THE COURT ORDERED that no one shall publish or reveal the name or address of the Appellant who is the subject of these proceedings or publish or reveal any information which would be likely to lead to the identification of the Appellant or of any member of his family in connection with these proceedings.
[2023] UKSC 24
On appeal from: [2020] EWCA Civ 1301
JUDGMENT
R (on the application of Officer W80) (Appellant) v Director General of the Independent Office for Police Conduct and others (Respondents)
before
Lord Lloyd-Jones
Lord Sales
Lord Leggatt
Lord Burrows
Lord Stephens
5 July 2023
Heard on 13 and 14 March 2023
Appellant
David Perry KC
Rosemary Davidson
(Instructed by DAC Beachcroft (London – Walbrook))
Respondent – Director General of the Independent Office of Police Conduct
Tim Owen KC
Michelle Butler
Danny Simpson
(Instructed by Independent Office for Police Conduct Legal Services)
Respondent – Eftehia Demetrio
Phillippa Kaufmann KC
Fiona Murphy
(Instructed by Bhatt Murphy Solicitors)
Respondent – Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis
Jason Beer KC
Robert Cohen
(Instructed by Metropolitan Police Directorate of Legal Services)
Interveners (Written submissions only)
1st Intervener (NPCC)
John Beggs KC
James Berry
(Instructed by Civil Nuclear Constabulary Legal Services)
2nd Intervener (College of Policing)
Jonathan Moffett KC
(Instructed by the Government Legal Department)
3rd Intervener (INQUEST & StopWatch)
Adam Straw KC
Jesse Nicholls
(Instructed by Hickman and Rose Solicitors)
LORD LLOYD-JONES AND LORD STEPHENS (with whom Lord Sales, Lord Leggatt and Lord Burrows agree):
Introduction
The issue in this appeal is what is the correct test for self-defence in police disciplinary proceedings.
Schedule 2 to the Police (Conduct) Regulations 2012 (SI 2012/2632) (“the 2012 Regulations”) provides that police officers shall only use force to the extent that it is necessary, proportionate and reasonable in all the circumstances. The appellant, W80, and the third respondent, the Metropolitan Police Commissioner, submit that the criminal law test applies in police disciplinary proceedings. The first respondent, the Director General of the Independent Office for Police Conduct (“IOPC”) and the second respondent, Eftehia Demetrio, (the mother of Jermaine Baker’s daughter) submit that the civil law test applies. The first intervener, the National Police Chiefs’ Council, submits that the criminal law test applies. The second intervener, the College of Policing, makes no submission as to the test which should be applied. The third interveners, INQUEST and Stopwatch, submit that if the test applicable is relevant to the appeal, the test identified by the Court of Appeal in these proceedings should be applied rather than the criminal law test. We set out the differences between the tests later in this judgment.
The Divisional Court (Flaux LJ and Sir Kenneth Parker) [2019] EWHC 2215 (Admin) held that the criminal law test applies. The Court of Appeal (Sir Geoffrey Vos C, Macur and Nicola Davies LJJ) [2020] EWCA Civ 1301; [2021] 1 WLR 418 held that neither the criminal law test nor the civil law test applies but that a tribunal in police disciplinary proceedings should simply apply the test contained in the wording of the use of force standard in the 2012 Regulations, namely whether the force used was necessary, proportionate and reasonable in all the circumstances.
Factual background
We gratefully adopt the facts as stated by the Divisional Court in Flaux LJ’s judgment delivered on 14 August 2019, as did the Court of Appeal at para 9.
… Izzet Eren was arrested with another man on 13 October 2015 on a stolen high-powered motor bike in possession of a loaded Scorpion sub-machine gun and a loaded semi-automatic handgun. Police believed they were on their way to carry out a murder. They were both charged with possession of firearms with intent to endanger life and pleaded guilty on 29 October 2015. They were remanded in custody until 11 December 2015, when they were to be sentenced in the Crown Court at Wood Green.
By 30 October 2015, the police had intelligence that there was a plot by Eren's cousin and others to snatch Eren and his co-defendant from custody whilst in transit from the prison to the Crown Court for the sentencing hearing. They planned to use a stolen Audi A6. The police mounted a large operation which involved two covert listening devices being planted in the car, specialist surveillance officers and eleven specialist firearms officers, including the claimant, in specialist vehicles. The intelligence provided to the specialist firearms officers was that the men in the car were in possession of firearms and intended to use them to free the prisoners from the van. This formed the basis of the threat assessment by the specialist firearms officers before and during the operation.
