Jersey & Guernsey Law Review – February 2012
Prosecuting in Guernsey
Graeme McKerrell
With there being
no specific legislation in Guernsey (unlike in Alderney and Sark) that spells
out the position with regard to commencing and conducting criminal prosecutions,
this article seeks to examine and explain the widely understood position that
private prosecutions are not a feature of the Bailiwick’s
constitution.
1 That there is no such thing as a private
prosecution in Guernsey is a proposition that is undoubtedly true—not
just in Guernsey itself, but in the Bailiwick
as a whole. It is also a proposition that is generally accepted without
question. In his book The Government and
Law of Guernsey, Dr Darryl Ogier stated (at 72) his understanding of the position
quite clearly when he wrote—“All criminal proceedings are brought
in the name of the Law Officers; indeed there is no right to bring a private
prosecution.” No authority for that bold (but undoubtedly correct)
assertion is given. Perhaps it was felt by the author that as a universal truth
none was needed. The question that this brief article therefore seeks to
address is what support can be found for this accepted position, other than the
fact that it is what everyone believes.
2 Before doing so, however, it may be worth
spending a short time examining by way of comparison the position elsewhere. In
England and Wales
the position is different. There a prosecution may be started and undertaken by
a private individual who is not acting on behalf of the police or any other
prosecuting authority or body (of which there are many). That right is
enshrined in legislation, namely the Prosecution of Offences Act 1985. Section
3 is a lengthy section that has developed over the years as the remit of the
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) has widened, but it states in broad terms that
the Director of Public Prosecutions has a general duty, subject to certain
exemptions, to take over the conduct of all criminal proceedings, other than
specified proceedings (which predominantly tend to be very minor traffic
infractions), instituted by a police force or by any other person.
3 Whilst it is therefore envisaged that the
CPS will be the predominant prosecutor in England
and Wales,
s 6 of the 1985 Act nevertheless preserves the right to bring a private
prosecution. Whilst the section recognises the right of the private prosecutor
to bring his own action, it also gives the DPP the power to take over the proceedings with the intention of running the case to
conclusion or doing so with the sole purpose of stopping them.
4 That is an extremely powerful tool. It can
be, and is, used to stop vexatious prosecutions. Equally, the DPP may intervene
to bring an end to a private prosecution that, although brought with bona fide intention, is simply bound to
fail or is clearly not in the public interest. Indeed, the DPP’s right to
do so was recently tested in the High Court in R (Singh Gujra) v CPS
when it was held that the policy of the CPS to take over the conduct of private
prosecutions in order to discontinue them where there was no reasonable
prospect of conviction against any of the accused was entirely lawful, and the
court would only disturb the decision of an independent prosecutor in highly
exceptional circumstances.
5 The position in Scotland is different from that south
of the border. There, private prosecutions require Criminal Letters from the
High Court of Judiciary and such applications are unlikely to be granted
without the agreement of the Lord Advocate, the chief public prosecutor.
6 So it would seem that the position in
Guernsey is quite different from that in some other parts of the British Isles. There is nothing necessarily wrong with
that. Indeed in a small island community, where local rivalries and tensions
can be greater, it might be argued there is every reason why the position
should be different. However, there are general principles that apply uniformly
across both jurisdictions. For example, no system of law wants to be troubled
by prosecutions that are doomed to fail and court time is precious enough
without unmeritorious cases eating into it. Further, bringing a criminal charge
is a serious step and creates a number of possible adverse consequences for the
proposed defendant, even if acquitted. There therefore needs to be a sensible
appraisal of the evidence and the public interest before the decision to charge
is taken. In Guernsey, that will be done in
the first instance by a salaried police officer, sometimes with the benefit of
advice from the Law Officers’ Chambers. When doing so, those police
officers are exercising a power that has the authority of the Law Officers, as
it is in their name that all criminal proceedings are brought.
7 Has it always been thus? In seeking to
answer that question it may be helpful to have some understanding of how
policing in Guernsey has developed.
8 The keeping of the
Queen’s Peace in Guernsey can be traced
back to the middle ages when feudal officers known as “Bordiers”
assisted the Prévôt (Sheriff) of the Royal Court in arresting tenants who had
committed offences and taking them to prison. In keeping with Norman feudal
systems this method of policing seems to have continued through the development
of parish constables acting in an honorary capacity. Although attempts were
made in 1870 and 1886 to change the honorary system generally, the first paid
policemen were employed by the Parish of St Peter Port in 1853 when four
officers were recruited. In later years the number was increased to twelve and
some years later both the St Sampson and Vale parishes employed two policemen
each and St Martin one.
