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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Hodgson, R v [2001] EWCA Crim 2697 (4th December, 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2001/2697.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Crim 2697 |
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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT BOLTON
(Mr Recorder Wright)
Royal Courts of Justice Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE RAFFERTY
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ZUCKER QC
____________________
REGINA
-v-
DAVID JOHN HODGSON
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Neil Fryman Esquire (instructed by Russell & Russell, Bolton, for the appellant)
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE POTTER:
Count 1
Count 2
“.. it seems to me that the kernel which I have identified [i.e. the fact that the spoon could be used for drug dealing] is admissible, is relevant and the only substantive counter argument which Mr Fryman has advanced in relation to that relates to the jury drawing adverse inferences with regard to the fact that they may speculate that the defendant has been dealing in drugs since 1998 and has retained possession of it since that date and, if that were right, that would have an adverse affect on the fairness of these proceedings. But I think that Mr Fryman’s concerns can be met by a strong direction on my part to the jury to deal with the counts on the indictment [on which] he is charged on the evidence before them, and there will be a proper direction in relation to them not speculating in relation to what has happened over the period of time concerned. I will give the jury a clear basis on how they should approach this particular aspect and to meet the concerns which have been advanced by Fryman.”
“It seems to me that the issue on Count 2, the defendant having pleaded guilty to possession of the diamorphine, is whether he had that with intent to supply it to others i.e. a future state of affairs. In my judgment, the circumstances of the observation – the frequent visits by people for short periods of time – is evidence on which the jury can draw the inference that they had acquired drugs from this defendant. It is not the strongest of evidence because … there is no additional evidence to show that drugs were actually transmitted from the defendant to these other people, but it is some evidence – not as strong as it might be – that took place and the question is, is that relevant to show his intention on this particular day … In my judgment, [it is] relevant to the issue as to whether the drugs, which he admitted being in possession of, he was in possession of with intent to supply to other people and, accordingly, I am going to allow the Crown to admit evidence of observations on 28th and 29th as being relevant.
“I bear in mind the points that Mr Fryman has made, his client will be in a position to deal with the people who have attended to explain why they may have been attending him so frequently on those occasions. It seems to me that the view I come to is, having regard to all the circumstances [and] having regard to the provisions of s.78, the Crown have satisfied me that he adverse effect of the admission of this evidence … on the fairness of the proceedings are such that I ought not to admit it and, accordingly, I would allow the Crown to introduce that particular evidence.”
“The questions you might want to ask yourself about those comings and goings are, first of all, are we sure that drug dealing (the supplying of drugs) was going on on that particular day and remember, of course, that the defendant said he will not say what was going on. He did not deal with drugs, but he will not say what was going on when that was put to him when he was being cross-examined. But that is not enough, Members of the Jury. If you are sure (Yes, drugs were being supplied on the previous day) that is not enough. You have to go on and ask yourself a second question and that is this; are we sure this defendant was supplying drugs on that day? If you are not sure of that, you ignore the evidence relating to the comings and goings on the previous day. But if you are sure that he was involved in the supply of drugs on the 28th, then that is some evidence that that is what he would be doing on the 29th with the two wraps that he admits being in possession of.”
“You are going to have to decide is there an explanation or not, does it point to the fact that she cannot have got this heroin from the defendant or it may be that she got it elsewhere. What the Crown can only say about this is clearly the money must have been hidden and the police never found it and, of course, what the defendant says, “we have got experienced police officers here, how could they not find the ten pounds?”
“… it was not the search that happened down in Bristol to Mr West’s house when they demolished walls and took up floorboards (nothing of that sort) but still the money was not found.”
“The second thing that the defendant relies on is that, given that he has a drug habit which he has to generate the funds to pay and that from the benefit, he being unemployed, that he has and paying for rent and his own food, etc, clearly would not support that, he says that he went shoplifting to give him the money to support that habit. Again, it is common ground, when he was interviewed about his sources of money, he made no comment; he did not tell that explanation to the police …. What the prosecution say is in the circumstances, having regard to that warning [i.e. the caution at interview], if those facts were true – if in fact he had been charged with shoplifting to support his heroin habit … that he could reasonably have been expected to mention that when he was being interviewed and the fact that he did not mention it may give you grounds to conclude, either that those acts have been invented to fit the prosecution case, or that, at the time he was interviewed, the defendant believed that those facts then would not actually stand up to scrutiny. Given that the defendant did fail to mention those facts when questioned it is for you to decide whether in the circumstances … those facts were something that he could reasonably been expected to mention at the time. If it was something that he could reasonably have been expected to have mentioned, then the law is that you may draw such inferences as appear proper from his failure to do that. But, Members of the Jury, failure to mention either or both of those facts cannot, of itself alone, prove the defendant’s guilt. But if you are sure, quite apart from those two failures, that there is the case for him to meet, it is something which you are entitled to take into account when deciding whether his evidence about these matters is true, that is you can take it into account as something additional to support the prosecution’s case. You are not bound to do so, but it is for you to decide whether it is fair to do so. …. Mr Fryman, on behalf of the defendant, invites you not to hold those failures to mention those facts against the defendant and he relies on the fact that the defendant has told you, first of all, that he was advised by his solicitor to only answer questions about his own use of drugs and to say ‘no comment’ on anything relating to the supply of drugs, and you will have to consider how that squares with what he, in fact, did say in the course of interview. Members of the Jury, if you think that that reason being put forward does amount to a reason why you should not hold his failure to mention them against him, then do not do so but, on the other hand, if in your judgment, it does not provide an adequate explanation and you are sure that the real reason for his failure to mention those facts was that he then had no innocent explanation to offer, then you can hold those failures against the defendant.”