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 £5, 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] | ||
Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Clark v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2003] ScotHC 66 (28 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2003/66.html Cite as: [2003] ScotHC 66 |
[New search] [Help]
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
|
Lord Justice General Lord Kirkwood Lord MacLean
|
Appeal No: XC1070/03 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD KIRKWOOD in APPEAL under section 74 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 by HUGH CLARK Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: Shead; Neil F. McPherson, Kilmarnock
Respondent:
I.G. Armstrong, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent28 November 2003
[1] The appellant, Hugh Clark, appeared at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court charged on indictment with assault to severe injury. The charge narrated that on 14 August 2001 at the Foregate, Kilmarnock he assaulted James Cormie, punched him on the face, knocked him to the ground and repeatedly kicked him on the face and body, all to his severe injury. [2] So far as the procedural history of the case is concerned, the appellant was detained on 3 September 2001, and was interviewed, arrested and charged by the police. He was then released from custody. On 6 November 2002 he appeared on petition at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court in answer to a petition warrant. He was committed for further examination and granted bail. On or about 4 August 2003 he was served with a copy of the indictment citing him to a sheriff and jury sitting at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court on 6 October 2003. The appellant had given notice of a devolution issue within the meaning of Schedule 6 to the Scotland Act 1998 claiming that there had been such delay in bringing proceedings against him as to breach the reasonable time requirement contained in Article 6(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights. On 25 September 2003 the sheriff heard submissions from the parties, and she refused the minute and granted leave to appeal. [3] Article 6(1) provides inter alia as follows:"In the determination of his civil rights and obligations or of any criminal charge against him, everyone is entitled to a fair and public hearing within a reasonable time ... ".
"The Crown having conceded that the overall period of some twenty five months from date of charge to trial diet was on the face of it unreasonable, the Sheriff failed to give due weight to the period between 21st March 2002 when a Petition warrant was passed to the police and 6th November 2002 when the said warrant was executed as forming a substantial part of the overall period and for which the Crown could give no satisfactory explanation."
Decision
[13] As we have said, the sheriff stated that, viewing the matter as a whole, she accepted the Crown's explanations as to the reasons for the delay of 25 months in this case and, in light of the explanations given by the Crown, she was not prepared to hold that the lapse of time was unreasonable. However, at the end of her report she made the following observations:"In coming to my conclusion I also considered the prejudice or the absence of prejudice to the Appellant as a factor which I was entitled to take into account in terms of Lord Nimmo Smith's observation in HMA V McGlinchey. Mr Muir accepted that there was no prejudice in the actual proceedings due to the fact that the video evidence has been preserved. Mr Muir was at pains to point out that the Appellant was, however, prejudiced in the conduct of his wider life. Whilst I accept this to a certain extent, I have to balance this against the rights of the victim should the case not proceed.
It must also be borne in mind, as Lord Bingham states in Dyer v Watson 2002 SCCR at page 222 that there are practicalities of litigation. I accept the explanation given by the Crown as to the reasons for the delay. I do not accept that the delay will prejudice the appellant in the conduct of this case and whilst it may be said it has prejudiced him in the wider conduct of his life when that is balanced against the victim's rights to have the matter proceed to trial, it is my view that the delay is not unreasonable. I therefor refused the Devolution Minute".
"[78] Prejudice has not been identified by the court as a specific factor to which regard must be had when considering whether the period of time was reasonable. But this does not mean that the question of prejudice has been ignored by the guarantees in art 6(1). On the contrary, the risk of prejudice if the guarantees are breached lies at the very heart of the article. The reason why the guarantee of a hearing within a reasonable time appears in art 6(1) is because prejudice is presumed to arise if the guarantee is violated ...
