Civil Asset
Recovery (International Co-operation) (Jersey) Law 2007
A LAW to enable Jersey to co-operate
with other countries in external civil asset recovery proceedings and
investigations and for related purposes
Commencement [see endnotes]
PArt 1
Introductory provisions
1 Interpretation
(1) In this Law –
“document” includes information recorded in any form
and, in relation to information recorded otherwise than in legible form,
references to its production include references to producing a copy of the
information in legible form;
“evidence” includes documents and other articles;
“external civil asset recovery order” means an order or
other judicial authority, that –
(a) is
made, other than in the course of criminal proceedings, by an external
decision-making body in a country or territory outside Jersey; and
(b) specifies
that property specified in the order is tainted property, or specifies an
amount of money to be money to be forfeited or recovered in lieu of tainted
property;
“external civil asset recovery proceedings” means
proceedings –
(a) which
are judicial in nature but are not criminal proceedings; and
(b) in
which external civil asset recovery orders may be made;
“external decision-making body” means a court or
tribunal, or other body or person, who or which is authorized, under a law of a
country or territory outside Jersey, to make external civil asset recovery
orders;
“items subject to legal professional privilege” shall
have the same meaning as is given to the expression “items subject to
legal privilege” by Article 1(1) of the Proceeds of Crime (Jersey) Law 1999;
“Minister” means the Minister for Treasury and Resources;
“premises” includes any place and, in particular,
includes –
(a) any
vehicle, vessel, aircraft or hovercraft;
(b) any
offshore installations; and
(c) any
tent or movable structure;
“property” means all property, whether vested or
contingent, and whether in Jersey or elsewhere, including –
(a) any
legal document or instrument evidencing title to or interest in immovable
property;
(b) any
interest in or power in respect of immovable property;
(c) in
relation to movable property, any right, including a right to possession;
“property restraint order” means an order made under
Article 7;
“recoverable property” means any property in respect of
which an external civil asset recovery order has been, or could be, made in
external civil asset recovery proceedings;
“respondent” means a person against whom, or against
whose property, an external civil asset recovery order has been made or against
whom, or against whose property, external civil asset recovery proceedings have
been, or are to be, instituted;
“responsible authority” means –
(a) an
external decision-making body;
(b) a
person or body who or which –
(i) is authorized
under a law of a country or territory outside Jersey to conduct investigations
on behalf of the country or territory in relation to external civil asset
recovery proceedings that are or may be instituted, and
(ii) is
conducting such an investigation; and
(c) any
other authority in a country or territory which appears to the Attorney General
to have the function of making requests, in relation to external civil asset
recovery proceedings, of the kind to which Article 2 or 3 applies;
“tainted property” means property that has been found by
an external decision-making body to have been –
(a) used
in, or intended to be used in, unlawful conduct; or
(b) obtained
in the course of, from the proceeds of, or in connection with, unlawful
conduct;
“unlawful conduct” means the commission of an offence
against a law of a country or territory, including Jersey.[1]
(2) For the purposes of
this Law, external civil asset recovery proceedings are instituted in a country
or territory outside Jersey when an application has been made to an external
decision-making body in the other country or territory for an external civil
asset recovery order.
(3) For the purposes of
this Law, external civil asset recovery proceedings are concluded in a country
or territory outside Jersey –
(a) when
(disregarding any power of an external decision-making body to grant leave to
appeal out of time) there is no further possibility of an external civil asset
recovery order being made in the proceedings; or
(b) on
the satisfaction of an external civil asset recovery order made in the
proceedings, whether by forfeiture, recovery, or realisation, of all property
liable to be forfeited, recovered, realised or otherwise dealt with under the
order.
(4) An external civil asset
recovery order is subject to appeal until (disregarding any power of an
external decision-making body or a court to grant leave to appeal out of time)
there is no further possibility of an appeal on which the order could be varied
or set aside.
