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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> DONALD SAMON and ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE v. HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [1998] ScotHC 13 (13th November, 1998) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/1998/13.html Cite as: [1998] ScotHC 13 |
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Lord Bonomy
Lord Johnston
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE GENERAL
in
APPEALS
in causis
DONALD SALMON
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
and
ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
_______
We have before us two appeals arising out of unconnected cases.
In the first the appellant is Donald Salmon who was convicted in the High Court at Aberdeen of two charges, the first being a contravention of Section 4(3)(b) of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 ("the 1971 Act") and the second being an attempt to defeat the ends of justice. Although the appellant originally had a ground of appeal which would have affected the conviction on both charges, his counsel, Mr. J. Davidson, Q.C., departed from that ground at the start of the hearing of the appeal. Salmon's appeal was therefore confined to his conviction on Charge 1, the drugs charge, which was in these terms:
"On 10 November 1995, at 17 Burnside Gardens, Portlethen, Skean Dhu Hotel, Farburn Terrace, Dyce, Aberdeen and elsewhere in the United Kingdom you ..., while acting with another, were concerned in the supplying of a controlled drug, namely cocaine, a Class A drug specified in Part I of Schedule 2 to the aftermentioned Act, to another or others, in contravention of section 4(1) of the said Act: CONTRARY to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, section 4(3)(b)".
In brief, Salmon was convicted of being concerned in the supplying of cocaine.
In the second case the appellant is Anthony James Irvine Moore, who was convicted at the High Court at Glasgow of a contravention of Section 5(3) of the 1971 Act, the charge being that
"on 2 March 1996 at Whitevale Street, Glasgow near Duke Street you did have in your possession a controlled drug, namely Methylenedioxyethylamphetamine, a Class A drug specified in Part I of Schedule 2 to the aftermentioned Act, with intent to supply it to another or others, in contravention of Section 4(1) of said Act: CONTRARY to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, Section 5(3)".
In brief, Moore was convicted of being in possession of Ecstasy with intent to supply it.
The court scheduled the appeals to be heard together since they appeared to raise related issues about the Crown's burden of proof and Section 28 of the 1971 Act. Originally the court was due to hear a third appeal at the same time, but it required to be continued to a later date. Hearing the two remaining appeals together did indeed prove useful since the different charges and different facts helped to test the various arguments, which ran over from one case to the other and developed during the two days of the hearing. In this opinion I first outline the facts in the two cases. Against that background I deal with the construction of Sections 4(3)(b), 5(3) and 28 of the 1971 Act. After that I consider the individual appeals in the light of the approach to the legislation which I have identified.
Facts in the Salmon Case
In the case of Salmon, on the day in question, the police were keeping surveillance at various places in and near the Skean Dhu Hotel at Dyce. They saw Salmon and one of his co-accused in conversation in the hotel bar. After some time Salmon and the other man left the hotel and went towards a car which was in the hotel car park. The car belonged to Salmon. His brother, who was not subsequently charged with any offence, was in the driving seat. Salmon and the other man began to enter the back of the car. At this point a number of police officers pounced and arrested the other man. Salmon, however, walked away quickly and then broke into a run. The police ordered him to stop. He ran out of the car park, across a road and into some fields where he disappeared. He was subsequently found lying in the bed of a stream, almost totally submerged in the water. He was arrested. His car was searched and on the back seat the police found a plastic bag containing 530 grams of cocaine of 60% purity. After cutting, the street value would have been around £120,000. When Salmon's house was searched, the police found a bag containing a box of glucose and a container of bicarbonate of soda, agents used to bulk out illegal drugs. These items had been taken to the house by other people, while Salmon was out of the house. The police also found £3735 in bank notes, and certain books on the subject of drugs.
The issue in the appeal related to Salmon's knowledge of the bag and its contents. In particular it was said that, since Salmon was charged with being concerned in supplying cocaine while acting in concert with another, the Crown required to prove that Salmon knew that controlled drugs were involved in the transaction in question. The jury should therefore have been directed that, before they could convict Salmon, they would have to be satisfied that he knew that there were drugs in the bag on the back seat and not simply that he knew that the bag containing something was there. By the end of the hearing, however, the contentions for Salmon had been refined. They are best understood once the relevant law has been considered.
Facts in the Moore Case
In the case of Moore, he hired a car from a firm of which he was a regular customer. All the cars are cleaned outside and inside before being released for hire. The following day, a Saturday, Moore was driving the car in Duke Street in Glasgow. There were three other men in the car, including one, Davis, who was sitting in the front passenger seat. Police officers saw the car and Davis, and they followed the car into Whitevale Street where it was stopped. According to Davis, there was a polythene bag at Moore's feet. That bag was subsequently found to contain 50 Ecstasy tablets. In evidence Davis said that, when the police stopped the car, Moore took the bag in his hand, passed it to Davis and said "ditch that", but in cross-examination he said that Moore could have said "what's that?" One of the men who was in the back of the car gave evidence to the effect that he had seen Moore "fling" the bag to Davis as the car was stopped. When he gave evidence, Moore said that he had been with Davis on the Friday and they had met others and had gone to a club and to a party. The next day he and the other three went to a travel agent in Rutherglen and then into Shettleston Road. He put a suit into a dry cleaners and, while he was doing that, Davis drove the car round the block. When the police stopped the car, Moore was looking for a newsagent. He described how something dropped at his feet. He picked it up and Davis grabbed it. He said to Davis "what is this?"
The police searched the car and found the bag to which I have referred between the seats, with Davis trying to conceal it under his hand. After Davis and Moore had been arrested, the police made a more detailed search of the footwell and then behind the dashboard fascia in front of the driver's seat. Behind the dashboard they found a Peckhams bag, inside which there was, first, another polythene bag with 50 Ecstasy tablets and, secondly, a Highlander Crisp packet containing 13 Ecstasy tablets. When cautioned and asked for an explanation, Moore made no reply. When he was later searched, he was found to have only a few pounds on him. He gave his occupation as a salesman. In evidence Moore said that he had never seen the Peckhams bag or its contents before.
The issue in Moore's appeal also related to knowledge. In the ground of appeal it was said that the trial judge ought to have directed the jury that the Crown required to prove that Moore knew that the packages with their contents were in his physical possession and control and that the appellant knew "the general character" of the contents. The trial judge had directed the jury that the Crown did not have to prove that Moore knew that there were drugs in the bags, provided that he knew that the bags contained something. This was said to constitute a misdirection. A further ground of appeal was intimated before the appeal began. This was to the effect that the trial judge should have given a direction in terms of Section 28 of the 1971 Act.
Section 28
Subsections (1) and (3) of Section 4 of the 1971 Act provide:
"(1) Subject to any regulations under section 7 of this Act for the time being in force, it shall not be lawful for a person -
(a) to produce a controlled drug; or
(b) to supply or offer to supply a controlled drug to another.
(3) Subject to section 28 of this Act, it is an offence for a person -
(a) to supply or offer to supply a controlled drug to another in contravention of subsection (1) above; or
(b) to be concerned in the supplying of such a drug to another in contravention of that subsection."
Section 5(3) is in these terms:
"Subject to section 28 of this Act, it is an offence for a person to have a controlled drug in his possession, whether lawfully or not, with intent to supply it to another in contravention of section 4(1) of this Act."
Section 28 says:
"(1) This section applies to offences under any of the following provisions of this Act, that is to say section 4(2) and (3), section 5(2) and (3), section 6(2) and section 9.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) below, in any proceedings for an offence to which this section applies it shall be a defence for the accused to prove that he neither knew of nor suspected nor had reason to suspect the existence of some fact alleged by the prosecution which it is necessary for the prosecution to prove if he is to be convicted of the offence charged.
(3) Where in any proceedings for an offence to which this section applies it is necessary, if the accused is to be convicted of the offence charged, for the prosecution to prove that some substance or product involved in the alleged offence was the controlled drug which the prosecution alleges it to have been, and it is proved that the substance or product in question was that controlled drug, the accused -
(a) shall not be acquitted of the offence charged by reason only of proving that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the substance or product in question was the particular controlled drug alleged; but
(b) shall be acquitted thereof -
(i) if he proves that he neither believed nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the substance or product in question was a controlled drug; or
(ii) if he proves that he believed the substance or product in question to be a controlled drug, or a controlled drug of a description, such that, if it had in fact been that controlled drug or a controlled drug of that description, he would not at the material time have been committing any offence to which this section applies.
(4) Nothing in this section shall prejudice any defence which it is open to a person charged with an offence to which this section applies to raise apart from this section."
The first thing which strikes me, when I look at these provisions, is that Parliament intends Section 4(3)(b) to be read along with, and subject to, Section 28 and similarly intends Section 5(3) to be read along with, and subject to, Section 28. This emerges both from the opening words of Section 4(3) and Section 5(3) ("Subject to section 28") and from subsection (1) of Section 28 which applies that section to offences under various provisions, including Section 4(3) and Section 5(3). Section 28 is therefore designed to put a qualification on the scope of those provisions.
The other point which strikes me is that Sections 4(3) and 5(3) are to be read as being subject to Section 28 as a whole. So far as Section 28 was concerned, in the earlier stages of the hearing counsel tried to confine the argument to the effect of subsection (3). That subsection had been paraphrased by the trial judge in his charge to the jury in the Salmon case and, counsel argued, it should have been mentioned by the trial judge in the Moore case. In cleaving to subsection (3) and studiously averting their eyes from subsection (2) counsel were merely following the lead of distinguished judges in both Scotland (McKenzie v. Skeen 1983 S.L.T. 121) and England (R. v. Ashton-Rickhardt (1977) 65 Cr. App. R. 67). The result of the courts' attitude is that Section 28(2) has vanished into a legal black hole. To ignore a provision which Parliament has included in an Act is wrong in principle, but, worse still, by disregarding subsection (2), the courts are in danger of distorting the construction of Section 28 as a whole. Indeed it is indispensable, even to a proper understanding of Section 28(3), to bring Section 28(2) back into the light and to examine its terms. As the opening words of subsection (2) show, Parliament intends subsection (3) to be read as qualifying subsection (2). That being so, one must understand subsection (2) if one is to understand subsection (3). Subsection (3) also provides invaluable clues to the construction of subsection (2). I begin by examining subsection (3).
Section 28(3)
Section 28(3) introduces a defence. It therefore provides a basis on which an accused person is to be acquitted, even though he would otherwise fall to be convicted.
In approaching the construction of Section 28(3) I start with the opening words of subsection (2), "Subject to subsection (3) below ...." Those words immediately indicate that, although the scope of subsection (2) is wider than the scope of subsection (3), subsection (3) is designed to apply a special legislative régime to a particular situation which would otherwise fall within subsection (2) and be regulated by it. So, by identifying what subsection (3) covers, you identify a particular example of the general kind of situation which subsection (2) is designed to cover.
The courts have tended to construe subsection (3) as if it applied in any case where an accused person is found in possession of a drug, but says that he thought that the drug was something else. So, for instance, in R. v. McNamara (1988) 87 Cr. App. R. 246, Lord Lane C.J. considered that Section 28(3) would be the basis upon which the appellant, if believed by the jury, could be acquitted in a case where he said that he thought that a cardboard box, which was on his motorcycle, contained pornographic or pirate videos rather than the 20 Kilos of cannabis resin which it in fact contained. In my view, however, such a broad interpretation of subsection (3) is not justified by the very precise language used by Parliament.
The first part of subsection (3) shows that the subsection concerns the situation where it is necessary for the prosecution to prove that "some substance or product involved in the alleged offence was the controlled drug which the prosecution alleges it to have been, and it is proved that the substance or product in question was that controlled drug" (emphasis added). It is significant that Parliament uses the words "substance or product" rather than some more general word such as "article". In the clauses which I have quoted the words "substance or product" can refer only to a substance or product which is actually a controlled drug - so it must be, say, the powder or tablets in question. That meaning must be carried through to the remainder of the subsection. Therefore in subsection (3)(b)(i), for instance, Parliament is saying that an accused is to be acquitted if he proves that he neither believed nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the powder or tablets in question were a controlled drug. It follows that the subsection is intended to deal with the limited situation where the Crown have proved that the accused person possessed or was concerned in supplying, say, tablets ("the substance or product"), which are proved to be Ecstasy tablets, but he says that he was mistaken about the nature or quality of the tablets.
