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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Walker v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2011] ScotHC HCJAC_51 (26 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2011/2011HCJAC51.html Cite as: 2011 GWD 18-430, 2011 SCL 755, [2011] ScotHC HCJAC_51, 2011 SLT 1114, 2011 SCCR 419, [2011] HCJAC 51 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice GeneralLord EassieLord Brodie
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[2011] HCJAC 51Appeal No: XC119/10
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by THE LORD JUSTICE GENERAL
in
APPEAL
by
JENNIFER INGLES WALKER or SMITH or LIEHNE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent:
_______
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Appellant: Shead, Nicolson; John Pryde & Co., Edinburgh
Respondent: W.J. Wolffe, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent
26 May 2011
Introduction
[1] On 7 April 2006 after a trial at the High
Court in Edinburgh which ran for more than
five weeks the appellant was convicted of the following charges (as amended):
"(1) on various occasions between 14 October 1982 and 20 December 1982 both dates inclusive, at [various locations in Edinburgh] you did assault J.S., born 14 May 1982, now deceased...and did cause her upper airways to be obstructed by means unknown, restrict her breathing, all to the danger of her life;
(2) on 20 December 1982 at [a location in Edinburgh] you did assault J.S., born 14 May 1982, residing there, and did obstruct her upper airways by means unknown, restrict her breathing, suffocate her and kill her"
[2] Charge (3) on the indictment was
withdrawn by the Advocate depute. The appellant was sentenced to an extended
sentence of fifteen years imprisonment comprising a custodial term of ten years
and an extended period of five years. On appeal that sentence was reduced to
one of seven years imprisonment. An appeal against conviction was not pursued.
[3] On 5 February 2010 the Scottish Criminal
Cases Review Commission referred the appellant's case to the High Court. She
lodged grounds of appeal which included contentions (1) that the trial judge
had misdirected the jury by failing to set out for them the expert evidence
which they would require to accept in order to convict and (2) that in the
circumstances of this case there was an infringement of the appellant's right
under Article 6(1) of the European Convention to a reasoned judgment.
These contentions are inter-related.
[4] The appellant and her husband married in
1981. There were three children of the marriage of whom J.S. was the middle
child. At the time of her death on 20 December 1982 she was somewhat over seven
months of age. Prior to her final admission on 20 December she had been
admitted to the Royal
Hospital for Sick Children in Edinburgh on five separate
occasions, the first of these being on 14 October. On each occasion the
appellant, who was alone in charge of the child, had reported that she had
suffered a "turn" where she went blue and stopped breathing or had
convulsions. A post mortem examination was carried out by Dr Bain, a leading
paediatric pathologist who had died before the trial, and (the then Doctor,
subsequently Professor) Anthony Busuttil, who gave evidence at the trial. The
initial cause of death was recorded by Dr Bain as "Sudden Infant Death
Syndrome". This was subsequently amended by him to "SIDS explained,
bronchiolitis and bronchopneumonia". Tissue blocks were retained and were
available for the criminal investigation which led to the appellant's
indictment in 2005. A number of pathological findings were undisputed at the
trial: intra-alveolar haemorrhage (fresh bleeding in the lungs),
haemosiderin-laden macrophages (iron deposits in the lungs, indicating previous
episodes of bleeding there), aspiration of food in the lungs, bronchopneumonia "starry-sky"
appearance in the thymus and pneumococcus in the heart blood. The post mortem
conclusion of bronchiolitis was disputed.
[5] There was no direct evidence that on any
occasion the appellant had assaulted the child. The Crown case at trial turned
substantially on medical inferences that the child had on each occasion,
including the last which led to her death, been subjected to deliberate
obstruction of her airways. Given the passage of time many of the witnesses
who spoke to the child's admissions to hospital and her condition while there
were reliant on her medical records. A log kept in 1982 by Mrs Susan Brown, a
social worker attached to the hospital, was also available at the trial.
Hospital admissions
14 - 18 October 1982
[6] On
14 October
1982 PC Stephen
Macrae attended the appellant's home, following an emergency call about
breathing difficulties with the child. He found her unattended in her room,
tried to clear her airways and moved her into the recovery position. Mrs
Brown's log recorded that he had found her lying on her back, having swallowed
vomit, had held her by her heels and had smacked her, whereby she revived and
began to vomit. She was taken to hospital by ambulance. Dr Alison James, a
registrar at the hospital in 1982, spoke to her admission. The history
provided was that the child had stopped breathing for 20 minutes. Dr James
gave evidence that this was not possible. The child
presented as developmentally normal. An inner ear infection was diagnosed. Other
tests were normal. Her temperature settled, she fed well and was discharged on
18 October.
18 - 29 October 1982
[7] The child was re-admitted as an emergency
on the same day. The history provided was that she had turned blue around
three hours after being fed and had suffered vomiting and diarrhoea. A
neighbour had performed mouth to mouth resuscitation. She was examined by Dr
Aysha Cockshot, then a senior house officer, who noted a low grade temperature,
slight swelling to the left cheek, a slightly accelerated heart rate and rapid
breathing. However, ears, nose and throat were normal; heart and breath
sounds were normal. These findings were consistent with an infection,
aspiration of stomach contents, or with an otherwise stressful event. A
further examination was carried out by Dr James. The child was sleepy, her
liver edge palpable, her tendon reflexes slightly fast and her plantar reflex
abnormal. In a sitting position she was floppy. Dr James gave evidence that
the most common reasons for transient floppiness in a child were a very high
temperature or experience of a fit. Not breathing could also result in
floppiness. Aspiration could have a neurological element; some of the
symptoms exhibited were consistent with a neurological problem. Various other
tests were done, including an EEG which showed no abnormality. Dr James
considered that the child might have experienced a fit. A urinary tract
infection was diagnosed. Antibiotics were prescribed. The child's nursing
records narrated: that her apnoea alarm sounded once on 22 October but there
was no sign of her having stopped breathing; that jerking was observed during
feeding on 23 October; that significant vomiting was noted on 26 October; and
that she was floppy on 28 October. She was discharged on 29 October. Although
not recorded in the nursing records, Dr James had noted that "during the
EEG ... [J] was noticed by the nurse to become extremely upset and to have a
short breath holding attack, during which she went to poor colour but not
cyanose, not blue. At this time she had a small nose bleed."
