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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Hodgson v HM Advocate [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_55 (03 May 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2012/2012HCJAC55.html Cite as: [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_55 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lady PatonLord HardieLord Bonomy
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[2012] HCJAC 55Appeal No: XC188/09
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD BONOMY
in
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
by
MICHAEL MARTIN HODGSON Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent:
_______
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Appellant: Shead et Mason; Bruce & Co, Arbroath
Respondent: Fairley AD et Barron; Crown Agent
3 May 2012
Background
[1] The appellant was convicted on 17 March 2009, after trial at the High
Court in Edinburgh, of the following charge:
"On an occasion between 20 August 2007 and 6 September 2007, both dates inclusive, at 15/14 Bingham Medway, Edinburgh you did assault M, and did attempt to induce her to consume alcohol, seize her by the body, pull her towards you, pick her up and drag her to a bedroom, place her face down on a bed and remove her clothing, tie her arms and feet to said bed, and you did rape her."
[2] Following his detention the appellant was
interviewed without having access to the advice of a solicitor, and evidence
was led about the terms of that interview at his trial. The Crown initially
maintained that the appellant had waived his right of access to a lawyer, but
before us it was conceded by the Crown, under reference to Cadder v HM
Advocate [2010] UKSC 43, 2011 SC (UKSC)13, 2010 SCCR 951, 2010 SLT 1125, that
evidence of the interview should not have been led.
[3] At the appellant's trial the Crown relied
upon his admission of having intercourse with the complainer to provide
corroboration that he was the person who had assaulted and raped her. However,
the police interview was not the only source of acknowledgement by the
appellant that he had had intercourse with the complainer. Prior to the police
interview, at the point of detention, he made certain remarks relating to his
relationship with the complainer. In light of the terms of the interview the Crown
did not rely on these remarks at trial.
[4] The first questions before us are whether,
in light of Cadder v HM Advocate it is now appropriate to take
that evidence into account and whether in fact the remarks amount to an
acknowledgement of penetration of the complainer. In the event that the answer
to both is in the affirmative, the next question for our attention is whether,
absent the evidence of the police interview, there was a real possibility of a
different verdict (Cadder v HM Advocate (supra) at
paragraph 64). There is a third and separate issue relating to the admission
of the evidence of a chartered clinical psychologist, Dr Katharine Russell,
as to the complainer's lack of understanding of sexual intercourse and related
matters.
The Facts
[5] The complainer was befriended at work by
'JC'. Because the complainer was having difficulty picking up how to do things
correctly, 'JC' tried to help her out. The complainer visited her at her
home. There she encountered the appellant who was one of 'JC's' neighbours.
The appellant and the complainer met on subsequent occasions. On one occasion
they went to Portobello Beach for a barbeque; on another occasion
they went to the cinema together, after which the complainer went to the
appellant's flat from where he walked her home.
[6] They met again on 27 August 2007, a holiday Monday, when
she took a DVD player and some DVDs to his flat. There they watched a film on
the DVD player. What happened thereafter is described by the trial judge in
his report as follows:
"When she was putting away her DVD he dragged her through to the bedroom. She tried to pull away but he was too strong for her. He laid her face down on the bed. He took her top, trousers and pants off. He tied her feet and hands to the bed. She kept saying 'No, no no' and tried to get away. Her feet were tied to one side of the bed and her hands to the head of the bed with dressing gown cords. He said 'You'll not get out of this one.' She did not know what was going to happen to her and she tried to undo the ties to get away. He had his penis out and put beer on it. She shouted on 'J'. He put his penis in what she described as 'my back end'. She did not know what was happening to her. At one point he put something in her mouth. (The words 'place a gag in her mouth' in the charge were deleted by the jury in their verdict). There was blood on the sheet and she thought she was bleeding but did not know where from. She did not think that what had happened to her was all that serious so she just put on her clothes and went home after he had untied her. He had the cheek to walk her home and ask if she was all right.
The complainer did not know what had happened to her or how to describe what had happened. She did not tell anyone, even when she was asked by her father and grandmother if anything had been done to her. On one occasion after the incident she was walked home from work by the appellant and refused a lift from her father in his taxi. She first disclosed what had happened to her when she was asked by 'JC', who then contacted the police on 6 September 2007. When she was examined by a forensic medical examiner a full length tear at the four o'clock position was found in her hymen."
