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No best answer has yet been selected by amirnazir. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I am a little puzzled to understand what stage in the proceedings your case has reached. It seems from what you say that you refused to accept the FPN, went to court and pleaded not guilty. The next normal stage is for a pre-trial review to be held. This is where the evidence is outlined and the witness availability discussed, etc. Have you passed that stage? If so, the next step is the trial proper. From what you say, this must also have taken place because the police officer has given his evidence.
However, where I am puzzled is that magistrates rarely, if ever, adjourn a trial for evidence to be clarified, justified or explained, or for points of law to be resolved. All the evidence has to be available on the day. Points of law (upon which they are relying) are explained by the advocates and the magistrates enlist the help of their legal adviser to explain matters on which they are not clear. The point which you mention is for the prosecution to make out. They would have to show why you should be convicted when all the evidence that they have presented suggests that the offence was committed whilst you were elsewhere.
You have to prove nothing (other than the fact that you were elsewhere when the offence was said to have been committed) and you certainly don�t have to delve into case law to support your cause. Stone�s Justices' Manual is the reference book for most matters arising in magistrates� courts. However, this is a lengthy tome and is not designed for the layman to use. I�d be interested to learn more about your case because, as I said, I am puzzled.
JudgeJ, Thank you for your response.
I was handed the FPN at the time of the offence in Feb 2005 (I produced my documents at the police station in 7 days as required) but did not surrender my licence as I wanted to challenge the offence.
A few months later I received a summons from the court stating that I had not accepted the FPN and that the issue would now to be dealt with by the courts and asked how I pleaded. I pleaded not guilty and requested disclosure of the case against me from the Prosecution.
Disclosure was provided in the form of a statement from the Police Officer (with several errors, lies and inaccurate comments), the case was then set for Trial in October 2005 (a few days before the trial I received a call advising the Prosecution Witness could not attend and it would have to adjourned)
The Case was then set for trial this Monday (27/03). I attended, (No one asked me in court how I pleaded nor was I asked to verify my name/address). The court went straight into Trial Mode. I was defending myself so sat next to the Prosecutor who called the witness who described what happened at what time etc.
I then got the chance to cross examine the witness and immediately asked him about the incident and time etc. I then approached the clerk and advised that I was no where near the location on that day time and provided evidence to support this. The Clerk then requested the Magistrates to leave and the witness to leave the court.
TBC...below
Thanks for the detailed description, amirnazir. It really is an unusual set of circumstances you describe. Essentially your trial is �part Heard� and, apart from anything else, it means that the same Bench of three magistrates will have to be reassembled in four week�s time to continue your case and this is unusual in itself.
It seems that the court has acted somewhat out of line with the accepted practice. Firstly, it should not have adjourned the case (in October) unilaterally. Only the magistrates can order an adjournment in these circumstances and you should have been given the opportunity to say (in Court, before the Magistrates) why you think the case should have proceeded on the set day. If you had failed to appear on that day the prosecution may well have asked for the case to proceed in your absence, and would probably have succeeded.
Moving to last Monday, you should have been asked to confirm who you were and also been asked to formally enter a plea. I am also surprised that the Legal Advisor asked you to leave the court whilst she discussed the matter with the prosecution and the police. Had you been represented by a solicitor you most certainly would not have been expected to leave as you are entitled to hear any debate relating to your case.
Moving to the trial itself it seems that only the prosecution case has been presented so far. You have not formally provided your evidence (that you were elsewhere) yet. You should be asked to provide this on oath. Magistrates (not the Legal Advisor) make the decision when �No Case to Answer� is argued. As I see it they cannot make such a ruling as the prosecution evidence suggests that there is a case to answer. The answer must come in the form of your evidence of alibi. (Cont�d)
The magistrates would then consider their verdict. For the Magistrates to find you guilty they must be convinced by the prosecution beyond reasonable doubt that you committed the offence. They must find their verdict based solely on the evidence provided and when announcing their verdict they will have to give their reasons.
From what you have said I cannot see how you can be convicted. The time is clearly a material fact in your case. If the prosecution had sought to amend its evidence by suggesting that the FPN contained an error they would have a strong case, but it seems they have not tried to do this and instead have compounded the error by providing verbal evidence to support the wrong time.
There seems to be no dispute as to when the offence is said to have been committed and you can prove that you were elsewhere. The only difficulty I can see is that you clearly were stopped by the officer and your acceptance of the FPN would confirm this. (By acceptance, I mean the physical acceptance of the form, not that you necessarily accepted its contents).
Where to go from here? I do not believe you have to provide any �case law� that has been suggested. Your evidence (when you give it) that you were elsewhere should be sufficient for the Magistrates to acquit you. However, I strongly suggest you enlist the help of a solicitor to argue your case. He might care to ask the court why it has managed your case in the unconventional way it seems to have done so far and almost reversed the burden of proof by asking you to prove your case. You will not be eligible for legal aid, but you will be able to claim your costs should you be acquitted. I�d be most interested in the outcome.