- Latest available (Revised)
- Original (As enacted)
This is the original version (as it was originally enacted).
(1)No court shall impose detention on a person under twenty-one years of age, unless the court is of opinion that no other method of dealing with him is appropriate.
(2)For the purpose of determining in pursuance of the provisions of subsection (1) of (this section whether any other method of dealing with a person mentioned therein is appropriate, the court shall obtain information about that person's circumstances from a probation officer or otherwise and shall consider that information ; and the court shall take into account any information before it which is relevant to his character and to his physical and mental condition.
(3)Where a court of summary jurisdiction imposes detention on an offender under twenty-one years of age, the court shall state the reason for its opinion that no other method of dealing with him is appropriate, and the reason shall be entered in the record of the proceedings along with the finding and sentence.
(4)Where, after the commencement of this section, in the case of a person who is of or over seventeen years of age but less than twenty-one years of age the court is of opinion as aforesaid, and either—
(a)if the person has been convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment, is satisfied, having considered all the circumstances of the case, that neither a sentence of borstal training nor a sentence of detention in a detention centre should be imposed ; or
(b)would have power but for the said commencement to impose imprisonment otherwise than by sentence;
it shall, subject to the following provisions of this Act, instead of imposing a term of imprisonment upon him impose detention in a young offenders institution for a term not exceeding the term for which he could have been imprisoned.
(1)The Secretary of State shall provide such young offenders institutions as appear to him to be necessary, and accordingly, after section 31(1)(c) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952 (which relates to remand centres, detention centres and borstal institutions), there shall be inserted the following paragraph— “and
(d)young offenders institutions, that is to say, places in which offenders upon whom detention therein has been imposed under the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1963, may be kept for suitable training and instruction.”
(2)In any enactment—
(a)any reference to a sentence of imprisonment as including a reference to a sentence of any other form of detention shall be construed as including a reference to a sentence of detention in a young offenders institution; and
(b)any reference to imprisonment as including any other form of detention shall be construed as including a reference to detention in a young offenders institution."
The power of a court to pass a sentence of borstal training under section 20 of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 shall not be exercised in the case of any person on whom such a sentence has previously been imposed and who has served any part thereof.
(1)The maximum period for which a person sentenced to borstal training after the commencement of this section may be detained in pursuance of section 33(2) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952 shall be two years instead of three years.
(2)The period for which a person sentenced to borstal training after the commencement of this section is to be under supervision under section 33(3) of the said Act after his release from a borstal institution shall, subject to any order of the Secretary of State under that subsection, be a period of one year beginning with the date of his release (instead of a period of three years from the date of sentence or of one year from the date of release, whichever period expires earlier).
(3)Where in pursuance of section 33(4) of the said Act an order is made for the recall of a person sentenced to borstal training after the commencement of this section and subsequently released, the maximum period for which he shall be liable to be detained following recall shall be three months instead of one year.
(1)Where in pursuance of section 33(4) of the said Act of 1952 an order is made for the recall of a person who is under supervision after his release from a borstal institution, that person shall, after the commencement of this section, instead of being detained in a borstal institution, be detained in a young offenders institution.
(2)The Secretary of State shall have power, in the case of a person who is detained in a borstal institution at the commencement of this section after his recall as aforesaid, to transfer that person to a young offenders institution.
(1)Where a person sentenced to borstal training, being under supervision after his release from a borstal institution, is convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment, the court may, instead of dealing with him in any other manner, make an order for his recall.
(2)An order for the recall of a person made as aforesaid shall have the like effect as an order for recall made by the Secretary of State under section 33(4) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952.
(1)Subject to the provisions of this section, in any case where a person who is not less than fourteen but under twenty-one years of age is convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment, and the court has been notified by the Secretary of State that a detention centre is available for the reception from that court of persons of his class or description, it may pass on him a sentence of detention in that centre for a fixed term of three months.
(2)A court shall not pass a sentence under this section in the case of a person who has served or is serving a sentence involving his detention for two months or more in a prison or in a young offenders institution or a sentence of borstal training, or in the case of a person who has served a sentence of detention in a detention centre, unless the court is of the opinion that, having regard to special considerations arising out of the circumstances of the case and the character of the offender, this method of dealing with him is the most appropriate.
(3)Where it appears to the Secretary of State that a person detained in a detention centre is unfit for such detention by reason of his health, without prejudice to any other powers he may have in the matter, he may, after consultation where practicable with the judge by whom or the presiding chairman of the court by which the sentence was passed, release that person ; and he shall then be required to be under supervision in accordance with section 11(1) of this Act.
(4)Section 19 of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 shall cease to have effect.
(1)The term for which a person may be detained in a detention centre shall not exceed three months at a time; and accordingly no court may pronounce an order the effect of which would be that a person would be liable to be detained for more than that period.
(2)Where a court has before it a person convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment who is serving a sentence of detention in a detention centre or who has been sentenced to and has not yet started to serve such a sentence as aforesaid, it may pass either of the following isentences (subject to the requirements of any enactment relating to those sentences)—
(a)a sentence of detention in a young offenders institution, or, if the person is of or over twenty-one years of age, a sentence of imprisonment, for a period not exceeding the aggregate of the unexpired portion of the sentence of detention in a detention centre and the maximum period of detention in a young offenders institution or of imprisonment, as the case may be, which the court may impose for the offence of which it has convicted the person; or
(b)a sentence of borstal training ;
and in that event the sentence of detention in a detention centre shall cease to have effect.
