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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Paul v Humberside Police [2004] EWCA Civ 308 (17 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/308.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 308 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Kingston upon Hull County Court
Judge Heppel QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
LORD JUSTICE CHADWICK
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
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JASON PAUL |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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CHIEF CONSTABLE OF HUMBERSIDE POLICE |
Defendant/Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Nicholas Wilcox (instructed by Legal Services Unit, Humberside Police) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Brooke :
D/C Wade What do you want to tell us?
Mr Paul My mate was arguing with another man. I tried to separate them. The man started throwing punches at me and I hit him once.
D/C Wade As a result of what you have said, I am arresting you for murder.
"There is currently an investigation under way by the [Police Complaints Authority] regarding the death in custody. It is requested that details of the death in custody are not divulged to the court."
D/C Mainland was unable to explain to the jury why these words were written.
(i) although he did not now contend that it was unreasonable of the police to suspect Mr Paul of murder when he attended the police station on 1st April, their decision to arrest him and detain him in custody that evening was vitiated by their improper wish to draw people's attention away from their own misconduct;
(ii) although he did not now make any complaint about the level of the assault charge the police chose to levy against Mr Paul the following evening, their decision to charge him at all was vitiated by their ulterior motive to distract attention from their own misconduct;
(iii) the decision to refuse him bail that evening on terms that he went to live with his sister well away from Kingston-upon-Hull was similarly vitiated.
It was an important part of his argument on the appeal that in relation to all three of these matters there were findings of fact which ought to have been left to the jury to decide, and that the judge had been wrong to withdraw them from the jury.
"Mr Paul, as I have said, submits that there were no grounds for arrest on suspicion of murder, that there were no reasonable grounds for charging the section 18 offence [causing grievous bodily harm with intent] and that the refusal of bail by the custody sergeant Mr Nicholson was therefore unlawful."
(i) They knew that Mr Alder had been struck a blow sufficient to knock him to the ground and to render him unconscious;
(ii) They were entitled to come to the provisional view that the blow and the death were in some way causally connected;
(iii) They knew, as a result of Mr Cunnah's telephone call, that Mr Paul has something to say about the incident;
(iv) More importantly, Mr Paul admitted striking Mr Alder when he arrived at the police station;
(v) The police would have been liable to criticism if they had continued to speak to Mr Paul without his being arrested if in due course he subsequently came to be charged with murder or any other offence in connection with the injuries sustained by Mr Alder.
"mere belief in the truth of his charge does not protect an unsuccessful prosecutor, given, of course, malice, if the circumstances before him would not have led 'an ordinarily prudent and cautious man' to conclude that the person charged was probably guilty of the offence … [W]hile the state of the prosecutor's mind or belief or opinion, if a disputed issue, is a question of fact properly to be left to the jury, the question whether the circumstances reasonably justified a belief in the truth of the charge is a question for the judge himself."
"A century-and-a-half ago, when this branch of the law was being formed and there was no police organisation as there is today, the law was anxious to encourage the private prosecutor to come forward and recognised that his motives would not always be disinterested. But it did, I think, demand that such a man should at least believe on reasonable grounds in the case he put forward, and on the strength of which another might lose for the time being his liberty, be put to expense and be caused distress. I do not see why any less should be demanded of a police officer. Although he may be more exposed to attack from persons he has mistakenly prosecuted, he should not stand in need of as high a degree of protection as the private individual, for there can be no occasion on which in his case a mixture of motives could be accepted as excusable."
(i) Objective: would the facts honestly believed by the accuser reasonably lead any ordinary prudent and cautious man, placed in the position of the accuser, to the conclusion that the person charged was probably guilty of the crime imputed?
(ii) Subjective: did the prosecutor believe these facts, and did he have an honest belief in the guilt of the accused, or in the charges levied?
"The motives of parties can only be ascertained by inference drawn from facts. The want of probable cause is, in some degree, a negative, and the plaintiff can only be called upon to give some … slight evidence of such want …"
Gibbs v Rea turned on the significance of the decision by the defence to call no evidence at the trial, but it is a useful reminder of the fact that a claimant cannot ordinarily be expected to produce direct evidence on these matters.
"[I]t is clear in my view that Paul can rely upon self-defence to justify his action …
Paul was being punched by a muscular and aggressive man, with whom he did not appear to want to fight, and has sought to protect himself by punching back … Therefore I have come to the conclusion that in punching Alder to protect himself Paul was acting in self-defence …
There is little doubt in my mind that Paul, in the heat of the moment, has reacted instinctively to a violent attack …
I can hardly see that he should be criticised for trying to calm the situation down …
I am firmly of the opinion that there is insufficient evidence to show that the force used was unlawful and therefore the defence of self-defence is most likely to succeed …"
(i) D/C Mainland's evidence that as soon as there was in his view evidence to justify a charge against an accused person the police should levy that charge;
(ii) Mr Alder's injuries, and the fact that although he was bigger than Mr Paul he had been knocked sufficiently hard to fall backwards to bang his head against the cobblestones;
(iii) Evidence before the police that Mr Paul had got himself involved in an altercation between Mr Alder and a third party when he need not have done, and that he had failed to withdraw when he could have done.
"… the custody officer has reasonable grounds for believing that the detention of the person arrested is necessary for his own protection."
In other words (like the justices the following morning), he did not state that a case was made out under sub-section (v) which provides an exception if
"… the custody officer has reasonable grounds for believing that the detention of the person arrested is necessary to prevent him from interfering with the administration of justice or with the investigation of offences or of a particular offence."
"It is an unchallenged matter of fact that Mr Alder had a brother who was albeit an informal patient at a local psychiatric hospital, and that in my judgment was sufficient to justify Sergeant Nicholson taking the decision that the question of the protection of Mr Paul was a factor in justifying refusing bail. It is also a matter of fact that Mr Paul does come from a community which is close knit. It is close knit in the circumstances because it is a black community but that in my judgment is beside the point. The decision was taken on the basis that there was the possibility of Mr Paul interfering with witnesses, many of whom were known to him, and indeed his own evidence to this court was that a large number of those in the Waterfront Club were indeed known to him. In my judgment, there was nothing unlawful in this decision taken by Sergeant Nicholson on the information which Mr Wade and Mr Mainland gave to him, which I find was given in perfectly good faith. There was no reason to come to the conclusion that Sergeant Nicholson acted unlawfully in refusing bail."
"The main reason upheld by the judge as reasonable was that Mr Paul should be in custody because of a danger of violence from a mentally unstable brother of Mr Alder. This bears all the hallmarks of a cynical rationalisation … No attempt was made to discuss this with Mr Paul, and advise him for example to keep clear of this brother. Further, there was no attempt to discuss this with Mr Alder's brother to ascertain what risk, if any existed. The police themselves gratuitously released Mr Paul's name and address to the press when he was charged, without even leaving it to the normal reporting of any court appearance … The police then knew that Mr Paul had a pregnant girlfriend at that address. A suggestion that Mr Paul could then be bailed to stay away from Hull was ignored …"
Lord Justice Chadwick:
Lord Justice Maurice Kay: