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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Barber v Crown Prosecution Service [2004] EWHC 2605 (Admin) (25 October 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2605.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2605 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
B E T W E E N:
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ANTHONY BARBER | ||
- v - | ||
CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE |
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Smith Bernal, 190 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone No: 020 7421 4040
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT
MR ADAM WEITZMAN (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service,
West Mercia Area) appeared on behalf of THE RESPONDENT
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Crown Copyright ©
Monday 25 October 2004
MR JUSTICE FORBES:
"4. It was contended by the appellant that the prosecution had failed to adduce in evidence the making and the validity of the order of which it was alleged that the appellant was in breach in accordance with rule 68 of the Magistrates' Courts Rules 1981.
5. It was contended by the respondent that the order had been adduced in evidence because:
5.1 The South Worcester Magistrates trying the matter had made the order.
5.2 The order was a court record and it was not necessary to produce it.
5.3 The appellant had been asked in interview whether he recalled the order and its terms.
5.4 The full terms of the order had been read out to the appellant in interview.
5.5 The witnesses had referred to the existence of the order in the course of their evidence."
"We were of the opinion that:
7.1 We as Justices were not required to have produced to us a copy or court extract of the Restraining Order in order to be satisfied that it had validly been made as provided by Rule 68 of the Magistrates' Courts Rules 1981. The prosecution did not produce documentary evidence of the order but we were of the opinion that it was a public document being a matter of court record and an order made by the Worcestershire Magistrates' Court.
7.2 We were of the opinion that the breach of a Restraining Order contrary to section 5(5) Protection from Harassment Act 1997 is a criminal offence and the burden on the prosecution is to the criminal standard. The cases cited on behalf of the appellant were cases of strict liability. In those cases it was held that because they did not require proof of mens rea the offence was complete when the breach was established and therefore additional evidence as to knowledge, motive and intention were not admissible. In our opinion as the statute had not specified that an offence under section 5(5) was one of strict liability we were required to receive evidence of mens rea. We therefore concluded that the evidence contained in the interview of PC Naulls with the appellant, as adduced by the prosecution, was admissible as to the defendants's knowledge of the order.
7.3 The evidence of PC Naulls stating the terms of the order, taken together with the evidence of Stephen Prosser, Rowan Prosser and WPC Goose, satisfied us of the existence of the order and its terms. The appellant did not challenge any of the prosecution witnesses when they gave evidence in relation to the existence or terms of the order and the appellant did not give evidence. And accordingly we accepted that the order had been properly proved. As a consequence of the findings above we found the appellant guilty of an offence contrary to section 5(5) Protection from Harassment Act 1997 and we sentenced him to a fine of £50 and £50 costs."
"Confessions
(1) In any proceedings a confession made by an accused person may be given in evidence against him in so far as it is relevant to any matter in issue in the proceedings and is not excluded by the court in pursuance of this section."
"Mr Barber, on 13 March this year there was a Restraining Order placed upon you. Do you remember what we call that Restraining Order?
THE APPELLANT: Well I do and I don't, because I -- just going through rough times. Still, go on.
PC NAULLS: Do you know what the order actually stipulates?
THE APPELLANT: It stated that I wasn't supposed to speak or have anything to do with the Prosser family.
PC NAULLS: This order hereby prohibits you from making any excessive noise to the distress or inconvenience of Stephen, Rowan and Robyn Prosser for a period of 18 months."
In my view, that exchange between the police officer and the appellant was clearly capable of being found to be an admission by the appellant that a restraining order in favour of Mr and Mrs Prosser had been made on 13 March 2004. Furthermore, although the appellant did not accurately recite the terms of the order, the terms were read out to him clearly and accurately in a way that left no doubt as to what the order said, including the fact that it ran for a period of eighteen months from 13 March 2004. That was not disputed by the appellant. The officer then proceeded to ask further questions. A little later in the interview, the following exchanges took place:
"MR DUNCAN [The appellant's solicitor] I think what he's, just to go back a bit, what he's saying about the Restraining Order is he thought that when the court case was finished.
PC NAULLS: That was also lifted.
MR DUNCAN: Yeah, because everything was dropped at Court. Am I right? Your understanding order was that the Restraining Order was gone. So you're saying that it was a misunderstanding.
THE APPELLANT: Well, I think so. I didn't realise.
PC NAULLS: Well, obviously your solicitor should have pointed out to you, although those particular cases were dropped, the Restraining Order was still in place.
THE APPELLANT: I wasn't under that impression. Not guilty, not guilty.
PC NAULLS: As I say, that Restraining Order was taken out on 13 March for a period of 18 months -- until September next year."
After a short further explanation by the officer, the appellant then said:
"Yeah, I suppose you are right."
What emerges from the latter series of exchanges is that the appellant was saying that he believed at the relevant time that the order had been brought to an end by the magistrates who had dealt with earlier allegations that he was in breach of the order. That was a reference to earlier proceedings for breach of the order which the appellant had successfully defended in the magistrates' court. In the course of his police interview the appellant was not saying that the order had not existed, nor that the order was different in its terms to those of the officer had reminded him in full, but rather that at the relevant time it was his understanding that the order had been brought to an end.
"a. Is the offence of being in breach of a Restraining Order, contrary to section 5(5) of the Protection from Harassment Act 1997, an offence of strict liability?"
To that I would answer "Yes".
"b. Was it necessary for the prosecution to formally prove the Restraining Order in accordance with Rule 68 of the Magistrates' Court Rules 1981 in order to prove the case against the appellant?"
To that I would answer that the word "formally" is inappropriate. It was necessary for the prosecution properly to prove the restraining order in question. That proof could take a number of different forms, including producing a formal certified copy of the entry in the register. However, it was also open to the prosecution to prove the order in question by means of admissible evidence such as an admission by the appellant. This they did in the way to which I have referred earlier in this judgment.
"c. Did the prosecution adduce any admissible evidence to prove the existence of the order to satisfy the burden of proof?"
To that I would answer: "Yes, see above."
"d. Were the Justices, on the evidence adduced entitled to be satisfied that the evidence of the order had been proved?"
To that I would answer: "Yes, see above".
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