2 Service
of external civil asset recovery process in Jersey
(1) If the Attorney General
receives from the government of, or a responsible authority in, a country or
territory outside Jersey –
(a) a
summons or other process requiring a person to appear as a respondent, or to
attend as a witness, in external civil asset recovery proceedings in that
country or territory; or
(b) a
document issued by an external decision-making body in that country or
territory as part of external civil asset recovery proceedings and recording a
decision of the body made in the course of those proceedings,
together with a request for it to be served on a person in Jersey,
the Attorney General may cause the process or document to be served by post,
or, if the request is for personal service, instruct the Viscount to cause it
to be personally served.
(2) Service by virtue of
this Article of any process mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) shall not impose
an obligation under the law of Jersey to comply with it.
(3) A process served by
virtue of this Article shall be accompanied by a notice –
(a) stating
the effect of paragraph (2);
(b) indicating
that the person on whom it is served may wish to seek advice as to the possible
consequences of the person’s failing to comply with the process under the
law of the country or territory where it was issued; and
(c) indicating
that under that law the person may not, as a witness, be accorded the same
rights and privileges as would be accorded to the person as a witness in civil
proceedings in Jersey.
(4) If the Viscount is
instructed under this Article to cause a process or document to be served, the
Viscount shall –
(a) if
it is has been served, inform the Attorney General as soon as practicable when
and how it was served and (if possible) provide the Attorney General with a
receipt signed by the person on whom it was served; or
(b) if
he or she has been unable to cause the process or document to be served, inform
the Attorney General as soon as practicable of that fact and of the reason he
or she has been unable to cause the process to be served.
PArt 2
Evidence in relation to external civil asset recovery proceedingS
3 Evidence
for, and assistance in relation to, external civil asset recovery proceedings
(1) This Article applies in
relation to a request if –
(a) the
Attorney General receives from a responsible authority a request for assistance
in obtaining evidence in Jersey in connection with –
(i) external civil
asset recovery proceedings that have been instituted in a country or territory,
or
(ii) an
investigation for the purpose of external civil asset recovery proceedings that
are being, or may be, instituted in a country or territory; and
(b) the
Attorney General is satisfied that there are reasonable grounds to suspect
that the evidence is, or relates to, property that –
(i) has been used in,
or is intended to be used in, unlawful conduct, or
(ii) has
been, or was intended to be, obtained in the course of, from the proceeds of,
or in connection with, unlawful conduct.
(2) If this Article applies
in relation to a request, the Attorney General may issue a notice in writing to
a person specifying any of, or any combination of, the following requirements –
(a) that
the person is required to give to the Attorney General, by the date specified in the notice, documents, or other articles,
which are specified in the notice and that may constitute evidence for the
purposes of the request;
(b) that
the person –
(i) is required to
give, to a court or the Viscount (as specified in the notice) documents, or
other articles, which are specified in the notice and that may constitute
evidence for the purposes of the request, and
(ii) may
be required by a court or the Viscount (as specified in the notice) to attend
and to give evidence in proceedings before the court specified or the Viscount
in relation to that evidence;
(c) that
the person may be required by a court or the Viscount
(as specified in the notice) to attend and to give
evidence in proceedings before the court specified or the Viscount in relation
to the request.
(3) A person shall not,
without reasonable excuse, fail to comply with a requirement of a notice given to
the person under paragraph (2) that is a requirement of the kind specified
in sub-paragraph (a) of that paragraph, in relation to evidence that the
person may, under Article 4, be compelled to give in proceedings under
this Article.
(4) A person who
contravenes paragraph (3) commits an offence and shall be liable to a fine
of level 3 on the standard scale.[2]
(5) A court shall have the
same powers for securing the attendance of –
(a) a
person to whom a notice has been given under paragraph (2) specifying a
requirement of the kind that is specified in sub-paragraph (b) or (c) of
that paragraph; or
(b) any
other witness,
for the purpose of proceedings under this Article as it has for the
purpose of other proceedings before it.
(6) The Viscount shall have
the same powers for securing the attendance of –
(a) a
person to whom a notice has been given under paragraph (2) specifying a
requirement of the kind that is specified in sub-paragraph (b) or (c) of
that paragraph; or
(b) any
other witness,
for the purposes of proceedings before the Viscount under this
Article as the Royal Court has for the purposes of any proceedings before it.
