R v Bewley

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    [2013] 1 All ER 1

    R v Bewley

    [2012] EWCA Crim 1457

    COURT OF APPEAL, CRIMINAL DIVISION

    MOSES LJ, UNDERHILL J AND JUDGE INMAN QC

    24 MAY, 6 JULY 2012

    Firearms Possession of firearm without a certificate

    Firearm Starting pistol capable of firing bullets by drilling barrel Barrel partially

    drilled Pistol capable of firing lead pellet if pistol mounted in clamp, and mallet and

    punch used to load through muzzle and strike firing pin Whether firearm Whether

    use of tools to enable discharge of missile without altering construction of pistolconversion of imitation firearm Whether pistol component part of prohibited weapon

    Firearms Act 1968, ss 1, 5(1)(aba), 57(1) Firearms Act 1982, s 1

    The defendant had escaped from prison where he had been serving a sentence for

    murder. He remained at large for about nine years. When police officers attempted to

    arrest him, he reached towards a cabinet and took hold of a starting pistol. The starting

    pistol was originally designed to fire blank cartridges. It was constructed with a solidly

    blocked dummy barrel. Part of the barrel had been removed by drilling, leaving a small

    section of the original blockage through which ran an off-centre hole with a diameter of

    approximately 2 mm. The top part of the hammer was broken off. A police forensic

    scientist tested the weapon, and he was able to fire it. Hemounted it in a vice or clampand loaded it with a specially selected lead pellet of 84 mm diameter. He used a mallet

    and punch to hammer that pellet through the muzzle tightly against the mouth of the

    hole within the barrel. He then discharged the projectile by loading an 8 mm calibre

    blank cartridge into the gun and then used a mallet and punch to strike the firing pin in

    order to discharge the blank cartridge. As a result ofthe partially unblocked barrel, high

    pressure gasses were expelled through the offset hole and thus the muzzle-loaded

    projectile was discharged. The projectile penetrated chamois leather and ballistic soap

    intended to simulate human skin and flesh. The defendant was charged with possession

    of a prohibited firearm, contrary to s 5(1)(aba)aof the Firearms Ac t 1968. 'Firearm' was

    defined in s 57(1)bof the 1968 Act as inter alia 'a lethal barrelled weapon of any

    description from which any shot, bullet, or other missile can be discharged and includes

    (a) any prohibited weapon, whether it is such a lethal weapon as aforesaid or not;

    and (b) any component part of such a lethal or prohibited weapon '. It was common

    ground that the starting pistol was lethal. The essential question was whether any shot,

    bullet or other missile could be discharged from the starting pistol when the only means

    of such a discharge was the elaborate technique deployed by the forensic scientist. The

    judge ruled that the starting pistol was a prohibited firearm within the meaning of s

    57(1) of the 1968 Act, and following that ruling the defendant pleaded guilty. In that

    regard, settled authority established the following propositions: the mere fact that only

    an expert could discharge a missile from the weapon did not mean that it lacked the

    capacity to

    a

    Section 5, so far as material, is set out at [6], below

    b Section 57, so far as material, is set out at [6], below

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 2

    discharge a missile; a weapon could fall within the definition in s 57(1) despite some

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    temporary fault at the time it was in the possession of the accused; and that a dummy

    pistol capable of adaptation was either a firearm or was part of a firearm. However,

    those authorities pre-dated the coming into force of the Firearms Ac t 1982. Section

    1(1)cof the 1982 Act included within the scope of the 1968 Act, subject to specific

    exclusions, imitation firearms if they had the appearance of a firearm to which s 1dof

    the 1968 Act applied and were so constructed or adapted as to be readily convertible

    into a firearm to which s 1 of the 1968 Act applied. Whether an imitation firearm was

    readily convertible had to be ascertained by reference to s 1(6) of the 1982 Act which

    provided that it would be '(a) if it can be so converted without any special skill on thepart of the person converting it in the construction or adaptation of firearms of any

    description; and (b) the work involved in converting does not require equipment tools

    other than such as are in common use by persons carrying out works of constructionand maintenance in their own homes'. On appeal, it fell to be determined (i) whether the

    addition of imitation firearms readily convertible into firearms to the scope of the 1968

    Act had changed the meaning of firearm in s 57(1) of the 1968 Act, with the result that

    the authorities could no longer be relied upon; (ii) whether the procedure followed by

    the forensic scientist to fire the weapon constituted conversion of the starting pistol for

    the purposes of s 1(1)(b) of the 1982 Act or whether the pistol was in itself a lethal

    barrelled weapon, capable of discharging a missile; (iii) whether the starting pistol fell

    within the meaning of firearm in s 57(1) of the 1968 Act; and (iv) whether the starting

    pistol could be regarded as a component part of 'such a lethal or prohibited weapon'within the meaning of s 57(1)(b).

