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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Attorney General v. Danhai Williams and Others (Jamaica) [1997] UKPC 22 (12th May, 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1997/22.html Cite as: [1997] UKPC 22, [1997] 3 WLR 389, [1998] AC 351 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 70 of 1995
The Attorney General Appellant
v.
(1) Danhai Williams and
(2) Danwills Construction Limited Respondents
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF JAMAICA
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 12th May 1997
------------------
Present
at the hearing:-
Lord Lloyd of Berwick
Lord Hoffmann
Lord Hope of Craighead
Lord Clyde
Lord Hutton
·[Delivered
by Lord Hoffmann]
-------------------------
1. The fundamental human right to protection
against unlawful searches and seizures is part of the English common law. In Entick v. Carrington (1765) 2
Wils. 275 the King's Messengers entered the plaintiff's house and seized his
papers under a warrant issued by the Secretary of State, a government
minister. Lord Camden C.J. said at page
291:-
" Our law holds the property of every man
so sacred, that no man can set his foot upon his neighbour's close without his
leave; if he does, he is a trespasser, though he does no damage at all; if he
will tread upon his neighbour's ground, he must justify it by law ... we can
safely say there is no law in this country to justify the defendants in what
they have done; if there was, it would destroy all the comforts of society; for
papers are often the dearest property a man can have."
From
the common law this right has passed into the Fourth Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States and into the constitutions of countries
throughout the world. In Jamaica it
appears in section 19 (1) of the Constitution:-
"Except with his own consent, no person
shall be subject to the search of his person or his property or the entry by
others on his premises."
2. But the right is not absolute. As Lord Camden said, the search must be
"justified by law". There are
cases in which the power to enter and search without the consent of the owner
is necessary for the proper functioning of a democratic society. Such powers have long existed at common law
and under various statutes. In Jamaica,
section 19 of the Constitution restricts the power of the legislature to create
new powers of search. They must come
within one or other of the categories contained in subsection (2), such as
"in the interests of ... public revenue" or "for the purpose of
preventing or detecting crime".
But the constitutionality of the old, pre-Independence powers is
preserved by section 26(8).
3. This case concerns the power of search
contained in section 203 of the Customs Act:-
"If any officer shall have reasonable
cause to suspect that any uncustomed or prohibited goods, or any books or
documents relating to uncustomed or prohibited goods, are harboured, kept or
concealed in any house or other place in the Island, and it shall be made to
appear by information on oath before any Resident Magistrate or Justice in the
Island, it shall be lawful for such Resident Magistrate or Justice by special
warrant under his hand to authorise such officer to enter and search such house
or other place, by day or by night, and to seize and carry away any such
uncustomed or prohibited goods, or any books or documents relating to
uncustomed or prohibited goods, as may be found therein; and it shall be lawful
for such officer, in case of resistance, to break open any door, and to force
and remove any other impediment or obstruction to such entry, search or seizure
as aforesaid."
4. It is a pre-Independence power and therefore
constitutional by virtue of section 26(8).
Even if it were new, it is plainly in the interests of the public
revenue and for the purpose of preventing or detecting crime and so would have
little difficulty in qualifying under section 19(2).
5. The circumstances in which this provision came
to be invoked were as follows. In May
1992 the Revenue Protection Division were
investigating allegations of a conspiracy to evade customs duties by
the fraudulent importation of large numbers of motor vehicles. Mr. Danhai Williams and Danwills
Construction Limited, a company which he controls, were suspected of being
implicated in the fraud. On 12th May
1992 Mr. Arthur McNeish, a Detective Assistant Superintendent of Police
attached to the Revenue Protection Division, and Mr. Michael Surridge, an
officer of the Division, visited the business premises of Mr. Williams's
company in Windward Road, Kingston.
According to their evidence, they were confronted by a hostile and
abusive crowd. They invited Mr.
