Introduction
The idea that a legal person cannot commit a crime is outdated. Societas delinquere non potest?Footnote 1 Of course, it can! Common law jurisdictions took important steps in the 19th century before large parts of continental Europe followed suit, step by step, in the ensuing one hundred years.Footnote 2 A global wave of corporate crime adoption swept the 1990s and 2000s, fuelled in part by international conventions that demanded corporate sanctions in cases of terrorist financing, organised crime, or corruption.Footnote 3 The purposes and effects of corporate criminal liability, however, remain disputed.Footnote 4
Distinct approaches emerged as to how the criminal liability of legal persons can be triggered. Depending on both theoretical and practical considerations, jurisdictions chose primarily between vicarious liability solutions, identification and attribution approaches, and aggregated fault or corporate culture doctrines.Footnote 5 Key differences arise mainly from the scope of human beings who can trigger the legal person's liability.Footnote 6 Nowadays, only few countries continue to uphold their resistance against the notion of corporate crime altogether.Footnote 7
In Thailand, lawmakers recently took the first steps to include corporate criminal liability explicitly in the Criminal Code.Footnote 8 This development follows decades of doctrinal and practical uncertainty that triggered regular scholarly criticism.Footnote 9 Only limited attention, however, has been paid to the historical evolution of corporate crime since the late 19th century. This article therefore examines how the possibility to hold legal persons criminally liable grew out of an English legal import, was advanced decisively by the Supreme Court, and continued its life as a legal irritant in the civil law environment of post-codification Siam/Thailand.Footnote 10 It carves out the path from early legal transfers to strict, vicarious, and fault-based corporate criminal liability.
The article connects to an emerging body of literature on the British legacy in presumed civil law Thailand.Footnote 11 This scholarship reexamines and partly challenges the traditional narrative of Siam's sudden flip from initial English law imports to continental-style codification.Footnote 12 The field of criminal law, however, has so far been neglected.Footnote 13 By selecting corporate criminal liability, the article addresses a non-traditional concept that entered Siam from abroad.
The evolution begins in the late 19th century, at a time when English law is becoming a secondary legal layer to meet some of the challenges arising from Siam's rapidly developing trade relations. British-type strict liability penalties are included in royal company charters, while Siamese law just commences to adopt the concept of the legal person. Following King Chulalongkorn'sFootnote 14 instruction to adopt continental-style codification in criminal and private law, the country's first Penal Code of 1908 stipulates criminal liability for natural persons only. A subsequent 1911 Act on Partnerships and Companies contains the penalties derived from the company charters. They are subsequently moved into the Penal Code, while strict vicarious liability is preserved. The Supreme Court then expands the concept to fault-based crimes in 1930, imitating earlier steps by English courts. Legislators push back and exclude corporate crimes from the 1956 Criminal Code. The Supreme Court, however, continues the expansion and introduces the English-origin identification doctrine into Thai law. Legal scholarship responds with sharp rebukes, pointing to nullum crimen sine lege. But the Court holds course and establishes a line of precedents in a legal system that is conventionally qualified as civil law.
These are the sketches of a process in which codified and statutory law met with judge-made corporate crime doctrine, leading to legal irritation, a notion proposed by Teubner.Footnote 15 This article, however, highlights the argument that irritation does not occur by itself but requires institutional drivers. In the case of corporate criminal liability in Thailand, it was the Supreme Court that was determined to preserve and expand the English law legacy. The Court's choice, in turn, was shaped by decades of English influence on Thai legal education and practice.
The article starts with an overview of the multiple uncertainties of Thai corporate criminal law. It recapitulates the notion of legal irritants and emphasises their drivers. The main part then sets out in eight steps the origins, evolution, and drivers of corporate criminal liability in Thailand. Finally, the conclusion interprets the findings and provides an outlook on the possible future of Thai corporate crime doctrine.
