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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Jeffrey v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2002] ScotHC 94 (16 July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2002/94.html Cite as: [2002] ScotHC 94 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord Justice General Lord Hamilton Lord Kingarth
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Appeal No: C352/99 OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE GENERAL in APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION by stuart darren jeffrey Appellant; Against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: M. Scott, Q.C.; Thorntons
Respondent: D. Batchelor, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent
16 July 2002
"The child, in my view, was a vulnerable person for whom the giving of evidence required her to be prepared over a period of time. I considered that her being recalled could have had a detrimental effect. I considered, further, in a matter of such apparent importance to the interests of an accused person that great care ought to be taken to ensure that all matters relevant to the evidence being given by a witness ought to be put before that witness. The statements lodged had been available to the defence from an early date and their significance clearly had been appreciated".
The sheriff goes on to state that the latter point distinguished the present case from Paterson v. H.M. Advocate in which at the time when a witness was being cross-examined the defence had not had access to what the witness had said on a previous occasion. It was in that context that the appeal court took the view that the sheriff would have been virtually bound to grant the motion for this recall of this witness.
"Counsel's independence must be preserved if he is to fulfil his duty to the court and to act in the public interest upon his professional responsibility. Any erosion of this principle would be bound to lead to uncertainty, and with it, to the risk of delay and confusion in the conduct of criminal trials, which rely to a substantial extent for their fairness and efficiency on the right of counsel to exercise their own judgment to the way in which the defence is conducted.
Accordingly it cannot be asserted as an absolute rule that the conduct of the defence by the accused's counsel or his solicitor will not be a ground of appeal. But the circumstances in which it will provide a ground of appeal must be defined narrowly. The conduct must be such as to have resulted in a miscarriage of justice, otherwise section 228(2) of the 1975 Act [now section 103(3) of the 1995 Act] will not apply. It can only be said to have resulted in a miscarriage of justice if it has deprived the accused of his right to a fair trial. That can only be said to have occurred when the conduct was such that the accused's defence was not presented to the court. This may be because the accused was deprived of the opportunity to present his defence, or because his counsel or solicitor acted contrary to his instructions as to the defence which he wished to be put or because of other conduct which had the effect that, because his defence was not presented to the court, a fair trial was denied to him".
"It is probably less helpful to approach the problem via the somewhat semantic exercise of trying to assess the qualitative value of counsel's alleged ineptitude, but rather to seek to assess its effect on the trial and the verdict according to the terms of the subsection".
The court in Anderson continued:
"We find some assistance in Rougier J's observation [in R v. Clinton at page 1188] that it is the effect of the conduct of the trial, rather than the qualitative description which is to be applied to it, which should be examined in order to see whether there was a miscarriage of justice. Phrases such as 'flagrant incompetence' may be of some value in order to show the exceptional nature of the circumstances where it would be proper for the court to intervene. The underlying question however is whether the appellant was deprived of his right to a fair trial because of the effect of the conduct which is complained of is that his defence was not put to the court".
"a substantial part of the Crown case...was never made the subject of any investigation by the defence either by way of precognition of the Crown pathologists or by way of an independent pathologist".
In E. v. H.M. Advocate, while the members of the court were not in agreement on all points, they were united in holding that there had been a miscarriage of justice in respect that the defence had not obtained support for the appellant by challenging the inference which was sought to be drawn from medical evidence relating to the complainers and the evaluation of information which they had given in the course of interviews.
"J7 told me that, while he and J6 had been sitting together in the jury room at a point where the jury had been retired - in fact, during the submission of no case to answer - that J6 had told him he had heard while in licensed premises that the appellant had a criminal record and that he had gotten away with something similar to the charge on which he was now standing trial a short time before. J7 had already begun forming an opinion on the character and conduct of J6 in the jury room and considered that either J6 was acting out a degree of bravado or that he had actually heard something. I understood this to relate to a degree of immaturity on the part of J6 perhaps in relation to his having been selected for jury service. J7 decided that he must have heard something and, feeling compromised in his role as a juror, decided then to speak to the court officer. J7 said that he was alive to the repercussions of receiving such information and went on to say that he did not honestly feel that he could have put such information to the back of his mind (sic). When asked about the apparent failure of J6 to admit to possession of such information he offered no opinion.