(7) A court or the
Viscount, as the case may be, may in proceedings before it or him or her under
this Article, take evidence on oath.
(8) An order for costs
shall not be made in proceedings before a court or the Viscount under this
Article.
(9) For the avoidance of
doubt it is declared that the Bankers’ Books Evidence (Jersey) Law 1986 applies to any proceedings
before a court or the Viscount under this Article as it applies to other
proceedings before the court or, in the case of the Viscount, would apply to
proceedings before the Royal Court.
(10) The Bankers’ Books Evidence (Jersey)
Law 1986 applies to the giving to the Attorney General, in pursuance of a
requirement of a kind that is referred to in sub-paragraph (a) of paragraph (2)
and that is specified in a notice given under that paragraph, of any evidence
to which that Law applies, as if the giving of the evidence to the Attorney
General took place in proceedings before a court.
4 Giving
of evidence in proceedings under Article 3
(1) A person shall not be
compelled to give in proceedings under Article 3 any evidence which the
person could not be compelled to give –
(a) in
civil proceedings in Jersey; or
(b) subject
to paragraph (2), in civil proceedings in the country or territory from
which the request under Article 3(1) has come.
(2) Paragraph (1)(b)
does not apply unless the claim of the person questioned to be exempt from
giving the evidence is conceded by the responsible authority which made the
request under Article 3(1).
(3) If the claim made by a
person is not conceded in accordance with paragraph (2) –
(a) the
person may (subject to the other provisions of this Article) be required to
give the evidence to which the claim relates; and
(b) the
evidence shall not be transmitted to the responsible authority which requested
it if a court in the country or territory in question, on the matter being
referred to it, upholds the claim.
(4) In this Article,
references to giving evidence include references to answering any question and
to producing any document or other article and the references in paragraph (3)
to the transmission of evidence given by a person shall be construed
accordingly.
(5) In this Article,
references to giving evidence in proceedings under Article 3 shall include
the giving of evidence to the Attorney General pursuant to a requirement that
is specified in a notice given under Article 3(2) and that is of a kind
that is specified in sub-paragraph (a) of Article 3(2).
5 Transmission
of evidence received in proceedings under Article 3
(1) The evidence received
by a court or the Viscount, as the case may be, under Article 3 shall be
provided to the Attorney General for transmission to the responsible authority
which made the request under that Article.
(2) If, in order to comply
with the request, it is necessary for the evidence to be accompanied by any
certificate, affidavit or other verifying document, the court or the Viscount,
as the case may be, shall also provide for transmission by the Attorney General
of any document of that nature as may be specified in the notice nominating the
court or Viscount.
(3) The Attorney General
may transmit to the responsible authority which made the request under Article 3
any evidence that is provided to him or her pursuant to a notice given to a
person under that Article in relation to the request.
(4) If the evidence
consists of a document the original or a copy may be transmitted, and if it
consists of any other article the article itself or a description, photograph
or other representation of it may be transmitted, as may be necessary in order
to comply with the request.
PART 3
Enforcement of EXTERNAL CIVIL ASSET RECOVERY orders
6 Making of property restraint
order
(1) The Attorney General
may apply to the Royal Court to make a property restraint order under this
Article in respect of recoverable property specified in the application.
(2) An application under paragraph (1)
may also be made on an ex parte application
to the Bailiff in Chambers.
(3) After receiving an
application under paragraph (1), the Royal Court may –
(a) make
a property restraint order in respect of any recoverable property specified in
the application; and
(b) give
directions in relation to the management or dealing with the property, other
than directions to dispose of, or realise, the property (other than perishable
property).
(4) The Royal Court may
only make a property restraint order if the application is made on behalf of
the government of a country or territory outside Jersey and if the requirements
of either paragraph (5) or (6) have been complied with.
(5) The requirements of
this paragraph are that –
(a) external
civil asset recovery
proceedings that relate to property in Jersey have been
instituted in a country or territory outside Jersey;
(b) the
proceedings have not been concluded; and
(c) it
appears to the Royal Court that there are reasonable grounds for believing that
an external civil asset recovery order may be made in the proceedings.