The multiple uncertainties of corporate criminal liability in Thailand
Despite the global expansion of corporate criminal liability, doctrinal models tend to differ from country to country.Footnote 16 Thai scholarship has generally settled on the distinction between three types of corporate offences:Footnote 17
1. Offences specifically addressed at legal persons;
2. Offences addressed at persons with specific characteristics if legal persons have such characteristics;Footnote 18 and
3. General criminal offences addressed at ‘whoever’ (ผู้ใด phu dai), which the courts also apply to legal persons.
The first type relies on specific legislation, the second on statutory interpretation, and the third type was added by the Supreme Court. Under the latter, legal persons can be punished by attributing to them the conduct and fault of their representatives, usually directors, but possibly also other personnel.Footnote 19 The Supreme Court's conceptual explanation distinguishes between intentional and negligent crimes.Footnote 20 Under the first two types of offences, the circle of relevant natural persons is not precisely circumscribed either. It extends beyond the representatives,Footnote 21 but how far exactly remains subject to case-by-case assessments.Footnote 22 The corporate crime models thus differ depending on the criminal provision in question. It is largely assumed that vicarious liability applies to the first two types, while the identification doctrine covers the third.Footnote 23
It is this latter type that caused most controversies. First and foremost, scholarly commentary argued that the Supreme Court violated the legality principle, nullum crimen sine lege, according to which, in many legal systems, every crime must be stipulated by written law before the criminal conduct occurred.Footnote 24 It is a fundamental principle of Thai criminal lawFootnote 25 and part of the Thai Constitution.Footnote 26 The critics’ key argument is that the Criminal Code's drafters did not intend the Code to be applied to legal persons.Footnote 27 According to this view, the Court's jurisprudence on the third type of corporate offences expanded criminal liability without a valid legal basis. Consequently, every punishment based on this type violates the nullum crimen principle.
But the problems did not end there. In some cases, the Supreme Court neglected its principles of attribution. For instance, it held a company liable under a general (‘whoever’) offence, even though it could not be proved that any of its representatives had committed the electricity theft in question.Footnote 28 The Court also used a kind of ‘reverse attribution’ when it derived a director's criminal liability from the company's crime, defying hitherto accepted categories.Footnote 29 Further scholarly criticism was provoked by considering legal persons and their representatives as joint principals, which appears problematic as a director can hardly conspire or make a common plan with the company they represent.Footnote 30
Legal transplants and drivers of irritation
The article situates itself within the multifaceted debate on legal transfers. Scholarly work on borrowing, imports, or transplants of legal rules covers an increasingly differentiated spectrum of theoretical considerations, historical accounts, and practical assessments.Footnote 31 The debate is still frequently connected to the coordinates set by Alan Watson and Pierre Legrand and their opposing views on the feasibility of legal transplants and the proper methods of comparative law.Footnote 32 They are not reiterated here. Recent research and scholarly commentary aim to shift the attention to the study of distinct types of transplanting activities and their practical implementation rather than to focus the inquiry on the question of ‘success’ and its vague parameters.Footnote 33
For the purposes of this article, Teubner's concept of the legal irritant is the most fruitful. It refers to a rule or principle that is transferred from one legal system to another and, in the receiving system, produces quite unintended outcomes.Footnote 34 It irritates in the sense that it ‘triggers a whole series of new and unexpected events.’Footnote 35 The irritation might affect the ‘law's binding arrangements’, possibly even leading to ‘wild perturbations’.Footnote 36 As a consequence, both the existing system as well as the ‘alien element’ need to be adapted through ‘an evolutionary dynamic in which the external rule's meaning will be reconstructed and the internal context will undergo fundamental change.’Footnote 37
Teubner's seminal article examined the import of good faith into British contract law through EU-driven legal harmonisation in the 1990s. Here, however, we are dealing with a different jurisdiction, a different area of law, and a distinct historical setting and motivation for legal transfer. The concept is nonetheless highly relevant to conceptualise the evolution of corporate criminal liability in Thailand. This is because traditional Siamese law neither recognised legal persons nor could it, consequently, prescribe corporate liability for offences committed by their personnel. The introduction of English-style penalties for companies in the latter half of the 19th century thus triggered a series of events that transformed parts of Siamese corporate law along a criminal law trajectory. Subsequent continental-style codification, however, matched uneasily with the English concepts. What followed was legal irritation.
While Teubner argued that ‘good faith is irritating British law’,Footnote 38 this article aims to highlight the driving forces of irritation. It emphasises that legal irritation does not occur by itself and illustrates Thailand's Supreme Court as an agent of irritation. Consequently, the article argues that irritation is a choice; that there can be alternatives, less irritating routes. This differs from malicious legal transplants that require the intention to do harm.Footnote 39 The case of corporate criminal liability in Thailand rather demonstrates how historical and institutional legacies explain the choices made. Irritation neither happens automatically nor because of bad faith, but because of preferences that are shaped by earlier developments. For corporate crime in Thailand, the choices resulted in significant setbacks for legal certainty, compromising the legal transfer's long-term success.
