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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 >> Director of Public Prosecutions v Baker [2004] EWHC 2782 (Admin) (02 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2004/2782.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 2782 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
DIVISIONAL COURT
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FULFORD
____________________
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS | (CLAIMANT) | |
-v- | ||
MARGARET BAKER | (DEFENDANT) |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR E A ELLIOTT (instructed by Travis Marston & Co) appeared on behalf of the DEFENDANT
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Section 1(1)
"A person must not pursue a course of conduct --
(a) which amounts to harassment of another, and
(b) which he knows or ought to know amounts to harassment of the other."
Section 2(1)
"A person who pursues a course of conduct in breach of section 1 is guilty of an offence."
Two further relevant sections are:
Section 7(2) "References to harassing a person include alarming the person or causing the person distress."
and
Section 7(3)
"A 'course of conduct' must involve conduct on at least two occasions."
"Advice was given by the Legal Advisor to the effect that the bench may wish to consider the question of whether or not evidence concerned with the period prior to 22nd October 2002, that being 6 months prior to the date of the last incident of harassment complained of by Mrs Brown, could be heard by the Court. Any incidents prior to this date therefore may be viewed as being outside the 6-month limitation for proceedings for a summary only offence. This advice was agreed with by the defence and this thinking echoes in a submission as to the point.
The prosecution however contended that the 6-month limitation could not prevent evidence from more than 6 months prior to the last incident complained of from being admitted due to the nature of the offence and it being a course of conduct. The court was referred to two authorities which were DPP v Ransdale (2001) and Robert William King v DPP (2000).
It was decided that the advice from the Legal Advisor and defence submissions were persuasive and a ruling to that effect was made, excluding evidence dating from before 22nd October 2002 as inadmissible." (I note that the justices' reference to the relevant date being 22nd October 2002 constituted a slight error; the cut-off point on this formulation should have been 10th October 2002, namely 6 months prior to when the information was laid or the complaint was made, which was on 10th April 2003).
"Were the Magistrates correct in adjudicating that any evidence of harassment prior to 10th October 2002 was inadmissible on the basis that it was more than 6 months prior to charge and thereby outside the 6 months limitation for proceedings for a summary only offence?"
"It is not an essential characteristic of a criminal offence that any prohibited act or omission, in order to constitute a single offence, should take place once and for all on a single day. It may take place, whether continuously or intermittently, over a period of time."
"I fully accept that the incidents which need to be proved in relation to harassment need not exceed two incidents, but, as it seems to me, the fewer the occasions and the wider they are spread the less likely it would be that a finding of harassment can reasonably be made. One can conceive of circumstances where incidents, as far apart as a year, could constitute a course of conduct and harassment. In argument Mr Laddie put the context of racial harassment taking place outside a synagogue on a religious holiday, such as the day of atonement, and being repeated each year as the day of atonement came round. Another example might be a threat to do something once a year on a person's birthday. Nonetheless the broad position must be that if one is left with only two incidents you have to see whether what happened on those two occasions can be described as a course of conduct."
"(9) The questions for this court are first whether the justices were entitled to admit the evidence of events alleged to have occurred outside the date contained in the information, and secondly whether having admitted that evidence they were entitled to find that a course of conduct included those events as well as events occurring on the date stated in the information".
"(16) In my judgment the answer to both questions posed in this case is yes. The evidence relating to dates other than 4th December was admitted without objection and clearly in no way took the appellant by surprise. In the light of rule 100 of the Magistrates' Court Rules 1981 if objection had been taken on the basis of a fundamental defect an application could have been made to amend the information to allege a period between dates rather than a specific date, but that was not done and there was, in my judgment, in the circumstances of this case, no question of any injustice or prejudice to the appellant.
(17) In any event, evidence about events other than those on 4th December may well have been admissible to prove the appellant's knowledge of the effect that his conduct would have on the complainant. In my judgment, in this case, the evidence having been admitted without objection, the justices were clearly entitled to take it into consideration, and depending on their view of its weight to rely on it or to reject it in coming to conclusions in the case. They accepted the evidence and convicted the appellant. There is no basis in law, in my judgment, for the attack on this conviction and, accordingly, the appeal should be dismissed."
"(W)here it is necessary to place before the jury evidence of part of a continual background of history relevant to the offence charged in the indictment and without the totality of which the account placed before the jury would be incomplete or incomprehensible, then the fact that the whole account involves including evidence establishing the commission of an offence with which the accused is not charged is not of itself a ground for excluding the evidence."
"Criminal charges cannot be fairly judged in a factual vacuum. In order to make a rational assessment of evidence directly relating to a charge it may often be necessary for a jury to receive evidence describing, perhaps in some detail, the context and circumstances in which the offences are said to have been committed. This, as we understand, is the approach indicated by this court in Pettman, May 2nd 1985, (unreported) approved in Sidhu (1994) 98 Cr App R 59 at 65 and Fulcher [1995] 2 Cr App R 251 at 258."
i) the meetings between the respondent and the complainant were truly explicable as being no more than coincidence;
ii) the respondent was both the author of the letters and the person who telephoned the complainant on most, if not all, occasions; and
iii) the complainant was, by her actions, intending to cause distress to the complainant.