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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Caley-Knowles, R v [2006] EWCA Crim 1611 (20 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/1611.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Crim 1611, [2007] Crim LR 61, [2006] WLR 3181, [2007] 1 Cr App Rep 13, [2006] 1 WLR 3181, [2007] 1 Cr App R 13 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 | ||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LEVESON
MR JUSTICE IRWIN
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
EDWARD CALEY-KNOWLES | ||
and | ||
R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
IORWERTH JONES |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
Tel No:
020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MISS
A WHALLEY appeared on behalf of the CROWN
MR J TUCKER appeared on behalf of
the APPELLANT JONES
MR H REES appeared on behalf of the CROWN
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"Five minutes from now you really will have to start on the case that this jury are hearing, you know."
Undeterred, the appellant continued for a further five minutes when the judge intervened again and in the exchanges which followed the appellant admitted that he had punched Mr Barton twice in the face causing him actual bodily harm, that he had not acted in self defence and that it was not an accident. He simply asked the jury not to convict him and maintained that the assault was justified because of Mr Barton's involvement in his dismissal. He added that if he was convicted he would be sent to prison and transferred to Broadmoor.
"I am taking the matter right out of your hands. I am taking full responsibility for this verdict... If I have made a mistake you need not fear any injustice: it will be put right on appeal... but as far as today is concerned I am directing you to return a verdict of guilty.
Members of the jury, will someone please stand as foreman and when you are asked the appropriate question by the Clerk of the Court say 'Guilty'. This I am afraid is a formality as far as you are concerned."
The clerk then said:
"Will one of your number please stand?"
Someone obviously did because he continued:
"Mr Foreman, have you reached a verdict on which you are all agreed?"
To which the foreman said "Yes". The defendant then intervened saying:
"What a complete farce. They are supposed to adjourn to make a decision. It's ridiculous. It's a farce. If this is British justice it stinks. This is a kangaroo court."
The clerk said:
"Guilty or not guilty?"
And the foreman said "Guilty".
"... somebody who does this amount of damage to get an inquiry into some incident about whether or not he was spoken to improperly by a barrister in 1983 or in 1984, that in my judgment as a matter of law could not amount to 'lawful excuse' for doing damage to the slates of the courthouse in Llandovery."
He continued:
"I am taking the step, therefore, ladies and gentlemen, of directing you to bring in a verdict of 'guilty' because there is no alternative."
He then asked one of the jurors to stand and act as the foreman and said:
"When the Clerk puts to you the question, would you please return the verdict of 'guilty'."
The clerk then said:
"Mr Foreman, upon the directions of his Honour do you find the defendant Iorwerth Jones guilty?
The Foreman: Yes.
The Clerk: And that is the verdict of you all?
The Foreman: Yes."
The judge then apologised for the fact that the jury might think this to be a rather strange procedure but he said:
"... this is the only way that it can be done. In effect, the issue of innocence or guilt has been withdrawn from you, and I take it upon my responsibility."
"Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Court of Appeal-
(a) shall allow an appeal against conviction if they think that the conviction is unsafe; and
(b) shall dismiss such an appeal in any other case."
"The Court is concerned with the safety of the conviction. A conviction can never be safe if there is doubt about guilt. However, the converse is not true. A conviction may be unsafe even where there is no doubt about guilt but the trial process has been 'vitiated by serious unfairness or significant legal misdirection'... Usually it will be sufficient for the Court to apply the test in Stirland (1945) 30 Cr.App.R 40, which, as adapted by [counsel], might read:
'assuming the wrong decision on law or the irregularity had not occurred and the trial had been free from legal error, would the only reasonable and proper verdict have been one of guilty?'"
"It seems to us that it is now possible to formulate two propositions in respect of irregularities at trial ...
1. If there was a material irregularity, the conviction may be set aside even if the evidence of the appellant's guilt is clear.
2. Not every irregularity will cause a conviction to be set aside. There is room for the application of a test similar in effect to that of the former proviso, viz. whether the irregularity was so serious that a miscarriage of justice has actually occurred."
"... the acquittals of such high profile defendants as Ponting, Randle and Pottle ... have been quite as much welcomed as resented by the public, which over many centuries has adhered tenaciously to its historic choice that decisions on the guilt of defendants charged with serious crime should rest with a jury of lay people, randomly selected, and not with professional judges."
This passage gives some support for the proposition that a defendant does have a constitutional right to what lawyers would characterise as a perverse verdict.
"Had the judge left the present case to the jury and directed them in the ordinary way, it seems very likely that they would have convicted. There could then have been no effective appeal. As it is, the Court of Appeal's judgment highlights the dangers of judicial intervention. It may well have been 'very far from clear' what the appellant's intentions were. The nature and extent of the appellant's religious motivation had been the subject of evidence. The appellant's evidence of not wanting to leave the weapons at home with no one to look after them may well have given rise to nuances ... not recognised by the judicial mind. These were pre-eminently matters for evaluation by the jury. Belief that the jury would probably, and rightly, have convicted does not in our judgment entitle us to consider this conviction to be other than unsafe when there were matters which could and should have been the subject of their consideration. We would accordingly allow the appeal, quash the appellant's conviction and answer the certified question by saying that there are no circumstances in which a judge is entitled to direct a jury to return a verdict of guilty."
One can well understand this conclusion on the facts of Wang but we do not think this passage supports the proposition that in every case where a direction to convict is given the conviction should be considered unsafe. Lord Bingham does not ask the Davis question in terms or any similar question or base his conclusion upon any assessment of the seriousness of the misdirection or irregularity involved in that case.
"I must direct you that there can only be one verdict in this case and that is one of guilty."
But he subsequently asked the jury to retire, which they did, and in due course they came back with a guilty verdict. On appeal to this court, Mantell LJ said:
"44. Now whilst it is true that any other verdict might be regarded as perverse, and the judge would certainly have been entitled to say 'you may think that there can only be one verdict in this case and that is one of guilty', it can hardly be denied that the words used could be taken as a direction to convict. We can well understand ... how this conscientious judge came to express himself as he did and we certainly do not criticise his withdrawal of the defence of 'lawful excuse'. But in our view the general issue of guilt or innocence should have been left to the jury and the words used crossed the line which separates forceful comment from a direction to convict."
"As has already been noticed, so long as the defendant remains in charge of the jury only the jury can return a verdict of guilty or not guilty. Where there has been a direction to convict, therefore, can it be said that the verdict returned is the voluntary and therefore the true verdict of the jury and, further, if not, in such a case can it be said that there has been a conviction, let alone a safe conviction?"
After referring to the decision in Stonehouse and the Davis test, the court concluded in paragraph 52:
"Applying that test and following the powerful precedent provided by the House of Lords in R v Stonehouse and notwithstanding the logical difficulty to which we have referred, we conclude that the conviction of Mr Kelleher is to be regarded as 'safe'."
So the appeal against conviction was dismissed.