Origins, evolution, and drivers of corporate criminal liability in Thailand
Setting the scene: Traditional Siamese law meets growing trade
Corporate offences were not part of Siamese law until the era of legal and administrative modernisation. Most of what we know today about the traditional law of prior Siamese Kingdoms stems from the Three Seals Code 1804, a collection and preservation of Ayutthayan law compiled during the first reign of the Rattanakosin (Bangkok) Kingdom.Footnote 40 The Three Seals Code, including its criminal law elements, remained by and large applicable until the entry into force of modern codified law.Footnote 41
The law of Ayutthaya was strongly influenced by ancient Indian law, particularly by the Code of Manu, which, in fact, recognised corporate bodies such as associations of castes, religious believers, or professions, and guaranteed their right to govern their own internal affairs. Under the relevant provisions, however, if heads of associations acted in bad faith, the King could only intervene and punish the head but not the corporate body itself.Footnote 42
Similar autonomous domains were recognised in traditional Siamese law. Family units, communities, tribal, and religious groups were the most prevalent segments of society.Footnote 43 The Three Seals Code also contained provisions on joint investments into commercial activities and the distribution of profits.Footnote 44 Nonetheless, ‘in Siam there [were] no laws on companies and their existence, and their statutes must be proven by witnesses and by assumptions.’Footnote 45 Consequently, laws to punish enterprises were absent, too.
With Siam's rapidly expanding trade relations, however, partnerships and companies entered the Kingdom's economic and legal system.Footnote 46 The late 19th century saw foreign businessmen, often of European origin, establish companies in Siam to conduct trade in rice and manufactured goods, railway construction, and other business. By virtue of a system of treaties that Siam had been pressed to conclude with several foreign powers, however, the non-Siamese owners were not subject to the local laws but to their respective home jurisdictions.Footnote 47 Companies could be established and operated by foreignersFootnote 48 based on foreign laws. Legal disputes involving foreigners were mainly resolved in consular courts.Footnote 49 Over time, Siamese citizens established companies, too,Footnote 50 but non-Siamese nationals often held major stakes in the entities founded in this era.Footnote 51
Planting the seeds: Company charters and strict corporate liability English-style
The voids of Siamese corporate law needed to be filled. Like in other legal branches,Footnote 52 English law was the first choice. Companies under the Kingdom's laws were established by way of royal charters.Footnote 53 This mode of establishment was used until the entry into force of the SiameseFootnote ‡ Act on Partnerships and Companies 1911,Footnote 54 which introduced simple registration. The concept of chartered companies had developed in England, where its practical importance spanned from the 14th century to the enactment of the English Registration Act (or Joint Stock Companies Act) 1844, which provided for incorporation by registration.Footnote 55 English legislators had thus abandoned the charter model for most practical commercial purposes by the mid-19th century. In Siam, however, its comparatively belated adoption allowed King Chulalongkorn's administration initial control over the creation of companies. It also advanced the introduction of legal personality in a piecemeal way: Each charter included a section which stipulated that legal personality was bestowed upon the company.Footnote 56 These provisions had constitutive character and could be found either as a concluding paragraph at the end of the charter,Footnote 57 or in a section toward the beginning.Footnote 58
Siamese company charters largely resembled one another in terms of structure, content, and wording. They covered the requirements and procedures related to the establishment, operation, modification, and dissolution of companies, as well as the respective duties of the company itself, its directors, and its shareholders. Several transliterated English terms illustrate an English influence, such as เมโมแรนดำออฟแอสโซซิเอชั่น (memorandum of association), อาติเกิลออฟแอสโซซิเอชั่น (articles of association), ไดเรกเตอร์ (director), แชร์ (share), เอเยนต์ (agent), and โว้ต (vote).