(1)For section 32 of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952 (which relates to transfers from prison to borstal institution and vice versa) there shall be substituted the following section:—
(1)If the Secretary of State is satisfied that a person detained in a young offenders institution in pursuance of a sentence is under twenty-one years of age and might with advantage be detained in a borstal institution, he may, after consultation where practicable with the judge by whom or the presiding chairman of the court by which the sentence was passed, transfer that person to a borstal institution; and the provisions of the next following section shall thereupon apply to him as if he had on the date of the transfer been sentenced to borstal training:
Provided that if on that date the unexpired term of his sentence is less than two years those provisions shall apply to him as if he had been sentenced to borstal training two years before the expiration of that term.
(2)If a person detained in a borstal institution is reported to the Secretary of State by the visiting committee to be incorrigible, or to be exercising a bad influence on the other inmates of the institution, the Secretary of State may present an application to the sheriff within whose jurisdiction the institution is situated for commutation to detention in a young offenders institution of the unexpired part of the term for which the said person is then liable to be detained in a borstal institution, and on any such application the sheriff may commute the said unexpired part to detention as aforesaid for such a term, not exceeding that unexpired part, as he may think fit; and for the purposes of this Act (other than those of subsections (3) and (4) of section 33) and of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1963 the said person shall be treated as if he had been sentenced to detention in a young offenders institution for that term.
(3)If in the case of a person who is not less than seventeen years of age, who is detained in a detention centre, it is reported to the Secretary of State by the visiting committee that he is not amenable to the discipline of the centre by reason of his health, the Secretary of State may transfer that person to a young offenders institution and there detain him for a period not exceeding the unexpired part of the term for which the said person was sentenced to be detained in the detention centre.
(4)The powers conferred upon the Secretary of State by the last foregoing subsection may be exercised in the case of a person who has not attained the age of seventeen years if the Secretary of State is satisfied, having regard to the character and development of the person, that it is appropriate that he should be detained in a young offenders institution.”
(2)On the coming into operation of the provisions of section 1 of this Act, the Secretary of State shall have power, in the case of any person who is under twenty-one years of age and who is serving a sentence of imprisonment under which he would not normally be released within the next three months, to transfer that person to a young offenders institution; and for the purposes of this Act and of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952, any person so transferred shall be treated as if he had been sentenced to detention in a young offenders institution.
(3)Where an order has been made under any of the enactments specified in the next following subsection for the committal or transfer to a civil prison in Scotland of a person who is under twenty-one years of age, that person shall be taken to a young offenders institution.
(4)(a)(a) The enactments referred to in the last foregoing subsection are—
the Army Act 1955
the Air Force Act 1955
the Naval Discipline Act 1957,
and any rules made thereunder.
(b)For the purposes of the aforesaid enactments, any reference therein to a like sentence of a civil court shall include, in relation to a person taken to a young offenders institution under the last foregoing subsection, a reference to a sentence of detention in a young offenders institution, and references to a civil prison and to imprisonment and any cognate references shall be construed accordingly.
(1)Subject to the provisions of this section, where a person serving a sentence of detention in a young offenders institution has attained the age of twenty-one years, the Secretary of State shall have power to transfer him to prison.
(2)No person shall be detained in a young offenders institution after he has attained the age of twenty-three years, and accordingly any person so detained shall, not later than the day immediately preceding his twenty-third birthday, be transferred to prison.
(3)Where a person has been transferred to prison under this section, he shall be treated for the purpose of his serving the unexpired part of his sentence and of his supervision on release as if the sentence of detention passed upon him were a sentence of imprisonment for a like term, and the provisions of this Act and of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952 relating to the treatment and supervision of prisoners shall apply to him accordingly.
(1)A person detained in a detention centre in pursuance of a sentence under section 7 of this Act, or transferred therefrom to a young offenders institution under section 32 (3) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952, shall, after his release and until the expiration of a period of twelve months from the date of his release, be required to be under the supervision of such person as may be specified in the notice to be given to him by the Secretary of State on his release, and shall, while under that supervision, comply with such other requirements as may be so specified:
Provided that the Secretary of State may, at any time, modify or cancel any of the said requirements or order that a person who is under supervision as aforesaid shall cease to be under supervision.
(2)Subject to the provisions of the next following subsection, if before the expiration of the said period of twelve months the Secretary of State is satisfied that a person under supervision under the last foregoing subsection has failed to comply with any requirement for the time being specified in the notice given to him under that subsection, he may, after the commencement of section 1 of this Act, by order recall him to a young offenders institution if the offender has attained the age of seventeen years or, where the offender is less than seventeen years of age, to a detention centre; and thereupon he shall be liable to be detained in that institution or centre until the expiration of the period of fourteen days from the date of his being taken into custody under the order, and if at large he shall be deemed to be unlawfully at large:
Provided that—
(a)any such order shall, at the expiration of the said period of twelve months, cease to have effect unless the person to whom it relates is then in custody thereunder; and
(b)a person shall not be recalled more than once under this subsection by virtue of the same sentence under section 7 of this Act.
(3)The power conferred upon the Secretary of State by the last foregoing subsection to recall an offender to a young offenders institution may be exercised in the case of a person who has not attained the age of seventeen years if the Secretary of State is satisfied, having regard to the character and development of the person, that it is appropriate that he should be detained in a young offenders institution.