Williams to come with them to the offices of the Revenue Protection Division
but he refused. The investigation
continued and some six months later, on 5th November 1992, Mr. McNeish applied
to a Justice of the Peace pursuant to section 203 for a warrant to search Mr.
Williams's home and two other premises occupied by him or his company,
including the premises in Windward Road.
6. The power conferred by section 203 is ancillary
to section 210 of the Act, which makes it an offence (among other things)
knowingly to keep or conceal uncustomed goods or to be knowingly concerned in
dealing with any goods with intent to defraud Her Majesty of any duties due thereon
or to be knowingly concerned in any fraudulent evasion of import duties.
7. In support of his application for a warrant,
Mr. McNeish swore an affidavit as follows:-
"The information and complaint of Arthur
McNeish in the Parish of Kingston made on oath before me the undersigned one of
Her Majesty's Justices of the Peace in and for the Parish of Kingston this 5th
day of November in the year of Our Lord One Thousand Nine Hundred and Ninety
Two who saith that he hath good reason to believe that in a certain place
situated at 1052 Windward Road, in the said Parish, occupied by Danwills
Construction Limited and Danhai Williams is kept or concealed uncustomed goods
or books or documents relating thereto, contrary to section 210 of the Customs
Act."
8. The affidavits in respect of the other two
premises were in similar terms.
9. The warrants were issued the same day and the
one in respect of the Windward Road premises read as follows:-
"To Arthur McNeish or any Customs Officer
WHEREAS the undersigned, one of Her Majesty's
Justices of the Peace in and for the Parish of Kingston being satisfied upon
written information on oath that there is good reason to believe that in a
certain place, to wit:
1052 Windward Road
Kingston
is kept or concealed uncustomed goods on which
the duty leviable by Law has not been paid or books, documents or instruments
relating thereto.
11. THESE ARE THEREFORE, in Her Majesty's name to
authorise and command you, with proper assistance, by such force as may be
necessary by night or by day, to enter or go to the said place and to search
the same and all persons found therein and to seize all such goods and other articles
reasonably supposed to have been used in connection with goods which may be
found in the said place and to take further action in the premises as the Law
allows
R. Stewart
Justice of the Peace."
13. Armed with these warrants, Mr. McNeish made
arrangements for a search. He enlisted
the help of members of the Jamaica Defence Force to secure the area against any
crowd intervention. He then carried out
the search with the support of a number of members of the Revenue Protection
Division and the Police. There was no
resistance. The items removed consisted
of a large number of miscellaneous documents together with a brief case and a
plastic bag containing, in addition to documents, items such as a cellular
phone case, some keys and a pocket calculator.
14. The investigation then proceeded and on or
about 9th December 1992 Mr. Williams and others were charged with conspiracy to
defraud. In the following July charges
under the Customs Act were added. On
14th September 1993, nearly nine months after the events which their Lordships
have described, the respondents issued a motion returnable in the
Constitutional Court, claiming redress on the ground that the search and the
removal of documents and other property had been a violation of their
fundamental rights. In addition to
section 19(1), the applicants relied in respect of the seizure upon section
18(1), of which the material words are as follows:-
"18.(1) No property of any description
shall be compulsorily taken possession of ..."
15. But this right is also subject to exceptions,
in section 18(2):-
"(2) Nothing in this section shall be
construed as affecting the making or operation of any law so far as it provides
for the taking of possession ... of property ...
(k)for so long only as may be necessary for the
purposes of any examination, investigation, trial or inquiry ..."
16. The motion was brought pursuant to section 25
of the Constitution. The following
parts are material:-
"(1) ... if any person alleges that any of
the provisions of sections 14 to 24 (inclusive) of this Constitution has been,
is being or is likely to be contravened in relation to him, then, without
prejudice to any other action with respect to the same matter which is lawfully
available, that person may apply to the Supreme Court for redress.