    Held (1) After the coming into force of the 1982 Act, s 57(1) of the 1968 Act

    referred to the capacity of the weapon without regard to its potential conversion,

    unless conversion fell within the scope of the 1982 Act. The addition of imitation

    firearms readily convertible into firearms into the scope of the 1968 Act by virtue of the

    1982 Act had changed the meaning of firearm in s 57(1) of the 1968 Act. Strictly, the

    1982 Act did not directly amend the 1968 Act, but it was to be regarded as an Act

    which amended the 1968 Act by enlarging its reach to those imitation firearms which fell

    within the provisions of s 1(1) of the 1982 Act. Where a later Act covered the same

    material as an earlier Act, the provisions of the later Act could be used to aid the

    construction of the earlier Act. Both Acts could be regarded as a single code. The testas to whether the later provisions altered the meaning of the earlier was whether

    Parliament had intended to effect such an alteration. In that regard, it was plain that

    Parliament had intended to widen the scope of the meaning of firearm to include an

    imitation firearm falling within s 1(1) of the 1982 Act. However, it was equally plain that

    Parliament had intended only to widen that description in cases where the conversion

    could be achieved without any special skill and without the use of equipment or toolsother than those in common use. It would be absurd to allow the prosecution to

    sidestep the safeguards within the 1982 Act merely by construing firearm as meaning an

    item which could 'easily'

    c Section 1, so far as material, is set out at [23], below

    d Section 1, so far as material, provides: '(1) Subject to any exemption under this Act, it is anoffence for a person (a) to have in his possession, or to purchase or acquire, a firearm to which thissection applies without holding a firearm certificate in force at the time, or otherwise than asauthorised by such a certificate '

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 3

    be converted into a lethal-barrelled weapon, capable of discharging a missile. It followed

    that the earlier authorities could no longer be relied on (see [25][29], below); dicta of

    Blackburne J in R (on the application of Morgan Grenfell Ltd & Co) v Special

    Commissioner [2002] 1 All ER 776 at [39]applied; Cafferata v Wilson, Reeve v Wilson

    [1936] 3 All ER 149and R v Freeman[1970] 2 All ER 413not followed; Kelly v

    MacKinnon1982 SCCR 205considered.

    (2) The words in s 1(1)(b) of the 1982 Act 'readily convertible into a firearm' were

    sufficiently broad to include the use of equipment or tools in conjunction with the use of

    an imitation firearm in a way which enabled it to be used to discharge a missile as much

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    as if those tools were used permanently to alter its construction. In the instant case,

    the use of the vice to clamp the pistol and the mallet and punch to ram the pellet home

    constituted conversion of the starting pistol (see [30][31], below).

    (3) There was no warrant for including within the definition in s 57(1) of the 1968 Act

    an item which could only discharge a missile in combination with other tools extraneous

    to that item. The opening words of s 57(1) referred to the capacity of a particular item

    and not its capacity in combination with other pieces of equipment. It followed that the

    starting pistol fell outside the definition in s 57(1). It was not a lethal barrelled weapon

    from which any shot, bullet or other missile could be discharged. It was plainly animitation firearm (see [32][33], below).

    (4) The starting pistol could not be regarded as a component part of 'such a lethal or

    prohibited weapon' within the meaning of s 57(1)(b) of the 1968 Act. The definition of

    firearm could not include a component part of a lethal barrelled weapon of any

    description from which any shot, bullet, or other missile could notbe discharged. Any

    other construction would ignore the use of the word 'such'. If the starting pistol did not

    fall within the definition of firearm within s 57(1), no part of it could do so. Accordingly,

    the conviction would be quashed (see [34][36], below).

    Notes

    For the meaning of 'firearm' and for imitation firearms, see 26 Halsbury's Laws(5th edn)

    (2010) paras 578, 581.

    For ss 1, 5, 57of the Firearms Act 1968, see 12(1) Halsbury's Statutes(4th edn) (2011

    reissue) 568, 572, 635.

    For s 1of the Firearms Act 1982, see 12(1) Halsbury's Statutes(4th edn) (2011

    reissue) 930.

    Cases referred to in judgment

    Cafferata v Wilson, Reeve v Wilson[1936] 3 All ER 149, DC.

    Kelly v MacKinnon 1982 SCCR 205, HC of Justiciary (Sc).

