First Hearings Flashcards
When does the first hearing occur?
Where the defendant is on bail, the first hearing must be within:
- 14 days of being charged- if the prosecutor anticipates a guilty plea which is likely to be sentenced in a magistrates’ court;
- 28 days of being charged- where it is anticipated that the defendant will plead not guilty, or the case is likely to go to the Crown Court for either trial or sentence.
If a defendant was detained in police custody following charge they must be brought before the next available court.
Where does the first hearing occur?
All adult defendants have their first hearing in a magistrates’ court
· Summary-only offence: trial and sentence at the magistrates’ court
· Either-way offence where:
o magistrates’ court accepts jurisdiction and D consents to summary trial- trial at the magistrates’ court and sentence at the magistrates’ court or Crown Court.
o magistrates’ court declines jurisdiction or D elects Crown Court trial- trial and sentence at the Crown Court.
· Indictable-only offence: trial and sentence at the Crown Court.
This element deals with first hearings in the magistrates’ court and pleas.
Does the defendant need to attend the first hearing?
The defendant must be present at the first hearing. If the defendant was bailed by the police to attend court and fails to attend, the court can issue a warrant for the defendant’s arrest. Failure to surrender to bail at the appointed time is an offence under the Bail Act 1976.
When the defendant does not attend as required then the court will consider whether it can proceed with the hearing anyway.
This will not usually be possible if the hearing will deal with allocation of an either-way offence or sending an indictable (either-way or indictable only) case to the Crown Court.
If the defendant has been summonsed to court (typically used for non-imprisonable, minor or road traffic offences) the defendant does not commit any offence for non-appearance. Provided the prosecution has served the statements and the defendant has been warned of the hearing, then the case can proceed in the absence of the defendant. If convicted, then the penalty can also be imposed in absentia.
What is the IDPC?
Initial details of the prosecution case (IDPC)
Criminal Procedure Rules, Part 8
The prosecution is obliged to serve the initial details on the court officer as soon as practicable and in any event, no later than the beginning of the day of the first hearing.
Where a defendant requests those details, the prosecutor must serve them on the defendant as soon as practicable and, in any event, no later than the beginning of the day of the first hearing.
A solicitor would almost certainly request the documents. The Crown Prosecution Service now uses electronic case files. These can be sent to defence representatives via secure email.
Ordinarily, the failure to supply initial details does not constitute a ground upon which a court may dismiss a charge or give rise to an abuse of process application. The usual remedy is for the court to adjourn a first hearing and/or award costs to the defence for the prosecution’s failure to serve.
Initial details – content
Initial details must include:
- a summary of the circumstances of the offence;
- any account given by the defendant in interview;
- any written statements and exhibits that are available and material to plea and/or mode of trial or sentence;
- victim impact statements; and
- the defendant’s criminal record.
The rules prescribe that where the defendant was in police custody immediately before the first hearing, initial details need only comprise:
- a summary of the circumstances of the offence; and
- the defendant’s criminal record.
Initial details
- The information supplied must be sufficient at the first hearing to allow the court to take an informed view on plea and venue for trial.
- Where no guilty plea is anticipated, they should be sufficient to assist the court in identifying the real issues and in giving directions. The information required for the Preparation for Effective Trial (PET) form must be available and where there is to be a trial, the parties must complete the form.
What happens at first hearings for summary and either-way offences?
The first hearing will be the hearing that deals with matters such as:
- plea;
- bail;
- representation and legal aid.
Depending on the type of offence it might progress to sentence.
What happens at first hearings for indictable only offences?
The magistrates’ court has no jurisdiction to deal with an indictable only offence and so a defendant charged with an indictable only offence makes only a brief first appearance in a magistrates’ court.
The court will deal with bail and legal aid then the defendant is sent to the Crown Court where they will enter a plea. The hearing at the Crown Court is three or four weeks later depending on the defendant’s bail status.
When will summary only offences go to the crown court?
- There is an important exception to the rule that summary only offences never go to Crown Court.