Regarding provisions on sanctions, the charters prescribed the liability of directors, members, agents, employees, other personnel, and, importantly, of the company itself for the violation of stipulated duties. A comparison between the charter provisions and similar sections of the English Companies Act 1862, in force in England throughout this era,Footnote 59 reveals remarkable parallels. The English Act established penalties for eight types of corporate offences,Footnote 60 several of which were also part of Siamese company charters.Footnote 61 The similarities between the English and Siamese provisions are tangible.Footnote 62 They reveal that the concept of strict corporate liabilityFootnote 63 for violations of statutory duties had travelled to Siam. Ordinary intentional crimes could, in turn, only be committed by natural persons, such as directors and agents, who could act with intention and thus be ‘guilty’.Footnote 64
English law: More than a gap filler
Beyond its relevance in the business sector, English law also dominated Siamese legal education. The curriculum of the country's first law school, established in 1897 and attached to the Ministry of Justice, was primarily based on English law and, to a lesser extent, the law of the Three Seals Code.Footnote 65 The school was run by Raphi Phatthanasak (1874–1920), Prince of Ratchaburi, a son of King Chulalongkorn and a graduate of the University of Oxford. He also authored key textbooks that combined Siamese and English law.
English concepts became part of Siamese legal education, such as the notions of consideration and trust in private law, and the concept of mens rea in criminal law.Footnote 66 The focus of legal education on English law prevailed for almost four decades, until 1934, when the law school was integrated into the newly founded Thammasat University, where continental European concepts were taught to increasing extents.Footnote 67 In judicial practice, eminent criminal court judges, who had graduated from English universities, conducted trials following English trial procedures.Footnote 68 Important legislation dating back to the modernisation era, such as the Evidence Act 1894, the Temporary Criminal Procedural Act 1896, and the Civil Procedure Act 1896, incorporated principles from English law.Footnote 69 The appointment of Stewart Black as Siam's first British Judicial Adviser in 1902 marked the beginning of a long line of British lawyers who served the government in various positions, including as Supreme Court judges,Footnote 70 along advisers from other countries. The significance of English law in legal education and practice throughout this era can therefore not be overstated.
The rise of continental legal concepts and the challenge for corporate crime
With the recruitment of Gustave Rolin-Jaequemyns in 1892,Footnote 71 Siam had taken a decisive turn toward legal reform. In 1894, the Legislative Council was created to assist the King in considering new legislation. The Council's early laws were derived from English models.Footnote 72 In criminal law, a special commission drafted revisions of existing rules. However, they were withdrawn in 1897.Footnote 73 To nonetheless satisfy foreign demands for reform and thus overcome the treaty-based extraterritorial regime, a thorough legislative overhaul appeared to be a non-negotiable step.Footnote 74 The Penal Code 1908 became the first codified law of this era.Footnote 75
The Code was drafted in English and translated into Thai. The two drafting phases illustrate the growing influence of continental European legal advisers. The first drafting commission (1898–1901) still largely adopted elements from the British-made Indian Penal Code 1860 and, to a lesser extent, from the Japanese and Italian codes. The second commission (1904–1908), however, switched to use mainly continental codes as sources,Footnote 76 which has been explained with reference to the drafters’ personal backgrounds.Footnote 77 The process also reflected King Chulalongkorn's increasing preference for systematic civil law style codification, which he considered similar to the Three Seals Code.Footnote 78 For the local practitioners, who were used to English concepts and procedures, however, ‘the continental system was alien.’Footnote 79
The drafts of both phases focused exclusively on the criminal liability of natural persons, although the Indian Penal Code 1860, influential mainly during the first drafting phase, applied to natural and legal persons alike.Footnote 80 The focus on human beings reflected both traditional Siamese law as well as the continental criminal law doctrine of the time.Footnote 81 Consequently, the legal situation began to change: Siam's codified law was on a continental-law trajectory that still generally rejected corporate crimes, while company law, including corporate sanctions, largely remained in English-law territory.
No irritation yet: The consolidation of strict vicarious liability
Although first drafts of a company law circulated since 1900,Footnote 82 the Act on Partnerships and Companies was promulgated only in 1911. The Act recognised the two types of legal persons and introduced incorporation by registration. The law on corporate sanctions, however, did not substantially change. The corporate penalties from the now-obsolete royal charters were incorporated into the Act.Footnote 83 Consistent with their prior quasi-criminal status, they prescribed strict vicarious liability.
After all, the 1911 Act was just an interlude before the promulgation of the Civil and Commercial Code (CCC) in 1925, which incorporated large parts of the Act. Only the penalty provisions had to go elsewhere. They were added to the Penal Code and, together with some additional offences, formed the second part's eleventh chapter.Footnote 84 The newly added Sections were, technically, covered by the Code's general part that demanded proof of intention (เจตนา jetana) for every crime unless stipulated otherwise.Footnote 85 It is doubtful, though, that the drafters intended this consequence. Switching strict liability offences into fault-based corporate crimes would have been a doctrinal leap. An influential contemporary textbook, in use in the Ministry of Justice law school, also rejected such possibility.Footnote 86 The inclusion of specific corporate offences in the amended Penal Code did therefore not result in a switch to fault-based liability. Rather, corporate liability remained limited to certain strict vicarious liability offences.
The situation resembled earlier steps in English law, where corporate crime had grown out of vicarious tort liability.Footnote 87 Siamese criminal and tort law thus converged with regard to their respective English roots. As Reekie and Reekie argued, the drafters of Siam's Civil and Commercial Code apparently rejected the fault-based conception of vicarious liability found in the civil codes of Japan and Germany – two jurisdictions which are conventionally considered most influential on the CCC. The drafters likely adopted a strict vicarious liability notion in line with English law.Footnote 88 By 1925, criminal and tort liability of legal persons were therefore aligned, limited to strict vicarious liability. This was nonetheless a fertile ground from which the Supreme Court pushed for more, again tracing developments in England.
Driving irritation: The Supreme Court takes the lead on fault-based corporate crimes
Following the 1925 amendment of the Penal Code, the Supreme Court's jurisprudence took important steps to extend the scope of corporate criminal liability. Most noteworthy is the 1930 Supreme Court decision No 265/2473. It dealt with one of several defamation cases against the English-language newspaper Siam Free Press. The defendant newspaper truthfully reported that the plaintiffs had confessed to the police the misappropriation of gold jewellery. The first instance court, the appeals court, and the Supreme Court considered this ‘bad news’ defamatory as no public interest exemption applied.Footnote 89 In addition, the Supreme Court affirmed the appeals court's finding according to which both the editor and the Siam Free Press Company Ltd should be held criminally liable.
In short, the Supreme Court, without acknowledging it, introduced two major innovations:
1. A legal person was held criminally liable for an intentional crime (defamation) rather than for a strict liability crime.
2. A general offence (defamation) of the Penal Code, which hitherto was understood to apply to natural persons only, was the basis to punish a legal person.
In an apparent attempt to justify this expansion, the Court cited Section 33 of the Magazine, Document and Newspaper Act BE 2479 (1927), which had been enacted three years before. According to this provision, the chief editor and the owner of a newspaper were to be held jointly, ie, vicariously, liable for the publication of criminal content. In addition, the Court referred to Sections 347 to 353 of the Penal Code, which had been added in 1925. This latter set of sections, however, merely contained specific crimes related to certain aspects of managing companies, while saying nothing about defamation.
The Supreme Court seemingly advocated a view according to which the Penal Code amendment had injected a more general principle into Thai criminal law: that legal persons could be held criminally liable even absent any explicit provision to this effect. The ‘reading together’ of the different sources led the judges to the conviction that the right result could only be the newspaper's corporate liability for defamation. This finding, however, expanded the grounds of vicarious liability from mere strict liability to liability for fault, since punishment for defamation required the proof of intention.
In coming to this conclusion, the Supreme Court ignored Section 25 of the Magazine, Document and Newspaper Act 2479 that, in fact, limited liability to natural persons only. This provision said that where the owner of a newspaper was a partnership or a limited company, only its manager or director could be held vicariously liable, but not the legal person. The Court thus reached its progressive result in disregard of explicit statutory limitations, but seemingly with a strong determination to drive the development of Thai criminal law. The judges confirmed their finding in a subsequent case.Footnote 90
Written law versus judge-made law: Parliament's rebuke and the Supreme Court's revenge
A survey of cases of the following years, however, indicates that prosecutorial and judicial practice went back to holding companies criminally liable under strict liability offences. These were cases dealing with violations of specific legislation, such as the Mining Act BE 2461 (1918),Footnote 91 the Act on the Control of Consumer Goods and Consumption and Other Items in Times of Crisis BE 2488 (1945),Footnote 92 and the Exploration and Prohibition of Rice Detention Act BE 2489 (1946).Footnote 93
In 1956, the new Criminal Code BE 2499 was promulgatedFootnote 94 to bring Thai criminal law into conformity with legal developments that had occurred in the half century since the first Penal Code's promulgation. However, as Chanhom noted, ‘most provisions in the Penal Code were transferred to the Criminal Code with minimal revisions.’Footnote 95 Importantly, the drafters restored the Code's purity regarding its applicability to natural persons. All provisions on the criminal liability of companies and partnerships were taken out and moved into the new Act Prescribing Offences Related to Registered Partnerships, Limited Partnerships, Limited Companies, Associations and Foundations BE 2499 (1956) (referred to hereinafter as the Corporate Offences Act).