On 11 December 2015, the Audi was parked in a side road close to the Crown Court at Wood Green with three men inside, one of whom was [Mr Baker]. At about 9am, when the prison van containing Eren and his co-defendant had left HMP Wormwood Scrubs the specialist firearms officers were instructed to intervene. At the time they approached the car the officers could not see inside as the windows were steamed up, so that they did not know how many men were in the car or what they were doing. In accordance with standard procedure, there were shouts of orders to those inside the car. [W80] opened the front passenger door. [Mr Baker] was sitting in the front passenger seat. [W80] pointed his firearm between the door and the side of the vehicle. His account was that despite instructions to put his hands on the dashboard, [Mr Baker's] hands moved quickly up towards his chest where he was wearing a shoulder bag. [W80] said: ‘I believed at that time that this male was reaching for a firearm and I feared for the safety of my life and the lives of my colleagues. I discharged my weapon firing one shot’. There was no firearm in the bag, but an imitation firearm, a black uzi style machine gun, was found in the rear of the car.
Following the incident all the officers present were interviewed or provided statements. As in the case of [W80], they said that they believed on the basis of the information provided to them that the men in the car did have firearms and had the capacity and intent to use them.
On 13 December 2015 [W80] was informed that he was to be interviewed on suspicion of murder. He was subsequently interviewed by the IOPC under caution later in December 2015 and in February and August 2016. In the meantime, in June 2016, the other two men who had been in the car with [Mr Baker] were convicted of firearms offences and conspiracy to effect Eren's escape from custody and received substantial prison sentences.
The predecessor of the IOPC, the Independent Police Complaints Commission (‘IPCC’), conducted an investigation and produced a detailed report which was submitted to the Crown Prosecution Service. On 14 June 2017, the Crown Prosecution Service confirmed the decision of the Director of Public Prosecutions that there was insufficient evidence to justify criminal proceedings against any police officer. After the family of [Mr Baker] had exercised the victim's right of review, on 19 March 2018 the Crown Prosecution Service confirmed the decision not to bring criminal proceedings.
The IPCC report set out at [1089] to [1096] the investigator's opinion that [W80] had a case to answer for gross misconduct on the basis of the civil law test that any mistake of fact could only be relied upon if it was a reasonable mistake to have made, which was said to be the test that investigators were advised to apply in police disciplinary proceedings. The report was provided to the [Metropolitan Police Service (‘MPS’)] as the ‘appropriate authority’ under the statutory framework regulating whether to bring misconduct proceedings … Correspondence ensued between the IOPC and the MPS in which the MPS contended that in the IOPC report the investigator had been incorrect as a matter of law in applying the civil law test, as opposed to the criminal law test of self-defence. The IOPC in turn maintained that it was correct to apply the civil law test.
On 19 March 2018, the IOPC wrote to the MPS, recommending under paragraph 27(3) of Schedule 3 to the Police Reform Act 2002 that the claimant should face misconduct proceedings. The MPS replied that it did not agree with the IOPC's recommendation and had decided not to follow that recommendation. On 1 May 2018, as it had power to do under paragraph 27(4) of Schedule 3, the IOPC wrote to the MPS, directing it to bring disciplinary proceedings. It is that decision by the IOPC which is challenged on this judicial review.
The Notice of Decision to refer an allegation to a misconduct hearing under regulation 21 of the [2012 Regulations] which was served on [W80] stated:
‘On 11.12.15 you shot Jermaine Baker dead.
In doing so you breached the Standards of Professional Conduct including in particular in respect of Use of force: You used force that was not necessary and/or was not proportionate and/or was not reasonable in all the circumstances.
Although you acted out of an honest belief that Mr Baker was reaching for a firearm at the time you shot him, that belief was mistaken and not one which it was reasonable to make having regard to:
oThe evidence from the audio recordings that some officers had told Mr Baker to put his hands up.
oThe evidence of the positioning of the track wound to Mr Baker's wrist indicates his hand was likely to have been positioned with the palm side facing towards the windscreen, raised approximately to the level of his neck.
oThe evidence that you shot Mr Baker at a very early stage of the interception and almost immediately after opening the front passenger door.
