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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Peacock, Re [2012] UKSC 5 (22 February 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2012/5.html Cite as: [2012] 2 All ER 257, [2012] 1 WLR 550 c, [2012] Crim LR 472, [2012] 2 Cr App R (S) 81, [2012] WLR(D) 42, [2012] Lloyd's Rep FC 291, [2012] 1 WLR 550, [2012] WLR 550, [2012] UKSC 5 |
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Hilary Term
[2012] UKSC 5
On appeal from: [2010] EWCA Civ 1465
JUDGMENT
In the matter of Peacock (Appellant)
before
Lord Hope, Deputy President
Lord Walker
Lady Hale
Lord Brown
Lord Wilson
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
22 February 2012
Heard on 14 December 2011
Appellant Orlando Pownall QC Christopher Marsh-Finch (Instructed by Creed Lane Law Group) |
Respondent David Perry QC William Hays (Instructed by CPS Appeals Unit) |
|
Intervener (Secretary of State for the Home Department) David Perry QC William Hays (Instructed by Treasury Solicitors) |
LORD BROWN
"(1) This section applies where, by virtue of section 5(3) of this Act, the amount which a person is ordered to pay by a confiscation order is less than the amount assessed to be the value of his proceeds of drug trafficking.
(2) If, on an application made in accordance with subsection (3) below, the High Court is satisfied that the amount that might be realised in the case of the person in question is greater than the amount taken into account in making the confiscation order (whether it was greater than was thought when the order was made or has subsequently increased) the court shall issue a certificate to that effect, giving the court's reasons.
(3) An application under subsection 2 above may be made either by the prosecutor or by a receiver appointed in relation to the realisable property of the person in question under section 26 or 29 of this Act or in pursuance of a charging order.
(4) Where a certificate has been issued under subsection (2) above the prosecutor may apply to the Crown Court for an increase in the amount to be recovered under the confiscation order; and on that application the court may –
(a) substitute for that amount such amount (not exceeding the amount assessed as the value referred to in subsection (1) above) as appears to the court to be appropriate having regard to the amount now shown to be realisable; and
(b) increase the term of imprisonment or detention fixed in respect of the confiscation order under subsection (2) of section 139 of the Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000 (as it has effect by virtue of section 9 of this Act) if the effect of the substitution is to increase the maximum period applicable in relation to the order under subsection (4) of that section."
The Commencement Order
"(1) Where, under article 3 . . . a provision of the Act does not have effect, the following provisions shall continue to have effect . . . (e) sections 1 to 36 and 41 of the Drug Trafficking Act 1994;"
Does section 16(2) extend to after acquired assets?
(a) where the defendant concealed assets at the time the confiscation order was originally made (concealed assets);
(b) where the assets originally taken into account were initially undervalued (undervalued assets);
(c) where the assets originally taken into account have since increased in value (appreciated assets);
(d) where, subsequent to the making of the original confiscation order, the defendant has increased his realisable property (after acquired assets).
"For the purposes of this Act the amount that might be realised at the time a confiscation order is made against the defendant is –
(a) the total of the values at that time of all the realisable property held by the defendant . . ."
Section 6(2) then defines "realisable property" to mean (again, so far as presently material) "(a) any property held by the defendant …".
"If, on an application made in accordance with subsection (3) below, the High Court is satisfied that the total values of all property held by the person in question at the time the confiscation order is made is greater than the amount taken into account in making the confiscation order (whether it was greater than was thought when the order was made or has subsequently increased) the court shall issue a certificate to that effect, giving the court's reasons."
"Where the defendant serves a term of imprisonment or detention in default of paying any amount due under a confiscation order, his serving that term does not prevent the confiscation order from continuing to have effect, so far as any other method of enforcement is concerned."
Although I would not myself place very much weight upon it, I too would regard section 9(5) as at least a straw in the wind: an indication of Parliament's intention that even serving a term in default will not exonerate a defendant from the possibility of eventually having to disgorge assets up to the extent of his criminal gains.
LORD WALKER
"It is a notorious fact that professional and habitual criminals frequently take steps to conceal their profits from crime. Effective but fair powers of confiscating the proceeds of crime are therefore essential. The provisions of the 1988 Act are aimed at depriving such offenders of the proceeds of their criminal conduct. Its purposes are to punish convicted offenders, to deter the commission of further offences and to reduce the profits available to fund further criminal enterprises. These objectives reflect not only national but also international policy. The United Kingdom has undertaken, by signing and ratifying treaties agreed under the auspices of the United Nations and the Council of Europe, to take measures necessary to ensure that the profits of those engaged in drug trafficking or other crimes are confiscated: see the United Nations convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (19 December 1988); Council of Europe Convention on Laundering, Search, Seizure and Confiscation of the Proceeds from Crime, Strasbourg, 8 November 1990. These Conventions are in operation and have been ratified by the United Kingdom."
There are numerous other authoritative statements to the same effect. It is sufficient to refer to the observations of Lord Bingham in McIntosh v Lord Advocate [2003] 1 AC 1078, para 4 and in R v May [2008] AC 1028, paras 7 to 9.
LORD WILSON
LORD HOPE (with whom Lady Hale agrees)
"When we are seeking the intention of Parliament that may appear from express words but it may also appear by irresistible inference from the statute read as a whole. But I would agree that, if there is a reasonable doubt, the subject should be given the benefit of the doubt."
There is no hint here that this principle should be attenuated according to the impression one forms as to whether or not the subject deserves, or does not deserve, to be given that benefit. It is a principle of universal application. Its force would be greatly weakened if it were otherwise.
"In this Act 'realisable property' means, subject to subsection (3) below –
(a) any property held by the defendant; and
(b) any property held by a person to whom the defendant has directly or indirectly made a gift caught by this Act."
Section 6(3) provides that property is not realisable property if an order made under various Acts which provide for the forfeiture of property is in force in respect of it. The context in which the definition appears directs attention to the time that the confiscation order is made. It does not appear to contemplate the carrying out of the exercise that section 6(1) refers to at any later date.
"Any determination under section 2(4) of this Act by virtue of this section shall be by reference to the amount that might be realised at the time when the determination is made." [emphasis added]
Section 15(9)(c) provides that section 6(1) of the Act shall have effect as if for "confiscation order is made" there were substituted "of the determination". These modifications would not have been required if the expression "the amount that might be realised" in section 6(1), read together with section 6(2), was capable of embracing assets acquired after the date when the confiscation order was made.
"Note that this section does not apply to property which comes into the possession of the defendant after the order is made."
No reasons are given for this observation. But this may be because the annotator, who had studied the background to this enactment in great detail, regarded the point as so obvious as not to require any explanation. In any event, it is of some interest that this was what a contemporary writer understood to be the effect of the section. For the reasons I have given, I do not think that it is self-evident that he was wrong.