- This happens when a defendant is charged with an offence that is to be tried in the Crown Court and there is a summary only offence which is connected to the indictable offence.
- If the summary only offence is one of those listed on the next page and is before the magistrates’ court at the same hearing as the indictable offence, it must be sent to the Crown Court.
Related summary matters that must be sent for trial and included on an indictment (s 40 CJA 1988)
- Common assault
- Assaulting a prison or secure training centre officer
- Taking a motor vehicle or other conveyance without authority
- Driving a motor vehicle while disqualified
- Criminal damage
A summary offence that is on the s 40 Criminal Justice Act (CJA) 1988 listand is related to the matter that has been sent to the Crown Court for trial can be included on the indictment and the jury will consider it then return a verdict.
Related summary matters that must be sent for plea only (s 51(3) CDA 1998)
Any summary matter not listed in s 40 CJA 1988 but that is punishable by disqualification from driving or imprisonment.
Where a summary only offence is not on the list in s 40 it will not appear on the indictment. When the trial for the indictable offence is over, the accused will be asked to enter a plea in relation to the summary only offence. If D pleads guilty, the Crown Court may deal with the offence in any way that would have been open to a magistrates’ court. If D pleads not guilty, the Crown Court has no further power to deal with the offence. If there is to be a trial it is remitted to a magistrates’ court.
When is the plea before venue?
· Summary-only offence: trial and sentence at the magistrates’ court
· Either-way offence where:
o magistrates’ court accepts jurisdiction and D consents to summary trial- trial at the magistrates’ court and sentence at the magistrates’ court or Crown Court.
o magistrates’ court declines jurisdiction or D elects Crown Court trial- trial and sentence at the Crown Court.
· Indictable-only offence: trial and sentence at the Crown Court.
Plea before venue
At a first hearing when the offence is one which is triable either-way, the defendant will be asked to indicate their plea. The defendant is supplied with a copy of the initial details by the prosecutor in accordance with Criminal Procedure Rules, Part 8. The charge is written down and read out to the defendant.
The defendant can:
- indicate guilty;
- indicate not guilty; or
- give no indication.
Where no indication is given, it is treated as a not guilty indication.
This is part of the hearing is known as ‘plea before venue’ and this procedure is set out in s 17A Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980.
Before they indicate their plea, the defendant must be warned that if they plead guilty, they can be:
- sentenced by the court; or
- committed to the Crown Court for sentence under s 14 Sentencing Act 2020 if a magistrates’ court is of the opinion that its sentencing powers are insufficient to deal with the offence.
A guilty plea must be unequivocal; that is to say, it must be one free of any suggestion or statement that the defendant is not guilty, either because they purport to rely on a defence or refuse to accept an element of the offence. If a plea is equivocal, it will be treated as a not guilty plea rather than a guilty plea. Examples of an equivocal plea are:
- To an allegation of inflicting grievous bodily harm- ‘Guilty, but I was acting in self-defence’
- To an allegation of theft- ‘Guilty, but I was going to give it back’
What happens if a defendant pleads guilty to an either-way offence on first hearing?
If the defendant indicates a guilty plea the court will treat that as a formal plea of guilty and proceed to sentence.
As an either-way offence can be sentenced in either a magistrates’ court or the Crown Court, a magistrates’ court must consider whether its sentencing powers would be sufficient in the circumstances given. A magistrates’ court does not have power to impose more than 6 months imprisonment in respect of any summary only or either-way offence (s 224 Sentencing Act 2020).
For two or more either-way offences, the maximum sentence in the magistrates’ court is 12 months imprisonment.
If the court decides that its powers are sufficient then sentence may be passed immediately or adjourned for the preparation of a pre-sentence report (‘PSR’). The sentencing process is considered in more detail in another element.
Where the court adjourns sentence for the preparation of a PSR, it must be careful not to create an expectation that the offender will be sentenced in a magistrates’ court if there is a possibility of committal for sentence.
