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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Sharman, R (on the application of) v HM Coroner for Inner North London [2005] EWHC 857 (Admin) (12 May 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/857.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 857 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of NEIL SHARMAN |
Claimant | |
and – |
||
HER MAJESTY'S CORONER FOR INNER NORTH
LONDON |
Defendant |
____________________
Tim Owen Q.C. and Danny Friedman (instructed by Hickman & Rose,
London) for Irene Stanley, the First Interested Party
Michael Wood Q.C. and
Samantha Leek(instructed by Director of Legal Services, Metropolitan
Police)
for the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, the Second
Interested Party
Mr Gerard Clarke (instructed by Independent Police
Complaints Commission)
for the Independent Police Complaints Commission, the
Third Interested Party
The Defendant did not appear and was not
represented.
Hearing dates: 27-28 April 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Leveson :
The Legal Framework
"It seems safe to infer that the state's procedural obligation to investigate is unlikely to be met if it is plausibly alleged that agents of the state have used lethal force without justification, if an effectively unchallengeable decision has been taken not to prosecute and if the fact-finding body cannot express its conclusion on whether unjustifiable force has been used or not, so as to prompt reconsideration of the decision not to prosecute."
"In a difficult case, the Coroner is carrying out an evaluation exercise. He is looking at the evidence before him as a whole and saying to himself, without deciding matters which are the province of the jury, 'Is this a case where it would be safe for the jury to come to the conclusion that there had been an unlawful killing?' If he reaches the conclusion that, because the evidence is so inherently weak, vague or inconsistent with other evidence, it would not be safe for a jury to come to the verdict, then he has to withdraw the issue from the jury. In most cases there will only be a single proper decision which can be reached on any objective assessment of the evidence. Therefore one can either say that there is no scope for Wednesbury reasonableness or there is scope, but the only possible proper decision which a reasonable coroner would come to is either to leave the question to the jury or not, as the case may be.
However, as was pointed out by the Lord Chief Justice in Galbraith, in these cases there will always be borderline situations where it is necessary for the Coroner to exercise a discretion. It is only in such a situation that he has any discretion. It follows, therefore, that the test of reasonableness enunciated in Wednesbury has to play in relation to decisions as to whether to leave a particular issue to the jury or not, a role which is extremely limited".
"…I have come to the conclusion that there is considerable force in [counsel for the coroner]'s argument that a broader approach is appropriate. There is no prosecutor in relation to an inquest and, while an inquest is a court, the coroner's role is more inquisitorial, even when sitting with a jury, than that of a judge. A prosecutor has considerable discretion as to what charges he prefers and the trial takes place on those charges. There are no charges at an inquest. And a coroner must decide the scope of the inquiry which is appropriate and the witnesses to be summonsed. He therefore must, at least indirectly, have a greater say as to what verdict the jury should consider than a judge at an adversarial trial. However, the difficulty is that if the Galbraith approach is not appropriate, what approach is correct? It is for the jury and not the coroner to decide facts on the evidence they have heard … .The conclusion I have come to is that, so far as the evidence called before the jury is concerned, a coroner should adopt the Galbraith approach in deciding whether to leave a verdict. The strength of the evidence is not the only consideration and, in relation to wider issues, the coroner has a broader discretion. If it appears there are circumstances which, in a particular situation, mean in the judgment of the coroner, acting reasonably and fairly, it is not in the interests of justice that a particular verdict be left to the jury, he need not leave that verdict. He, for example, need not leave all possible verdicts just because there is technically evidence to support them. It is sufficient if he leaves those verdicts which realistically reflect the thrust of the evidence as a whole…."
