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 ┬г1, 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. GB [2006] ScotHC HCJ_10 (09 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJ_10.html Cite as: [2006] HCJ 10, [2006] ScotHC HCJ_10 |
[New search] [Help]
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY [2006] HCJ 10 |
|
|
OPINION OF LORD HARDIE in the cause HER MAJESTY'S
ADVOCATE Pursuer; against G.B. Defender: ннннннннннннннннн________________ |
For the crown: Brown, Advocate Depute instructed by the Crown
Agent
For the accused:
(1) On
"The Court
ordains the Crown to disclose any additional information outstanding no later
than 4pm on 1 August, allows the defence seven days thereafter to decide
whether a special defence and list of witnesses is required and to intimate to
the Crown any Crown witnesses which are required, appointed 16 October 2006 at
10am within the High Court of Justiciary at Glasgow as a diet of trial..."
(2) On 16 October the accused appeared for
trial, pled not guilty adhered to special defences of alibi and incrimination
and referred to a list of witnesses all of which had been lodged within the
period specified in the interlocutor dated 31 July. The trial proceeded until
19 October and in the circumstances outlined in my opinion dated 24 October it
was deserted pro loco et
tempore. The Principal Advocate
Depute intimated that a fresh indictment would be served that day with a
preliminary hearing fixed for 2 November. Accordingly he sought an extension of the 110
and 140 day time limits specified in section 65 of the 1995 Act as amended. In the event that an extension of the time
limits was not granted the Principal Advocate Depute invited me to impose
additional bail conditions, including the surrender of the accused's passport,
a requirement that he attend once or twice weekly at his local police station
and his giving an undertaking not to apply for a passport. Senior counsel for the accused moved for bail
and confirmed the willingness of the accused to accept the conditions proposed
by the Crown as well as electronic monitoring, if that was available.
(3) I considered the competing submissions in which the Principal
Advocate Depute conceded that the only basis for refusing bail was the
accused's previous failure to appear. It
seemed to me that the issue was finely balanced. Although the accused had previously failed to
appear, section 65 of the 1995 Act as amended was designed to prevent delays in
trials. More significantly it was
intended to prevent the incarceration of an accused beyond the statutory time
limits, except on cause shown. I was not
satisfied that electronic monitoring would be available and with considerable
reluctance agreed to extend both time limits to the date of the preliminary
hearing. Such a decision had the effect of
enabling the Crown to serve the fresh indictment but also ensured that the
issue could be addressed more fully at the preliminary hearing on 2 November.
(4) On 2 November the Advocate Depute invited me to fix a trial
diet and thereafter to extend the 140-day time limit to a date beyond the date
fixed for the trial. Mr. Graham for the accused satisfied me that
electronic monitoring was in principle available in such cases but that I
required a report about the suitability of the bail address. The accused did not possess a passport and was
willing to report daily at his local police station. He had requested family members to provide
caution for his future attendance at court. Mr. Graham invited me to continue the hearing
until 9 November to enable me to obtain the necessary monitoring report
and agreed to an extension of the 140-day time limit until that date. In doing so he emphasised that he should not
be taken to be conceding that a further extension would be appropriate. An extension until 9 November would enable the
necessary inquiries to be made so that the court could take an informed
decision about the question of admitting the accused to bail. In these circumstances I continued the diet to
9 November and I extended the 140-day time limit to that date. I also requested a report about the
suitability of the proposed bail address for electronic monitoring.
(5) On 9 November I again heard submissions in support of the
respective positions of each party. The
Advocate Depute relied upon the previous failure to appear for trial whereas
counsel for the accused relied upon the favourable report about the suitability
of electronic monitoring. He also
confirmed the accused's willingness to submit to a daily curfew between the
hours of
(6) For centuries successive legislatures have imposed
restrictions on the imprisonment of persons awaiting trial in
"(4)...an accused who is
committed for any offence until liberated in due course of law shall not be
detained by virtue of that committal for a total period of more than-
...
(b) 110
days, unless the trial of the case is commenced within that period, which
failing he shall be liberated forthwith and thereafter he shall be for ever
free from all question or process for that offence."
Subsection (7) permitted a single judge of the High Court to extend the period in subsection (4)(b)
"where he is
satisfied that delay in the commencement of the trial is due to-
(a)
the illness
of the accused or the judge;
(b)
the absence
or illness of any necessary witness;
(c)
any other sufficient
cause which is not attributable to any fault on the part of the prosecutor."
(7) In 2004 the terms of section 65 of the
1995 Act were considered by the Scottish Parliament in the context of
procedural reforms introduced by the 2004 Act and that section was amended. The relevant provisions for the purposes of
this case are:
"(4)...an accused who is
committed for any offence until liberated in due course of law shall not be
detained by virtue of that committal for a total period of more than-
...
(aa) where an
indictment has been served on the accused in respect of the High Court-
...
(ii) 140 days, unless the trial of the case
is commenced within that period, which failing he shall be entitled to be
admitted to bail."
The provisions
for extending the statutory time limit are contained in subsection (5), which
is in the following terms:
"On an application made for
the purpose-
(a)
in a case where, at the time the
application is made, an indictment has not been served on the accused, a single
judge of the High court; or
(b)
in any other case, the court specified in
the notice under section 66(6) of this Act,
may,
on cause shown, extend any period mentioned in subsection (4) above."