(6) The requirements of
this paragraph are that –
(a) it
appears to the Royal Court that external civil asset recovery proceedings that may relate to property in Jersey are
to be instituted in a country or territory outside Jersey; and
(b) it
appears to the Royal Court that there are reasonable grounds for believing that
an external civil asset recovery order may be made in the proceedings.
(7) A property restraint order –
(a) shall
specify the respondent, if any, to whom it relates;
(b) shall
specify the recoverable property to which it relates;
(c) shall
provide for service on, or the provision of notice to, persons affected by it
in the manner that the Royal Court may direct; and
(d) may
be made subject to conditions or restrictions specified in the order.
(8) If the Royal Court has
made a property restraint order, it shall discharge it if any proposed external
civil asset recovery proceedings to which it relates are not instituted within
the time that the Court considers reasonable.
7 Effect,
and discharge of, property restraint order
(1) Subject to paragraph (3),
on the making of a property restraint order –
(a) all
the recoverable property that is specified in the order shall vest in the
Viscount;
(b) any
specified person may be prohibited from dealing with any recoverable property
held by that person that is specified in the order;
(c) any
specified person may be prohibited from dealing with any recoverable property
that is specified in the order and that is transferred to the person after the
making of the order; and
(d) any
specified person having possession of any recoverable property that is
specified in the order may be required to give possession of it to the
Viscount.
(2) Subject to paragraph (3),
on the making of a property restraint order the Viscount shall take
possession of, and, in accordance with the directions of the Royal Court under
Article 6(3), manage or otherwise deal with, any recoverable property that
is specified in the order.
(3) Any property vesting in
the Viscount pursuant to paragraph (1)(a) shall so vest subject to all hypothecs and security interests with which the
property was burdened before it was so vested.
(4) A property restraint order –
(a) may
be discharged or varied in respect of any property to which the external civil asset recovery proceedings in
respect of which the order was made may relate; and
(b) shall
be discharged on satisfaction of an order made under Article 10.
(5) An application for the
discharge or variation of a property restraint order may be made to the Bailiff
in Chambers by any person affected by it and the Bailiff may rule upon the
application or may, at the Bailiff’s discretion, refer it to the Royal Court
for adjudication.
(6) If it appears to the Royal
Court that any property restraint order, or any variation or discharge of such
an order, made by it may affect immovable property situate in Jersey, it shall
order the registration of the order in the Public Registry.
(7) If it appears to the
Bailiff that any variation or discharge of a property restraint order made by
him or her pursuant to paragraph (5) affects immovable property situate in
Jersey, the Bailiff shall order the registration of the order in the Public
Registry.
(8) For the purposes of
this Article, dealing with property held by any person includes (without
prejudice to the generality of the expression) –
(a) where
a debt is owed to that person, making a payment to any person in reduction of
the amount of the debt; and
(b) removing
the property from Jersey.
(9) If the Royal Court has
made a property restraint order, a police officer may, for the purpose of
preventing any recoverable property to which the property restraint order
relates being removed from Jersey, seize the property.
(10) Property seized under
paragraph (9) shall be dealt with in accordance with directions of the Royal
Court.
8 Liability and costs of
Viscount
(1) If the Viscount takes
any action under a property restraint order in relation to property which is
not liable to be dealt with under an external civil asset recovery order, the
Viscount shall not be liable to any person in respect of any loss or damage
resulting from the Viscount’s action (except in so far as the loss or
damage is caused by the Viscount’s negligence) if –
(a) the
action taken was action which the Viscount would be entitled to take if the property
were property which is liable to be dealt with under an external civil asset recovery order; and
(b) the
Viscount believed, and had reasonable grounds for believing, that the Viscount
was entitled to take that action in relation to that property.
(2) The Viscount shall be
entitled –
(a) to be
remunerated for managing property that has vested in him or her under this Law;
and
(b) to be
paid any expenses he or she has reasonably incurred in managing property that
has vested in him or her under this Law.
