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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Duggan, R (on the application of) v HM Assistant Deputy Coroner for the Northern District of Greater London & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 142 (29 March 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/142.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 142, [2017] WLR(D) 231, [2017] WLR 2199, [2017] 4 All ER 104, [2017] 1 WLR 2199, [2017] Inquest LR 142 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION, DIVISIONAL COURT
THE PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION,
LORD JUSTICE BURNETT AND
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER THORNTON Q.C.
CO8332014
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
and
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of PAMELA DUGGAN) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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HER MAJESTY'S ASSISTANT DEPUTY CORONER FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF GREATER LONDON - and - (1) COMMISSIONER OF POLICE FOR THE METROPOLIS (2) SERIOUS ORGANISED CRIME AGENCY (3) 11 SC&O19 OFFICERS (4) Z51 (5) INDEPENDENT POLICE COMPLAINTS COMMISSION (6) DS ANDREW BELFIELD (7) DC STEVE FAULKNER |
Respondent Interested Parties |
____________________
Ashley Underwood QC (instructed by Philippa Long on behalf of the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hugo Keith QC and Sarah Le Fevre (instructed by Hugh Giles, Director of Legal Services, Metropolitan Police Service) for the 1st Interested Party
Clare Montgomery QC and David Patience (instructed by Scott Ingram, Slater and Gordon) for the 3rd Interested Party
Hearing date: 2nd March 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir Terence Etherton MR, Lord Justice Davis, Lord Justice Underhill:
The background to the inquest
The Inquest
"It is 804 days since this happened and I'm 100% convinced he was in possession of a gun on shot one and shot two."
"Phone always in hand. Initially thought gun. Shiny. But read N/Papers then thought it was Blackberry. If had gun he would have aimed it at them."
The Coroner's directions to the jury
"You will know, and this is the direction that is given in courts up and down the country about what is self-defence … Any person is entitled to use reasonable force to defend himself or another from injury, attack or threat of attack. So, if you come to the conclusion, as is being stated by V53, that he may have been defending himself or one of his colleagues, then go on to consider these two matters. … Did V53 honestly believe, or may he honestly have believed, even if that belief is mistaken, that at the time he fired the fatal shot that he needed to use force to defend himself or another? If your answer is "no", then he cannot have been acting in lawful self-defence and you can put [the issue of self-defence] to one side. If your answer is "yes", that he did believe or may honestly have believed, even if mistaken, then go on to consider: "Was the force used – that fatal shot – reasonable in all the circumstances? … Obviously, if someone is under attack from someone or potentially under attack from someone he genuinely believes is violent and armed, then that person cannot be expected to weigh up precisely the amount of force needed to prevent that attack. But, if he goes over the top and acts out of all proportion to the threat, then he would not be using reasonable force and his actions would be unlawful. The question whether the degree of force used by V53 was reasonable in the circumstances is to be decided by reference to the circumstances as V53 believed them to be, again even if mistaken, but the degree of force is not to be regarded as reasonable in those circumstances as V53 believed them to be if it was disproportionate in those circumstances. … Only if you are sure that Mr Duggan was killed unlawfully will you come to this conclusion and record it as such. … If you conclude it was more likely than not that the fatal shot which killed Mark Duggan was the use of lawful force, then you would return a conclusion of lawful killing."
The legal framework
"If D claims to have held a particular belief as regards the existence of any circumstances –
(a) the reasonableness or otherwise of that belief is relevant to the question whether D genuinely held it; but
(b) if it is determined that D did genuinely hold it, D is entitled to rely on it … whether or not
(i) it was mistaken, or
(ii) (if it was mistaken) the mistake was a reasonable one to have made."
"Article 2 – Right to life
1. Everyone's right to life shall be protected by law. No one shall be deprived of his life intentionally save in the execution of a sentence of a court following his conviction of a crime for which this penalty is provided by law.
2. Deprivation of life shall not be regarded as inflicted in contravention of this article when it results from the use of force which is no more than absolutely necessary:
a. in defence of any person from unlawful violence;
…."
"The Court … considers that the use of force by agents of the State in pursuit of one of the aims delineated in paragraph 2 of Article 2 (art. 2-2) of the Convention may be justified under this provision (art. 2-2) where it is based on an honest belief which is perceived, for good reasons, to be valid at the time but which subsequently turns out to be mistaken. To hold otherwise would be to impose an unrealistic burden on the State and its law-enforcement personnel in the execution of their duty, perhaps to the detriment of their lives and those of others."
Judicial Review
The appeal
The merits of the appeal
The absence of a direction as to the relevance of the reasonableness of V53's belief
"It can therefore be elicited from the Court's case-law that in applying the McCann and Others test the principal question to be addressed is whether the person had an honest and genuine belief that the use of force was necessary. In addressing this question, the Court will have to consider whether the belief was subjectively reasonable, having full regard to the circumstances that pertained at the relevant time. If the belief was not subjectively reasonable (that is, it was not based on subjective good reasons), it is likely that the Court would have difficulty accepting that it was honestly and genuinely held."
"In their Lordships' view the defence of self-defence is one which can be and will be readily understood by any jury. It is a straightforward conception. It involves no abstruse legal thought. It requires no set words by way of explanation. No formula need be employed in reference to it. Only common sense is needed for its understanding. It is both good law and good sense that a man who is attacked may defend himself. It is both good law and good sense that he may do, but may only do, what is reasonably necessary. But everything will depend upon the particular facts and circumstances. Of these a jury can decide. … There are no prescribed words which must be employed in or adopted in a summing up. All that is needed is a clear exposition, in relation to the particular facts of the case, of the conception of necessary self-defence. If there has been no attack then clearly there will have been no need for defence."
