SUMAL: Yes.
JUDGE SPENCER: Right. Go on.
MR LYNCH: Ms Sumal is currently working, your Honour, and has a prearranged, obviously subject to your Honour's leave work event on the 15th to the 20th of February.
JUDGE SPENCER: Right.
MR LYNCH: Where she'll be promoting her business, which she currently works for in Saudi Arabia. She raised that before the hearing, before –
JUDGE SPENCER: No, she's not going abroad. She'll surrender her passport.
MR PETKOVIC: Fucking dickhead, man.
JUDGE SPENCER: Sorry, I heard that Mr Petkovic. There'll be no repetition of that.
MR PETKOVIC: You can hear all you like.
JUDGE SPENCER: You can mute.
MR PETKOVIC: It's ridiculous.
JUDGE SPENCER: Don't be impertinent with me. You may think you can be impertinent in Loughborough, but you will not be impertinent to me. She'll surrender her passport and all travel documentation.
MR LYNCH: Of course, you Honour will be aware that this offence dates back to 20 –
JUDGE SPENCER: I am.
MR LYNCH: September 2022, of course.
JUDGE SPENCER: I am.
MR LYNCH: Your Honour will also be aware there's been no issue with any bail since then.
JUDGE SPENCER: She will surrender her passport and all travel documentation. When?
MR LYNCH: Your Honour, yes.
JUDGE SPENCER: When?
MR LYNCH: I'd ask for the next, well, today's Friday. So, the next … yes, the next –
JUDGE SPENCER: Ordinarily should stay in custody until they're actually surrendered to the police station. But I will make an exception.
MR LYNCH: Well, I'm grateful for that invitation, your Honour.
JUDGE SPENCER: Find out where the nearest police station is to her home, and she'll surrender by midday on Wednesday.
MR LYNCH: Your Honour. Yes.
JUDGE SPENCER: She wants to tell you something, which you better find out.
MR LYNCH: Forgive me, your Honour.
JUDGE SPENCER: Somebody give me the date of Wednesday.
MR LYNCH: Sorry, yes.
JUDGE SPENCER: Right. She can do that, can she?
MR LYNCH: Your Honour, yes.
JUDGE SPENCER: Right. That will suffice those two conditions, Mr Lynch.
MR LYNCH: Well, I'm grateful.
JUDGE SPENCER: Is there anything else you want to raise?
MR LYNCH: No, thank you, your Honour."
"Please find attached an acknowledgment of service on behalf of the defendant, Leicester Crown Court, in the above matter. The defendant wishes to remain neutral and not participate in proceedings unless otherwise directed by the Admin Court.
To assist the Admin Court, below are comments from HHJ Spencer KC on this matter. We are remaining neutral in this Judicial Review and the comments are being provided to assist the Admin Court.
Comments:
1. It is submitted that it is clear – p37E onwards – that the judge was addressing the risk of failing to attend trial. That risk was increased by a delay between the first effective PTPH when the seriousness of the applicant's position became clear and a trial date some 5 months distant, particularly when the applicant, a non-UK national, was proposing leaving the jurisdiction in Feb 24.
2. The transcript does reflect a series of interruptions from the male defendant at 38E onwards but a written transcript cannot adequately convey what actually happened in court. He joined by prison link, was defiant throughout, interrupted in an abusive way – 38E- and interrupted again despite being told not to, and sought to dominate proceedings. What the transcript does not reflect is that the judge ordered that the prison link be put on mute (sometime after "you can mute" at 38F) which silenced his further attempts to disrupt. The judge's remarks at 39E onwards were meant to convey, in language he would clearly understand, that such behaviour would not be tolerated in court."
B. Decision
"(3) In relation to the jurisdiction of the Crown Court, other than its jurisdiction in matters relating to trial on indictment, the High Court shall have all such jurisdiction to make mandatory, prohibiting or quashing orders as the High Court possesses in relation to the jurisdiction of an inferior court."
In M v Isleworth Crown Court [2005] EWHC 363 (Admin), the Divisional Court considered a challenge to a decision of the Crown Court refusing bail to a defendant facing trial on charges of conspiracy to import Class A drugs. The application for bail had been made and refused shortly after the case had been transferred from the Magistrates' Court to the Crown Court. The judgment of Maurice Kay LJ included the following.
