TAYLOR v. THE UNITED KINGDOM
Doc ref: 31209/96 • ECHR ID: 001-3883
Document date: September 10, 1997
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AS TO THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
Application No. 31209/96
by Ronald J. M. TAYLOR
against the United Kingdom
The European Commission of Human Rights (First Chamber) sitting
in private on 10 September 1997, the following members being present:
Mrs. J. LIDDY, President
MM. M.P. PELLONPÄÄ
E. BUSUTTIL
A. WEITZEL
C.L. ROZAKIS
L. LOUCAIDES
B. MARXER
B. CONFORTI
N. BRATZA
I. BÉKÉS
G. RESS
A. PERENIC
C. BÎRSAN
K. HERNDL
Mrs. M. HION
Mr. R. NICOLINI
Mrs. M.F. BUQUICCHIO, Secretary to the Chamber
Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection
of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;
Having regard to the application introduced on 28 February 1996
by Ronald J.M. TAYLOR against the United Kingdom and registered on
29 April 1996 under file No. 31209/96;
Having regard to the report provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules
of Procedure of the Commission;
Having deliberated;
Decides as follows:
THE FACTS
The applicant is a British citizen, born in 1936. He is currently
detained in Swaleside prison, on the isle of Sheppey in Kent.
The facts of the case, as they have been submitted by the
applicant, can be summarised as follows:
A. Particular circumstances of the case
On 2 June 1986 the applicant, having pleaded guilty, was
convicted by the Central Criminal Court of drug trafficking between
1 January 1974 and 17 September 1979. He was sentenced to six years'
imprisonment and fined £234,750.
On 12 January 1987 section 1 of the Drugs Trafficking Offences
Act 1986 came into force providing for the confiscation of the proceeds
of drug-related offences.
On 1 November 1994 the Crown Court at Chelmsford found the
applicant guilty of drug trafficking between 1 February 1990 and
20 April 1993 and sentenced him to ten years' imprisonment. The court
also made a confiscation order under the Drugs Trafficking Offences
Act 1986 in the sum of £15,311,729.19 which covered proceeds from drug
trafficking relating to the period between 1 January 1974 and
17 September 1979 and the period between 1990 and 1993. In order to
take into account the proceeds relating to the period between
1 January 1974 and 17 September 1979, the court relied on the
applicant's own admission that he had benefited from drug trafficking
during that period of time and had lived comfortably off the proceeds.
In order to take into account the proceeds relating to the second
period, the court relied on the evidence tendered during the
proceedings. The court further ordered that in default of payment of
this sum the applicant would be liable to serve a consecutive four
years' prison sentence.
The applicant applied for leave to appeal against the
confiscation order, invoking, inter alia, Article 7 of the Convention.
On an unspecified date, a single judge gave the applicant leave to
appeal.
The Court of Appeal delivered its judgment on 1 December 1995.
The court considered that the Drugs Trafficking Offences Act gave it
the power to confiscate proceeds from drug-trafficking which related,
inter alia, to the period between 1 January 1974 and 17 September 1979.
Moreover, the applicant's case was clearly distinguished from Welch v.
United Kingdom (Eur. Court HR, judgment of 26 February 1996, Series A
no. 307). As opposed to Welch, the applicant, when committing the
offences which enabled the court to make the confiscation order, i.e.
drug trafficking between 1 February 1990 and 20 April 1993, was aware
of the possibility that such an order could be made, since the Drugs
Trafficking Offences Act 1986 had already come into force. As a result,
the court rejected the applicant's appeal.
B. Relevant domestic law
The Drugs Trafficking Offences Act 1986 provides as follows:
"1. Confiscation orders
(1) ... where a person appears before the Crown Court to be
sentenced in respect of one or more drug trafficking offences
(and has not previously been sentenced or otherwise dealt with
in respect of his conviction for the offence or, as the case may
be, any of the offences concerned), the court shall act as
follows:
(2) The court shall first determine whether he has benefited from
drug trafficking.
(3) For the purposes of this Act, a person who has at any time
(whether before or after the commencement of this section)
received any payment or other reward in connection with drug
trafficking carried on by him or another has benefited from drug
trafficking.
(4) If the court determines that he has so benefited, the court
shall, before sentencing ... determine ... the amount to be
recovered in his case by virtue of this section.
(5) The court shall then in respect of the offence or offences
concerned -
(a) order him to pay that amount ...
...
2. Assessing the proceeds of drug trafficking
(1) For the purposes of this Act -
(a) any payments or others rewards received by a person at any
time (whether before or after the commencement of section 1 of
this Act) in connection with drug trafficking carried on by him
or another are his proceeds of drug trafficking, and
(b) the value of his proceeds of drug trafficking is the
aggregate of the values of the payments or other rewards.
(2) The court may, for the purpose of determining whether the
defendant has benefited from drug trafficking and, if he has, of
assessing the value of his proceeds of drug trafficking, make the
following assumptions, except to the extent that any of the
assumptions are shown to be incorrect in the defendant's case.
(3) Those assumptions are -
(a) that any property appearing to the court -
(i) to have been held by him at any time since his conviction,
or
(ii) to have been transferred to him at any time since the
beginning of the period of six years ending when the
proceedings were instituted against him,
was received by him, at the earliest time at which he
appears to the court to have held it, as a payment or
reward in connection with drug trafficking carried on by
him,
(b) that any expenditure of his since the beginning of that
period was met out of payments received by him in connection with
drug trafficking carried on by him, and
(c) that, for the purpose of valuing any property received or
assumed to have been received by him at any time as such a
reward, he received the property free of any other interests in
it ..."
COMPLAINTS
The applicant complains under Article 7 of the Convention that
the use by the Chelmsford Crown Court of the power to make a
confiscation order in respect of proceeds from drug trafficking
relating to the period between 1 January 1974 and 17 September 1979
amounts to a penalty for offences committed prior to the entry into
force of section 1 of the Drugs Trafficking Offences Act 1986.
THE LAW
The applicant complains that the confiscation order, insofar as
it concerns proceeds relating to the period between 1 January 1974 and
17 September 1979, is a penalty imposed retroactively in breach of
Article 7 (Art. 7) of the Convention.
Article 7 para. 1 (Art. 7-1) of the Convention provides as
follows:
"No one shall be held guilty of any criminal offence on account
of any act or omission which did not constitute a criminal
offence under national or international law at the time when it
was committed. Nor shall a heavier penalty be imposed than the
one that was applicable at the time the criminal offence was
committed".
The Commission recalls that, in accordance with the Court's Welch
v. the United Kingdom judgment, a confiscation order could amount to
a "penalty" within the meaning of Article 7 (Art. 7) of the Convention
(supra, p. 14, para. 36). It also recalls that the Court reached the
conclusion that the confiscation order imposed in Welch constituted
such a penalty given the sweeping statutory assumptions in section 2
para. 3 of the 1986 Act that all property passing through the
offender's hands over a six-year period was the fruit of drug
trafficking unless he could prove otherwise, the fact that the
confiscation order was directed to the proceeds involved in drug
dealing and was not limited to actual enrichment or profit, the
discretion of the trial judge, in fixing the amount of the order, to
take into consideration the degree of culpability of the accused and
the possibility of imprisonment in default of payment by the offender.
The Commission, taking the same elements into account, considers
that the confiscation order imposed on the applicant also constitutes
a "penalty" within the meaning of Article 7 (Art. 7) of the Convention.
Having reached this conclusion, the Commission must next determine
whether this was a penalty imposed for the offences of which the
applicant had been found guilty in 1986.
The Commission notes that, according to the Drugs Trafficking
Offences Act, a confiscation order cannot be made unless there is a
criminal conviction. However, the order may affect proceeds which are
not directly related to the facts underlying a criminal conviction (see
Welch v. United Kingdom judgment, supra, p. 13, para. 29). In the
circumstances of the case, the conviction which activated the power of
the Chelmsford Crown Court to make a confiscation order was that of
1 November 1994. This conviction concerned drug trafficking which had
occurred between 1 February 1990 and 20 April 1993. However, under the
Drugs Trafficking Act, the Crown Court could order the confiscation
also of proceeds which did not relate to the facts of which it had
convicted the applicant and, as a result, the Crown Court was able to
take into account also the proceeds relating to drug trafficking
between 1 January 1974 and 17 September 1979.
The fact that the applicant had already been convicted of drug
trafficking during this period of time was immaterial for the power of
the Crown Court to make the confiscation order. This transpires clearly
from the Act which links the power of the court to make a confiscation
order to the accused's having "benefited" from drug trafficking and not
to the accused's having been convicted. According to the Act a person
may be considered to have "benefited" from drug trafficking without
having been convicted, while a person who has been convicted is not
necessarily considered to have benefited. Following this logic, the
Crown Court, in order to make the confiscation order, did not rely on
the applicant's previous conviction but on his own admission that he
had "benefited" from drug trafficking between 1 January 1974 and
17 September 1979.
In these circumstances, the Commission considers that, although
the confiscation order also concerned proceeds from drug trafficking
between 1 January 1974 and 17 September 1979, this was not a "penalty"
for the offences committed by the applicant between 1 January 1974 and
17 September 1979, but for the offences he committed between 1990
and 1993. When committing these offences, however, the applicant was
aware that he was liable to a confiscation order which could have
concerned earlier proceeds, since the Drugs Trafficking Offences
Act 1986 had already come into force. As a result, the Commission
considers that no appearance of a violation of Article 7 (Art. 7) of
the Convention is disclosed.
It follows that the application is manifestly ill-founded and
that it must be rejected as inadmissible in accordance with Article 27
para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention.
For these reasons, the Commission, unanimously,
DECLARES THE APPLICATION INADMISSIBLE.
M.F. BUQUICCHIO J. LIDDY
Secretary President
to the First Chamber of the First Chamber
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