The theory of attribution in common law turns significantly on the application of the two main cases: Tesco Supermarkets v. Nattrass [1972] AC 153 (which provides for a strict reading of who the ‘directing mind and will’ of a company is), and Meridian Global Funds v. Securities Commission [1995] 2 AC 500 (which, in certain instances, allows for a more flexible understanding). In the application of the attribution rules to criminal law, Courts have understandably been more hesitant in applying a broad-based, flexible rule. Tesco v. Nattrass is seen as the default rule; and Meridian flexibility will be used only when the policy or words of the statute necessarily requires such a flexible reading. An illustration of the English approach to these questions is provided in St. Regis Paper Company v. R [2011] EWCA Crim 2527, where the Court of Appeal has again underscored the point that the default Tesco rules cannot be easily undermined in the criminal law context.
The question in St. Regis pertained to whether the company could be liable under certain pollution-control Regulations for the offence of “intentionally making a false entry”. The company owned five mills. The smallest of these five was the Cullompton Mill. The Cullompton Mill had 129 employees; amongst them was one Mr. Steer, the technical manager. Mr. Steer deliberately falsified records, and intentionally made a false entry. The question was whether this could be attributed to the company, such that the company could be said to have committed the offence. It was argued that (following Meridian) the actions of Mr. Steer could be attributed to the company. This was on the basis that the Regulations were intended to control the activities of companies in relation to environment protection, and unless the actions of persons like Mr. Steer were attributed to the company, the point of the Regulations would be emasculated.
Instinctively, one is drawn towards this argument; for it stands to reason that particularly in areas such as environmental protection, companies should not be able to evade obligations by pointing out to a lower-level functionary who actually performed these acts. However, in a considered judgment, the Court of Appeal rejected this argument, and held that the company could not be liable in the facts of the case. The Court gives several reasons for this. First, the Regulations would not be emasculated – the Regulations provided several strict-liability offences; and the Court held that these strict-liability offences would serve to uphold the purpose of the Regulation and would prevent companies from evading the Regulations. Thus, the effectiveness of the Regulations would not be eroded by refusing to adopt a flexible approach to attribution. Secondly, it was held that Mr. Steer was far too low in the corporate hierarchy. Mr. Steer was the technical manager of the smallest of the five mills. He reported to the Mill’s (not the company’s) Managing Director. That Managing Director reported to divisional technical officers and divisional environment officers, who in turn reported to the senior management of the company. In the absence of any fault with any of these intervening functionaries, Mr. Steer’s actions could not be attributed to the company. Further, the directors had expressly set out an environmental policy; under this policy, no discretion in respect of maintaining records was given to Mr. Steer. Under the policy, the Court held, Mr. Steer was simply not one who was in actual control of the operations of the company or part of the operations. The Court of Appeal held, “The importance of avoiding environmental pollution cannot be overstated. But the Regulation has sought to meet that danger in a carefully graduated way imposing both offences of strict liability and those which require proof of intention such as in 32(1)(g) and (h)…” Accordingly, it was held that the more flexible approach of Meridian could not be invoked in respect of Mr. Steer, who was far too low in the corporate hierarchy to be treated as an embodiment of the company.
The decision reiterates that Tesco operates as the default rule; and ordinarily only the acts of the senior management can be attributed to the company. This default rule can be displaced (by following the Meridian approach) only when the policy or words of the statute are clear in this regard. Further, the creation of an extensive strict-liability regime also played an important part in the Court’s reasoning: the policy of the statute would not require the flexible approach to mens rea being adopted, as the statute itself completely dispensed with mens rea in several situations, meaning thereby that the company could not automatically avoid responsibility by pointing towards a lower-level functionary. Whether the Meridian rules are attracted in the context of criminal law depends on a careful analysis of the relevant statute. [The approach in India is not yet clear – the Supreme Court in Iridium v. Motorola approved Tesco, but did not cite Meridian at all. However, the Supreme Court was concerned only with a prima-facie enquiry (pertaining to quashing u/s 482 Cr.P.C.); and it is not completely out of the question for Meridian flexibility to yet be imported. A discussion of the Indian position can be found in these two posts and this article.]