Moreover, the legislators refused to pick up the preceding judicial steps that had extended corporate criminal liability to general crimes. Quite to the contrary, the Council of State rejected to include a draft provision in the Corporate Offences Act that would have declared all offences ‘in this Act or other laws’ applicable to legal persons.Footnote 96 The Council's Secretary-General, Yut Saeng-uthai,Footnote 97 argued that, if at all, this issue should be addressed in the draft Criminal Code. That, however, would not really be necessary because each specific offence in statutory legislation could be interpreted as to whether or not legal persons could be punished.Footnote 98 In explaining the Council's stance to members of parliament, Yut also referred to the Siam Free Press case:
There has once been a Supreme Court judgment where a company that owned a newspaper was also held criminally liable for defamation. The committee believes that this should be a matter on which parliament should enact specific laws; or otherwise leave it to the courts to interpret in what cases registered partnerships, limited partnerships or limited companies should be liable under criminal law.Footnote 99
Yut, who had received his doctoral degree in Germany,Footnote 100 highlighted the courts’ general authority to interpret rather than make laws. His disagreement with the Supreme Court's progressive turn two decades earlier is tangible. In addition, he clearly favoured a statutory piecemeal approach rather than a grand solution in the Criminal Code. Parliament followed his advice, rejected draft Section 3 of the Corporate Offences Act, and purified the Criminal Code from all corporate crime elements.
The Supreme Court's chance for revenge came with a trademark imitation case in 1963.Footnote 101 The first instance and the appeals court had found the managing partner of an ordinary partnership criminally liable under the relevant sections of the 1956 Criminal Code.Footnote 102 The trial judges rejected punishment of the legal person as they considered legal persons unable to act intentionally. A general meeting of the Supreme Court, however, overruled the acquittal on revision.Footnote 103 The highest court argued that the physical and mental elements of a general crime could be attributed to a legal person by its representatives. Ironically, the judges supported their reasoning with reference to a provision of the Civil and Commercial Code, according to which, for matters of private law, the purpose of a juristic person is expressed by its representatives.Footnote 104
The decision's implication was not only a late affirmation of the 1930 Siam Free Press ruling that general (‘whoever’) provisions could be applied to both natural and legal persons, but more importantly, the Court attempted a doctrinal explanation which, however, rejected the vicarious liability approach. Scholars commented that the Supreme Court had adopted something like the English identification (or ‘alter ego’) doctrine, according to which the will of a company was identical with the will of its directing mind, which is the mind of its directors.Footnote 105
The ruling duped parliament: Beyond reaffirming the Court's earlier stance on the applicability of general criminal law to legal persons, the judges doubled down with an effort to entrench their solution in legal doctrine. The palpable aim was to rid themselves of the shackles that parliament had attached. The 1963 decision indeed laid the legal groundwork that would support decades of jurisprudence.Footnote 106 But of course, a law-making court sat uncomfortably with the country's shift to civil law methodology.
The Supreme Court's preferences exhibit astonishing parallels to prior developments in England. To recapitulate, the Thai Court's jurisprudence on corporate criminal liability took two defining steps:
• 1930: The Siam Free Press case, expanding vicarious liability from strict to fault-based crimes and from specific statutory offences to general crimes of the Penal Code;
• 1963: The trademark imitation case, introducing the attribution of fault from representatives to the company for general (‘whoever’) crimes.
