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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Kin-hung v. The Queen (Hong Kong) [1996] UKPC 39 (11th November, 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1996/39.html Cite as: [1996] UKPC 39 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 38 of 1996
Kwong Kin-hung Appellant
v.
The Queen Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF HONG KONG
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 11th November 1996
------------------
Present
at the hearing:-
Lord Browne-Wilkinson
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Steyn
Lord Hoffmann
Lord Cooke of Thorndon
·[Delivered
by Lord Steyn]
-------------------------
1. This is an appeal from the judgment of the
Court of Appeal of Hong Kong, given on 3rd February 1995, which dismissed the
appellant's application for leave to appeal against two convictions of
rape. On 6th December 1993, after a
trial by a High Court judge and a jury, the appellant was convicted on two
counts of rape. The judge sentenced the
appellant to concurrent terms of 12 years' imprisonment on each count.
2. At the trial the Crown's case was based on the
uncorroborated evidence of two sisters, who were described as PW1 and PW2. At the time of the trial PW1 was aged 18
years and PW2 was aged 17 years. The
gist of the evidence of the complainants was that on the night of 8th/9th
September 1992 they were in a flat; that the appellant and others were present
in the flat; that they were intimidated, humiliated and assaulted by other men
who were present in the flat; that this took place in the presence of the
appellant (a man aged 35 years); and that the appellant first raped PW2 and
then PW1.
There
were many weaknesses in the Crown's case. Neither sister complained to the police until three months after the
alleged rape. PW1 met her boyfriend
shortly after the alleged rape. She
complained to him that she had been assaulted but made no mention of rape. She said that she had sexual intercourse
with the appellant on a previous occasion but could not remember the time and
place. When she returned home PW2 made
no complaint of rape to her parents. There was no corroboration of the allegations of rape. Moreover, there were many discrepancies in
the evidence. The sisters contradicted
each other. There were also
inconsistencies between the evidence of each sister and their statements to the
police. But each sister insisted
throughout in evidence that they had been raped in turn.
3. One may be forgiven for observing that despite
the weaknesses in the prosecution case the jurors might have wondered what the
appellant's version was. Their
curiosity was not satisfied during the cross-examination of PW1. The defence case was never put. Counsel for the appellant did, however, put
the appellant's case to PW2. Counsel
suggested to PW2 that the appellant was only in the flat for about 10 minutes
and that nothing untoward happened during that short period. PW2 denied this suggestion and insisted that
the appellant had raped her. In direct
contradiction of the appellant's case as put in cross-examination, a third
witness, a girl aged 16 years, who lived in the flat, testified that the
appellant was present "from the night to the next day".
4. Counsel for the appellant made no submission
that there was no case to answer. The
appellant did not testify. The
prosecution case, such as it was, was left unanswered. It appears from the summing up that counsel for
the appellant took the line that he was putting the prosecution to proof of
every element of the crimes alleged against the appellant including the issue
of consent.
5. Lord Thomas of Gresford Q.C., who did not
appear at the trial, accepted that the judge's summing up cannot be criticised
on behalf of the appellant. Indeed it
was plainly a summing up carefully designed to guide the jury towards an
acquittal on both counts. The judge
dealt at length with the inconsistencies and discrepancies in the prosecution
case. Rhetorically, he in effect asked
the jury about the evidence of each complainant whether in the light of the
multiplicity of flaws in the evidence it would be right to rely on her
evidence. At 12.10 p.m. on the day of
the summing up the jury retired to consider their verdicts. At 3.50 p.m. they returned with their
verdicts. Not heeding the guidance of
the trial judge they convicted the appellant on both counts. On the count relating to PW1 the jury
convicted by a majority of 5:1. The verdict
on the count relating to PW2 was unanimous.
6. The appellant applied for leave to appeal
against both convictions to the Court of Appeal. The jurisdiction of the Court of Appeal to allow an appeal
against a verdict of a jury is set out in section 83 of the Criminal Procedure
Ordinance (Cap. 221). So far as it is
material it reads as follows:-
"(1) Except as provided by this Ordinance, the Court of Appeal shall allow an
appeal against conviction if it thinks:-
(a)that the conviction should be set aside on
the ground that under all the circumstances of the case it is unsafe and
unsatisfactory; ..."