    R v Clarke [1986] 1 All ER 846, [1986] 1 WLR 209, CA.

    R v Freeman [1970] 2 All ER 413, [1970] 1 WLR 788, CA.

    R v Jobling [1981] Crim LR 625, Crown Ct.

    R v Law[1999] Crim LR 837, CA.

    R v Pannell (1982) 76 Cr App Rep 53, CA.

    R (on the application of Morgan Grenfell & Co Ltd) v Special Comr[2001] EWCA Civ

    329, [2002] 1 All ER 776, [2003] 1 AC 563, [2002] 2 WLR 255; rvsd[2002] UKHL 21,

    [2002] 3 All ER 1, [2003] 1 AC 563, [2002] 2 WLR 1299.

    Read v Donovan [1947] KB 326, [1947] 1 All ER 37, DC.

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 4

    Appeal

    William Bewley appealed with leave of the full court against his conviction for

    possession of a prohibited firearm contrary to s 5(1)(aba) of the Firearms Act1968. He had pleaded guilty after a ruling dated 1 March 2011 by Judge Kamill, in

    the Crown Court at Snaresbrook that a starting pistol found in his possession

    was a prohibited firearm within the meaning of s 57(1) of the 1968 Act. The

    facts are set out in the judgment of the court.

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    Michael Skelley (instructed by Edwards Duthie) for the appellant.

    Benjamin Temple (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown.

    Judgment was reserved.

    6 July 2012. The following judgment of the court was delivered.

    MOSES LJ.

    [1] This appeal concerns an Italian Kimar model 85 starting pistol originally designed to

    fire blank cartridges. It was constructed with a solidly blocked dummy barrel. But part of

    its barrel had been removed by drilling, leaving a small section of the original blockage

    through which ran an off-centre hole with a diameter of approximately 2 mm. The top

    part of the hammer was broken off.

    [2] Mr Miller, a senior forensic scientist at the Metropolitan Police Service Forensic

    Firearms Unit, was, however, able to fire the starting pistol. He mounted it in a vice or

    clamp and loaded it with a specially selected lead pellet of 84 mm diameter. He used amallet and punch to hammer that pellet through the muzzle tightly against the mouth of

    the hole within the barrel.

    [3] He then discharged that projectile by firstly loading an 8 mm calibre blank cartridge

    into the gun and then used a mallet and punch to strike the firing pin in order to

    discharge the blank cartridge. As a result of the partially unblocked barrel, high pressure

    gasses were expelled through the offset hole and thus the muzzle-loaded projectile was

    discharged. The projectile penetrated chamois leather and ballistic soap intended to

    simulate human skin and flesh. Mr Dyson, the firearms expert retained by the defence,

    did not dispute that by taking those elaborate steps the starting pistol would discharge

    the specially selected muzzle-loaded pellet and penetrate the simulated human skin and

    flesh.

    [4] By her ruling dated 1 March 2011, Judge Kamill, at Snaresbrook Crown Court, ruled

    that the starting pistol was a prohibited firearm, possession of which was contrary to s

    5(1)(aba) of the Firearms Ac t 1968. Following that ruling, the appellant pleaded guilty.

    [5] The appellant was undoubtedly in possession of the starting pistol. He had escaped

    from prison following a sentence for murder on 5 March 2001. He had been at large for

    about nine years. On 4 June 2010, when officers attempted to arrest him in Kent, hereached towards a cabinet and took hold of the starting pistol. He told the police

    officers that it was not a working firearm. A full court gave permission to appeal against

    conviction.

    [6] By s 5(1)(aba) a person commits an offence if he is in possession of 'any firearm

    which either has a barrel less than 30 centimetres in length or is less than 60

    centimetres in length overall, other than an air weapon, a muzzle-loading gun or a

    firearm designed as signalling apparatus'. 'Firearm' is defined in s 57(1) of the 1968 Act:

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 5

    'In this Act, the expression firearm means a lethal barrelled weapon of any description from whichany shot, bullet, or other missile can be discharged and includes(a) any prohibited weapon, whetherit is such a lethal weapon as aforesaid or not; and (b) any component part of such a lethal orprohibited weapon; and (c) any accessory to any such weapon designed or adapted to diminish thenoise or flash caused by firing the weapon '

    [7] Both experts accepted that the starting pistol was lethal because it could penetrate

    that which was commonly accepted to simulate human skin. The essential question was

    whether any shot, bullet or other missile could be discharged from the starting pistol

    when the only means of such a discharge was the elaborate technique deployed by the

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    expert which we have already described.

