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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Kearney v. Procurator Fiscal Greenock [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_4 (13 December 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_4.html
Cite as: [2007] HCJAC 4, 2007 GWD 5-74, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_04, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_4, [2007] HCJAC 04, 2007 SCCR 35

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Abernethy

Lord Nimmo Smith

C.G.B. Nicholson, CBE, QC,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJAC 4

Appeal No: XJ 1429/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by C.G.B. NICHOLSON, CBE, QC

 

in

 

APPEAL BY STATED CASE

 

in causa

 

JOHN GERARD KEARNEY

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, GREENOCK

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: Shead, Mitchell; Jim Friel & Co, Glasgow

Respondent: Stewart, QC, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

13 December 2006

 

[1] This is an appeal by way of stated case against a conviction after trial on a charge of breach of the peace. That charge set out that:

" ..... on a date between 01 April 2005 and 8 April 2005, exact date unknown, at Kilblain Street, Greenock you JOHN GERARD KEARNEY did conduct yourself in a disorderly manner approach Kirsty Spence and Paula Mitchell, both c/o Strathclyde Police, seize said Kirsty Spence by the hand, refuse to release her hand, utter sexually explicit comments, invite said Kirsty Spence and Paula Mitchell to attend at a house with you, place them in a state of fear and alarm and commit a breach of the peace."

[2] The foregoing charge called for trial before the sheriff at Greenock on 14 June 2005, at which stage the appellant was represented by a solicitor. Having heard the evidence, the sheriff found the appellant guilty as libelled. Thereafter the case was continued for the preparation of various reports and, on 2 August 2005, the sheriff imposed a fine of £750 and placed the appellant on the Sex Offenders' Register for a period of five years. The sheriff's decision was thereafter appealed by way of stated case.

[3] For reasons to which we turn shortly the appeal was not in fact heard by this Court until 13 December 2006. On that date, having heard counsel for the appellant and the advocate depute in reply, we allowed the appeal on one ground, and intimated that our reasons would be given in writing at a later stage. Those reasons are set out later in this Opinion; but, first, it is appropriate to narrate the history of this case during the period between the date of the sheriff's determination and the date of the hearing of the appeal, not least on account of the fact that the appellant's grounds of appeal changed to a significant extent during that period.

 

The background to the hearing of the appeal

[4] Following on the appellant's conviction an application for a stated case was lodged on 9 August 2005. Although that application has the appearance of having been prepared by a solicitor, it was in fact signed and presented by the appellant in person; and, as the sheriff has told us in his Note to the Stated Case, the appellant appeared in person at the hearing on adjustments which took place on 22 September 2005. In the application for a stated case the matters which the appellant sought to bring under review were:

"a) There was an insufficiency of evidence to convict;

b) The nature and extent of the Crown evidence lacked the necessary

credibility and reliability to convict; and

c) On the findings of fact, a breach of the peace was not committed.

Further on the findings of fact a Breach of the Peace with an aggravation relating to a sexual element was not committed."

[5] The Stated Case, as adjusted, was duly lodged; and 16 December 2005 was assigned as a diet for the hearing of the appeal. On that date, however, having heard counsel for the appellant and the advocate depute in reply, the Court discharged the diet of appeal and granted leave for amended grounds of appeal to be lodged. "Adjusted" grounds of appeal were duly lodged on 17 January 2006 in the following terms:

"1. The learned sheriff erred in holding that the Crown had established that the offence had occurred between the 1st and 8th of April. The Crown libelled the date in question 'on a date between the 1 April 2005 and 8 April 2005, exact date unknown'. The Complainers said that the incident had taken place 'during the Easter school holidays' but 'were unable to state to the Court the date when the incident took place' (Finding in Fact 4).

2. The learned sheriff erred in finding that esto the evidence of the complainers was both credible and reliable, the circumstances amounted to a breach of the peace in terms of SMITH V DONNELLY 2001 SCCR 800."