[7] The appellant was detained by the police on
7 September 2007, and in a lengthy police interview lasting 1 hour 53
minutes he admitted tying the complainer's hands and one foot to the bed and
having sexual intercourse with her, but maintained that she consented and
indeed had egged him on by saying "Go for it" and also "Keep going". He stated
that when he inserted his penis into her vagina she screamed and he withdrew
and untied her. He gave evidence at the trial maintaining his defence of
consent.
[8] The appellant was detained at his home
address on 7 September 2007. After being cautioned
and told why he was being detained he said:
"I'm flabbergasted. I've only slept with two people since I've been here."
He shortly thereafter, once he had checked some items of property in his bedroom, added:
"I've slept with Kirsty, but she only came on Monday, and another girl who lives over there, she's a care assistant. I can't remember her name. She's only 17 1/2 years old."
The reference to "another girl" was clearly a reference to the complainer.
Admissibility of Remarks made upon Detention
[9] Mr Shead, counsel for the appellant,
acknowledged that, if these utterances were truly voluntary, they were not
struck at by the decision in Cadder v HM Advocate or any other
related case. The question, therefore, was whether, applying the general test
of fairness, the policy of the court should be to admit such statements,
bearing in mind what was the state of the law at the time the statements were
made. He suggested that the court might approach the matter by asking this
question - is such a statement truly voluntary when the person making it does
not know of his entitlement to legal advice? Mr Shead also invited us to
construe the appellant's reference to sleeping with the complainer as not
amounting to an acknowledgement of penetration, but in doing so recognised that
the court had already, in GM v HM Advocate [2011] HCJAC 112 at
paragraph 21, interpreted that expression as being open to that construction.
[10] In response the Advocate depute submitted
that, unless there could be shown to be some nexus between an utterance or remark
and police questioning in relation to the offence, Cadder v HM
Advocate was not engaged to the extent of rendering the remark
inadmissible. He relied in particular on the judgment of Lord Hope at
paragraph 48 and Lord Rodger at paragraph 70 and their emphasis on
material derived from interrogation. The same emphasis can be seen in
paragraph 13 of the opinion of Lord Justice Clerk in Mullen v HM Advocate
[2011] HCJAC 55, 2011 SCCR 438, and paragraph 80 of the judgment of
Lord Brown in Ambrose v Harris [2011] UKSC 43, 2011 SCCR 651.
[11] Having reviewed again the evidence relating
to the circumstances in which the remark about sleeping with the complainer was
made, we consider that it was a genuinely voluntary statement made following
caution to the effect that the appellant was not obliged to say anything other
than to provide certain personal details, and including the warning that
anything he did say might be used as evidence. His remarks were made
instantaneously and, in our opinion, spontaneously and truly voluntarily. No
question was posed to which the remarks could be seen to be a response. Some
reference was made in the discussion before us to the possibility of the terms
of the caution being revised to include reference to the right to legal advice.
However any such revisal would relate to legal advice before being interviewed.
It is difficult to see what difference such an additional element in the
caution would have made in the circumstances of this case. We can see no
reason why evidence of the remarks should not have been admitted.
[12] Since the remarks were properly admitted,
they were a feature of the trial and were available to the jury for their
consideration. The fact that, when the Advocate depute came to address the
jury, he chose to rely on what the appellant had said at the interview rather
than these remarks does not detract in any way from their availability as
evidence to be taken into account in determining whether there was a
sufficiently corroborated case to answer at the close of the Crown case.
Mr Shead suggested that in two respects there was insufficient evidence, viz
penetration of the complainer's vagina and identification of the appellant
as the assailant. In our opinion there was sufficient corroborated evidence in
respect of both. The complainer's evidence that she was penetrated somewhere
in the region of her private parts was corroborated by the evidence of
Dr Jane Turnbull, forensic medical examiner, that the complainer had
a full length tear at the 4 o'clock position in her hymen. The complainer's
evidence that the appellant was responsible for penetrating her was
corroborated by his remarks, in particular his statement that he had "slept
with" another girl clearly
fitting the description of the complainer. The absence of consent and the appellant's awareness thereof were spoken to by the complainer and confirmed by the findings of dressing gown cords during the police search of the appellant's home. We are accordingly satisfied that, absent the evidence of the police interview, there was nevertheless, at the close of the Crown case, a sufficiently corroborated case for the appellant to answer.
