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 High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Senior Courts Costs Office) Decisions >> Bowden, R. v [2022] EWHC 1540 (SCCO) (31 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Costs/2022/1540.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1540 (SCCO) |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
SENIOR COURTS COSTS OFFICE
Royal Courts of Justice London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
REGINA | ||
v | ||
BOWDEN | ||
Judgment on Appeal under Regulation 29 of the | ||
Criminal Legal Aid (Remuneration) Regulations 2013 |
____________________
____________________
CRIMINAL LEGAL AID (REMUNERATION) REGULATIONS 2013
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT
Crown Copyright ©
Costs Judge Rowley:
"cracked trial" means a case on indictment in which—
(a) the assisted person enters a plea of not guilty to one or more counts at the first hearing at which he or she enters a plea and—
(i) the case does not proceed to trial (whether by reason of pleas of guilty or for other reasons) or the prosecution offers no evidence; and
(ii) either—
(aa) in respect of one or more counts to which the assisted person pleaded guilty, the assisted person did not so plead at the first hearing at which he or she entered a plea; or
(bb) in respect of one or more counts which did not proceed, the prosecution did not, before or at the first hearing at which he or she entered a plea, declare an intention of not proceeding with them; or
(b) the case is listed for trial without a hearing at which the assisted person enters a plea;
"(1) Whether or not a jury has been sworn is not the conclusive factor in determining whether a trial has begun.
(2) There can be no doubt that a trial has begun if the jury has been sworn, the case opened, and evidence has been called. This is so, even if the trial comes to an end very soon afterwards, through a change of plea by a Defendant, or a decision by the prosecution not to continue (R v Maynard, R v Karra).
(3) A trial will also have begun if the jury has been sworn and the case has been opened by the prosecution to any extent, even if only for a very few minutes (Meek and Taylor v Secretary of State for Constitutional Affairs).
(4) The trial will not have begun, even if the jury has been sworn (and whether or not the Defendant has been put in charge of the jury) if there has been no trial in a meaningful sense, for example because before the case can be opened, the Defendant pleads guilty (R v Brook, R v Baker & Fowler, R v Sanghera, The Lord Chancellor v Ian Henery Solicitors Ltd (the present appeal)).
(5) A trial will have begun even if no jury has been sworn if submissions have begun in a continuous process resulting in the empanelling of the jury, the opening of the case and the leading of evidence (R v Dean-Smith, R v Bullingham, R v Wembo).
(6) If, in accordance with modern practice in long cases, a jury has been selected but not sworn, then provided the court is dealing with substantial matters of case management, it may well be that the trial has begun in a meaningful sense.
(7) It may not always be possible to determine, at the time, whether a trial has begun and is proceeding for the purposes of the Graduated Fee Schemes. It would often be necessary to see how events have unfolded to determine whether there has been a trial in any meaningful sense.
(8) Where there is likely to be any difficulty in deciding whether a trial has begun, and if so, when it begun, the Judge should be prepared, upon request, to indicate his or her view on the matter for the benefit of the parties and the Determining Officer, as Mitting J did in R v Dean Smith, in the light of the relevant principles explained in this judgment".
"20. In the case of Sallah, the defence counsel served a 10-page skeleton argument dealing with a number of issues of admissibility of the evidence. The prosecution counsel took instructions and decided that there was a risk that two of the prosecution witnesses had been inadvertently influenced in their identifications and as such the prosecution counsel did not feel that their evidence could be advanced. The remaining evidence in that case concerned CCTV footage and the Crown took the view that that was insufficient on which to base the prosecution. Consequently, no evidence was offered.
21. The abandonment of the case in Sallah arose from the adversarial nature of the intended trial and the defence challenging the appropriateness of the evidence expected from the prosecution. If the prosecution had not been persuaded of the strength of the defence argument, then the judge would undoubtedly have had to deal with that matter in the manner contemplated by the cases referred to in Henery.
22. By contrast, in this case, the issue was entirely the reluctance of a witness to continue to give evidence having retired from the police force. There was no argument from the defence as to the quality of that evidence. Having heard the judge's comments regarding the possibility of an adjournment, Mr Barnes' counsel (and indeed Mr Bowden's) understandably weighed in to indicate that they were ready for trial and that the case should proceed. It seems to me that those submissions are of a very different order from the arguments put forward in Sallah as to the quality of the prosecution's evidence and as to whether it could be relied upon as a result.
23. The issue is whether the issues of case management involved are substantial? In my view the efforts of the respective parties' counsel in Sallah justified that description, but it seems to me clear that this is not the case here. Shorn of the comments of the defence counsel regarding trial readiness and the length of time before any adjourned case could come on for hearing, the only matter before the court was the prosecution's attempt to adjourn the trial to a later date in order to obtain evidence from a different witness. Such an application to adjourn cannot in my view possibly be sufficient to amount to a substantial case management issue."