(4)The Secretary of State may, at any time, release a person who is detained after recall as aforesaid; and the provisions of this section shall apply to a person released by virtue of this subsection, subject to the modification that the period referred to in subsection (1) shall be calculated from the date of his original release.
(5)Where a person who has attained the age of seventeen years is recalled under this section before the commencement of section 1 of this Act, he shall be recalled to a detention centre instead of to a young offenders institution.
(1)A person detained in a young offenders institution in pursuance of a sentence shall, where the term of his detention is six months or more, after his release and until the expiration of a period of twelve months from the date of his release, be required to be under the supervision of such person as may be specified in the notice to be given to him by the Secretary of State on his release, and shall, while under that supervision, comply with such other requirements as may be so specified :
Provided that the Secretary of State may, at any time, modify or cancel any of the said requirements or order that a person who is under supervision as aforesaid shall cease to be under supervision.
(2)The Secretary of State may by order extend the provisions of the last foregoing subsection to persons detained as aforesaid whose term of detention is less than six months but not less than three.
(3)If before the expiration of the said period of twelve months the Secretary of State is satisfied that a person under supervision under subsection (1) of this section has failed to comply with any requirement for the time being specified in the notice given to him under that subsection, he may by order recall him to a young offenders institution; and thereupon he shall be liable to be detained in that institution, and if at large he shall be deemed to be unlawfully at large :
Provided that any such order shall, at the expiration of the said period of twelve months, cease to have effect unless the person to whom it relates is then in custody thereunder.
(4)The period for which a person may be detained under the last foregoing subsection shall not exceed three months.
(5)The Secretary of State may, at any time, release a person who is detained under this section; and the provisions of this section shall apply in the case of a person so released subject to the following modifications:—
(a)the period referred to in subsection (1) shall be calculated from the date of his original release; and
(b)the period during which he shall be liable to be detained on further recall shall be the period referred to in subsection (4) reduced by any time during which he has previously been detained under this section.
(1)Where a person sentenced to detention in a young offenders institution, being under supervision after his release from such an institution, is convicted of an offence punishable with imprisonment, the court may, instead of dealing with him in any other manner, make an order for his recall.
(2)An order for the recall of a person made as aforesaid shall have the like effect as an order for recall made by the Secretary of State under section 12 of this Act.
(1)If it appears to the Secretary of State that a person serving a sentence of imprisonment is a person to whom this section applies, he shall, by notice given to such person in accordance with paragraph 2 of Schedule 1 to this Act, place him under supervision under that Schedule on his release from prison.
(2)Subject to the provisions of subsection (4) thereof, this section applies—
(a)to any person serving a sentence of imprisonment for a term of three years or more ;
(b)to any person serving a sentence of imprisonment for a term of not less than six months,
but less than three years, who is under the age of twenty-six years at the commencement of the sentence ; but does not apply to a person serving a sentence of imprisonment for life.
(3)The Secretary of State may by order substitute a lower limit of three months instead of six months in paragraph (b) of subsection (2) above.
(4)This section shall not apply to persons serving a sentence of imprisonment commencing before such date as may be prescribed by order of the Secretary of State under this subsection ; and any such order may prescribe different dates in respect of sentences described in paragraphs (a) and (b) respectively of subsection (2) of this section, and, in respect of sentences comprised in the said paragraph (b), either according to the length of the term of imprisonment under a sentence or to the age of the person on whom it is passed.
(1)Subject to the provisions of this section, the powers of the Secretary of State under the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952 shall include power to make such arrangements as appear to him to be necessary for the supervision of offenders released from institutions provided under that Act.
(2)The Secretary of State may no longer place offenders under the supervision of the After Care Council in pursuance of section 18(2) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952, and accordingly for that subsection there shall be substituted the following subsection:—
“(2)It shall be the duty of the After Care Council to advise the Secretary of State on any question relating to the after-care of offenders which he may refer to them, and to bring to his attention any matter relating to after-care of which in their opinion he ought to be apprised”.
In section 8 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 (which provides in certain cases where the person convicted has two previous convictions for a maximum sentence of six months imprisonment), for paragraphs (a) and (b) there shall be substituted the following paragraphs:—
“(a)a second or subsequent offence inferring dishonest appropriation of property, or attempt thereat, or
(b)a second or subsequent offence inferring personal violence”.
(1)For the purposes of the First Offenders (Scotland) Act 1960, any order made by a court of summary jurisdiction under section 1 or section 2 of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 (which provide for absolute discharge and probation) shall be treated as a conviction.
(2)For the purpose of determining whether a person is a first offender within the meaning of that Act, a previous conviction shall be disregarded after the expiration of a period of ten years from the date of that conviction, being a period exclusive of any period spent by him in custody under sentence in respect of the conviction.
(1)At any time during the period of a person's detention in an approved school the managers of the school may, and if the Secretary of State so directs shall, release him:
Provided that no person shall be released within the first six months of that period without the consent of the Secretary of State.
(2)A person who, after the commencement of this section, is released from an approved school (whether under subsection (1) of this section or at the expiration of the period of his detention, and whether he 'has been released on any previous occasion or not) shall, after his release, be subject to supervision under Part I of Schedule 2 to this Act.