"21. An inquest is not concerned to attach and is indeed expressly prohibited from attaching civil or criminal liability to anyone in particular. It is concerned only to determine who the deceased was and how, when and where the deceased came by his death. However, a finding of unlawful killing will almost inevitably be regarded as a condemnation of the actions of one or a number of easily identifiable persons. It is presented in the media and regarded generally as a positive finding that that person or persons between them have been guilty of a criminal offence, in this case manslaughter…
22. … [I]t must be borne in mind that the safeguards applicable to a trial of anyone charged with a criminal offence are not in place. … The absence of any opening or closing speeches at inquests means that the need for clarity in a summing-up becomes all the more important. That is not to say that a summing-up should be subjected to a close analysis or that the absence of a particular form of words or indeed of particular directions will necessarily be fatal. But the jury must know clearly what they must find as facts in order to justify any verdict, especially one which decides that a criminal offence has caused the death. …"
i) unlawful killing: a finding beyond reasonable doubt that the firearm was not discharged in the belief that one of the officers was under imminent threat of being shot with a sawn-off shot gun;ii) lawful killing: a finding, on the balance of probabilities, that Chief Inspector Sharman believed, albeit mistakenly, that he or Constable Fagan was under imminent threat of being shot with a sawn-off shot gun;
iii) open verdict: a rejection of the proposition that Chief Inspector Sharman may have believed that he or Constable Fagan was under imminent threat of being shot with a sawn-off shot gun but an inability to conclude, beyond reasonable doubt, that such was not the case.
The Evidence
"The man who I now know as Harry Stanley stopped and with a deliberate motion turned via his left hand side. As he turned via his left hand side, he started to level the cylindrical object, the object in the bag from pointing downwards up to the horizontal. As he turned, he started to level it, hip level, pointing as he turned round towards me. As he turned, I again shouted, "Armed police, drop it". By which time he turned round and was looking directly at me. As opposed to walking around he turned round and he was looking directly at me. The position he was in at that point I can only describe as a boxer's stance. As he turned, he levelled it. His left foot was forward, his right foot was back, so he was in the boxer stance. The weapon, which I think is a weapon bearing in mind the way he is pointing it, is horizontal and hip. His left-hand came up to the weapon to grip it, so he is gripping it with both hands. At that point I felt for sure I was looking down the barrel of a sawn-off shotgun. To strengthen the point even more if it needed it, he pulled it into his right hip as if to settle himself into a firing position. He had both hands on the weapon, he is in a boxer's stance to me, looking directly at me, with the weapon in both hands and it was pulled into his right hand hip to steady it. I could not quite believe what was going on, at this point, sir, bearing in mind I have actually used this firing position when I have fired sawn-off shot guns in training. The realisation struck me, that I was about to be shot at fifteen feet, with a sawn off shot gun. By this time, I had come into an instinctive firing position, and genuinely fearing for my own safety and I thinking I was about to be shot, I fired one pre-emptive shot in self defence."
"Whilst challenging, the male who was walking away from me turned, and he turned on his left leg and he turned through me, and I will describe him turning through me because he turned through me as if I was not there to face back along the pavement towards where Kevin Fagan was. As he was turning, the bag that was in his right hand was brought up across the body as he was turning and then the other hand, as he stopped facing Mr. Fagan, the other hand came up and grabbed the front of the bag and pulled it in. At that point, fearing for Kevin Fagan's life and believing that the contents of that bag were a sawn off shot gun, and with the actions of the person holding it, I felt that he was about to be shot. In response to that threat, I fired one round from my service pistol at the person."
"There is some evidence that P.C. Fagan fired the first shot, from Dr Rouse. Dr Rouse would say that the fatal head shot would have caused the sudden collapse and therefore, by exclusion, the first non-fatal head shot was to the fingers."
" Again, as I said in my report, the most likely route is little finger, coming out middle finger. That is the most likely route because of the problems associated with shored-up exit wounds, but I cannot say that it did not happen the other way in this particular case."
"I have seen on many occasions that officers and witnesses pick up on a cue which is incomplete but in which their brain fills in the blank to complete the movement. It is a real phenomena. It is a recognised psychological phenomena and it means that they genuinely and honestly believe when they recount events and at the time the events they have filled in the blanks."
The Available Verdicts
"I am satisfied that there is sufficient evidence from Dr Rouse and Mr Brookes and Mr Bailey, taken together as a whole, with the factual evidence of all the witnesses in this case, the two officers and the three independent eye-witnesses, for the issue of unlawful killing to be properly put to the jury.