[6] At a procedural hearing on 9 February 2006 the Court allowed the foregoing grounds of appeal to be received, and continued the hearing to a further procedural hearing on 9 March 2006 to allow disclosure by the Crown and consideration by those representing the appellant as to the possible lodging of additional grounds of appeal. Thereafter, further procedural hearings took place on 9 March, 13 April, and 26 May, after which an additional ground of appeal was lodged on behalf of the appellant. It was in the following terms:

"3. The Crown failed to disclose the relevant witness statements. They were obliged to do so having regard to their obligations under the common law and Article 6(1) of the Convention. The failure referred to deprived the Defence of the opportunity to properly prepare and present the appellant's defence. In inviting the Sheriff to convict, in the absence of disclosure, the Lord Advocate, through the Procurator Fiscal, was acting oppressively et separatim incompatibly with the appellant's right to a fair trial guaranteed by Article 6(1). Such an act was ultra vires. Reference is made to section 57(2) of the Scotland Act 1998. Accordingly there has been a miscarriage of justice."

[7] Following on the lodging of the foregoing additional ground of appeal the case called for a further procedural hearing on 16 June 2006. At that hearing the Court allowed the further ground of appeal to be received; and, in light of the fact that, by then, there were three new grounds of appeal in place of those originally set out in the application for a stated case, the sheriff was requested to provide the Court with a supplementary report. The Court also directed that a further procedural hearing should be assigned for a date subsequent to receipt of that supplementary report.

[8] The sheriff's supplementary report was received at the end of June and, on 12 September 2006, a further procedural hearing took place at which the appeal was continued for a full hearing on a date to be afterwards fixed. As noted above, that hearing took place on 13 December 2006. As a consequence of the various adjustments and additions which had occurred during the preceding year there were by that stage three new or adjusted grounds of appeal before the Court. Stating them shortly, they related to: (1) the issues surrounding the date of the alleged offence; (2) the question whether the activity complained of amounted to a breach of the peace; and (3) the issue concerning disclosure.

 

Facts found proved by the sheriff

[9] So far as relevant for present purposes the sheriff's findings in fact are as follows:

"1. The complainers, Kirsty Spence and Paula Mitchell, suffer from learning difficulties and attend a special school.

2.                  The appellant is known to the complainers. He has, on occasion, been the driver of the school bus transporting the complainers to school.

3. The complainers were unable to state to the Court the date when the incident took place. The complainers stated that the incident took place during the Easter school holidays. On the date in question, the complainers, along with another friend, had travelled to Braehead Shopping Centre, Renfrew. On their return to Greenock, it was the intention of Kirsty Spence to spend the night with the other complainer, Paula Mitchell. Kirsty and Paula returned to Kirsty's home for some clothes.

4. They then came in to Greenock town centre to get the bus to Paula's house. It was late and dark and they were sitting on a wall at the bus terminus at Kilblain Street, waiting for their bus. The appellant came over to the two girls and took hold of Kirsty's hand. Kirsty asked him to let go. The appellant was holding Kirsty's hand tightly and refused to release her hand.

5. The appellant then turned to Paula and said, "She's a nice girl, but she could not handle me in bed". He was referring to Kirsty. This was a sexually explicit comment.

6. The appellant said this on more than one occasion. The appellant let go of Kirsty's hand after repeating the comment he had made to Paula three times. The appellant then asked both complainers if they wanted to go up to his brother's house and if they wanted his phone number. The complainers said no.

7. The complainers thought the appellant was serious. The complainers were scared about the things said to them by the appellant. The appellant walked away towards Greenock town centre. The appellant's conduct was genuinely alarming and disturbing to a reasonable person."

[10] The sheriff goes on to narrate that, initially, the complainers were too scared to tell anyone what had happened, but that eventually they spoke to a school auxiliary, and that the school contacted Paula's parents. They complained to the police, and, on 26 April 2005, the appellant voluntarily attended at Greenock Police Station where he was cautioned and interviewed. The sheriff states that the appellant admitted that he had met both girls in Kilblain Street, and that he had spoken to them. He denied the statement attributed to him, and thereafter he was cautioned and charged. Of some significance for present purposes, it is to be noted that, in this part of the sheriff's findings, there is no finding to the effect that the appellant, when interviewed by the police, specified any date when the meeting between him and the girls had taken place. It is also to be noted that no evidence was led for the defence in this case.