(3)Part II of Schedule 2 to this Act shall have effect for the purpose of enabling the managers of an approved school to exercise certain supervisory powers in relation to a person who has been under their supervision under Part I of that Schedule, if requested by him to do so.
(4)Section 78 of the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1937 and paragraph 6 of Schedule 2 to that Act (which provisions relate to supervision, licence and recall) shall cease to have effect.
(1)Where, in the case of a person who is detained in an approved school, the managers of that school have decided to bring him before a court of summary jurisdiction under paragraph 8 of Schedule 2 to the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1937 on the ground of serious misconduct, that person may be dealt with in accordance with the following provisions of this section.
(2)If it appears to a justice of the peace (not being a manager of the approved school), on sworn information laid by or on behalf of the managers of the school, that a person detained in the school, to whom subsection (1) above applies, should be removed therefrom without delay, the justice may issue a warrant authorising the managers or, on cause shown, directing a constable to remove that person to a place specified in the warrant in accordance with the next following subsection, and section 20 (3) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 (which relates to the bringing of persons in custody before a court) shall apply in relation to a person removed as aforesaid as it applies to a person apprehended under a warrant issued under that section.
(3)Any one of the following places may be specified in a warrant issued for the purposes of the last foregoing subsection, that is to say.—
(a)remand home,
(b)remand centre,
(c)police station,
(d)approved school,
(e)hospital :
Provided that in the case of the two places last mentioned the managers or, as the case may be, the board of management are willing temporarily to receive the person named in the warrant.
(4)In this section any reference to a justice of the peace includes a reference to the sheriff and to a magistrate.
(1)It shall no longer be a requirement that the managers of an approved school who bring a person before a court under paragraph 8 of Schedule 2 to the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1937 on the ground of serious misconduct shall be authorised in that behalf by the Secretary of State.
(2)A court of summary jurisdiction, in exercising its powers under section 70 of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 (which among other things confers certain powers on a court in relation to persons brought before it for serious misconduct while detained in an approved school or for absconding therefrom), shall have the like power to adjourn the case for inquiry, or for any other necessary cause, as it has in relation to the case of an accused or convicted person, and may, during the period of adjournment, commit a person so brought before it to any place (other than a police station) that may be specified for the purposes of section 19 (2) above.
(3)A person committed under this section to an approved school shall, while liable to be detained therein, be treated as if he were so liable by virtue of an approved school order; and, without prejudice to the foregoing provision, the enactments relating to .persons detained in approved schools shall apply in relation to any person so committed as if he were detained in and under the care of the managers of the school in which he was detained before committal.
(1)If it appears to the Secretary of State that the provision made in any approved school with regard to any matter relating to the premises or equipment of the school, the number or grades of the staff employed in the school, or the education, training or welfare of persons under the care of the managers is inadequate or unsuitable, he may give to the managers such directions as he thinks necessary for securing that proper provision is made with respect thereto.
(2)Where it appears to the Secretary of State that the managers of an approved school have failed to give effect to any directions under this section, section 83 (2) of the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1937 (which empowers the Secretary of State in certain circumstances to withdraw his certificate of approval) shall apply as it applies where he is dissatisfied as mentioned in that section.
(1)The Secretary of State may by order make provision for regulating the constitution and proceedings of the managers of any approved school other than a school provided by a local authority or by a joint committee representing two or more local authorities; and any such order shall have effect notwithstanding anything in any trust deed relating to the school.
(2)Before making an order under the foregoing subsection in respect of any school, the Secretary of State shall afford to the managers of the school an opportunity for making representations with respect to the proposed order; and in making any such order the Secretary of State shall have regard to all the circumstances of the school, and to the manner in which it has been managed theretofore.
(3)In the case of an approved school, other than a school provided by a local authority or by a joint committee representing two or more local authorities, the Secretary of State may appoint one or more persons as additional members of the body constituting the managers of the school; and any person so appointed shall, notwithstanding anything in any trust deed relating to the school or in any order made in respect of the school under subsection (1) of this section, be one of the managers of the school until such time as his appointment is terminated by the Secretary of State or under subsection (4) of this section.
(4)Any order or appointment made under this section in respect of an approved school shall cease to have effect in the event of that school ceasing to be an approved school; but nothing in this subsection shall affect the validity of anything done while the order or appointment was in force.
(5)In this section " trust deed ", in relation to any school, includes any instrument (not being an order under this section) regulating the constitution of the school or its maintenance, management or conduct, or the constitution or proceedings of its managers.
(1)The limit imposed by section 3 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 upon the amount of the fine which may be imposed by a court of summary jurisdiction other than a sheriff court on convicting a person of a common law offence shall be raised from ten pounds to fifty pounds, and the limit on the amount of caution which any such person as aforesaid may be ordained to find shall be raised from twenty pounds to fifty pounds.
(2)The limit imposed by section 7 (1) of the said Act upon the amount of the fine which may be imposed by the sheriff on summarily convicting any person of a common law offence, and upon the amount of caution which any such person as aforesaid may be ordained to find, shall be raised from twenty-five pounds to one hundred and fifty pounds.
(3)The limit imposed by section 40 of the said Act upon the amount of the fine which may be imposed in substitution of a period of imprisonment shall be raised from twenty-five pounds to one hundred pounds.
The limit imposed by section 33 (1) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 upon the amount of the fine which may be imposed by a court upon a witness who shall be deemed guilty of contempt of court under that subsection shall be raised from three pounds to twenty-five pounds.
