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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG v Goodchild and Mazurke [2023] JRC 188 (19 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2023/2023_188.html Cite as: [2023] JRC 188 |
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Grave and criminal assault and larceny - bad character application.
Before : |
R. J. MacRae, Esq., Deputy Bailiff |
The Attorney General
-v-
Mark Goodchild
Addison Mazurke
M. R. Maletroit Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate C. R. Baglin for Defendant Goodchild.
Advocate G. F. Herold-Howes for Defendant Mazurke.
reasons
THE DEPUTY BAILIFF:
1. The Defendants were convicted of grave and criminal assault and larceny by the jury on 5 October 2023.
2. On 2 October 2023, I declined to admit a caution for breach of the peace recorded against the complainant in this case, Mr Ratajczak, which the Second Defendant, Mr Mazurke, sought to adduce by way of bad character evidence. I now give reasons for this ruling.
3. The application was made shortly before trial owing to late disclosure of the fact and circumstances of the caution for breach of the peace recorded against Mr Ratajczak on 12 January 2022. Mr Ratajczak was forty-seven years old and had other matters recorded against him, but the application to adduce evidence in respect of offences for which he appeared before the Guernsey Magistrate's Court in March 2019 was withdrawn in the course of argument. The circumstances giving rise to the caution were that Mr Ratajczak was involved in a late night altercation in St Helier whilst intoxicated in which he had headbutted another person at just after 2am. He accepted what he had done and, owing to the minor injury suffered by the complainant, it was recommended that the matter be dealt with at the parish hall.
4. The brief circumstances of the case heard by the jury were that in the small hours of the 12 September 2022 Mr Ratajczak was assaulted by the Defendants. The Defendants' actions appear to have been prompted by Mr Ratajczak taking a bag of takeaway food from a third party who was a stranger to him. This led Mr Mazurke to remonstrate with him, and trip him up on more than one occasion. Mr Ratajczak was then knocked to the ground and punched and kicked repeatedly by the Defendants. He was then pursued down King Street and near Charing Cross thrown to the ground by Mr Goodchild. Whilst Mr Ratajczak was unconscious, Mr Mazurke video recorded him on his mobile phone, laughed and made a number of disparaging remarks about his victim. Shortly thereafter, the Defendants stole Mr Ratajczak's shoes, and according to Mr Mazurke threw them away.
5. The application to adduce Mr Ratajczak's caution was made pursuant Article 82J(1)(b) of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003 ("the Law") on the footing that it was of substantial probative value in relation to a matter in issue in the proceedings and was of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole.
6. The approach to this application was considered by the Royal Court in the case of AG v PMB [2021] JRC 335, where the Court said:
7. Normally such application would be dealt with well before trial, but the material allowing the defence to make this application was only disclosed by the Crown on 27 September 2023. It was said on behalf of Mr Mazurke that this material supported Mr Mazurke's account that he was simply seeking to recover the property of another person (the takeaway meal), that Mr Ratajczak then became angry and there was a confrontation, that Mr Ratajczak was the aggressor who was seen to swing punches at Mr Mazurke on several occasions and therefore Mr Mazurke was acting in self-defence. It was argued that Mr Ratajczak's creditworthiness was an issue of substantial importance and that this bad character evidence was of persuasive value and accordingly of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole.
8. The Crown initially argued that the circumstances of the caution could not be relevant to any issue between the parties as Mr Mazurke had already pleaded guilty to common assault prior to trial and the only issue between the parties was whether or not what he did amounted to a grave and criminal assault. However, I accepted during the application that Mr Mazurke, whilst accepting that part of the force he offered amounted to common assault in respect of the significant injuries occasioned by Mr Ratajczak, said that either he did not cause those injuries or that he was acting in self-defence when he did.
9. The Crown went on to argue that what Mr Ratajczak said and did was not a significant issue in the case. It was accepted that he was drunk and the CCTV footage, which everyone agreed was central to the Crown's case, showed that he was aggressive. The Crown's case derived from the CCTV footage and was undisputed (save for the issue of Goodchild's presence, which was resolved by the jury). Mr Ratajczak's evidence was likely to be (and indeed it was) to the effect that he could not recall how the incident started, and accordingly it was unlikely that he would say anything to contradict Mr Mazurke's case to the effect that he took a takeaway meal from the third party concerned. The Crown said that it was not Mr Ratajczak's conduct that was in issue, as it was undisputed. What was in dispute was whether or not Mr Mazurke's response was lawful. Mr Ratajczak's bad character was not relevant to this issue.
10. On balance I concluded that this evidence, namely Mr Ratajczak's caution for breach of the peace, was not of substantial probative value in relation to an issue of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole, and was therefore not admissible.
11. Nonetheless, I indicated that Mr Mazurke's counsel was at liberty to renew his application at the end of cross-examination of Mr Ratajczak if he wished to do so. This he chose not to do, which was fully explicable in the circumstances where, as predicted in the course of argument, Mr Ratajczak did not contest what was put to him as to how the confrontation between himself and Mr Mazurke began.
12. In view of my decision on admissibility of the question of any exclusionary discretion does not strictly arise and, indeed, the exclusionary discretion under Article 82E(2) does not apply to evidence admitted under Article 82J. However, I note from the extract cited above from Brewster, that it is said that there is "no residual discretion except in the exercise of case management to refuse the admission of the evidence". The Court's general power to exclude unfair evidence under Article 76 does not apply either as that only applies to prosecution evidence. Nonetheless, had I admitted the evidence, I would have been concerned about the fairness of doing so, as it would have inevitably led to the Crown applying under Article 82G to adduce Mr Mazurke's relevant convictions. Such an application would have been, prima facie, unanswerable subject to the Court's exclusionary powers under Article 82(E)(2). Further, such evidence in the case of Mr Mazurke would have included convictions for an offence contrary to the Crime (Disorderly Conduct and Harassment) Law 2008 resulting in a conviction in December 2020,. It might have also extended to other matters involving allegations of violence, in respect of which he was already in custody. Such an outcome might, overall, have been disadvantageous to Mr Mazurke.