The [Appropriate Authority's] case is that, as a matter of law, the panel should find that you breached the standard, even though your mistaken belief was honestly held if they find it was unreasonable’.”
Since Flaux LJ’s judgment in the Divisional Court, a public inquiry pursuant to section 1 of the Inquiries Act 2005 known as “The Jermaine Baker Public Inquiry” was conducted into the death of Mr Baker by HHJ Clement Goldstone QC, a former Recorder of Liverpool. Public hearings over 31 days considered detailed evidence as to the circumstances in which W80 had shot and killed Mr Baker. The inquiry’s report which was published on 5 July 2022 included a narrative conclusion.
In relation to the question as to whether Mr Baker did move his hands towards his shoulder bag, the report concluded that he did so “in a way that meant W80 honestly believed he was not complying with the instruction to place his hands on the dashboard”; see para 13.77.
The report found, at para 14.7, that because of briefings received, W80 believed that the suspects in the car would be armed with weapons and might try to fight their way out of the Audi vehicle being used for the mission.
The report also made findings in relation to W80’s belief at the time that he shot Mr Baker. It concluded, at para 13.79, that:
“… when W80 shot Mr Baker, he held an honest and genuine belief that Mr Baker was moving in order to reach for a firearm. As such, W80 perceived that Mr Baker posed a lethal threat. In the circumstances that pertained … I draw the conclusion, on the balance of probabilities, that the perceived threat from the actions and movement of Mr Baker was such that W80 honestly believed that it was reasonably necessary for him to shoot at Mr Baker.”
The report found that there was no firearm in the shoulder bag. W80’s honest and genuine belief that Mr Baker posed a lethal threat was tragically wrong; see para 13.81.
The proceedings below
The appellant brought judicial review proceedings challenging the decision of the IOPC dated 1 May 2018 to direct the MPS to bring disciplinary proceedings against him. The basis of his challenge was that the IOPC had erred in applying the civil law test for self-defence in determining whether the appellant had a case to answer on charges of gross misconduct.
In a judgment delivered on 14 August 2019, the Divisional Court allowed the appellant’s claim for judicial review.
The IOPC appealed to the Court of Appeal and in a judgment delivered on 9 October 2020, the appeal was allowed.
The appellant now appeals to the Supreme Court.
The law as to the use of force in self-defence
Two limbs to self-defence
There are two limbs to self-defence in both criminal proceedings and in civil actions. They can be conveniently described as the trigger and the response.
The first limb, the trigger, is a factual question; what did the individual genuinely believe was happening to cause him to use the violence that he did?
The second limb, the response, is a question of reasonableness; was the individual’s response reasonable in all the circumstances?
Self-defence in criminal proceedings
The law governing the reasonable use of force in the context of self-defence in criminal proceedings is now governed by section 76 of the Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008. Section 76 enacted in statutory form the common law position which evolved in a line of authority commencing with the House of Lords decision in R v Morgan [1976] AC 182.
Section 76 in so far as relevant provides:
The question whether the degree of force used by D was reasonable in the circumstances is to be decided by reference to the circumstances as D believed them to be, and subsections (4) to (8) also apply in connection with deciding that question.
If D claims to have held a particular belief as regards the existence of any circumstances—
the reasonableness or otherwise of that belief is relevant to the question whether D genuinely held it; but
if it is determined that D did genuinely hold it, D is entitled to rely on it for the purposes of subsection (3), whether or not—
it was mistaken, or
(if it was mistaken) the mistake was a reasonable one to have made.
….”
“ …
In relation to the first limb of self-defence in criminal proceedings, it is apparent from section 76(4)(a) that the reasonableness or otherwise of the defendant’s belief is relevant to the question of whether the defendant genuinely held it.
It is also apparent from section 76(4)(b) that in criminal proceedings a defendant is entitled to rely upon a genuinely held belief regardless of whether or not the belief turns out to be mistaken, and regardless of the reasonableness of the mistake made. Accordingly, in criminal proceedings the necessity to take action in response to an attack, or imminent attack, must be judged on the assumption that the facts were as the defendant honestly believed them to be, whether or not the defendant was mistaken and, if the defendant made a mistake of fact, whether or not it was reasonable for the defendant to have done so; see Ashley v Chief Constable of Sussex Police [2008] UKHL 25; [2008] 1 AC 962, at paras 16 and 17.
