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PART 24TRIAL AND SENTENCE IN A MAGISTRATES’ COURT

Setting aside a conviction or varying a costs etc. order

24.18.—(1) This rule applies where under section 142 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980(1), the court can—

(a)set aside a conviction, or

(b)vary or rescind—

(i)a costs order, or

(ii)an order to which Part 31 applies (Behaviour orders).

(2) The court may exercise its power—

(a)on application by a party, or on its own initiative;

(b)at a hearing, in public or in private, or without a hearing.

(3) The court must not exercise its power in a party’s absence unless—

(a)the court makes a decision proposed by that party;

(b)the court makes a decision to which that party has agreed in writing; or

(c)that party has had an opportunity to make representations at a hearing (whether or not that party in fact attends).

(4) A party who wants the court to exercise its power must—

(a)apply in writing as soon as reasonably practicable after the conviction or order that that party wants the court to set aside, vary or rescind;

(b)serve the application on—

(i)the court officer, and

(ii)each other party; and

(c)in the application—

(i)explain why, as appropriate, the conviction should be set aside, or the order varied or rescinded,

(ii)specify any variation of the order that the applicant proposes,

(iii)identify any witness that the defendant wants to call, and any other proposed evidence,

(iv)say whether the defendant waives legal professional privilege, giving any relevant name and date, and

(v)if the application is late, explain why.

(5) The court may—

(a)extend (even after it has expired) the time limit under paragraph (4), unless the court’s power to set aside the conviction, or vary the order, can no longer be exercised;

(b)allow an application to be made orally.

[Note. Under section 142 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980—

(a)where a defendant is convicted by a magistrates’ court, the court may order that the case should be heard again by different justices; and

(b)the court may vary or rescind an order which it has made when dealing with a convicted defendant,

if in either case it appears to the court to be in the interests of justice to do so.

The power cannot be exercised if the Crown Court or the High Court has determined an appeal about that conviction or order.

See also rule 28.4 (Variation of sentence), which applies to an application under section 142 of the 1980 Act to vary or rescind a sentence.]

(1)

1980 c. 43; section 142 was amended by sections 26 and 29 of, and Schedule 3 to, the Criminal Appeal Act 1995 (c. 35).