[2025] UKUT 289 (AAC)
Upper Tribunal Administrative Appeals Chamber

[2025] UKUT 289 (AAC)

Fecha: 21-Ago-2025

the fact that the Respondent had committed an offence in service did not mean that service caused the offence. The decision to commit an offence was a personal choice, and it just so happened that he

(i)

the fact that the Respondent had committed an offence in service did not mean that service caused the offence. The decision to commit an offence was a personal choice, and it just so happened that he was in service: Wedderspoon. Put another way, the Respondent’s service may have provided the setting for him to commit the offence, but it cannot be said that service caused the offence.

(ii)

the fact that the Respondent was sentenced to detention at MCTC for committing an offence was likewise not an event which was caused by service, for the same reason that the offence itself was not caused by service.

(iii)

nor was the immediate cause (moving chairs at MCTC) a service cause. The Respondent was not in service at the time.

(i)

not in “service”;

(ii)

serving a sentence of detention not as a serviceman but as a civilian;