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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Paterson v. Procurator Fiscal [2002] ScotHC 74 (11 June 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2002/74.html Cite as: [2002] ScotHC 74 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord MacLean Lord Macfadyen Lord McCluskey
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Appeal No: 292/02 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD MACFADYEN in NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE by NORMAN STUART PATERSON Appellant; against PROCURATOR FISCAL, Dunoon Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: Shead; O'Donnell Vaughan
Respondent: N. Beynon, A.D.; Crown Agent
11 June 2002
(1) |
that on 12 November 2000 at 52 Cowal Place, Dunoon he did conduct himself in a disorderly manner, shout and swear, threaten the lieges with violence, brandish knives, and strike the door of the house occupied by Kenneth Fairgrieve, and commit a breach of the peace; and |
(2) |
that on 17 November 2002 at the same address he did conduct himself in a disorderly manner, shout, swear, brandish two knives or other similar instruments, threaten the lieges with violence, place the lieges in a state of fear and alarm, and commit a breach of the peace. |
The Sheriff sentenced the appellant to six months imprisonment in respect of each charge, the sentences to run concurrently.
(1) |
that the sentence of six months imprisonment on each charge was incompetent, the maximum competent sentence being three months imprisonment on each charge; and |
(2) |
that the sentences imposed were in any event excessive. |
When the appeal called on 26 March 2002 it was continued to enable the issue of the competency of the sentences to be heard by a bench of three judges.
"Where a person is convicted by the sheriff of -
(b) a second or subsequent offence inferring personal violence,
he may, without prejudice to any wider powers conferred by statute, be sentenced to imprisonment for any period not exceeding six months."
Where that provision does not apply, the maximum sentence of imprisonment which the sheriff may impose is three months. It was common ground that the appellant had a number of previous convictions in respect of offences which inferred personal violence. The question therefore came to be whether the offences of breach of the peace of which the appellant was found guilty on this occasion could be regarded as offences "inferring personal violence" within the meaning of section 5(3)(b).
"In our view, the correct starting-point is the language of the statute. In this type of situation, the question which the court has to address when faced with a plea of guilty, is whether or not the offence to which the appellant has pled guilty is one which 'infers personal violence'. We accept that an offence of breach of the peace does not in its nature necessarily infer personal violence: McMahon v Lees. But, in the present case, each appellant accepted that, among other things which he did, he assaulted another (or others) by punching, kicking and knocking the victim(s) to the ground, to the injury of the victim. These facts obviously infer personal violence whatever other words appear in the libel. In our opinion, it is clear that the appellants have each pled guilty to an offence inferring personal violence."
"... there is nothing in the charge to indicate that personal violence was used at any stage in the course of the incident which forms the basis of the charge. If there was to be personal violence, it lay in the future. The use of words involving threats to cause alarm or fear that personal violence may be used in the future does not imply that personal violence was used in the offence for which the appellant was being sentenced."
In Youngson the charge was breach of the peace, and the libel included an averment that the accused had threatened to assault a named complainer. That was held not to infer personal violence.
"It is also assault to menace B by a threatening gesture or by presenting or brandishing a weapon at him ... Verbal threats, unaccompanied by menacing gestures, do not constitute assault, although they may be criminal."
In the present case, he submitted, the libel of threatening the lieges with violence and brandishing knives was sufficient to constitute an offence inferring personal violence. He further submitted that there was no need, as a matter of fair notice, for the word "assault", or any other express averment identifying that the offence inferred personal violence, to appear in the libel. Sufficient notice of whether the offence inferred personal violence was given by the averments describing the actus reus.