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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Crane v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_40 (27 April 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_40.html
Cite as: 2006 JC 190, 2006 GWD 19-400, [2006] HCJAC 40, 2006 SCCR 301, [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_40

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Johnston

Lord Sutherland

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] HCJAC 40

MISC14/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD MACFADYEN

 

in

 

PETITION

 

by

 

DONNA CRANE

Petitioner:

 

to the

NOBILE OFFICIUM

 

_______

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Farquharson; Beaumont & Co.

Alt: Prentice, A.D.; Crown Agent.

 

27 April 2006

Introduction

[1] By this petition to the nobile officium of the court the petitioner seeks to appeal against a community service order imposed on her by the sheriff at Edinburgh in respect of breach of a supervised attendance order.

[2] The procedural history of the matter is as follows. On 13 June 2002 the petitioner was convicted on summary complaint at Edinburgh Sheriff Court of contraventions of sections 87(1) and 143(1) and (2) of the Road Traffic Act 1988 committed on 1 February 2001. She was fined £100 in respect of each charge. Payment was allowed to be made by instalments of £7 per fortnight. The petitioner failed to make payment of the fines, and after sundry procedure a supervised attendance order was made on 29 October 2002 (not 2004 as narrated in statement 1 of the petition). The petitioner failed to comply with that order, in respect that she failed to attend a number of appointments as instructed on dates in February and March 2003. Proceedings in respect of her breach of the supervised attendance order were brought, and in respect of those proceedings warrant for her apprehension was granted on 8 April 2003. The petitioner eventually appeared before the sheriff on 4 February 2005 and admitted breach of the supervised attendance order. The sheriff deferred further consideration of the matter for the purpose of obtaining social enquiry and community service reports. On 25 February 2005 the sheriff revoked the supervised attendance order and imposed a community service order requiring 80 hours work. When that disposal was intimated to the City of Edinburgh Council Social Work Department, an official of that department wrote to the Sheriff Clerk questioning the competency of the community service order.

[3] On 27 February 2006 the present petition was presented. The contention for the petitioner, set out in statement 4 of the petition, is that the imposition of the community service order was incompetent in terms of paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 7 to the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 ("the Act").

[4] The sheriff was invited to comment on the petition. He did so by letter dated 28 March 2006. He expressed the view that, in the light of the terms of paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 7 of the Act, read with section 238(1) of the Act, it was competent for him to impose, in respect of breach of a supervised release order, a community service order.

 

The competency of the application to the nobile officium

[5] It is averred that the Act provides no statutory right of appeal against an order made in respect of breach of a supervised attendance order, and that, in the absence of other means of bringing the community service order under review, the application to the nobile officium is necessary. Miss Farquharson, for the petitioner, sought to support that position by reference to McGregor 1999 SCCR 225 (see also Ward v PF (Hamilton), 20 September 2000, unreported, and Kelly v PF (Hamilton), 27 August 2002, unreported).

[6] The Advocate depute accepted that McGregor vouched the competency of a petition to the nobile officium as the appropriate means of bring under review the merits of an order made in respect of breach of a supervised attendance order. He submitted, however, that where, as in the present case, what was in issue was the competency of the order made in respect of breach of the supervised attendance order, the ordinary means of challenging a procedural irregularity, namely a bill of suspension, was available, and that availability precluded application to the nobile officium.

[7] We consider that the distinction drawn by the Advocate depute is sound. When what is in issue is whether the order made in respect of breach of a supervised attendance order is inappropriate or excessive in the circumstances, there is no statutory right of appeal, and resort to the nobile officium is competent to avoid injustice. Where, however, the issue is the competency of the order imposed in respect of breach of the supervised attendance order, proceedings by way of bill of suspension are appropriate, and a petition to the nobile officium is not.

[8] We were invited, if we took that view, to treat the present petition as if it were a bill of suspension. The Advocate depute offered no opposition to our taking that course. We consider it appropriate to do so.

 

The relevant legislation

[9] Supervised attendance orders are regulated by section 235 of the Act. That section provides inter alia as follows:

 

"(1)

A court may make a supervised attendance order in the circumstances specified in subsection (3) below ...