    [8] The Crown's essential argument was that the pistol was capable of discharging a

    missile. The test was not whether the weapon could be fired easily or effectively but

    was merely whether it had the capacity to discharge a missile. The fact that it required

    expertise to discharge that missile was nothing to the point.

    [9] The first and essential question was that posed by the statute in the opening words

    to s 57(1). There being no dispute but that the starting pistol was a lethal barrelled

    weapon, the statutory question was whether any shot, bullet or other missile could bedischarged from it. This was the question which the judge in her ruling answered in the

    affirmative.

    [10] This argument was founded in part upon the decision of this court in R v Law

    [1999] Crim LR 837. The charge in that case was brought under s 5(1)(a) which relates

    to 'any firearm which is so designed or adapted that two or more missiles can be

    successively discharged without repeated pressure on the trigger'. The weapon in issue

    had been designed to be used as a semi-automatic weapon but was modified (in so far

    as it is possible to follow the short summary) with the intention that it should not be

    capable of burst fire. However, it did remain capable of burst fire if used by an expert.

    [11] The court rejected an argument that the prosecution had to prove that the firearmhad been designed or adapted with the intention of being used as a semi-automatic

    weapon. As the commentary to the short report points out, the decision of the court

    probably went further than it needed. The section requires no more than proof that the

    firearm was designed or adapted to be capable of burst fire; it does not require proof

    that it was, in fact, capable of burst fire. But the court focussed on the firearm's

    capacity.

    [12] It is for that reason that the authority is significant in this appeal. The only

    statutory question is whether any shot, bullet or other missile could be discharged from

    the weapon. R v Lawis authority for the proposition that the mere fact that a weapon's

    capacity to discharge a missile could only be demonstrated by an expert is irrelevant to

    whether the weapon falls within the statutory definition of firearm. (R v Pannell (1982)76 Cr App Rep 53 also establishes that proposition: the ability of the carbines to fire

    automatically required an operation of some delicacy achieved only by an expert.)

    [13] Similar issues had arisen in R v Clarke [1986] 1 All ER 846, [1986] 1 WLR 209. In

    that case, a sub-machine gun was found to be incomplete, without trigger, pivot pin or

    magazine. But it had been designed for fully automatic fire

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 6

    only and could be operated by use of a piece of string tied across the 'sear' (the catch

    keeping the hammer at full or half-cock) and around the trigger guard so that by

    applying tension to the string the gun could be operated.

    [14] The court disapproved R v Jobling [1981] Crim LR 625 in which Taylor J ruled that it

    was insufficient to ask whether the weapon was originally designed to fire continuously;

    the question was whether it remained so. Relying on the decision of the Court of Appeal

    in R v Pannell (1982) 76 Cr App Rep 53 the Court of Appeal in R v Clarke [1986] 1 All ER

    846 at 849, [1986] 1 WLR 209 at 213 took the view that the words in s 5(1)(a) were

    descriptive of the kind of firearm which is prohibited rather than descriptive of an

    individual weapon at the very time the accused was alleged to have been in possession

    of it. But it acknowledged that a weapon might become so damaged or altered, by

    accident or design or by the removal of so many components, that it could no longer

    fairly be described as a 'weapon'. Alternatively, the gun, even after the trigger, pivot

    pin and magazine had been removed, was a component part of a prohibited weapon.

    [15] The question in the instant appeal is not whether the gun was designed or adapted

    to discharge a shot, bullet or other missile, as in R v Law, R v Clarke, R v Joblingand R v

    Pannellbut whether it had the capacity to do so. Those cases are of significance in

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    that they teach that the mere fact that only an expert could discharge a missile from

    the starting pistol does not mean that it did not have the capacity to discharge a

    missile and thus did not remove it from the scope of the definition in s 57(1).

    [16] Although s 57(1) uses the present tense, 'can be discharged', a weapon may fall

    within the definition in s 57(1) despite some temporary fault at the time it is in the

    possession of the accused. Even Taylor J in R v Jobling [1981] Crim LR 625

    acknowledged that a mere temporary fault would not preclude the weapon from the

    prohibition. So did Eveleigh LJ in R v Pannell (1982) 76 Cr App Rep 53 at 5556 (cited in

    R v Clarke [1986] 1 All ER 846 at 849, [1986] 1 WLR 209 at 213). The very notion of thecapacity of a weapon must refer not only to its condition at the time of possession but

    to its construction and its potential as a means of discharging a missile. But once it is

    recognised that a gun might fall within the definition of firearm, even if its condition at

    the time renders it incapable of firing, the question arises as to the extent to which it is

    permissible to look to possible alterations to the gun from the condition in which it is

    found in the possession of the accused. If a minor repair is all that is needed, the gun is

    a firearm. But what if it needs a major conversion, adaptation or repair before it can

    discharge a missile?