The court should make it clear that all sentencing options, including committal to the Crown Court for sentence, remain open.
What is committal for sentence?
If the court decides that its powers are insufficient either because the sentence exceeds their maximum, or because the defendant should be made subject to a sentence of a kind that they cannot pass, then the defendant will be committed for sentence to the Crown Court.
A magistrates’ court should order a PSR for use by the Crown Court if it considers that:
- there is a realistic alternative to a custodial sentence; or
- the defendant may be a dangerous offender; or
- there is some other appropriate reason for doing so.
The defendant will make their next appearance at the Crown Court to be sentenced by a Crown Court Judge who will be able to pass a sentence of anything up to the Crown Court limit for the offence.
What happens if a defendant pleads NOT guilty to an either-way offence on first hearing?
If a defendant indicates a not guilty plea then the court moves on to consider where the trial will be held. This is known as allocation and is set out in s 19 Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980. Additionally, the court must follow the allocation guideline.
The court must take into account the allocation guideline which indicates that either-way offences should generally be tried summarily unless:
- the court’s sentencing powers would be insufficient i.e. the outcome would clearly be a sentence in excess of the court’s powers for the offence(s) after taking into account personal mitigation and any potential reduction for a guilty plea; or
- for reasons of unusual legal, procedural or factual complexity, the case should be tried in the Crown Court.
What is the allocation hearing?
The allocation guideline states that in cases with no factual or legal complications the court must bear in mind its power to commit for sentence after trial (s 14 Sentencing Act 2020) and, crucially, may retain jurisdiction notwithstanding that the likely sentence might exceed its powers.
This means that, in practice, cases are likely to be retained and tried in the magistrates’ court unless the offence was clearly so serious that only the Crown Court should have the power to deal with the defendant.
Given the key consideration for a magistrates’ court when deciding whether to accept jurisdiction is whether its sentencing powers are adequate, the court will need to consider the relevant sentencing guidelines and any associated case law.
The court should also take into account the submissions of the parties.
What does the prosecution do at an allocation hearing?
- Opens with the facts.
- Outlines the defendant’s offending history (if any).
- Makes submissions as to where the trial should be held consistent with the allocation guidelines.
The submissions will cover the nature and seriousness of the offence including any particular aggravating and mitigating features.
What does the defence do at an allocation hearing?
- Can make submissions as to venue.
- Where they agree with the prosecution it may be no more than saying that.
- However, if the prosecution submits that the case should be heard in the Crown Court and the defence disagree, they will need to make fuller, more persuasive submissions at this point.
The court must then decide whether to allocate the case to a magistrates’ court (accept jurisdiction) or send it to the Crown Court.
If they decide to allocate it to the Crown Court, the matter is sent pursuant to s 51 Crime and Disorder Act 1998 and the defendant will make their next appearance at the Crown Court. The defendant has no right to elect a magistrates’ court trial in these circumstances.
If the court decides to retain jurisdiction (s 20 Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980), there are further steps in this process.
The court will explain to the defendant that:
- The court has decided that summary trial is more suitable.
- The defendant can consent to be tried summarily or, if D so wishes, be tried by a jury.
- If D is tried summarily and is convicted, D may still be committed to the Crown Court for sentence.
When does an indication of sentence happen?
- The defendant is able to ask for an indication of sentence if they were to plead guilty instead.
- The court has the discretion as to whether they will give an indication.
- The court can decline to give an indication.
- If they do, it must be confined to telling the defendant whether the sentence would be custodial or non-custodial.
- If the defendant asks for an indication and one is given, they can change their plea to guilty and the process followed will be as if they had pleaded guilty from the outset.
- Where a non-custodial sentence is indicated, that indication will be binding on any later magistrates’ court.
What is election?
If the defendant does not ask for an indication, or if the court refuses to give one, or if having heard the indication the defendant sticks with their not guilty plea, the court asks the defendant:
- if they consent to being tried in a magistrates’ court, meaning the case will be adjourned; or
- if they want to elect to be tried by a jury meaning the case will be transferred to the Crown Court.