The submissions for the parties

[11] Mr Shead, for the appellant, began his submissions by making some general comments in relation to what was by then his third ground of appeal, namely that bearing on the matter of disclosure. However, he then went on to present detailed submissions in support of his first and second grounds of appeal, namely those relating to the question whether it had been proved that the offence occurred within the dates specified in the complaint, and whether, if so, the event in question constituted a breach of the peace according to the law of Scotland. Having completed those submissions Mr Shead then suggested to us that, since we might find it possible to dispose of the appeal on one or other of those grounds, and without having to hear submissions on the matter of disclosure, we might consider it appropriate to hear the advocate depute in reply on the grounds already advanced, reserving, of course, to Mr Shead the right to present further submissions on the matter of disclosure in the event that we were to be against him in respect of both of the first two grounds of appeal. That suggestion appeared to us to be a sensible one in the circumstances, and we accordingly called on the advocate depute to reply in respect of the two grounds argued by Mr Shead at that stage in the proceedings. Having heard the advocate depute, we came to the view that this appeal should be allowed on the first ground of appeal, namely that relating to the date of the alleged offence, and we gave our decision to that effect with an indication that our detailed reasons would be given in writing at a later date. In those circumstances it is now unnecessary for us to set out Mr Shead's submissions on either the second or third grounds of appeal, nor do we require to express any view on the merits of those submissions. Consequently, we turn now to the detail of Mr Shead's submissions regarding proof of the date when the alleged offence was committed.

[12] On that matter Mr Shead began by reminding us that the charge in the complaint libels that the alleged offence took place "between 01 April 2005 and 8 April 2005, exact date unknown". However, the sheriff's findings do not disclose that there was any evidence at the trial to show that the offence in fact occurred between those dates. As is stated, in finding in fact 3, the complainers "were unable to state to the Court the date when the incident took place", and stated only that "the incident took place during the Easter school holidays". However, there was no evidence as to the dates of the Easter school holidays, nor indeed to confirm that it was the Easter holidays in 2005 that were being referred to rather than those in an earlier year. Mr Shead noted that, in the course of the appellant's interview with the police on 26 April 2005, he is recorded as having said that he had met, and spoken to, two unnamed girls in Greenock town centre "two or three weeks ago". However, the sheriff has not made any finding on that matter, and his mention of the police interview is silent as to the naming of any date by the appellant. As Mr Shead pointed out, there is no other evidence in the case to fix the date of the alleged offence.

[13] Mr Shead acknowledged that, by statute, a certain latitude as to dates may be available to a prosecutor. That arises by virtue of section 138(4) and Schedule 3, para. 4(1), of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. Para. 4(1) of the Schedule provides:

"The latitude formerly used in stating time shall be implied in all statements of time where an exact time is not of the essence of the charge."

Mr Shead accepted that, in the present case, time is not of the essence of the charge. However, he submitted that the latitude allowed by the foregoing provision is not available where, as in the present case, a prosecutor has specified a precise period between two dates. In such a case, he submitted, there must be evidence that the alleged offence occurred between those dates; and, in the absence of such evidence, the prosecution must fail.

[14] In relation to those submissions Mr Shead referred us to two cases, namely Creighton v. HMA (1904) 4 Adam 356, and Andrew v. HMA 1982 SCCR 539. In Creighton the appellant had been charged with having had unlawful sexual intercourse with a girl under the age of sixteen "between 14th January and 6th February 1904 (the particular date being to the complainer unknown)". At the appellant's trial the evidence negatived any criminal assault by him between the dates libelled, but the sheriff charged the jury that they were entitled to bring in a verdict of guilty provided they found that an assault had been proved subsequent to 11th December 1903. (Since this was a charge to which a statutory time limit applied, it appears that the date chosen by the sheriff was the one which occurred three months prior to the serving of the indictment.) The jury convicted the appellant, and he appealed to the High Court of Justiciary. In the circumstances of that case the Court allowed the appeal, holding that the Crown must confine itself to the dates specified in the indictment. It may be that the circumstances which led to that decision were somewhat special, and we consider them in more detail later.