    [17] This is an issue previously considered by the courts. In Cafferata v Wilson, Reeve v

    Wilson[1936] 3 All ER 149, the Divisional Court, on an appeal by way of case stated,

    decided that a dummy revolver which was not capable of firing a bullet or other missilewas a firearm within the meaning of s 12(1) of the Firearms Act 1920 or, alternatively,

    all the parts of the dummy other than the solid barrel were parts of a firearm. Thedummy shared the characteristics of the starting pistol in the instant appeal in that

    there was a vent hole for the escape of gas but, in contrast, no hole had been drilled

    such as to permit the discharge of a missile. Lord Hewart CJ, in his brief judgment, said

    (at 150):

    'The magistrate has held that the article as a whole is part of a firearm within the meaning of thedefinition. That is quite a tenable proposition. If something had had to be added to the dummy tomake it into a complete revolver, the dummy might be said to be part of a revolver. It seems to

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 7

    make no difference that the decisive part was not to be an addition but an adaptation of what wasalready there. It is easier to support the decision from another point of view. The dummy containseverything else necessary for making a revolver except the barrel, and therefore all the other parts ofit except those which require to be bored are parts thereof within the meaning of the section. Themagistrate has not misdirected himself and the appeal must be dismissed.'

    [18] The principle which appears to have been identified in Cafferata's case is that a

    dummy pistol capable of adaptation, in that case by boring the barrel, is either a firearm

    or is part of a firearm within the meaning of the predecessor to s 57(1).

    [19] That principle was followed in R v Freeman [1970] 2 All ER 413, [1970] 1 WLR 788.

    A .38 starting pistol with a revolving chamber had constrictions in the front ends of the

    firing chambers and a solid barrel. But those obstructions could readily be removed by

    drilling, whereafter the revolver would be capable of firing bulleted ammunition with

    lethal force (see [1970] 2 All ER 413 at 414, [1970] 1 WLR 788 at 790). The court

    traced the successors to the 1920 Act, and the relevant statutory provision at the time

    of Cafferata's case. It concluded that the Firearms Acts of 1937 and 1968 re-enacted,

    in slightly different language, the provisions of the 1920 Act. The court applied the

    principle that the 1937 and 1968 Acts should be deemed to be enacted by legislature

    acquainted with the actual state of the law and the practice of the courts at the date

    when they were passed (see [1970] 2 All ER 413 at 415, [1970] 1 WLR 788 at 791).

    Applying that principle the court concluded that the 1937 and 1968 Acts embodied the

    principle in Cafferata's case into the law. Sachs LJ said ([1970] 2 All ER 413 at 416,

    [1970] 1 WLR 788 at 792):

    'It would indeed be unfortunate if an object, which by the use of an electrical drill of a type that can bebought at almost any general store in any High Street can be so easily adapted into a lethal weapon,should not come within s1(1) of the 1968 Act.'

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    The court added ([1970] 2 All ER 413 at 416, [1970] 1 WLR 788 at 792) that it would be

    a question of fact and degree whether the subject matter of a charge fell within the

    ambit of the Act but warned that the intention of the manufacturer of the subject

    matter of the charge was irrelevant to the issue which the jury had to try (referring to

    Read v Donovan [1947] KB 326, [1947] 1 All ER 37, the case of a signal pistol).

    [20] If this court is compelled to apply R v Freemanthen there is no escape from the

    conclusion that the gun in the instant case fell within the meaning of firearm and thus

    within s 5(1)(aba). It profits the appellant nothing to refer to the trenchant criticism

    expressed by Lord Emslie, the Lord Justice-General in Kelly v MacKinnon 1982 SCCR 205.The Scottish court declined to follow Cafferata's case; the fact that the replica Colt

    revolvers could be easily converted into a firearm did not bring the weapon within the

    meaning of s 57(1) of the 1968 Act. That section poses the statutory question whether

    a firearm is a weapon which 'can be discharged', not whether it could, on adaptation, be

    discharged in the future. The Lord Justice-General took the view (at 212) that whether

    it would be easy or difficult to convert an article, not itself capable of discharging a

    bullet or missile, is 'quite irrelevant'.

