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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Robinson, R v [2002] EWCA Crim 2489 (08 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2002/2489.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Crim 2489 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KEITH
and
SIR RICHARD TUCKER
____________________
R | ||
- and - | ||
Timothy Morgan ROBINSON |
____________________
David Etherington QC and Gary Bell appeared for the appellant
Simon Freeland QC appeared for the Chief Constable of Gloucestershire
Hearing dates: 28, 29 and 30 October 2002
(Appeal; against conviction)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
The anonymous letter
"Dear Fellow Jurors
When the doctor I was going to at that time gave me the confirmed diagnosis of my condition and told me there would be periods of time that I would feel like this, she said there will be long stretches of time where you will have hot and cold flushes, you will get upset and angry for no reason, your senses will be highlighted including your hearing you will have periods of long depression and likened it to the female menopause but she also said unlike their condition yours is incurable you will have to live with it, so if I have caused any upset or grief with my attitude it is purely down to my position, not only do I have arthritis in my fingers knees toes ankles and spine which tend to make me rather cranky but I have recurrent bouts of malaria but if I have caused any upset I AM SORRY.
So if you see me first thing in the morning and I ignore you it is not because I don’t like any of you it is because I am exhausted and I am waiting for the medication to kick in.
Normal life for me is calculation I cannot do things on the spur of the moment I can’t ride on a bus or even in a car the pain is too much for me to bear apart from the drugs I have taken in the orange juice I carry with me there are dissolved painkillers enough to knock a normal person flat on their back but all it does with me is dull the pain it does not kill it just dulls it that is the real reason why I am not attached because if somebody were nice enough to put up with me and there are many I have wanted to I tend to give up and let them do everything for me. That would not be fair on them, so I tend to keep everybody at arms length, but it is not because I don’t like people. I do. We all have our own eccentricities, like you, lovely M, very loud and aggressive, and P loves to moan about everything, but I understand every member of this jury I could liken to a friend of mine and as for me, I am cynical, bombastic and sarcastic and love every second of my pain-filled life."
"To Judge Smith
We are members of your Jury and because of the Notice in our Room we want to be anonymous. We think that you should know that S was picked on for weeks by two ladies and he wrote the letter because he was Provoked. There had been a big row before he wrote the letter as the ladies had said that they had made their minds up about 2 defendants and his opinion, which we agree with, was that we should hear from all the defendants before we made our minds up. He got angry and then wrote the letter to apologise. Some of us are under pressure from the ladies to agree with them but we dont think that is what juries are meant to do."
"This is an enquiry authorised by His Honour Judge Smith
And your reply will remain anonymous to your other jury members.
‘Are you the author of, or have you been party too, the sending of an anonymous letter dated 12 October 2000 to His Honour Judge Smith?’
Please answer YES if you have been involved in the drafting of that letter.
YES NO"
"Members of the jury, I feel sure that at least two of you, and possibly more, have quite a good idea about what has been happening these last few days and what we have been discussing. The fact is that I have received a letter from some members of the jury who did not want to be identified. They did not want to be identified for the very good reason that the Contempt of Court Act, about which there is a notice in the jury room, says that it is an offence to reveal anything about the jury’s private discussions, and the letter does do that.
Now, I want to make it plain that those jurors are not in any kind of trouble, and I am grateful to them for having done so because I think the matters that were raised in the letter are of very great importance. I am quite convinced it is a genuine letter, but lurking at the back of our minds is a suspicion that perhaps it was not, after all, from the jury and there is only one way in which we could find out and that is by asking."
"This enquiry in authorised by His Honour Judge Smith QC
Last week a letter was received by His Honour Judge Smith QC which appears to have been written anonymously and posted by one or more jurors.
The purpose of this enquiry is to satisfy the court that the letter is genuinely from one or more jurors. We do not want to know the identity of the author(s) or those having knowledge of it. There is no question of the author(s) or those having knowledge of the letter being in any trouble at all.
Please answer the following questions by circling "YES" or "NO".
1. Did you write, send or take part in the writing or sending of the letter? YES NO
2. Were you aware of it before the Judge mentioned it?
YES NO
To keep your identity secret please put this completed form in the envelope provided and seal it."