1
- 9 November 1982
[8] The child
was re-admitted as an emergency on 1 November. The history provided was that
she had been irritable and that the appellant had noticed her to be blue around
the mouth and face. No abnormal signs were noted and no signs of infection
presented upon investigation. She was discharged on 9 November.
13 - 16 November 1982
[9] The
child was re-admitted on 13 November. The history provided was that she had
stopped breathing, turned blue and that blood was observed from both nostrils. On
examination, she exhibited no abnormal symptoms and there was no evidence of a
nose bleed. However, the medical notes recorded that, during an EEG test, a
nurse observed the child become extremely upset, suffer a short breath holding
attack, turn a poor colour, but not cyanose, not blue, and suffer a small nose
bleed. Dr James gave evidence that a breath holding attack was not
uncommon in babies who were extremely upset: it might cause the child to turn
blue briefly before breathing re-started. Nursing records recorded two periods
of vomiting before and after feeds on 15 November. The child was discharged on
16 November.
[10] The
child was seen in the Outpatient Department on 26 November. No further
turns were reported at that time.
12 - 19 December 1982
[11] The child was re-admitted on 12 December. The
history provided was that she had suffered two convulsions of between 5 and 10
minutes and one of around 15 minutes, all involving her face turning blue,
her limbs being stiff and her eyes rolling. She was examined by Dr Dugald
Glen, then a junior doctor. He noted a bloodstained discharge from her nose. He
also noted crackles in her left lung, which were consistent with an infection
or pneumonia. Her white blood cell count was raised, indicating infection, and
her chest x-ray was abnormal. An ear infection was noted, but was unlikely to
have explained the white blood cell count. A raised temperature was noted on
14, 16 and 17 December. Feeding problems, including vomiting, were noted on
16, 17 and 18 December. On 18 December the child was examined by Dr Jacqueline
Mok, then a senior paediatric registrar, and at the time of trial a consultant
paediatrician and lead clinician for child protection with a post graduate
doctorate in respiratory infections. A blocked nose and redness to the ear and
the throat were noted, leading to a diagnosis of an upper respiratory tract
infection. On 19 December the child was discharged. Her white blood cell
count had lowered, her temperature stabilised and she seemed well. Dr Mok accepted, but doubted, that she might have missed
signs of pneumonia when examining the child, or that she might have succumbed
to an overwhelming pneumonia between 19 and 20 December. She acknowledged that crepitations noted in the child's
chest were suggestive of a pneumonic process taking place. Nevertheless,
the child ought to have been able to respond to infection. Her opinion was
that something dramatic had happened to her.
Events prior to death
[12] On the evening of 19 December 1982 the appellant's then general
practitioner, Dr Janet MacFie, attended at the appellant's home address
following a report of blueness around the child's lips. The child's father
testified that he and the appellant had been in the livingroom of their home
when the appellant had run across to the pram in which the child was lying. On
Dr MacFie's arrival she examined the child, but noted no abnormal symptoms.
She was contacted again later that evening, it being reported that drips of
blood had been observed coming from the child's nose. She again attended and
examined the child. She noted a brief period of slowed breathing, but was not
concerned. Joyce Hall, the appellant's aunt and a qualified nurse, was
present. Ms Hall thought that the child appeared to be in some pain,
perhaps due to colic, but there did not appear to be anything seriously wrong
with her.
[13] The child's father gave evidence that she
appeared well when he left for work on the morning of 20 December. In contrast
Mrs Brown's log suggested that he had observed her turn very pale and was
concerned. The appellant contacted Dr MacFie's surgery at around 8.00 am in a distraught state,
reporting that the child was cold. An ambulance was called. Ms Hall
attended. She could detect no pulse from the child and performed cardiopulmonary
resuscitation. The child was dead on arrival at the hospital shortly after 9.10 am. Her body was examined
by Dr James and another doctor. There were no external signs of injury or of
petechial or retinal haemorrhaging. The child's frenulum (the fold of skin in
the floor of the mouth) was undamaged.
The appellant's police interview
[14] The
appellant was interviewed by the police in October 2001. She indicated that the
child seemed fine from birth until about four months of age, when she began
experiencing spells of turning blue. From about six months of age she had held
her breath a lot. The night prior to her death the child seemed to have bad
colic. The following morning she was still irritable. As the appellant was
feeding her, the blood drained from the child and she turned grey. She was
still breathing when the ambulance arrived. The appellant told the police that
she had seen blood coming from the child's nose and that she had been blue.
The
expert evidence
[15] A wide
range of expert evidence was led, both from the Crown and from the defence,
interpreting the clinical findings. It is appropriate to summarise that in the
order in which it was given at the trial.
The
Crown case
Haematology
[16] Dr Angela Thomas, a consultant paediatric haematologist, had
examined the blood counts and bacteriological results for the child. She noted
that the neutrophil (a subdivision of white blood cells) count could indicate
an infection or be secondary to stress, exercise or adrenalin release. The
white count and the neutrophil count were raised in response to two known
infections (ear and urinary tract). On 12 December there was a
significantly raised neutrophil count at a time when no obvious infection was present.