9 On 30 October 1914, during the Great War,
the States agreed to create an island-wide force for the duration of the war.
After it was over a Projet de Loi, entitled Loi
ayant rapport à la Police Salariée pour l’île
entière, was registered in Guernsey on 10 January 1920, from which
it can be said our present-day police force was born as it was this that
declared that all duties in matters criminal and in relation to law keeping in
general were transferred from the parish constables to an Island Police Force.
10 Against that backdrop it is also
informative to look at how criminal offences have developed in Guernsey. Le Marchant in his critical commentary on the
Order in Council of 1583, which gave legal force to the Approbation des Lois,
which itself had sought to identify what part of the Grand Coutumier was
effective in Guernsey, states the position—
“Tort fait à une personne est
l’origine et source de tous procès et actions criminelles. Or,
comme on peut faire tort à un homme ou en sa personne ou en ses biens,
ainsi y a-t-il deux sortes de causes criminelles, l’une est personnelle,
pour tort fait à la personne, et l’autre de possession, pour tort
fait à la possession de quelqu’un; et quant aux actions
criminelles personnelles, comme on peut offenser une personne de fait ou de
paroles, ainsi aussy il y a deux espèces d’action personnelle
criminelle, l’une de fait et l’autre de dict. Sur tout quoy il faut
observer qu’il y a deux sortes d’actions criminelles, tant à
cause de la matière d’icelles qu’à raison de la
procédure qu’on y tient; l’une est ditte simple, qui
procède de simple délict, ou crime plus léger, et tend
à réparation simple et amende pécuniaire; l’autre est
ditte criminelle, criminellement intentée, qui naist de délict
énorme, comme de meurtre ou mehain, (c’est
à dire, de blesseure à sang et playe, et dont pourroit ensuivre
perte de membre,) et tend à punition corporelle contre la partie
coulpable”.
11 This roughly translates as there being
two types of criminal cause—wrongs against the person and wrongs against
the possessions of persons and two types of criminal acts, by actions and by
words. Similarly there are two types of criminal action—“simple”
(ordinary) wrongs for lesser crimes with simple reparation (ie damages) and pecuniary fines and
“criminal” wrongs, with criminal intent, which comprise great
wrongs such as murder or mayhem, with bodily punishment. What seems clear is
that included amongst the “simple” wrongs were what might be termed
“quasi-criminal” offences that sought not only to punish the
wrongdoer but also make him pay some form of compensation to his victim.
12 Moving forward in time by some 300 years
or so, considerable evidence was taken from a number of distinguished witnesses
before the Commissioners inquiring into the state of the Criminal Law in the Channel Islands who reported in 1848.
13 In the course of his evidence, Charles De
Jersey, HM Procureur, confirmed that the Royal Court alone exercised criminal
jurisdiction in Guernsey. He stated quite
categorically that in Guernsey no
private individual can prosecute criminally, except in cases in which he had a
personal interest, such as in actions for “assault, battery, libel,
defamation, cries of Haro, and nouvelle dessaisine, or (as informer)
for penalties for the infringement of Acts of Parliament, or of ordinances of
the Royal Court.”
14 In response to being asked what steps
were taken for the purpose of bringing a suspect to justice, he said that
information was given to one of the constables or assistant constables of the
parish who, according to the gravity of the charge, either took the accused
into custody, or ordered him to appear before the court. In either case the
constable was bound to report the matter to the Chief Magistrate and to the
Crown lawyers. All petty offences could be disposed of summarily by the Ordinary Court,
sitting as a Court of Correctional Police; otherwise the matter would be tried
by the Criminal Court. When asked by whom the proceedings against the accused
party were instituted he responded—
“The constable produces the
party and the witnesses before the Court in the first instance: the act of
commitment for trial directs the Crown lawyers to prosecute; who then, as
public prosecutors, indict the prisoner ...”
15 The Commissioners also heard from John De
Haviland Utermarck, HM Comptroller. He told them—
“The original proceedings states the name of the
Constable who produces the prisoner; the subsequent proceedings are brought in
the name of the Law officers.”
Further into his evidence, apparently aware of the
dislike the Commissioners had for Guernsey’s criminal justice system, he
embarked upon a defensive critique of what he regarded as the advantages of it,
in which he placed first—“The prosecution of all offences being
conducted by public prosecutors paid by the Crown and bound to take notice of
all infractions of the public peace”,
although it should be noted that the notion of there being a “public
prosecutor” was questioned by others.