[79] Where significant prejudice due to a period of delay can be demonstrated, it can be taken into account in making the assessment ... But it is not necessary for a person charged who claims that his art 6(1) Convention right has been violated to show that he has suffered, or will suffer, any actual prejudice. The mere fact of inordinate or excessive delay is sufficient to raise a presumption in his favour that he will be prejudiced ... ".As Lord Hope observed, where significant prejudice can be demonstrated, it can be taken into account when making the assessment. However, it is, in our opinion, quite inappropriate for the court, when considering whether there has been a breach of the reasonable time requirement, to embark on a balancing act in the course of which any prejudice sustained by the accused is balanced against "the rights of the victim" should the case not proceed. In the circumstances of this case we consider that the sheriff, having ascertained the facts, did not apply the correct test. That being so, we are satisfied that the issue as to whether or not there was a breach of the reasonable time requirement is now at large for this court.
[15] The lapse of time with which we are concerned amounts to 25 months, namely from 3 September 2001 until 6 October 2003. At the hearing before the sheriff, the procurator fiscal depute conceded that the lapse of time gave grounds for real concern, and for present purposes we shall proceed on the basis, as was conceded by the Advocate depute, that that was a concession which was properly made. Submissions were made to us in relation to the three periods of allegedly unexplained delay. The first related to the fact that the police report was not sent to the procurator fiscal until March 2002, some six months after the appellant had been detained, cautioned and charged. However, the complainer sustained a back injury which involved crushed and detached vertebrae and necessitated surgery. We were told that it was not possible to ascertain the overall effect of the injury on the complainer, and accordingly the aggravation or aggravations which should be libelled, until it had settled, and that the police encountered difficulties in trying to take statements from the surgeons involved. In the circumstances we are not satisfied that there was significant unexplained delay in the preparation of the police report. The second period of delay (which was the one principally founded on by the appellant in the Note of Appeal) related to the period from 21 March 2002, when the petition warrant was passed to the police with an instruction that the appellant should be invited to surrender to it voluntarily, until early in November when he did in fact attend at the police station in answer to the warrant. The police were asked to contact the procurator fiscal if they had been unable to effect service within three months, and we were advised by the Advocate depute that that period was in accordance with normal practice as the police did not give a high degree of priority to dealing with petition warrants where voluntary attendance was invited. However, after the three month period had expired it was two months before the procurator fiscal sent the police a reminder and, no reply having been received, a further two months elapsed before a second reminder was sent. In our opinion, there was in this connection a period of unexplained delay which amounted to some four months, namely from June until October. The third period of delay related to the time which was taken to prepare the Crown precognition. This delay was principally due to the videotape requiring to be reformatted which took about four months. We accept that in a case of this nature it was good practice to have the videotape reformatted before the witnesses were interviewed, and it does appear that the external organisation carrying out the work was very busy, and that for some months the matter was effectively out of the hands of the procurator fiscal and the police. In these circumstances we do not consider that the time taken to produce the precognition can be categorised as unreasonable. After the precognition was sent to Crown Office on 16 July 2003 arrangements were made for the trial to commence on 6 October 2003. [16] Where it is alleged that there has been a breach of the reasonable time requirement contained in Article 6(1), each case must be considered in light of its own particular circumstances. In this case the accused was an adult and he was not in custody. We have taken into account all the circumstances and the submissions of the parties. While the procurator fiscal depute conceded that the lapse of time of 25 months gave grounds for real concern, the issue before us is whether, in light of the information now available, including the explanations tendered by the Crown, the overall lapse of time has crossed the threshold of proving a breach of the reasonable time requirement, a threshold which, as Lord Bingham of Cornhill observed in Dyer v. Watson, supra, (at para. [52]), is a high one, not easily crossed. The court is not concerned simply with the question whether, within the overall lapse of time, there has been a period, or periods, of unexplained delay. The court must view the whole picture. While it has taken longer than normal for this case to come to trial, we have not been persuaded, in light of the explanations given by the Crown, that the overall lapse of time violated the reasonable time requirement contained in Article 6(1). We shall answer both questions in the negative and refuse the appeal.