Radiology
[17] Dr Maeve McPhillips, a consultant in paediatric radiology, had noted
that the x-ray taken on 12 December had shown some increase in shadowing.
She considered that it represented some inflammatory change, probably as a
result of infection. She did not consider that a post mortem chest x-ray would
have been of assistance.
Radiology
[18] Dr Karl Johnson, a consultant paediatric radiologist, explained that
an x-ray, believed to have been taken on 12 December, showed changes in the child's
lungs, suggesting her breathing was shallow. This was consistent with
infection, but also with the child being fractious or the radiographer
inexperienced.
Paediatric
respiratory medicine
[19] Dr Neil Gibson, a consultant in paediatric respiratory medicine, distinguished
between two broad types of apnoea (stopping breathing) in infants: "central
apnoea" due to a failure of the messages to make breathing efforts going out
from the brain, and "obstructive apnoea" where the correct messages are sent
and received but there is some obstruction or blockage preventing a breath
being taken. Central apnoea was excluded by the clinical history. The most
likely cause of death was suffocation by deliberately imposed airways
obstruction. That could lead to aspiration of stomach contents, causing
pneumonia. The reports of blueness prior to the admissions on 14 and
18 October could not be explained by the infections diagnosed. The
convulsions described by Dr Glen on 12 December suggested that anoxic
seizures had taken place. He rejected bronchiolitis and a single aspiration
episode secondary to a gastro-oesophageal reflux as causes. The findings of
petechial haemorrhages, haemosiderin, fresh haemorrhage and food in the lungs
suggested several episodes of significant hypoxia and finally a severe anoxic
event. He accepted that pneumococci were the most common cause of bacterial
pneumonia, that the nosebleed observed during the EEG was unusual and
potentially significant, and, with regard to the floppiness observed, that abnormal
muscle function might affect breathing.
Endocrinology
[20] Dr Christopher Kellnar, a consultant endocrinologist, testified that
the child's glucose level was raised during each of her admissions prior to
death. That was consistent with her being unwell or particularly stressed. It
would be very unusual for an ear infection to raise the level to that noted on
14 October. On 18 October the level was that commonly seen in the context of a
fit or convulsion. On 1 November the levels were inconsistent with an ordinary
apnoeic attack or with infection (unless severe). He accepted that there were
some individuals who had a routinely higher blood glucose level and that this
child could be one of them. However, the levels recorded on 14 October and 1
November indicated a "very stressful episode".
Pathology
[21] Professor Busuttil, by now emeritus Professor of Forensic Medicine,
testified that the most likely diagnosis of the cause of death, particularly in
light of the extensive pulmonary haemorrhage and the haemosiderin, was acute
imposed upper airways obstruction. In 1982 he had acted as the second
pathologist at the child's post mortem dissection but had not been involved in
writing the death certificate or in any examination conducted after the
dissection was completed. Aspiration could result from imposed upper airways
obstruction. If someone had placed their hand over the child's nose and
applied pressure, this might explain the nosebleeds observed. He did not
believe that the lung tissue indicated bronchiolitis or that this, along with
bronchopneumonia, was the cause of death. The presence of pneumococci in the
heart blood was unusual, but might be explained by contamination or by the
bacteria being in an early stage of a descending infection. A severe lung
infection would have been apparent to the doctors who examined the child when
alive, if that had been the cause of death. There was no sign of septicaemia.
The level of bleeding in the lungs was too high to have been caused by previous
infection or inhalation. The lungs appeared to be congested (engorged with
blood) suggesting that the blood vessels there were under pressure to the
extent that they were disrupted. On the pleura there were tiny pinprick areas
of haemorrhage (petechial haemorrhages); these might be due to either cot
death (they were commonly found in such deaths on the thymus gland, the lungs or
the heart, albeit their mechanism was not understood) or the child having
suffered from a lack of oxygen (asphyxia) for any reason. The presence of haemosiderin
in the lungs might indicate past exposure to asphyxia. Over-exertion of the
lungs was the most likely explanation for bleeding into the lung tissues. Such
over-exertion might be the result of some kind of blockage. That might be
natural - as with infections such as bronchitis - but someone dying from
pneumonia would have very serious clinical findings. Imposed upper airways
obstruction might also cause haemorrhaging. There was evidence of acute
inhalation of food. This might be due to imposed upper airways obstruction,
though there were other possible causes. Air sacs had collapsed which
suggested that something other than recent infection and inflammation had
obstructed the airways. Professor Busuttil did not consider that the child's
death should have been attributed to "SIDS" or to "SIDS, explained
bronchiolitis and bronchopneumonia". The lung tissue did not indicate
bronchiolitis. The bruise on the child's head might indicate a bump caused
while she was struggling for air. One would not expect to find external
evidence of imposed upper airways obstruction unless the hand was applied
directly. Professor Busuttil accepted that with aspiration and inflammation
one would expect a measure of haemorrhage. It took some time, a matter of
weeks, for haemosiderin to form. No single cause other than episodes of
imposed upper airways obstruction concluding in a final episode leading to
death could account for all the findings.
Paediatric pathology
[22] Dr
Alan Howatson, a consultant paediatric pathologist, testified that suffocation,
whether imposed or due to natural causes, was the likely cause of death. It
was consistent with all of the pathological findings. Aspiration had taken
place on more than one occasion and the resultant irritation might explain the
bronchopneumonia, but the pathological findings were inconsistent with it being
the cause of death. The appearance of the thymus suggested acute stress in the
hours prior to death, which might be related to an inflammatory process or to
acute upper airways obstruction. The presence of pneumococci was relevant, but
was dismissed as the cause of death: it was inconsistent with the observations
in the child's final hours and infective bacteria would have been identifiable
in the lungs and airways. It might be explained by contamination, or by
translocation following resuscitation efforts. The breath holding and jerking
incidents noted in the nursing records were accepted as significant: they
raised the possibility of a natural cause of death, such as epilepsy and long
QT syndrome. He accepted that extrajudicially he had observed that "this was a
case full of problems" and that "a number of issues had to be addressed".