A person in that position may say one of three things about the tablets. First, he may say that he did not know that they were Ecstasy tablets and had always thought that they were heroin. Even if the jury accept his evidence on this point, it does not constitute a defence, however, since he is not to be acquitted of possessing Ecstasy tablets by proving that he did not know that the substance or product in question was the particular controlled drug alleged rather than another controlled drug (Section 28(3)(a)). Secondly, the accused may prove that he thought that the tablets in the bottle were aspirin and that he neither suspected nor had reason to suspect that they were a controlled drug. In that situation he is to be acquitted (Section 28(3)(b)(i)). Thirdly, there are situations where people are authorised to possess or supply particular drugs. For instance, although heroin is a Class A drug, a doctor may "for the purpose of acting in his capacity as" a doctor have heroin in his possession (Regulations 8(2)(a) and 10(1)(a) of, and Schedule 2 to, the Misuse of Drugs Regulations 1985 (No. 2066)). If a doctor were found to have Ecstasy tablets in his possession, it would be a defence for him to prove that he believed that the tablets were heroin tablets which he had in his possession for the purpose of acting in his capacity as a doctor (Section 28(3)(b)(ii)).
That being the scope of subsection (3), it is not apt to apply to the kind of case envisaged in McNamara where an accused says that he thought that the contents of a box on his motorcycle were pornographic or pirate videos rather than cannabis resin. In such a case the accused is not claiming that he did not know that the organic matter ("the substance or product in question") was a controlled drug. Rather, he is saying that he did not think that the cannabis resin was there at all: he thought that the box contained videos. It follows that, if the only possible basis for the motorcyclist's defence were Section 28(3), he would have no defence.
As I noted, Section 28(3) applies only where it is necessary "for the prosecution to prove that some substance or product involved in the alleged offence was the controlled drug which the prosecution alleges it to have been, and it is proved that the substance or product in question was that controlled drug". The subsection is therefore concerned with a situation where the Crown have to prove the existence of a particular fact, viz. that the substance or product in question was a controlled drug. Similarly, as the wording of paragraphs (a) and (b)(i) shows, the subsection applies where the accused proves that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect the existence of the fact which it was necessary for the Crown to prove, viz. that the substance or product in question was a controlled drug. Therefore, as was envisaged above, subsection (3) turns out to be simply a particular example of the wider class of situations covered by subsection (2), viz. situations where the accused proves "that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect the existence of some fact alleged by the prosecution which it is necessary for the prosecution to prove if he is to be convicted of the offence charged."
Section 28(2)
This brings me to Section 28(2) itself. In view of what is said by Lord Justice General Emslie in Mackenzie (1989 S.L.T. at p. 121), it is perhaps worth emphasising that subsection (2) of Section 28 is concerned with the accused's state of knowledge as to some fact which the Crown must prove if it is to succeed in the prosecution rather than with the fact itself. So, for instance, in McNamara it was necessary for the Crown to prove that there was organic matter in the box on the back of the appellant's motorcycle and that it was cannabis resin. The function of subsection (2) is to give an accused person in the position of McNamara a defence - which subsection (3) does not afford him - if he proves that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the organic matter was in the box. I noted that subsection (3) was designed to provide a defence to someone who would otherwise fall to be convicted of an offence under, say, Section 4(3) or Section 5(2) or (3). In the same way, subsection (2) is designed to provide a defence to someone who would otherwise fall to be convicted of an offence under the same provisions. So, even if the Crown established that the motorcyclist in McNamara was in possession of the box and of the cannabis resin inside the box, he would still have a complete defence to the charge if he proved that he thought that the box contained videos and that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the organic matter, which was proved to be cannabis resin, was in the box. I therefore respectfully agree with the Court of Appeal in McNamara when they say that, if he proved that, a person in McNamara's position would have a defence, but the defence would arise, not - as the Court of Appeal thought - under Section 28(3), but rather under Section 28(2).
It is worth summarising the conclusions so far.
Subsections (2) and (3) of Section 28 are both designed to come into play at a stage when the Crown have proved all that they need to prove in order to establish guilt either of a contravention of Section 4(3)(b) or of a contravention of Section 5(3). So the Crown will have proved that the accused was delivering a package containing cocaine, for example, and was thus concerned in the supplying of cocaine; or that he was in possession of a package containing Ecstasy with intent to supply it. At that stage Section 28(2) provides that the accused is none the less to be acquitted if he proves that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect the existence of a fact which the Crown required to prove, for example, that there was powder - which proved to be cocaine - or that there were tablets - which proved to be Ecstasy - in the package which he was delivering or in the package which he possessed.
The scope of that general defence in Section 28(2) is qualified by Section 28(3). Subsection (3) is concerned with one particular type of the general situation covered by subsection (2), viz., where the Crown establish that the accused was concerned in supplying the substance or product which turns out to have been a controlled drug, or that he possessed it, but the accused proves something about his absence of knowledge of the nature and quality of the substance or product which comprised the controlled drug. In that situation, even although the accused proves that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect the existence of a fact which the Crown required to prove, viz. that the substance or product was a controlled drug, in one set of circumstances he is not to have the benefit of the kind of defence provided in Section 28(2).
The set of circumstances is this. To succeed in a particular prosecution the Crown must prove the charge which they bring. In particular where they have alleged, say, that the accused possessed Ecstasy with intent to supply it, they must prove that it was Ecstasy, and not any other controlled drug, that the accused possessed. For obvious reasons, however, Parliament will not allow an accused person to escape conviction simply by proving that, though he knew that he had a controlled drug, he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the drug was Ecstasy as opposed to some other controlled drug, say, cocaine. Section 28(3)(a) therefore qualifies the general defence in subsection (2) by providing that in such a situation the accused is not to be acquitted. Presumably, it was because of the need to cater for this case that subsection (3) was inserted. See Reg. v. Shivpuri [1987] AC 1 per Lord Bridge of Harwich at pp. 16F-17C.
If, however, the accused proves that he neither believed nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the pills which he had or which he was involved in supplying were a controlled drug, he is to be acquitted (Section 28(3)(b)(i)). The same is to happen in the very special situation envisaged in Section 28(3)(b)(ii) where, for instance, someone could legitimately possess a controlled drug or a particular controlled drug in certain circumstances. If he possessed a different drug, then it is a defence for him to prove that he believed that the substance or product was one which he had in his possession for the purpose of acting in his capacity as a doctor. The situations in (b)(i) and (ii) are dealt with on essentially the same basis as situations which fall under subsection (2).
It is perhaps worth stating explicitly that, even though subsections (2) and (3) speak of the accused proving something, this does not imply that, to establish a defence, the accused must necessarily give evidence. Doubtless, that would often be the simplest mode of proof, but the necessary evidence might come, for example, from a "mixed" statement or from witnesses speaking to what the accused was told was in the container or to the accused's apparent astonishment when the contents of the container were revealed and found to be a controlled drug. It goes almost without saying that the facts necessary for any defence under Section 28 can be proved on the basis of uncorroborated evidence.
Section 28 and the Burden of Proof
As I mentioned, the courts in both England and Scotland have tended to ignore Section 28(2). This appears to have happened as a result of somewhat incautious arguments which the Crown put forward in both jurisdictions in the years after Section 28 came on the scene in the 1971 Act. The issue tended to arise in relation to charges involving possession of a controlled drug. It has long been accepted, rightly in my view, that in the context of drugs legislation, the term "possession" is not to be given any technical construction but is to be given its ordinary meaning. As Lord Diplock said in D.P.P. v. Brooks [1974] AC 862, an appeal to the Privy Council concerning the dangerous drugs legislation in Jamaica,
"In the ordinary use of the word 'possession', one has in one's possession whatever is, to one's own knowledge, physically in one's custody or under one's physical control" ( p. 866).
Similarly, in McKenzie v. Skeen Lord Cameron inferred that in the 1971 Act the concept of possession covered "an article subject to the control of the possessor" and he added:
"the concept of control would imply knowledge that the article in question was subject to that control. Control is not a function of the unconscious".
It follows that, before someone can be convicted of being in possession of a controlled drug, the Crown must prove that he had the necessary knowledge and control. This was the position under the Drugs (Prevention of Misuse) Act 1964. For the purposes of that Act the courts required, of course, to define what degree of knowledge and control the Crown needed to establish. This they did in a series of cases culminating in the decision of the House of Lords in Warner v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner [1969] 2 A.C. 256.
Under the 1964 Act, on the other hand, there was never any doubt that the burden of proving the necessary knowledge and control rested on the Crown. With the advent of Section 28 of the 1971 Act, however, the Crown began to argue that the effect of Section 28(2) had been to shift the onus in regard to proving the necessary knowledge from the Crown to the defence. In other words, it was contended that all that the Crown required to do was to prove that, as a matter of fact, the drugs were in the custody or control of the accused and he would then be convicted, unless he proved that he had not known that the drugs were there. Not surprisingly, this kind of argument provoked a strong reaction from the courts, both in Scotland and in England. They rejected the argument for the Crown and affirmed that Section 28(2) did not shift the onus of proving knowledge on to the defence (McKenzie v. Skeen per the Lord Justice General (1983 S.L.T. at p. 121) in Scotland and Ashton-Rickhardt per Roskill L.J. (65 Cr. App. R. at p. 67) in England). The courts were plainly right to reject the Crown's argument: as Roskill L.J. pointed out, the manifest purpose of Section 28 was not to place a new onus on an accused person but "to afford a defence to an accused person where no defence had previously existed" (Ashton-Rickhardt, 65 Cr. App. R. at p. 72). Unfortunately, having rejected the extreme argument advanced by the Crown as to the effect of Section 28(2), the courts seem to have felt that there was no place left for that subsection in a system, such as they envisaged, where the burden of proving the necessary knowledge and control continued to rest on the Crown. Hence subsection (2) disappeared from view.
Once the proper but limited range of Section 28(3) is appreciated, however, there is no inconsistency in holding both that the burden of proving the necessary knowledge and control rests on the Crown and that Section 28(2) has a distinct role to play. There are cases, of course, where police officers searching a suspect or his house find pills comprising a controlled drug, not in any container, but perhaps in his hand or in his pocket or lying on his bedside table. In straightforward cases of that kind, in order to prove their case, the Crown must satisfy the jury that the accused knew that he had the pills and that he had control of them. Since the pills are not in any kind of container but can be seen directly, the Crown will be seeking to show that the accused knew that he had the pills themselves. In the nature of things, however, controlled drugs tend to be found in a container of some kind - in a bag or a parcel or a box or a tin, for example. In such cases the strict legal question comes to be whether the Crown require to prove not only that the accused knew that he had the container in question but also that he knew that there were controlled drugs inside the container. In broad terms the courts have decided that it is sufficient for the Crown to prove that the accused knew that he had the container and that there was something in it. In that situation, if he had the necessary control of the container and its contents, the accused is held to have been in possession of the contents even though he did not know that they were controlled drugs.
So far as England is concerned, this emerges most clearly from McNamara. The Lord Chief Justice began by drawing a number of propositions from the speeches in Warner, including (87 Cr. App. R. at p. 251)
"Fourthly, in the case of a container or a box, the defendant's possession of the box leads to the strong inference that he is in possession of the contents or whatsoever it is inside the box. But if the contents are quite different in kind from what he believed, he is not in possession of it."
Lord Lane goes on to point out that the 1971 Act was passed with a view to elucidating some of the problems which arise from the speeches in Warner. Referring to the situation in McNamara where the appellant had a box containing drugs on the back of his motorcycle, Lord Lane then says:
"It seems to us, in order to make sense of section 28, and also to make as clear as can be possible the decision in Warner v. M.P.C. (supra), the draftsman of the Act intended that the prosecution should have the initial burden of proving that the defendant had, and knew that he had, in these circumstances the box in his control and also that the box contained something. That, in our judgment, establishes the necessary possession. They must also of course prove that the box in fact contained the drug alleged, in this case cannabis resin. If any of those matters are unproved, there is no case to go to the jury.
The speeches in Warner v. M.P.C. (supra) then seem to have qualified that comparatively simple concept by saying that the defendant has the burden thereafter to show or suggest that he had no right or opportunity to open the box or reason to doubt the legitimacy of the contents and that he believed the contents were different in kind, and not merely quality, than what they actually were.
To implement those considerations as they stood, and explain them so the jury can understand them, would have been a daunting task for a judge. Accordingly, in our view, it is to those matters that the words of section 28, and particularly section 28(3)(b)(i) are directed."
Having quoted Section 28(1) and (3), which embody part of the new approach, Lord Lane concludes (87 Cr. App. R. at p. 252):
"Once the prosecution have proved that the defendant had control of the box, knew that he had control and knew that the box contained something which was in fact the drug alleged, the burden, in our judgment is cast upon him to bring himself within those provisions."
In my respectful opinion that passage states the law correctly, except that, for the reasons which I have explained, I consider that in McNamara the appellant required to bring himself within the scope of Section 28(2) rather than of Section 28(3)(b)(i).