16 The Comptroller was asked to clarify
matters further. After confirming that the Law Officers did not have authority
to dismiss charges without first consulting the Bailiff, he was asked to state
his understanding of the duties of the Law Officers with regard to matters
which are in themselves purely criminal (as opposed to quasi-criminal). His
response is worthy of exact recital—
“With regard to ordinances, all ordinances of the
Court inflict penalties for infringements of the clauses contained in them; and
all actions entered for penalties must be patronised by one of the Crown
Officers either in his own name or in the name of the informer; that is, A.B. et les Officiers de la Reine joints.
He later explained that in this context
“patronize” meant that a Crown Officer must grant summonses and
then “must appear in Court to prosecute upon them.” “There is
also a particular form of action in what are called causes mixtes, which are subdivided into Causes en adjunction, cases for assault or slander, in which a
party claims damages. Those cases must also be patronized by one of the Law
officers for the plaintiff; and the first summons sent is in the name of the
party alone. If the action is admitted, or if the defendant makes a default and does not appear upon the first proceedings, an adjunction des Officiers de la Reine is
ordered, and the subsequent proceedings are in the name of the plaintiff and
the Officier de la Reine joints.”
17 Crucially, he was then asked whether
those proceedings, being patronized by a Crown Officer, implied they were being
carried on in his name—“No. Summonses are sent by one of the Crown
officers, either in his own name alone, or in his name and the name of the
informer jointly.”
However, as we will see later, Causes en
adjunction fell into disuse and were finally abolished in 1950.
18 Further clarification was sought by the
Commissioners with regard to purely criminal offences and again it is helpful
to refer to the evidence of the same witness. The following exchange initially
took place—
“Who decides whether a person shall be prosecuted
or not?
“That is the prosecution, if it is a summary
case.”
then
“... who has the right of instituting criminal
proceedings; is it the Law officers of the Crown or the Court?”
“The
constables bring every case before the Court … [and the Comptroller
confirmed elsewhere—] Supposing a complaint to be made to a constable by
any party, it must come before the Court. When I say ‘complaint,’
supposing a person were to go to the constable with a civil charge, the
constable would not undertake it; but, supposing he goes to the constable with
any complaint bearing the nature of criminal proceeding, he would bring it before
the court.”
19 This is, of course, consistent with his
earlier testimony and that of the Procureur. The Comptroller also gave evidence
that—
“… the constable warns all the witnesses he
thinks necessary for the support of the charge, and a list of any which the prisoner
may have given him, to attend at the Court. He then gives a list of the whole
on both sides to the Crown officers with the nature of the charge. The Crown
officers then lay before the Court their opinion as to whether the case is of a
nature to be tried summarily, or to be sent for trial, and the Court decides
whether it shall be taken summarily or not. Supposing it to
be taken summarily, the charge is immediately gone in the Public Court. The Crown officers examine
each witness ...”
So it is clear that, whether the court decided the
matter was to be dealt with summarily or on indictment, it was the Law Officers
who presented the prosecution’s case.
20 The Comptroller was asked if the
constable had any discretion about bringing criminal matters to court and his
response was—“He must bring every case before the Court which
partakes of the nature of a criminal charge.”
21 The interchange developed by the
Comptroller being quizzed as to what would happen, if having received a
complaint, the constable refused to do bring the case to court—
“The Court would then request the Crown Officers to
write to the constable, stating that such a complaint had been made: and if
they were of opinion there had been any gross violation of his duty on the part
of the constable, they would order the constable to appear before them. If it
were in the nature of carelessness, or matter of doubt, they would request the
Crown Officers to write to the constable, stating that such and such a person
had complained to the Court, and requiring them to bring the case
forward.”
22 Thereafter there was another
exchange—
“Two
questions arise in case of the default of the constable; one is his own
criminality in not bringing the complaint forward, the other is the right of
the party complaining. Supposing the constable is obstinate, has the party the
right of getting his case before the Court in any other way?”
“Then
the Court would order another constable to bring it forward.”
“There
is not known to your Law any criminal process not passing through the
constable?”
“No.”
“There
is no mode of setting a criminal case in motion, but through the
constable?”
“No.”
23 It is also patently clear that overall
the Commissioners did not like what they found. As the above passages perhaps allude
to, they received evidence that the constables were not always disposed towards
the proper exercise of their functions. Indeed in their Report reference was made to an instance where an
advocate had stabbed an Englishman, thereby wounding him. The matter, although
within the knowledge of the constables, was not brought before the court by
them. Only once it became a matter of public concern did the court itself
direct an enquiry which ultimately led to the trial and conviction of the
offender but which was, of course, prosecuted by the Law Officers.
