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148 J.P.N. 497 (1984)
Issue 32

handle is hein.journals/cljw148 and id is 687 raw text is: 




LONDON,  SATURDAY,  AUGUST  11, 1984 Vol. 148 No. 31 Pages 497-512


Justice of






the Peace


Offices
LITTLE   LONDON
CHICHESTER, SUSSEX


Editor:
Brian Harris,
O.B.,   Q.C. LL.B.


The Journal  for the Practitioner in the Magistrates' Courts and the Crown  Court
Established 1837 Registered at the General Post Office as a Newspaper Price £1


notes of the week


dealing with  offences triable
way.


Committal   for Trial or Sentence?
   The  Magistrates' Courts Act 1980
 gives to a  magistrates' court wide
 powers to change from committal pro-
 ceedings to summary   trial and vice
 versa, yet these powers are not without
 their bounds. In a note  in Criminal
 Jurisdiction of Magistrates, 8th edn., at
 p.177, it is stated, Presumably there is
 no power  to change over (from sum-
 mary  trial to committal proceedings)
 following a plea of guilty. This view of
 the law has now been confirmed by a
 Divisional Court of the Queen's Bench
 in R. v. Dudley Magistrates' Court, ex
 parte Gillard (1984) July 28.
   Section 25(2) of the Act  of 1980
 states that:

   Where the court has . . begun to try
   the information summarily, the court
   may,  at any time before the con-
   clusion of the evidence for the pros-
   ecution, discontinue the summary
   trial and proceed to inquire into the
   information as  examining justices
   and, on doing so, may adjourn the
   hearing without remanding the ac-
   cused.

   Apparently, the Dudley justices had
discontinued the summary hearing of an
offence of  assault occasioning actual
bodily harm  to which  the defendant
had  pleaded guilty and purported to
commit  him  to stand his trial at the
Crown  Court. Kennedy, J, appears to
have based his decision on the words


at any time before the conclusion of
the evidence for the prosecution and
the  decision in R. v. Grant  (1936)
26  Cr. App. R. 8, which was  to the
effect that a magistrates' court had no
power to commit  for trial once it had
registered a conviction. Accordingly,
s.25(2) did not empower the court to
discontinue the summary hearing of an
offence and commit the defendant for
trial once a plea of guilty had been
entered.
   Stephen Brown,  J, agreeing, added
that if  the prosecutor's view were
accepted, the power of a magistrates'
court to commit for sentence would be
unnecessary. This underlines the deli-
cate balance of relations between the
power  to  commit  for trial and the
power  to commit  for sentence, which
turns essentially upon the mode   of
trial decision. Under the present law, it
is essential that magistrates make proper
inquiry into the appropriate mode of
trial of any offence triable either way
because, once they have decided upon
summary  trial, their powers thereafter
to commit for sentence are confined to
the character and antecedents of the
offender so that  they may  not, for
example, commit  for sentence an of-
fender without previous convictions or
other antecedents which  justify this
course. This  rather complex  frame-
work derives from the early days of the
magistrates' jurisdiction. It is about time
that the relationship between summary
trial and trial on indictment was looked
at afresh, in particular the method of


Amnesty
   Considerable changes can  now  be
effected in very simple ways. The con-
ception of  an amnesty  is foreign to
English ears. The Polish Government has
recently announced permission to release
from  prison a number of members  of
the trade union Solidarity and also a
number  of prisoners convicted of anti-
social crimes. Such actions are designed
to show the Government in a good light.
   The Home   Secretary has permitted
what  in one sense might also be des-
cribed as a  partial amnesty. Section
60(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 1967
allows the Secretary of State to release
on  licence a person serving a sentence
of  imprisonment (other than persons
serving life imprisonment  or  youth
custody, for whom different provisions
apply) after he or she has served not less
than one  third of the sentence or the
specified period, namely 12 months or
such period not more than 12 months,
as the Secretary of State may by order
provide whichever expires the later. The
release is subject to the recommendation
of the Parole Board.
   Section 60(1) was altered by s.33(a)(i)
of the Criminal Justice Act 1982. The
expression twelve months was altered
to  the  specified period and  the
specified period was defined in s.1A
as twelve months or such period, not
more  than twelve months, as the Sec-
retary of State considers appropriate.
   By  the Eligibility for Release on
Licence Order  1983  (S.I. 1983 No.


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