A similar approach has been adopted in Scotland. In a passage in his opinion in McKenzie v. Skeen which is not reproduced in the Scots Law Times report, the Lord Justice General remarked:
"In most cases possession of a container will support the inference of possession of its actual contents but it must always be a question to be decided in the particular circumstances of the particular case".
Lord Emslie's general approach is clear, even although he went on to say that on the particular - and very special - facts as stated in that case he was unable to draw the necessary inference that the appellant knew that there was a minute quantity of cannabis flakes in a jar containing cannabis seeds, the seeds not being a controlled drug.
In his opinion in the same case Lord Cameron expressed a similar view about the general approach. He cited Warner as authority for holding that
"in proof of possession it was necessary for the prosecutor to establish that the 'possessor' had knowledge of the fact that he had the article which turned out to be a prohibited drug though it was not necessary to prove that he was aware that the article or substance was a drug far less the prohibited drug libelled."
I note en passant that, despite what is said in the Scots Law Times report, there is nothing in the papers which we have recovered from the Scottish Record Office to indicate whether Lord Johnston, the third member of the court, concurred with the Lord Justice General or with Lord Cameron. It is therefore not possible to identify the precise ratio of the decision. In practice, however, this passage from Lord Cameron's judgment has generally been followed by Scottish judges when charging juries. More recently, some uncertainty about the correct approach seems to have crept in after the decision of this court in Sim v. H.M. Advocate 1996 S.C.C.R. 77.
In Sim the appellant was charged with being in possession of Temazepam capsules with intent to supply them. The capsules were in transparent self-sealing plastic bags inside an opaque unsealed plastic grocery bag which was in the wardrobe in the appellant's bedroom. The trial judge directed the jury that
"The Crown must, however, prove that he knew that the bag, with contents, was in his physical control, and that he knew the general character of the contents of that bag."
The appeal appears to have been based on another passage in the judge's charge which was said to be inconsistent with this passage. The contention was that there was a confusion between the statements which would be likely to have misled the jury. The court held that there was no confusion and that it was clear what the trial judge was saying. The Lord Justice General (Hope), giving the opinion of the court, added:
"He was basing his direction upon the opinions in McKenzie v. Skeen. What he was doing was to develop the matter, first by reference to an illustration and then by applying that illustration to the evidence which was before the jury in this case. He was making it clear how the principles in McKenzie v. Skeen fell to be applied to that evidence. The matter was summed up by him perfectly correctly, as a proper development of the previous passages, in the passage ... to which Mr. McSherry quite rightly took no objection."
The written ground of appeal by Moore was indeed based on this passage which was said to be authority for the view that the Crown required to prove that he knew "the general character" of the contents of the bags. Plainly, the trial judge in Sim went further than Lord Cameron in McKenzie and, in so far as he directed the jury that the Crown must prove that the accused knew "the general character" of the contents of the bag, I consider that the direction was unduly favourable to the accused. For the reasons which I have given, I am satisfied that the Crown would have discharged their initial burden by proving that the accused knew that the bag was in the wardrobe, that it contained something which turned out to be Temazepam capsules and that the bag and its contents were under his control. The judgment of the court in Sim proceeded on the basis that the approach in McKenzie was correct and the court regarded the passage in the trial judge's charge as having been intended to reflect that approach. Indeed it is clear that the focus of the appeal was, not on the passage of the judge's charge which I have quoted, but on a supposed confusion arising out of another passage. In rejecting the criticism of the judge's charge, therefore, the court were not intending to lay down any rule which conflicted with what Lord Cameron had said in McKenzie and their opinion should not be read as doing so. The approach of Lord Cameron in this matter should be followed.
Even though that approach has been enshrined in our law for more than twenty years, it can still seem surprising that, technically, for instance, a taxi driver who agrees in all innocence to collect a suitcase, which obviously contains something, and carry it to some destination will, when carrying the suitcase, be in possession both of the case and of the controlled drugs which it contains. This makes it all the more important to stress that Section 28(2) provides a complete defence for the taxi driver to any conceivable charge under Section 5(3). The role of Section 28(2) and (3) is therefore crucial in providing innocent people with a defence and it is therefore singularly unfortunate that the courts should have banished section 28(2), in particular, from their sight.
Section 28 and Possession
At the risk of some repetition, the way in which sections 5 and 28 of the 1971 Act are intended to operate may be more readily understood with the aid of simple examples. (In Section 5(3) charges, of course, the Crown requires to prove not merely possession but an intent to supply - which they usually invite the jury to infer from surrounding circumstances or from the quantity or form of the drugs. For the sake of simplicity, however, I concentrate simply on the issue of possession.)
Suppose that police officers search a house where the accused lives with other people and in the course of the search the officers find a bag containing Ecstasy tablets. The Crown prosecute the accused on a charge of being in possession of Ecstasy. At his trial the accused may say a number of things.
First, he may say that he was completely unaware that the drugs were in the house and that, if they were, they must have belonged to one of the other occupants. It is for the Crown to establish that the accused knew that the bag was in the house, that he had control of it and that it contained Ecstasy. If they fail to establish any of those elements, then the prosecution will fail, simply because the Crown will not have discharged the burden of proof which lies on them. So far as knowledge and control are concerned, in directing a jury, the judge will simply say that, if any of the evidence leaves them with a reasonable doubt as to whether the accused knew that the bag was in the house or as to whether he had it under his control, then the accused must be acquitted. No issue under Section 28 arises.
Alternatively, if the Crown prove that there were Ecstasy tablets in the bag, the accused may say that, although he knew that the bag was in the house and contained something, and although he had it in his control, none the less he did not know that it contained tablets. In that situation, since the accused is admitting knowledge and control of the bag and its contents, the Crown have discharged their burden of proof. The accused will therefore be convicted, unless he proves that he did not know nor suspect nor have reason to suspect that the tablets were in the bag. If he proves this, then, even though he was in possession of the tablets, he must be acquitted in terms of Section 28(2). In a case like that the trial judge should direct the jury to consider whether they are satisfied, on a balance of probabilities, that the accused did not know nor suspect nor have reason to suspect that the tablets were in the bag. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict.
Thirdly, if the Crown prove that there were Ecstasy tablets in the bag, the accused may say that, although he knew that the bag was in the house and although he had it in his control and even although he knew that it contained tablets, none the less he did not know that the tablets comprised Ecstasy. In that situation also, the accused is admitting that he was in possession of the Ecstasy tablets and the Crown have discharged their burden of proof. The accused will therefore be convicted unless he brings himself within the scope of the defences in Section 28(3). To do so, it will not be enough for him to prove that he thought that the tablets were a different controlled drug - heroin rather than Ecstasy, for instance. As Section 28(3)(a) shows, that is not a defence. But the accused will have a defence in terms of Section 28(3)(b)(i) if he proves that, even though he knew that he had the tablets, he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that they were a controlled drug. In that situation therefore the trial judge should direct the jury to consider whether they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the accused neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the pills were a controlled drug. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict. Mutatis mutandis the same applies in the special case covered by Section 28(3)(b)(ii).
I do not suggest that these clear-cut illustrations exhaust the possibilities. For example, a person accused of having Ecstasy tablets in his possession with intent to supply might give evidence that an individual had been in the habit of leaving bags at his house and that he had always understood that they contained pornographic videos. He could go on to say that, on the occasion referred to in the charge, he had been staying at his girlfriend's flat and so had been unaware that the bag in question had been left in his house. The jury might reject the accused's evidence that he did not know of the presence of the bag on the particular occasion, but accept his evidence that he had believed that the bags left with him contained videos. They could therefore acquit him on the basis of the defence in Section 28(2), viz. that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the bag in question contained the pills which turned out to be Ecstasy.
In such a case the judge would require to direct the jury that they should first consider whether, on the basis of all the evidence, including the evidence given by the accused, they are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that, on the occasion in question, the accused knew that the bag was in his house, that he was aware that it contained something and that he had control of the bag and its contents. If they are not so satisfied, they should acquit the accused because the Crown would have failed to prove that the accused was in possession of the tablets. The judge should go on to direct the jury that, even if they are satisfied that the accused had possession of the bag and its contents, they should then go on to consider whether, on all the evidence, they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the accused neither knew, nor suspected nor had reason to suspect, that the Ecstasy tablets were in the bag. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit the accused; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict him.
It is similarly possible to conceive of a defence being open under Section 28(3)(b)(i) even although the accused's primary position is that he did not know that he had the tablets on the occasion in question.
For instance a person accused of possession of Ecstasy tablets with intent to supply might give evidence that a friend had been in the habit of leaving bags at his house from time to time and that he (the accused) had known that they contained tablets, but had always understood that the tablets were some (uncontrolled) "lifestyle" drug which his friend was selling on the black market. In this case also he could go on to say that, on the occasion referred to in the charge, he had been staying at his girlfriend's flat and so had been unaware that the bag in question had been left in his house. Here too the jury might reject the accused's evidence that he did not know of the presence of the bag in his house on the particular occasion, but accept his evidence that he believed that the bags left with him contained tablets of some (uncontrolled) lifestyle drug. They could therefore acquit him on the basis of the defence in Section 28(3)(b)(i), viz. that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the tablets comprised a controlled drug.
In such a case the judge would require to direct the jury that they should first consider whether, on the basis of all the evidence, including the evidence given by the accused, they are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that on the occasion in question the accused knew that the bag was in his house, that he was aware that it contained something and that he had control of the bag and its contents. If they are not so satisfied, they should acquit the accused because the Crown would have failed to prove that the accused was in possession of the tablets. The judge should go on to direct the jury that, even if they are satisfied that the accused had possession of the bag and its contents, they should then consider whether, on all the evidence, they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the accused neither knew, nor suspected nor had reason to suspect, that the tablets comprised a controlled drug. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit the accused; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict him.
Section 28 and Being Concerned in Supplying
I have so far discussed the application of Section 28 to charges involving possession under Section 5. But, as Section 28(1) shows, Section 28 also applies to charges of supply or of being concerned in supplying under Section 4(3). Since Section 28(1) does not indicate that Section 28 is to operate differently in relation to different provisions, it must be intended to operate in the same way in all cases. This in turn means that, just as the initial onus remains on the Crown under Section 5, so also the initial onus remains on the Crown under Section 4(3). So, for instance, under Section 4(3)(b) the Crown will require to prove both that the accused was concerned in supplying a product or substance and that the product or substance was the controlled drug libelled in the charge.
In the case of Section 5, the use of the word "possession" entails the need for the Crown to establish the necessary degree of knowledge. In my view, equally, the use of the words "concerned in" in Section 4(3)(b) shows that the accused person must have a degree of knowledge. One cannot be "concerned in" supplying a controlled drug, if one is not aware of being involved in supplying. At the hearing of the appeals an example was given of a bus driver who drives his bus from point A to point B. The driver is unaware that someone at point A has concealed controlled drugs, say, Ecstasy tablets, in a secret compartment on the bus and that someone else will remove the drugs at point B. When the bus, driven by the driver, carries the Ecstasy tablets from A to B, that may be a vital part of the mechanism by which they are supplied to the person who collects them. None the less, since he is quite unaware that his bus is carrying the drugs, the driver cannot be said to be "concerned in" supplying them.
But, just as with possession, so also in Section 4(3) cases, the question arises as to the degree of knowledge which the Crown must establish. In my view, by a parallel train of reasoning to that which applies in Section 5 cases, the Crown must establish that the accused knew that he was involved in supplying something, and must prove that the thing which he was concerned in supplying was the controlled drug libelled in the charge. Provided that the Crown establish those elements, they have done all that is required under Section 4(3)(b). The accused will then be convicted unless he can establish one of the defences in Section 28.
I shall require to examine Tudhope v. McKee 1987 S.C.C.R. 663 in more detail below, but at present I simply note that in McKee the Lord Justice Clerk (Ross) drew a distinction between Section 5 cases, involving possession - where the Crown required to prove the appropriate degree of knowledge - and cases under Section 4(3)(b). He said that in his opinion "section 4(3)(b) is an offence of strict liability subject only to the defence afforded by section 28 of the Act." Neither of the other judges expressed that view. It is not entirely clear to me what the Lord Justice Clerk intended to convey by saying that the offence was one of strict liability. If, as I think likely, he was merely saying that in a Section 4(3)(b) case the Crown did not require to prove that the accused knew that the subject-matter of the supply was a controlled drug, then I agree. If, on the other hand, he meant that it was sufficient for the Crown to prove that, as a matter of fact, the accused was involved in supplying a controlled drug and that the onus then shifted to the accused to show that he did not know that he was involved, then, for the reasons which I have given, that would not in my view be an accurate statement of the law.