(2) The Supreme Court shall have original
jurisdiction to hear and determine any application made by any person in
pursuance of subsection (1) of this section and may make such orders, issue
such writs and give such directions as it may consider appropriate for the purpose
of enforcing, or securing the enforcement of, any of the provisions of the said
sections 14 to 24 (inclusive) to the protection of which the person concerned
is entitled:
17. Provided that the Supreme Court shall not
exercise its powers under this subsection if it is satisfied that adequate
means of redress for the contravention alleged are or have been available to
the person concerned under any other law."
18. The redress sought by the motion was a
declaration that the warrants were invalid and the searches unlawful and
unconstitutional and that the seizure of the documents, files and other
property was illegal or made without due process or an abuse of process. The applicants sought orders for return of
the documents and other property and for compensation. Wider claims for a stay of the criminal
proceedings and the exclusion of the documents from evidence were abandoned at
the hearing in the Supreme Court.
19. The court (Patterson, Ellis and Smith JJ.)
dismissed the motion. They held that
(a) the Justice of the Peace had material on which he could properly exercise
his discretion to issue warrants under section 203; (b) the warrants were
formally valid and (c) the searches and seizures were within the terms of the
warrants and therefore lawful. Further,
they considered that even if the search and seizure had been unlawful, the
proviso to
section 25(2) precluded constitutional
redress. It appeared to them that adequate
means of redress were available under the ordinary law. The applicants could sue for trespass,
detinue or conversion or invite the Resident Magistrate hearing the trial to
exercise his discretion to exclude the seized materials from evidence.
The
applicants appealed to the Court of Appeal (Wright, Forte and Downer
JJ.A.). The judges of the Court of
Appeal agreed with the Supreme Court that the Justice of the Peace had material
on which he could properly have exercised his discretion. But they considered that the terms of the
warrants showed that the discretion had not been properly exercised. The searches and seizures were accordingly
unlawful. They agreed that constitutional
redress was precluded by the proviso to section 25(2) but reconstituted the
proceedings as if they had been an action in tort begun by writ. They held that the Attorney-General
(representing the Crown) was liable in tort for trespass to the applicants'
land and goods and remitted the matter to a judge of the Supreme Court for
damages to be assessed and for trial of the question whether the execution of
the warrant had been an abuse of power by the authorities. Against that decision, the Attorney-General
appeals to their Lordships' Board.
20. Their Lordships think that it will be
convenient to consider the matter in four stages. First, the duties of a Justice who is asked to issue a warrant
under section 203. Secondly, the way in
which the discretion was exercised in this case. Thirdly, the legal effect of the warrant. Fourthly,
the remedies (if any) available to the applicants.
1.The Duties of the Justice.
The purpose of the requirement that a warrant
be issued by a Justice is to interpose the protection of a judicial decision
between the citizen and the power of the State. If the legislature has decided in the public interest that in
particular circumstances it is right to authorise a policeman or other
executive officer of the State to enter upon a person's premises, search his
belongings and seize his goods, the function of the Justice is to satisfy
himself that the prescribed circumstances exist. This is a duty of high constitutional importance. The law relies upon the independent scrutiny
of the judiciary to protect the citizen against the excesses which would
inevitably flow from allowing an executive officer to decide for himself
whether the conditions under which he is permitted to enter upon private
property have been met.
21. Section 203 is clear as to the matters upon
which the Justice must be satisfied. It
must appear to him from information on oath that the officer has reasonable
cause to suspect one or more of
the matters there
specified. It is not sufficient
that the Justice is satisfied by the officer's oath that he suspects; it must
appear to the Justice that his cause for suspicion is reasonable. The test is an objective one. The matter was considered by the House of
Lords in Reg. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, Ex parte Rossminster Ltd.