The decisions mirrored earlier steps in England:
• 1917: In Mousell Brothers Ltd v London and North Western Railway Co, a warehouse worker deliberately omitted to provide full information on goods transported by railway, resulting in the violation of toll payment duties under the English Railway Clauses Consolidation Act 1845 (UK). In its decision, the English High Court moved beyond strict liability when holding that Mousell Brothers was vicariously liable for the intentional crime committed by its employee.Footnote 107
• 1944: In a trio of fraud cases, the English High Court's King's Bench division and the English Court of Appeal held that companies could be criminally liable for intentional statutory and common law offences, arguing that a responsible person's knowledge and intention must be imputed to the company. The cases involved corporate liability for a transport manager's submission of falsified records to fraudulently acquire petrol coupons,Footnote 108 a conviction for common law conspiracy to defraud by a managing director and a registered owner,Footnote 109 and a company's fraud liability due to false tax returns made by a branch and a sales manager with the intent to deceive.Footnote 110
As early as in 1917, English courts were thus prepared to punish legal persons not only for strict liability crimes but also for intentional offences, based on the concept of vicarious liability, which had been carried over from tort law.Footnote 111 The Supreme Court of Siam adopted this view thirteen years later in the Siam Free Press case.
The English courts then took another step and adopted an attribution model for general offences that allowed the punishment of legal persons for the fault of their representatives. The three cases are conventionally regarded as the historical starting points of the identification doctrine in English criminal law.Footnote 112 Nineteen years later, the Thai Supreme Court followed suit in the trademark imitation case, adding a doctrinal reference to the Civil and Commercial Code.
Grooming the irritant, surpassing the motherland
The 1917 and 1944 English rulings were treated with caution in their home country. The House of Lords described the application of vicarious liability to mens rea crimes as a ‘long-standing anomaly’.Footnote 113 This hesitation regarding liability for intentional offences also affected the identification doctrine's development, which ‘has been allowed only an extremely restricted ambit’Footnote 114 in English judicial practice. Despite the House of Lords’ 1971 decision in the false advertisement case Tesco v Nattrass, which vindicated the law's bifurcation into vicarious and identification liability,Footnote 115 English courts have been more inclined to interpret statutory law to impose strict or vicarious liability on corporations.Footnote 116
In contrast, hesitation turned out to be only temporary in Thailand. As mentioned, the 1930 Siam Free Press ruling was an ‘anomaly’ that was not reflected in subsequent prosecutorial and judicial practice, and in 1956, the Council of State even rebuked the Supreme Court somewhat belatedly. It was not until 1963 that the Court struck back by importing the identification doctrine into the trademark imitation case. From there, however, a long list of casesFootnote 117 entrenched the doctrine, despite repeated scholarly criticism.Footnote 118 It became a firm, though unwritten, part of criminal law that resulted in the punishment of companies and partnerships for a large variety of Criminal Code offences. Over the course of the last decade (2010–2020) alone, these included cases involving false incrimination,Footnote 119 providing false evidence,Footnote 120 forgery of documents,Footnote 121 unlawful use of names or trademarks,Footnote 122 defamation,Footnote 123 theft,Footnote 124 fraud,Footnote 125 defrauding creditors,Footnote 126 and trespassFootnote 127 – quite the opposite of the ‘extremely restricted ambit’ that English courts granted it. In addition, the Court extended its approach to negligent offences, holding companies liable for manslaughter where managing directors had violated their duties of care.Footnote 128
As a result, the Supreme Court not only prolonged but intensified the English legacy as it continued to replicate developments in corporate crime doctrine. This amounted to judge-made law in a legal system that was supposedly being programmed on written laws. In this sense, and with reference to Teubner, the Court irritated one of Thai law's ‘binding arrangements.’ In the process, ‘the external rule's meaning [was] reconstructed’, offering much wider application to the identification doctrine than it received in England itself; and the ‘internal context [underwent] fundamental change’Footnote 129 in the sense that Thai criminal law expanded beyond the written law, and this expansion became deeply entrenched over the course of the next 60 years.
Conclusion and outlook
Why did the Thai Supreme Court become a driver of legal irritation? The characteristically brief judgments allow us only to speculate about its motivation. References to public policy or the need to fill gaps in the law have remained conspicuously absent from its jurisprudence. But the judges apparently felt the need to punish companies and partnerships for intentional crimes committed by their personnel and looked for ways to do so.
