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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Mair, R v [2002] EWCA Crim 2858 (3 December 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2002/2858.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Crim 2858 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SILBER
MR JUSTICE GRIGSON
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CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION | ||
UNDER s.9 CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1996 | ||
R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
SYDNEY MAIR |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street London EC4A 2AG
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MR P PARKER QC appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"The learned judge correctly directed the jury on 'joint enterprise' -- it was not necessary for the jury to be sure that you knew Bryce had a knife -- and upon 'provocation'. The summing-up was fair and was not vitiated by the error referred to in 3(d) of the Grounds of Appeal -- which could and should have been corrected by counsel at the time."
"(a) The summing-up was deficient in that the judge failed to invite the jury to consider whether Mair knew that Bryce had a knife in his possession;
(b) The summing-up was deficient in that the judge failed to remind the jury of all relevant extracts from the evidence which went to the issue of whether Mair did know that Bryce had a knife in his possession;
...
(e) The judge failed adequately to put before the jury Mair's defence that in the absence of knowledge on his part that Bryce had any weapon at all, the jury ought not to infer that Mair contemplated or foresaw death or grievous bodily harm being inflicted by Bryce."
"The contention is that the judge did not effectively and properly direct the jury as to the law on joint enterprise in the circumstances of this case. We repeat that we cannot agree with that. That law as affecting Mair was explained by the Judge so that no jury could possibly have misunderstood it and have failed to apply it to the facts as they found them."
Watkins LJ also said that:
"[The summing-up of Hazan J was] conspicuous for the accuracy of its directions on the criminal law, especially in regard to the law on joint enterprise ... "
He went on to say:
"Mair was convicted on the basis that he was a party to a joint enterprise. In other words that there had been a determination by both him and Bryce before they entered the pool room that they were going to assault and harm seriously, if not kill, Shepherd or Mulholland or both."
"Assault -- Bryce pulls knife and kills. Mair not liable. But if jointly enters to cause GBH doesn't matter if one uses one weapon and other uses or is prepared to use a different weapon or even doesn't know precise nature of weapon other is carrying."
"Rarely has the court been required to review the safety of a conviction recorded over 45 years earlier. In undertaking that task we conclude:
(1 We must apply the substantive law of murder as applicable at the time, disregarding the abolition of constructive malice and the introduction of the defence of diminished responsibility by the Homicide 1957.
(2) The liability of a party to a joint enterprise must be determined according to the common law as now understood.
(3) The conduct of the trial and the direction of the jury must be judged according to the standards which we would now apply in any other appeal under section 1 of the 1968 Act.
(4) We must judge the safety of the conviction according to the standards which we would now apply in any other appeal under section 1 of the 1968 Act.
Where, between conviction and appeal, there have been significant changes in the common law (as opposed to changes effected by statute) or in standards of fairness, the approach indicated requires the court to apply legal rules and procedural criteria which were not and could not reasonably have been applied at the time."
"75. It seems to us, in the light of those authorities binding on the trial judge, that his direction to the jury was in accordance with the law as it then stood and was, if anything, favourable to the appellant. But it was argued that later developments in the law governing the liability of secondary parties to joint criminal enterprises, in particular the recent decision of the House of Lords in Powell and English, rendered his direction unsound. The relevant law is in our judgment summarised with sufficient accuracy for present purposes in the following propositions advanced on behalf of the Crown:
(i) Where two parties embark on a joint enterprise to commit a crime and one party foresees that in the course of the enterprise the other party may carry out, with the requisite mens rea, an act constituting another crime, the former is liable for that crime if committed by the latter in the course of the enterprise."
And some cases are referred to, including Powell and English.
"(ii)Where the principal kills with a deadly weapon, which the secondary party did not know that he had and of which he therefore did not foresee use by the principal, the secondary party is not guilty of murder.
(iii)If the weapon used by the primary party is different to but as dangerous as the weapon which the secondary party contemplated he might use, the secondary party should not escape liability for murder because of the difference in the weapon, for example if he foresaw that the primary party might use a gun to kill and the latter used a knife to kill or vice versa (R v English, a reference to the speech of Lord Hutton).
(iv)The secondary party is subject to criminal liability if he contemplated the act causing the death as a possible incident of the joint venture unless the risk was so remote that the jury take the view that the secondary party genuinely dismissed it as altogether negligible."
"In such circumstances, as Lord Hutton pointed out, fine analysis and legal theory have to yield in part to commonsense and more flexible formulation. Cases in which parties embark upon a criminal enterprise knowing that one or other of them is armed with a potentially lethal weapon are more easily analysed. Nevertheless it seems to us that upon the basis of Lord Hutton's speech [that is a reference to Lord Hutton's speech in Powell and English] the question whether the actions of one participant went so beyond the common design of the parties is a question to be decided by the tribunal of fact, in this case the jury, after direction in accordance with the formulation of Lord Parker CJ in Anderson and Morris, including the test of foresight at page 120. The direction given to the jury in Powell was held to be inadequate because the judge at pages 285 and 980:
'... did not qualify his direction on foresight of really serious injury by stating that if the jury considered that the use of the knife by Weddle was the use of a weapon and an action on Weddle's part which English did not foresee as a possibility, then English should not be convicted of murder.'
In the present case Sedley J did not invite the jury to consider whether the appellant Greatrex foresaw as a possibility the use by Bates of the bar or an equally dangerous weapon. His direction left it open to the jury to convict Greatrex of murder if they were satisfied that he had an intent to do serious harm and that Bates struck the fatal blow with a similar intent. Whilst it would have been open to the jury to conclude that the shod foot is as much as a weapon as a bar, and equally dangerous in the sense of being capable of inflicting really serious injury and so not beyond the contemplation or foresight of Greatrex when he joined in the attack, it was for the jury to decide whether that was so or whether the actions of Bates in using the bar were not foreseen by Greatrex at the time when the fatal blow was struck and so were outside the combined purpose. On the evidence of the pathologist none of the kicks administered to the deceased contributed to his death so that the jury could have concluded that although Greatrex took part in this combined attack intending to do really serious harm (and of this the jury were clearly satisfied) he was not a party to the murder in the sense that his actions did not actually assist or encourage Bates' attack with the bar. It seems to us that the question framed by the judge in giving Greatrex leave to appeal confirms that he thought such a view was open to the jury in this case.
As these questions were not left to the jury, we consider that the conviction of Greatrex cannot be upheld."
"... there will be cases giving rise to a fine distinction as to whether or not the unforeseen use of a particular weapon or the manner in which a particular weapon is used will take a killing outside the scope of a joint venture, but this issue will be one of fact for the common sense of the jury to decide."