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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Brady -v- Governor of the Midlands Prison [2011] IEHC 295 (18 July 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2011/H295.html Cite as: [2011] IEHC 295 |
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Judgment Title: Brady -v- Governor of the Midlands Prison Composition of Court: Judgment by: Irvine J. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2011] IEHC 295 THE HIGH COURT 2011 1246 SS IN THE MATTER OF A COMPLAINT FOR AN INQUIRY PURSUANT TO ARTICLE 40.4.2 OF THE CONSTITUTION OF IRELAND 1937, AND IN THE MATTER OF ARTICLE 40.4.1 OF THE CONSTITUTION AND THE EUROPEAN CONVENTION ON HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 2003 BETWEEN EDWARD BRADY APPLICANT AND
GOVERNOR OF THE MIDLANDS PRISON RESPONDENT PRESIDENT OF HIGH COURT (KEARNS J.),
DIRECTOR OF COURTS SERVICE, E. GRIFFIN (REGISTRAR OF THE HIGH COURT), DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS AND CIRCUIT CRIMINAL COURT (JUDGE PATRICIA RYAN) NOTICE PARTIES JUDGMENT of Ms. Justice Irvine delivered on the 18th day of July, 2011 1. The applicant is currently detained in the Midlands Prison. From the documentation before the court it appears that the applicant was convicted on 15th January, 2010, on seven counts of indecent assault contrary to common law. On 11th March, 2010 he was sentenced by Her Honour Judge Patricia Ryan at the Circuit (Criminal) Court to two years imprisonment on each count in accordance with s. 6 of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act 1935 (“the 1935 Act”), with the sentences to run concurrently. The conviction Order also notes that the trial judge directed that the applicant’s name be placed on the Sex Offenders Register for a period of ten years commencing 11th March, 2010. She also refused the applicant leave to appeal against conviction and sentence. 2. The applicant seeks an inquiry pursuant to Article 40.2 of the Constitution into the lawfulness of his present detention in the Midlands Prison. He also seeks certain declaratory relief. To this end, he lodged the present application with the High Court on 23rd of June 2011 and the twelve pages of paperwork grounding his application were put before me on 27th June, 2011. In his unsworn statement dated 10th June, 2011, the applicant seeks a number of declaratory relief’s, namely
(ii) He seeks a declaration that the committal order and warrant of conviction is invalid as its contents and recitals are fraudulent, vague and void for uncertainty and do not represent the words spoken by the sentencing judge. (iii)He seeks a declaration that his detention in the Midlands Prison is unlawful as the warrant of conviction only permits him to be detained in Mountjoy Prison. 4. As exhibit B to his unsworn statement, the applicant encloses a copy of the affidavit and exhibits he maintains he submitted to the High Court on 25th March last. Therein the applicant sought a number of relief’s which may be summarised as follows:-
(ii) a declaration that the Circuit Criminal Court had no power or jurisdiction to try, convict or sentence him to two years imprisonment under s. 6 of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act 1935 having regard to s. 10(2) of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act 1981; (iii)a declaration that his legal advisers had acted in a “deplorable and constitutionally unacceptable manner” and that his trial was not conducted in accordance with the principles laid down by the Supreme Court in McDonough v. Frawley [1978] I.R.; and (iv)an injunction to prevent his removal from the Midlands Prison to any other prison pending the determination of those proceedings. 6. Notwithstanding the fact that the court has not been in a position to locate the papers which the applicant maintains he lodged by letter dated 25th March last, prior to his being entitled to any declaratory relief of the nature sought on the present application, I would have to be satisfied that he had put forward, in the course of his first application, good grounds to argue that his detention was unlawful. Having considered a copy of the papers which the applicant maintains were lodged with the High Court on 25th March last and which are exhibited at exhibit B to his unsworn statement grounding the present application, I am not satisfied that he has established any legal basis for his complaint in the first application. 7. At the heart of the first application was an assertion that by reason of the provisions of the Criminal Law (Rape) Act 1981 (“the 1981 Act”) that the applicant could not validly have been indicted or convicted for the offence of indecent assault contrary to common law. Section 10 of that Act provides as follows:-
(2) Section 6 of the Criminal Law Amendment Act, 1935, is hereby repealed.”
9. The effect of s. 10 of the 1981 Act does no more than provide for an alteration in the maximum sentence to be applied in respect of any offence of indecent assault contrary to common law committed after the commencement of that Act. The section has no bearing on the validity of the applicant’s prosecution and/or his conviction on the seven charges of indecent assault contrary to common law relating to offences which were committed prior to 8th August, 1974 and the 7th August, 1976. Neither has the Statute any bearing upon the validity of the sentence imposed by the learned Circuit Court judge, confined as she was at the time of sentencing to the maximum period provided for in s. 6 of the 1935 Act. 10. For the aforementioned reasons, it is clear to me that even had the applicant’s first application been validly submitted to the court, he did not have any good grounds to argue that his detention at that time was unlawful or to seek an Order of the Court directing an Inquiry into the lawfulness of his detention. Accordingly, this Court has no need to engage further upon the applicant’s right to the declaratory relief sought on his present application which right is stated to be based upon an assertion that his constitutional rights and/or his rights under the European Convention on Human Rights Act 2003, were breached by the High Court in its alleged failure to deal promptly with the application which he states he made on 25th March last. 11. As to the applicant’s complaint in the present proceedings that he was never before Her Honour Judge Ryan in respect of the charges contained in Bill of Indictment No. 1069/04, that contention is contrary to the documentary evidence available to the court. Regarding his assertion that the committal order and warrant of conviction is invalid as its contents and recitals are fraudulent, vague and void for uncertainty, the applicant does not state the basis for any such allegations. Indeed, in his sworn affidavit in support of his first application, the applicant made no complaint that the committal order or warrant of conviction was vague or void for uncertainty and in that application confined his complaint as to the effect of s. 10(2) of the 1981 Act on the validity of his prosecution, conviction and sentence. 12. The applicant further complains in the present proceedings that as the warrant for his detention is directed to the Governor of Mountjoy Prison that he has grounds to argue that his detention is unlawful because he is presently held in the Midlands Prison. In this regard I am satisfied that these facts do not give the applicant any legal basis to support his present application for an inquiry into the lawfulness of his detention. The transfer of prisoners from one prison to another is a matter for the executive and not for the courts. Any such transfer may be exercised by the Minister for Justice, Equality and Law Reform pursuant to s. 17 of the Criminal Justice Administration Act 1914, and in such circumstances the Governor of the prison to which the transfer is made becomes his new custodian. There is no evidence before this Court that a transfer order was not made in accordance with the said provision. 13. In addition to the foregoing grounds of complaint the applicant contends that the trial Judge did not, at the time he was sentenced, order that his name be placed on the sex offenders register for a period of ten years as appears on the warrant of conviction. In this regard the court notes firstly that this complaint, even if it were true and established by means of evidence, does not go to the lawfulness of the applicant’s detention and therefore can give him no grounds for the relief he seeks under Article 40.4 of the Constitution. Secondly, I note that no such complaint was made by the applicant in his first application. Finally, if the applicant was truly of the belief that the court order in respect of his conviction and sentence was not in accordance with what was directed by the sentencing judge that is a matter that should have been revisited with that judge and is not a matter that can be dealt with on the present application. 14. For all of the aforementioned reasons I will refuse the present application.
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