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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Paterson v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_2 (16 January 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_2.html
Cite as: [2008] HCJAC 02, 2008 JC 230, [2008] HCJAC 2, 2008 SCCR 582, [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_2, [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_02

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Johnston

Lord Wheatley

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] HCJAC2

Appeal Nos: XC697/07

M133/07

 

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

delivered by LORD MACFADYEN

 

in

 

BILL OF ADVOCATION

 

by

 

ROBERT WILLIAM WILSON MEECHAN PATERSON

Complainer;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

_____________

 

Act: Jackson, Q.C., Forbes; Balfour + Manson LLP

Alt: McSporran, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

 

15 January 2008

Introduction

[1] By this Bill of Advocation the complainer seeks to have this court recall an order pronounced by the trial judge deserting his trial pro loco et tempore, and substitute an order deserting the proceedings simpliciter. In addition to the Bill of Advocation there is before the court a petition to the nobile officium seeking the same remedy. When the matter called before the court for a hearing it was common ground between the complainer and the respondent that the appropriate process in which to consider the issue raised was the Bill of Advocation. We accept that that is correct. We shall accordingly address the matter by reference to the Bill of Advocation. Whatever the outcome of that process, the petition to the nobile officium will be refused as incompetent, since the Bill of Advocation, if well founded, affords the complainer a remedy.

 

The circumstances leading to desertion

[2] The complainer was indicted at the instance of the respondent on six charges. Charge 1 was a charge of murder by shooting. Charge 2 was a charge of assault by presenting a firearm. Charges 3, 4 and 5 were of statutory offences under the Firearms Act 1968 as amended. Charge 6 was a charge of attempting to pervert the course of justice. There were two associated indictments, one charging a further contravention of the Firearms Act 1968, and one charging contraventions of sections 103(1)(b) and 143(1) and (2) of the Road Traffic Act 1988. Hereafter in this Opinion references to "the indictment" are references to the indictment which contained the murder charge.

[3] The complainer's trial on the indictment began on 2 July 2007. A jury was sworn, and thereafter a hearing took place in respect of a minute presented by the complainer under section 72 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. Evidence was led in the course of that hearing. On 10 July the trial judge ruled on the issue raised in the minute. In consequence of that ruling the indictment was amended by the deletion of charge 6. Thereafter, because a number of members of the jury had holiday commitments which made them unavailable for the continuing trial, the trial judge ex proprio motu deserted the diet pro loco et tempore. On 11 July a new jury was sworn, and the trial re-commenced.

[4] In the course of the trial, evidence was led from a Crown witness, Brian Adair, of an admission allegedly made to him by the complainer. Adair spoke to the complainer and the deceased being present together in his home; of an argument between them; of their leaving the house; and of his then hearing two gunshots. He then spoke to leaving the house and finding the body of the deceased nearby. He said that while he was tending to the deceased he received a call from the complainer on his mobile telephone, in the course of which the complainer said:

"Is he dead yet? If not, tell him I'm going to put another one in him".

[5] The Crown were aware that Adair would or might give evidence about that alleged admission. A statement which he had given to the police contained a passage referring to the alleged admission. That statement was disclosed to the complainer's solicitors. The passage in the statement which referred to the alleged admission had, however, been "redacted" from the copy of the statement so disclosed. In other words, that passage had been obscured so that it could not be read, although it remained evident that there was a passage which had been so obscured.

[6] Following Adair's evidence in chief, counsel for the complainer sought and obtained an adjournment in order to check the terms of the original handwritten version of Adair's statement. On so checking the handwritten statement, counsel learned for the first time that Adair's statement contained reference to the alleged admission which he had spoken to in evidence, and that that reference had been redacted from the copy statement disclosed to the defence.

[7] The following day counsel for the complainer, in the absence of the jury, moved the trial judge to desert the diet simpliciter. Counsel sought to support his motion by reference to a number of other aspects of the Crown's conduct in addition to the redaction of Adair's reference to the alleged admission. Having heard counsel and the Advocate depute, the trial judge refused the motion to desert the diet simpliciter, but deserted the diet pro loco et tempore. He set out his reasons for taking that course at length in a written judgment.

 

The complainer's submissions

[8] Mr Jackson submitted that the relevant test to be applied in determining whether a diet should be deserted simpliciter had been set out authoritatively in H. M. Advocate v Fleming 2005 JC 291, 2005 SCCR 324. At paragraphs 33 and 34, Lord Justice Clerk Gill, with whom the other members of the court agreed, said:

 

"[33] When a judge has to decide whether or not to desert a trial, he bases his decision on such facts as are known to him at that stage (Donaldson v Kelly [2004 SCCR 153], paragraph 18). He should desert the trial if the fairness of it has been prejudiced or if there is at least a material risk that it may have been. As I have said in another context, a judge may be justified in deserting a trial even where a subsequent investigation of the circumstances establishes that there was in fact no miscarriage of justice (Gray v H.M. Advocate [2005 SLT 159, 2005 SCCR 106], paragraph 6).