Again, examples may help to show how these issues may arise in practice. In the bus driver example given above, the Crown would have to prove that the accused knew that he was involved in carrying the items, which were proved to be controlled drugs, from point A to point B where they were to be picked up. If the jury believe the accused when he says that he did not know of the secret compartment or that there was anything in it, or if on the evidence as a whole they have a reasonable doubt, then they must acquit the accused since the Crown will have failed to prove that he had the requisite knowledge to be "concerned in" supplying the drugs. No Section 28 issue arises.
On the other hand the accused may give evidence to the effect that, although he knew that there was a secret compartment and that there was something in it, he thought that it contained pornographic videos and therefore thought that he was involved in transporting those videos from A to B where someone was to pick them up. In that situation, the accused would be admitting being concerned in supplying the items which, as the Crown would have proved, were actually controlled drugs. The Crown would therefore have done all that was required to secure a conviction under Section 4(3)(b). None the less, if the accused satisfies the jury, on the balance of probabilities, that he thought that the items were videos and that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that they were controlled drugs, then he will have established a defence under Section 28(2) and will require to be acquitted. In such cases, the jury should be directed that, even if they are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused knew that he was involved in supplying the items which were in fact controlled drugs, they must go on to consider whether they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the items were controlled drugs rather than videos. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit the accused; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict him.
Finally, the bus driver may admit that he knew that the concealed compartment contained the actual substance or product, say, tablets, and the Crown prove that the tablets comprised Ecstasy. Again, if the jury accept the evidence, the Crown will have proved all the necessary elements for conviction. If all that the accused proves in reply is that he thought that the tablets were heroin rather than Ecstasy, then that will provide no defence (Section 28(3)(a)). But he may say that he thought that the tablets were some lifestyle drug and that he thought that he was involved in a black market operation to supply that lifestyle drug, which is not a controlled drug. He is seeking to make out a defence under Section 28(3)(b)(i). The jury should be directed that, even if they are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused was concerned in supplying Ecstasy, they must go on to consider whether they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that he did indeed believe that he was concerned in supplying the lifestyle drug and neither suspected nor had reason to suspect that he was in fact concerned in supplying Ecstasy. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit the accused; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict him. Mutatis mutandis in an appropriate case the same would apply to a person who was entitled to invoke the special defence in Section 28(3)(b)(ii).
These clear-cut illustrations are again not intended to be exhaustive and, just as with possession, there may be circumstances where the accused does not admit involvement but the jury find that he was involved, and yet it is still open to him to satisfy the jury that he has a defence in terms of Section 28(2) or Section 28(3)(b)(i).
Suppose that the bus driver gives evidence to the effect that he had been aware that someone at point A had been in the habit, from time to time, of putting a package into the hidden compartment in his bus on the evening before the bus was due to travel to point B, but that he (the bus driver) had always thought that the package contained pornographic videos and had had no reason to suspect that it contained controlled drugs. He goes on to say that, because he had been on holiday until the morning of the particular day in question, he had not actually been aware that there was any package in the secret compartment on this occasion. The jury would be entitled to reject the accused's evidence that he had been off work and so had been unaware of the package being put in the compartment, but still accept his evidence that he had always thought that such packages contained videos. If they did so, the jury could then acquit the accused on the basis that he had made out a defence under Section 28(2), viz. that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the items which he was involved in supplying were controlled drugs rather than videos.
The judge should direct the jury that they must first consider whether, having considered all the evidence, they are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused knew that he was involved in carrying the items, which were proved to be Ecstasy tablets, from point A to point B where they were to be picked up. If the jury are not so satisfied beyond reasonable doubt, then they must acquit the accused since the Crown will have failed to prove that the accused was concerned in supplying the items in question. If, however, they are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was concerned in supplying, they must go on to consider whether, on all the evidence, they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the accused neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the items were controlled drugs rather than videos. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit the accused; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict him.
Similarly, a defence under Section 28(3)(b)(i) may be open even where the accused's basic position is that he was not involved in supplying. Again we may suppose that the bus driver, charged with being concerned in supplying Ecstasy tablets, gives evidence to the effect that he had been aware that someone at point A had been in the habit, from time to time, of putting a package into the hidden compartment in his bus on the evening before the bus was due to travel to point B, and that he had been aware that such packages contained tablets but had always thought that the tablets comprised an (uncontrolled) lifestyle drug. He goes on to say that, because he had been on holiday until the morning of the day in question, he had not actually been aware that there was any package in the secret compartment on this occasion. The jury would be entitled to reject the accused's evidence that he had been off work and so had been unaware of the package being put in the compartment, but still accept his evidence that he had always thought that such packages contained tablets of the lifestyle drug. The jury could then acquit the accused on the basis that he had made out a defence under Section 28(3)(b)(i), viz. that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the tablets which he was involved in supplying were controlled drugs.
In this kind of case the judge should direct the jury that they must first consider whether, having considered all the evidence, they are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused knew that on the occasion in question he was involved in carrying the package containing the tablets which were proved to be Ecstasy, from point A to point B where they were to be picked up. If the jury are not so satisfied beyond reasonable doubt, then they must acquit the accused since the Crown will have failed to prove that he was concerned in supplying the items in question. If, however, they are satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused was concerned in supplying the tablets on the occasion in question, they must go on to consider whether, on all the evidence, they are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that the accused neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the tablets comprised Ecstasy rather than an (uncontrolled) lifestyle drug. If they are so satisfied, they must acquit the accused; if they are not so satisfied, they must convict him.
Concert
In some of the Scottish authorities there is an indication that, in cases where the Crown rely on concert to establish guilt of a Section 4(3)(b) offence, the Crown must prove that the accused knew that they were concerned in supplying a controlled drug. This proposition first emerged in McCadden v. H.M.A. 1986 S.C.C.R. 16. In that case the appellant and a co-accused were charged with being concerned in the supplying of heroin "while acting along with others". The evidence showed that the appellant drove his co-accused, who acted as a courier, to a café where he pointed out another man (named McQuade) to the co-accused. The co-accused left the car and approached McQuade. The co-accused and McQuade then came over to the car and spoke to the appellant who drove off. Thereafter the co-accused and McQuade met a third man who gave the co-accused a bag of heroin. There was also evidence of the appellant and another man visiting McQuade's house and of a visit by the appellant and McQuade to London. At the trial, the judge directed the jury that, before they could convict the appellant of being concerned in supplying a controlled drug, they required to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that he knew that a controlled drug was the subject of this elaborate plan for handing over the bag to the co-accused in his capacity as a courier. The appellant appealed on the ground that there was insufficient evidence for the jury to draw that inference. The court refused the appeal.
As is clear from the report, the only issue argued in the appeal was whether there had been sufficient evidence for the jury to draw the inference that the appellant knew that a controlled drug was the subject of the plan. The Crown did not argue that it would have been enough for conviction if the jury had been satisfied that the appellant knew that he was involved in a plot to supply something without knowing that it was a controlled drug. The question of the necessary degree of knowledge was therefore never considered by this court in that case. I also note that the court proceeded on the basis that it had been made plain to the jury that the conviction of the appellant depended upon the principle of concert. Any direction to that effect would have been unnecessary, however: on the evidence the jury would have been entitled to infer that the appellant, as an individual, was concerned in supplying - in particular by taking the courier to the place where he met McQuade and by pointing McQuade out to him, thereby putting the courier in touch with the man who eventually indicated where he was to get the drugs. I respectfully refer to, and adopt, the approach of the Lord Justice General (Hope) in Clements v. H.M. Advocate 1991 J.C. 62 at pp. 68 and 70, which was followed by Lord Marnoch in H.M. Advocate v. Hamill 1998 S.C.C.R. 164 at p. 166C.
In due course McCadden was cited to the court in McKee as support for a contention that, in a charge under Section 4(3)(b), the Crown had to prove that the accused knew that the subject of the supply was controlled drugs. In McKee the respondent had been convicted of being concerned in supplying cannabis resin in contravention of Section 4(3)(b). The facts in the Stated Case showed that she had passed a small package to a prisoner sitting in the dock in the District Court in Glasgow. When a police officer detected this, the prisoner tried to swallow the package. The package was retrieved and was found to comprise three pieces of cannabis resin, weighing about three-quarters of an ounce, wrapped up in a yellow balloon, which was in turn wrapped in clingfilm. It was not possible to see the contents until the package was opened. The Sheriff sustained a submission of no case to answer on the ground that the Crown required to prove that the respondent knew that what she was handing to the prisoner was a controlled drug and, on the evidence, he was unable to infer that she knew this.
I pause to observe that the proper charge for the Crown to have brought in McKee would have been one of supplying, under Section 4(3)(a), rather than of being concerned in supplying under Section 4(3)(b). The Crown's decision to use a Section 4(3)(b) charge, when another was the appropriate charge, complicated the picture quite unnecessarily.
In McKee counsel for the respondent founded on what had been said in McCadden as support for his contention that the sheriff had been correct in holding that the Crown required to prove that the respondent knew that there were controlled drugs in the package. Although, as I have pointed out, in McCadden this court had not considered the question of the degree of knowledge necessary for a Section 4(3)(b) conviction, the Lord Justice Clerk distinguished McCadden on the basis that the decision had depended on concert. He continued:
"There was no evidence that the appellant in that case had ever had possession of the controlled drug, and it was accepted that he could only be liable on the basis of art and part. In such a case knowledge on his part that drugs were involved in the transaction was obviously essential; he could not have been held to be engaged with others in the commission of a common criminal purpose in relation to supplying drugs unless he knew that the common criminal purpose related to controlled drugs."
In view of what is said in Rodden v. H.M.A. 1994 S.C.C.R. 841, which I shall discuss in a moment, it is worth noting that in this passage it was only in the case of the accused who was to be convicted on the basis of concert that the Lord Justice Clerk stipulated that he required to know that the common purpose related to controlled drugs. Having distinguished cases involving concert, the Lord Justice Clerk went on to hold that, since no question of concert arose in McKee, there had been no need for the Crown to prove that the appellant had known that she was handing over a controlled drug. On the other hand, if the appellant could prove her lack of knowledge of the contents, she might "be able to establish a defence under Section 28(3)".
In my view the court reached the correct result in McKee even though any reference to Section 28(3) was misplaced. For the reasons which I have set out above, given that the charge was libelled under Section 4(3)(b), the Crown discharged their onus by proving that the package contained cannabis resin and that the respondent was aware that she was involved in supplying the contents of the package to the prisoner. The respondent then fell to be convicted, unless she proved, in terms of Section 28(2), that she did not know and did not suspect nor have reason to suspect that there was a controlled drug in the package. Since there was no evidence to prove that, the respondent should have been convicted and the court was right to allow the Crown's appeal.
The matter of concert arose again in Rodden. The appellant was charged, along with a co-accused, with being concerned in supplying cannabis resin on a specific date on a road in Fife and in a car on that road. The police had been keeping the road under observation and they stopped a car driven by the appellant. They asked the appellant and the co-accused, who was a passenger in the car, to leave the car. As the co-accused was walking from the car, he appeared to stumble. The search revealed nothing and the appellant and the co-accused drove away. After they had left, the police searched the area and found four pieces of cannabis resin. They suspected that this might have been dropped by the two men whom they had searched and they suspected that they might return to look for it. The police therefore left the resin on the ground. About twenty minutes later the car returned and the police saw the two men get out and look around in an agitated fashion. They were down on their hands and knees looking for something at about the spot where the pieces of resin had been found. The police stopped and searched the appellant and co-accused once more and two pieces of resin were found on the co-accused. There was evidence that they were two of the four pieces which the police had found after the first search. At the trial the co-accused gave evidence that he had been looking for a key. Both the appellant and the co-accused were convicted.
Under reference to McKee, the Crown argued that being concerned in supplying a controlled drug was an offence of strict liability, subject only to Section 28, and that it had therefore not been necessary for the Crown to prove that the appellant knew what his co-accused was looking for. The court rejected that submission. Giving the opinion of the court, Lord Justice Clerk Ross stated that
"Where two or more accused are charged with acting art and part in the contravention of section 4(3)(b) of the Act of 1971, it must be established by sufficient evidence that there was knowledge on the part of each accused that drugs were involved in the transaction in question (McCadden v. H.M. Advocate; Tudhope v. McKee)."
Approaching the matter on that footing, the court held that there was sufficient evidence to allow the jury to draw the inference that the appellant and his co-accused were engaged together in a common criminal purpose, namely that they were concerned in the supplying of a controlled drug. Moreover, despite somewhat confusing directions, the jury must have appreciated that they were being asked to determine whether the appellant and his co-accused were acting together when they were seen in an agitated and anxious way to be searching at the locus for something which turned out to be a controlled drug. The appeal was therefore refused.
In Rodden also I have difficulty in understanding why the Crown chose to charge the accused with a contravention of Section 4(3)(b). The facts suggest that the men would have been more appropriately charged with being in possession with intent to supply in terms of Section 5(3). By forcing these particular facts into a Section 4(3)(b) charge, the Crown ran the risk of distorting the application of the legislation.
The evidence that the co-accused appeared to stumble suggests that it was the co-accused who dropped the cannabis resin. This in turn suggests that it was the co-accused who had it when the men were stopped originally. It was certainly he who had it when they were searched for a second time. Assuming that the quantities or form of the resin would have permitted the jury to draw the inference that the co-accused intended to supply the resin, the Crown would have had a sufficient basis for seeking a conviction of the co-accused for being in possession of the cannabis resin with intent to supply. The Crown could have sought a conviction of the appellant on that charge, however, only on an art and part basis. In order to convict the appellant of possessing the resin with intent to supply, the Crown would have required to show that the appellant knew that the co-accused had a controlled drug which he intended to supply and that the appellant and the co-accused were engaged on a common enterprise in relation to the supply of the drug. Since the Crown chose to dress up what was really a possession case as a charge of being concerned in supplying cannabis resin, in my view this court was right to hold that the appellant could be convicted only if the jury were satisfied that he knew that the transaction involved a controlled drug.
The statement in the Lord Justice Clerk's opinion, which I have quoted, goes further, however, than was necessary for the disposal of that case and it is accordingly obiter. It appears to say that the mere fact that the Crown has framed a charge on an art and part basis somehow imposes upon the Crown the need to prove knowledge on the part of each accused, which the Crown would not need to prove if they were not charged on that basis. Neither McCadden nor McKee is authority for a statement of this breadth and in my view, as a general proposition, it cannot be correct - as a simple example makes clear. Suppose that there is ample evidence against an accused of his activities as a courier, carrying packages which contain controlled drugs. The Crown charge him with being concerned in supplying controlled drugs. If the Crown establish that the packages contained controlled drugs and that the accused knew that he was involved in supplying the contents of the packages, they will be entitled to seek a conviction without proving that the accused knew that the packages contained controlled drugs - subject to any defence that the accused may put forward in terms of Section 28. The dictum in Rodden would suggest that the position would alter, however, if, say, the Crown charged the accused's wife on the basis that she had been party to the accused's activities. By choosing to charge the accused and his wife on an art and part basis, it is said, the Crown would be required to prove that the accused knew that the packages which he was carrying contained a controlled drug. There can be no such rule: a change in the drafting of the statutory charge cannot alter what Parliament requires for its proof. In the example which I have given, whether the accused is charged alone or along with his wife, the degree of knowledge on the part of the accused which the Crown have to prove remains the same.
I shall require to deal briefly with the matter of concert when I come to examine Salmon's appeal. In discussing McKee and Rodden I have proceeded on the assumption that concert can arise in cases under Section 4(3)(b). Like Lord Bonomy, however, I share the doubts expressed by Lord Marnoch in H.M.A. v. Hamill supra as to what room, if any, there is for concert to apply in these cases if the accused is participating in the operation of supplying. It is, however, unnecessary for present purposes to explore the matter and I accordingly reserve my opinion.
I would add one further comment. At first sight it seems strange that the issue of the degree of knowledge which the Crown must prove in Section 4(3) or Section 5(2) or (3) cases should be coming before the court for full argument so long after the legislation came into force. On reflexion I think, however, that this is because in most trials the issue does not really arise in this form. The Crown's contention will usually be that the whole circumstances, including tick lists or other drugs paraphernalia, demonstrate that the accused was well aware that what he possessed or was concerned in supplying was controlled drugs. Usually also, the defence will be that the accused knew nothing about the drugs and had nothing whatever to do with any supplying. In cases fought out on that stark basis, the jury's verdict will depend on how they resolve that broad conflict rather than on the precise nature or degree of the knowledge to be proved. So, however important these issues may be from a theoretical point of view, in practice they are likely to occur only comparatively rarely in trials or in appeals to this court.
With these general observations on the approach to the legislation, I turn to deal with the individual appeals. In doing so I gratefully adopt the reasoning of Lord Bonomy in his opinion which I have studied in draft, but in view of the importance of the matter I add some observations of my own.
Salmon's Appeal
At an early point in his charge to the jury in Salmon's case the trial judge explains to them, in the usual way, that the burden of proof lies on the Crown throughout and he then adds:
"Subject to what I have to say in a broad reply at a later stage, it is not for the accused to prove anything and he is under no obligation either to give or to lead evidence from other witnesses."
I suspect that the words "in a broad reply" are not an accurate transcription of what the judge actually said, but it is clear that he was signalling that he would return to the matter and give them a further direction as to circumstances in which, exceptionally, the onus would not lie on the Crown and it would be for the accused to prove something. There appear to be two passages later in his charge which have a bearing on the point. The first occurs after he has explained that the offence is one of being concerned in supplying a controlled drug in contravention of Section 4(3)(b). Having given that explanation, the trial judge adds that the first qualification attaching to the subsection is created by the words "Subject to section 28 of this Act". He goes on:
"Now in the circumstances of this case I consider it necessary for me to tell you about the provisions of that section. First of all, it applies to any offences under a listed series of provisions of the Act, one of which is section 4(3) with which we are concerned here. Now the third subsection of section 28 says this and I am going to read it short and exclude passages which are not of any conceivable relevance in this case, 'where in any proceedings for an offence to which this section applies it is necessary if the accused is to be convicted of the offence charged for the prosecution to prove that some substance or product involved in the alleged offence was the controlled drug which the prosecution alleges it to have been and it is proved that the substance or product in question was that controlled drug, the accused shall be acquitted thereof if he proves that he neither believed nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the substance or product in question was a controlled drug.' Now I'd like to try to explain to you just how that section may in certain circumstances operate and I do so by quoting to you what has been said about that provision and the provision under which charge 1 is brought by a senior judge. In a particular case with which he was dealing, he spoke of these provisions and was talking about the accused in that case who was charged with being concerned in the supply to another person of a controlled drug and he said this: 'In my opinion it was not necessary in the present case for the Crown to establish that the respondent knew what was in the package. Section 4(3)(b) is not concerned with possession where knowledge is an important matter. In my opinion the offence described in section 4(3)(b) is an offence of strict liability subject only to the defence afforded by section 28 of the Act." So that is I hope some clarification of the way in which that section may operate and I may have something more to say about that in due course."
The trial judge then gives certain other directions about the meaning of Section 4(3)(b) and in particular he refers to the phrase "being concerned in the supplying of controlled drugs." He adds:
"You may wonder well what on earth does that mean, that is why I have to tell you what that may mean. Being concerned in the supplying of drugs extends to a great variety of activities both at the centre and at the fringes of drug dealing including the activities of couriers, go-betweens, lookouts, financiers, advertisers and any person who is a link in a chain of distribution or who took part in breaking up or adulterating quantities of drugs and weighing out and packing drug deals. A person may be convicted of being concerned in the supply of drugs even if no actual supply takes place and further more, the offence can relate to drugs supplied or to be supplied by the accused person himself. So there you have a definition of what is involved in being concerned in supply."
The other passage dealing with knowledge comes in the section of his charge where the judge is summarising the position of the Crown and the defence in relation to the evidence. His summary of the defence position includes this passage:
"Now so far as the black bag is concerned, as I understand the defence position based upon the statement that was made on tape by the accused, it is quite simply that Mr. Salmon had no knowledge of even the existence of that black bag in the back of the Lancia car. Well, if you were to accept that, Ladies and Gentlemen, that would of course, be a very substantial step towards an acquittal. If, however, you were to conclude that Mr. Salmon was aware of that bag, it is in that context that what I have to say to you about Section 28 of the Act may have significance."
The transcription should presumably read "what I had to say to you about Section 28 of the Act".
At the trial the Crown had led evidence that the contents of the bag on the back seat of the car were cocaine. The Crown case was that Salmon was concerned in supplying the cocaine which was in the bag. To discharge the initial onus on the Crown, they required to satisfy the jury beyond reasonable doubt that the bag contained cocaine and that Salmon knew that he was involved in a scheme to supply the contents of the bag. In my view that was the appropriate test in the present case, even though Salmon and his co-accused were charged with being concerned in supplying "along with another". This was not a situation in which the Crown case rested on Salmon being party to the actings of others. Rather, the evidence showed that he, as an individual, had been concerned in supplying. That being so, the appropriate legal test was the one which I have described.
In determining that issue the jury would have been entitled, of course, to take into account the appellant's presence in the hotel with the other man, the fact that the drugs were in his car, the fact that when the police arrived he escaped from the scene and concealed himself in a stream, as well as the fact that glucose and bicarbonate of soda had been taken to his house where there were books on drugs - the Crown's contention being that it had been the intention to take the drugs to Salmon's house to prepare them for distribution. Indeed, in reality, this was a case where the Crown were inviting the jury to hold beyond reasonable doubt that Salmon well knew that there was cocaine in the bag. And at the hearing of the appeal Mr. Davidson accepted that the surrounding facts and circumstances would have entitled the jury to conclude that Salmon was well aware that the bag was in the car and that it contained controlled drugs. None the less, it was a matter of fact for the jury to determine and at the trial the contention for the defence was that they should not be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that Salmon was concerned in supplying the cocaine. Salmon did not give evidence, but in deciding whether the Crown had established their case, the jury required to take into account the fact that, in his statement to the police, he had said that he did not know that the bag was on the back seat of the car. They also had to consider the defence contentions that the money found in Salmon's house was not a particularly significant sum and might have derived in any event from car sales; and that Salmon had had nothing to do with bringing the glucose and bicarbonate of soda to his house.
Given the approach of the Crown and defence, the only question for the jury was whether the Crown had established beyond reasonable doubt that Salmon was concerned in supplying the contents of the bag. No further and separate issue arose under Section 28 and in particular no issue arose under Section 28(3)(b)(i), since counsel for Salmon never suggested - nor was there any evidence to prove - that, while he knew that the bag contained powder, he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the powder was a controlled drug. Indeed in the circumstances of this case any such defence would have been inconsistent with Salmon's actual defence that he knew nothing about the bag.
The trial judge's directions are open to criticism. In the first place, at no point does he spell out to the jury that they required to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the bag contained cocaine - a matter which was, of course, not in dispute - and that Salmon knew that he was involved in supplying the contents of the bag. Moreover, by quoting McKee and Section 28(3)(b)(i) - which had no bearing on the issue which the jury required to determine - the trial judge not only introduced an unnecessary complication but, especially by referring to strict liability, he ran the risk of leaving the jury confused as to where the onus of proof lay. Nor, in my opinion, is the position helped by the later passage in the judge's charge where he directed the jury that "if you were to accept" Salmon's statement to the police that he did not know of the existence of the bag in the back of the car, "that would, of course, be a very substantial step towards an acquittal". The use of the phrase "if you were to accept" was not criticised in the grounds of appeal. None the less it would have been preferable for the judge to direct the jury that, even if they did not actually accept the statement, if it gave rise to a reasonable doubt, they would require to acquit Salmon. Looking at the directions as a whole, while I have considerable sympathy with the trial judge in the light of the somewhat confused state of the authorities in this area of the law, I am satisfied that his directions did not give the jury adequate guidance as to the approach which they required to adopt in reaching their verdict. Moreover, although there was plainly ample evidence for the jury to convict Salmon, the lack of proper directions means that it is impossible to be sure that they applied the correct test in reaching their verdict. Nor can it be said that there was only one verdict which they could have returned. In these circumstances in this case there has been a miscarriage of justice. I therefore move your Lordships to set aside the verdict and quash Salmon's conviction on Charge 1. In that event we shall require to hear parties on any motion by the Crown for authority to bring a fresh prosecution in accordance with Section 119 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995.
Moore's Appeal
As I have explained, in Moore's written grounds of appeal, the criticism of the trial judge was that he should have directed the jury that the Crown required to prove that Moore knew that the packages were in his physical possession and control and that he knew of the general character of the contents. It is plain from reading his charge, however, that the trial judge gave entirely proper directions on the need for the Crown to prove that Moore knew that the bags were in the car and that he had control of them. So Miss Dorrian, Q.C., did not press that point. Nor, in the light of the discussion of the authorities at the hearing, did she maintain the contention that the Crown required to prove that Moore knew of the general character of the contents of the bags. In my view counsel was correct to adopt that attitude.
So far as the Peckhams bag is concerned, the only issue for the jury was whether the Crown had established beyond reasonable doubt that Moore knew that the bag was concealed behind the fascia. No issue under Section 28 arose in relation to that bag, as Miss Dorrian rightly accepted. She contended that the position was different in respect of the other bag, found between the seats. Here, she said, there was a defence open to Moore under Section 28(2). Therefore the trial judge had erred in not directing the jury that, even if they were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that Moore was in possession of this bag and its contents, they should go on to consider whether they were satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the bag contained a controlled drug.
Although the trial judge had not had the opportunity to prepare a supplementary written report on this additional ground of appeal, he informed the court that in his recollection the defence had not approached the matter in that way at the trial and in particular had not suggested that he should give a direction in these terms.
In describing the defence evidence in his charge to the jury, the trial judge narrated Moore's account of events up to the time when he parked the car and he then continued:
"According to his evidence he is about to get out when, 'Something dropped at my feet,' he said. 'I picked it up and Davis grabbed it and I said, what's this?" He repeated that and then we have the arrival of the police and he is ultimately standing on the kerb at the front or near the front of the car.
He accepts in cross-examination that what he picked up felt like polythene. He took it in his hand but Davis grabbed it and his evidence is that he has never been involved in anything like this, he had no idea what was in the bag if anything and he certainly had no idea there was anything else concealed up near the steering wheel in the area described to you the Jury and that they had nothing whatsoever to do with him and he suspected that it had something to do with his colleague.
Well, ladies and gentlemen, that is his evidence and it is of course markedly different to some of the evidence given by the Crown witnesses to such an extent that they can't be reconciled and you, the jury, will have to make up your mind about them in accordance with the tests which I have given to you."
At an earlier point in his charge, when dealing with the need for the Crown to prove their case, the trial judge said:
"Now, at this point let me say one thing further to you about his evidence. It is entirely for you to reflect and to remember what his evidence was and at this stage I say nothing about it but you will remember that he was asked a number of questions about the involvement or part played by the front seat passenger, his colleague, the Crown witness Davis I think his name was and the suggestion that was made and how he gave his evidence about his involvement.
It seems to be suggested by him that the front passenger was the person involved with the drugs. Now, you must view that evidence, ladies and gentlemen, quite simply in this way; if you believe it the way he gave it you have got to acquit him and if it creates a reasonable doubt as to his involvement, that is the accused's own involvement, then again you have got to acquit him - that's the way you have to look at it."
As these passages indicate, Moore's position at the trial was that he knew nothing about the Peckhams bag behind the fascia and that the first he knew of the other bag was when it landed at his feet and he picked it up and Davis grabbed it and Moore said "What's this?" and repeated the question. The police then arrived. In substance Moore's defence was that, apart from the momentary contact when the bag fell at his feet and he picked it up, he knew nothing of the bag or its contents. In other words he was contending that he was never in possession of the bag. If the jury accepted his evidence or it gave rise to a reasonable doubt, then, as the judge explained, their duty was to acquit Moore, on the basis that the Crown had failed to prove that he had the necessary knowledge and control of the bag and its contents. But the jury determined that critical question by convicting Moore of being in possession. They must therefore have accepted the quite different evidence for the Crown, to the effect that the bag was on the driver's area of the floor and that Moore picked it up, passed it to Davis and told him to ditch it. In accepting the Crown evidence of possession, the jury must by implication have rejected Moore's evidence. Since they had rejected his evidence, there was no basis upon which the jury could have been satisfied that, though he was in possession of the bag, he neither knew nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that it contained Ecstasy tablets. In these circumstances, as the defence obviously recognised at the trial, no issue arose under Section 28(2).
For these reasons I am satisfied that there was no misdirection on the part of the trial judge. Since that was the only basis upon which Moore's appeal was advanced at the hearing, I move your Lordships to refuse the appeal.
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE GENERAL
in
APPEALS
in causis
DONALD SALMON
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
and
ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
_______
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
OPINION OF LORD BONOMY
in
APPEALS
in causis
(1) DONALD SALMON
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
and
(2) ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
_______
In 1968 the House of Lords tackled the thorny issue of the requirements for "unlawful possession" under section 1 of the Drugs (Prevention of Misuse) Act 1964. In particular they wrestled with the question of the extent of knowledge about material under his control that an accused must have before he can be said to be in possession of it - Warner v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner [1969] 2 A.C. 256. In their speeches their Lordships expressed views which ranged from that of Lord Reid, that knowledge that the material was a controlled drug was required, to that of Lord Guest, that it was sufficient to know that the item under one's control was a package with contents. In the other speeches are comments which fall somewhere between these views. The 1964 statute and other pre-1971 statutes did not have the more sophisticated scheme of offences set out in sections 4 and 5 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971. Their Lordships were particularly concerned about the difficulty of identifying circumstances in which an accused might be acquitted because of his genuine lack of knowledge in relation to a provision which some, at least, regarded as creating an absolute offence. Lord Pearce encapsulated the problem when he said:
"It would, I think, be an improvement of a difficult position if Parliament was to enact that when a person has ownership or physical possession of drugs he shall be guilty unless he proves on a balance of probabilities that he was unaware of their nature or had reasonable excuse for their possession. In the present case, therefore, there was a very strong prima facie inference of fact that the accused was in possession of the drugs; but he was entitled to try to rebut (or raise a doubt as to) that inference by putting before the jury his defence that, although the package itself was clearly in his possession, the contents were not".
Following that invitation Parliament passed the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971. The drug trafficking offences are set out in sections 4 and 5. Two of these are the subjects of the present appeals, viz. contravening section 4(3)(b) of the Act, i.e. being "concerned in the supplying" of a controlled drug to another, and section 5(3), i.e. being in "possession...with intent to supply" a controlled drug to another. These offences, like the other offences in these sections, are said to be "subject to section 28 of this Act". In both sections the provisions creating the offences are in the following terms: "Subject to section 28 of this Act, it is an offence for a person...". Both sections are also subject to any regulations under section 7 of the Act, and offences under section 5 are subject to defences under section 5(4). Neither regulations under section 7 nor the defences in section 5(4) are of relevance to these appeals.
In section 28 Parliament set out defences echoing, to a considerable extent, the views of their Lordships in Warner about the circumstances which led, or should lead, to acquittal on a charge of unlawful possession and reflecting the views of Lord Pearce about the action which Parliament should take to clarify the law.
At first blush the scheme of sections 4 and 5, combined with section 28, is simple. If certain things are proved to the satisfaction of the jury beyond reasonable doubt, then the jury would, in the absence of other evidence, be entitled to convict. However, because detailed knowledge of the quality of the offending item involved does not have to be established by the Crown, it was necessary for Parliament to provide defences to avoid the injustice that could otherwise befall someone who is in all innocence associated with the controlled drug. The defences which he can establish are set out in section 28. Alas, the provisions have not always been viewed in such simple terms. Serious crimes are involved. As was plain in Warner, and as can be seen in other cases, the courts are not inclined to assume that Parliament intended that an accused might be convicted in the absence of mens rea in the sense of knowing involvement in the commission of a crime. The terms of the opinion of the Lord Justice General (Emslie) in McKenzie v. Skeen 1983 S.L.T. 121 at page 121 plainly disclose a reluctance to accept the import of, particularly, section 28(2). The opinion in R. v. Robert Hughes (1985) 81 Cr. App. R. 344 demonstrates a similar reluctance to recognise that the effect of the offences in sections 4 and 5 being said to be "subject to section 28" is that the knowledge required to prove the commission of any of these offences might fall short of knowledge that a controlled drug is involved.
In none of the cases since the 1971 Act was passed, which were cited to us, has the court endeavoured to analyse what the combined effect of the three sections is and what degree of knowledge may be sufficient to establish a case to answer. I suspect there are a number of reasons for that. In the first place, there are many cases where the only relevant knowledge that might be imputed to an accused is knowledge of the involvement of controlled drugs; so knowledge of a less specific nature will quite simply not arise. That may, for example, have been the position in Robert Hughes and may explain why the knowledge required was described as knowledge "of the nature of the enterprise, i.e. that it involved supply of a drug". In the second place, the Crown often present their case on the basis that the knowledge to be imputed to the accused is knowledge that a controlled drug is involved, and seek a conviction only if that is established. In the third place, the court has, on occasion, stated in terms that knowledge that a controlled drug is involved is the knowledge required. That has tended to be seen as a statement of principle of universal application, rather than a statement of the reality of the factual position in a particular case, cf. McCadden v. H.M. Advocate 1986 S.C.C.R. 16.
Perhaps the closest one gets in the cases to an analysis of the situation is in the opinion of the Lord Justice Clerk in Tudhope v. McKee 1987 S.C.C.R. 663 at 665 to 666. There he distils the requirement of knowledge for possession from McKenzie v. Skeen and Warner as
"knowledge of the fact that he had the article which turned out to be a prohibited drug, though it was not necessary to prove that he was aware that the article or substance was a drug far less the prohibited drug libelled".
The Lord Justice Clerk then proceeded to describe the offence in section 4(3)(b) as an offence of "strict liability" subject only to the defence afforded by section 28 of the Act. In particular he refers to section 28(3). (Indeed, I have not been able to find any reported case in which section 28(2) is explained). In so describing the offence under section 4(3)(b), however, the Lord Justice Clerk appears to distinguish that offence from the offence of possession, where knowledge is required. In other words he distinguished between an offence of strict liability and one where knowledge is required. He thus distinguished the case being considered from McKenzie v. Skeen and did so on the basis that "...it was not necessary in the present case for the Crown to establish that the respondent knew what was in the package" which was a yellow balloon wrapped in clingfilm which she passed to a prisoner sitting in court. While Lord Macdonald considered that knowledge that the package contained a controlled drug could be inferred from the facts, Lord Wylie proceeded on the basis that that degree of specific knowledge was not necessary. He accordingly proceeded on a similar basis to the Lord Justice Clerk and, like him, said in terms that it was not essential for the Crown to establish the accused knew what was in the package. He, however, came closest to stating in positive terms what is required for proof of a contravention of section 4(3)(b) when he said:
"...in the absence of possession reliance had to be placed on the whole surrounding facts and circumstances from which an inference could be drawn that there was some joint enterprise in which, with others, the appellant was engaged".
In fact the starting point turned out to be the possession of the balloon, but it may be that in that statement Lord Wylie was recognising that there is a requirement for knowledge in an offence under section 4(3)(b) but that the knowledge required may be of something other than the nature of the contents of any package involved. Lord Wylie's reference to "the whole surrounding facts and circumstances from which an inference could be drawn that there was a joint enterprise in which the appellant was engaged" presupposes knowledge of the enterprise, since a person can normally be assumed to be aware of what he is doing. Similarly, in relation to possession, the fact that an accused has a thing under his control will frequently be the basis for an inference that he knows what he has, or at least that he has something.
Having described the contravention of section 4(3)(b) as an offence of strict liability in Tudhope v. McKee, the Lord Justice Clerk, both there in relation to McCadden and in Rodden v. H.M. Advocate 1994 S.C.C.R. 841, expressed the view that where an accused is charged "art and part in a contravention of section 4(3)(b)" there must be evidence from which the jury can infer that he knew that drugs were involved before there would be sufficient evidence for convicting the accused of the offence. He distinguished a direct contravention of the section in circumstances such as those in Tudhope v. McKee from acting art and part in a contravention thereof. I share the doubts expressed by Lord Marnoch in H.M. Advocate v. Hamill 1998 S.C.C.R. 165 as to whether art and part guilt, in the sense that that expression is normally understood, applies to a contravention of this section. It seems to me that in relation to both McCadden and Rodden the Lord Justice Clerk was simply stating what was required, in the way of knowledge, in the particular circumstances of these cases to provide sufficient evidence to establish the contravention.
So, as I indicated earlier, no case provides a comprehensive analysis of the scheme of sections 4, 5 and 28. The grounds of appeal in the present appeals focus on the issue of knowledge in relation to both section 4(3)(b) and section 5(3). I consider that it is necessary, in order to deal satisfactorily with these appeals, for the court to identify the part which knowledge plays in these sections.
It is helpful to consider possession first. Possession in this context has been the subject of judicial definition both before and after the 1971 Act was passed. In R. v. Ashton-Rickardt (1977) 65 Cr. App. R. 67 Roskill L.J. explained the effect of the 1971 Act as follows:
"It is true that the language of section 5(1) and (2) of the 1971 Act is not precisely the same as that of section 1 of the 1964 Act, but the word 'possession' appears in both the statutory provisions. It would be strange indeed if Parliament, being deemed to know in 1971 what the House of Lords had decided in Warner v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner in 1969, should have intended a different meaning to be given to 'possession' in the 1971 Act from that given by the House of Lords in Warner v. Metropolitan Police Commissioner when construing the word in the 1964 Act. If that had been Parliament's intention, one would have expected to have found some very clear language to that effect in the 1971 Act".
Then later he stated the opinion of the court over which he presided as follows:
"It seems to us plain that there is nothing in section 28 which in any way alters the burden which rests on the Crown so that when they seek to prove unlawful possession of a controlled drug, proof of possession involves proof of knowledge by the accused that he had control of the 'thing' in question, as the House of Lords decided in Warner's case".
That opinion, that the basic requirements of possession were not altered by the 1971 Act, was confirmed by the opinions of both the Lord Justice General and Lord Cameron in McKenzie v. Skeen. It can therefore be asserted with confidence that, before a person can be said to be in possession of a controlled drug, he must be shown to have control over the material or substance which turns out to be a controlled drug and to have knowledge that he has control over that material or substance. Knowledge of the quality of the thing, i.e. that it is a controlled drug, is not essential for possession. If the knowledge required for possession were knowledge that the material or substance was a controlled drug, then the defence provided in section 28(3)(b)(i) would be unnecessary. Indeed, it would require proof on a balance of probabilities by the accused of something about which reasonable doubt would oblige the jury to acquit in any event. I can see no other way of making sense of that particular defence than if the knowledge which the Crown requires to prove is at least restricted in the way I have indicated. That provision and the rest of section 28(3) are concerned with the quality of a substance or product and would relate, for example, to a situation where an accused might have control over some tablets, know he has them, but have no reason to suspect they are other than medicinal products such as aspirin.
Section 28(2), it seems to me, deals with a rather different situation, but is nevertheless closely related to section 28(3). It is in the following terms:
"Subject to subsection (3) below, in any proceedings for an offence to which this section applies it shall be a defence for the accused to prove that he neither knew of nor suspected nor had reason to suspect the existence of some fact alleged by the prosecution which it is necessary for the prosecution to prove if he is to be convicted of the offence charged".
There are many cases where an accused person knows that he has a container and knows that the container has contents within it, but it cannot be shown he knows the character of these contents. For example, the evidence might indicate he was told that he was carrying money. In these circumstances he would know he was carrying the item which turned out to be controlled drugs and would thus be in possession of it on the basis of the degree of knowledge and control required for possession. That could result in injustice if he was liable to be convicted even though he had in fact no reason to suspect it was powder, far less a controlled drug. To prevent such injustice a defence that he had no reason to suspect that the contents were a product or substance which was proved to be a controlled drug is provided in section 28(2).
That this is how the matter should be viewed is confirmed by the Lord Chief Justice (Lane) in delivering the opinion of the court in R. v. James McNamara (1988) 87 Cr. App. R. 246. At page 251 he said this:
"It seems to us, in order to make sense of the provisions of section 28, and also to make as clear as can be possible the decision in Warner v. M.P.C., the draftsman of the Act intended that the prosecution should have the initial burden of proving that the defendant had, and knew that he had, in these circumstances the box in his control and also that the box contained something. That, in our judgment, establishes the necessary possession. They must also of course prove that the box in fact contained the drug alleged, in this case cannabis resin. If any of those matters are unproved, there is no case to go to the jury".
He then went on to explain that section 28 was aimed at resolving the difficulties which the court identified for a defendant in circumstances such as those arising in Warner. In doing that the Lord Chief Justice concentrated on section 28(3)(b)(i). In fact on his own analysis McNamara was a case in which the appropriate defence was under section 28(2). For present purposes, however, the important thing is that the knowledge required is simply that "the box contained something".
The expression "to be concerned in the supplying" of a controlled drug requires to be interpreted as part of the code of sections 4, 5 and 28 in the same way as "possession". Being "concerned" in an activity imports participation in that activity. In dealing with the meaning of "possession" in McKenzie v. Skeen Lord Cameron said at page 122:
"...the concept of control would imply knowledge that the article in question was subject to that control. Control is not a function of the unconscious".
Likewise participation in an activity implies knowledge of that involvement. The question here is whether the knowledge required is knowledge that drug trafficking is the activity involved. To give meaning to section 28(2) and (3) in the context of being "concerned in the supplying" of a controlled drug, knowledge of the quality of the material or substance cannot be essential. In my opinion what is required is participation in an operation which has as its objective the supplying of material or of a substance which turns out to be a controlled drug, and knowledge that what one is involved in is a supplying enterprise. In relation to a charge of contravening section 4(3)(b), a defence under section 28(2) would be open to a person who was involved in some capacity in arranging for a delivery to be made, and knew he was arranging a delivery, but who thought that the delivery was of videos rather than of a controlled drug: he could prove that he had no reason to suspect that the supplying enterprise involved, for example tablets, far less a controlled drug. In the same way, section 28(3) would apply where absence of knowledge that a substance or product was a controlled drug was the issue.
Thus it can be seen that what the Crown require to establish in order to prove a contravention of section 4(3)(b) is that the accused played some part in an enterprise which had as its objective the supplying of something which turned out to be a controlled drug. If his defence is that he was not involved in any enterprise or that he did not know there was an enterprise which had supplying of material as its ultimate objective, then that defence would be open to him in the ordinary way by relying on reasonable doubt. If, however, he was playing a role and knew that the objective was supplying material, there would be a case to answer and indeed, if these facts were not disputed, he would be convicted unless he established one of the defences open to him in terms of sections 28(2) and (3).
In suggesting that section 28(2) had no real content I believe the Lord Justice General (Emslie) erred when he said:
"It will be observed at once that this subsection is extraordinary in that it appears to restrict the prescribed defence to proof of ignorance 'of the existence of some fact...which it is necessary for the prosecution to prove..'. Why it was thought necessary so to provide is astonishing since no conviction could possibly be returned on the evidence as a whole unless the Crown proved all that required to be proved. Be that as it may the defence is clearly not available with respect to any fact which it is not necessary for the prosecution to prove...".
What I think the Lord Justice General failed to give full weight to was the stress in the subsection on the accused proving lack of knowledge or suspicion or reason for suspicion of a "fact" which the prosecution had to prove. This presupposes that the Crown do not have to prove knowledge of the particular fact but simply have to prove the fact itself. It is only right and just that in such circumstances there should be open to an accused the defence that he had no knowledge of, and suspicion of, and reason to suspect that fact. I find no difficulty with that concept and can readily see how it would apply in the circumstances of McKenzie v. Skeen, e.g. to the fact the Crown had to prove that there were leaves within the jar which turned out to be cannabis. The misfortune is that the extreme Crown argument, that knowledge was not required at all for possession, distracted attention from the need to give meaning to the terms of section 28(2).
It follows that I agree entirely with your Lordship in the chair's analysis of the relationship between section 28 on the one hand and sections 4 and 5 respectively on the other.
The appeal of Donald Salmon
The material facts are set out in the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair. In presenting this appeal Mr. Davidson departed from the first ground and made two submissions in relation to the second ground. His first and primary submission was that the trial judge misdirected the jury by failing to direct them that the Crown required to prove there was knowledge on the part of the appellant that drugs were involved in the transaction about which evidence was led. Mr. Davidson conceded that knowledge might be inferred from the surrounding circumstances and that wilful blindness on the part of the appellant would be no answer to circumstances inferring knowledge on his part. His second submission related to page 26B to D of the charge where the trial judge directed the jury that, if they accepted the appellant's own evidence that he had no knowledge of even the existence of a black bag on the back seat of a car, then "that would...be a very substantial step towards an acquittal".
The appellant and another had been seen by police officers to start to enter the rear of the car. At that point a number of police officers pounced on them. The appellant's co-accused was apprehended but the appellant walked quickly away, subsequently breaking into a run, disappeared and was later found lying in the bed of a stream adjacent to a field, almost totally submerged in the water.
While the primary submission was that a direction that knowledge that drugs were involved was necessary, it was implicit in the submission that at the very least the jury must be told what knowledge on the part of the accused must be proved before he can be convicted. It follows from what I have said so far that, where the charge is one of contravening section 4(3)(b) of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, it will normally be necessary for the trial judge to direct the jury that "being concerned in the supplying of a controlled drug to another" involves participation by the
appellant in an enterprise involving, as its objective, the supplying of a controlled drug and knowledge that what he is involved in is an enterprise involving the supplying of some material. So the two elements of "involvement" and "knowledge" should normally be at the forefront of a definition of the offence. In this charge the trial judge, in defining the crime, made reference initially to the scheme of the Misuse of Drugs Act, i.e. that it involved the classification of controlled drugs and the creation of a system of control of the production, possession and use of such drugs. He then explained that the offence in section 4(3)(b) was subject to regulations under section 7 and also subject to section 28, the terms of which he set out, and went on to quote from the Lord Justice Clerk's opinion in Tudhope v. McKee where he said:
"In my opinion it was not necessary in the present case for the Crown to establish that the respondent knew what was in the package. Section 4(3)(b) is not concerned with possession (where knowledge is an important matter)".
The words in brackets were added by the trial judge to the quotation. He continued with the quotation as follows:
"In my opinion the offence described in section 4(3)(b) is an offence of strict liability subject only to the defence afforded by section 28 of the Act".
At that point in his charge he returned to the qualification that an offence under section 4(3)(b) is "subject to any regulations under section 7 of this Act", and directed the jury to put that aspect of the matter out of their minds, since they did not need to be concerned with that provision in this case. He then defined "supply". Following that he proceeded to explain "being concerned in the supplying of controlled drugs". In doing so he quoted from the opinion of Lord Hunter in Kerr v. H.M. Advocate 1986 S.C.C.R. 81. The particular quotation explains the width of activities covered by the expression but makes no reference to knowledge. Following that his Lordship proceeded to direct the jury on the law of concert.
The trial judge made one further reference to section 28 at page 26 of the charge, immediately following the passage criticised in the subsidiary submission of Mr. Davidson. Having told the jury that the absence of knowledge on the part of the appellant of even the existence of the black bag would be a very substantial step towards an acquittal, he went on:
"If however you were to conclude that Mr. Salmon was aware of that bag then it is in that context that what I have to say to you about section 28 of the Act may have significance".
The trial judge made no further reference to section 28 but it may be the transcript inaccurately reflects what he said and that he in fact made a reference back to what he had already said about section 28. Although the appellant did not give evidence, reliance was placed on a tape recorded interview in which he denied knowledge of the existence of the black bag.
It is a consequence of the opinion I have reached about the interpretation of sections 4, 5 and 28 that section 28(3), which was the subsection quoted by the trial judge in his charge, could have no application to the live issues at this trial. Indeed it is difficult to see that section 28(2) would have had any application either. The main issue was whether the appellant was concerned in a supplying operation and, in particular, whether he knew of such an operation. Apart from the bag of drugs in the back of the car, at his house there was other material, such as bags in which drugs might be packaged, bulking-out or cutting agents, a substantial sum of money and certain books on the subject of drugs. There were, however, also issues over the extent of the appellant's knowledge of the presence of the bags and cutting agents and the source of the money. The principal issue in the trial, therefore, was simply whether the Crown had proved the basic elements they required to prove for conviction. In these circumstances it was, in my opinion, fundamental that the jury should be directed on the subject of the knowledge that the Crown required to bring home to the appellant for conviction. They were not. I am, therefore, satisfied that the jury were misdirected in relation to the basic definition of what is required to prove an offence under section 4(3)(b) of the Act.
The advocate depute initially submitted that, reading the charge as a whole, it must be plain to the jury that knowledge that controlled drugs were involved had to be established. He pointed out that the trial judge referred to knowledge at page 26 in the passage criticised in the subsidiary submission and also earlier at pages 14 and 15 in dealing with section 28. However, the advocate depute did ultimately concede that these latter references were in the context of defining the offence under section 4(3)(b) as one of strict liability. It was part of the advocate depute's submission that section 28 did not really arise in this case but that the references to that section, albeit unnecessary, were favourable directions since they were directions about a defence which did not happen to arise. In all the circumstances he submitted there was no miscarriage of justice.
While there may be force in what the advocate depute said about section 28, I consider there was a miscarriage of justice in this case because the direction omitted was fundamental in relation to the real issues in the case, and the passage at page 26B to D could have been of no assistance to the jury in the absence of the basic direction about knowledge. It is unfortunate that that is the conclusion to which I am driven since this was, on the face of it, a strong Crown case in respect of which a unanimous verdict was returned by the jury. I am, therefore, satisfied that this appeal should be allowed.
The appeal of Anthony James Irvine Moore
Again the material facts are set out in the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair. The grounds of appeal are very similar to those in the case of Salmon, although in this case the offence is contravening section 5(3) of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971. The contention advanced in the grounds is that the trial judge misdirected the jury by telling them that the knowledge required, where the Crown case was that the appellant had possession of a plastic bag, was knowledge that he had the bag and that it contained something, and that it was not necessary for the Crown to prove that he knew that the contents of the bag were controlled drugs. The direction sought by the appellant was that the appellant knew the package with contents was in his physical possession and control and that he knew the general character of the contents.
That latter point of detail can be found in the charge in a similar case viz. Sim v. H.M. Advocate 1996 S.C.C.R. 77. The Lord Justice General (Hope), in delivering the Opinion of the Court, said that that part of the direction was consistent with the opinions in McKenzie v. Skeen. I cannot find the passage in McKenzie v. Skeen that the court in Sim may have had in mind. I do not read the opinions in that case as indicating that knowledge of the "general character" of the contents of a bag is required. McKenzie v. Skeen is a highly exceptional case on very unusual circumstances. In the course of his opinion the Lord Justice General (Emslie) said:
"In most cases possession of a container will support the inference of possession of its actual contents but it must always be a question to be decided in the particular circumstances of the particular case".
It follows that in Sim the trial judge was correct when he said:
"To put me in possession I would require to know the existence of the package in my bag. I would not require to know the precise character of the bag or its contents, namely that they were particular drugs, but I would need to know that the packet and its contents were in my bag".
He demanded too much when he went on to say:
"The Crown must, however, prove that he knew that the bag, with contents, was in his physical control, and that he knew the general character of the contents of that bag".
Ignorance of the general character or the contents of a bag is the sort of thing that it is for an accused to prove in terms of section 28(2), for example where he believes he has money and he actually has powder.
As it happens Miss Dorrian, in presenting this appeal, did not rely on Sim or indeed the grounds of appeal lodged. She presented the appeal on a broader basis in the light of the argument which had developed in the course of the appeals. She submitted that, following the trial judge's directions, the jury would be left with the impression that the offence of contravening section 5(3) of the Act was an absolute offence committed if there were controlled drugs present in the car which he was driving, and that the circumstances in which the jury should acquit the accused were inadequately set out in the charge.
The evidence indicated that, when police officers stopped the car driven by the appellant, in which there were three passengers, and searched it, they found a polythene bag containing 50 MDEA tablets between the seats. The front seat passenger was trying to conceal it. His evidence was that the bag had been at the appellant's feet. In addition, behind the fascia dashboard the police found a red Peckhams bag in which were two other bags containing 50 and 13 MDEA tablets respectively. The appellant gave evidence. In relation to the bag between the seats he said that when the car stopped something dropped at his feet. He picked it up. He said to the front seat passenger "What is this?". The front seat passenger grabbed it. The appellant said he had never seen that before. He also said he had no knowledge of the Peckhams bag behind the fascia.
Against that background Miss Dorrian pointed to a number of passages in the charge which she maintained, taken together, constituted misdirection of the jury amounting to a miscarriage of justice. In relation to knowledge, at pages 14E to 15D the trial judge said that in relation to both bags the Crown must prove that the appellant knew that a bag containing something was in the car. He went on to say that the Crown does not have to prove the appellant knew that there were drugs in the bag, provided he knew he had the bag which contained something. He then went on:
"...and the reason for that is this; the legislation concerning drugs is couched in what is described as absolute terms and it is not necessary for the Crown to prove that the accused knew that the contents of the bags were controlled drugs".
She related that passage to what the trial judge said at page 26B to D when dealing with the appellant's position. There the trial judge said:
"He accepts in cross-examination that what he picked up felt like polythene. He took it in his hand but Davis (front seat passenger) grabbed it and his evidence is that he has never been involved in anything like this, he had no idea what was in the bag if anything and he certainly had no idea there was anything else concealed up near the steering wheel in the area described to you the jury and that they had nothing whatsoever to do with him and he suspected that it had something to do with his colleague".
That passage, said Miss Dorrian, might indicate to the jury that the appellant only had a defence if he proved the absence of knowledge that there was anything there in a bag at all. The main issues in the case did not relate to section 28 at all. They related to the fundamental points the Crown must establish before there can be conviction.
She pointed to other passages in the charge which, she submitted, suggested that there was an onus on the appellant to prove his defence or which gave an inadequate indication of the circumstances in which the appellant should be acquitted. She pointed to page 10C where the trial judge said:
"If however he does give evidence as he did in this case, if you believe his evidence and that evidence tends to excuse him of the crime, then that is sufficient, you must acquit if you believe him".
She suggested the use of the expression "tends to excuse him of the crime" did not go far enough. The trial judge should have said that "reasonable doubt" about the accused's guilt arising from any evidence would result in acquittal. However, this direction must be seen in its context. It was a direction given in relation to the absence of any need for corroboration of evidence which supports the defence and followed on clear directions about the presumption of innocence, the burden of proof and the standard of proof. Miss Dorrian pointed also to the direction at page 19C in relation to the appellant's answers to police questioning where he said:
"His answers to questions in this statement arising out of questions is admissible as evidence of the facts contained in the answers and if you think the answers exculpate him, if you accept them as true, then you must acquit".
She criticised the use of "exculpate" because that suggested some onus on the appellant and was plainly not the only basis on which there might be acquittal. However, it must be noted that immediately after that direction the trial judge said: "Once again if you think they create a reasonable doubt you must acquit". She then pointed to the trial judge's use of the word "involvement" at page 11. In dealing with the evidence of the appellant he referred to him being asked a number of questions about the involvement or part played by the front seat passenger Davis. He went on:
"It seems to be suggested by him that the front seat passenger was the person involved with the drugs. Now, you must view that evidence, ladies and gentlemen, quite simply in this way. If you believe the way he gave it you have got to acquit him and if it creates a reasonable doubt as to involvement, that is the accused's own involvement, then again you have got to acquit him -- that's the way you have to look at it".
I consider that passage makes plain the obligation of the jury to acquit if in reasonable doubt about the guilt of the accused because of the view they take of the evidence about the role played by Davis. That is simply a specific direction about one aspect of the case and does not, in my opinion, detract from the overall adequacy and clarity of the directions about onus and standard of proof given by the trial judge.
In relation to section 28, Miss Dorrian pointed to the fact that the evidence led by the Crown indicated that, when the car was stopped, the appellant took the bag in the footwell in his hand, passed it to his front seat passenger and said "ditch that". She referred to the trial judge's direction in relation to the appellant's evidence on this point at page 26B to C, where he reminded the jury that the appellant said he had never been involved in anything like this and had no idea what was in the bag, if anything. She submitted that on that evidence it could be said he had control of the package, and knowledge of that and of the existence of contents might be inferred from his holding it. In these circumstances that summary of his evidence indicated his defence was threefold, viz: he had no knowledge that the bag had any contents; if it did have contents, he had no idea what they were; and he certainly had no reason to suspect that controlled drugs were involved. In other words he was denying the knowledge that the Crown had to establish to bring home guilt, and was also, under section 28(2), denying knowledge of a fact the Crown had to prove, viz. that there were tablets in the bag, and he was also, under section 28(3), denying knowledge that the tablets were controlled drugs. She submitted that the jury should have been told they could distinguish the appellant's position in relation to that bag and his position in relation to the Peckhams bag and the two bags in it which were concealed behind the fascia dash.
In reply the advocate depute acknowledged that, on a very technical view of the appellant's position described in his evidence, he might be said to have acknowledged control over the bag in the footwell. On the other hand that was clearly not the way in which the Crown had approached the case, since it was not a realistic way in which to expect a jury to view possession. That explained why counsel for the appellant did not suggest in submission to the jury that they should apply section 28 and why the trial judge gave no directions about section 28. He submitted that the trial judge's directions were much more favourable to the accused and that, in any event, at page 11, in relation to the appellant's evidence about the involvement of his front seat passenger quoted above, the jury were told that if they accepted what the appellant said about his holding of the bag and his explanation of the circumstances they should acquit. That direction was favourable when read along with the rest of the charge. At no point, in the submission of the advocate depute, was there any indication given to the jury that there was an onus on the appellant. He made the same submission in relation to the use of the expression "absolute" in its context, and the directions at page 19 which were criticised by Miss Dorrian.
I am persuaded that this is a case where a direction about section 28 was unnecessary. The case was conducted on the basis that the appellant's account provided a defence if it created a reasonable doubt in the minds of the jury about the accused's guilt. The emphasis was on the package which the appellant handled, but it would be unrealistic to think that the jury could possibly have thought that, while the appellant's evidence might substantiate a defence in relation to the bag he handled, it might not provide one in relation to the hidden bag. There was, in my opinion, no need for the trial judge to distinguish between the two bags in the directions he gave. His directions were clear on the issue, the sole issue in the case, namely whether the Crown had proved the accused's guilt beyond reasonable doubt. The trial judge gave standard clear directions about the presumption of innocence, burden of proof and the standard of proof. He supplemented his directions in relation to the burden and standard of proof when dealing with corroboration. At that stage, in addition to the passage quoted above, he said at pages 10D to 11B:
"...it may be...you don't altogether believe what he said to you, you believe some of it but not all of it. If what you do believe creates a reasonable doubt in your mind as to whether the Crown has proved its case then, again your duty is clear, you must acquit and even if you wholly disbelieve the accused, if you reject him it does not follow that he must be guilty. You simply wipe out his evidence as if it had never been given, you go back and again ask yourselves the question, on the case has the Crown on whom the burden lies proved it beyond a reasonable doubt. That, ladies and gentlemen, is how you must view the evidence of the accused".
He went on at page 11 to deal specifically with the effect of the appellant's evidence about the role of his front seat passenger. I have dealt with that above. In relation to the definition of possession at page 13E to F he said: "The critical factors are knowledge of possession and control over the destiny of the item". Then at page 15 he gave further directions about knowledge, making it clear that it was knowledge of the existence of the bag and the existence of contents that mattered. The word "absolute" was used in the context of explaining that knowledge that the contents were controlled drugs was not required. What was said subsequently at page 19 in relation to the effect of the statements made by the appellant in answer to police questions made it clear that reasonable doubt about his guilt resulting from these statements should lead to acquittal. At page 26 the trial judge repeated parts of the appellant's evidence, about the effect of which he had already given clear directions. There was, in my opinion, no need for the trial judge to raise the issue of section 28. It was not a live issue in the trial. In relation to the matters which were raised by Crown and defence he gave directions which made it clear that, if the jury were in reasonable doubt that the appellant only became aware of the bag and its contents because it dropped at his feet when the police arrived, then they should acquit. In these circumstances I do not consider there was any misdirection, far less any miscarriage of justice. I am accordingly satisfied that this appeal should be refused.
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
OPINION OF LORD BONOMY
in
APPEALS
in causis
(1) DONALD SALMON
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
and
(2) ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
_______
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
OPINION OF LORD JOHNSTON
in
APPEALS
in causis
DONALD SALMON
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
and
ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
_______
I have had the opportunity of reading the Opinion of your Lordship in the chair, with which I am in full agreement, in terms of both the analysis of the general law raised by the issues in these appeals and also with regard to the proposed particular disposals in each case.
I would merely wish to add that to my view the scheme of the legislation, particularly in respect of Section 28 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, is not designed to admit general defences, but only to focus a particular defence in a given state of circumstances. I say this, because in my opinion Section 28 of the Act in general terms will not come into play where the basic defence being advanced on behalf of the accused, whether in cross-examination or a fortiori by actual evidence is, in relation to Section 4(3)(b) of the Act (being concerned in supply), denial on the part of the accused of any knowledge that a scheme, of the type envisaged by your Lordship in the chair, was in existence. That is a perfectly legitimate defence, but only rarely will it thereafter admit Section 28 in any of its forms in the alternative. Equally, with regard to the position under Section 5 of the legislation where the accused, again through cross-examination or by evidence, is denying knowledge of the existence whether it be of a container or of the article in question, it will be unusual for him thereafter to invoke Section 28 in the alternative. In my opinion that defence under section 28 will generally only be available where the basic facts are admitted in relation to the crimes covered by both sections of the legislation, which are sufficient to yield the necessary inferences, that the Crown need establish with regard to relevant knowledge in a particular case. Thereafter the grounds of rebuttal open in the particular ways in relation to the provisions that Section 28 offers. I therefore consider it unlikely for a defence to be run based both on denial of the basic facts that the Crown seek to prove in order to establish a prima facie case and thereafter an assertion of ignorance of the particular issues that Section 28 raises. By way of example to make the point, a person asserting alibi cannot thereafter in practice in the alternative admit presence but deny involvement in the criminal activity in question.
I accept that there must be room for unusual cases, which the law requires to recognise, but it remains my opinion that when the evidence discloses a basis for a defence under Section 28 the matter must be focused on the evidence as such, and it is unnecessary for the trial judge even to consider the issues raised by section 28 in his charge unless they have been properly so focused by the defence.
In the whole circumstances, for the reasons given by your Lordship, I would allow the appeal in relation to Salmon and deny it in relation to Moore.
HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
OPINION OF LORD JOHNSTON
in
APPEALS
in causis
DONALD SALMON
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
and
ANTHONY JAMES IRVINE MOORE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent:
_______