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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 >> Johnson, R v [2016] EWCA Crim 10 (03 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/10.html Cite as: [2016] 2 Cr App R (S) 38, [2016] Crim LR 362, [2016] 4 WLR 57, [2016] EWCA Crim 10, [2016] WLR(D) 56 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT LEEDS
Miss Recorder Heeley
T20120921
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE EDIS
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WAIT
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
____________________
REGINA |
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- and - |
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BEVERLEY JOHNSON (formerly known as FARMER) |
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Mr. A. Stranex for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 18th December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Edis :
"Prior to my marriage I purchased the above property for £69,000 and eventually sold it to my daughter in June [the Crown asserted that the date of the sale was actually in July] 2008 for £140,000 but I gifted her £20,000 in the conveyance."
77 Tainted gifts
(1) Subsections (2) and (3) apply if—
(a) no court has made a decision as to whether the defendant has a criminal lifestyle, or
(b) a court has decided that the defendant has a criminal lifestyle.
(2) A gift is tainted if it was made by the defendant at any time after the relevant day.
……….
(9) The relevant day is the first day of the period of six years ending with—
(a) the day when proceedings for the offence concerned were started against the defendant, or
(b) if there are two or more offences and proceedings for them were started on different days, the earliest of those days
9 Available amount
(1) For the purposes of deciding the recoverable amount, the available amount is the aggregate of—
(a) the total of the values (at the time the confiscation order is made) of all the free property then held by the defendant minus the total amount payable in pursuance of obligations which then have priority, and
(b) the total of the values (at that time) of all tainted gifts.
81 Value of tainted gifts
(1) The value at any time (the material time) of a tainted gift is the greater of the following—
(a) the value (at the time of the gift) of the property given, adjusted to take account of later changes in the value of money;
(b) the value (at the material time) of the property found under subsection (2).
(2) The property found under this subsection is as follows—
(a) if the recipient holds the property given, the property found under this subsection is that property;
(b) if the recipient holds no part of the property given, the property found under this subsection is any property which directly or indirectly represents it in his hands;
(c) if the recipient holds part of the property given, the property found under this subsection is that part and any property which directly or indirectly represents the other part in his hands.
(3) The references in subsection (1)(a) and (b) to the value are to the value found in accordance with section 79.
79 Value: the basic rule
(1) This section applies for the purpose of deciding the value at any time of property then held by a person.
(2) Its value is the market value of the property at that time.
(3) But if at that time another person holds an interest in the property its value, in relation to the person mentioned in subsection (1), is the market value of his interest at that time, ignoring any charging order under a provision listed in subsection (4).
"From the 1986 Act onwards, the courts have been required to reinforce confiscation orders by the imposition of a term of imprisonment to be served in default of payment. But it has been recognised that a defendant may lack the means to pay a sum equal to the aggregate of the payments or rewards he has received, or the value of the property or pecuniary advantages he has obtained. It has also been recognised that it would be unjust to imprison a defendant for failure to pay a sum which he cannot pay. Thus provision has been made for assessing the means available to a defendant and, if that yields a figure smaller than that of his aggregate benefit, making a confiscation in the former, not the latter sum."
"If it is impossible to recover the debt then it would be quite inconsistent with the structure of the Act as explained by the judgment of Lord Bingham in May to trigger the default sentence. A defendant is not to be imprisoned if he satisfies the court that he simply does not have the assets available: see the decision of this court in Chen [2009] EWCA Crim 2669; [2010] 2 Cr App R (S) 34."
"One must remember that at this moment in time the capital asset, i.e. the house, still exists and if the house remains in the hands of the Defendant's family then over the course of the next months or years it may well increase in its value enabling payment to be made. If I declare it of no value at this stage the house may end up still being kept within the Defendant's family and the Defendant's family then have the benefit of any increase in house prices.
"This is a sad and unusual case and I do have some sympathy for the Defendant….I accept that there is at this stage no prospect of recovering the £20,000 but there is clearly potential for it in the future. In any event I do not need to trouble myself with recoverability, as I say there is no provision for that within the scope of the Proceeds of Crime Act, all I have to satisfy myself is that this was a tainted gift within the meaning of the Act. I find that it was a tainted gift and therefore the £20,000 is an available asset."
"In terms of the default period for the figures between £10,000 up to £20,000 it is up to twelve months, This is right at the top of that and therefore I impose a default sum of twelve months' imprisonment if it is not paid. I do appreciate the particular circumstances of this case and I am very sorry, but my hands are tied by the law in this matter."
23 Inadequacy of available amount: variation of order
(1) This section applies if—
(a) a court has made a confiscation order, and
(b) the defendant or the prosecutor, or a receiver appointed under section 50, applies to the Crown Court to vary the order under this section.
(2) In such a case the court must calculate the available amount, and in doing so it must apply section 9 as if references to the time the confiscation order is made were to the time of the calculation and as if references to the date of the confiscation order were to the date of the calculation.
(3) If the court finds that the available amount (as so calculated) is inadequate for the payment of any amount remaining to be paid under the confiscation order it may vary the order by substituting for the amount required to be paid such smaller amount as the court believes is just.
……….
(5) The court may disregard any inadequacy which it believes is attributable (wholly or partly) to anything done by the defendant for the purpose of preserving property held by the recipient of a tainted gift from any risk of realisation under this Part.
The present position
The Basis of the Appeal
Discussion
10 Assumptions to be made in case of criminal lifestyle
(1) If the court decides under section 6 that the defendant has a criminal lifestyle it must make the following four assumptions for the purpose of—
(a) deciding whether he has benefited from his general criminal conduct, and
(b) deciding his benefit from the conduct.
………..
(6) But the court must not make a required assumption in relation to particular property or expenditure if—
(a) the assumption is shown to be incorrect, or
(b) there would be a serious risk of injustice if the assumption were made.
(5) If the court decides under subsection (4)(b) or (c) that the defendant has benefited from the conduct referred to it must—
(a) decide the recoverable amount, and
(b) make an order (a confiscation order) requiring him to pay that amount.
[Paragraph (b) applies only if, or to the extent that, it would not be disproportionate to require the defendant to pay the recoverable amount.]
.
15 Section 6(5) of POCA sets out the final stage of the process of assessment of a confiscation order:
"If the court decides under subsection (4)(b) or (c) that the defendant has benefited from the conduct referred to it must— (a) decide the recoverable amount, and (b) make an order (a confiscation order) requiring him to pay that amount."
16 It is plainly possible to read paragraph (b) as subject to the qualification: "except in so far as such an order would be disproportionate and thus a breach of article 1, Protocol 1." It is necessary to do so in order to ensure that the statute remains Convention-compliant, as Parliament must, by section 3 of HRA , be taken to have intended that it should. Thus read, POCA can be "given effect" in a manner which is compliant with the Convention right. The judge should, if confronted by an application for an order which would be disproportionate, refuse to make it but accede only to an application for such sum as would be proportionate.
Although provisions identical or closely similar to those contained in POCA were to be found in the preceding legislation,1 they have the potential to work a violation of the right to the peaceful enjoyment of his possessions enjoyed by the recipient of the gift under Article 1 of Protocol 1 to the Convention. Whilst the justice of avoiding a gift which is a sham designed to defeat the confiscation legislation is obvious, the necessity (and therefore proportionality) of deeming property in the hands of a non-party to the proceedings as transferable to the state whatever the circumstances of the case is less immediately apparent.2 Surprisingly, at the time of writing the issue has yet to be litigated, but it may be that the courts will be required to read a discretion akin to that found in CJA 1988 into POCA in order to avoid having to declare the gift provisions incompatible with a recipient's Convention rights.