Thus it is
apparent that although it made significant changes to the legislation the
Scottish Parliament recognised that the historical protection for the liberty
of the individual should be
maintained. That recognition is important when one
considers the argument advanced on 2 November by the Advocate Depute in support
of an extension of the 140-day period based upon the public interest and the
interests of justice. While it is
undoubtedly desirable that the trial of an accused should proceed,
the interests of justice and the public interest are not confined to that
single issue. If it were otherwise the
statutory protection recently reaffirmed by the Scottish Parliament would have
no meaning. It seems to me that it was
the clear intention of the legislature that the Crown should justify any
proposed extension of the time limit by showing cause
why it should be granted. If I am
correct in that interpretation of section 65(5)(b) of the 1995 Act as amended,
the Crown has the burden of satisfying the court that the circumstances of any
particular case merit the deprivation of the liberty of an individual beyond
the strict limits imposed by Parliament. In other words it will not suffice for the
Crown simply to refer to the public interest and to confuse that with the
narrow issue of bringing the accused to trial. If that were the test the statutory protection
of the individual against unlawful detention would be meaningless. In other
words the approach adopted by the Advocate Depute on 2 November would
result in removing the protection of the liberty of the individual that has
been in place in
(8) In my previous opinion dated 24 October I
outlined the circumstances that gave rise to the desertion of the earlier
trial. It is unnecessary to repeat these
but it is sufficient to note that the cause of the desertion was the abdication
by the Crown of its responsibilities in the public interest to ensure that an
accused receives a fair trial. It has
long been recognised that the Crown must be impartial and has an obligation to
disclose any relevant material to the representatives of the accused. In this case the Crown failed to act in the
public interest and in the interests of justice by failing to have in place
basic management systems designed to ensure that all relevant material was
disclosed to enable the accused to receive a fair trial. If the test to be applied by the court was
that which applied prior to 2004, there can be no doubt that the Crown would
fail. How could the Crown satisfy the
court that delay in the commencement of the trial was due to any other
sufficient cause not attributable to any fault on the part of the prosecutor
when the sole cause was such fault? While
fault on the part of the prosecutor is not a bar to the grant of an extension
of the 140-day time limit, nevertheless it seems to me that it is still a
relevant consideration for the court.
(9) What is the justification advanced for
the extension sought on this occasion? The Advocate Depute relied upon the
nature of the crime with which the accused was charged, namely murder. If that alone were cause for detaining an
accused indefinitely, it would make a mockery of the presumption of innocence. Such a submission also ignores the plain
language used by the legislature when it refers in section 65(4) to an accused
committed for any offence (my
emphasis) until liberated in due course of law. There is no exception to the statutory
protection. Nor should there be any
exception if the liberty of the individual is to have any significance.
Moreover in 2004 the Scottish Parliament clearly contemplated the release on
bail of those charged with murder and rape. Section 24A of the 1995 Act as
amended was inserted into the legislation by section 17 of the 2004 Act.
Section 24A(2) envisages the grant of bail to a person charged with murder or
rape and the remaining provisions of that section consider situations where
there is a restriction of movement condition of any such bail order. Thus the mere fact that an accused is charged
with murder does not appear to me to be just cause for extending the period of
his incarceration before trial.
(10) The Advocate Depute also relied upon the
desirability of bringing persons to trial and invoked the public interest and
the interests of justice in that regard. As I have already observed the public interest
and the interests of justice are much wider than the narrow focus of the
submission before me. Mere lip service
to such important principles is insufficient to merit what would otherwise be
an unlawful detention in the absence of the sanction of the court.
(11) The final consideration advanced by the
Advocate Depute was the previous failure of the accused to appear at a trial
diet. That is obviously a factor to be
considered. However it seems to me that
it cannot alone amount to sufficient cause for an extension of the period of
detention before trial. That is
particularly so where the reason for the failure to comply with the statutory
provisions is due to serious deficiencies in the practices and procedures of
the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service. Even when the previous failure to appear is
taken along with the other considerations I am not convinced that the Crown has
shown cause why the statutory time limits should be
extended and I shall refuse that motion.
(12) What are the consequences for the accused? In terms of section 65(4)(aa)(ii)
he is entitled to be admitted to bail. In admitting any accused to bail the court
recognises that no system of bail can be sufficiently robust as to guarantee
the attendance of an accused for trial but efforts are made by the imposition
of appropriate conditions to secure that objective. Having regard to the previous failure to
appear the conditions of any bail order should be more stringent than might
otherwise be appropriate. Apart from the
standard conditions of bail relating to attendance at future diets, the
obligations not to commit future offences, or to interfere with witnesses or
otherwise obstruct the course of justice it seems to me that the following
additional conditions are appropriate:
(i)
that
the accused undertakes not to take any steps himself or through the agency of
others to obtain a passport until after the conclusion of his trial;
(ii)
that
the accused will be subject to restriction of movement and shall remain within
his bail address at 56 Drygrange Road, Craigend Glasgow daily between the hours
of 8pm and 8am;
(iii)
that
the accused will be subject to remote monitoring of his movements and will
comply with the installation of the necessary equipment and the maintenance in
place of such equipment to enable effective monitoring to be carried out;
(iv)
that
the accused will attend daily at London Road Police Station between the hours
of
(v)
that in advance of his release from custody
the accused will lodge with the Sheriff Clerk, Glasgow the sum of г5,000 as
caution for his attendance at all future diets.
The reason for
these additional conditions is to meet the concerns expressed by the Crown
about the previous failure to attend and to secure so far as possible the
attendance of the accused at all future diets in this case.