Admissibility of the Expert Evidence
[13] In these circumstances it is necessary to
address the question whether, had the evidence of the interview been excluded,
there was a real possibility of the jury arriving at a different verdict. Before
addressing that question, however, it makes sense for us to deal with the third
and separate issue mentioned above relating to the evidence of
Dr Katherine Russell. Should we decide that her evidence ought not
to have been admitted, then the question whether there was a real possibility
of the jury arriving at a different verdict would have to be addressed in light
of that error along with the admission of evidence of the police interview of
the appellant.
[14] In the course of preparing the case for
trial the Crown were concerned about the apparent learning difficulties
displayed by the complainer which were confirmed by the views expressed by
witnesses about her naivety and level of understanding of matters sexual.
Reports were commissioned from two psychologists. The instructions given to
Dr Katherine A Russell, chartered clinical psychologist, were to
complete a cognitive assessment of the complainer and in particular to consider
whether she was able to give consent to sexual intercourse. Dr Russell
conducted two individual assessment interviews with the complainer and in
addition assessed her intelligence and carried out a mini mental state
examination to test her memory. Dr Russell was unable to complete her
assessment of the complainer's ability to give consent to sexual intercourse.
However she was able to reach conclusions about her level of intellect and her
understanding of matters relating to sexual intercourse. She found the
complainer to have a very low average (borderline) intelligence quotient
and a
definite lack of knowledge in the area of understanding of the consequences of
sexual intercourse, the mechanics of sexual intercourse, the nature and
functions of sexual organs and even the language associated with sexual
activity and relationships.
[15] At the trial the Crown led Dr Russell
as a witness. She spoke to her report, Crown production 15. When she reached
that part of her report which dealt with the complainer's sexual knowledge and
understanding, counsel for the appellant objected to her evidence on the ground
that, because it was not the Crown case that the complainer's intellectual
capacity was such that she was incapable of consenting to sexual intercourse,
Dr Russell's evidence relating to the extent of the complainer's sexual
knowledge was hearsay evidence in relation to material about which it was not
appropriate to lead expert evidence. The evidence was accordingly irrelevant.
The jury could assess the complainer's knowledge of sexual matters from her own
evidence. They did not require the assistance of expert evidence. In response
the Advocate depute submitted that the expert evidence was relevant to the
credibility of the complainer and the appellant. It would not have been
realistic or appropriate for him to have asked the detailed questions posed by
Dr Russell in her interviews and then to have asked the jury to work out
her state of sexual knowledge without expert assistance.
[16] The trial judge repelled the objection on
the ground that the evidence sought to be led did not constitute secondary
hearsay and that it was relevant to the question of credibility and reliability
of the complainer and the appellant. That decision is challenged as erroneous
in both respects - it was neither hearsay nor relevant expert evidence.
[17] In support of this ground of appeal
Mr Shead founded on Gage v HM Advocate [2011] HCJAC 40.
The test was not one of relevance but necessity. There the court had held
expert evidence relating to the inherent unreliability of identification
evidence to be inadmissible. Mr Shead submitted that the result of the
erroneous admission of the evidence of Dr Russell was to accord to the
complainer's evidence, and indeed to the Crown case, a false note of
authenticity which, when considered along with the damage to the appellant's
case done by the admission of evidence of his interview, had resulted in a
miscarriage of justice.
[18] The Advocate depute submitted that, properly
understood, the decision in Gage supported the Crown position. Expert
evidence was appropriate where a case involved special features pertaining to a
witness or the evidence of the witness that were likely to be outwith the
jury's knowledge or experience (paragraph 22 of the opinion of the
Lord Justice Clerk). The Advocate depute then drew our attention to
various passages in the report and evidence of Dr Russell which
demonstrated that the evidence of the complainer fell into that category, in
particular her lack of understanding of sexual matters.
[19] We accept that Mr Shead correctly
identified the test for the admissibility of expert evidence in circumstances
such as this as one of necessity. Relevance alone is not sufficient. That
that is the case is clear from the opinion of the Lord Justice Clerk
in Gage v HM Advocate where he described the test and illustrated
its application in practice as follows:
"[22] We do not accept the submission that evidence of the kind proposed is admissible if it might be useful to the jury. That test is not supported by authority and, in our view, would be unworkable in practice. Expert evidence is admissible only if it is necessary for the proper resolution of the dispute. In particular, in a case of this kind it is necessary only if the tribunal of fact would be unable to reach a sound conclusion without it (Wilson and Murray v HM Adv [2009] HCJAC 58, 2009 SCCR 666, para [58]; Dickson Evidence (3rd edn), para 397). That will be the case only if there are special features pertaining to a witness or to his evidence that are likely to be outwith the jury's knowledge or experience (HM Adv v A 2005 SCCR 593, at para [11]).