All eleven members of the jury returned the form on the following morning with negative answers to both questions.
"I am sure that I was wrong to conclude that the letter we have been considering came from the jury. It is now clear to me that it did not and I am sure about it and I am confident that the notional independent observer in the public gallery would come to the same conclusion. There is therefore no basis on which it would be right to discharge the jury and the trial proceeded this morning."
"Secondly, there was in fact no complaint from any member of the jury, or indeed from S himself, and had it not been that we were aware of the existence of the letter we I think would not have been led to ask to read it, but the jury had been told, I think on more than one occasion, that it was really for them to resolve their problems and if they could not be resolved they should write me a note, and nobody did write a note at that stage.
Then it is, as I have already said, it seems incredible to me that two or more jurors would go to all the trouble of writing an anonymous letter and then remain silent."
"What I have been invited to do is to conclude that there must be two jurors who have written ‘No’ on documents twice and I am invited to conclude that two of them are lying, or indeed there is a risk – I have not to conclude that they are; I have only got to conclude that there is a risk – that they are lying, or a danger of their lying, or that the impartial observer would think that they may be lying, and I find that impossible to do.
I conclude that the jury, having taken an oath to decide the case upon the evidence, if he really was upset with the way that the Foreman was behaving, which is quite unacceptable, I find it impossible to believe that such a juror would not say ‘Yes’."
"If the jury did not write the note then there are other candidates. S of course is another candidate. I think we have got to be frank and say obviously the three defendants in the dock are candidates. There are 5 defendants awaiting trial and in the second case I think there are 17 defendants awaiting trial, and Mr Glen reminded me of a fact which I had forgotten, that the LiveNote is available, and indeed I said it was to be available – I made an order to that effect – to the defendants who are awaiting trial, and therefore it is access to everything that is going on here and indeed the full text of all the notes, the letter from S, for example, the full text is on the LiveNote, and all those persons are either solicitors or solicitors’ clerks in a firm doing almost wholly criminal work. The fact that a notice is, as far as I know, in every jury room in the land would be well-known to many if not all of those defendants."
"NOTICE TO JURORS
YOU MUST NOT TELL OR SHOW ANYONE DETAILS OF:
- Statements made
- Opinions expressed
- Arguments advanced or votes cast
By, you or any other juror during the deliberation of the jury.
IF YOU DO YOU WILL BE IN CONTEMPT OF COURT.
Contempt of Court may be punished with a fine or imprisonment."
A printed notice, in similar terms, is handed to all members of the jury panel when they commence their duties.
(1) The picture given, in the letter, of life in the jury room is totally at odds with the admittedly genuine letter of S written a few days earlier. That letter refers, somewhat movingly, to S’s ill-health and his attitude to his fellow jurors. M probably did not feel flattered by his description of her but it does not suggest that she is corrupt or has a manner beyond what one would expect from at least one member of any group of 12 people kept in close company. His letter is self-critical but does not suggest either that he was picked on or that some members of the jury had put others under pressure. Eccentricities such as these to which S refers are likely to emerge when any group of people have been together for 66 days, as this jury had. (These factors do also suggest that S was not the author of the letter.)
(2) There is every reason to believe from the record of the trial that the jury were conscientious and determined to do their duty. Aware as they were of other procedures which could be followed, it is extremely unlikely that they would write anonymously, and through the Royal Mail, to the judge. The notice in the jury room does not prevent or discourage notes to the judge being submitted via the court usher.
(3) The contents of the notice in the jury room would be very widely known amongst members of the public and reference to them in the letter gives little support to the authors being members of this jury.
(4) Plainly there are people, as the judge stated, who might have an interest in disrupting what was the first of a series of criminal trials. To someone with such an attitude, the temptation to attempt to make capital from the S incident, which had occurred only a few days before, would be considerable.
(5) In addition to the circumstantial evidence, this was a situation in which enquiries were made of the jury, properly so and without objection (save as to their value). The answers received from the members of the jury are powerful evidence that the note did not originate from them. Especially given the assurance the jury were, reliance can be placed upon their answers. The circumstantial evidence does not support conduct in the jury room of the kind suggested in the note and there is no evidence to support the existence of the pressure mentioned in the letter.
Traffic Census Disclosure
"But I just remind you of the vital importance of keeping an open mind and not coming to a conclusion until you have heard all the evidence, and the speeches and the summing-up. That is the time when you can validly come to a conclusion in accordance with your oath, because you have sworn an oath to try the case in accordance with the evidence and that means in accordance with all the evidence, and, although it does not say so, it really means in accordance not just with the evidence but what people say to us about it, and then, when you have given it mature reflection, you can conscientiously, in accordance with your oath, return a verdict.
But you have to keep an open mind until we get to that final stage, and I am sure if I put it in that way you will say [see?] why am I saying this. It is perfectly obvious, but I am afraid it is often my task to say things to jurors which are perfectly obvious, and I am doing it every day and I get paid for it, but there you are,.
As I say, you may think that is all perfectly obvious but I am reminding you of it because it is important."
Disclosure of documents in relation to Hill
"1. Richard Hill acted from time to time as a police informant.
2. Richard Hill received payment on occasions for information he passed to the Police.
3. On occasions, the information passed to the police by Richard Hill when he was acting as a police informant necessarily involved some of the clients of Robinsons Solicitors.
4. When clients of Robinsons Solicitors were involved, Richard Hill, necessarily, breached the duty he owed both to Robinsons Solicitors and to clients of the firm.
5. On occasions, Richard Hill has informed on clients of Robinsons Solicitors to the police,
without their knowledge and/or consent,
and not with the intention of assisting those clients,
and not with the knowledge or approval of Timothy Robinson."
Hill’s conduct in disclosing the fraud, in which he was involved, to the police was of a quite different character from the informing there admitted and unconnected with it.
The summing-up
"Now it is for you, then, to consider Hill’s evidence with all those faults and decide whether you can rely on it. Is he a liar trying to bring others down to improve his position, or is he telling the truth, willing to accept his share of the blame, but keen that others who are to blame should also be convicted?"
"Well, members of the jury, I remind you of that because it is an important part of the case; important for the defence because you will bear that fact in mind, that that was a lie, in assessing his evidence, and the fact that he told a lie about an aspect of his case. On the other hand, I would suggest to you that only a saint or a liar can say they have never told a lie. I will say it again, only a saint or a liar can say they have never told a lie and there are not many saints about, and it is for you to assess whether or not that was an understandable lie that he gave, not wanting to give further details and it is to decide whether you can accept the main thrust of his evidence in the light of the warning I have given you, and you will of course bear in mind that the particular lie was a lie on oath in court."
Mr Etherington submits that the reference diminishes the significance of Hill’s lie.
Use of solicitors’ clerks as informants
"Among the rights which, in part at least, survive are three important rights, closely related but free standing, each of them calling for appropriate legal protection: the right of access to a court; the right of access to legal advice; and the right to communicate confidentially with a legal adviser under the seal of legal professional privilege. Such rights may be curtailed only by clear and express words, and then only to the extent reasonably necessary to meet the ends which justify the curtailment."
"3.5 The 2000 Act does not provide any special protection for legally privileged information. Nevertheless, such information is particularly sensitive and any source which acquires such material may engage Article 6 of the ECHR (right to a fair trial) as well as Article 8. Legally privileged information obtained by a source is extremely unlikely ever to be admissible as evidence in criminal proceedings. Moreover, the mere fact that use has been made of a source to obtain such information may lead to any related criminal proceedings being stayed as a abuse of process. Accordingly, action which may lead to such information being obtained is subject to additional safeguards under this code.
3.6 In general, an application for the use or conduct of a source which is likely to result in the acquisition of legally privileged information should only be made in exceptional and compelling circumstance. Full regard should be had to the particular proportionality issues such a use or conduct of a source raises. The application should include, in addition to the reasons why it is considered necessary for the use or conduct of a source to be used, an assessment of how likely it is that information subject to legal privilege will be acquired. The application should clearly state whether the purpose (or one of the purposes) of the use or conduct of the source is to obtain legally privileged information."
Result