![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Singh v R [2011] EWCA Crim 2992 (21 December 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/2992.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 2992 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT BIRMINGHAM
HHJ MAYO
T2007/7898
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HOLROYDE
and
MR JUSTICE SUPPERSTONE
____________________
HARBANS SINGH |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
THE CROWN |
Respondent |
____________________
MR. A. MUNDAY QC for the Respondent
Hearing date: 14th December 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper :
JUDGE MAYO: So at this point there is no application to add either ... Mr Harban Singh's spouse on the indictment?
MR MUNDAY: There is not, no.
JUDGE MAYO: Well, that is no doubt a considered position and you know the consequences of either not doing that now.
Well, I am not trying to make life complicated for myself, or the court, I do not. I can rhetorically ask Mr Munday whether there is going to be any suggestion that Sarbjit Kaur was a conspirator. My respectful submission is that there is no evidence that Sarbjit Kaur was a conspirator and indeed, Mr Munday has firmly suggesting, and we have a note; probably a similar note to Your Honour, of Mr Munday's cross-examination of ... Chahal was firmly to suggest that everything, if I can be colloquial, was down to ... Chahal. And insofar as Sarbjit Kaur did anything, she did anything under the instructions of ... Chahal and no suggestion was put to ... Chahal that Sarbjit Kaur was conspiring with him, indeed, the reverse.
....
I just want confirmation that at this stage of the case no one is going to suggest that Sarbjit Kaur was a conspirator and as Your Honour may recall at the close of the case submissions were made, and if ever there was a stage when Mr Munday could have made submissions that she should be named as a conspirator it was then. Your Honour enquired if that was so and the Crown declined to make that offer and it would be wrong in law and wrong in fact, by fact I mean the nature of my learned friend's cross-examination, which began at one stage, and I have a note of it: "The proposition I put to you Mr ... Chahal, is that you were responsible for all the deals both in terms of the actual purchases/sales and the payment of the HComm Communications transactions." That proposition is, as I understand it, the Crown's case re [Chahal] and that being the case there cannot be any suggestion that this lady was anything other than like a secretary conducting whatever she was told to do by ... Chahal on a [inaudible] basis.
It is the Crown's -- the Crown does not have a case that she was or was not a conspirator. There is insufficient material for the Crown to reach a judgment and therefore, I would not be seeking to suggest that she was or was not. There is no need for me to have to do it if she is not on trial.
...
I would be inviting the jury to look at what the Crown can prove against Harbans Singh and his relationship with ... Chahal and the position of the wife is irrelevant, from our point of view.
JUDGE MAYO: But you see Mr Lederman asked Mr Chahal a lot of questions about what Sarbjit Kaur had done and identified her handwriting, effectively laid the way clear, quite rightly, nothing forensically wrong with it at all, to say, to suggest in his closing address to the jury; "Well all of this has got Sarbjit's fingerprints on it."
MR MUNDAY: Bold submission.
JUDGE MAYO: Well, I am not concerned about what is bold and what is not, I am concerned about what Mr Harbans Singh's case is, because I must leave it to the jury and I have to deal, do I not, with what do the jury, what do they do if they think that Sarbjit Kaur is an active participant in H Comm.
MR MUNDAY: If Your Honour feels that that is appropriate then Your Honour will have to deal with it in this way, that -- the way in which you (sic) have dealt with on the last occasion, namely that if they came to the view that she was a conspirator then they could not find Harban Singh guilty if he only allegedly, and I put it in inverted commas "conspired with her."
JUDGE MAYO: Yes. Well that is what I am going to do.
I can categorically tell the court and I say this simply because I feel duty bound, that my advice to Harbans Singh not to give evidence was based upon the cross-examination by Mr Munday of the first defendant, because I heard it, I noted it. I noted how ... Mr Munday was putting to ... Chahal his, Mr Munday's response, to Sarbjit Kaur when ... Chahal was saying: "Actually, Sarbjit Kaur did some of the work, actually Sarbjit Kaur did," and Your Honour in fact, if you remember, he said: "Later on she did some of the work," and Your Honour said: "When was that," and this matter was canvassed, and all the time Mr Munday's position was: "You are offloading this, if you like, onto Sarbjit Kaur. Actually you were the person." And that is why one has as one has. In the s. 34 [adverse inference] submissions by Mr Munday, the fact that he, ... Chahal, has raised Sarbjit Kaur in evidence, but not in interview, is a subject which they are entitled to comment on the basis that it is not true.
JUDGE MAYO: ... my view is that there is evidence that [Sarbjit] acted as a conspirator. Now the question is whether I am prevented or it would be wrong of me to tell the jury that, because of the stance that has been adopted by the Crown and you would say that potential evidence that she is a conspirator should not be put before the jury in my summing up, because the Crown have chosen not to say that she is a conspirator.
MR LEDERMAN: Precisely, that is precisely it and the Crown were offered their chance and specifically declined it. And in addition, Your Honour, this is -- and I hope the court accepts this from me, this is not in any way meant to be a sort of blackmail submission -- I can categorically say to the court from the Bar, that our advice to Mr Harbans Singh as to whether he should give evidence or not, proceeded on the basis that after the cross-examination of ... Chahal when Mr Munday made quite clear his position, the decision not to call my client was wholly influenced by the way Mr Munday had conducted that cross-examination.
When you consider the case for and against Harbans Singh it will necessarily involve careful consideration of the available evidence as to what Sarbjit Kaur (his wife) did or didn't do. It may be tempting to ask yourselves whether Harbans Singh could possibly be guilty, because his wife has not been tried alongside him. The answer in law is that he can be guilty if you're sure of the matters I've set out earlier -- participation, knowledge, dishonesty -- and the fact that his wife has not been tried is quite simply irrelevant. This fact cannot on its own provide Mr Singh with a shield or some form of insulation from blame. You will have to look very carefully at the evidence of participation of Sarbjit Kaur, and if you conclude that she may have played a role in this conspiracy then add her to the list of conspirators who are not being tried by you, and they are on the indictment. But that in itself will not mean that Harbans Singh is more or less likely to be guilty himself. It's one of the matters that you must weigh up as you consider the evidence as a whole. (Underlining added)
Before deciding whether Harbans Singh is guilty there's a particular matter of law that you must take into account. A husband and wife are not guilty of conspiracy if they alone are the parties to the conspiracy. You don't have to worry about why. That's what the law is. So if there's only two people in a conspiracy and they're married they can't be guilty of conspiracy. If, however, they conspired together and with at least another person then both husband and wife can be guilty of conspiracy.
So in Harbans Singh's case the test is a little different from it is with Mr Chahal and Mr Mallourides, and these are the questions you must ask yourselves: are we sure that there was a conspiracy? If yes, are we sure that Harbans Singh participated with his wife and at least one of the conspirators named on the indictment -- in other words, not just her -- or are we sure that Mr Singh, along with at least one of the conspirators named on the indictment, participated in this conspiracy, and was that done with the intention of defrauding the revenue? If yes, did he do so knowing that the result was likely to lead to the revenue being defrauded? If yes, did he do so dishonestly? Again, if the answer to all of those questions is yes he's guilty. If not, he's not guilty.
Note 1 Missing trader intra-community fraud. [Back] Note 2 It is therefore not necessary for us to consider what limitations, if any, there are on the prosecution submitting that a person not on trial is a conspirator in circumstances where the prosecution has offered no evidence against him: see Austin [Back]