[23] For these
reasons this court has held that psychiatric or psychological evidence would
have been admissible on the question of the reliability of a child witness in
light of the interviewing techniques used (AJE v HM Adv 2002 JC
215) and on the question whether a witness suffered from a severe personality
disorder and was a pathological liar (McBrearty v HM Adv 2004 JC
122). This court has also admitted such evidence on the question of an
appellant's susceptibility to pressure when he was being questioned by the
police (Gilmour v HM Adv [2007] HCJAC 48, 2007 SCCR 417). A
trial judge has admitted such evidence on the question whether a complainer who
suffered from bi‑polar illness (manic depression) exhibited false memory
syndrome (HM Adv v A, supra); but it was not admitted in HM
Adv v Grimmond (2001 SCCR 708) on the question of reliability of
child complainers where there was no suggestion that they were other than
ordinary, normal children."
[20] The assessment of the intellectual capacity,
and indeed also the level of the general social functioning, of a person with
an intellectual capacity so limited that it falls below that of the vast
majority of the population is plainly an area of psychological expertise. A
proper assessment of intellectual and social functioning by psychometric
testing and questioning is appropriately done in scientifically controlled
surroundings. Where a witness falls into such a limited category of the public
that jurors are unlikely to have experience of the way in which the
difficulties facing such people are likely to manifest themselves, expert
psychological evidence can be said to be necessary to give to the jury a proper
appreciation of the witness's level of understanding by reference to her
intellectual capacity. While that level of understanding can be, and indeed
was, spoken to by witnesses who knew the complainer, their evidence was
anecdotal experience of a level of understanding of a kind members of the jury
were unlikely to have encountered. Dr Russell's investigation
demonstrated that the complainer's intellectual capacity was lower than that of
the vast majority of the population. She fell into a small group of persons
with very low intellectual capacity bordering on learning difficulty.
[21] In our opinion the test for admission of
expert evidence relating to a witness, explained in Gage v HM
Advocate, was met in the circumstances of this case. The special features
of the intellectual capacity of the complainer which had a direct bearing on
her lack of understanding of matters relating to sexual relations, including
the mechanics and consequences of sexual intercourse, the nature and functions
of sexual organs, and even the language associated with sexual activity and
relationships were likely to be outwith the jury's knowledge or experience. Much
of her evidence was likely to have appeared to the jury to be odd, having
regards to her physical age. Expert evidence relating to the complainer's
intellectual capacity and understanding of matters sexual was therefore
necessary to enable the jury to reach a sound conclusion as to the credibility
and reliability of her evidence and that of the appellant. The appellant's
ground of appeal relating to the admission of Dr Russell's evidence thus
falls to be refused.
Was there a Real Possibility of a Different Verdict?
[22] As a result, the question whether there was
a real possibility of the jury arriving at a different verdict arises only in
relation to the wrongful admission of evidence of the appellant's interview. It
was the submission of Mr Shead that, in the absence of evidence of the
interview, the Crown case would have been weakened to a material extent in two
respects; firstly, the evidence from the interview supporting the Crown case
would not have been available, and secondly, the interview could not have been
used, as it was, to undermine the appellant's credibility. In support of the
first point Mr Shead founded also on a separate ground of appeal to the
effect that the trial judge misdirected the jury when he directed them that,
because the appellant had given evidence, the contents of his "mixed statement",
i.e. his police interview, were not evidence of the facts mentioned therein in
so far as they were in his own favour, but that what he said in his own favour
to the police could be founded on by the appellant only as supporting or
strengthening his credibility or reliability.
[23] Under reference to Thomson v HM
Advocate 1998 SCCR 683, the Advocate depute acknowledged that to limit the
use to which passages from the appellant's interview favourable to his case
might be used was a misdirection, but submitted that that misdirection was of
no practical significance in the context of the trial as a whole.
[24] With that submission we agree. We invited
Mr Shead to identify any part of the interview which contained material
favourable to the appellant's case which did not feature as part of his
evidence in court. Mr Shead did not identify any passage of which that
could be said. He made the general proposition that the balance of the trial
had been disturbed by that part of the charge, because the Crown had the
benefit of the parts of the statement they relied on while the appellant had
been denied the benefit of parts favourable to his case.