    [21] Nor could the unconverted replica be regarded as a component part of 'such a

    lethal weapon'. Section 57(1)(b) required the part in issue to be a

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 8

    component part of a lethal weapon from which any shot, bullet or other missile can be

    discharged and not a component part of something which, when completed, would

    become a lethal weapon (see 208). Lord Cameron also referred to a provision of the

    Firearms (Amendment) Act 1936 which was, as he put it (at 215), 'completely ignored'

    by the court in Cafferata's case, namely, s 9(2), now re-enacted as s 4(3) of the 1968

    Act. That subsection makes it an offence for a person other than a registered firearms

    dealer to convert into a firearm anything which, though having the appearance of being

    a firearm, is so constructed as to be incapable of discharging any missile through its

    barrel. The plain corollary, as Lord Cameron put it (at 216), is that if an article is

    constructed as to be incapable of discharging any missile, then it does not fall within

    the definition of a firearm in s 57(1), even if it could be constructed so as to be capableof discharging any missile (and see 213).

    [22] However compelling this reasoning, it is not open to this court to apply it unless

    the statutory scheme is different from that which was in force at the t ime of those

    decisions.

    [23] Since the 1968 Act came into force, the Firearms Ac t 1982has widened the scope

    of the 1968 Act to embrace imitation firearms readily convertible into firearms to which s

    1 of the 1968 Act applies. Section 1 of the 1968 Act, which imposes the requirement of

    a firearms certificate, applies to every firearm except shotguns as defined (see s 1(3))

    and those air weapons which fall outwith rules made by the Secretary of State (see s

    1(3)). Section 1 of the 1982 Act includes within the scope of the 1968 Act, subject tospecific exclusions (such as s 4(3) and (4) of the 1968 Act) imitation firearms if they

    have the appearance of a firearm to which s 1 of the 1968 Act applies and are so

    constructed or adapted as to be readily convertible into a firearm to which s 1 applies

    (see s1(1) of the 1982 Act). Whether an imitation firearm is readily convertible must be

    ascertained by reference to s 1(6) of the 1982 Act:

    'For the purposes of this section an imitation firearm shall be regarded as readily convertible into afirearm to which section 1 of the 1968 Act applies if(a) it can be so converted without any specialskill on the part of the person converting it in the construction or adaptation of firearms of anydescription; and (b) the work involved in converting it does not require equipment or tools other thansuch as are in common use by persons carrying out works of construction and maintenance in theirown homes.'

    [24] The 1982 Act also provides that it is a defence for an accused to show that he did

    not know and had no reason to suspect that an imitation firearm could be readily

    convertible into a firearm to which s 1 of the 1968 Act applies (see s 1(5)). An imitation

    firearm is defined by reference to s 57(4) of the 1968 Act (see s 1(3) of the 1982 Act):

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    ' imitation firearm means any thing which has the appearance of being a firearm (other

    than such a weapon as is mentioned in section 5(1)(b) of this Act) whether or not it is

    capable of discharging any shot, bullet or other missile'.

    [25] The question then arises as to whether the addition of imitation firearms readily

    convertible into firearms to the scope of the 1968 Act changes the meaning of firearm in

    s 57(1) as interpreted by this court in R v Freeman [1970] 2 All ER 413, [1970] 1 WLR

    788. Section 57(1) was unaltered. Is it to be construed as including a gun which could

    be easily turned into a lethal barrelled weapon (as Sachs LJ thought in R v Freeman) or

    is that section now to be interpreted in the light of the 1982 Act? Strictly, the 1982 Actdoes not

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 9

    directly amend the 1968 Act. But it seems to us that it is to be regarded as an Act

    which amends the 1968 Act by enlarging its reach to those imitation firearms which fall

    within the provisions of s1(1) of the 1982 Act.

    [26] As we have recalled, s 57(1) of the 1968 Act was not amended. Where a statute

    is amended, those parts which were unamended are to be construed as meaning what

    they did before, unless the contrary intention appears (see Bennion on Statutory

    Interpretation (5th edn, 2008) section 78). But Benniondoes suggest that where alater Act covers the same material as an earlier Act, the provisions of the later Act may

    be used to aid the construction of the earlier Act. Both Acts may be regarded as a

    single code. But whether those later provisions alter the meaning of the earlier, the test

    is whether Parliament intended to effect such an alteration (section 234). Bennionc ites

    Blackburne J in R (on the application of Morgan Grenfell & Co Ltd) v Special

    Commissioner [2001] EWCA Civ 329at [39], [2002] 1 All ER 776 at [39], [2003] 1 AC

    563:

    'we question why, in a code such as this [tax legislation] which Parliament has from time to timeamended, it should be impermissible when determining what the true scope was of that provision, toconsider what Parliament's intention was by reference to other provisions of the code. We see noreason why, in a case such as this, the court's gaze must be confined to legislation as it existed at

    some much earlier date. Each amendment accrues to a text conveying an evolving but at each stageascertainable intent.'

