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 >> Her Majesty's Advocate v. McGale & Ors [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_59 (07 April 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2005/HCJAC_59.html Cite as: [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_59, [2005] HCJAC 59 |
[New search] [Help]
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY OPINION by THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD MACFADYEN in causa HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE against CHRISTOPHER FRANCIS McGALE AND OTHERS ___________ |
Appellant: Ablet, A.D., Crown Agent
Respondent: (First Accused) Ms. Livingstone; (Second Accused) Ms. P. Collins
7 April 2005
[1] The first accused, Christopher Francis McGale, who is 22 years of age, was indicted, with two others, at the instance of the Lord Advocate on two charges of contravening the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971. The case called before me on 7 April 2005 for a preliminary hearing in terms of section 72 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 (as amended). At the preliminary hearing the first accused (to whom I shall henceforth refer as "the accused") tendered a plea of guilty to charge 1 on the indictment under certain deletions, and a plea of not guilty to charge 2. Those pleas were accepted by the Crown. Charge 1 (as amended) was a charge that on a single day in December 2004 the accused was concerned in the supplying of a small quantity of diamorphine to two undercover police officers, in contravention of section 4(3)(b) of the 1997 Act. [2] In moving for sentence, the Advocate depute laid before me a schedule of the accused's previous convictions, and drew attention to two convictions in particular. They were:(1) a summary conviction on 3 August 2000 at Falkirk Sheriff Court in respect of a contravention of section 4(3)(b) of the 1971 Act, in respect of which the accused was sentenced to nine months detention in a Young Offenders Institution; and
(2) a solemn conviction on 5 February 2002 at the same court in respect of a further contravention of the same section, in respect of which the accused was sentenced to 30 months detention in a Young Offenders Institution.
The Advocate depute produced the relative complaint and indictment which showed that the drug which the accused had been concerned in supplying on each of the two previous occasions was diamorphine. The current proceedings have thus resulted in the accused's third separate conviction of a class A drug trafficking offence, and consequently section 205B of the 1995 Act (as amended) applies.
[3] The issue which arose in the course of submissions related to the proper construction of sections 205 and 196 of the 1995 Act, when read together. Miss Livingstone, who appeared for the accused, drew my attention to certain passages in the annotations to the 1995 Act which appears in Renton & Brown's Criminal Procedure Legislation and which appear to suggest that in no circumstances could a person who pled guilty to a third class A drug trafficking offence be sentenced to less than 80% of seven years imprisonment or detention. She submitted that that was an erroneous view of the legislation. She submitted that the accused should have the benefit both of section 205B(3) and of section 196(1). [4] Before turning to the annotations in question, it is convenient to set out the relevant statutory provisions. I have already summarised the circumstances in which section 205B applies. There is no dispute that it applies in the present case. Section 205B(2) provides inter alia as follows:"Subject to subsection (3) below, where the section applies the court shall sentence the person -
(a) where he has attained the age of 21 years, to a term of imprisonment of at least seven years."
"The court shall not impose the sentence otherwise required by subsection (2) above where it is of the opinion that there are specific circumstances which -
(a) relate to any of the offences or to the offender; and
(b) would make that sentence unjust."
"Where the court is passing sentence on an offender under section 205B(2) of this Act and that offender has pled guilty to the offence for which he is being so sentenced, the court may, after taking into account the matters mentioned in paragraphs (a) and (b) of subsection (1) above, pass a sentence of less than seven years imprisonment or, as the case may be, detention but any such sentence shall not be of a term of imprisonment or period of detention of less than five years, two hundred and nineteen days."
"It was only after the Committee stage of the Crime and Punishment Bill that the Government moved the amendments, now found in subs. (2), to enable the High Court to mitigate the automatic minimum sentences introduced as s.205B of the 1995 Act in cases where a timeous guilty plea has been tendered. The mandatory sentence of seven years may in such circumstances be reduced to a period of not less than five years 219 days, a 20 per cent discount. Clarification of the interplay between subs.(2) [of section 196] and s.205B(3) which relates to the extent of judicial discretion in sentencing after trial is found in s.199(3)(c) below. Section 199 serves to limit the range of sentencing options available at the judge's discretion in the circumstances set out in s.205B; accordingly, it is submitted that the sentencing options specified in s.199(2) of the Act do not apply to a third conviction before the High Court for a class A drug trafficking offence - an offender has to be incarcerated for a term of imprisonment, or detention of at least five years 219 days in any such case."
"It would appear that the judicial discretion to reduce the mandatory seven year sentence (subs.(3)) operates separately from, and not as an addition to, any discount in sentence award under s.196; in other words, that discretion cannot be invoked to reduce the sentence following a guilty plea below the statutory minimum of five years 219 days. The provision in s.205B seems intended to allow only the most limited degree of judicial discretion to depart from the mandatory sentences set out in subs.(2)".