24 So, it is submitted, pulling together all
the strands of the evidence that were put before the Commissioners it can be
concluded that—
(1) in
respect of all matters that related to crime the constable was required to
bring the matter to court;
(2) thereafter
the court would decide, after receiving representation from the Law Officers,
whether the case should be dealt with summarily or on indictment;
(3) whichever
venue was decided, it was a Law Officer who presented the case for the
prosecution; and
(4) in a
criminal matter there was nothing known during the 19th century that would
permit a private citizen to bring a proposed defendant before the court in
respect of what would today be recognised as a criminal offence.
25 With regard to the last of these points
the Commissioners proposed that there should be such a right—
“We are of the opinion that the method by which
alone offences are brought within the cognizance of the Court is objectionable.
We see no reason for entrusting the Police with so large a discretion; nor do
we think that parties desiring to prosecute have, in the present system ample
means of producing cases. We recommend that ... there should be three modes of
prosecuting. We will for the present suppose that some tribunal for preliminary
enquiry (either that now existing as the Cour
Du Quartier, or any which it may be
thought desirable to substitute) is to exist, distinct from the Court which is
to try the case. We suggest that every individual should have the power of
bringing a charge before this Court, and of obtaining a
warrant for compelling the appearance of the accused party, where such Court,
on an ex parte application, decides
that the case ought to go on. We think, also, that the Law Officers should have
the power, ex officio to demand a
warrant.”
26 However, the context of the
recommendations has to be appreciated. The Commissioners were clearly very
troubled by many things, including aspects of the role of the parish constables
and the performance by them of their duties. Parish constables were, after all,
parochial and not Crown appointments and may have found themselves in
situations or positions of conflict on more than a few occasions. What the
Commissioners therefore saw was an unsatisfactory system of policing that was
open to abuse for personal reasons and/or a failure generally to carry out
duties properly. There would have been no Code for Crown Prosecutors the
general principles of which, although an English document, are followed in Guernsey today and which demands objectivity and fairness
in making charging and prosecution decisions. The Commissioners also felt
uneasy about the implicit (and in some cases explicit) duality of role that was
played by certain officers within the criminal justice system and the lack of
transparency and disclosure that restricted the ability of a defendant to
answer the case against him properly. In short, what they found was a system
that could not be tolerated today. In addition, it should be noted that their
recommendation that a private person should be able to complain directly to the
court was only made in the context of getting the accused to court. The whole
tenor of their other recommendations was clearly in favour of the Law Officers
continuing to be “the prosecutor” and indeed went further by
suggesting they be given greater power to dismiss prosecutions if they felt
they were unwarranted rather than that power remaining solely within the gift
of the court in circumstances where it might be perceived or directly accused
of a lack of partiality.
27 It must also be noted than many of the
Commissioners’ recommendations were never carried out (and they
themselves recognised how controversial many of them were) and that some were
only carried out many, many years later and perhaps for other reasons—for
example, they recommended the abolition of causes
en adjonction but that did not occur until 1950, one hundred years later.
However, what did change, albeit nearly half a century later, was the
introduction in 1920 of a salaried police force so that what the Island then had was a professional statutory body that
could meet many of the concerns expressed by the
Commissioners. It should be remembered, however, that some changes to the
parish system were made much earlier, in the late 19th century, by the
introduction of salaried, rather than honorary, officers in certain parishes,
including St Peter Port, where the majority of the little crime that there was
in Guernsey would have been committed.
28 Further help in establishing that no
right to private criminal prosecution existed in Guernsey
may be gained from two other sources. The first is the Guernsey Court of Appeal
case of Bach v Law Officers.
After referring to the historical development of the criminal law in Guernsey,
the Court made reference to the case of Smith
v Harvey which, although an action for damages for personal injury based on
negligence, involved consideration of the notion of criminal prescription which
it addressed thus—
“Another
area in which a prescription of a year and a day was recognised by Terrien is
that of minor crimes. In certain such cases an award of damages could be made
to the injured individuals, but the grounds of action were plainly limited to
positive intentional acts either of physical violence or of language, sometimes
identified as assaults, batteries, libel and slander. This limitation can be
traced in Denisart’s Collections
des Decisions Nouvelles (II p 557) and in the Commissioners’ Report
(p 48 para 33). The prosecution of such wrongs was of a double character, both
civil and criminal, prosecuted at the same time by the injured party and by the
Procureur and leading, if successful, to an award of reparation for the victim
and of a penalty paid to the King (Terrien
Bk XII p. 507; Le Marchant vol II p 165). The procedure came to be known as a cause en adjonction. It was noted and
discussed in the Commissioners’ Report and plainly existed in 1848 as a
recognised form of remedy. By the Loi
Relativeaux aux Causes présentement poursuivies aux Petit Criminel, 1861
the procedure, subject to certain exceptions, became a purely civil matter without
the adjunction of the Crown Officers. Eventually it was entirely abolished by
the Royal Court of Guernsey (Miscellaneous Reform Provisions) Law, 1950.”