7. By a majority decision the Court of Appeal
refused leave to appeal. The majority
(Macdougall V.-P. and Liu J.A.) considered the cumulative effect of the
inconsistencies and discrepancies in the prosecution case but concluded that
they were "not persuaded that their (the jurors') acceptance of the
sister's evidence was perverse". Penlington J.A. said that he had a "lurking doubt". That was a reference to well known
observations by Widgery L.J. in R. v. Cooper (Sean) [1969] 1 Q.B. 267,
at page 271 C-G, to which their Lordships will have to turn in due course. Penlington J.A. held that the convictions
were unsafe and said that he would have allowed the application and the appeal.
8. Lord Thomas submitted that the majority in the
Court of Appeal misconstrued their powers and duties under the statute by
asking the question whether the convictions can be categorised as
"perverse". That, he
submitted, is a different and more stringent test than that contemplated by the
statute, viz. whether the convictions were unsafe and unsatisfactory. On the supposition that this submission is
correct, he invited their Lordships to perform the task that the majority of
the Court of Appeal failed to perform.
9. This submission cannot, however, be considered
in the abstract. Rightly, Lord Thomas
addressed their Lordships on the weaknesses of the prosecution case. His arguments derived considerable comfort
from the views of the trial judge and Penlington J.A. who both concentrated in
a large measure on the discrepancies and inconsistencies in the sisters'
accounts. Their Lordships are persuaded
by Mr. Saw, who appeared for the Crown, that those flaws in the prosecution
evidence need to be considered in the light of a common thread in the evidence
of the sisters. Only in this way can a
balanced assessment be made of the prosecution case. Both sisters said PW2 arrived at the flat before PW1. They agreed on the identity of the persons
present in the flat and that the appellant was present
throughout. They
testified that there was a discussion about
whether PW2 had a boyfriend and that following that discussion one of the other
men hit PW1 in the face. They both said
that over a substantial period of time the other men, in the presence of the
appellant, assaulted PW2 causing an injury to her eye. They both described a bizarre "tea
ceremony" where PW1 and PW2 were forced to kneel and offer sips of tea to
the appellant. The appellant refused to
accept the tea. PW1 and PW2 then said
that they were separated: each was forced to sign an I.O.U. in an amount of
$54,000. The I.O.U.'s contained a
reference to their family's address. They were told that they would be required to "work" to pay
off the debt. They understood that they
were being forced into prostitution. Both PW1 and PW2 testified that the appellant had sexual intercourse
with them without their consent on a mattress on the floor in the bedroom. The appellant approached PW2 first and then
PW1. Sometime after the rapes had taken
place, PW1 and PW2 saw the appellant in the flat injured and bleeding. A number of police officers attended the
flat. During the time the police
officers were at the flat PW1 and PW2 were kept in a bedroom by another man who
was holding a vegetable chopper. The
day following the rape the same man took PW1 and PW2 to visit the appellant at
hospital. PW1 told the appellant that
if they did not return home their parents would report their disappearance to
the police. Whilst at the hospital, PW1
contacted her boyfriend by telephone and arranged to meet him at a
restaurant. PW1 told her boyfriend in
the presence of PW2 what had happened but did not disclose that they had been
raped.
10. It seems realistic to accept that this account
by the sisters would have been the context in which the jury would have
examined the flaws in the prosecution case. They would also have been entitled to take into account that the
prosecution evidence was not contradicted or explained by any evidence from the
appellant. Moreover, there is another
significant factor which was not mentioned by the trial judge or considered by
Penlington J.A. As their Lordships have
already observed, counsel for the appellant put the appellant's case to PW2 on
the basis that the appellant was only present in the flat for some 10
minutes. There was, however, evidence
from a third witness, who said that the appellant was present throughout. Counsel for the appellant did not
cross-examine this witness. In these
circumstances the jurors might quite reasonably have viewed the appellant's
explanation with considerable scepticism.
11. It is against this background that the Court of
Appeal had to consider the catalogue of inconsistencies and discrepancies in
the prosecution case which the trial judge placed before the jury. No point would be served by setting out the
details of the flaws in the evidence. Their Lordships observe that
many of the inconsistencies
relate to relatively unimportant matters, such
as estimates of time and the order of trivial events. On the other hand, there were undoubtedly major discrepancies,
e.g. PW1 said knives were produced and PW2 made no mention of knives. Not surprisingly, such matters were canvassed
in cross-examination, explained in speeches and dwelt upon at length in the
summing up. These matters would have
been etched in the minds of the jurors.