i) The robustness of the evidence of the value of the tainted gift. In this case there is good reason to believe that the valuation of the gift at £20,000 may have been excessive. No ground of appeal arises here on that ground because it was the appellant herself who gave that valuation and the Judge had little alternative but to accept it.ii) The proportionality of making an order in the sum sought. This requires the court to appreciate the distinction between this exercise and the exercise of a general discretion to avoid hardship. In Waya the court said
20 The difficult question is when a confiscation order sought may be disproportionate. The clear rule as set out in the Strasbourg jurisprudence requires examination of the relationship between the aim of the legislation and the means employed to achieve it. The first governs the second, but the second must be proportionate to the first. Likewise, the clear limitation on the domestic court's power to read and give effect to the statute in a manner which keeps it Convention-compliant is that the interpretation must recognise and respect the essential purpose, or "grain" of the statute.21 Both Mr Perry and Lord Pannick submitted that it would be very unusual for orders sought under the statute to be disproportionate. Both drew attention to the severity of the regime and commended its deterrent effect. The purpose of the legislation is plainly, and has repeatedly been held to be, to impose upon convicted defendants a severe regime for removing from them their proceeds of crime. It is not to be doubted that this severe regime goes further than the schoolboy concept of confiscation, as Lord Bingham explained in R v May [2008] AC 1028 Nor is it to be doubted that the severity of the regime will have a deterrent effect on at least some would-be criminals. It does not, however, follow that its deterrent qualities represent the essence (or the "grain") of the legislation. They are, no doubt, an incident of it, but they are not its essence. Its essence, and its frequently declared purpose, is to remove from criminals the pecuniary proceeds of their crime. Just one example of such declarations is afforded by the Explanatory Notes to the statute (paragraph 4): "The purpose of confiscation proceedings is to recover the financial benefit that the offender has obtained from his criminal conduct."…………24 For the reasons given above, it must clearly be understood that the judge's responsibility to refuse to make a confiscation order which, because disproportionate, would result in an infringement of the Convention right under A1P1 is not the same as the re-creation by another route of the general discretion once available to judges but deliberately removed. An order which the judge would not have made as a matter of discretion does not thereby ipso facto become disproportionate. So to treat the jurisdiction would be to ignore the rule that the parliamentary objective must, so long as proportionately applied, be respected.iii) The appropriate term of imprisonment to be imposed in default. The stipulated scale provides for maximum sentences relating to various amounts payable under the order. Although there is an obligation to impose a term of imprisonment in default when making a confiscation order (Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000, section 139(2)), the court is required to consider all of the circumstances of the case when doing so in accordance with R v. Castillo [2011] EWCA Crim 3173. There is no minimum term which must be imposed. The purpose of the term is enforcement not further punishment, and where the court is affirmatively satisfied that enforcement is impossible that may be a reason to make a substantial reduction in the term imposed in default. This will inevitably be a wholly exceptional course because the court will usually have limited confidence that an asset which has been apparently given away cannot be recovered by the offender or that the offender cannot satisfy the order by other means.
Disposal of appeal
33 A confiscation order in such a case is not compelled by the House of Lords decision in R v Smith (David) [2002] 1 WLR 54 , although the contrary appears often to be asserted. In R v Smith the defendant had evaded the payment of duty on imported cigarettes by smuggling them past the customs post. The decision in the case was that the pecuniary advantage thus (admittedly) obtained had not retrospectively been undone by the subsequent seizure of the cigarettes. That was plainly correct. Lord Rodger held, at para 23, that the subsequent seizure of the cigarettes was in like case to subsequent loss of or damage to goods obtained in the course of crime; such loss or damage would not affect the propriety of a confiscation order—consider for example the case of a burglar who hides the householder's goods in the open air so that they are ruined by the weather or stolen by someone else. The House was not, however, considering the case in which the criminal property obtained has been restored to its owner undamaged. On the contrary, Smith was agreed to have obtained the pecuniary advantage of avoiding payment of the duty, at any rate temporarily.