Medical
statistics
[23] Dr Angela Wade,
a senior lecturer in medical statistics, offered some criticism of the
statistical conclusions which Professor Morris, a defence expert, had drawn in
his report.
Microbiology
[24] Dr Pota Kalima, a consultant microbiologist, was
of the view that the child had had an upper respiratory tract infection on her
final admission to hospital. Based upon the white blood cell count, it also appeared
that a bacterial infection had taken place. The child's clinical presentation
suggested that this was not serious. However, the findings on 12 December of a
markedly raised white blood cell count and a raised temperature, without an
obvious source, could be associated with occult (not clinically detected)
pneumococcal bacteraemia (presence of bacteria in the bloodstream). That might
also be consistent with her presentation on 19 December, although the necessary
investigations had not been carried out. The presence of pneumococcus in the
blood was potentially significant and could have been the result of bacteraemia.
However, in the absence of supporting histopathological evidence, it was hard
to conclude that it played a significant part in death, particularly as it had
been found at only one site. If an organism was not consistent with the
clinical picture in life, it may well be a contaminant.
Paediatric pathology
[25] Dr Jean Keeling, a retired
consultant paediatric pathologist, gave evidence that one had to consider
imposed upper airways obstruction as a cause of death. SUDI deaths ("sudden
unexpected or unexplained deaths in infancy") were uncommon in children over
six months. The bleeding in the lungs and the haemosiderin strongly suggested
hypoxic stress. There was no convincing evidence of bronchiolitis. There was
no evidence of any natural disease processes which could cause such stress. The
bronchopneumonia did not relate to infection, but to the inhalation of gastric
contents which had occurred on more than one occasion. The appearance of the
thymus suggested a stressful event some hours or days before death, which was
consistent with imposed upper airways obstruction. The pneumococcus might be a
contaminant, but that would be unusual. Had it been the cause of death, the child
would have been visibly unwell beforehand. Deaths from such infection did not
occur suddenly. She accepted that there might be neurological causes of
aspiration, but that the necessary examinations, particularly that of the
brain, had not been carried out. She also accepted that aspiration could
inflame the lungs and facilitate bacterial infection. She agreed that there
was "no satisfactory answer to the cause of death".
Paediatrics
[26] Dr Helen Hammond, a consultant paediatrician specialising in child
protection, prepared a report interpreting the clinical evidence. Her overall
opinion was that the circumstances of the child's admissions to hospital and
her death were highly suspicious and consistent with repeated upper airways
obstruction. The pattern of reported apnoeic attacks, in particular the fact
that no such attacks were observed at the hospital, suggested fabrication or
induced causation. Bleeding from the nose was known to be associated with
imposed upper airways obstruction and was an important indicator. The
breath-holding incident during the EEG examination was potentially significant,
but had not been well documented: it was not clear if the appellant had been
present and accompanied prior to its onset. She dismissed the possibility of a
life-threatening pneumonia: this would have been spotted by medical staff and
the child's family. She did not accept that the child had bronchiolitis, nor a
history of aspiration. She did not accept that hypoxia (lack of oxygen) might
have been caused by a seizure, neurological problems or cardiac problems.
The
defence case
[27] The evidence of Drs Myerscough and Reid and that of Professor
Morris was interposed within the evidence of Dr Gray.
Pathology
[28] Dr Elizabeth Gray, a consultant paediatric pathologist, agreed with
Dr Bain's post mortem conclusion that the cause of death was bronchiolitis
and bronchopneumonia. The presence of pneumococci, as a single isolate, in the
heart blood was extremely significant. As well as infectious pneumonia one
could also get chemical pneumonias which included aspiration pneumonia. In her
view chemical pneumonia, caused by repeated episodes of aspiration, had
weakened the child's lungs leaving them open to a secondary pneumonia which had
an infective cause. Her view was that this would explain the pulmonary
bleeding, the haemosiderin and the appearance of the thymus. The most common
cause of aspiration was gastro-oesophageal reflux, although it might also be
related to neurological conditions. If there had been a neuro-pathological
examination this might have provided an explanation for the floppiness
observed. Aspiration and reflux were not regularly associated with smothering,
which she felt was a very complex explanation for death, although she could not
altogether rule it out.
Paediatrics
[29] Dr Elizabeth Myerscough, a consultant paediatrician specialising in
child protection, accepted that a number of features of the case were
suspicious, but indicated that natural causes could not be ruled out. The
medical notes did not adequately record whether the onset of the incident
during the EEG was independently witnessed. If it had been it would have been
significant. The circumstances of the death were consistent with pneumonia
being its cause: infants could become unwell and die over a matter of hours.
The floppiness observed in the child could have been associated with seizures
and a central nervous system abnormality. This may have caused hypoxia.
Gastro-oesophageal reflux, possibly accompanied by aspiration, may also have
caused hypoxia. Children with low-tone were particularly prone to such
reflux. Developmental delays in the child were also potentially significant.
In the absence of an ECG, the possibility of heart problems causing hypoxia
could not be discounted.
Microbiology
[30] Dr Thomas Reid, a consultant clinical microbiologist, suggested that
the most likely cause of death was acute toxaemia resulting from invasive
pneumococcal infection. The presence of pneumococci, a common source of which
was a middle ear infection such as had been diagnosed in the child, provided a
credible explanation for sudden infant death. It might initially go undetected,
but once it entered the blood a very rapid deterioration might result. It was
not an organism which he associated with post mortem contamination.