12. Against this contextual background their
Lordships can now turn to Lord Thomas' principal submission. Initially Lord Thomas submitted that the
majority erred in not applying the test enunciated in Cooper [1969] 1
Q.B. 267. In that case Widgery L.J.
observed (at page 271 C-G):-
"[This is] a case in which every issue was
before the jury and in which the jury was properly instructed, and,
accordingly, a case in which this court will be very reluctant indeed to
intervene. It has been said over and
over again throughout the years that this court must recognise the advantage
which a jury has in seeing and hearing the witnesses, and if all the material
was before the jury and the summing-up was impeccable, this court should not
lightly interfere. Indeed, until the
passing of the Criminal Appeal Act, 1966 [which somewhat widened the court's
powers to quash a conviction] ... it was almost unheard of for this court to
interfere in such a case.
13. However, now our powers are somewhat different,
and we are indeed charged to allow an appeal against conviction if we think
that the verdict of the jury should be set aside on the ground that under all
the circumstances of the case it is unsafe or unsatisfactory. That means that in cases of this kind the
court must in the end ask itself a subjective question, whether we are content
to let the matter stand as it is, or whether there is not some lurking doubt in
our minds which makes us wonder whether an injustice has been done. This is a reaction which may not be based
strictly on the evidence as such; it is a reaction which can be produced by the
general feel of the case as the court experiences it."
14. This guidance has, of course, been repeatedly
recited and applied in the Courts of Appeal in England and Hong Kong. Pressed to explain, however, whether it
poses a test different from the question whether the conviction is "unsafe
or unsatisfactory" within the meaning of the statute, Lord Thomas rightly
conceded that the "lurking doubt" test is simply a different and
vivid way of expressing exactly the same idea. Thus in Stafford v. Director of Public Prosecutions [1974] A.C. 878, at page 912, Lord
15. Kilbrandon summarised the test to be applied by
each member of the appellate court as follows:-
"Have I a reasonable doubt, or perhaps
even a lurking doubt, that this conviction may be unsafe or
unsatisfactory?"
Ultimately, their Lordships conclude, the words
of the statute must govern the position. Refining his argument Lord Thomas said that the majority ought to have
posed the question whether the conviction was unsafe or unsatisfactory. Instead, he argued, they considered a
different and higher test, namely whether the verdicts of the jury can be said
to be perverse. Their Lordships
disagree. The statutory test was
invoked by the grounds of appeal and a skeleton argument filed on behalf of the
appellant. The majority expressly
examined the contention that:-
"... the convictions are unsafe and
unsatisfactory in that the jury acted perversely in relying on the
uncorroborated evidence of the sisters and that there must therefore be a
lurking doubt as to the guilt of the applicant."
16. The test whether each member of an appellate
court considers the verdicts "unsafe or unsatisfactory" is part of
the very alphabet of the criminal law. The majority would not have lost sight of it. Indeed, it is clear that in considering whether the verdicts were
perverse the majority were simply applying the statutory test in the context of
the particular case before them. The
statement that the verdicts were not perverse was shorthand for saying that
there was evidence upon which a properly directed jury (as this jury was) could
conscientiously have convicted. Given
the evidence, and the verdicts of the jury, they regarded the convictions as
safe. They therefore posed no different
or higher test than that envisaged by the statute. The real difference between the majority and Penlington J.A. was
that the majority, as a matter of judgment, accorded a higher degree of
deference to the verdict of the jury - than Penlington J.A. did. That difference of degree in reasoning
raises no issue of principle or law. And the reasoning of the majority cannot be faulted.
17. It follows that their Lordships reject Lord
Thomas' principal submission. Prima
facie that is the end of the matter and their Lordships need not reconsider
the minutiae of the case. But
Lord Thomas submitted that it can be demonstrated that there are substantial
grounds for thinking that there might have been a miscarriage of justice. It is unnecessary to consider the legal
basis of this submission. Given the state
of the evidence, the terms of the summing up and the verdicts of the jury,
there is no reason to doubt that the convictions were safe and satisfactory.
18. Their Lordships will humbly advise Her Majesty
that the appeal should be dismissed.
© CROWN
COPYRIGHT as at the date of judgment.