The following sections shall be substituted for sections 42 and 43 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954:—
(1)Where a court of summary jurisdiction has imposed a fine on an offender or ordered him to find caution, the court shall, subject to the provisions of the next following subsection, allow him at least seven days to pay the fine or the first instalment thereof or, as the case may be, to find caution; and any reference in this and the next following section to a failure to pay a fine or other like expression shall include a reference to a failure to find caution.
(2)If on the occasion of the imposition of a fine—
(a)the offender appears to the court to possess sufficient means to enable him to pay the fine forthwith; or
(b)on being asked by the court whether he wishes to have time for payment he does not ask for time; or
(c)he fails to satisfy the court that he has a fixed abode; or
(d)the court is satisfied for any other special reason that no time should be allowed for payment,
the court may refuse him time to pay the fine and, if the offender fails to pay, may exercise its power to impose imprisonment and, if it does so, shall state the special reason for its decision.
(3)Where time is allowed for payment of a fine or payment by instalments is ordered, a court of summary jurisdiction shall not, on the occasion of the imposition of a fine, impose imprisonment in the event of a future default in paying the fine or an instalment thereof unless the offender is before it and the court determines that, having regard to the gravity of the offence or. to the character of the offender, or to other special reason, it is expedient that he should be imprisoned without further inquiry in default of payment; and where a court so determines, it shall state the special reason for its decision.
(4)Where a court of summary jurisdiction has imposed imprisonment in accordance with the provisions of the last foregoing subsection, then, if at any time the offender asks the court to commit him to prison, the court may do so notwithstanding subsection (1) of this section.
(5)Nothing in the foregoing provisions of this section shall affect any power of a court of summary jurisdiction to order a fine to be recovered by civil diligence.
(6)Where time has been allowed for payment of a fine imposed by a court of summary jurisdiction, the court may, subject to any rules under this Act, on an application by or on behalf of the offender, and after giving the prosecutor an opportunity of being heard, allow further time for payment.
(1)Where a court of summary jurisdiction has imposed a fine or ordered the finding of caution without imposing imprisonment in default of payment, it shall not impose imprisonment on an offender for failing to make payment of the fine, unless on an occasion subsequent to that sentence the court has enquired into his means in his presence; but this subsection shall not apply where the offender is in prison.
(2)A court of summary jurisdiction may, for the purpose of enabling enquiry to be made under this section—
(a)issue a citation requiring the offender to appear before the court at a time and place appointed in the citation ; or
(b)issue a warrant of apprehension.
(3)On the failure of the offender to appear before the court in response to a citation under this section, the court may issue a warrant of apprehension.
(1)Without prejudice to the operation of section 42 (2) of this Act, where a court of summary jurisdiction has imposed a fine on an offender, the court may, of its own motion or on the application of the offender, order payment of that fine by instalments of such amounts and at such time as it may think fit, and it shall be the duty of the court to inform the offender of his right to make an application as aforesaid.
(2)Where any instalment is not paid by the time so ordered, the offender shall, subject to the provisions of the last foregoing section, be deemed to be in default of payment of a fine of the amount of the unpaid balance and dealt with accordingly, and where the court has already imposed imprisonment in default of payment the offender shall be liable to be imprisoned for a period that bears to the period of imprisonment so imposed the same proportion, as nearly as may be, as the amount of the unpaid balance bears to the total amount of the fine.
(1)Where an offender has been allowed time for payment of a fine by a court of summary jurisdiction, the court may, either on the occasion of the imposition of the fine or on a subsequent occasion, order that he be placed under the supervision of such person as the court may from time to time appoint for the purpose of assisting and advising the offender in regard to payment of the fine.
(2)An order made in pursuance of the last foregoing subsection shall remain in force so long as the offender to whom it relates remains liable to pay the fine or any part of it unless the order ceases to have effect or is discharged under the next following subsection.
(3)An order under this section shall cease to have effect on the making of a transfer of fine order under section 44 of this Act in respect of the fine or may be discharged by the court that made it without prejudice, in either case, to the making of a new order.
(4)Where an offender under twenty-one years of age has been allowed time for payment of a fine by a court of summary jurisdiction, the court shall not order the form of detention appropriate to him in default of payment of the fine unless he has been placed under supervision in respect of the fine or the court is satisfied that it is impracticable to place him under supervision.
(5)Where a court, being satisfied as aforesaid, orders the detention of a person under twenty-one years of age without an order under this section having been made, the court shall state the grounds on which it is so satisfied.
(6)Where an order under this section is in force in respect of an offender, the court shall not impose imprisonment in default of the payment of the fine, unless the court has, before so doing, taken such steps as may be reasonably practicable to obtain from the person appointed for the supervision of the payment of his fine a report, which may be oral, on the offender's conduct and means and shall consider any report so obtained, in addition, in a case where an enquiry is required by section 43 of this Act, to that enquiry.
(1)Where under the provisions of the last four foregoing sections a court is required to state a special reason for its decision or the grounds on which it is satisfied that it is undesirable or impracticable to place an offender under supervision, the reason or, as the case may be, the grounds shall be entered in the record of the proceedings along with the finding and sentence.