Histopathology
[31] Professor James
Morris, a consultant histopathologist, concluded that there were four possible
causes of death. In order of the most likely these were: pneumococcal
pneumonia and pneumococcal septicaemia (the two together causing death); recurrent
aspiration of gastric contents leading to recurrent Apparent Life Threatening
Episodes (ALTE) and eventually sudden death; another natural but unknown
cause; and smothering. The presence of bronchopneumonia in the lungs and
pneumococci in the heart blood as well as the appearance of the thymus were all
suggestive of an infection. The pneumonia noted was likely to have been caused
by a bacterial infection. That could cause the sudden death of a child in
apparently good health. The study suggesting that nosebleeds in infants was
indicative of smothering had since been discredited. The child's previous
admissions were most likely related to a natural disease, probably reflux. He
indicated that it would be unusual were the pneumococci discovered to have been
a contaminant. The presence of haemosiderin in the lungs did not, in his view,
point to smothering as its cause.
Subsequent
procedure at the trial
[32] After the close of the defence case the Advocate depute addressed the
jury. She described the case as very complex, with very complex medical
evidence. She stated that she was not going to go over that evidence or even
to summarise it as that would carry a real risk that she would get it wrong or
that she might summarise it in a way that was not helpful to the jury. She
founded the Crown case substantially upon what she described as a pattern of
events involving the child being admitted to hospital on a number of occasions
but on investigation there being found to have no or only minor ailments.
There were no significant alarms about the child while she was in hospital
care. The pattern, when read with the post mortem findings of haemosiderin and
food contents in the lungs, pointed to aspiration, not as a result of natural
disease but consequential on the deliberate obstruction of the child's
airways. The jury should conclude that it had been established beyond
reasonable doubt that the child had been repeatedly assaulted by the appellant,
the last assault resulting in her death.
[33] Counsel
for the defence told the jury that they had "a huge quantity, a mountain, maybe
a swamp, of professional opinion to assess". He was not, he said, going to go
over that evidence in detail since, like the Advocate depute, he might get it
wrong. He emphasised that twenty five years had passed since the child's death
and that there were significant sources of medical information which, as a
result of practices at the time, were not available for the jury's
consideration. The thrust of the Crown case (that there had been repeated
induced asphyxiation of the child by the appellant) was negatived by at least
one instance where the breathing difficulties had occurred when the appellant
was not alone with the child. There had also been a significant gap in time
between the fourth and fifth admissions. The evidence in favour of the death
being the result of natural causes should be preferred. The Crown had not
proved its case beyond reasonable doubt.
[34] The
trial judge then directed the jury. As a result, it seems, of a technical
failure, the whole of these directions was not duly recorded. However, the
trial judge has produced a reconstruction of his charge, the accuracy of which
was not disputed by either party. He gave to the jury directions which were in
the circumstances adequate as to how they should approach expert testimony. He
advised them more than once that he was not going to rehearse that evidence and
did not do so. He reminded the jury that the Crown's case as to the commission
of the crimes charged was based on circumstantial evidence and that the Advocate
depute had outlined the circumstances upon which she relied. He was not, he
said, going to rehearse these circumstances and did not do so. He told the
jury that they should consider everything that had been said by either
counsel.
[35] The
jury deliberated for more than a full day. They then returned a majority
verdict of guilty on both charges.
Submissions on behalf of the appellant
[36] The appellant's primary ground of appeal was
that there had been misdirection by the trial judge. Mr Shead submitted that,
standing the complex nature of the case and the divergence in the expert
opinion, the trial judge ought to have analysed the evidence in greater detail
and offered more guidance to the jury (cf Shepherd v HM Advocate 1996
SCCR 679, per Lord McCluskey at page 684). A number of English authorities
provided helpful guidance. In complex cases directions should provide
structure, focussing the issues and any material disputes which had to be
resolved: one could not rely on the speeches of counsel (R v Amado-Taylor
[2000] 2 Cr App R 189). The requirements of a fair trial demanded that a
jury's decision be reached on a logically justifiable basis. Thus, in cases
involving expert medical evidence, they should, where relevant, be directed on
the need before convicting to reject any realistic alternative explanation for
the cause of death and on the need for caution in relation to developing
medical science (R v Henderson
[2010] EWCA Crim 1269, per
Moses LJ at paras 200 - 202 and 213 - 221). An
analogy could be drawn with the trial judge's duty, in ensuring a fair trial,
to give legal directions independently of the manner
in which parties presented their case (Ferguson v HM Advocate 2009 SCCR 78, per Lord Osborne at para [30] - [35], adopting the dicta in R v Coutts [2006] UKHL 39; (2006) 1 WLR 2154).
[37] In an associated ground of appeal Mr Shead
submitted that, in the circumstances of the present case, the failure of the
jury to provide reasons for
their decision had denied the appellant a fair trial in terms of article 6 of
the European Convention on Human Rights. Beggs v HM Advocate 2010 SCCR 681 could be distinguished: that was not a particularly complicated case
(Opinion of the Court, delivered by Lord Eassie, at para [208]). Moreover,
it was decided prior to both the Grand Chamber decision in Taxquet v
Belgium [2010] ECHR 1806 and recently published research into jury trials
by Professor Cheryl Thomas (Are Juries Fair?, Ministry of Justice
Research Series, 1/10). Taxquet highlighted the need for safeguards to
protect against arbitrariness and to ensure that the reasons for a verdict
could be ascertained (at paras 90 - 92). These safeguards might include more
detailed directions from the trial judge, preferably in written form according
to Professor Thomas' research, or the posing of specific questions to the jury.
