Jersey & Guernsey Law Review – February 2012
VIVE LA DIFFERENCE (1)
Nik van Leuven
1 Sir Christopher Pitchers’ apercu of grave and criminal assault, following Cyril
Whelan’s tour d’horizon
on the same subject, reinforces the disparity
between the respective approaches of Jersey and Guernsey to the development of the
criminal law, illustrated in the exchange False Friends of Crown Advocates (1)
and (2). One purpose of Sir
Christopher’s review is to examine, in a comparative way, how Jersey customary law “plays out in one area of
the criminal law”. Others are invited by the author “to say where
the balance of advantage lies”, both of which suggest some
consideration of the development in Guernsey
of the characterisation and prosecution of offences of assault – hence
this note, which has encouraged some further identification of areas of
difference between the jurisdictions.
2 So far as I can ascertain (and I have not
checked, to any detailed extent, the Crime
folios of the latter half of the 19th and early part of the 20th
centuries), grave and criminal assault has never existed as a separate and
distinct criminal offence in Guernsey. Such a formulation does not appear in
the Commissioners’ Second (Guernsey) Report of 1848, which nowadays must
be the first port of call into the development of Guernsey’s
criminal law. Interestingly, Whelan points out that a search of Jersey’s Poursuites Criminelles for the more
serious offence described as such discloses its first instance in 1864, some 17
or so years after the Commissioners’ First (Jersey) Report of 1847, which
suggests to Whelan’s mind the possibility (and he is obviously cautious
here) of some local reflection of a perceived need, following enactment in
England of the Offences against the Person Act 1861, somehow to categorise by
the wording of the charge preferred the gravamen of the offence, which had been
previously generically prosecuted as assault. But the 1861 Act reflected, at
least in part, earlier codifications of assault offences by which their
severity, both as to conduct and consequence, determined the charge. So there was little new in the 1861 formulations. In support
of this view, the 1848 Guernsey Report particularly identifies, besides “ordinary”
assault, the offence of grievous bodily harm, and from the exchange reported at
para 6144 et seq
it is clear that an indictment for assault with intent to do grievous bodily
harm would then have been laid as such. The Bailiff, at para 6190, further
observed that the offence of mayhem “would be in exactly the same
position here as it was in England when Blackstone’s Commentaries were
written” (in the mid-18th century), which provides further evidence
– as, indeed does much of the 1848 Guernsey Report – that English
law, rather than Norman or French law, had by then become, if not the historic origo then the current fons,
of Guernsey’s criminal law.
3 Having been reminded in the ‘False
Friends’ exchange that the development of Guernsey’s and
Jersey’s criminal laws have proceeded by different means to different
places, it is interesting to note that, in the area of assaults, Guernsey has
not specifically legislated to reproduce in legislation the principal English
statute – the 1861 Act. What seems to have happened is that the Law
Officers developed the practice of drafting indictments by reference to the
more serious of those various offences identified in the 1861 Act, and, where
appropriate, laying as an alternative to the more serious charge (framed in terms
of the 1861 Act offence) mere customary or “common law” assault,
which would be apt to cover a wide range of conduct and consequence. In this
approach, what would in England
ordinarily be preferred as assault occasioning actual bodily harm is invariably
encompassed by a charge of assault, whether or not as an alternative to a more
serious charge. Interestingly Sir Christopher refers to the 1993 (English) Law
Commission proposals by which offences of assault would be re-categorised
according to their severity, not only of conduct but also consequence, which
would broadly reproduce the subsisting 1861 Act hierarchy, set out
(principally) in s 18 – wounding or causing grievous bodily harm with
intent; s 20 – wounding or inflicting grievous bodily harm; and s 47
– assault occasioning actual bodily harm; besides customary (or common
law) assault. Furthermore, the practice of Guernsey’s prosecuting
authorities to charge on the basis of the more serious 1861 Act offences
carries advantages, as identified in the ‘False Friends’ exchange,
including some simplification of the sentencing process if and so far as
English sentencing principles and practices are relevant. But of this, more
anon, with particular reference to the Law Officers’ conclusions, long since statutorily abandoned in Guernsey but not
in Jersey and, more latterly, the Guernsey Court of Appeal’s recent judgment in Law
Officers v Gunter, in which English sentencing practice in offences of internet child
pornography was held to be more directly relevant in the Guernsey courts’
determining of sentences, unlike, for example,
sentencing for drug trafficking offences.
Nik van Leuven QC held office as HM Procureur
(Attorney General of Guernsey) between October
2002 and May 2009. He has been the Director General of the Guernsey
Financial Services Commission since June 2009.