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United Kingdom Supreme Court |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> Mackle, R. v (Northern Ireland) [2014] UKSC 5 (29 January 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2014/5.html Cite as: [2014] 2 WLR 267, [2014] Lloyd's Rep FC 253, [2014] 1 AC 678, [2014] NI 292, [2014] 2 Cr App R (S) 33, [2014] AC 678, [2014] 2 All ER 170, [2014] UKSC 5, [2014] WLR(D) 40 |
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Hilary Term
[2014] UKSC 5
On appeal from: [2011] NICA 31
R v Mackle (Appellant) (Northern Ireland)
R v Mackle No 2 (Appellant) (Northern Ireland)
R v Mackle No 3 (Appellant) (Northern Ireland)
R v McLaughlin (Appellant) (Northern Ireland)
Appellant (Plunkett Jude Mackle) Ronan Lavery QC Michael Duffy BL (Instructed by Rafferty & Donaghy Solicitors) |
Respondent Liam McCollum QC David McDowell BL (Instructed by Public Prosecution Service of Northern Ireland) |
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Appellant (Benedict Mackle) David A. Scoffield QC Donal Sayers BL (Instructed by Rafferty & Donaghy Solicitors) |
Respondent Liam McCollum QC David McDowell BL (Instructed by Public Prosecution Service of Northern Ireland) |
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Appellant (Patrick Mackle) Julian Knowles QC Frances Lynch (Instructed by McNamee McDonnell Duffy Solicitors LLP) |
Respondent Liam McCollum QC David McDowell BL (Instructed by Public Prosecution Service of Northern Ireland) |
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Appellant (Henry McLaughlin) Julian Knowles QC Frances Lynch BL (Instructed by McNamee McDonnell Duffy Solicitors LLP) |
Respondent Liam McCollum QC David McDowell BL (Instructed by Public Prosecution Service of Northern Ireland) |
LORD KERR (with whom Lord Neuberger, Lord Mance, Lord Hughes and Lord Toulson agree)
The facts (the Mackles)
The facts (Mr McLaughlin)
The proceedings against the Mackles
(i) The Rooney hearing
"… the prosecution position is that there is no evidence which suggests anything contrary to the submissions made by counsel on their behalf in this application. So for the purpose of this application I have no contrary submissions."
(ii) The sentencing hearing
(iii) The confiscation proceedings
The proceedings against Mr McLaughlin
The Court of Appeal's judgment
"Where, a defendant is knowingly involved in the evasion of duty on smuggled cigarettes after importation and comes into possession of the smuggled cigarettes with knowledge of the evasion and as part of a joint enterprise to take advantage of the economic advantages flowing from the evasion of the duty at the point of importation he may gain a financial advantage flowing from his participation in the ongoing enterprise."
"This criminal enterprise involved a number of participants acting together playing different roles in the furtherance of the joint enterprise. The pleas of guilty by the appellants make clear their acceptance of the fact that they played a role in the enterprise, thus evidencing participation in that joint enterprise. A proper inference that could have been drawn from the pleas is that in playing their different roles the appellants and each of them were involved in the handling and processing of the cigarettes to advance the purposes of the joint enterprise. To so handle and process them they had to obtain them at different stages of the process. As R v Green shows receipt of goods by one on behalf of several defendants can be regarded as receipt for all. The joint actions of the appellants, at least arguably, involved possession and control of the cigarettes by those involved in the participation and the enterprise."
"1. Is a defendant who pleaded guilty to being knowingly concerned in the fraudulent evasion of duty and who consents, with the benefit of legal advice, to the making of a confiscation order in an agreed amount in circumstances which make clear that he does not require the Crown to prove that he obtained property or a pecuniary advantage in connection with the charged criminal conduct bound by the terms of the confiscation order?
2. Does a defendant who knowingly comes into physical possession of dutiable goods in respect of which he knows the duty has been evaded and plays an active role in the handling of those goods so as to assist in the commercial realisation of the goods benefit from his criminal activity by obtaining those goods for the purposes of section 158 of the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002?"
The statutory framework
"Without prejudice to any other provision of the Customs and Excise Acts 1979, if any person is, in relation to any goods, in any way knowingly concerned in any fraudulent evasion or attempt at evasion—
(a) of any duty chargeable on the goods;
…
he shall be guilty of an offence under this section and may be detained."
"… the Commissioners may by regulations make provision, in relation to any duties of excise on goods, for fixing the time when the requirement to pay any duty with which goods become chargeable is to take effect ('the excise duty point')."