In the present case, no such safeguards had been adopted.
[38] Viewed separately or in conjunction these grounds
of appeal supported the contention that the appellant had been denied a fair
trial and that there had been a miscarriage of justice.
Submissions of behalf of the Crown
[39] The Advocate depute submitted that there had
been no misdirection by the trial judge. He had a discretion as to the extent
to which he directed the jury on the relevant issues, having had the benefit of
hearing all the evidence (M'Phelim v HM Advocate 1960 JC 17, per
Lord Justice Clerk Thomson at pages 21-2). Shepherd v HM Advocate merely
provided guidance on the approach to be adopted in directing a jury, and did
not fetter that discretion in any way. There might be cases in which it was
incumbent upon a trial judge to give specific directions, but that was not so
in the present case (cf Black v HM Advocate 1974 JC 43, per Lord
Cameron at page 49). While it had involved a number of experts, they had given
evidence over five weeks and that evidence had been tested by senior counsel,
who had then addressed the jury: in the circumstances there had been ample
opportunity for the exposition of the material issues which had to be resolved.
Indeed, in a complex case it was often counter-productive for a trial judge to
revisit the evidence or focus on particular points; to do so could complicate
matters and distract a jury's focus from other relevant evidence. Reference
was made to Hamilton v HM Advocate 1938 JC 134, per Lord Justice General Normand at
pages 143-4.
[40] It was submitted that little guidance could
be gleaned from English authorities. The system to which they related was not
comparable. In particular it was there expected that a trial judge would
revisit the evidence in his summing up, whereas in Scotland the duty of the judge was focussed more
on the provision of legal guidance. Moreover, the need for a direction that a
jury had to reject any realistic alternative explanation for the cause of death
was questionable: the real question was whether the case had been proved
beyond reasonable doubt (cf R v Henderson).
[41] It was accepted that, if the
trial judge had materially misdirected the jury by omitting to give necessary
directions, there would have been a miscarriage of justice.
[42] As regards the associated ground
of appeal, it was submitted that there was nothing in the Grand Chamber's
decision in Taxquet which undermined Beggs v HM Advocate. It
made clear that a trial by jury was not incompatible, per se, with the
Convention (at para 83) and that it was not necessary for a jury to provide
reasons for its decision (at para 90). The safeguards to which it referred
were merely examples, and were not definitive. In the present case, the
evidence had been heard in public, recorded and rigorously cross-examined. The
indictment made clear the facts which had to be proved and the jury were aware
that the onus lay on the Crown in that regard. Moreover, the right of appeal
ensured due consideration that there had been a logically justifiable basis for
the verdict returned. In all of the circumstances it could not be said that
the appellant had been denied a fair trial.
Ground (6)
[43] Both counsel addressed us on a separate ground of appeal
(ground (6) - alleged misdirection by the judge in relation to express
directions given by him in relation to culpable homicide) but in light of our
decision on the grounds mentioned above it is unnecessary to rehearse the
arguments in relation to that separate ground.
Discussion
[44] In Shepherd v HM Advocate Lord McCluskey,
delivering the Opinion of the Court, said at page 684:
"The general principles which govern the treatment of evidence by the judge in his directions to the jury are well-established. The primary duty of the judge is to direct upon the law; and it is usually necessary for him to refer to the evidence to which the relevant law applies. It is, however, a matter for his discretion, in the light of the whole conduct of the trial, to determine the extent to which it is appropriate to refer to the evidence. There is no general obligation on him to attempt to summarise it. In certain types of cases - long, complicated cases, for example - a judge might consider it appropriate to remind the jury of much of the evidence upon which the parties seek to rely. In others - for example, short cases in which there are few issues and they are sharp issues of fact upon which the questioning and the speeches have focused sharply - the trial judge may consider it appropriate not to canvas the evidence at all. He may, in appropriate circumstances decide to refer to parts of the evidence to illustrate the applicability of particular rules of law - for example, rules about hearsay evidence and about fairness as a test of admissibility. He may respond to an invitation made by a party's advocate in a speech to assist the jury in their recollection of a particular body of evidence. He may consider it necessary to amplify or correct some reference to the evidence which has been made in a speech to the jury if the judge considers that the evidence as described in the speech has not been accurately or fairly dealt with. These are only some examples of circumstances which the trial judge will have regard to in determining the extent to which it is appropriate to refer to the evidence. The judgment, however, is clearly one that he is best qualified to make in the context of the trial over which he has presided. He is in the best position to understand what have been the real issues of fact canvassed at the trial and the extent to which the jury might benefit from further clarification."
[45] Lord McCluskey then quoted a
sentence from a passage at page 144 in the Opinion of Lord Justice General
Normand in Hamilton and Others v HM Advocate. The full passage in
which that sentence occurs is as follows:
"The primary duty of the presiding judge is to direct the jury upon the law applicable to the case. In doing so it is usually necessary for him to refer to the facts on which questions of law depend. He may also have to refer to evidence in order to correct any mistakes that may have occurred in the addresses to the jury, and he may have occasion to refer to the evidence where controversy has arisen as to its bearing on a question of fact which the jury has to decide. But it is a matter very much in his discretion whether he can help the jury by resuming the evidence on any particular aspect of the case. I am confident that the anxious willingness of judges to give every help that they can to the jury may be relied on to guide them aright on the extent to which they ought to review the evidence in the case, and I am little disposed to attend with patience to the criticism that more should have been said about the evidence by way of exposition or explanation than the judge thought proper at the time. The Court of Appeal is not in a position to review this discretion of the presiding judge on matters which concern the best way of conducting the case before him."