"6. Following that refusal of bail, the claimant made the present application to this court. Until April of last year, a person in the position of M would have applied to a High Court judge for bail. However, that form of access to the High Court was abolished by section 17(3) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003, which came into force on 5th April 2004. Clearly the intention and effect of that abolition is generally to confine decisions on bail to judges in the Crown Court. Its origin is to be found in Auld LJ's report which expressed concern about the wasteful duplication of bail applications.
7. As I have said, the present application is for judicial review of a refusal of bail by the Crown Court. Two jurisdictional issues require comment, although there is no dispute about them in the present case. The first is the exclusion of judicial review in respect of "matters relating to trial on indictment" by section 29(3) of the Supreme Court Act. It is common ground, and I accept, that a decision as to bail at an early stage of criminal proceedings does not relate to trial on indictment as that expression has been interpreted in cases such as R v Manchester Crown Court ex parte DPP [1994] 98 Cr. App. R 461 HL, where Lord Browne-Wilkinson stated that the question to be posed when considering the "trial on indictment" test was as follows:
'Is the decision sought to be reviewed one arising in the issue between the Crown and the defendant formulated by the indictment (including the costs of such issue)?' … If the answer is 'no', the decision of the Crown Court is truly collateral to the indictment of the defendant and judicial review of that decision will not delay his trial: therefore, it may well not be excluded by the section."
8. M therefore overcomes that barrier.
9. The second jurisdictional question is whether a refusal of bail is susceptible to judicial review in any event. In R v Croydon Crown Court ex parte Cox [1997] 1 Cr. App. R 20 it was held in this court that a refusal of bail was not so susceptible. However, the rationale of that decision was the availability of an alternative remedy, namely the possibility which then existed of an application to a High Court judge. Now, not only has that been abolished, but section 17(6)(b) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 provides:
"Nothing in this section affects … any right of a person to apply for a writ of habeas corpus or any other prerogative remedy."
10. I have no doubt that prerogative remedies in that context embrace those set out in section 29(1) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 – mandamus, prohibition and certiorari – which are now of course respectively called a mandatory order, a prohibiting order and a quashing order in part 54 of the Civil Procedure Rules. That means that this court now has jurisdiction to review a bail decision by the Crown Court. In the recent case of Serumaga [2005] EWCA Crim 370, when sitting in the Court of Appeal Criminal Division, and when specifically considering the exceptional position of a person facing summary proceedings for contempt of court, I may have implied otherwise. However, the matter having arisen more generally and directly in the present case, I can now say that such an implication would be erroneous. Thus, M overcomes the second jurisdiction barrier.
11. Although we have jurisdiction by reason of section 17(6)(b), I am no doubt that it is a jurisdiction which we should exercise very sparingly indeed. It would be ironic and retrograde if, having abolished a relatively short and simple remedy on the basis that it amounted to wasteful duplication, Parliament has, by a side wind, created a more protracted and expensive remedy of common application."
(1) Grounds 2 and 3: taking account of irrelevant matters; attaching incorrect weight to relevant matters; irrational conclusion.
"JUDGE SPENCER: Right, Voya Petkovic, it's clear to me. You can hear me? Can you hear me clearly, Madam? I think I detect an attitude. I certainly detect an unpleasant defiance in you, Petkovic. An attitude that somehow because of the serious trial you are facing in Loughborough, this indictment is less important. Let me dispel that notion straight away. These are very serious charges, effectively smuggling some enabled electronic device into prison. Probably at the time when you, Petkovic, were facing serious criminal charges in prison. There seems to be, I hope I'm wrong, a rather casual attitude towards preparation for this trial. That better stop. You will face trial on the 8 April. If you are convicted, you are both looking, in your case, Petkovic at further prison. In your case, Sonya Sumal going to prison. I don't want you to be under any illusions whatsoever about the seriousness of the position you are in. Never be impertinent to me, Petkovic. Otherwise you will suffer. I will find ways of making you suffer. You will stay in custody. You'll be brought to this court on the 8 April to face your trial …"
(2) Ground 1: misapplication of the Bail Act 1976
C. Disposal