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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 >> Vidal & Anor v R. (Jamaica) [2011] UKPC 12 (18 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2011/12.html Cite as: 79 WIR 409, [2011] UKPC 12, (2011) 79 WIR 409 |
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[2011] UKPC 12
Privy Council Appeal No 39 of 2010
JUDGMENT
Rohan Vidal and Kevin Thompson (Appellants) v
The Queen (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of Jamaica
before
Lord Hope
Lady Hale
Lord Brown
Lord Kerr
Lord Dyson
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
Lord Dyson
ON
18 MAY 2011
Heard on 29 March 2011
Appellant Michael Egan QC Alex Ward (Instructed by S.J. Berwin LLP) |
Respondent Tom Poole (Instructed by Charles Russell LLP) |
LORD DYSON:
The first ground of appeal
"…he was shown both warrants and asked whether since he had known the persons before, why it is that that was not put on the warrant itself, and according to him, he says both witnesses had pointed out the accused men, they were complainants in the case, and he did not see it necessary to put that he knew them. Well that was the explanation he gave, it was not necessary as the accused men were pointed out to him by the complainants……
But [Vidal] says that it was only one person who pointed him out to the police, but when Miss Notice gave evidence, it was not suggested to her that he was not pointed out by both; but it is a matter for you. The police officer said that both Sandra and Sylvia were the complainants in the case."
"There has been much reference in this case to a woman called Sandra Wright who has not given evidence before you. There has been reference to what she may have said to police officers and indeed Miss Notice. You remember I told you that you try this case on the evidence you have heard in the witness box and that has been read to you. Sandra Wright has given no evidence and therefore she cannot support in any way the one witness that says that these two defendants committed the crime you are trying. Sandra has given no evidence at all; you should disregard what you have heard about what she might have said to police officers or Miss Notice. It is Miss Notice you must focus on. Her evidence that it was the defendants is unsupported by any other evidence".
"…it is the evidence that you have heard in this court room, the evidence that you have heard in this court from the witnesses called in this court, which must determine the conclusion to which you arrive in respect of the guilt or innocence of these two accused men."
"Miss Notice is the sole eye-witness in the case. So you have to assess that evidence…." (emphasis added).
"The question which arises is whether he met his death in the manner stated by Miss Notice in her evidence, and in that regard the Crown is relying on her evidence to prove that these two accused men were present and also that they committed the offence" (emphasis added).
"the only witness as to fact in the case, the eye-witness on whom the Crown relies. There is no other evidence in the case which links these two accused men other than the evidence of Sylvia Notice and you will have to recall and recapture her demeanour as she gave evidence in the witness box" (emphasis added).
"but I remind you that you are not trying the case on evidence of witnesses that you don't have. What you are trying the case on is in respect of the witnesses that you do have and you cannot speculate in respect of evidence of witnesses not before you.
In the final analysis what you are required to do is consider the evidence before you and see whether on that evidence you can feel satisfied to the extent that you feel sure of the guilt of those accused" (emphasis added).
"It is only if, Mr Foreman and members of the jury, you were to feel sure that Miss Notice was in fact, after you have considered the question of identification and the caution that I gave you, after you have considered that and you feel sure that Miss Notice is to be believed when she said she was at the A3 building, and if you feel sure that she is not mistaken it's only in those circumstances that it would be open to you to convict the accused in each case of the offence of murder. If you are in doubt, then you acquit them" (emphasis added).
The second ground of appeal (Thompson alone)
Conclusion