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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Lord Chancellor v Frieze [2007] EWHC 1490 (QB) (27 April 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2007/1490.html Cite as: [2007] 5 Costs LR 684, [2007] EWHC 1490 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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LORD CHANCELLOR | Applicant | |
-v- | ||
FRIEZE | Respondent |
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PO Box 1336, Kingston-Upon-Thames KT1 1QT
Tel No: 020 8974 7300 Fax No: 020 8974 7301
Email Address: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Respondent appeared in person.
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) The amount of the graduated fee for a single trial advocate representing one assisted person in a guilty plea or cracked trial shall be the basic fee specified in paragraph 10 as appropriate to the offence with which the assisted person is charged, the category of trial advocate instructed and whether the case is a guilty plea or a cracked trial, increased by the evidence uplift.
(2) The evidence uplift shall be calculated as follows:
(a) there shall be no uplift in respect of the first 10 pages;
(b) the uplift set out in the third column of the applicable Table in paragraph 10 shall be payable in respect of each page from the 11th to the 50th;
(c) the uplift set out in the fourth column of the applicable Table in paragraph 10 shall be payable in respect of each page from the 51st to the 100th; and
(d) the uplift set out in the fifth column of the applicable Table in paragraph 10 shall be payable in respect of each page from and after the 101st.
(3) A case on indictment in which a pleas and directions hearing takes place is a cracked trial if it fulfils the following conditions:
(a) the matter did not proceed to trial (whether by reason of pleas of guilty or for other reasons) or the prosecution offered no evidence, and
(b) (i) in respect of one or more counts to which the assisted person pleaded guilty, he did not so plead at the plea and directions hearing; or
(ii) in respect of one or more counts which were not proceeded with, the prosecution did not, before or at the plea and directions hearing, declare an intention of not proceeding with them.
(4) A case on indictment in which no pleas and directions hearing takes place is a cracked trial if it was listed for trial but the case was disposed of without a trial (whether by reason of pleas of guilty or for other reasons) or the prosecution offered no evidence.
(5) A case on indictment is a guilty plea if it was disposed of without a trial because the assisted person pleaded guilty to one or more counts and is not a cracked trial."
"It is my opinion that in this case a plea and case management hearing did take place. The case was listed for a PCMH on 6th January 2006 and appeared as such on the court list. It was at this hearing that the defendant pleaded guilty. At the hearing the defendant entered his pleas and the case was actively managed in that the judge gave directions that were designed to facilitate the future course of the case in that essential reports were ordered and a proposed date for sentence was allocated. I also note that the PCMH forms used by the judge in all such hearings has a paragraph 3, a section dealing with guilty pleas and providing for the giving of directions such as ordering the production and filing of a PSR and the defence filing additional material on which they wished to rely. If it is accepted that in a case which was listed for a PCMH at which a guilty plea was entered and directions for the listing of the sentence given constitutes a plea and case management hearing, then a PCMH has for all purposes, including determination, taken place."
"I have to say that I find the reasoning of [the respondent] very convincing, and the reasoning of the Determining Officer less so, and, on my interpretation of the Regulations, I find that Counsel's interpretation is to be preferred, and accordingly this appeal is allowed in full..."
"In respect of one or more counts to which the assisted person pleaded guilty, he did not so plead at the pleas and directions hearing."
This clearly contemplates that a plea of guilty can be entered at a PCMH.
"Active case management at the PCMH should reduce the number of ineffective and cracked trials…"
thereby indicating that the fact that a PCMH takes place cannot by itself be determinative of whether a trial is cracked, as it would be on the appellant's case. Moreover, at paragraph IV.41.9 it states in relation to a PCMH hearing:
"In the event of a guilty plea before such an authorised judge, the case will be adjourned for sentencing."
That clearly contemplates the entry of a guilty plea at a PCMH. Moreover, the PCMH form itself, which was used in all Crown Courts at the time with which we are concerned, includes a section which deals with events following from a guilty plea entered at that hearing, although I am told that a modified form is now in use which does not include that section.
"To allow the court to take an early guilty plea."
The court's duty includes a duty at 1.5(b) to take a defendant's plea, and the duties of advocates at such a hearing under 11.8(a) and 11.9(a) vary according to whether or not a guilty plea is entered.
"This is a hearing at which the defendant enters his plea and is sentenced as appropriate."
The PCMH form, as I have indicated, contemplates a range of outcomes even if these outcomes or further proceedings do not include a substantive issue between the parties. It is clear from the form that this is still to be regarded as a PCMH. Moreover, the guidance itself at page 124 indicates that the PCMH can be a hearing at which sentence itself is passed.