(2)Any reference in the sections last mentioned to imprisonment shall be construed, in the case of an offender on whom by reason of his age imprisonment may not lawfully be imposed, as a reference to the lawful form of detention in default of payment of a fine appropriate to that person, and any reference to prison shall be construed accordingly.”
(1)It shall mo longer be a requirement that a transfer of fine order within the meaning of section 44 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 shall be made only on the application of the person on whom the fine was imposed, and accordingly subsection (3) of that section shall cease to have effect.
(2)For the purpose of enabling .transfer of fine orders to be made—
(a)by courts of summary jurisdiction in Scotland in respect of persons residing in England and Wales ; and
(b)by magistrates' courts in England and Wales in respect of persons residing in Scotland,
the section set out in Part I of Schedule 3 to this Act shall be substituted for the said section 44, and .the sections set out in Part II of that Schedule shall be inserted after section 72 of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1952.
Where a person convicted on indictment has been committed to prison or otherwise detained for failure to pay a fine, the provisions of section 45 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 (which relates to the reduction of the term of imprisonment where payment of a fine in part is made by a prisoner) shall apply to him as if he had been summarily convicted.
Paragraph (3) of section 43 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1908 (which, as read with section 77(4) of that Act, directs that a fine not exceeding twenty-five pounds may be substituted for imprisonment on conviction on indictment for the contravention of any enactment which provides no other penalty than imprisonment for such a contravention) shall be amended by the omission of the words " a fine not exceeding twenty-five pounds " and by the insertion, at the end of the paragraph, of the words “a fine as provided in the following table:—
Period of imprisonment | Amount of fine |
---|---|
Not exceeding three months | Not exceeding £100 |
Exceeding three months but not exceeding six months | Not exceeding £200 |
Exceeding six months but not exceeding one year | Not exceeding £400 |
Over one year | Such fine as the court may, in its discretion, decide.” |
Where, in the case of an offender in a borstal institution, detention centre or approved school, or under supervision following release therefrom, who has not made payment of a fine imposed before his being so detained, it appears to the Secretary of State that remission of the fine might assist the rehabilitation of the offender, he may, after consultation where practicable with the judge by whom or the presiding chairman of 'the court by which sentence was passed, remit that fine in whole or in part.
(1)Any rule of law or the provisions of any enactment which enable a previous conviction to be libelled as an aggravation of an offence shall cease to have effect.
(2)Where a person is convicted of an offence, any rule of law which precludes the laying and proof before the court of any previous conviction in respect of that person shall cease to have effect, and the court may have regard to any such conviction in deciding on the disposal of the case.
(3)The provisions of any enactment relating to the laying and proof of previous convictions before a court shall apply to a conviction laid before a court in pursuance of this section.
(4)Nothing in the foregoing provisions of this section shall affect the provisions of any enactment relating to the sentence which a court may pass on a second or subsequent conviction.
(1)A previous conviction may be proved against any person in any criminal proceedings by the production of such evidence of the conviction as is mentioned in this section and by showing that his fingerprints and those of the person convicted are the fingerprints of the same person.
(2)A certificate purporting to be signed by or on behalf of the Chief Constable of Glasgow or the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, containing particulars relating to a conviction extracted from the criminal records kept by the person by or on whose behalf the certificate is signed, and certifying that the copies of the fingerprints contained in the certificate are copies of the fingerprints appearing from the said records to have been taken in pursuance of regulations for the time being in force under section 11 of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952, or under section 16 of the Prison Act 1952, from the person convicted on the occasion of the conviction or on the occasion of his last conviction, shall be sufficient evidence of the conviction or, as the case may be, of his last conviction and of all preceding convictions and that the copies of the fingerprints produced on the certificate are copies of the fingerprints of the person convicted.
(3)Where a person has been apprehended and detained in the custody of the police in connection with any criminal proceedings, a certificate purporting to be signed by the chief constable concerned or a person authorised on his behalf, certifying that the fingerprints produced thereon were taken from him while he was so detained, shall be sufficient evidence in those proceedings that the fingerprints produced on the certificate are the fingerprints of that person.
(4)A certificate purporting to be signed by or on behalf of the governor of a prison or of a remand centre in which any person has been detained in connection with any criminal proceedings, certifying that the fingerprints produced thereon were taken from him while he was so detained, shall be sufficient evidence in those proceedings that the fingerprints produced on the certificate are the fingerprints of that person.
(5)A certificate purporting to be signed by or on behalf of the Chief Constable of Glasgow, and certifying that the fingerprints, copies of which are certified as aforesaid by or on behalf of the Chief Constable or the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis to be copies of the fingerprints of a person previously convicted and the fingerprints certified by or on behalf of a chief constable or a governor as aforesaid, or otherwise shown, to be the fingerprints of the person against whom the previous conviction is sought to be proved, are the fingerprints of the same person, shall be sufficient evidence of the matter so certified.
(6)The method of proving a previous conviction authorised by this section shall be in addition to any other method of proving the conviction.
(1)At the end of section 65 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 (which among other things relates to the procedure in courts of summary jurisdiction on the determination of an appeal) there shall be added the following subsection :—
“(4)Where an appellant who has been granted interim liberation does not thereafter proceed with his appeal, the court from which the appeal was taken shall have power, where at the time of the abandonment of the appeal the person is serving a term or terms of imprisonment imposed subsequently to the conviction appealed against, to order that the sentence or, as the case may be, the unexpired portion of that sentence relating to that conviction should run from such date as the court may think fit, not being a date later than the date on which the term or terms of imprisonment subsequently imposed expire.”