[25] In further support of his proposition that
the Crown case would have been much less robust at its close had the interview
been ruled inadmissible, Mr Shead submitted that the spontaneous remarks
made on detention would have been much more likely to be seen as exculpatory.
The appellant's statement that he was "flabbergasted" was as exculpatory an
assertion as one could imagine.
[26] However his principal submission was that
the Crown would have been unable to use elements of the interview in the way in
which they did to undermine the appellant's evidence. He referred to a number
of passages on which the Advocate depute had founded to advance a submission in
his speech to the jury that the appellant had been lying in his evidence. In
the absence of evidence of the interview, the appellant could have given his
evidence from a much more advantageous position. That alone, in
Mr Shead's submission, satisfied the test that there was a real
possibility of a different verdict. As was plain from the trial judge's charge,
both counsel had placed reliance on the accused's evidence in light of his
interview.
[27] In a case such as this the credibility and
reliability of the principal witnesses, the complainer and the appellant, are
inevitably significant issues, and the terms of a prior interview of the
appellant may have an important part to play in the jury's determination of
where the truth lies. However, whether that part is of such significance that
the absence of the interview from the case should give rise to a real
possibility that the jury would have returned a different verdict depends upon
a review of the whole evidence presented in the case and an assessment of the
significance of the interview in the overall content of the case presented at
the trial. Our review of the evidence has failed to identify any individual
aspect of the interview that was likely to have had a significant bearing on
the verdict. We have come to the conclusion that, having regard to the overall
strength of the Crown case, including the spontaneous remarks made by the
appellant on detention, the fact that the appellant gave evidence and was able
to state all that he wished in his defence, and the fairly limited use that was
made of the evidence of the interview, there was no real possibility that the
jury would have returned a different verdict had the evidence of the interview
not been admitted.
[28] There was clear
evidence that the complainer was a very immature naïve 17 year old who had
little understanding of matters sexual. JC noted from the point she first met
her that she presented as very young. She was "childlike" and got on very well
with JC's 11 year old son. She had told JC that she had never had a
boyfriend. The complainer's father described his daughter as a very slow
learner who struggled with schoolwork and was usually shy and timid. She
tended to socialise with younger people. Her mother described her as having
needed learning support, and said that she had not had a boyfriend and had
declared no knowledge to her of boys. Her grandmother described her in a similar
way. PC Andrew Dick, who took a statement from her on
6 September 2007, said that within five minutes of meeting her he had
formed the view that she had learning difficulties and he arranged for an
appropriate adult from emergency social work services to be present during the
interview. The appellant described her, prior to the incident, as having
kissed like a child. The complainer herself gave evidence that at the time of
the incident she did not know the name for a penis, that prior to the incident
she had never had a boyfriend nor kissed a boy, had never seen a penis and did
not know what sex was. In describing the incident, she was unclear about
precisely where on her body the appellant had penetrated her, although she knew
that it was somewhere at her back end. That the penetration was vaginal was
confirmed by the evidence of the forensic medical examiner. At the time of the
incident the complainer was 17 and the appellant 46.
[29] So far as the
incident is concerned, the complainer's evidence was of being dragged by the
appellant to the bedroom, forced onto the bed and having her clothes forcibly
removed before being tied to the bed with dressing gown cords and penetrated.
Dressing gown cords were recovered from the bedroom during the police
investigation. The appellant confirmed that he had tied the complainer to the
bed, but with her consent and not securely. The complainer gave evidence of
shouting for help. The appellant stated in his evidence that she had screamed
out as he penetrated her. Both confirmed that she bled afterwards. The
appellant acknowledged that on the day before the incident he had apologised to
her when he had put his hand down her trousers and she had said "No". He also
accepted that he had apologised to her after the incident in the libel. He
accepted that he did not ask her if she wanted to have sexual intercourse. In
support of his defence the appellant was able to give a full account of the
whole relationship between him and the complainer.
[30] Having considered
again the cross‑examination of the appellant, so far as it involved
reference to his police interview, we have been unable to identify any
particular point on which the appellant's evidence could be said to have been
undermined by reference to the interview. Nor have we been able to identify
minor matters which, taken together, might be said to have undermined the
defence case. On the other hand, there were parts of the appellant's evidence,
unrelated to his interview, in which he was evasive about his knowledge of the
complainer's age, her maturity, when he became sexually attracted to her, and
what they talked about.
[31] We therefore reject
the contention that, had the evidence of the interview been excluded from the
trial, there was a real possibility of a different verdict.
[32] For these
various reasons we refuse this appeal.