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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> McCafferty Or Simpson v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_76 (07 December 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_76.html Cite as: [2007] HCJAC 76, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_76 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord Nimmo Smith
Lord Abernethy
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[2007] HCJAC76Appeal No: XC324/07 and XC388/07OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD NIMMO
SMITH in NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE by JASON
WILLIAM McCAFFERTY or SIMPSON Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: and DENNIS CHRISTIE Appellant against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Act: Paterson, Solicitor
Advocate; (for appellant McCafferty)
Ms McKenzie (for appellant Christie)
Alt: Borthwick, A.D.; Crown
Agent
[2] Section
210(1) of the Criminal Procedure (
"A court, in passing a sentence of
imprisonment or detention on a person for an offence, shall -
(a) in
determining the period of imprisonment or detention, have regard to any period
of time spent in custody by the person on remand awaiting trial or sentence, or
spent in custody awaiting extradition to the United Kingdom, or spent in
hospital awaiting trial or sentence by virtue of an assessment order, a
treatment order or an interim compulsion order or by virtue of an order made
under section 200 of this Act;
(b) specify
a date of commencement of the sentence; and
(c) if
the person -
(i) has
spent a period of time in custody on remand awaiting trial or sentence; or
(ii) is
an extradited prisoner for the purposes of this section, or
(iii) has
spent a period of time in hospital awaiting trial or sentence by virtue of an
assessment order, a treatment order or an interim compulsion order or by virtue
of an order under section 200 of this Act,
and the date specified under paragraph (b)
above is not earlier than the date on which sentence was passed, state its
reasons for not specifying an earlier date .....".
Sub-sections (2) and (3) contain provisions defining the
expressions "extradited prisoner" and "extradited to the
"The right to have a sentence
backdated, or to receive reasons for that not being done, is a right enjoyed by
all prisoners receiving sentences of imprisonment, and there is no reason for
treating prisoners receiving mandatory life sentences any differently from any
other prisoners in this respect."
The Court therefore allowed an appeal against a sentence of
life imprisonment, which had not been backdated by the trial judge, to the
extent of backdating the sentence to the date when the appellant first appeared
on petition. In Martin v HM Advocate 2006 S.C.C.R.683 Lord
Kingarth, in delivering the Opinion of the Court, said in paragraph 8, on page
685:
"Although ....a period on remand is
different from a period spent in custody following sentence, the important
point is that in both cases the prisoner is deprived of his or her
liberty.....[T]he normal practice at least [in the case of someone remanded
throughout the period from committal until sentence] is to backdate to the
start of the remand period, so that the whole period of remand counts towards
assessment of the appropriate date for release under section 1(1) of the
[Prisoners and Criminal Proceedings (Scotland) Act 1993]".
Reference may also be made to Grant v HM Advocate
1998 S.C.C.R.113.
[4] The appellant
Simpson was convicted at
"I felt that it was appropriate to
backdate, and as is my practice, I backdated to the date of full committal,
namely
[5] The appellant
Christie was convicted at
"The important words are 'on remand awaiting
trial'. When an accused person first
appears on petition, the normal procedure is for that accused to make neither
plea nor declaration, and for the Crown to move the Court to continue the
matter for further enquiries. Bail is
granted, or the accused is remanded in custody.
When the case next calls, the Crown motion is for full committal, and
again bail is granted or the accused is remanded. This time, he is remanded 'awaiting trial'
and thus falls under the provisions of section 210. Previously, he was remanded 'for further
enquiries', and thus does not fall within the scope of section 210".
Reference is then made by the Sheriff to the language of
section 65 of the 1995 Act, where at sub-section (1)(b) reference is made to
"the first appearance of the accused on petition in respect of the offence" and
sub-section (4), where reference is made to "an accused who is committed for
any offence until liberated in due course of law". The Sheriff states:
"Both of these wordings imply that
the relevant date is the date when an accused first appears on the
petition. This is in contrast with the
wording quoted above from section 210".
The Sheriff adds:
"In any event, I deemed it
appropriate to backdate to the date of full committal and said so when passing
sentence".