[46] That the primary duty of the
presiding judge in Scotland is to direct the jury upon the law applicable to
the case is not in doubt. It is also not in doubt that the judge has no duty
when directing the jury to rehearse the evidence which they have heard, that
is, to summarise in chronological order the testimony of the witnesses. Not
even in England, where judges in practice tend more to enter
upon the evidence than in Scotland, is the duty expressed
in these terms. In R v Farr, 10 December 1998, unreported
but quoted by Henry LJ in R v Amado-Taylor at para 9, Rose
LJ is noted as having said in relation to a 13 day trial:
"It cannot be too strongly emphasised that the judge is under no obligation when summing up, to rehearse all the evidence or all the arguments."
It is well established in England that the "fundamental requirements are correct directions in points of law, an accurate review of the main facts and alleged facts and a general impression of fairness" (McGreevy (1973) 57 Crim App R 424, per Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest at page 430). In short trials it may in that jurisdiction be unnecessary to review the facts at all (Wilson, 14 May 1991 at page 5D, as quoted in R v Amado-Taylor).
[47] The passages cited above from Shepherd
and Hamilton might suggest that, in Scotland, there is no
obligation on a trial judge in any circumstances to address the evidence when
directing the jury; that whether he does so or not is a matter for his
unfettered discretion, a discretion with which an appeal court will not
interfere. But that would be a misunderstanding. The overarching
responsibility of the judge is to ensure that there is a fair trial. A fair
trial imports that any verdict, and in particular a verdict of guilty, is not
arbitrary but proceeds upon a reasoned basis. The nature of jury trial is such
that there is not imposed upon the jury the discipline of disclosing the reasons
which have led to their verdict. But that makes it all the more important that
they should be provided by the trial judge with a framework which allows them
to proceed to a verdict by a reasoned process. Lord McCluskey in Shepherd
said: "There is no general obligation on [the trial judge] to attempt to
summarise [the evidence]". That sentence, particularly when read with the
following sentence, imports that in some circumstances, and in particular in
long complicated cases, there may be an obligation to refer to some of the
evidence - so that the jury may be focused on the critical issues for their
decision. In Black v HM Advocate at page 49 Lord Cameron
said:
"In considering the adequacy and sufficiency of a judge's charge to a jury it is at all times necessary to keep in view the circumstances of the particular case under review, its simplicity or complexity, and the legal issues which require to be brought to the attention of the jury. Now great elaboration of these issues can be as confusing to the members of the jury as failure to deal with those which are relevant and require to be explained can be misleading. ... As decisions on matters of fact and judgments on evidence are essentially the province of the jury, we do not think that it is incumbent on a judge - or even desirable that he should, in every case and as a matter of practice do so - to embark upon a detailed rehearsal or analysis of the evidence. In many cases - of which the present may well be one - the evidence lies within such short compass and has so recently been led before the jury that to enter upon a recapitulation of it would be wholly superfluous and might even be confusing.
At the same time there are cases in which the form of the indictment, the nature and complexity of the charge or charges themselves or of the evidence relating to them demand detailed directions in law and some balanced examination of the evidence in order to focus accurately for the jury the legal context within which their consideration of the evidence and the determination of their verdict have to be conducted."
[48] Cases involving the deaths of
infants allegedly at the hands of a parent or other carer are amongst the most
difficult, and potentially the most complex, of all cases coming before the criminal
courts. In many such cases, and the present is such, there will be no direct
evidence of criminal conduct by the accused towards the child. The case will
largely, if not exclusively, depend on inferences to be drawn from medical
testimony. In this field, while knowledge advances, there remain many
uncertainties. Establishing the cause of a sudden infant death may be very
difficult and in some cases may not be possible. If criminal liability is to
be brought home to the accused it will be necessary to exclude not only any
natural explanations for the death suggested in the evidence, but also any
realistic possibility of there being an unknown cause. In R v Henderson (a series of
cases concerned with "shaken baby syndrome") Moses LJ said at para 217:
"... a realistic possibility of an unknown cause must not be overlooked. In cases where that possibility is realistic, the jury should be reminded of that possibility. They should be instructed that unless the evidence leads them to exclude any realistic possibility of an unknown cause they cannot convict. In cases where it is relevant to do so, they should be reminded that medical science develops and that which was previously thought unknown may subsequently be recognised and acknowledged. As it was put by Toulson LJ, 'today's orthodoxy may become tomorrow's outdated learning' (R v Houldsworth [2008] EWCA Crim 971 at [57]). In cases where developing medical science is relevant, the jury should be reminded that special caution is needed where expert opinion evidence is fundamental to the prosecution."
[49] Where there is
on the evidence a realistic possibility of there being an unknown (currently unknowable)
cause of death, as there was on Professor Morris' evidence, the jury should be
reminded that this must be excluded before they can convict. Also, of course,
the jury will require, before they can convict, to exclude any natural cause of
death which is positively suggested in the evidence. This may be obvious, but
the jury should be reminded of it. The way in which a jury approaches its
deliberations upon the issues before it will be a matter, ultimately, for them
to decide; but in a case of the present kind it will be incumbent on the judge
to give them guidance. Even where counsel for the prosecution and for the
defence have in their speeches fully explored the technical evidence (and they
did not do so here), it will be for the trial judge to provide a succinct,
balanced review of the central factual matters for the jury's determination.
Where natural causes for the death are suggested in evidence, an appropriate
starting point may be to remind the jury what these are, giving a brief
explanation of the evidential basis for each of them, and directing them that,
if they are persuaded of them or if any evidence with respect to them gives
rise to a reasonable doubt about the accused's guilt, they are bound to
acquit.