Of course, legal transfers to enhance domestic law may occur for a variety of reasons. The will to improve the country's economic performance and attract foreign business and investment is often an important factor,Footnote 130 but less so if the transfer results in expanded corporate criminal liability. Sacco has argued for ‘imposition and prestige’ as the two fundamental causes of imitation.Footnote 131 With regard to legal transplants by the judiciary, Cuniberti argued that judges may also want to increase their own reputation in relevant circles.Footnote 132 Watson highlighted, in particular, the enormous influence of legal education on legal attitudes.Footnote 133
In the case of Siam, the initial entry of English law was certainly catalysed by Siam's semi-colonial status and the Western pressure to ‘modernise’ during the 19th and early 20th centuries. By the 1930s, however, all major codes had entered into force, and no foreign government was forcing the continued adoption of English corporate crime doctrine. The Supreme Court's decision to drive legal irritation was its own choice. The prestige of English law must have been a significant factor in this respect. It had grown over decades of legal teaching and practice, and it set the Court on a self-confident, rule-making path, which may also have raised its profile among fellow judges and other practitioners. Within Miller's typology of legal transplants,Footnote 134 the case of corporate criminal liability in Thailand may thus be very roughly categorised as a legitimacy-generating and cost-saving transplant, rather than an externally dictated or ‘entrepreneurial’ one. Thai academic circles nonetheless responded with repeated criticism and renewed rejection. In their eyes, the Court must have been out of step with the times. Many of them took the legal constraints of nullum crimen sine lege much more seriously, whereas the Court continued its journey beyond the written law.
The present study also raises questions about the role of precedents in Thai law. While Vietnamese lawmakers have recently opted to introduce the notion of binding precedents by way of a ‘mixed legal transplant’,Footnote 135 no similar developments have been taking place in Thailand, where court decisions are not a source of law. Looking back at Supreme Court cases from the 1920s and 30s, however, Reekie and Reekie identified several judgments in which the respective judges used the common law style of reasoning and compared the material facts of a case with those of cited precedents, even including scattered references to English cases.Footnote 136 Over time, the Court developed its characteristic style of briefly citing prior decisions as a point of reference without detailed discussion. Whether Thai judges treat prior cases as sources of law or merely as orientations for interpretation remains unclear. But the Supreme Court's jurisprudence on intentional corporate offences must be classified as rulemaking, going far beyond mere interpretation. Further study may be required to prove if this is illustrative of a general ambition or self-perception as a driver of legal development.
The Supreme Court's precise motivation for adopting and entrenching the identification model as a firm part of Thai corporate crime doctrine thus remains unknown. But the development can be explained with reference to historical path-dependence. The critical junctureFootnote 137 occurred in 19th-century Siam: the introduction of English legal concepts, including the possibility of judicial rulemaking, forged a path for these ideas to take root in Siam. This step could only be partially reversed by subsequent turns to continental ideas, and it rendered the judges, who had been extensively exposed to English law, the drivers of irritation in an unfamiliar civil law environment.
So, what is the future of Thai corporate criminal law? A recent anti-corruption act included comprehensive rules on how to assess the criminal liability of legal persons, including a compliance defence.Footnote 138 It was the first time that written criminal law explicitly spelled out the scope of people who trigger a legal person's criminal liability. Interestingly, the drafters opted for a wide vicarious liability model, rejecting identification.Footnote 139 Most recently, the government instructed the Council of State to start working on a general legal footing for corporate crimes in the Criminal Code. The responsible committee produced a draft that would effectively supersede the Supreme Court's jurisprudence.Footnote 140 The draft's key provision reads:
A legal person is punishable if its representative or a person authorised to act on behalf of the legal person acts within the objective, according to the powers, and for the benefit of the legal person.Footnote 141
If the draft became law, it would finally reassert parliament's exclusive authority to enact criminal law, while relegating the courts back to legal interpretation. Interestingly, the draft rejects vicarious liability and, rather, opts for an enhanced identification approach. Liability is triggered by a representative, but also by ‘a person authorised to act on behalf of the legal person.’ This is reminiscent of the model adopted in 1994 in France, which distinguishes between ‘organs’ and ‘representatives’.Footnote 142 More importantly, such a provision, if inserted into the Criminal Code, would apply throughout the entire Thai criminal law, unless statutory legislation contains more specific rules. Subject to this caveat, the enhanced identification approach would be applied generally, so that it would also serve as the model for the first and second types of liability offences that have been mentioned earlier, and which have hitherto been treated as vicarious liability offences without an explicit legal basis.
The future of Thai corporate criminal liability may therefore consist of continuation, enhancement, and expansion: English-style identification would not only be continued, but enhanced with supposedly French elements and extended to almost all corporate crimes. Whether the draft will resolve existing irritation or cause new remains to be seen. Either way, the Supreme Court-driven English legacy will remain an important part of Thai corporate criminal law.