Smith, Hogan and Ormerod’s Criminal Law, 16th Ed., (2021) para 10.7.1 states the general principles governing self-defence in the criminal law in the following terms:
“The defences at common law and under s 3 [Criminal Law Act 1967 dealing with arrest and the prevention of crime], as now both also regulated by s 76 [Criminal Justice and Immigration Act 2008], can be conveniently described in terms of trigger and response:
the trigger being D’s belief that the circumstances as he understands them render it reasonable or necessary for him to use force; and
the response being the use of a proportionate or reasonable amount of force to the threat that D believes he faces.
The general principle is that the law allows such force to be used as is objectively reasonable in the circumstances as D genuinely believed them to be. The trigger is assessed subjectively (what did D genuinely believe); the response objectively (would a reasonable person have used that much force in the circumstances as D believed them to be).”
As we have indicated, the statutory approach evolved from a line of authority commencing in 1976 with R v Morgan. It is appropriate to refer to some of the cases in this line of authority to demonstrate that the criteria of an honestly held belief in criminal proceedings is not confined to self-defence and to set out certain helpful passages as to self-defence in criminal proceedings.
In R v Morgan, the House of Lords held that an honestly held belief in consent was a defence to a charge of rape even if there was no reasonable basis for the belief.
In R v Williams (Gladstone) (1984) 78 Cr App R 276, the Court of Appeal held that an honestly held belief applied in the context of the use of reasonable force to prevent a crime. Lord Lane CJ stated (at p 280):
“What then is the situation if the defendant is labouring under a mistake of fact as to the circumstances? What if he believes, but believes mistakenly, that the victim is consenting, or that it is necessary to defend himself, or that a crime is being committed which he intends to prevent? He must then be judged against the mistaken facts as he believes them to be. If judged against those facts or circumstances the prosecution fail to establish his guilt, then he is entitled to be acquitted.”
“In a case of self-defence, where self-defence or the prevention of crime is concerned, if the jury came to the conclusion that the defendant believed, or may have believed, that he was being attacked or that a crime was being committed, and that force was necessary to protect himself or to prevent the crime, then the prosecution have not proved their case. If however, the defendant’s alleged belief was mistaken and if the mistake was an unreasonable one, that may be a powerful reason for coming to the conclusion that the belief was not honestly held and should be rejected.
Even if the jury come to the conclusion that the mistake was an unreasonable one, if the defendant may genuinely have been labouring under it, he is entitled to rely upon it.”
He then said this in relation to self-defence (at p 281):
In Beckford v The Queen [1988] AC 130, an appeal from Jamaica against a conviction for murder, the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council expressly approved the passage in Williams (Gladstone) cited above. Referring to Morgan, which Lord Griffiths described (at p 1145C) as a landmark decision in the development of the common law, he explained, at p 144E:
“If then a genuine belief, albeit without reasonable grounds, is a defence to rape because it negatives the necessary intention, so also must a genuine belief in facts which if true would justify self-defence be a defence to a crime of personal violence because the belief negatives the intent to act unlawfully.”
In R v Keane [2010] EWCA Crim 2514; [2011] Crim LR 393, Hughes LJ observed (at para 4) that the law of self-defence is not complicated and represents a universally recognised common sense concept. He then, while disclaiming any intention to provide a comprehensive survey of the law of self-defence, made the following helpful general observations (at para 5):
If there is a dispute about what happened to cause the defendant to use the violence that he did, and there usually is such a dispute, then the jury must decide it, attending of course to the onus and standard of proof.
If the defendant claims that he thought that something was happening which the jury may find was not happening, then the second question which arises is what did the defendant genuinely believe was happening to cause him to use the violence that he did? That question does not arise in every case. If it does arise then whether his belief was reasonable or not, providing it is genuinely held, he is to be judged on the facts as he believed them to be unless his erroneous belief is the result of voluntarily taken drink or drugs, in which event it is to be disregarded.
Once it has thus been decided on what factual basis the defendant’s actions are to be judged, either because they are the things that actually happened and he knew them or because he genuinely believed in them even if they did not occur, then the remaining and critical question for the jury is: was his response reasonable, or proportionate (which means the same thing)? …” (Emphasis as applied by Hughes LJ)
“It is however very long established law that there are usually two and sometimes three stages into any enquiry into self-defence. There may be more, but these are the basic building blocks of a large proportion of the cases in which it is raised: