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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Alden, R. v [2001] EWCA Crim 3041 (20 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2001/3041.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Crim 3041 |
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APPEAL COURT
The Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
(LORD JUSTICE ROSE)
Mr JUSTICE ROUGIER
and
Mr JUSTICE SULLIVAN
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
JAY ALDEN | ||
PAUL JONES |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Tel No: 0171 421 4040 Fax No: 0171 831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr E GRITT appeared on behalf of the Appellant JONES
Mr J MASON appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
"In a case where two or more people join in an attack on another person each person is responsible for the totality of the injuries. So if two people jointly attack another person, each is responsible for all the injuries which result from the joint attack. The Crown does not have to show which defendant actually caused which bruise or which cut. Even if a person does not actually join in in the sense that they physically join in, if a person deliberately eggs on an attacker he involves himself in that attack and he makes himself a party to the attack. This is what the Crown said happened in the case of Signaller Alden here. The Crown say that Signaller Alden deliberately egged Signaller Jones on from the start, that he intended to spur him on to a fight and that he wilfully took actions which did encourage Signaller Jones to attack Lance Corporal Annis. If you are sure that that is what he did then he made himself party to a joint enterprise with Signaller Jones. The fact that Signaller Jones said in evidence that he was not influenced one way or another by Signaller Alden egging him on is irrelevant. So long as Signaller Alden deliberately acted in a way intended to egg him on and incite him to attack Lance Corporal Annis, and Signaller Jones did in fact attack Lance Corporal Annis then that is enough.
It is also possible for somebody to join in an attack after it has begun, may be even halfway through the attack. If he does that he also makes himself party to the attack and part of a join enterprise. So if you are not sure that signaller Alden was egging Signaller Jones on from the start and making himself a party in this way, it would still be possible for you to find that he later joined in the attack on Lance Corporal Annis by hitting him. If you sure that Signaller Alden hit Lance Corporal Annis unlawfully outside block 31 that may mean at that point he had made himself a party to Signaller Jones' attack; he joined in Jones attack, even though he had not actually joined in from the start. In that case he would again be acting jointly with Jones."
"In the case of Signaller Alden, before you convict him on the first charge you must be sure first of all, as I have already said, that he made himself a party to Signaller Jones' attack on Lance Corporal Annis either by deliberately egging him on to attack Lance Corporal Annis and/or by joining in the attack later on; so he must have been acting jointly with him. The mental element must also be proved against Signaller Alden. You must be sure that when Signaller Alden joined the attack he realised that in the course of it Signaller Jones might use force with intent to cause grievous bodily harm to Lance Corporal Annis, and Signaller Jones of course went on and did so. That is the mental element in the case of each defendant which has to be proved on that first charge."
"Briefly, doing the same thing in the case of Signaller Alden, a fundamental point with him is are you sure he made himself party to Signaller Jones' attack on Lance Corporal Annis, either by deliberately egging him on to attack Lance Corporal Annis for the start or by later joining in. If you are sure he is not guilty of that then Signaller Alden is not guilty of either charge. If you sure that he did and you are sure that Signaller Jones caused the grievous bodily harm outside block 31, are you sure that when Signaller Alden joined in the attack on Lance Corporal Annis he realised that Signaller Jones may use force intending to cause grievous bodily harm to Lance Corporal Annis. If you are sure about this he is guilty of charge one. If you are not sure about that then he is not guilty of charge one move on to charge two. In the case of charge two you must be sure that when he joined the attack Signaller Alden realised that Signaller Jones' attack which he had joined in may cause some injury to Lance Corporal Annis but he joined in anyway. If that is what he did then he is guilty of charges. If you are not sure about that then he is not guilty of anything."
"He then started to fight me, in self-defence and natural reaction I hit him back. I only hit him once because I was angry. I walked away before I would do anything more."
"...in self-defence I hit him once in the face. He fell to the floor, holding his head."
"We have heard in evidence that both the defendants had consumed alcoholic drinks before the incident so how does that affect the situation here in terms of their mental state? Of course it is something you have to bear in mind, but the fact that the defendants' minds were affected by drink so he acted in a way which he would not have done had he been sober, that does not assist him at all provided that he did have the necessary intention. A drunken intent is nevertheless an intent."
"...where drunkenness and its possible effect upon the defendant's mens rea is an issue, (we stress those words) we think that the proper direction to a jury is, first, to warn them that the mere fact that the defendant's mind was affected by drink so that he acted in a way which he would not have done had he been sober does not assist him at all, provided that the necessary intention was there. A drunken intent is nevertheless an intent.
Secondly, and subject to this, the jury should merely be instructed to have regard to all the evidence, including that relating to drink, to draw such inferences as they think proper from the evidence and on that basis to ask themselves whether they feel sure that at the material time the defendant had the requisite intent."
"In our judgment, it follows from Sooklal that there must be a proper factual basis before the Sheehan and Moore direction is given. It certainly is not every case of drunkenness that would require it. There is no such factual basis here. It would be prudent in all cases involving drunkenness for the trial judge to discuss the issue with counsel at the close of evidence, or perhaps earlier in some cases."
THE VICE PRESIDENT: No, Mr Gritt we do not certify either of these questions, of being public or general importance arising from this case. Thank you.