[15] In the more modern case of Andrew the facts were relatively straightforward. In that case the appellant was charged with having committed a theft "between 26th and 31st October 1981". After having deliberated for some time the jury sought further directions as to whether any verdict of guilty had to be restricted to between those two dates. The sheriff said that, in light of the evidence, the starting date could not be before 26th October but it was open to them to substitute a later date in place of 31st October. In due course the jury returned a verdict of guilty in respect of a date "between the 26th October and the 19th November 1981". The High Court allowed an appeal against conviction and, in delivering the Opinion of the Court, the Lord Justice General (Emslie) said (at p. 541):

"Now there is no doubt that the verdict returned by the jury cannot stand for the simple reason that the precise terms of this libel prescribed once and for all the latitude which the Crown elected to take and it was only open to the jury to find the appellant guilty of a crime within the scope of this libel provided they were able to hold that the crime, whatever it was, was committed between 26th October and 31st October 1981. It was not open to the sheriff or the jury to extend the latitude of time and thus to alter the indictment in the way which was done."

[16] Mr Shead founded strongly on the foregoing passage in the Opinion delivered by the Lord Justice General, and he urged us to follow it in the present case. If we were to do so, it would follow that the sheriff would have been entitled to convict only if he was satisfied, by sufficient evidence, that the alleged offence had occurred on a date between the two dates specified in the complaint. In fact, of course, the sheriff found the appellant "guilty as libelled", and made no mention of having applied the statutory latitude despite having had two opportunities to do so (in the original Stated Case and in his Supplementary Note) had that actually been his approach. That must mean, it was submitted, that the sheriff had been satisfied that there was sufficient evidence to establish that the alleged offence had occurred on a date between 1 and 8 April 2005. However, for the reasons already advanced, Mr Shead submitted that there was simply no evidence to establish the commission of an offence on any of these dates, and in those circumstances he invited us to allow the appeal on this ground.

[17] In response the advocate depute began by indicating that his primary position was based on the "latitude" provisions in the 1995 Act to which we have already referred. He noted that, in the case of Creighton, the decision of the Court is not on all fours with that in the later case of Andrew, but was arrived at in the special circumstances of that case. Moreover, he submitted that an accurate analysis of the "latitude" provision is to be found in a passage in the fifth edition of Macdonald's Criminal Law (at page 217) which is quoted in the Commentary to the report of the case of Andrew in 1982 SCCR, at page 543. In that connection he noted that Lord Justice Clerk Macdonald had been a member of the Bench in Creighton. The advocate depute also noted that neither the case of Creighton nor the passage in Macdonald appear to have been before the Court in the case of Andrew.

[18] The passage in Macdonald is in the following terms:

"Thus if a crime is indicted as having been committed on 15th June - or during the period between 5th and 15th June - the prosecutor has an implied latitude extending from 1st May to 31st July. But if a crime is indicted as having been committed during a period falling within two or more calendar months - as during the period between 28th May and 5th June - there is no implied latitude, because it is impossible then to ascertain to which three calendar months the implied latitude should extend."

[19] The problem which arises in the second of the examples given in the foregoing passage appears to be that, since the dates given in the indictment span two months, it is impossible to say with certainty whether the latitude should extend from 1st April until 30th June or from 1st May until 31st July. There is thus an ambiguity: and that appears to be the reason why the Court was not prepared to recognise any latitude in the case of Creighton. In both the present case, and in the case of Andrew, by contrast the libels specify a period of time falling within a single calendar month. In that situation, the advocate depute submitted, the statutory latitude is available in the present case, and the ground of appeal directed at evidence of the date of commission of the offence should fail.

[20] In the circumstances which we have just outlined we asked the advocate depute whether he was inviting us to remit the present case to a larger Bench with a view to a possible over-ruling of the decision in the case of Andrew. However, he expressly declined to make any such motion, and instead he submitted that we could simply distinguish the case of Andrew on the basis that the decision in that case appeared to have been arrived at without any consideration of Creighton or of the passage in Macdonald which we have quoted above. On that basis he submitted that we, and the sheriff, were entitled to hold that in the present case there was a statutory latitude extending from 1st March until 31st May. That having been done, he went on to submit, it could be held on the evidence of the two complainers that the present offence was committed on a date falling within that extended period.

