“Jurisdictional Rigour under s.58 CJA 2003” – Commentary on AWY, R. v [2025] EWCA Crim 754

“Jurisdictional Rigour under s.58 Criminal Justice Act 2003”
Commentary on AWY, R. v ([2025] EWCA Crim 754)

1. Introduction

The Court of Appeal’s decision in R. v AWY crystallises, once again, the unforgiving procedural terrain that the prosecution must navigate when invoking section 58 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 (“CJA 2003”). The case arose from a multi-count indictment containing allegations of serious sexual offences, coercive behaviour and violence within an intimate relationship. After the complainant withdrew part-way through live evidence, the Crown sought to tender her interviews and statements as hearsay on the ground of fear; the trial judge declined, prompting the CPS to consider an interlocutory appeal. What followed was a muddled in-court exchange, an omitted acquittal undertaking, and, ultimately, an appellate dismissal for want of jurisdiction.

Beyond its immediate facts, the judgment serves as a sharp reminder that: (i) the “acquittal undertaking” must accompany, contemporaneously, any notification of intention to appeal; and (ii) failure to do so is jurisdictionally fatal, regardless of subsequent attempts to cure the defect.

2. Summary of the Judgment

Lord Justice Edis, giving the single judgment, refused the prosecution’s application for leave to appeal because the Court had no jurisdiction to entertain it. When oral notice of intention to appeal was given in the Crown Court, prosecuting counsel omitted the statutory guarantee that the respondent would be acquitted if leave were refused or the appeal abandoned (s.58(8)–(9) CJA 2003). Applying R v PY and R v BJF, the Court held:

  • An informal, ambiguous statement that “the Crown are intending to appeal” does amount to giving notice;
  • Because the undertaking was not proffered “at or before that time”, the pre-condition for jurisdiction was unmet;
  • Later written communications (letter of 7 March) could not retrospectively validate the defective notice;
  • Accordingly, the appellate court lacked power to consider the merits of the evidential ruling.

The Court also addressed reporting restrictions, concluding—by analogy with BJF—that, whether or not s.71 CJA 2003 technically applied, it would lift any restriction to permit publication of an anonymised version of the judgment.

3. Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Considered

(a) R v PY [2019] EWCA Crim 17

A comprehensive review of the legislative history and purpose of prosecution interlocutory appeals. It established the non-negotiable nature of the s.58(8) undertaking: without it, “the Court of Appeal has no jurisdiction whatsoever”. LJ Burnett underscored the Parliamentary bargain—expedited appeals in exchange for guaranteed acquittal in failure scenarios.

(b) R v BJF [2024] EWCA Crim 1670

Factually analogous: the prosecution emailed notice of intention to appeal, but the acquittal undertaking followed 90 minutes later. Williams LJ held the time lag fatal. The case is authority that even minimal delay breaches the contemporaneity requirement. In AWY, the Court adopts and applies BJF almost verbatim.

(c) Earlier authorities

Although not expressly cited, the line of cases beginning with R v Smith [2005] (the first major interpretation of s.58) inform the Court’s approach: the jurisdictional bar is absolute; purposive construction cannot override clear statutory wording.

3.2 Legal Reasoning

  1. Statutory Text is Conclusive. Section 58(8) uses the words “may not inform the court… unless, at or before that time, it informs the court” of the undertaking. The syntax links the two acts inseparably.
  2. Notice was in fact given. The Court rejects any suggestion that counsel’s hesitancy or sotto voce discussion rendered the notice equivocal. Once the judge and all in court proceeded on the basis that an appeal would follow (evidenced by discussion of expedition), the Rubicon was crossed.
  3. No room for de minimis or “substantial compliance”. The jurisprudence treats s.58 as conferring a conditional jurisdiction; failure to satisfy the condition voids the appeal ab initio. Later rectification is legally impossible because jurisdiction never vested.
  4. Policy consistency. The Court re-emphasises that formalism is not an end in itself but preserves the defendant’s protection against double jeopardy scenarios and trial disruption.

3.3 Impact of the Decision

The judgment, though building on existing authority, tightens practical expectations in several respects:

  • Operational discipline for prosecutors. CPS advocates must have a pre-drafted written undertaking ready before signalling an appeal. “We are still thinking about it” suffices only if the judge formally adjourns before notice is given.
  • Training for judges. Crown Court judges may feel compelled to ask expressly, “Are you also tendering the acquittal undertaking?”—to forestall defective notices recorded in open court.
  • Victim-witness strategy. In sexual-offence cases where the complainant’s continued participation is uncertain, the CPS cannot rely on a “we’ll fix it on appeal” approach. Non-compliant hearsay rulings may become unreviewable, pressing the need for in limine strategy and contingency planning.
  • Reporting-restriction jurisprudence. By assuming, without deciding, that s.71 applies and then disapplying it, the Court offers an expedient template for future anonymised publication.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

4.1 Section 58 Interlocutory Appeals

• Allows the prosecution, in certain Crown Court trials, to challenge adverse evidential or procedural rulings before verdict.
• Designed to correct errors swiftly without aborting trials.
• Comes with a price: the prosecution must guarantee acquittal if leave is refused or the appeal is abandoned—preventing the defendant being “kept in limbo”.
• That guarantee is termed the “acquittal undertaking”.

4.2 Contemporaneity Requirement

The undertaking and notice must be coupled. The statute’s timing phrase “at or before that time” means literally simultaneous (or earlier). Any gap—minutes or days—breaks the chain and nullifies jurisdiction. Think of a train ticket: if you board without having the ticket in hand, you cannot later buy it mid-journey to avoid a penalty fare.

4.3 Section 71 CJA 2003 Reporting Restrictions

Automatically restricts publication of material relating to prosecution interlocutory appeals, to avoid jury prejudice. But the Court of Appeal can lift or modify restrictions. Here, the Court assumed s.71 applied but lifted it (in anonymised form), mirroring earlier practice in BJF.

5. Conclusion

AWY reaffirms that the prosecution’s right of interlocutory appeal is strictly conditional. The Court of Appeal has drawn a bright-line rule: “Say the words, at the time, or forever hold your peace.” In practical terms, the judgment:

  • Consolidates PY and BJF into a firm trilogy on s.58 formalism;
  • Signals to prosecutors that procedural lapses will not be forgiven, no matter the gravity of the underlying allegations;
  • Encourages proactive case-management and cautions against over-reliance on appellate “safety nets”;
  • Provides clarity for media reporting through a pragmatic approach to s.71 restrictions.

In the broader legal ecosystem, the judgment strengthens defendants’ procedural protections, underlines appellate jurisdictional limits, and ensures that the legislative quid-pro-quo embedded in s.58 remains intact. It is therefore a precedent of high practical significance and a master-class in statutory rigour.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)

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