 

[34] But when the trial judge has to decide whether to desert pro loco et tempore or to desert simpliciter, he has to direct his attention to the future and particularly to the circumstances in which any retrial will take place. Counsel for the first respondent has submitted that the test is whether at a retrial a fair trial could be guaranteed. I do not agree. In my view the test is whether at a retrial an unfair trial would be inevitable."

[9] Mr Jackson recognised that a number of the points made in the Bill of Advocation could not satisfy that test. He submitted, however, that two factors rendered it inevitable that a retrial would be unfair, and therefore justified desertion simpliciter. It is therefore sufficient for us to confine our attention to these factors.

[10] The first factor on which Mr Jackson relied was that, by the time the redaction of the alleged admission from Adair's statement came to light in the course of the trial, six or seven important Crown witnesses had been led and had been cross-examined. When they came to give evidence at any retrial, they would be forewarned of the likely lines of cross-examination, and would be in a position to adapt their evidence accordingly. That was inevitably prejudicial to the complainer. It would, in the circumstances, render an unfair trial inevitable. Mr Jackson recognised that it could be said in relation to any retrial that witnesses who had given evidence at the original trial would be forewarned about lines of cross-examination, and the accused would thereby be prejudiced. He submitted, however, that where a retrial was inevitable, without any fault in the system, as for example when the first trial was deserted because the judge fell ill in the course of the trial, retrial had to be accepted, and, although prejudicial, was not properly to be regarded as unfair. Where on the other hand, the cause of the need for the retrial was fault on the part of the Crown, it was unfair to subject the accused to a second trial in which the witnesses were forewarned of the likely lines of cross-examination.

[11] The second factor on which Mr Jackson relied related to the issue which had been raised in the section 72 minute in respect of the identification procedures which had been followed. The trial judge had ruled that certain identification procedures had been unfair and that evidence derived from them was on that account inadmissible. The effect of that was, it was submitted, that the Crown had, by conducting the unfair procedures, deprived the complainer of the opportunity to take part in a fair identification procedure and so be exculpated. It was accepted, however, that a number of the eyewitnesses knew the complainer.

[12] Mr Jackson submitted that these two factors, when taken together, satisfied the test set out in Fleming. If a retrial were to take place, it would inevitably be unfair. The diet should therefore have been deserted simpliciter. The Bill of Advocation should therefore be passed and the trial judge's refusal of the motion to desert simpliciter should be reversed.

 

Discussion

[13] Having heard Mr Jackson, we did not consider it necessary to call upon the Advocate depute to reply. Mr Jackson rightly identified the relevant test. The question is whether it can be said that any retrial would inevitably be unfair (Fleming, paragraph 34).

[14] Mr Jackson recognised that he could not say that the fact that witnesses who had given evidence at the original trial would be forewarned about likely lines of cross-examination inevitably led to an unfair retrial. If that were so, no retrial could ever take place after material witnesses had given evidence at the original trial. He sought to distinguish the situation which arose where the need for the retrial arose without fault on the part of anyone from the situation which arose where the need for a retrial was caused by fault on the part of the Crown. We do not consider that that distinction is sound. It seems to us that it cannot be said that a retrial rendered necessary because of some fault on the part of the Crown is inevitably unfair, when it is recognised that a retrial made necessary without fault is, or can be, fair. The potential prejudice - that material witnesses will have been rehearsed, and may tailor their evidence to meet the line of cross-examination that they have been forewarned will probably be deployed - is the same in either case.

[15] We are not persuaded that the deficiencies in the identification parade procedure which led the trial judge to exclude certain evidence as unfair and therefore inadmissible has the consequence that any retrial will inevitably be unfair. Whether there is any merit in the contention that the complainer has been deprived of the opportunity to obtain, from a fair identification procedure, evidence tending to exculpate him depends on viewing the identification evidence as a whole after it has been given. We note that a number of the Crown witnesses knew the complainer. That may affect the strength of the point.

[16] We do not consider that the points relied upon by Mr Jackson, either individually or in aggregate, yield the conclusion that any retrial would inevitably be unfair. It may be that after retrial these points can be restated and will support the conclusion that the retrial was unfair. Applying the Fleming test, however, we cannot say at this stage that that is inevitable. We therefore conclude that the trial judge was right to refuse to desert the diet simpliciter, and right to desert pro loco et tempore.

Result

[17] For the reasons which we have set out we refuse to pass the Bill of Advocation. As we have already indicated, since the Bill of Advocation was the appropriate procedure by which to bring before the court the issues which the complainer sought to raise, the petition to the nobile officium, which raised the same issues, is refused as incompetent.

 

 


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