9 Registration
of external civil asset recovery orders
On an application made on behalf of the government of a country or
territory outside Jersey, the Royal Court may register an external civil asset
recovery order made in the country or territory if –
(a) it is satisfied that at
the time of registration the order is in force and not subject to appeal;
(b) where the respondent in
relation to the order did not appear in the proceedings in which the order was
made, it is satisfied that he or she received notice of the proceedings in
sufficient time to enable him or her to defend them; and
(c) it is of the opinion
that enforcing the order in Jersey would not be contrary to the interests of
justice.
10 Recovery
of property
(1) If an external civil
asset recovery order has been registered in the Royal Court under Article 9,
the Court may, on the application of the Attorney General, order that –
(a) so
much of the property, specified in the order, as is not subject to a property
restraint order, shall vest in the Viscount and may, in accordance with the
directions of the Court, be managed, dealt with, or realised, by the Viscount;
and
(b) any
property specified in the order that is subject to a property restraint order
may, in accordance with the directions of the Court, be managed, dealt with, or
realised, by the Viscount.
(2) The Royal Court shall
not exercise the powers conferred by paragraph (1) in respect of any
property unless a reasonable opportunity has been given for persons holding any
interest in the property to make representations to the Court.
(3) Subject to paragraph (4),
on the making of an order under paragraph (1) the Viscount shall take
possession of, and, in accordance with directions of the Royal Court under
paragraph (1), manage or otherwise deal with, the recoverable property
that is specified in the order.
(4) Any property vesting in
the Viscount pursuant to paragraph (1) shall so vest subject to all hypothecs and security interests with which the
property was burdened before it was so vested.
(5) If it appears to the Royal
Court that any order made by it under paragraph (1)(a) may affect
immovable property situate in Jersey, it shall order the registration of the
order in the Public Registry.
11 Civil
Asset Recovery Fund
(1) There shall be
established a fund to be called the Civil Asset Recovery Fund.
(2) The Civil Asset
Recovery Fund shall be managed and controlled by the Minister.
(3) Any money that is –
(a) obtained
by the Viscount under Article 10, including by the realisation of property
to which an order under that Article relates; or
(b) obtained
under an asset sharing agreement,
shall be paid into the Civil Asset Recovery Fund.
(4) Except as required by paragraph (9),
money that is paid into the Civil Asset Recovery Fund is not required to be
credited to the consolidated fund.
(5) [3]
(6) The Minister shall
apply monies in the Civil Asset Recovery Fund –
(a) to
discharge Jersey’s obligations under any asset sharing agreement;
(b) to
pay to the Viscount –
(i) any amount
required under Article 8(2), and
(ii) any
amount required to be paid to the Viscount under any other enactment pursuant
to which money recovered by any process is required to be paid into the Fund;
(c) to meet
the expenses reasonably incurred by the Minister in administering the Fund;
(d) to
meet the expenses reasonably incurred by the Attorney General in the discharge
of his or her functions under –
(i) this Law, and
(ii) any
other enactment pursuant to which money recovered by any process is required to
be paid into the Fund.
(7) At the end of each
financial year, the Minister shall pay into the consolidated fund so much of
the amount of money standing to the account of the Civil Asset Recovery Fund as
has not been applied or is not required to be applied, to discharge the
obligation described in paragraph (6)(a), or to pay the remuneration for,
and meet the expenses incurred, in the year, in accordance with paragraph (6)(b)
to (d).
(8) Monies paid into the
Civil Asset Recovery Fund, while not applied for any of the purposes mentioned
in paragraph (6) or not required to be paid into the consolidated fund
under paragraph (7), shall be held by the Treasurer of the States.
(9) In this Article –
“asset sharing agreement” means any agreement or
arrangement made by or on behalf of Jersey with a country or territory outside
Jersey for the sharing of the proceeds of unlawful conduct that, as a result of
mutual assistance in proceedings (other than criminal proceedings), have been confiscated
or forfeited either in Jersey or elsewhere;
“consolidated fund” has the meaning assigned to it in
the Public Finances (Jersey) Law 2019.[4]
12 Representation
of governments of other countries or territories
(1) In any proceedings
pursuant to Article 7 or 9, the government of a country or territory
outside Jersey shall be represented by the Attorney General.
