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S.W. v. THE UNITED KINGDOM

Doc ref: 20166/92 • ECHR ID: 001-2590

Document date: January 14, 1994

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S.W. v. THE UNITED KINGDOM

Doc ref: 20166/92 • ECHR ID: 001-2590

Document date: January 14, 1994

Cited paragraphs only



                           SUR LA RECEVABILITÉ

                      Application No. 20166/92

                      by S. W.

                      against the United Kingdom

      The European Commission of Human Rights sitting in private on

14 January 1994, the following members being present:

      MM.  C.A. NØRGAARD, President

           S. TRECHSEL

           A. WEITZEL

           F. ERMACORA

           H.G. SCHERMERS

           C.L. ROZAKIS

      Mrs. J. LIDDY

      MM.  L. LOUCAIDES

           M.P. PELLONPÄÄ

           B. MARXER

           G.B. REFFI

           M.A. NOWICKI

           I. CABRAL BARRETO

           B. CONFORTI

           N. BRATZA

           I. BÉKÉS

           J. MUCHA

           D. SVÁBY

      Mr.  H.C. KRÜGER, Secretary to the Commission

      Having regard to Article 25 of the Convention for the Protection of

Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms;

      Having regard to the application introduced on 25 March 1992 by S.

W. against the United Kingdom and registered on 18 June 1992 under file

No. 20166/92;

      Having regard to:

-     reports provided for in Rule 47 of the Rules of Procedure of the

      Commission;

-     the observations submitted by the respondent Government on

      29 January 1993 and the observations in reply submitted by the

      applicant on 31 March 1993;

-     the observations submitted by the parties at the oral hearing on

      14 January 1994;

      Having deliberated;

      Decides as follows:

THE FACTS

      The applicant is a British citizen, born in 1963, and detained in

H.M. Prison Erlstoke, Devizes, Wiltshire.  He is represented before the

Commission by Messrs. S.P. Groves & Co., Solicitors, Farnham, Surrey.

      The facts of the present case, as submitted by the parties, may be

summarised as follows:

A.    The particular circumstances of the case

      The applicant had a stormy relationship with his wife and the

marriage came under great strain in 1990 with the applicant becoming

unemployed.  The wife had been thinking of leaving the applicant for some

weeks and told him in the early evening of 18 September 1990. The

applicant did not accept that she meant it and there was a row, during

which the applicant ejected his wife from the house, bruising her arm.

The police were called and following their visit, the applicant's wife

re-entered the house.  Later that same evening the applicant forcibly and

violently had sexual intercourse with his wife to the extent that he

assaulted her, placed her in fear of further violence and threatened to

kill her.

      On 19 September 1990 the applicant was charged with rape, contrary

to section 1 (1) of the Sexual Offences Act 1956, threatening to kill,

contrary to section 16 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861, and

assault occasioning actual bodily harm, contrary to section 47 of the

latter Act.  On 19 April 1991 the applicant was convicted of all three

offences and sentenced to five years' imprisonment for the first offence,

two years' imprisonment for the second and three months' imprisonment for

the third.

      At his trial the applicant had submitted that he was not liable to

a charge of rape, for to hold otherwise would be contrary to the common

law principle that a husband cannot commit the offence of rape on his

wife.  Founded on the teachings of St. Augustine in the sixth century,

the common law of England was stated by Sir Matthew Hale in his "History

of Pleas for the Crown" published in 1736 as follows:-

      "... But the husband cannot be guilty of rape committed by himself

      upon his lawful wife, for by their matrimonial consent and contract

      the wife hath given up herself in this kind unto her husband, which

      she cannot retract ..."

      However, on 14 March 1991 in R. v. R. the Court of Appeal had

declared that the general principle was anachronistic and an offensive

common law fiction which should no longer be applied.  The conviction of

the defendant in R. v. R. by a Crown Court for an offence of attempted

rape against his wife was accordingly upheld.  On 23 October 1991 the

House of Lords dismissed the further appeal by the defendant in R. v. R.

and declared, inter alia, that the common law was capable of evolving in

the light of changing social, economic and cultural developments, and

that the general principle that a husband cannot rape his wife no longer

formed part of the law of England and Wales.

      The applicant had contended at his trial that -

      (a)  the judgment of the Court of Appeal of 14 March 1991 in the

      case of R. v. R. was not binding on the trial judge in his case

      insofar as it purported to change the principle that a husband

      cannot rape his wife, since the Court of Appeal was bound by its own

      previous decision in R. v. Steele;

      (b)  the decision in R. v. R., insofar as it is purported to change

      the principle, infringed Aricle 7 para. 1 of the Convention;

      (c)  although the Convention was not part of the law of England,

      Article 7 para. 1 had to be incorporated into the law of the

      European Community by the decision of the European Court of Justice

      in R. v. Kirk (1984) ECR 2689 (at page 2718), and was thus part of

      the law of England.

      The trial judge, Mr. Justice Rose, assumed for the purposes of his

judgment that submissions (b) and (c) were possibly correct in principle,

but that this case fell within the exception contained in Article 7 para.

2 of the Convention, and he therefore rejected the submissions.

      The applicant lodged an appeal against conviction and sentence in

which he repeated the submissions set out in paragraphs (a) to (c) above,

but before the appeal was heard the House of Lords had given the decision

in R. v. R. referred to above.  The latter decision made no reference to

the Convention or to Article 7 para. 1 of the Convention.  In the

circumstances the applicant was advised by his lawyers on 3 January 1992

that the prospects of success of his appeal against conviction were

hopeless.  He, therefore, withdrew it on 15 January 1992, maintaining his

appeal against sentence, which at the time of lodging the application was

still pending.