(2)At the end of section 71 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 (which relates to the powers of the High Court of Justiciary on the hearing of appeals) there shall be added the following subsection:—
“(7)Where at the time an appeal is dismissed or refused as aforesaid the appellant is serving a term or terms of imprisonment imposed subsequently to the conviction appealed against, the High Court shall have the like powers in regard to him as may be exercised by a court of summary jurisdiction in pursuance of subsection (4) of section sixty-five of this Act.”
Section 22 of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 (which empowers a court to order certain discharged prisoners to notify their addresses) shall cease to have effect.
Where a court has made an order for the forfeiture of an article, the court or any justice of the peace may, if satisfied on information on oath—
(a)that there is reasonable cause to believe that the article is to be found in any place or premises; and
(b)that admission to the place or premises has been refused or that a refusal of such admission is apprehended,
issue a warrant of search which may be executed according to law; and for the purposes of this section, any reference to a justice of the peace includes a reference to the sheriff and to a magistrate.
For section 26 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1887 (which relates to the giving of notice to an accused of the first diet in solemn procedure) there shall be substituted the following section:—
(1)Where a person is charged on indictment, the notice for the first diet of compearance shall call on that person to appear in the sheriff court before which he appeared on judicial examination unless the Lord Advocate otherwise directs.
(2)The Lord Advocate may make a direction that the first diet of compearance may be taken at a sheriff court other than the sheriff court where the accused appeared on judicial examination either in respect of a class of cases or in respect of particular cases.”
A court, on conviction of a person on indictment, shall have power to correct an error or defect in a notice of previous conviction relating to the person convicted, and accordingly after section 39(1)(e) of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 there shall be inserted .the following paragraph:—
“(ee)on the conviction of an accused, person, it shall be competent for a court to amend a notice of previous conviction so laid by deletion or alteration for the purpose of curing any error or defect therein :
Provided that no such amendment shall be made to the prejudice of the accused.”
(1)The following provisions of this section shall apply where a court has refused to admit a person to bail or, where a court has so admitted a person, the bail fixed in his case has not been found.
(2)A court shall, on the application of any such person as aforesaid, have power to review its decision to admit to bail or its decision as to the bail fixed and may, on cause shown, admit the person to bail or, as the case may be, fix bail at a lower amount.
(3)An application under this section, where it relates to the original decision of the court, shall not be made before the fifth day after that decision and, where it relates to a subsequent decision, before the fifteenth day thereafter.
(4)Nothing in the provisions of this section shall affect any right of a person to appeal against the decision of a court in relation to admitting to bail or to the bail fixed.
(5)In the foregoing provisions of this section, any reference to bail includes a reference to caution for interim liberation and any reference to admitting to bail shall include a reference to ordering the finding of caution as aforesaid.
(1)A warrant issued in the Isle of Man for the arrest of a person charged with an offence may, after it has been endorsed by a justice of the peace in Scotland, be executed there by the person bringing that warrant, by any person to whom the warrant was originally directed or by any officer of law of the county or place where the warrant has been endorsed as aforesaid in like manner as any such warrant issued in Scotland.
(2)In this section—
" endorsed " means endorsed in the like manner as a process to which section 4 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Process) Act 1881 applies;
" justice of the peace " includes a sheriff and a magistrate ;
" officer of law " includes a constable within the meaning of the Police (Scotland) Act 1956, a sheriff officer, prison officer and any other person having authority to execute a warrant of court.
(1)A warrant issued in Scotland for the apprehension of a person charged with an offence may be executed in England and Wales by any constable acting within his police area; and subsections (3) and (4) of section 102 of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1952 (execution on Sunday and execution without possession of the warrant) shall apply to the execution in England and Wales of any such warrant.
(2)A warrant issued in England and Wales for the arrest of a person charged with an offence may be executed in Scotland by any constable appointed for a police area in like manner as any such warrant issued in Scotland.
(3)A warrant may be executed by virtue of this section whether or not it has been endorsed under section 14 or section 15 of the Indictable Offences Act 1848.
(4)Nothing in this section affects the execution in Scotland of a warrant to which section 123 of the Bankruptcy Act 1914 applies.
(5)Section 12 of the Metropolitan Police Act 1839 shall cease to have effect.
Nothing in section 6(3) (extent) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1957 or in the Summary Jurisdiction (Process) Act 1881 shall be construed as precluding the service in Scotland, with a summons which is so served under the said Act of 1881, of any such notice or statement as is mentioned in subsection (1) of section 1 of the said Act of 1957 (plea of guilty in absence of accused).
A warrant of apprehension issued by the sheriff, to which section 25 of the Sheriff Courts (Scotland) Act 1838 applies, may be executed throughout Scotland in like manner as it may be executed within his jurisdiction, and accordingly the proviso to the said section 25 (which proviso restricts the execution of such a warrant without endorsation) shall cease to have effect.
Section 6 of the Prevention of Crimes Act 1871 (which among other things provides for the keeping of a register for Scotland of all persons convicted of crimes, to be kept in Edinburgh) shall, so far as it relates to Scotland, cease to have effect.
The power to make rules conferred on the High Court of Justiciary by section 76(1) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 shall, without prejudice to the generality of that subsection, include power to make provision for the manner in which an accused person or witness may be cited in any proceedings under that Act, and accordingly section 18(3) of that Act (which regulates citation) shall cease to have effect.
