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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Berr, R (on the prosecution of) v Lowe [2009] EWCA Crim 194 (17 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/194.html Cite as: [2009] Lloyd's Rep FC 314, [2009] 2 Cr App Rep (S) 81, [2009] EWCA Crim 194, [2009] Crim LR 452, [2009] 2 Cr App R (S) 81 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT AT BIRMINGHAM
HH Judge Ross
S20071019
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE PITCHFORD
and
RECORDER OF BRIGHTON & HOVE (SITTING AS A JUDGE IN THE COURT OF APPEAL CRIMINAL DIVISION)
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R (on the prosecution of BERR) |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Baden Lowe |
Appellant |
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Mr A Mitchell QC and Richard Atkins for the Respondent, instructed by the Solicitor, BERR
Hearing date: 27 November 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Thomas :
The facts
i) In November 2002 it had purchased a piece of land known as the Catherine Wheel Filling Station for £64,593.ii) In September 2004 planning permission was granted for a small five dwelling development. In consequence by February 2005 the property was worth £175,000.
i) In July 2005 the liquidator commenced proceedings against Penwood on the basis that the disposition of the land after the commencement of the winding up was, unless the court otherwise ordered, void.
ii) Negotiations about the transfer back of land were conducted between Mr Lloyd for Penwood and the liquidator. Agreement was reached on 25 April 2006 and embodied in a court order of that date under which Mr Lloyd was recognised as a creditor of the company in the sum of £37,000. Under the agreement Penwood was obliged prior to 31 May 2006 to execute a transfer of the property back to the liquidator of CPSM.
iii) That transfer was duly made. The land was subsequently sold for £205,000 in January 2007, six months before the appellant pleaded guilty.
iv) On the completion of the liquidation after payment of all the costs, including solicitors' costs, the liquidator's costs and the fees, there was a small surplus.
The operation of s.6(6) of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002
"But the court must treat the duty in subsection (5) as a power if it believes that any victim of the conduct has at any time started or intends to start proceedings against the defendant in respect of loss, injury or damage sustained in connection with the conduct."
If that section applies, then under s.7(3), the court can fix the amount as that which the court considers just subject to the maximum that the court would have fixed had it been under the mandatory duty to make the order.
"In a winding up by the court, any disposition of the company's property, and any transfer of shares, or alteration in the status of the company's members, made after the commencement of the winding up is, unless the court otherwise orders, void."
The transfer which the appellant had instigated was to Penwood, a company of which he was a director and a 50% shareholder. The land so transferred was never vested in him personally but only in Penwood. As a result of the operation of s.127 that transfer was void unless the court otherwise ordered. Therefore there would be no need to bring a claim against the appellant to which s.6(6) would apply and in fact none was brought. Even if the transfer had not been void, proceedings under s.238 of the Insolvency Act 1986 (which gives the liquidator power to apply to the court for the restoration of property transferred at an undervalue), would have been proceedings against Penwood, not the appellant.
Abuse of process
"where demonstrably (i) the defendant's crimes are limited to offences causing loss to one or more identifiable loser(s), (ii) his benefit is limited to those crimes, (iii) the loser has neither brought nor intends any civil proceedings to recover the loss, but (iv) the defendant either has repaid the loser, or stands ready willing and able immediately to repay him, the full amount of the loss."
"30. In those cases, the Crown accepts, and we hold, that it may amount to an abuse of process for the Crown to seek a confiscation order which would result in an oppressive order to pay up to double the full restitution which the defendant has made or is willing immediately to make, and which would thus deter him from making it. In particular, although the confiscation jurisdiction is rightly described as draconian and often as penal in nature, we do not accept the contention that it is a sufficient justification for seeking a confiscation order in the limited class of cases which we are here dealing with that the Crown wishes to inflict an additional financial penalty upon the defendant. Whilst confiscation may well be draconian or penal in effect, it does not, as the House of Lords observed in R v May, at paragraph 48(1), operate as a fine. Whether an application for confiscation is or is not oppressive in the limited class of cases we are considering will fall to be considered by the trial judge individually on the facts of each case. The jurisdiction to stay may be exercised either in advance of the confiscation hearing or during it if it becomes clear that the making of an order would be oppressive for the reasons here discussed."
As the comment in the Criminal Law Review on this decision pointed out "the scope for an application to stay as identified in this judgment is extremely narrow." The court then set out at paragraph 31 the circumstances in which it would not be oppressive to seek such a confiscation order and decided that in that case the abuse of process application failed.
"This jurisdiction must be exercised with considerable caution, indeed sparingly. It must be confined to cases of true oppression. In particular, it cannot be exercised simply on the ground that the judge disagrees with the decision of the Crown to pursue confiscation or the way it puts its case on the topic. A specific example of this principle is that it is clearly not sufficient to establish oppression, and thus abuse of process, that the effect of the confiscation will be to extract from a defendant a sum greater than his net profit from his crime".
i) The appellant made no offer to restore the property. It would have been restored by operation of the provision of the Insolvency Act if his co-director Mr Lloyd had not entered into an agreement to restore it.
ii) This was not a course of criminal conduct limited to one or more identifiable losers; the fraudulent transfer was made to strip an asset out of his company to the detriment of every creditor.
iii) There can be no suggestion of an abuse or oppression. The decision to seek a confiscation order is one that can be seen as simply carrying out the decision of Parliament.
Postscript
i) It is essential that the court hearing the proceedings finds and sets out all the relevant facts in its ruling (or judgment), including the facts that are agreed before it. It is evident that many confiscation hearings are not prepared in advance as they should be. There are many complaints that Defence Statements are inadequate. Timetables set out in the Criminal Procedure Rules or the court's directions frequently slip. Sometimes it is only at the last minute, either immediately before the court sits or even in the course of a hearing, that some matters are agreed and the real issues emerge, considerably burdening the task of the judge hearing the proceedings. If identifying the issues is left to the last minute, then insufficient attention is paid to ensuring that any procedural steps needed for the evidence to be admissible are taken. In an occasional case, where difficult issues arise, it may be the case that counsel with more experience of such issues is needed. Difficulties are from time to time compounded by a lack of a properly paginated bundle. It is, in the experience of many in this court, that, for reasons such as those we have outlined, it is not always clear from the ruling (or judgment) below what the facts were on which the issues which arose were determined. As the task of the court hearing the confiscation proceedings is to apply the statutory provisions to the facts (as agreed or found), it is essential that the ruling (or judgment) sets out all the relevant facts, as agreed and as found.
ii) Too many authorities are cited to courts. Advocates should bear the observations in May at paragraph 48 (4) clearly in mind before any authority is cited to the judge hearing the proceedings or in this court. We were provided with a large bundle of authorities which were unnecessary.