B.    Relevant Domestic Law and Practice

Common law

      Until the case of R. v. R. the English courts, on the few occasions

when they were confronted with the issue whether directly or indirectly,

had always recognised at least some form of immunity as attaching to a

husband from any charge of rape or attempted rape by reason of a notional

or fictional consent to intercourse deemed to have been given by the wife

on marriage.  The eighteenth century proposition of Sir Matthew Hale

quoted above has been upheld until recently, for example in the case of

R. Kowalski (1987, 86, Cr. App. R 339), which concerned the question of

whether or not a wife had impliedly consented to acts which if performed

against her consent would amount to an indecent assault.  Ian Kennedy J.

giving the judgment of the court stated, obiter dicta,

      "It is clear, well-settled and ancient law that a man cannot, as

      actor, be guilty of rape upon his wife"

and he went on to say that that principle was

      "dependent upon the implied consent to sexual intercourse which

      arises from the married state and which continues until that consent

      is put aside by decree nisi, by a separation order or, in certain

      circumstances, by a separation agreement".

      In another example, Lord Justice O'Connor in the R. v. Roberts case

(1986 CLR 188) stated:

      "The status of marriage involves that the woman has given her

      consent to her husband having intercourse with her during the

      subsistence of the marriage ... she cannot unilaterally withdraw

      it."

Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1976

      Section 1 (1) of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1976 provides,

in so far as it is material, as follows:

      "For the purposes of section 1 of the Sexual Offences Act 1956

      (which relates to rape) a man commits rape if

      -    (a) he has unlawful sexual intercourse with a woman who at the

           time of the intercourse does not consent to it..."

COMPLAINTS

      The applicant complains that his conviction for the rape of his wife

constituted a violation of Article 7 of the Convention, in that such a

conviction was not based on any penal offence under national or

international law on the day on which he committed the offending act,

namely 18 September 1990.

PROCEEDINGS BEFORE THE COMMISSION

      The application was introduced on 29 March 1992 and registered on

18 June 1992.

      On 12 October 1992 the Commission decided to communicate the

application to the Government and to ask for written observations on the

admissibility and merits of the application.

      The Government's observations were submitted on 29 January 1993

after one extension of the time limit fixed for this purpose, and the

applicant's observations in reply were submitted on 31 March 1993.

      On 8 April 1993, the Commission granted the applicant legal aid.

      On 28 June 1993, the Commission decided to hold an oral hearing,

consecutive to a hearing in the case of R. v. the United Kingdom (No.

20190/92).

      At the hearing which was held on 14 January 1994, the parties were

represented as follows:

For the Government

Mr. Huw Llewellyn                Agent

Mr. Alan Moses Q.C.              Counsel

Miss Beverley Waplington         Legal Adviser, Home Office

Mr. Peter Dawson                 Administrator, Home Office

For the applicant

Mr. Alan Tyrell Q.C.             Counsel

Mr. Robert Hill                  Counsel

Mr. Purvaise Punwar              Counsel

Mr. Simon Groves                 Solicitor

THE LAW

      The applicant complains that he has been convicted in respect of

conduct which at the relevant time did not constitute a criminal offence.

He invokes Article 7 (Art. 7) of the Convention, which provides as

follows:

      "1.  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.

      2.   This Article shall not prejudice the trial and punishment of

      any person for any act or omission which, at the time when it was

      committed, was criminal according to the general principles of law

      recognised by civilised nations."

      The Government submit that the applicant's conviction for the rape

of his wife was in conformity with Article 7 (Art. 7) of the Convention.

They submit that, by the relevant time, Hale's proposition that a wife's

consent to sexual intercourse was irrevocable was no longer good law.

English law did not therefore recognise any absolute immunity conferred

on a husband who had sexual intercourse with a wife without her consent.

There was case-law indicating that a husband could be guilty of raping

his wife where a court had issued a decree nisi of divorce or a non-

molestation order; where the husband had given an undertaking in lieu of

an injunction not to molest his wife; where there was an agreement

express or implied between the parties which made it clear that the

implied consent of the wife was revoked; and where there had been a

withdrawal of either party from cohabitation accompanied by a clear

indication that consent to sexual intercourse had been terminated.

      The Government contend that in the present case the facts indicated

that the applicant's wife had revoked her consent by mutual agreement

with the applicant. Even if the decisions of the courts were based rather

on the fact that a wife was able unilaterally to withdraw her consent,

this was a reasonable interpretation of the existing law in the light of

changing social circumstances and clarified the existing elements of the

offence.

      The applicant submits that his conviction for rape of his wife

concerned conduct which did not at the relevant time constitute a

criminal offence under United Kingdom law. The general rule that a

husband could not commit the offence of rape against his wife was

universally accepted until 1990. While exceptions to this principle had

developed, these were strictly limited to circumstances where, for

example, there had been a court order or formal separation agreement.

The facts of this case do not disclose any mutual agreement between the

applicant and his wife. There was no authority for the proposition that

a wife could unilaterally withdraw her consent. Furthermore, in the case

R. v. R. the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords acknowledged that

they were changing the law, not merely clarifying it. The courts went

beyond reasonable interpretation of the existing law and extended the

definition of the offence in such a way as to include facts which

hitherto had not constituted a criminal offence.

      The Commission has taken cognizance of the submissions of the

parties. It considers that the application raises serious issues of fact

and law under the Convention, the determination of which should depend

on an examination of the merits. It follows that the application cannot

be dismissed as manifestly ill-founded within the meaning of Article 27

para. 2 (Art. 27-2) of the Convention. No other ground for declaring it

inadmissible has been established.

      For these reasons, the Commission by a majority

      DECLARES THE APPLICATION ADMISSIBLE, without prejudging the

      merits.

Secretary to the Commission           President of the Commission

      (H.C. KRUGER)                         (C.A. NØRGAARD)

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