I was at pains to ascertain from J7 where he and J6 had been seated in the jury room. I was told they had been seated together - as they had been in the jury box - and that the conversation had taken place between them alone and while their voices were lowered. No other member of the jury had been close enough to hear.
J6 informed me that the information said to have been imparted to J7 had indeed been given by him and that that information had come into his possession a few weeks before. J6 was challenged by J7 as to whether the timescale was accurate and asked why he had not volunteered possession of such information at the opportunities afforded at the outset of the trial. The response given by J6 was not clear. It may be, however, that when uttering these words J7 was simply expressing surprise at the knowledge of his fellow juror and the length of time that had been in the possession of J6 rather than asking for a specific response. J6 told me that he had not discussed the information in his possession with anyone else on the jury apart from J7.
When I enquired of J6 as to why he had not considered his position in the light of the approach by the sheriff clerk before the trial commenced and the opportunity which I had afforded to the empanelled jurors, he indicated that he had not considered that such information as had come to light was of relevance in the trial.
J6 seemed to me to indicate that the information which he had passed on had come into his possession within 24 hours of his having imparted it to J7. He made the point as to why such a piece of information would have significance when, on being cited for jury service he would not have known he would have been balloted as a juror. He was clear in what he told me that he had not spoken of the information to any other member of the jury.
J7 also made it clear that he had not discussed the information imparted to him to anyone else. When asked if he considered the information had been further passed on by J6 he indicated that, in his opinion, it had not. There had been discussion involving all members of the jury anent the moral standards of certain unnamed witnesses in the case but that had not touched upon the appellant.
What I was concerned to ascertain as far as possible was whether the discussion between these two male jurors had been overheard by or involved other members of the jury. I did not consider it at all appropriate to embark on such an enquiry. I had administered an admonition to the entire jury at the outset that the evidence from which they were to make their findings had to be based on what they had heard in the court. J7 had obtempered the admonition which I have given to the jury at the outset that any approach to any of them should be reported to me. I considered in those circumstances that the possibility of further contamination unlikely.
I was told that there had been discussion between members of the jury touching on certain moral values of witnesses but that there had been no discussion anent the appellant.
I noted J7 to be mature in age and outlook. He struck me as intelligent and shrewd. I considered him to be entirely credible. I shared with him his assessment of J6, altogether younger and with a more superficial outlook. While I had some reservations with the account given by J6 I considered whether that may have arisen as a result of his degree of immaturity. I had some difficulty with his position that he had had the information in his possession only some 24 hours before either the trial commencing or the inquiry which I was conducting.
I considered that, on the information which I had before me that there was no reasonable basis for concluding that other members of the jury had overheard the conversation between J7 and J6 and that there had been no compromise of their functions as jurors".
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord Justice General Lord Hamilton Lord Kingarth
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Appeal No: C352/99 OPINION OF LORD KINGARTH in APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION by stuart darren jeffrey Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: M. Scott, Q.C.; Thorntons
Respondent: D. Batchelor, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent
16 July 2002
As I understand the decision a distinction falls to be drawn between decisions made as to how an accused's defence falls to be presented and a failure to present that defence, and it is only in the latter circumstance, as emphasised more than once in the passage quoted, that it can be said, in cases such as this, that an accused has been denied the right to a fair trial. As was stressed in Anderson v. H.M. Advocate it is necessary to define the test narrowly, not only to preserve the independence of counsel but also to preserve, so far as possible, the principle of finality and avoid a plethora of appeals based on assertions (all too easy to make in any case) that had the defence been presented in a different way or ways the result could have been different. As was said at page 36:
"Then there is the principle of finality. In Rondel v. Worsley at page 253D Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest said that the attainment of finality must be the aim of any legal system. The application of this principle to criminal cases in Scotland has been described in Beattie v. H.M. Advocate at page 279G-J in regard to allegations that there was a miscarriage of justice on the ground of fresh evidence. We mention the point here because it serves as a reminder that the right to a fair trial should not be viewed as involving a right to a re-trial simply because things might have been done differently by the accused's counsel or his solicitor. There is no ground, if that is the complaint, for saying that there has been a miscarriage of justice. There can be no miscarriage of justice if the advocate conducts the case within his instructions according to his own professional judgment as to what is proper for him to do in his client's best interests. A difference of view with the advocate on matters of detail as to how the defence should be presented cannot provide the accused who has been convicted of the right to a new trial. If that was so, there would be no end to the process of putting him on trial for his offence".