"…no jury is going to accept a man's assertion that he believed that he was about to be attacked without testing it against all the surrounding circumstances. In assisting the jury to determine whether or not the accused had a genuine belief the judge will of course direct their attention to those features of the evidence that make such a belief more or less probable."
"4. The law of self-defence is not complicated. It represents a universally recognised commonsense concept. In our experience juries do not find that commonsense concept at all difficult to understand. The only potential difficulty for a judge is that he needs to remember the potential possibility of what lawyers would call a subjective element at an early stage of the exercise, whilst the critical question of the reasonableness of the response is, in lawyer's expressions, an objective one. In using those lawyer's terms we do not for a moment suggest that it is helpful to use them in a summing-up.
5. It is however very long established law that there are usually two and sometimes three stages into any enquiry into self-defence. There may be more, but these are the basic building blocks of a large proportion of the cases in which it is raised:
1. If there is a dispute about what happened to cause the defendant to use the violence that he did, and there usually is such a dispute, then the jury must decide it, attending of course to the onus and standard of proof.
2. If the defendant claims that he thought that something was happening which the jury may find was not happening, then the second question which arises is what did the defendant genuinely believe was happening to cause him to use the violence that he did? That question does not arise in every case. If it does arise then whether his belief was reasonable or not, providing it is genuinely held, he is to be judged on the facts as he believed them to be unless his erroneous belief is the result of voluntarily taken drink or drugs, in which event it is to be disregarded.
3. Once it has thus been decided on what factual basis the defendant's actions are to be judged, either because they are the things that actually happened and he knew them or because he genuinely believed in them even if they did not occur, then the remaining and critical question for the jury is: was his response reasonable, or proportionate (which means the same thing)? Was it reasonable (or proportionate) in all the circumstances? Unlike the earlier stages which may involve the belief of the defendant being the governing factor, the reasonableness of his response on the assumed basis of fact is a test solely for the jury and not for him. …
6. The single judge invited the court to consider whether the statutory formulation of the law in section 76 might have contributed to any degree of confusion and debate which ensued before the judge in the second of our cases. We do not think in fact that section 76 contributed significantly to the debate in question, nor to such degree of confusion as there was. For the avoidance of doubt, it is perhaps helpful to say of section 76 three things: (a) it does not alter the law as it has been for many years; (b) it does not exhaustively state the law of self-defence but it does state the basic principles; (c) it does not require any summing-up to rehearse the whole of its contents just because they are now contained in statute. The fundamental rule of summing-up remains the same. The jury must be told the law which applies to the facts which it might find; it is not to be troubled by a disquisition on the parts of the law which do not affect the case."
The absence of any conclusion by the jury on breach of the civil law
"17. … One of the main functions of the criminal law is to identify, and provide punitive sanctions for, behaviour that is categorised as criminal because it is damaging to the good order of society. It is fundamental to criminal law and procedure that everyone charged with criminal behaviour should be presumed innocent until proven guilty and that, as a general rule, no one should be punished for a crime that he or she did not intend to commit or be punished for the consequences of an honest mistake. There are of course exceptions to these principles but they explain, in my opinion, why a person who honestly believes that he is in danger of an imminent deadly attack and responds violently in order to protect himself from that attack should be able to plead self-defence as an answer to a criminal charge of assault, or indeed murder, whether or not he had been mistaken in his belief and whether or not his mistake had been, objectively speaking, a reasonable one for him to have made. As has often been observed, however, the greater the unreasonableness of the belief the more unlikely it may be that the belief was honestly held.
18. The function of the civil law of tort is different. Its main function is to identify and protect the rights that every person is entitled to assert against, and require to be respected by, others. The rights of one person, however, often run counter to the rights of others and the civil law, in particular the law of tort, must then strike a balance between the conflicting rights. Thus, for instance, the right of freedom of expression may conflict with the right of others not to be defamed. The rules and principles of the tort of defamation must strike the balance. The right not to be physically harmed by the actions of another may conflict with the rights of other people to engage in activities involving the possibility of accidentally causing harm. The balance between these conflicting rights must be struck by the rules and principles of the tort of negligence. As to assault and battery and self-defence, every person has the right in principle not to be subjected to physical harm by the intentional actions of another person. But every person has the right also to protect himself by using reasonable force to repel an attack or to prevent an imminent attack. The rules and principles defining what does constitute legitimate self-defence must strike the balance between these conflicting rights. The balance struck is serving a quite different purpose from that served by the criminal law when answering the question whether the infliction of physical injury on another in consequence of a mistaken belief by the assailant of a need for self-defence should be categorised as a criminal offence and attract penal sanctions. To hold, in a civil case, that a mistaken and unreasonably held belief by A that he was about to be attacked by B justified a pre-emptive attack in believed self-defence by A on B would, in my opinion, constitute a wholly unacceptable striking of the balance. It is one thing to say that if A's mistaken belief was honestly held he should not be punished by the criminal law. It would be quite another to say that A's unreasonably held mistaken belief would be sufficient to justify the law in setting aside B's right not to be subjected to physical violence by A. I would have no hesitation whatever in holding that for civil law purposes an excuse of self-defence based on non existent facts that are honestly but unreasonably believed to exist must fail."
Conclusion