    [27] We should apply that principle in the instant case. It is plain that Parliament

    intended to widen the scope of the meaning of firearm to include an imitation firearm

    falling within s 1(1) of the 1982 Act. But it is equally plain that Parliament intended only

    to widen that description in cases where the conversion could be achieved without any

    special skill and without the use of equipment or tools other than those in common use.

    By imposing what could loosely be described as safeguards, Parliament clearly expressed

    the intention to exclude from the application of the 1968 Act imitation firearms which

    could not be readily convertible into a firearm by equipment or tools which were not in

    common use.

    [28] Accordingly, the principle identified in R v Freemanis, under the current statutory

    scheme, no longer of any application. If the item can be easily adapted into a lethal

    weapon, to adopt Sachs LJ's words (see [1970] 2 All ER 413 at 416, [1970] 1 WLR 788

    at 792), with the use of equipment described in s 1(6) of the 1982 Act, then it will,

    subject to the statutory defence, fall within the 1968 Act. But no conclusion can bereached as to whether an imitation firearm is readily convertible without proper

    consideration of s 1(6) and, if it is raised, the defence in s 1(5). Those subsections

    raise questions of fact which must be resolved. Whether an item falls within s 57(1) of

    the 1968 Act should no longer be answered by reference to R v Freemanor to

    Cafferata's case. Courts should look to the 1982 Act read with the 1968 Act. It would

    be absurd to allow the prosecution to sidestep the safeguards within the 1982 Act

    merely by construing firearm as meaning an item which could 'easily' be converted into alethal barrelled weapon, capable of discharging a missile, in the application of the

    principle in R v Freeman.

    [29] But Mr Benjamin Temple, on behalf of the prosecution, argued that issues of

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    conversion and adaptation had no relevance in the instant case. The process of

    clamping, the use of the mallet and punch to drive the pellet home,

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 10

    were not acts of conversion or adaptation of the pistol. Despite the need to use those

    implements, the starting pistol was itself a lethal barrelled weapon from which any shot,

    bullet or missile could be discharged.

    [30] It seems to us that reading the 1968 Act in the context of the 1982 Act also

    assists in understanding what is meant by conversion. The words in s 1(1)(b) 'readily

    convertible into a firearm' are sufficiently broad to include the use of equipment or tools

    in conjunction with the use of an imitation firearm in a way which enables it to be used

    to discharge a missile as much as if those tools are used permanently to alter its

    construction. There is no reason to restrict the application of the 1982 Act to a

    conversion which permanently alters the construction of the imitation firearm in

    question. The 1982 Act contemplates converting an item from which a missile cannot be

    discharged into one from which a missile can be discharged. It matters not whether that

    process involves the permanent alteration of the construction of the firearm such as by

    drilling or by some other more temporary means. An item may be converted not merely

    by changing its capacity or by altering its construction, but also by adapting the way it

    can be used.

    [31] The starting pistol could only discharge a missile with the aid of other implements

    external to the weapon itself. It required the use of a vice to hold it, a hammer and a

    punch thin enough to be inserted into the off-centre hole running through the part of

    the barrel that was blocked, with a diameter of approximately 2 mm. The specially

    selected pellet could only be discharged if it was rammed home with a mallet and punch

    to ensure as t ight a fit as possible. The use of those extraneous tools was a process of

    conversion. For the reasons we have given, after the 1982 Act came into force, s 57(1)

    of the 1968 Act refers to the capacity of the weapon without regard to its potential

    conversion, unless that conversion falls within the scope of the 1982 Act . We reject the

    prosecution contention that the use of the vice to clamp the pistol and the mallet and

    punch to ram the pellet home did not constitute conversion of the starting pistol.

    [32] Once we exclude consideration of any conversion, we must acknowledge that the

    starting pistol itself had no capacity to discharge any shot, bullet or other missile. A

    missile could only be discharged from the barrel in combination with other pieces of

    equipment, namely, the vice with which the pistol could be clamped, the punch and the

    mallet. There is no warrant for including within the definition in s 57(1) an item which

    can only discharge a missile in combination with other tools extraneous to that item.

    The opening words of s 57(1) refer to the capacity of a particular item and not its

    capacity in combination with other pieces of equipment.

