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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Thompson v Procurator Fiscal Glasgow [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_27 (15 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2012/2012HCJAC27.html Cite as: 2012 GWD 8-140, 2012 SCL 508, [2012] HCJAC 27, 2012 SLT 577, [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_27, 2014 JC 16, 2012 SCCR 298 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord BracadaleLord Osborne
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[2012] HCJAC 27XJ1224/09OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
In the Appeal by
STUART THOMPSON Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, GLASGOW Respondent: _______
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For the appellant: C Mitchell; Paterson Bell, Edinburgh
For the Crown: Stewart QC AD, McGuire; Crown Agent
15 February 2012
Introduction
[1] On 25 August 2009 at Glasgow sheriff court the
appellant pled guilty on summary complaint to the following charge:
"On 14th June 2009 at Gordon Street, Glasgow you ... did assault [the complainer] ... and did seize hold of her buttocks."
[2] This appeal was heard with the appeals in Hay
v HM Adv [2012 HCJAC 28].
The circumstances
[3] At about 3.20am on the date libelled the
complainer, then aged 25, was with a group of female friends in Glasgow city centre. They were
waiting for a taxi. The appellant was one of a group of males standing
nearby. He was then aged 22. The complainer did not know him. The complainer
felt someone grab her buttocks. She turned and saw the appellant. She asked
him to move his hand and he replied "Fuck off and lighten up." She pushed him
away. The police were contacted and the appellant was identified as the person
responsible.
The hearing and the sheriff's decision
[4] Before the sheriff the Crown's position was
that this was an indecent assault. The plea in mitigation was that the
appellant's behaviour had been drunken and offensive but that he had derived no
sexual gratification from it.
[5] The sheriff decided that an assault by
grabbing the buttocks was an "indecent assault", and that by reason of
paragraph 40 of Schedule 3 to the Sexual Offences Act 2003 the appellant would
be subject to the notification requirements of the Act. Quoad ultra he
deferred sentence to await background reports. Sentence has since been further
deferred pending the outcome of this appeal.
The appeal
[6] The appellant has lodged a bill of
suspension and a devolution minute. In the bill of suspension he avers that
the sheriff erred in holding that his behaviour in connection with the offence
had a significant sexual aspect. In his devolution minute he contends that in
bringing this prosecution the Crown violated his right to a fair trial under
article 6(1) of the Convention by failing to give him fair notice that the
Crown viewed this as an indecent, rather than a simple, assault. He further
contends that the prosecution amounts to a disproportionate interference with
his right under article 3 of the Convention not to be subjected to inhuman or
degrading treatment, and with his right to respect for his private and family
life under article 8.
Submissions for the appellant
[7] Counsel
for the appellant submitted that it was of the essence of an indecent assault that
the conduct outraged public decency (Grainger v HM Adv 2005 SCCR 175). Indecency connoted social unacceptability. The assault on the
complainer was not indecent. Therefore paragraph 40 of Schedule 3 did not
apply to it. An indecent assault was not necessarily sexual. If the
appellant's conduct could be characterised as indecent, it was not sexually
indecent. At worst, it had been inappropriate. The appellant had not been
given fair notice that the Crown considered this to be an indecent assault. Quoad
ultra counsel adopted the Convention-based submissions of counsel for the
appellant in Hay v HM Adv (supra) and Heatherall v
PF Edinburgh [2012 HCJAC 25].
Submissions for the Crown
[8] The
advocate depute submitted that by reason of paragraph 40 of Schedule 3 to the
2003 Act, indecent assault was per se an offence to which the
notification requirements applied. The question of significant sexual aspect
did not arise. The complaint had libelled what could clearly amount to an
indecent assault, and had thus given fair notice. It was not necessary to
specify a nomen juris: nor did there need to be evidence of sexual
motive or gratification (Grainger, supra). It was for the
sentencing sheriff to decide whether the notification requirements of the 2003
Act applied.
Conclusions
[9] In my view paragraph 40 of Schedule 3 does
not apply in this case. For the reasons that I have given in Hay v
HM Adv (supra), I consider that if the Crown is insistent that an
alleged assault is indecent in nature and should therefore, on conviction,
result automatically in notification under paragraph 40, it should give express
notice of that in the libel itself. The Crown failed to do so in this case and
thereby infringed the appellant's article 6 rights. That is a sufficient
reason for our allowing the appeal.
[10] In any event, had the substantive question
arisen, I would have been of the view that on the facts paragraph 40 of
Schedule 3 to the 2003 Act (supra) did not apply.
[11] Since the Crown took its stand on paragraph
40, both before the sheriff and before this court, the possible application of
section 60 to the facts of the case is not in issue.
[12] It would appear that this was a momentary
incident. When the complainer pushed the appellant away, that was the end of it.
If the question of applying paragraph 60 had arisen, I would have considered
that the commonsense answer was that notification and its drastic consequences
were not brought into play by a minor incident of this nature.
Disposal
[13] I propose to your Lordships that we should
allow the appeal, quash the registration of the appellant under the 2003 Act
and return the case to the sheriff to decide on the sentence.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord BracadaleLord Osborne
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[2012] HCJAC 27XJ1224/09OPINION OF LORD BRACADALE
In the Appeal by
STUART THOMPSON Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, GLASGOW Respondent: _______
|
For the appellant: C Mitchell; Paterson Bell, Edinburgh
For the Crown: Stewart QC AD, McGuire; Crown Agent
15 February 2012
[14] For the reasons given by your Lordship in
the chair, I agree that the disposal of this appeal should be as proposed by
your Lordship.
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord BracadaleLord Osborne
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[2012] HCJAC 27XJ1224/09
OPINION OF LORD OSBORNE
In the Appeal by
STUART THOMPSON Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, GLASGOW Respondent: _______
|
For the appellant: C Mitchell; Paterson Bell, Edinburgh
For the Crown: Stewart QC AD, McGuire; Crown Agent
15 February 2012
[15] I agree with the Opinion of your Lordship in
the Chair and have nothing further to add.