[1980] AC 952, which also concerned a search by officers of the revenue on a
warrant issued by a judge. Although the
statutory provision in that case, section 20C of the Taxes Management Act 1970,
as amended, provided that it was for the appropriate judicial officer to be
satisfied on information on oath given by an officer of the Board that there
was reasonable ground for suspicion that an offence had been committed, the
practical effect of the requirement was the same as that laid down by section
203 of the Customs Act. Lord
Wilberforce said (at page 998):-
"If the judge does his duty...he must
carefully consider for himself the grounds put forward by the revenue officer
and judicially satisfy himself, in relation to each of the premises concerned,
that these amount to reasonable grounds for suspecting etc. It would be quite
wrong to suppose that he acts simply as a rubber stamp on the revenue's
application."
"It cannot in my view be emphasised too
strongly that the section requires that the appropriate judicial authority
should himself be satisfied of these matters and that it does not suffice for
the person laying the information to say that he is."
"... if officers of the board require
search warrants, they must give evidence on oath laying before a circuit judge
the grounds for their suspicion and ... the duty of the judge must then be to
consider the evidence and decide whether he (the judge) is satisfied that it
establishes reasonable ground for the board's suspicion."
"The judge must himself be satisfied. It
is not enough that the officer should state on oath that he is satisfied...The
issue of the warrant is a judicial act, and must be preceded by a judicial
inquiry which satisfies the judge that the requirements for its issue have been
met."
25. In the present case, the matter was correctly
stated by Forte J.A. in the following passage:-
"Although it is clear in the Statute that
it is the Customs Officer who has to have `reasonable cause to suspect' it is
equally clear in my view that he (the Customs Officer) has to make it appear to
the Justice that he (the Customs Officer) has `reasonable cause' to
suspect. If it does not appear to the
Justice of the Peace that the officer has `reasonable cause' then he ought not
to issue the warrant. In coming to that
conclusion, it is inescapable that the Justice would also have to apply his
mind to the matters upon which the officer's cause for suspicion is based
and/or the credibility of the officer."
26. Their Lordships would not have thought it
necessary to burden this opinion with such extensive citation if it were not
for certain passages in the judgments in both the Supreme Court and the Court
of Appeal which might be read as justifying a less anxious degree of scrutiny
by the Justice to whom application is made for the warrant. So, for example, Patterson J. said:-
"... I am of the view that the oath of the
officer of his reasonable cause to suspect is what is required, and not the
particulars upon which the suspicion is grounded."
Smith J. said:-
"... even if all the Justice had before
him was a statement on oath by the officer that he had good reasons to believe
that uncustomed goods were being kept or concealed on the premises aforesaid
that would be sufficient to found jurisdiction for the issuing of the warrants
by the Justice."
Wright J.A. said:-
"... there is no requirement for the
Justice to make an assessment of the officer's reasonable cause to suspect and
to satisfy himself before issuing the warrant."
27. It may be that some of these remarks are
directed to the contents of the formal affidavit, sometimes described as the
"information", which is prepared in a form which can be disclosed to
the occupier of the premises to be searched.
It would plainly not be in the public interest for the grounds of the
officer's suspicions to be disclosed while the investigation is in progress and
one would not expect them to be stated upon a publicly available document. The need for confidentiality in these
matters was rightly stressed by Patterson J. in the Supreme Court. But there is no need for the same
confidentiality in the privacy of the Justice's room. The application is made ex parte and the officer must
disclose to the Justice all that the latter needs to know in order to discharge
his duty. There may be some knowledge,
for example the identity of informers,
with which the Justice will find it unnecessary to be burdened. But sufficient information to establish the
grounds for suspicion to his satisfaction must be stated on oath. The statute does not require the information
to be provided in writing. An oral
statement on oath is sufficient.
28. Their Lordships do not underestimate the
difficulty and delicacy of the task which is put upon Justices and other judicial
officers to whom application is made for search warrants. The applicant is generally a police or other
law enforcement officer who knows far more than the Justice about the
investigation. The application is made ex
parte; there is naturally a predisposition upon the part of the Justice to
be helpful to the officer who is present and assures him that a search is
necessary. The officer may be known to
the Justice, who may have learnt to trust his judgment and veracity. Their Lordships do not suggest that this is
something which should be ignored. On
the other hand, the citizen whose rights the Justice is constitutionally
required to protect is absent and seldom depicted in the most favourable light. Nevertheless, if the constitutional
safeguards are to have any meaning, it is essential for the Justice
conscientiously to ask himself whether on the information given to him upon
oath (in the case of section 203, either orally or in writing) he is satisfied
that the officer's suspicion is based upon reasonable cause.
