HYSLOP, APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION BY JAMIE HYSLOP AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_75 (29 November 2018)


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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> HYSLOP, APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION BY JAMIE HYSLOP AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_75 (29 November 2018)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2018/[2018]_HCJAC_75.html
Cite as: 2018 GWD 40-489, [2018] HCJAC 75, [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_75, 2019 SCCR 49

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Justice General
Lord Menzies
Lord Brodie
[2018] HCJAC 75
HCA/2018/100/XC
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD CARLOWAY, the LORD JUSTICE GENERAL
in
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION
by
JAMIE HYSLOP
Appellant
against
HER MAJESTY’S ADVOCATE
Respondent
Appellant: Findlater; Faculty Appeals Unit (for Dunnipace Brown, Cumbernauld)
Respondent: Meechan AD; the Crown Agent
29 November 2018
Background
[1]       On 2 February 2018, after an extraordinary 38 day trial at the Sheriff Court in
Hamilton, the appellant was convicted of two charges. The first was that:
“on 7 July 2017 at Thorndean Crescent, Bellshill you ... did whilst acting with others
assault [DM] ... and did pursue him and did punch and kick him on the head and
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body and strike him with knives or other similar instruments to his severe injury and
permanent disfigurement”.
He was also convicted of attempting to pervert the course of justice by arranging with the
fifth accused to set up a false alibi. The alibi had been discussed in what transpired to be an
ill-advised, and recorded, phone call which he made to his co-accused from Saughton
Prison.
[2]       On 2 February 2018, he was sentenced to 3 years imprisonment on charge 1 and a
consecutive 4 months on charge 5.
Evidence
[3]       The principal charge involved the complainer being chased by a group of men who
struck him with knives or other similar instruments. There was evidence from the
complainer that it had been the appellant, whom he had identified at a VIPER parade and
knew already anyway, who had struck him with a meat cleaver. The corroboration of this
was his own statement in the phone call from the prison to the fifth accused in which he said
that:
“I will not be on the CCTV. I know for a fact that I am no n I had my hood up n all
that anyway”.
The sheriff considered that this amounted to an admission that the appellant had been at the
scene; there being evidence not only of the existence of CCTV but also that several of the
assailants did have their hoods up, albeit that the offence took place in July.
[4]       The defence appears to have been one of mistaken identity, although exactly how
that matched with what the appellant had said on the phone is uncertain. The appellant did
not give evidence.
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Ground of Appeal
[5]       The only ground of appeal that passed the sift is in the following terms:
The sheriff erred in allowing a motion by the Crown in terms of section 268 of the
Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 for the admission of CCTV footage as
additional evidence. ... [T]he CCTV footage did not satisfy the statutory test ... The
failure of the police and the Crown in their disclosure duties relative to this CCTV
was a miscarriage of justice. ... [T]his important evidence ... was properly
inadmissible ... the Crown not having included the CCTV on the list of productions
attached to the indictment or on a section 76 notice”.
[6]       The sheriff reported that the trial had started on 21 November 2017. Although the
estimate of its duration had been, as might have been expected, 4 to 6 days, it did not finish
until 2 February 2018. On 13 December 2017, which was several days into the trial, DC
Jacqueline McCann gave evidence that, on the day after the assault, she and the reporting
officer, namely DC Lindsay McIntyre, had viewed a CCTV recording taken from cameras
outside a shop near the locus. She was asked about the content of the recording and gave
evidence about what was on it, without objection. The recording, which had been viewed
by the police in situ, had shown a number of people, possibly four or five, running from a
lane at the side of the shop towards the locus at Thorndean Crescent and back again; all at
the relevant time. It was not possible to identify anyone in the recording because it was
dark. In the course of cross-examination by the first accused, DC McCann said that she had
understood that arrangements had been made by DC McIntyre to seize the hard drive.
[7]       It was explained at the appeal hearing that, prior to the reporting officer giving
evidence, the procurator fiscal depute had asked her what had happened to the recording.
The reporting officer told him that she had arranged for the recording to be transferred onto
disc. This had been done and the disc had been lodged with the production keeper at
Bellshill. She was under the impression that the disc had been forwarded to the Crown.
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Upon inquiry, this was found not to be the case. DC McIntyre discovered that it was still at
Bellshill Police Office. The PFD recovered the disc and it was available in court on
14 December when DC McIntyre gave evidence to the same effect as her colleague.
[8]       There was no clear explanation as to why the recording had not previously been
disclosed to the Crown and thence to the defence, other than that it had been simply
overlooked. The existence of the recording had been mentioned in the police summary of
the evidence, which had been made available to both the Crown and the defence, when the
accused had appeared on petition. The case was adjourned from Thursday 14 December
until Monday 18 December to enable the defence to view the recording. When the trial
resumed, motions were made by several of the accused, not that the recording should not be
introduced into the proceedings, but to desert the trial diet. The argument was that the
recording had been of such major evidential value that it would have affected the cross-
examination of those witnesses who had already departed from the witness box. It may
have changed the emphasis of the trial. The motions to desert were refused.
[9]       The refusal to desert provoked a number of motions to adjourn the trial for several
days to allow the defence to carry out investigations relative to the recording. These
motions were refused. The agents for the first, third and fourth accused each intimated that
their respective clients had all lost confidence in their ability to represent them. Each agent
intimated that he was therefore withdrawing from acting. The appellant and the fifth
accused had failed to appear and warrants for their arrest were granted. The trial was
adjourned on various occasions between 18 December and 3 January 2018 to enable the three
unrepresented accused to obtain new agents. On 3 January the agents for the appellant and
the fifth accused intimated that their instructions had been withdrawn. They too withdrew
