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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 >> Stewart, Re [2016] EWCA Crim 2238 (16 December 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/2238.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 2238 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JAY
MR JUSTICE LAVENDER
REFERENCE BY THE ATTORNEY GENERAL UNDER
S.36 OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1988
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WILLIAM ANTHONY STEWART |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr P Astbury appeared on behalf of the Offender
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS:
Introduction
Facts
Sentencing Hearing
"The most serious offences encompassing driving that involved a deliberate decision
to ignore (or a flagrant disregard for) the rules of the road and an apparent disregard for the
great danger being caused to others. Such offences are likely to be characterised by:
• A prolonged, persistent and deliberate course of very bad driving AND/OR ...
• A group of determinants of seriousness which in isolation or smaller number would place the offence in level 2."
"... driving when knowingly deprived of adequate sleep or rest, or knowing the vehicle has a dangerous defect or is poorly maintained or is dangerously loaded."
"The issue for the court, the prosecution would say, would be whether or not what driving the vehicle in the condition that it was and not making any proper checks in terms of the outrigger arms created a substantial risk of dangerousness thus putting it into level 2 or whether or not that in fact amounted to what the guidelines term as significant risk of danger."
Counsel then went on to say:
"... the prosecution say it may well come in fact between levels 2 and 3. The Crown say there was a substantial risk of dangerousness and that would have been obvious ..."
Counsel then went on to draw attention to the appropriate ranges for level 2 and also the appropriate ranges for level 3.
"Your sister says you are always thinking of others before yourself, well unfortunately not on the 4th June last year."
"You were so lax in your behaviour and concentration that day that you did not notice the crossing or Ms Thorpe, you hadn't noticed a car reversing out of your way moments before the accident because of the arm sticking out, you hadn't noticed or you had ignored the reversing alarm constantly beeping and you drove knowing that you had stowed the crane incorrectly and you failed to see in your mirrors that the outrigger had come from its holding where it should have been locked securely in place by three separate locking mechanisms."
Moreover, the judge pointed out that on his own admission the offender had whilst driving been using or looking at his phone as a SatNav guidance device. That was not causative in any way, it should be stressed, of the ultimate fatal incident; but, as the judge put it, it provided a further insight into the attitude of this offender as to compliance with the rules of the road. The judge further noted the previous incidents of careless driving at his previous employment indicating that:
"... [they] in themselves demonstrated your careless attitude to your job and the responsibility of driving a large and potentially dangerous vehicle."
The judge noted the relative inexperience of the offender as a driver of such a vehicle. She went on to make these important further findings:
"...but you knew full well what was expected of a driver of such a lorry in using and stowing away the crane correctly, using and locking the stablising legs... Yet on the 4th June and contrary to all your training you told us that you used only one stablising arm when using the crane and loading the lorry and without locking the arm in place, it's a miracle there wasn't an accident as a result of that, or in stowing away the left stabilising arm before stowing away the crane, another accident waiting to happen and in stowing away the crane completely incorrectly so that it protruded from the waggon and this is before you drove away and you drove away without locking the stabilising arm in place.
This was no oversight, this did not occur because of any mechanical failure but because you quite simply ignored the training you had received over those two courses. Even if one assumes for one moment that this was initially an oversight, had you made the most cursory visual check or pulled on the arm you would have seen that the arm was not locked but you did not. I have come to the conclusion that you were cutting corners that day, frustrated at being in Cheshire for longer than you probably anticipated, waiting for instructions, wanting to return to the Wirral as soon as possible that afternoon and you simply made the decision not to lock the arm in place correctly, hoping that the top lock might do the job, but it never could because the arm wasn't being held properly in place by the two bottom locks."
The judge went on to say there had been no proper acknowledgement of the seriousness of what the offender had done. She went on later to say this:
"After all you had been trained and you demonstrated it in passing the test and what you told the police in interview demonstrates that you knew precisely what was expected of you in the safety procedures and in the use of the crane and stabilisers."
The judge thus made it clear that it had been the offender's deliberate choice to drive off in the manner described. The judge found that he had showed a complete lack of responsibility on 4th June that year and a complete disregard of what he knew had to be done to drive that lorry safely. The judge further and appropriately referred to the message that had to be sent out:
"...if a driver deliberately and knowingly drives a lorry in a dangerous state when that state would be obvious to a careful and competent driver and as a result someone is killed then a prison sentence must follow."
The judge then made further remarks and imposed the sentence that we have indicated.
Submissions
Disposition
Other observations