2.The Issue of the Warrants.
The next question is whether the Justice had
before him information upon which he could be satisfied that Mr. McNeish had
reasonable cause to suspect. Here one
comes to the chief difficulty in the case, which is that their Lordships (like
the courts in Jamaica) have no information about what passed between Mr.
McNeish and the Justice. This is
entirely understandable because, at the stage when the constitutional motion
was launched, the criminal prosecution was still pending. It would have been contrary to the public
interest for any information about the grounds for suspicion to be disclosed
at that time to the respondents. The position may have been different if the
civil proceedings had been commenced after the criminal prosecution was
concluded: see Reg. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, Ex parte Rossminster
Ltd. [1980] AC 952 at pages 1000-1001.
But in proceedings commenced, as these were, during the course of the
investigation, the courts are handicapped in their ability to protect the high
constitutional right conferred on the citizen by section 19(1) because, as Lord
Diplock said in Rossminster (at page 1011) they have to try to reconcile
two competing and conflicting public interests:-
"... that offences involving tax frauds
should be detected and punished,
and that the
right of the
individual to the
protection of the law from unjustified
interference with his private property should be upheld."
29. But these limitations on the exercise of
judicial control over the decision of the Justice to issue the warrant make it
all the more important that he should make that decision with the greatest
care. He has the responsibility of
fulfilling the requirements of the statute, the effect of which is that for
practical purposes the issue of the warrant is often likely to be incapable of
effective review.
30. In the absence of any direct evidence of the
information actually provided to the Justice, the courts have to do the best
they can with such inferences as can be drawn from the terms of the warrant
itself and such other evidence as is available. In this case, each warrant recited upon its face that the Justice
was satisfied that "there is good
reason to believe that in a certain place to wit [the premises to be searched]
is kept or concealed uncustomed goods ... or books, documents or instruments
relating thereto". Prima facie,
this statement must be accepted and their Lordships agree with both lower
courts that if the Justice was satisfied that there was "good reason to
believe" that uncustomed goods etc. were on the premises, it must follow
that he was satisfied that the officer had reasonable cause to suspect this to
be the case. Is there anything to rebut
this statement - to show that the Justice did not really have any information
on which he could have concluded that the officer had reasonable cause to
suspect? Mr. Dingemans, who appeared
for the respondents, said that one could draw this inference from the fact that
the warrant recited that the Justice was satisfied "upon written
information on oath". The only
written information disclosed was the formal affidavit which their Lordships
have already quoted in full. This
plainly contains no material upon which the Justice could have been satisfied
that the officer had reasonable cause to suspect. And Mr. Dingemans says that the reference to written information
excludes the possibility, to which some of the judges referred, that the
Justice may have been given oral information on oath.
31. Their Lordships consider that the reference to
written information is too slender a ground upon which to infer that the
statement that the Justice was satisfied of the existence of reasonable grounds
was not true. It is, they think,
consistent with his having treated the formal written statement as confirmed by
oral information on oath or with the existence of other written information on
oath which, for the reasons already discussed, has not been disclosed. As Forte J.A. said:-
"The Justice of the Peace, having issued
the warrants on the basis of the `information on oath' must have been so
satisfied, and it is not open to the Court, in the absence
of
the details of what transpired before the
Justice of the Peace to assume he acted contrary to what is required of him in
the Act. For those reasons I would hold
that the search warrants were lawfully issued."
32. The other matters relied upon are certain
features in the language of the warrant.