(2) In any proceedings
pursuant to Article 7 or 9, a request for assistance sent to the Attorney
General by a responsible authority of a country or territory outside Jersey
shall, unless the contrary is shown, be deemed to constitute the authority of
the government of that country or territory for the Attorney General to act on
its behalf.
PART 4
CONCLUDING PROVISIONS
13 Application
in event of death or disappearance of person
(1) A notice that may be
given by a person under this Law to another person who is deceased shall be
deemed to have been given if it is given to the personal representatives of the
other person’s estate or, if none, his or her heirs.
(2) If a person’s
whereabouts is unknown, or a person has absconded, the Royal Court shall not
make an order in relation to the person, or in relation to the property of the
person, unless it is satisfied that the Attorney General has taken reasonable
steps to contact the person.
(3) Where –
(a) a
notice is or may be issued under Article 3(2) in relation to external
civil asset recovery proceedings, or investigations for the purpose of such
proceedings, that are being, or may be, instituted; and
(b) the
person, if any, to whom the proceedings relate, or who has possession of
evidence to which the notice may relate, dies,
then, despite that death, Part 2 shall continue to apply in
relation to –
(i) any
evidence; and
(ii) any
person who may be required to give any evidence under that Part in relation to
the proceedings or investigations,
if the proceedings or investigations may, under the law of the
country or territory in which they are or may be instigated, continue despite
the death of the deceased.
(4) The death of a person
in relation to whom external civil asset recovery proceedings are or may be
instigated shall not prevent the making of, or the continuance in force of, a
property restraint order, or an order under Article 10, in respect of
property to which the external civil asset recovery proceedings relates or may
relate, if the proceedings may, under the law of the country or territory in
which the proceedings are or may be instigated, continue, despite the death of
the person.
(5) The death of a person
in relation to whom an external civil asset recovery order is made, shall not
prevent the making of, or the continuance in force of, a property restraint order,
or an order under Article 10, in respect of recoverable property to which
the external civil asset recovery order relates.
(6) The death of a person
who has an interest in property in Jersey in relation to which a property
restraint order, or an order under Article 10, may be made shall not
prevent such an order being made or continuing in force in relation to the
property.
14 Right
of person affected to make representation to Royal Court
Any person appearing to
the Royal Court to be likely to be affected by the making of an order under this Law by
the Court shall be entitled to appear before the Court and make
representations.
15 Rules
of Court
(1) The power to make Rules
of Court under Article 13 of the Royal Court (Jersey) Law 1948 shall include a power to
make Rules for the purposes of giving effect to, and regulating the procedure
under, this Law.
(2) Rules made for the
purposes of giving effect to, and regulating the procedure under this Law, may,
in particular, make provision with respect to the persons entitled to appear or
take part in proceedings, before a court or the Viscount, to which this Law
applies and for excluding the public from any such proceedings.
16 Regulations
(1) The States may by
Regulations make such provision as to the
evidence or proof of any matter for the purposes of this Law as appears to the
States to be necessary or expedient.
(2) The
States may by Regulations make provision for the issue of, and the powers
conferred by, warrants for the search of premises, of persons on such premises,
and of articles on such premises or persons, where –
(a) external
civil asset recovery proceedings have been issued; or
(b) where
investigations are being, or have been, undertaken for the purpose of
determining whether to institute external civil asset recovery proceedings.
(3) Regulations
made under paragraph (2) may further provide for the keeping, use and
onward transmission of any evidence seized pursuant to such a warrant.
(4) Regulations
made by the States under this Article may include such incidental, consequential
and transitional provisions as appear to the States to be necessary or
expedient.
17 Transitional
provisions
This Law shall apply to and in relation to –
(a) external civil asset
recovery proceedings;
(b) investigations for the
purpose of external criminal asset recovery proceedings that are being, or may
be, conducted; and
(c) any order or other judicial
authority, or document or evidence,
whether or not –
(i) the proceedings
or investigations began before or after the commencement of this Law; or
(ii) any order or
other judicial authority, or document or evidence was made, or came into
existence, before or after the commencement of this Law.
18 Citation
This Law may be cited as the Civil Asset Recovery (International
Co-operation) (Jersey) Law 2007.