| Theft, Page 454
Hinks [2000] 4 All ER 833 (HL); [2000] 3
WLR 1590; [2001] Crim LR 162
Disappointingly, the House of Lords has now affirmed the
Court of Appeal's decision in Hinks [2000] 1 Cr App R 1. For
a full discussion of the decision, readers are referred to
Sir John Smith's note of the case in [2001] Crim LR 162 (Feb).
In substance, the decision does not change the analysis in
the text of Simester and Sullivan. Gomezû remains the leading
case on appropriation, supplemented by Hinks, which is now
settled authority that the acquisition of outright ownership
by receipt of gift is, in itself, an appropriation. By parity
of reasoning, the acquisition of ownership by any means is
an appropriation.
In defence of the decision, it did not require their Lordships
to hold that, for the purposes of s. 3, acquiring title to
property is exercising one of the rights of the owner‹which
would be absurd. This is because the definition of appropriation
in s. 3 of the Theft Act 1968 only includes, and is not limited
to, 'any assumption of the rights of an owner'Ó [see S&S p.447].
Further, as was observed in Gomez, the language of s. 3 nowhere
mentions any such word as 'unauthorised'. So it was possible,
on a very literal reading of the section, to come to the conclusion
reached in Hinks. Possible, but no more than that. As Lord
Lowry demonstrated, in his dissenting judgment in Gomezû[1993]
AC 442, it is clear from the Parliamentary and drafting history
that Parliament intended øappropriationÓ to mean a conversion,
i.e. an unauthorised or usurpatory assumption of the owners
rights. The point was ignored by the majority in Gomez, and
again by Lord Steyn in giving the majority judgment in Hinks.
So much for consistency in approaches to statutory interpretation
and respect for the intention of Parliamentary.
What about the merits? The main problem with the decision
is that it turns the very rationale of property offences on
its head. Theft is not a crime in thin air. It is designed
to protect and reinforce property rights. That is the whole
point of theft. Since the offence has no other raison dÁtre,
it is inherently derivative upon the civil law of property.
If I have no property right in Ds car, which is sitting on
the road beside my house, I cannot complain when D drives
it away. Neither am I allowed to drive it away myself without
D's permission. All this is because, at civil law, the car
belongs to D. Without that crucial piece of initial information,
we have no way of deciding whether anything wrong has occurred,
any sort of property wrong that requires the attention of
the criminal law. Unless there is a violation of someones
property rights, where (as Mill and Feinberg would ask) is
the harm? The law of theft cannot dispense with the requirement
for violation of a property right because its whole purpose
is dependent upon and secondary to the allocation of rights
through property law. Hinks, alas, cuts property offences
adrift from the law of property rights. There can be a crime
without either a wrong or a harm: the cart is now before the
horse. Lord Hobhouse sees this in his dissent, when he observes
that "There is no law against appropriating your own
property" (at 856c; see generally 854-856; also 865b).
Lord Steyn sees this too, albeit without any real concern
(at 843). But consider the four examples set out by Lord Steyn
at 842, of which we reproduce one here:
P sees D's painting and, thinking he is getting a bargain,
offers D £100,000 for it. D realises that P thinks the painting
is a Constable, but knows that it was painted by his sister
and is worth no more than £100. He accepts P's offer. D
has made an enforceable contract and is entitled to recover
and retain the purchase price.
"My Lords, at first glance these are telling examples,"
comments Lord Steyn. Yes indeed: it surely cannot be the case
that D is entitled to the purchase price and yet, if found
to have stayed silent dishonestly, be guilty of stealing it.
[Cf. S&S at 455; also Sir John Smith at [2001] Crim LR 165.]
Thus the reader waits with bated breath to find the devastating
riposte that Lord Steyn will deliver‹to discover what it is
that the rest of us have all been missing. But Lord Steyn
doesnt give a counterargument. He simply moves right on,
dismissively remarking only that "I am quite unpersuaded
that the House [in Gomez] overlooked the consequences of its
decision." Yet Gomezû did not decide the issue in Hinks.
The point simply did not arise in that case.So far as the
merits are concerned, the final proposition upon which His
Lordship relies is even more worrying. He expressly states
(at 844): "My Lords, for my part the position would have
been different if I had any lurking doubt about the guilt
of the appellant on the charges for which she was convicted.
In the light of a fair and balanced summing up and a very
strong prosecution case, the jury accepted the prosecution
case and rejected the appellants account as untruthful. They
found that she had acted dishonestly by systematically raiding
the savings in a building society account of a vulnerable
person who trusted her."
So: the defendant was dishonest. No doubt she deserved to
be convicted. But that is not the point. What counts is whether
she was guilty under the law: nullum crimen sine lege [S&S
p. 26]. It is wrong, a profound violation of the Rule of Law,
to reinterpret the law in order to convict a particular defendant
who deserves the label of criminal.
Given the expansiveness of this decision, a point of limitation
should be stressed. Hinksû deals with the scenario where the
act of acquiring title is charged as theft. The case does
not decide that once D has acquired valid title to property,
any subsequentûdishonest appropriation of that property by
D will amount to theft.
In dissent, the lucid and persuasive judgment of Lord Hobhouse
is a recommended read. Lord Huttons dissent is less persuasive
in that, unlike Lord Hobhouse, he agrees with the majority
that acquisition of outright ownership can be an appropriation.
His dissent focuses on the troublesome issue of dishonesty.
Lord Hutton observes that s. 2(1)(a) of the Theft Act 1968
provides that a persons appropriation is not to be regarded
as dishonest if he appropriates property in the belief that
he has, in law, the right to deprive the other of it. He considers
it paradoxical to distinguish between persons with a belief
in a claim of right and persons, like Karen Hinks, who have
a claim of right. Accordingly, his Lordship concludes that
there can be no finding of dishonesty where the gift is valid.
Prima facie, Lord Hutton offers a plausible argument. However,
it was implicitly rejected by the majority. The exploitative
conduct by Karen Hinks was dishonest: everyone, and most importantly
the jury, agreed on this. Nonetheless, on different facts,
there may be room to invoke Lord Huttons reasoning. If we
reconsider the four examples mentioned by Lord Steyn at 842,
perhaps in each case, were D charged with theft, he might
answer: øI know it was sharp practise, but I also knew it
was permissible within the (civil) law, otherwise I would
not have done it. I sought throughout to abide by the law
and made all the disclosures that the law required of me in
order for the transaction to be valid.Ó In such a scenario
it is arguable that, by virtue of s. 2(1)(a), D could not
in law be considered dishonest.
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