They are, first, that the warrant includes no express reference to the
statutory power under which it was issued; secondly, that it purports to
authorise search of persons upon the premises when the section confers no such
power; thirdly, that it contains a reference to "instruments"
suspected to be upon the premises when the section does not use that word; and
fourthly, that it purports to authorise the seizure of goods "and other
articles" when the section refers to "books or documents". Their Lordships will presently have to
consider whether these matters affect the formal validity of the warrant. At this stage, the question is whether they
provide grounds for holding that, contrary to the recital, the Justice was not
satisfied as to the matters which would have given him jurisdiction to issue
the warrant.
33. As to the last two discrepancies, their
Lordships think that "instruments" which appears in the preamble but
not in the main body of the warrant might have been intended to refer to such
things as negotiable instruments, which would fall within the category of
documents, and that the authority to recover "articles" appears to go
beyond the terms of the power, but could be intended to serve as a compendious
description of the "books, documents or instruments relating thereto"
in the recital. But even assuming
that these discrepancies are treated as
indicating that the Justice (a) did not know under which power he was acting;
(b) wrongly thought that it included a power to authorise the search of
persons; (c) thought that suspicion of the presence of "instruments"
other than documents would justify the
issue of a warrant; and (d) thought that he had power to authorise the seizure
of articles relating to uncustomed goods which were not books or documents,
their Lordships still do not think that individually or cumulatively these
discrepancies show that the Justice was not entitled to issue the warrant. The section said that if he was satisfied
that there was reasonable cause to suspect that any of the things there mentioned
was kept on the premises, he could authorise a search and the seizure of those
things. The recital declares him to be
so satisfied. If the other matters were
inconsistent with his being satisfied on this central question, they might
throw doubt upon the accuracy of the recital.
But they are not. The fact that
the Justice may have held erroneous beliefs about the source or extent of the
power, or may have been satisfied on other matters irrelevant to the exercise
of the power, is not inconsistent with the recital.
3.Effect of the Warrants.
In Reg. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, Ex
parte Rossminster Ltd. [1980] AC 952, 1000, Lord Wilberforce said:-
"There is no mystery about the word
`warrant': it simply means a document issued by a person in authority ...
authorising the doing of an act which would otherwise be illegal."
34. In these proceedings, the applicants complain
that "the seizure of the documents, files and other property pursuant to
the aforesaid search was illegal and unconstitutional". There is no doubt that a search took place
and that documents, files and other property were taken. The question is therefore whether the
warrant made this lawful. This must
depend upon two questions of construction: first, did the matters of which
complaint is made fall within the acts authorised by the warrant, and secondly,
did the statute give the person who issued the warrant power to authorise those
acts?
35. In construing both the warrant and the
empowering statute, the court, in Lord Diplock's words at page 1008:-
"... ought, no doubt, to remind itself, if
reminder should be necessary, that entering a man's house or office, searching
it and seizing his goods against his will are tortious acts against which he is
entitled to the protection of the court unless the acts can be justified either
at common law or under some statutory authority. So if the statutory words
relied upon as authorising the acts are ambiguous or obscure, a construction
should be placed upon them that is least restrictive of individual rights which
would otherwise enjoy the protection of the common law."
36. Their Lordships consider that even on the
strictest construction, the warrant undoubtedly authorised, and the statute
enabled it to authorise, the search of the premises and the taking of files and
documents reasonably suspected to be connected with uncustomed goods. Whether the documents actually taken fell
within this description is a question of fact.
There was in evidence a list of the documents which were taken, from
which their Lordships think it is impossible to form a view as to whether they
related to uncustomed goods or not. But
there is nothing to show that the officers conducting the search did not
reasonably suspect this to be the case.
So much was recognised by the Court of Appeal: for example, in dealing
with the claim for return of the documents, Forte J.A. said:-
"As there is no evidence as to the
relevance of the seized articles
to [the charges
against Mr. Williams] I would be
reluctant to make an order at this stage for
the return of the articles, as they may be needed as evidence in the criminal
cases, in which case the Crown would be entitled to retain them."
37. At that stage of the proceedings it was, for
the reasons already discussed, impossible for the Crown to disclose the grounds
upon which it considered that the seized property was relevant to the
charges. In those circumstances their Lordships
think it cannot be assumed against the Crown that they did not have reasonable
grounds for taking the documents which they did. As Eveleigh L.J. said of the search by revenue officers in Reg.
v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, Ex parte Rossminster Ltd. [1980] AC 952,
966:-
"What the applicants' evidence amounts to,
as I say, is that not every document was read, and not every document, as an
individual document, was examined.
Files were taken as files...It seems to me that there can well be
occasions when a glance at a document will tell an investigating officer
whether it is the kind of document that he is entitled to take. No one can
expect that they should stay on the premises to read the words and details of
every document."
38. On the other hand, the taking of things other
than documents (such as the pocket calculator) was probably not authorised by
the warrant (unless "articles" is given a wider construction than the
context would seem to justify) and certainly not authorised by the statute. Unless, therefore, the taking of these
articles could be justified at common law, their removal was unlawful. But their Lordships do not consider that
this trivial excess of power can vitiate the legality of the search and the
taking of the documents properly authorised by the statute and the warrant.
39. The Court of Appeal considered that the warrant
was vitiated by the absence of any mention of the statutory power under which
the warrant was issued and the references in the document to the presence of
"instruments", the search of persons and the seizure of
"articles". Their Lordships
have already dealt with the question of whether these matters threw any light
on the propriety of the decision to issue the warrant. But the Court of Appeal also seems to have
regarded them as affecting the formal validity of the warrant.
40. Any inquiry into the formal validity of the
warrant must start from the undoubted fact that the section does not prescribe
any form at all. The language of the
warrant must be such as plainly to authorise the acts of which complaint is
made, but any further requirements
as to form can only arise by implication. Professor Feldman, in his book, The Law Relating to Entry,
Search and Seizure at paragraph 5.02, says that a warrant fulfils three
main functions:-
"First, the requirement for the officer to
apply for a warrant in theory gives another person, usually an independent
judicial officer, a chance to check on the need for a search...Second, the
warrant allows the occupier of the premises to be searched to satisfy himself
that the officers who arrive and demand to be admitted are acting
lawfully. This cuts down the risk of
misunderstandings, violence and the criminal charges which often follow and makes
the job of the police easier. Third, it
should indicate the limits to the powers of the officers, circumscribing their
discretion and clarifying their rights."
41. Their Lordships have considered the first of
these purposes under the heading "The Issue of the Warrants" and the
third as a question of construction.
This leaves the second. Does the
need for the occupier to be able to satisfy himself that the search is lawful
give rise to any implied requirements about what the warrant should say? In Reg. v. Inland Revenue Commissioners,
Ex parte Rossminster Ltd. [1980] AC 952, 1000 Lord Wilberforce said:-
"The person affected, of course, has the
right to be satisfied that the power to issue it exists: therefore the warrant
should (and did) contain a reference to that power."
"Even though the statute may not strictly
so require (a matter on which I express no concluded opinion) the warrant ...
ought to state upon its face the statutory authority under which it has been
issued."
43. Their Lordships agree that it is highly
desirable for the warrant to contain an express statement of the statutory
authority under which it was issued. If
it does not, the householder might reasonably think that it was not based upon
any authority and resist entry. But
this does not mean that in a case in which the warrant was in fact issued under
proper authority and there was no resistance to entry, the warrant should be
treated as invalid, particularly when, as Forte J.A. said, it is clear from the
terms of the warrant that it was issued under section 203. The Court of Appeal placed some reliance
upon section 64(2) of the Justices of the Peace Jurisdiction Act which requires
that a warrant issued for the purpose of "proceedings before examining
Justices ... for an offence" must "contain a reference to the section
of the statute creating the offence".