from acting. The trial was adjourned until 4 January for them to obtain legal representation.
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[10]       On 4 January all five accused appeared unrepresented. The PFD moved to lodge the
recording as additional label, in terms of section 268 of the 1995 Act, on the grounds that it
was prima facie material evidence which had not been disclosed to the Crown or the defence
prior to the trial and that it was in the interests of justice that it be lodged. The minutes
record that this motion was unopposed. However, the sheriff accepted that she had not
asked the unrepresented accused to express any views on the motion. She explained that
she had already heard extensive submissions regarding the recording. She considered that
the recording was prima facie material, because it showed a number of people running down
a lane past the shop, towards the locus in Thorndean Crescent at the material time, and
returning shortly thereafter. The timing was consistent with evidence which had been given
about the time of the assault and with the complainer’s account about being pursued down
the lane before being assaulted in Thorndean Crescent. There had been evidence from other
witnesses that the assailants had run away in the direction of the lane. The sheriff allowed
the application. The examination of DC McIntyre resumed.
[11]       On 8 January 2018 all the defence agents re-appeared; explaining that they had been
re-instructed. Presumably, each accused had regained confidence in their agents.
Apparently the agent for the first accused had remained in court on 4 and 5 January; despite
an absence of instructions. The next phase of the trial was the cross-examination of
DC McIntyre.
Submissions
[12]       It was accepted by the appellant that, in terms of section 268, the recording was
prima facie material”. However, it was submitted that it had not been established, in terms
of sub-section 268(2)(b), that it had neither been available, nor could it reasonably have been
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made available, at the commencement of the trial. The existence of the recording had been
referred to in the summary. It could have been found and lodged. It had not been
established that its materiality could not reasonably have been foreseen by the party. The
materiality was clear, given that it showed events at or around the time of the incident. A
miscarriage of justice had arisen as a result. The recording had been of great significance. It
had been unhelpful for the appellant, as it showed the presence of multiple people with their
hoods up; a matter which had particular significance in relation to the prison phone call.
[13]       The advocate depute submitted that there had been no failure to disclose on the
Crown’s part. The PFD had not been aware of the existence of the recording, as distinct
from the fact that the police had viewed it, until the police officers were giving evidence.
The motions to desert had been made on the basis that the recording was inconsistent with
the complainer’s account. Once the accused had become unrepresented, the PFD had
considered it to be his duty, as a matter of fairness to the accused, to ask that the disc be
lodged (Morrison v HM Advocate 2013 SCCR 626, Lord Brodie, delivering the Opinion of the
Court, para [27] citing Boucher v The Queen [1955] SCR 16). If the matter had been opposed,
that opposition would have run contrary to the arguments advanced in support of the
motions to desert.
[14]       It was accepted that the recording had been prima facie material and that it could
have been made available at the commencement of the trial. Its materiality could not have
been foreseen by the Crown. The Crown had not been aware of its existence. Its admission
was thus a matter for the discretion of the trial judge; the test being one of fairness. In any
event, no miscarriage of justice had occurred. Secondary evidence had already been given,
without objection, about the content of the recording. All parties had been proceeding on
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the basis that the recording no longer existed. The recording, once played, did not reveal
anything different from the secondary evidence.
Decision
[15]       Section 268 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 provides that additional
evidence may be led where it is prima facie material and that, at the commencement of the
trial, either:
“(i) the additional evidence was not available and could not reasonably have
been made available; or
(ii) the materiality of such additional evidence could not reasonably have been
foreseen by the party.”
It is accepted that the recording was prima facie material, at least at the point when the
motion to introduce it was made. It was conceded that the recording could reasonably have
been made available at the commencement of the trial. It was referred to in the summary of
the evidence. Had the Crown asked the reporting officer, it would have been located and
could have been lodged. Its materiality, however, had not have been foreseen by the Crown.
The recording was described in the summary of the evidence (and presumably also the
police statements) as not showing the events at the locus and not revealing the identity of the
accused as attackers. It did not obviously contain material relevant to the case. The issue
was not whether the complainer had been chased and attacked, but whether the individual
accused had been involved.
[16]       In these circumstances, since the terms of section 268 had been satisfied, it was a
matter for the discretion of the sheriff to decide whether the recording should be admitted in
the interests of justice or whether its admission would be unfair. Given its eventual
materiality, it was undoubtedly in the interests of justice that the recording should have
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been played. Any potential unfairness could have been met by recalling any witness who
had already testified and whose evidence differed from that which was subsequently
revealed by the recording. No motion to recall any such witness was made.
[17]       The court is not satisfied that the sheriff erred in her decision. It may be that she
ought to have asked the unrepresented accused for their views. However, it is not apparent
that any of the accused, and in particular the appellant, would have raised any objection or,
if they had, what the ground of objection might have been. The motions to desert appear to
have been predicated upon an assumption that the recording would be introduced as
evidence mid-trial.
[18]       In any event, it is impossible to see how a miscarriage of justice can be said to have
occurred. The content of the recording had already been described, without objection and
apparently accurately, in the course of the trial. In particular, from the appellant’s point of
view, in relation to the prison phone call, there had been evidence that there was CCTV at
the locus and that the attackers were wearing hoods.
[19]       The appeal is according refused.



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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2018/[2018]_HCJAC_75.html