 

Discussion and decision

[21] Having now had the opportunity to consider in detail the various authorities to which we were referred, including in particular the case of Creighton and the passage in Macdonald which we have quoted earlier, we tend to the view that the decision in the case of Andrew cannot be reconciled with those earlier authorities. Putting it shortly, the decision in Andrew appears to be authority for the proposition that, where the Crown has elected to specify a particular latitude of time, the statutory provision as to latitude cannot be prayed in aid in order to extend the period further even where the period specified by the Crown falls entirely within a single calendar month. By contrast, the decision in Creighton and the passage in Macdonald both appear to vouch the proposition that the statutory latitude will be unavailable only where the period specified by the Crown spans more than a single month because, in that event, there must of necessity be some ambiguity as to when the period of latitude (traditionally, it would appear, one of three months) is to begin and to end.

[22] Having regard to the foregoing conflict between the cases of Creighton and Andrew, we are of the view that, were it to be necessary to try to resolve that conflict, that task could only properly be undertaken by a larger Bench. However, we also consider that it is unnecessary to contemplate that task in the context of the present case. We have reached that view not for the reasons urged upon us by the advocate depute but because we have come to the conclusion that considerations relative to the statutory latitude simply do not arise in this case.

[23] In our opinion the starting point for a consideration of the date when the present offence was committed must be the clear statement on the first page of the Stated Case where the sheriff says that he found the appellant "guilty as libelled". Nowhere does the sheriff say anything about the statutory latitude. He does not say that the Crown ever invited him to apply it, nor does he say that he considered it, and applied it, ex proprio motu. Moreover, despite being required by this Court to provide a supplementary report dealing with the appellant's new and revised grounds of appeal, the sheriff effectively says no more in that report than that the question of date was never raised by anyone in the course of the trial. From all of that it must follow, in our view, that, when the sheriff says that he found the appellant "guilty as libelled", those words must mean that he found that the appellant had committed the offence in question between 1st and 8th April 2005, and not on any earlier or later date.

[24] That being so, the only question is whether there was sufficient evidence in this case to entitle the sheriff to reach that conclusion. In our opinion the only evidence which was before the sheriff on that matter was the evidence of the two complainers. Although the terms of the appellant's interview with the police on 26 April 2005 are with the Court's papers, the sheriff does not state that the transcript was ever lodged as a production. Moreover, in finding 13, where the sheriff says something about that interview, he nowhere mentions that part of the transcript where the appellant is recorded as having said that his meeting with the girls took place "two or three weeks ago". In those circumstances we do not consider that any regard can properly be given to that passage in the interview transcript. In any event, of course, even if that part of the transcript had been evidence in the case, it does not unequivocally pinpoint any meeting as having taken place within the dates specified in the complaint.

[25] Accordingly, we are left with no other evidence as to date apart from the evidence of the two complainers. As we have already noted, their evidence was simply to the effect that the incident had taken place "during the Easter school holidays"; but, there was no evidence from any other source as to the dates when those holidays occurred in 2005, nor indeed was there even any evidence as to the date of Easter. We venture to doubt whether Easter school holidays would in any event have lasted for only a single week so that, even if there had been evidence as to their dates, it would have been unlikely that such evidence would have indicated that the complainers must have been referring to the single week specified in the complaint. At the end of the day, however, the only evidence on this matter is the general reference to the Easter school holidays in the evidence of the complainers. We have formed the clear view that that evidence is vague and unspecific, and certainly does not indicate beyond reasonable doubt that the incident to which the complainers were referring took place within the dates specified in the complaint. For that reason we consider that an essential part of the charge has not been proved, and that this ground of appeal, as advanced by Mr Shead, must succeed. We have accordingly answered the first question in the Stated Case in the negative and have allowed this appeal.

 


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