For the removal of doubt it is hereby declared that it is competent to prosecute summarily in the sheriff court crimes of robbery and assault with intent to rob.
In paragraphs (c), (d) and (e) of section 4(2) of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 (which subsection places certain restrictions on the jurisdiction of a court of summary jurisdiction other than the sheriff court)—
(a)the limit on the amount involved in certain offences specified shall be raised from ten pounds to twenty-five pounds; and
(b)for the restriction by reference to two previous convictions of any offence inferring dishonest appropriation of property there shall be substituted a restriction by reference to one previous conviction of such an offence.
The maximum period for which a court of summary jurisdiction may continue a case on special cause shown under section 21 of the Summary Jurisdiction (Scotland) Act 1954 shall be increased from fourteen days to twenty-one days.
For the removal of doubt it is hereby declared that it is competent for any Scottish court to defer sentence after conviction for a period and on such conditions as the court may determine.
The Legal Aid (Scotland) Act 1949 shall have effect in relation to legal aid in connection with criminal proceedings subject to the amendments set out in Schedule 4 to this Act.
The number of judges of the Court of Session who may be appointed shall be increased to seventeen, and accordingly section 1(1) of the Administration of Justice (Scotland) Act 1948 shall have effect as if for the word " sixteen " there were substituted the word " seventeen ".
(1)Any power of the Secretary of State to make orders under this Act (other than orders made under section 11, section 12(1) or (3) or section 22) shall be exercisable by statutory instrument.
(2)A statutory instrument containing an order under section 12(2) or section 14 of this Act shall be subject to annulment in pursuance of a resolution of either House of Parliament.
(1)In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, the following expressions have the meanings hereby assigned to them, that is to say :—
" fine " includes an instalment of a fine;
" impose detention " or " impose imprisonment " means pass a sentence of detention or imprisonment, as the case may be, or make an order for committal in default of payment of any sum of money or for failing to do or abstain from doing anything required to be done or left undone;
" prison " does not include a naval, military or air force prison.
(2)References in this Act to a court do not include references to a court-martial; and nothing in this Act shall be construed as affecting the punishment which may be awarded by a court-martial under the Naval Discipline Act 1957, the Army Act 1955 or the Air Force Act 1955 for a civil offence within the meaning of those Acts.
(3)For the purposes of any reference in this Act to a term of imprisonment or to a term of detention in a young offenders institution, consecutive terms and terms which are wholly or partly concurrent shall be treated as a single term.
(4)Where the age of any person at any time is material for the purposes of any provision of this Act regulating the powers of a court, his age at the material time shall be deemed to be or to have been that which appears to the court, after considering any available evidence, to be or to have been his age at that time.
(5)References in this Act to an offence punishable with imprisonment shall be construed in relation to any offender without regard to any prohibition or restriction imposed by section 1 of this Act and by section 18 (1) of the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1949 (which subsection prohibits the imprisonment of persons under seventeen years of age) upon the imprisonment of offenders of his age.
(6)Any reference in this Act to any other enactment is a reference thereto as amended, and includes a reference thereto as extended or applied, by or under any other enactment, including this Act.
(1)The enactments described in Schedule 5 to this Act shall have effect subject to the amendments specified therein, being minor amendments and amendments consequential on the foregoing provisions of this Act.
(2)The enactments described in Schedule 6 to this Act are hereby repealed to the extent specified in the third column of that Schedule.
(3)The amendment or repeal by this Act of any enactment described in the said Schedule 5 or Schedule 6 (except the amendment to section 33(4) of the Prisons (Scotland) Act 1952 relating to young offenders institutions) shall not extend to that enactment in so far as it applies to any person—
(a)by virtue of his having been sentenced to borstal training before the commencement of section 4 of this Act; or
(b)by virtue of his having been released from an approved school before, and not having again been so released after, the commencement of section 18 of this Act.
(1)The following provisions of this Act shall extend to England and Wales, that is to say:—
section 26;
sections 39 and 40 ;
section 52;
Schedules 3, 5 and 6, so far as they relate to enactments which extend to England and Wales.
(2)The following provisions of this Act shall extend to Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands, that is to say—
section 52;
Schedule 5, so far as it relates to enactments which extend to Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands.
(3)The following provisions of this Act shall extend to the Isle of Man, that is to say—
section 38;
section 52;
Schedule 5, so far as it relates to enactments which extend to the Isle of Man.
(4)Save as aforesaid, and except so far as it relates to the interpretation or commencement of the said provisions, this Act shall extend only to Scotland.
(1)There shall be paid out of moneys provided by Parliament any increase attributable to the provisions of this Act in the sums which, under any other enactment, are payable out of moneys so provided.
(2)There shall be defrayed out of the Consolidated Fund of the United Kingdom and out of moneys provided by Parliament respectively any increase attributable to section 49 of this Act in the sums required to be so defrayed.
(1)The foregoing provisions of this Act (including the Schedules therein referred (a) shall come into operation on such date as the Secretary of State may by order appoint.
(2)Different dates may be appointed by order under this section for different purposes of this Act; and any reference in this Act to the commencement of any provision of this Act shall be construed as a reference to the date appointed for the purposes of that provision.
This Act may be cited as the Criminal Justice (Scotland) Act 1963.
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