"On the hearing of the appeal Mr Cammerman accepted, in our judgment correctly, that the appellant would only have obtained a benefit by way of a pecuniary advantage in the form of the evasion of excise duty if he was himself under a liability for the payment of that duty which he dishonestly evaded. To help somebody else to evade the payment of duty payable by that other person, within intent to defraud, is no less criminal, but in confiscation proceedings the focus is on the benefit obtained by the relevant offender. An offender may derive other benefits from helping a person who is under a liability for the payment of duty to avoid that liability, eg by way of payment for the accessory's services, but that is another matter. In order to decide whether the offender has obtained a benefit in the form of the evasion of a liability, it is necessary to determine whether the offender had a liability which he avoided. In the present case that turns on whether the appellant was liable for the payment of excise duty on the relevant goods under the relevant Regulations."
Provisions relating to confiscation in Northern Ireland
The basis on which the appellants were said to have benefited from their offences
Is a consent to a confiscation order made under a mistake of law binding?
"Where—(a) there is tendered to the Crown Court by the prosecutor a statement as to any matters relevant to the determination whether the defendant has benefited from drug trafficking or to the assessment of the value of his proceeds of drug trafficking; and (b) the defendant accepts to any extent any allegation in the statement, the court may, for the purposes of that determination and assessment, treat his acceptance as conclusive of the matters to which it relates."
"Earlier in this century it may not have been possible to put forward as a ground of appeal that the plea of guilty arose from a mistake of law or fact of the defendant: R v Forde [1923] 2 KB 400, 403, per Avory J. Nowadays it is clear that as a matter of jurisdiction the Court of Appeal has power in such a case to consider an argument that the plea of guilty was induced by a fundamental mistake of law or fact: see R v Boal [1992] QB 591 (a mistake of law); R v Lee (Bruce) [1984] 1 WLR 578, 583E (a mistake of fact) and Blackstone's Criminal Practice, 7th ed. (1997), pp. 1512-1514, para. D22.12. Given that the powers of the Court of Appeal extend to cases when a plea was entered on a mistaken view of the law or fact, it is difficult to see what rational basis there could be to exclude such a right of appeal under section 3(1). Even drug traffickers have rights and they, too, are entitled to justice."
"In our view it would be a grave injustice not to grant leave in cases such as the present cases … on the basis that there has been a previous misconception as to the state of the law, there would be a substantial injustice if we did not grant leave."
The second certified question
"…under the 1986 Act the first question was always whether, on the facts (and allowing permissible inferences) the defendant had benefited by receipt of any payment or other reward, which a mere intermediary might possibly not. It does not necessarily follow from the mere possession of drugs that a person is not a mere minder or custodian: see R v J [2001] 1 Cr App R (S) 79; R v Johannes [2002] 2 Cr App R (S) 30."
"In its opinion in R v May the committee endeavoured to explore the meaning of section 71(4). … The focus must be and remain on the language of the subsection. The committee regards the meaning of the subsection as in substance the same as the equivalent provisions of the drug trafficking legislation. There is a real danger in judicial exegesis of an expression with a plain English meaning, since the exegesis may be substituted for the language of the legislation. It is, however, relevant to remember that the object of the legislation is to deprive the defendant of the product of his crime or its equivalent, not to operate by way of fine. The rationale of the confiscation regime is that the defendant is deprived of what he has gained or its equivalent. He cannot, and should not, be deprived of what he has never obtained or its equivalent, because that is a fine. This must ordinarily mean that he has obtained property so as to own it, whether alone or jointly, which will ordinarily connote a power of disposition or control, as where a person directs a payment or conveyance of property to someone else." (emphasis added)
"Where two or more defendants obtain property jointly, each is to be regarded as obtaining the whole of it. Where property is received by one conspirator, what matters is the capacity in which he receives it, that is, whether for his own personal benefit, or on behalf of others, or jointly on behalf of himself and others. This has to be decided on the evidence: Green, para 15. By parity of reasoning, two or more defendants may or may not obtain a joint pecuniary advantage; it depends on the facts."
"In Sivaraman the court also addressed two misconceptions which subsequent cases suggest may still be common. One was that in assessing benefit in a conspiracy case each conspirator is to be taken as having jointly obtained the whole benefit obtained by 'the conspiracy'. A conspiracy is not a legal entity but an agreement or arrangement which people may join or leave at different times. In confiscation proceedings the court is concerned not with the aggregate benefit obtained by all parties to the conspiracy but with the benefit obtained, whether singly or jointly, by the individual conspirator before the court. The second misconception is a variant of the first. It is that anybody who has taken part in a conspiracy in more than a minor way is to be taken as having a joint share in all benefits obtained from the conspiracy. This is to confuse criminal liability and resulting benefit. The more heavily involved a defendant is in a conspiracy, the more severe the penalty which may be merited, but in confiscation proceedings the focus of the inquiry is on the benefit gained by the relevant defendant. In the nature of things there may well be a lack of reliable evidence about the exact benefit obtained by any particular conspirator, and in drawing common sense inferences the role of a particular conspirator may be relevant as a matter of fact, but that is a purely evidential matter."