[50] In the present case one expert
led by the defence (Dr Reid) testified that the most likely cause of the
child's death was acute toxaemia resulting from invasive pneumococcal
infection. This was based on the presence of pneumococci in the heart blood,
as detected at the post mortem examination. The child's records indicated that
she had inflamed eardrums. One of the most common causes of middle ear
infection was pneumococcus. Dr Reid had no difficulty with the fact that
the child had been discharged from hospital the previous evening and had been
seen twice by the family's general practitioner twice later that evening but
had died suddenly the following morning. On the other hand, he acknowledged
that he was not an expert in the effect of smothering on the lungs. He offered
no opinion on the evidence that there had been prior bleeding in these organs.
[51] Professor Morris concluded that
there were in this case four possible causes of death. In order of the most
likely first, these were (i) pneumococcal pneumonia and pneumococcal
septicaemia, (ii) recurrent aspiration of gastric contents, (iii) another
natural but unknown cause and (iv) smothering. While he could not exclude the
last, the simplest and most likely explanation, in his view, was recurrent
bouts of aspiration and finally aspiration plus pneumococcal pneumonia causing
death. He thought the most likely explanation for recurrent episodes of
aspiration was gastro-oesophageal reflux. He thus offered a possible
explanation for there being previous affection of the lungs.
[52] Dr Myerscough also offered
gastro-oesophageal reflux with aspirations as a possible explanation for the
child's presentation on 19 December. She raised the possibility of
neuro-developmental problems as the origin of that reflux. She pointed to
aspects of the child's medical history which might point to such problems.
Imposed upper airways obstruction was a possibility but not in her view the
only possibility.
[53] Dr Gray's view as to the
cause of death coincided with that expressed by the principal pathologist who
had carried out the immediate post mortem examination - bronchialitis and bronchopneumonia.
She attributed the aspiration to gastro-oesophageal reflux, which might also be
related to neurological conditions. The finding of pneumococci was, in her
view, significant. Although she could not altogether rule out smothering as
the cause for the aspiration, she concluded that the cause of death was
purulent bronchopneumonia.
[54] The views of the experts led by
the defence varied - in their particulars and in their emphases - but all
afforded natural explanations for the death (and in most cases also for the
earlier alarms leading to hospital admissions) which the jury would have to reject,
and have a proper basis for rejecting, if they were to be satisfied beyond
reasonable doubt that the accused had repeatedly obstructed the child's upper
airways, on the final occasion causing her death. It was, in our view,
incumbent on the trial judge to focus the jury's attention on these
explanations to allow them to approach their task in a logical and rational way
and so to reach a reasoned verdict. Simply to leave the technical evidence at
large for the jury involved, in our view, in the circumstances of this case, a
misdirection.
[55] If the trial judge was to
identify and succinctly to describe the natural explanations advanced by the
defence (as in our view he was), he would in fairness have required to conduct
a like exercise in relation to the evidence upon which the Crown relied for the
propositions that the child had been assaulted and ultimately killed by the
accused. The technical evidence which the Crown led was wide-ranging and
involved a number of distinct disciplines but it all tended, to a greater or
lesser extent, towards the proposition that the accused had on repeated
occasions over the period between 14 October and 20 December
1982 restricted the child's breathing and on the last occasion
suffocated her. The pattern of events whereby the child was on many occasions
admitted into hospital having reportedly suffered difficulty in breathing but
on being admitted found to have no problem other than, on some of these
occasions, apparently minor ailments was, certainly on one view, suspicious.
In the view of Dr Hammond the circumstances were, for the reasons she
gave, highly suspicious and consistent with repeated upper airways obstruction.
Dr Gibson, an expert in paediatric respiratory medicine, was equally
definite. Professor Busuttil and Dr Kellnar gave positive support to the
Crown case, as did Dr Howatson and Dr Keeling. A succinct reference
to the bases for each of their views would have been appropriate.
[56] The task which it was, in our
view, incumbent on the trial judge to perform was not an easy one. There was a
risk that, in seeking to identify the position of each of the principal experts,
errors might be made. But the fact that the task was difficult does not mean
that it was unnecessary. The failure to undertake that task in this case
amounted in our view to a material misdirection. It is not disputed that, if
we came to that view, the result was that there had been a miscarriage of
justice and that the verdict would require to be quashed. We accordingly allow
the appeal and quash the verdict.
[57] In these circumstances it is
unnecessary to address in detail the ground of appeal based on an alleged
infringement of the appellant's Article 6 right to a determination by a
reasoned judgment. It is quite clear that, notwithstanding that a jury's
verdict is not "transparent", jury trial in Scotland is not by that reason
inconsistent with Article 6 (Beggs v HM Advocate, at
paras [207]-[208], where account was taken, of among other authorities,
the judgment of the Second Section of the European Court of Human Rights in Taxquet
v Belgium, Application No.926/05, 13 January 2009). Since then
the Grand Chamber of the Court has delivered its judgment in Taxquet (16 November
2010), in which it held that the institution of the lay jury cannot be
called into question in the context of an Article 6 challenge. A decision
to the like effect was reached by the Second Section of the Court in the
context of Scottish criminal proceedings in Judge v United
Kingdom, Application No.35863/10, 8 February
2011.
[58] It is central to these decisions
that the jury's verdict is not given in isolation but in a framework which
includes the presiding judge's charge to the jury. It accordingly follows
that, if in the circumstances of the particular case that aspect of the
framework is materially inadequate, the verdict may be vulnerable to challenge
under Article 6. As we have already found that at common law there was a
miscarriage of justice, it is unnecessary to reach a firm conclusion on the
Article 6 point. We would, however, be inclined to hold that, given the
complexity of the issues at this trial and the failure of the judge to give to
the jury adequate guidance as to how they might address them, there was a
breach of Article 6.
[59] As earlier stated, a further
ground of appeal was argued but in the circumstances it is unnecessary to deal
with it.