29 The second source is the 1861 Loi
referred to immediately above, in which art 1 specifically stated—
“Les
causes présentment poursuivies au Petit Criminel (à
l’exception de celles qui sont intentées pour les penalités
et amendes imposées par les Lois et Ordonnances) seront pour
l’avenir censées causes civiles, et elles seront poursuivies comme
telles sans l’adjonction des Officiers de la Reine …”
which broadly translates
as—
“The causes presently
prosecuted as minor criminal matters except those instituted for penalties by
way of fines imposed by laws and ordinances shall in the future be deemed to be
civil causes and they shall be pursued as such without the adjunction of the
Law Officers.”
30 An exception to
this rule was retained in the case of libel where it remained possible obtenir l’adjonction d’un des
Officiers de la Reine and one can perhaps understand the sound policy
reasons why a court would value the view and assistance of a “public
prosecutor” in such a case. What this legislation certainly shows,
however, is Guernsey’s continued move
away from the notion of mixed liability offences to there being a clear
division between civil wrongs and matters that were considered as “pure”
criminal offences instituted and prosecuted by the Law Officers.
31 It is perhaps
difficult to explain why in the Loi ayant
rapport a l’institution d’un magistrat en police correctionnelle et
pour le recouvrement de menues dettes 1925, which created the position of a
Stipendiary Magistrate to deal with summary matters, it was stated in art
1—
“Le Magistrat pourra exercer sa
juridiction dans les causes soit criminelles soit civiles sans la
présence des Officiers du Roi. Pourvu toutefois que rien dans cette loi
ne déroge aux droits des Officiers du Roi d’assister aux
enquêtes en cas de cause de mort et d’intenter et de poursuivre ou
d’intervenir dans toute cause criminelle ou quasi-criminelle comme par le
passé devant la Cour de Police Correctionnelle.”
32 Quite why, or in
what circumstances, given the obvious development of criminal offences away
from “quasi-criminal” matters, it was thought in 1925 that the Law
Officers could intervene in a case apparently not already in their name or that
was not being brought by the police on their behalf is not clear and the policy
letters behind the law do not assist but perhaps, despite the apparent clarity
of the Loi of 1861, it was simply the retention of the exception in libel cases
in 1925 that caused it to be felt necessary to include a specific provision in
the Law of 1950 to abolish without any doubt causes en adjonction in totality.
33 Moving to the
present day, certainly to the author’s personal knowledge of practising
law in Guernsey since the late 1990s all criminal
prosecutions have been prosecuted in the name of, and by or on behalf of, the
Law Officers of the Crown, as was broadly considered to be the position in
1848. I think it would also be fair to say also that no present advocate,
whether practising or not, has any knowledge of the position being any
different at any other time in living memory and that is something of which judicial
note can be taken. Indeed, as was said by the then Deputy Bailiff in Re Clemens in the context of a case concerning
prescription—
“I have practised and been
concerned with the law since 1960 as an Advocate in private practice, as a Law
Officer of the Crown and as Deputy Bailiff. In none of these capacities have I
ever heard it said that crime is prescribed by any period at all and it was
never a consideration raised by other members of the Bar, by defendants, by the
police as the source of prosecution activity, nor by any member of the public
at large.
If year and a day prescription
were part of our law there would be doubtless much learning on breaking
prescription, deferring prescription by absence from the Island
or incapacity, there would be an active consideration of the issue in the many
cases which come before the Courts. I have no knowledge of any such learning.”
34 Similarly, there
would appear to be no such learning concerning the right to bring a private
prosecution (indeed all the learning that there is points away from it) and
certainly no statute has introduced it.
35 What about the
rest of the Bailiwick? The position in Alderney and Sark is different in that
the governments of those Islands have
legislated on the issue. Thus in the former Island, s 16 of the Government of
Alderney Law 2004 states that criminal proceedings before the Court of Alderney
may be instituted only by or under the authority of Her Majesty’s
Procureur. A similar provision applies in
respect of the Court of the Seneschal by virtue of s 14 of the Reform (Sark) Law 2008. It can be assumed that the parliaments of
those two Islands, for the avoidance of doubt, only sought to replicate in
their legislation what is understood to be the position in Guernsey.
36 Whether a right
should exist to prosecute privately is not the subject of this short article
but whatever one thinks it would appear that, as the law stands, none does.
Graeme McKerrell is Director
of Prosecutions and a Crown Advocate in the Chambers of the Law Officers of the
Crown, Guernsey.