This is known as ‘election’.
The defendant will be told that even if they consent to summary trial, the court still has the power to commit them to the Crown Court for sentence.
Note: If the defendant chooses not to change their plea to guilty then the indication given will not bind any later court in the event that the defendant falls to be sentenced.
Advice on election
It is one of the duties of the defendant’s legal representative to advise the defendant on whether to consent to summary trial or to elect trial.
Elect trial on indictment
Quite often the advice will be to elect trial on indictment in the Crown Court:
- the acquittal rate is higher in the Crown Court; and
- the separate tribunals of law and fact in the Crown Court can be advantageous to the defendant. Voir dire procedures allow the judge to hear arguments to exclude evidence in the absence of the jury.
- it is not always the case that a Crown Court judge will sentence more harshly than a magistrates’ court.
Consent to summary trial
Proceedings in a magistrates’ court:
- are less formal
- the waiting time before the trial date is much shorter
- the trial itself is much quicker.
- do not require a defendant to serve a defence statement.
- are less expensive than the Crown Court.
- magistrates have to provide reasons for their decision whereas juries do not give reasons.
- magistrates have less sentencing powers than those of the Crown Court. However, the magistrates’ court has a power to commit to the Crown Court for sentence even after trial.
What happens is the defendant consents to a summary trial?
D consents to summary trial
If the defendant consents to summary trial then the court:
- progresses as if the case were a summary only offence
- sets a trial date
- conducts any case management that is required.
What happens if the defendant elects for a crown court trial?
If the defendant elects trial at the Crown Court then:
- the matter is sent pursuant to s 51 Crime and Disorder Act 1998;
- the defendant will make their next appearance at the Crown Court.
- the court will complete the ‘Case sent to the Crown Court for trial – case management questionnaire’.
What are the exceptions to the rules of which courts hear which offences?
The simple rule that summary only offences must be dealt with in the magistrates’ court, indictable only must be sent to Crown Court and either-way can be dealt with in either court is, naturally, subject to some exceptions.
In relation to either-way offences there are some key ‘special cases’ which affect the jurisdiction of some offences nominally classed as either-way by making some into summary only and others indictable only.
The key ones are:
- Low value shoplifting
- Criminal damage
- Cases involving complex fraud or where children may be called as witnesses
‘Special’ cases
Low-value shoplifting
Low value shoplifting is stealing goods valued at £200 or less.
Although theft is a an either-way offence low value shoplifting is treated as summary only.
The maximum sentence is 6 months.
Somewhat oddly, the defendant still has the right to elect to be tried at the Crown Court under s 22A(2) Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980.
Criminal damage
Although classed as either- way the offence can be dealt with at the Crown Court only when the damage is:
- over £5000; or
- caused by fire (arson).
If £5000 or less, the offence becomes summary only and must be dealt with in the magistrates’ court. When this is the case, the maximum penalty that can be imposed is 3 months’ imprisonment or a level 4 fine. This is an exception to the normal rule regarding magistrates’ powers.
‘Special’ cases
Section 50A Crime and Disorder Act 1998 provides that cases involving complex fraud or where children may be called as witnesses should be sent directly to the Crown Court, if notice has been given under:
- section 51B (regarding fraud); or
- section 51C (regarding children).
Although the offences themselves might be classed as either-way, these type of cases will be sent to the Crown Court without going through the plea before venue or allocation procedure.
For all intent and purposes, they are indictable only.
Complex fraud
To be complex fraud, at least two of the following must be present:
- The amount is alleged to exceed £500,000
- There is a significant international dimension
- The case requires specialised knowledge of financial, commercial, fiscal or regulatory matters such as the operation of markets, banking systems, trusts or tax regimes
- There are numerous victims
- There is substantial and significant fraud on a public body
- The case is likely to be of widespread public concern or the alleged misconduct endangered the economic well-being of the United Kingdom, for example by undermining confidence in financial markets