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Cite as: [1998] EWHC Admin 99

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DPP v. ULLAH [1998] EWHC Admin 99 (29th January, 1998)




IN THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE CO/3569/97
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
CROWN OFFICE LIST
(DIVISIONAL COURT )

Royal Courts of Justice
Strand
London WC2

Thursday 29th January 1998


B e f o r e:


LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN

-and-

MR JUSTICE MANCE

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DPP

-v-

ULLAH

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(Computer-aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2HD
Telephone No: 0171 421 4040
Fax No: 0171 831-8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court) - - - - - - -

MR J PAVRY (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service, Bermondsey) appeared on behalf of the Applicant.


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J U D G M E N T
(As Approved by the Court)
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Crown Copyright



Thursday 29th January 1998


1. LORD JUSTICE SIMON BROWN: This is a Prosecutor's appeal by Case Stated against the adjudication of the City of London Justices on 17th June 1997 acquitting the Respondent of an offence under section 139(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988. The information proffered against him alleged that he, on 1st February 1997, at King William Street had with him, without good reason or lawful authority, an article which had a blade or was pointed, namely a knife with a five inch fixed blade contrary to the section.

2. The few relevant parts of section 139 are these:

"(1) Subject to subsections (4) and (5) below any person who has an article to which had this section applies with him in a public place shall be guilty of an offence.

(2) ...

This section applies to any article which has a blade or is sharply pointed except a folding pocket knife.

...

(4) It shall be a defence for a person charged under this section to prove that he had a good reason or lawful authority for having the article with him in a public place."

3. There was no dispute that the Respondent had the knife with him in a public place. The issue was whether he had a good reason for that. The burden of establishing that rested upon him to be discharged on the balance of probabilities.

4. A large part of the Case Stated consists of verbatim extracts from the Justices Clerk's notes of the evidence. Rather than set these out I propose instead to summarise the evidence, largely as it is set out in the helpful skeleton argument provided for us by

5. Mr Pavry for the Appellant. The Respondent, I should note, is neither represented nor present in person. There is some doubt, indeed, as to whether he was ever properly notified of this hearing date but, given the way this appeal is to be decided, that matters not.

6. The Respondent is a part-time mini-cab driver, a man of no previous convictions, who drives his own

7. Ford Scorpio motor car for a mini cab firm. On

8. Monday 27th January 1997 a passenger left in his vehicle a bag containing a five inch fixed bladed knife. On Tuesday 28th January the Respondent discovered that knife and placed it in the doorwell on the driver's side of the vehicle. On Wednesday 29th January he informed his employer, Mr Mohammed Nasir of Cityman Radio Cars, that a passenger had left a knife in the vehicle. The reporting of that event was confirmed to the police by Mr Nasir. At 02.15 a.m. on Saturday 1st February 1997 the Respondent was stopped by a police officer whilst driving his vehicle and the knife was duly found in the driver's side doorwell. Thus it was that the Respondent came to be charged.

9. The Justices' conclusions upon that evidence were these:


"It was never in issue that the knife was found in Mr Ullah's possession in a public place. He admitted throughout that he was aware that the knife was there. Having considered all the evidence before us we found that Mr Ullah had the knife in his possession for good reason, because it had been left in his car by a customer. He intended to hand the knife, and the bag from which it came, into his controller's office when he next went there. He was a credible witness, his story had not changed from the time of his arrest, and his reporting of the knife to his controller was corroborated by the evidence before us.

His demeanor in Court, the consistency of his account and the evidence of his employer persuaded us that Mr Ullah was telling the truth. We decided that if he was telling the truth the defence in Section 139(4) of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 was made out and therefore we acquitted the defendant."

10. The single question posed for the opinion of this court is:


"Whether there was any evidence upon which we could be satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the defendant had good reason for having an article with him in a public place."

11. In contending for the answer "no" to that question Mr Pavry for the Prosecutor submits that once the Respondent had discovered the knife in his vehicle he was bound to remove it to a private place at the first reasonable opportunity and this counsel submits, he had failed to do. He argues that the Justices failed to have regard to the fact that by the time of the arrest the knife had been in the Respondent's possession, in his vehicle, to his knowledge, for something like four days and that there was no real evidence that he had not by then had a reasonable opportunity to hand it in. In support of his argument, he refers us to

DPP v. Gregson (1993) 96 Cr.App.R 240 when this court, allowing the Prosecutor's appeal against what he submits was a comparable acquittal upon a charge under this section, held that having a knife for a good reason - there for the purpose of work (see section 139(5)(a)) - six days earlier could not amount to a good reason six days later when the defendant was not at work. The passage upon which Mr Pavry principally relies is this at page 243 of McCowan LJ's judgment:

"In my judgment, Mr McGuinness is right to say that it is important to concentrate on the time in respect of which the defendant is charged. Six days earlier, no doubt this man had the knife on him for a good reason, because the justices found that it was a knife that he used in his work and would have had with him at his work and might well have put into his pocket at work six days earlier. But did he have it with him for a good reason at the time of his arrest? Having it for work reasons six days earlier cannot, in my judgment, be a good reason for having it on him six days later but not at work. The question, therefore, seems to me boils down to whether forgetfulness at the relevant time was a good reason. It does appear that the justices found that he had forgotten he had it on him."

12. Persuasively although these submissions were advanced, and superficially similar though one recognises the case of Gregson to be, I, for my part, remain disinclined to accept the argument. I readily acknowledge that the Justices' conclusions here could be thought to stretch the concept of good reason to its uttermost limits and certainly not every Bench of Magistrates would necessarily have taken the same view. The Respondent should perhaps therefore regard himself as somewhat fortunate at the outcome of the case. The position here, however, is to my mind materially different from that arising in Gregson. The defendant's detailed story there, which it is unnecessary for present purposes to recount, appears to have been riddled with improbabilities and inconsistencies and it is perhaps unsurprising that this court rejected it as a sufficient basis for finding good reason for the knife still being carried six days after the defendant last needed it for work. Here, by contrast, the Respondent's explanation and good character are not in doubt. In these circumstances I am not prepared to say that despite their having accepted every word of the Respondent's evidence, the Justices were simply not entitled to regard him as having had good reason for continuing to have the knife in his vehicle. It seems to me implicit in the Justices' findings of fact that the Respondent was intending at all times to hand the knife in to the controller's office when next he went there, and that he had not in fact been there during the interval between first finding and reporting the knife and later being arrested. I think it was open to the Justices to conclude that the time had not yet arrived when the Respondent was bound in law to have made a special journey in order to hand this knife in. I accept that that time must inevitably have arrived very soon after his arrest, but it seems to me properly within the limits of the Justices' discretion, when determining the issue of good reason, to decide that it had not quite been reached by the point of his arrest.

13. For those reasons, I, for my part, would answer the question posed for us in the affirmative and accordingly dismiss this appeal.





14. MR JUSTICE MANCE: I agree. What is good reason in particular factual circumstances is a matter of judgment about which there is some scope for legitimate difference of opinion at least in marginal cases. This is certainly a marginal case, in my view. The Justices, as their Case Stated shows, cannot be said to have taken into account inadmissible considerations, or to have failed to have taken into account admissible considerations. As to weight they placed on the considerations which they evaluated, the fact that this court or another Bench of Justices might not have reached the same conclusion as these Justices is not sufficient to justify this court in saying that the Justices' decision was wrong in law, or irrational, or should otherwise be set aside.


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© 1998 Crown Copyright


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