Their Lordships do not understand the relevance of
this provision. The
warrant was not
issued in connection with
proceedings for an offence since no offence had yet been charged. Furthermore, no one is suggesting that the
warrant should have contained a reference to a section of the statute (if there
was one - the only offence originally charged was conspiracy to defraud at
common law) creating the offence which might at some future date be
charged. The question is whether it
should have referred to the section creating the power of search. On this question, the Justices of the Peace
Jurisdiction Act has nothing to say.
As for the references to a personal search,
instruments and articles, their Lordships do not see how it is possible to
imply some formal requirement in the language of the warrant which the
inclusion of these infelicities would infringe. Of course, if there had actually been a personal search, their
Lordships have no doubt that it would not have been authorised by the section:
see King v. The Queen [1969] 1 AC 304. But as no such search took place, the fact that the warrant
wrongly purported to authorise one is in their Lordships' view irrelevant. Likewise, as their Lordships have already
said, the taking of property other than books and documents could not be
justified by the word "articles" in the warrant, because this went
beyond the statutory power. But this
does not mean that the warrant was formally invalid.
44. Although the courts may sometimes feel
frustrated by their inability to go behind the curtain of the recital that the
Justice was duly satisfied and to examine the substance of whether reasonable
grounds for suspicion existed (a frustration articulated by Lord Scarman in Reg.
v. Inland Revenue Commissioners, Ex parte Rossminster Ltd. [1980] AC 952
at page 1022) their Lordships think that it would be wrong to try to compensate
by creating formal requirements for the validity of a warrant which the statute
itself does not impose. In so doing,
there is a risk of having the worst of both worlds: the intention of the
legislature to promote the investigation of crime may be frustrated on technical
and arbitrary grounds, while the courts, in cases in which the outward
formalities have been observed, remain incapable of protecting the substance of
the individual right conferred by the Constitution. The alleged defects in the warrants are all errors of drafting,
no doubt on the part of the officers of the Revenue Protection Division by whom
it was prepared for submission to the Justice.
So far as they may have led to substantive abuses, it is of course right
that the applicants should have a remedy.
But in a case like this in which they have caused little or no prejudice
to the applicants, their Lordships think it would be wrong to treat them as
punishable by invalidity of the entire search.
Section 19(1) of the Constitution was intended to serve a higher purpose
than to promote accuracy in drafting in the Revenue Protection Division.
4.Remedies.
The Court of Appeal, having held that the
entire search and seizure was an unlawful trespass, reconstituted the
proceedings as an ordinary action in tort and remitted it to a judge of the
Supreme Court. They gave no redress
under section 25(2) of the Constitution on the ground that an action in tort
provided adequate means of redress and that constitutional relief was therefore
barred by the proviso to that subsection.
45. On behalf of the applicants it was submitted to
their Lordships that under the ordinary law of Jamaica, the relief available
against the officers of the Revenue in an ordinary action in tort was so
limited as not to be "adequate means of redress". The limitation period is very short and
section 33 of the Constabulary Force Act is said to require proof of malice or
absence of reasonable and probable cause.
Their Lordships do not find it necessary to enter into this difficult
question because they consider that the Court of Appeal was wrong to reverse
the decision of the Supreme Court that the search as a whole was lawful. The
decision to reconstitute the proceedings was a procedural matter in which their
Lordships would not ordinarily wish to interfere with the discretion of the
Court of Appeal. But since it was based
upon a wrong finding that the whole search was unlawful, their Lordships think
it would be proper for them to consider the matter again. On the evidence before the Supreme Court in
these proceedings, the only arguable wrongdoing relates to the few
non-documentary items which were taken.
The proceedings have therefore been almost entirely unsuccessful and
their Lordships think that it would be wrong to keep them on foot merely for
the purpose of pursuing a claim over matters such as a pocket calculator and a
mobile telephone case. They will
therefore humbly advise Her Majesty that the appeal should be allowed and the
order of the Supreme Court dismissing the constitutional motion restored. There will be no order as to costs.
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