In doing so, it is not my personal belief that this is the verdict that should be returned, but that is irrelevant. Again, going back to the Palmer case, the coroner has to carry out an evaluation exercise. He has to look at the evidence which is before him as a whole, saying to himself, without deciding matters, which are for the provenance of the jury."
"[I]t appeared to the Coroner (accepting the submissions of Mr Owen Q.C.) that there was evidence which would entitle the jury to question the account of the officers and, taking account of all they had heard including assessing the credibility of the officers themselves, reject their account. The coroner accepted that if the account given by the officers was rejected by the jury, they were entitled to conclude that the killing was unlawful."
Summing Up and Verdict
"In contrast, the burden for lawful killing is on the balance of probabilities: is it more likely than not? Again, there is a legal test for lawful self defence. Did the person who actually committed the act of what is purported to be self defence honestly believe or may he or she – he, in this case – honestly have believed it was necessary for self defence or for the defence of others? If you, the jury are sure that the person who committed the act did not have an honest belief that it was necessary for self defence, then the killing was unlawful.
However, if the person was or may have been acting in that honest belief, then you go on to the second question. I have to say, in this case, that there is no evidence that PC Fagan and Inspector Sharman were acting in anything other than an honest belief. There is no evidence that they had a dishonest belief in this case.
The second question is about the reasonableness of the force …"
"I also commented, in error, about there being no evidence of a dishonest belief. You should ignore that because the facts are a matter for you. You are entitled to reject any witness' evidence in part or in full. It was put to the officers, but denied, but you are entitled to find that you do not accept the officers' account and that it was a fabrication, and you are entitled to conclude or make – findings about dishonest belief are a matter for you. [sic]"
"15. What did Mr Stanley do and how did he move when challenged by the officers?
16. What were the positions of the officers relative to each other and Mr Stanley when the shots were fired?
17. What threat or risk to their own health and safety did the officers believe or perceive themselves to be exposed (sic)?"
"There are certain questions which must be answered in term of Mr Stanley's full name and registration particulars … There are other questions for which there may not be an answer because there is not evidence for it or it is a question which you have to ask yourself and simply not find an answer to. It is a question of considering whether there is an answer to it and putting it in the inquisition. Also, the final question, question 17, is a question for you to consider now, but it also goes more to the verdicts which I will come to later."
"At between 7.52 and 7.55 pm on Wednesday, 22nd September 1999, Mr Henry Bruce Stanley was killed by a single bullet wound to the head. The shot was fired by Inspector Neil Sharman. Mr Stanley was positioned on the right-hand pavement of Fremont Street, near the junction of Victoria Park Road. Mr Stanley was also shot in the left hand by Constable Kevin Fagan. The two shots were fired following a verbal challenge by both officers, who were responding to a 999 call made by Mr Willing from the Alexandra Public Arms [sic] at approximately 7.44 pm. Mr Willing reported a man fitting Mr Stanley's description who had left the pub carrying what was apparently a sawn-off shotgun wrapped in a blue plastic bag. Mr Stanley had begun to turn towards the officers in response to the challenge when the shots were fired."
Although I appreciate that the coroner made it clear that the questions did not have to be answered in the Inquisition, and specifically commented that Question 17 went "more to the verdicts", the jury did not, in fact, deal with the last two questions in their narrative of circumstances and no challenge is mounted to this aspect of the Inquisition.
Conclusion
Postscript
"[A] small number of exceptionally complex or contentious inquests should be taken by suitably trained Circuit Judges, and a yet smaller number of still more complex inquests should be heard by suitably prepared High Court Judges, each sitting as Coroner. This provision, too, should be sparingly used.
Allocation of inquests at Circuit Judge level would be arranged by the Presiding Judge of the relevant Circuit on application from the Regional Co-ordinating Coroner. Inquests at the High Court level might largely be confined to those following disasters with multiple deaths, though we do not exclude other cases where appropriate. They would be arranged by the Chief Coroner in liaison with the Presiding Judges of the Circuits on application from the Regional Co-ordinating Coroner."