    [33] For those reasons we would conclude that the starting pistol fell outwith the

    definition in s 57(1). It was not a lethal barrelled weapon from which any shot, bullet orother missile can be discharged. It was plainly an imitation firearm within the meaning of

    s 57(4). Whether it fell within the scope of the 1982 Act cannot be determined in this

    appeal. No facts were advanced to show that the starting pistol could be readily

    converted in accordance with the provisions of s 1(1)(b) and s 1(6) of the 1982 Act. No

    opportunity was given for the accused to put forward the defence in s 1(5) of that Act.

    [34] The question then arises as to whether the starting pistol could be regarded as a

    component part of 'such a lethal or prohibited weapon'. The Divisional Court inCafferata's case would, no doubt, have concluded that it could be so regarded. That

    seems to us to be an impossible construction of s 57(1)(b). The definition of firearm

    cannot include a component part of a

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 11

    lethal barrelled weapon of any description from which any shot, bullet or other missile

    can notbe discharged. Any other construction would ignore the use of the word 'such'.

    If the starting pistol does not fall within the definition of firearm within s 57(1), no part

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    of it could do so. The Lord Justice-General in Kelly v MacKinnon 1982 SCCR 205 at 210

    said that the proposition that all parts of the dummy which did not require to be bored

    should be regarded as parts of a lethal weapon was 'untenable'. We agree. We do not

    think that Cafferata's case accurately expresses the law.

    [35] We can underline this conclusion by reference to the missing hammer. If the only

    reason that the starting pistol could not discharge a missile was the absence of the

    hammer, then it was plainly a firearm. Absent the hammer, a suitably sized 'ball peen'

    hammer could be used to strike the firing pin. If, contrary to our conclusion, a missile

    could be discharged from the starting pistol if the hammer had been present, then itsabsence would merely lead to the conclusion that the remaining parts of the pistol were

    component parts of a lethal or prohibited weapon as defined.

    [36] Our conclusion obviates the need to decide whether the judge was correct to

    withdraw the matter from the jury. Since the case was never advanced by deploying

    the provisions of the 1982 Act and it was never alleged that the firearm was an

    imitation firearm readily convertible for the purposes of the 1982 Act, the correct

    conclusion is that the conviction should be quashed. Mr Temple rightly observed that

    the language of s 57(1) of the 1968 Act was widely drawn for what he described as

    'public policy reasons'. It is clearly highly undesirable that starting pistols such as these

    should be used by someone, such as this accused, on the run from the police. But such

    considerations should not override the true construction of the 1968 Act when readwith the 1982 Act. Nor should we overlook provisions in the 1968 Act dealing with

    imitation firearms, as defined in s 57(4), without any need to have recourse to the 1982Act. There are specific sections which deal with possession of imitation firearms, such

    as ss 16A, 17, and 18. Section 17 would have been particularly apt in this case. It

    creates an offence to attempt to make any use whatever of an imitation firearm with

    the intent to resist or prevent lawful arrest or detention. It would have avoided the

    complicated issues to which this appeal gives rise. For the reasons we have given, the

    appeal is allowed and the conviction is quashed.

    [37] The appellant also seeks permission to appeal against a sentence of two years,

    passed consecutively to the five-year sentence in respect of the conviction forpossession of a firearm. We give permission to appeal against that sentence.

    [38] The appellant was convicted of murder 31 years before he was sentenced. His

    tariff was one of 15 years. In the 1980s he progressed through the prison system and

    was placed, eventually, in an open prison. He walked out and was away for 1218

    months before being returned to closed conditions for four years. He was then allowed

    to return to an open prison but left and disappeared for some nine years. He did not

    come to the attention of the police during that period of nine years.

    [39] According to his landlady, he had lived quietly and had helped her positively, and

    others.

    [40] The judge was plainly right to have in mind that there were two occasions, of

    which this escape was the second, when the appellant walked out of prison. But he had

    suffered for that since he had returned to closed conditions and his parole would have

    been delayed. We think, now that the

    [2013] 1 All ER 1 at 12

    conviction for the firearms offence has been quashed, that a sentence of two years'

    imprisonment for escape from lawful custody was manifestly excessive and a sentence

    of 18 months' imprisonment should be substituted. As our judgment makes clear, the

    appellant was, perhaps, fortunate not to be charged with an offence of using an

    imitation firearm. But we think it wrong that any sentence should reflect that fact. In

    those circumstances, the appeal against sentence is allowed, the sentence of twoyears quashed, and substituted by a sentence of 18 months' imprisonment.

    Appeal allowed.

    Sally Barker Solicitor (non-practising).

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