 

(3)

The circumstances referred to in subsection (1) above are where ―

 

 

(a)

the offender is of or over 16 years of age;

 

 

(b)

having been convicted of an offence, he has had imposed on him a fine which (or any part or instalment of which) he has failed to pay and the court, but for this section, would also have imposed on him a period of imprisonment under subsection (1) of section 219 of this Act; and

 

 

(c)

the court considers a supervised attendance order more appropriate than the serving or, as the case may be, imposition of such a period of imprisonment."

[10] Further provisions relating to supervised attendance orders, including the provisions conferring power on the court to deal with breach of such an order, are contained in Schedule 7 to the Act. Paragraph 4(2) of that schedule contains inter alia the following provisions:

 

"If it is proved to the satisfaction of the court before which an offender is brought or appears in pursuance of sub-paragraph (1) above that he has failed without reasonable excuse to comply with any of the requirements of paragraph 3 above or of the order (including any failure satisfactorily to carry out any instructions which he has been given by the supervising officer under the order) the court may ―

 

(a)

revoke the order and impose such period of imprisonment not exceeding ―

 

 

(i)

in the case of a sheriff court , 30 days ...

 

 

as the court considers appropriate; or

 

(b)

subject to section 235 of this Act and paragraph 2(2) above, vary the number of hours specified in the order."

[11] The imposition of a community service order is regulated by section 238 of the Act. Subsection (1) of that section provides as follows:

"Subject to the provisions of this Act, where a person of or over 16 years of age is convicted of an offence punishable by imprisonment, other than an offence the sentence for which is fixed by law, the court may, instead of imposing on him a sentence of, or including, imprisonment or any other form of detention, make an order (in this Act referred to as "a community service order") requiring him to perform unpaid work for such number of hours (being in total not less than 80 nor more than 300 on conviction on indictment, and not less than 80 nor more than 240 in any other case) as may be specified in the order."


Submissions

[12] For the petitioner, Miss Farquharson submitted that paragraph 4(2) conferred on the sheriff power to do one or other of two things when breach of a supervised attendance order was proved to his satisfaction. These were (1) revocation of the supervised attendance order and imposition of a period of imprisonment, and (2) variation of the number of hours specified in the supervised attendance order. No power to impose a community service order for breach of a supervised attendance order was conferred. Section 238(1) did not apply. It was concerned to empower the court, when sentencing for an offence, to impose a community service order instead of a sentence of imprisonment. It had no application in the context of dealing with breach of a supervised attendance order. What the sheriff had power to do in that context was regulated by paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 7. At that stage, the sheriff was not imposing a sentence for the original offences, but was rather imposing a penalty for the breach of the supervised attendance order. The sheriff's error lay in proceeding as if he were sentencing the petitioner for the original offences.

[13] The Advocate depute did not submit that the sheriff had power in the circumstances to impose a community service order.

 

Discussion

[14] In our opinion the sheriff had no power to impose a community service order in respect of the petitioner's breach of the supervised attendance order. His powers in that context are set out in paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 7 to the Act. That paragraph enabled the sheriff, on proof of breach of the supervised attendance order, to revoke that order and impose a period of imprisonment, or to vary the number of hours of supervised attendance. It did not enable him to impose a community service order.

[15] The sheriff relied on section 238(1) as empowering him to impose a community service order. In our view that involves a misconstruction of the subsection. It is concerned with the imposition of a sentence for an offence. It is confined to offences punishable by imprisonment. In the present case the original offences were not punishable by imprisonment, and therefore did not fall within the scope of section 238(1). Had the sheriff been sentencing the petitioner in respect of the original offence, the imposition of a community service order would have been incompetent on that account. But that is not what the sheriff was doing. He was not imposing a sentence in respect of the original offences. On the contrary, he was imposing a penalty for breach of the supervised attendance order. Nothing in section 238(1), properly construed, applies in such circumstances or increases the range of courses open to the sheriff under paragraph 4(2).

 

Result

[16] In these circumstances, proceeding as if we had before us a bill of suspension, we shall set aside the sheriff's order of 25 February 2005 by which he revoked the supervised release order and imposed the community service order, and remit to the sheriff to proceed as accords. That will enable the sheriff to take such course under paragraph 4(2) of Schedule 7 as he considers appropriate in all the circumstances.


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_40.html