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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 >> B v R. [2013] EWCA Crim 3 (31 January 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/3.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 3, [2013] 1 Cr App R 36, [2013] WLR(D) 43 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CHELMSFORD
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BALL Q.C
T20107225
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE MACUR DBE
and
MR JUSTICE MADDISON
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B |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
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Timothy Cray (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 10th May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hughes:
Count 5 (common assault)
Count 7 (common assault):
Count 3 (rape):
Count 4 (rape):
Count 8 (Criminal Damage):
Evidence at the trial
i) The defendant had clearly suffered from a mental illness which was best diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenia, or possibly schizo-affective disorder. He was probably suffering from this condition at the time of the events which were before the jury, and at one stage at the end of September 2010, about six weeks after his arrest in August, a different psychiatrist had thought him then sufficiently ill to be unfit to plead. He was however very much better by the time of the trial as a result of medication.
ii) The mental illness had meant that he believed that he had healing powers. He could cure cancer and epidemics. He had sexual healing powers. He also had a solution to the banking crisis and to climate change. He had a special connection to God. In prison he had made a special toothpaste for other prisoners in the belief that it would make them better.
iii) When ill he had a lack of insight into his condition. Now that he was much better his insight was improved. He did not now think he had healing powers. However, his insight into the illness that he had had was still impaired, and he did not make any link between it and his behaviour towards his partner.
Direction to the jury: rape
"(1) A person (A) commits an offence if –(a) he intentionally penetrates the vagina, anus or mouth of another person (B) with his penis,(b) B does not consent to the penetration, and(c) A does not reasonably believe that B consents.(2) Whether a belief is reasonable is to be determined having regard to all the circumstances, including any steps which A has taken to ascertain whether B consents."
As everyone knows, that can give rise to three successive questions where (as here) there is no issue whether the intercourse took place:
(1) did the complainant in fact consent ? If not,(2) did the defendant believe that she was consenting ? If yes,
(3) was his belief reasonable ?
"If you are satisfied so that you are sure that she was not consenting on the occasion you are considering, you then go on to consider this issue of reasonable belief. This is where you are focusing on what is in the defendant's mind. You have considered her position as to whether she was consenting. Now let us look at him and what he was or might have been believing….As a matter of public policy the law does not permit defendants suffering from mental illness to avoid the consequences of their crimes by relying upon the explanation: "I only did it because I was mentally ill". That may sound harsh but you can see the sense behind it, because if mental illness did operate as an excuse for criminal conduct it would be carte blanche. The law is not a total ass, because mental illness may well have a role to play in influencing sentence….
If…you find that he did have a belief or might have had a belief that she was consenting to the particular act of intercourse, then you have to go on and consider the reasonableness of that belief.
Given the facts in this case it is important to understand that a delusional belief in consent or a belief in consent which is the result of his mental illness cannot be a reasonable belief…
Ask yourselves what society would reasonably expect of a person not suffering from mental illness, not suffering from mental illness, who found themselves in the circumstances that pertained on each of the occasions…..
To try to explain it in simple terms, if you put the mental illness out of the question, were all the signs and signals such that someone who had been in a relationship with her all those years would have picked up on the signals and realised that she was not consenting, or were the signals such that someone would have, or might have, thought 'Yes she is consenting' and have carried on ?"
In other words, the judge directed the jury that they should leave the mental illness out of the equation when asking whether any belief that the defendant may have had in consent was reasonable, but that if there might, independently of the illness, have been a reasonable belief, that would result in a verdict of 'not guilty'.
Parliamentary material: rape
Conclusions: rape
"Although the general trend of English criminal law has been increasingly favouring subjective approaches to mens rea -even in serious sexual offences – there are powerful arguments against adopting a purely subjective approach in this context. When the conduct in question is of a sexual nature, the ease with which the defendant can ascertain the consent of his partner, coupled with the catastrophic consequences for the victim if the defendant acts without consent, militate strongly against the purely subjective approach. The generosity of the law, extending to accepting a defendant's genuine but unreasonable mistakes in, for example, matters of self defence, need not be replicated in sexual cases because the conduct in question calls for a qualitatively different degree of vigilance on his part."
It is difficult, and probably unsafe, to attribute a single reason to the whole of Parliament, but one reason for the distinction may well have been the one identified by Professor Ormerod, and adverted to by Lord Falconer (see [28] supra). But whatever the reason(s) for the form of the legislation, the difference between the law of rape and the law of self defence is apparent, and plainly deliberate.
Common Assault
"You have to be satisfied that what he was doing on those occasions was not justified in law. No on has to put up with physical molestation. Of course, we all have to tolerate the everyday jostlings of everyday life, in the tube train or in the queue and so forth. But if there is unwanted touching going beyond that which is generally accepted by the standards of modern society, that can represent common assault…So the Crown have to prove, in each of those separate cases, that he did things towards her that she did not wish, that she did not want; that these were deliberate acts that involved some element of physical or forceful interference or violation of her; and that he did these various things not a an act of love or affection but from a hostile intent, in the broadest possible sense, towards her; that he was doing it because he wanted to do it, not out of any feelings of affection or care for her."
The judge declined an invitation from Mr Spence to add a direction to the effect that if the defendant's motive or intention were to benefit the complainant, for example because he believed it to be good for her health that she should eat the peas and leaf mixture, there would be no common assault because there would be no 'hostility'.
Criminal Damage
"With regards to believing that someone might give you permission to do such a thing, all that I need to add is that it does not matter whether such a belief is justified or not, providing it is honestly held. That would be sufficient to give you lawful excuse."
On the facts of this case, that was plainly sufficient.
Conclusion