![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Jenkins & Ors, R v [2002] EWCA Crim 749 (14th February, 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2002/749.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Crim 749 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
2000/03839/Z4 2000/06762/Z4 2000/03547/Z4 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE HALLETT DBE
and
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
____________________
R | ||
- and - | ||
David Ian Jenkins Alicia Jenkins Terry William Jenkins Russell Brown |
____________________
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)
Michael Massih QC for the appellant Alicia Jenkins
John Davis for the appellant Terry William Jenkins
Crispin Aylett for the appellant Russell Brown
Richard Horwell and Edward Brown for the Crown
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice PILL:
“Re David Jenkins
On any view you inflicted the fatal wounds with a knife and caused the victim’s death. The case against you on the murder charge was a powerful one. Your grounds of appeal do not raise an arguable case either that the Judge misdirected the jury or that any of his rulings fell outside the reasonable exercise of his discretion. The conviction is not arguably unsafe.
Re Alicia Jenkins
There was strong evidence from which the jury was entitled to conclude that you helped your son David by driving him to find the victim in order to carry out a revenge attack when armed with a knife. Under those circumstances they were entitled to convict you of murder. None of the ten grounds advanced on your behalf raise any arguable case that your conviction was unsafe; several of the grounds seem to lack any substance at all.
Re Terry Jenkins
You were present when your brother carried out the fatal stabbing and were very close to him. There was ample evidence that you went to the scene as part of a plan for a revenge attack on the victim after what he had done to you. Neither of the grounds put forward on your behalf make your conviction arguably unsafe.
Re Russell Brown
I have taken into account your counsel’s well argued grounds: but there was evidence for the jury when considering the verdict in your case
1. that you knew that David Jenkins had a knife
2. that you chose to join with him in a trip to take revenge on the victim
3. that you were close enough to the victim to get blood on your clothes
None of the grounds put forward disclose any arguable irregularity or misdirection nor any feature which makes the verdict arguably unsafe.”
“Victor Rey-Blasco describes David Jenkins and Terry Jenkins leaning over and punching in a downward direction. They both deny it. Rey-Blasco is cross-examination said he might have been mistaken but that was his evidence that that is what he saw. If he is right, it is of course, potentially damaging.”
Secondly, Charlotte Cheeseman was an eye-witness and stated that she saw one of those who approached Mitchell Davis make several lunging movements towards him. Thirdly, there are references to the evidence of two fishermen as to events after the killing and to a conversation between Alicia Jenkins and police officers. These are made in the course of this judgment.
“In my opinion, therefore, judges should not be required to describe the objective element in the provocation defence by reference to a reasonable man, with or without attribution of personal characteristics. They may instead find it more helpful to explain in simple language the principles of the doctrine of provocation. First, it requires that the accused should have killed while he had lost self-control and that something should have caused him to lose self-control. For better or for worse, section 3 left this part of the law untouched. Secondly, the fact that something caused him to lose self control is not enough. The law expects people to exercise control over their emotions. A tendency to violent rages or childish tantrums is a defect in character rather than an excuse. The jury must think that the circumstances were such as to make the loss of self control sufficiently excusable to reduce the gravity of the offence from murder to manslaughter. This is entirely a question for the jury. In deciding what should count as a sufficient excuse, they have to apply what they consider to be appropriate standards of behaviour; on the one hand making allowance for human nature and the power of the emotions but, on the other hand, not allowing someone to rely upon his own violent disposition.”
“My Lords, I do not wish to lay down any prescriptive formula for the way in which the matter is explained to the jury. I am sure that if judges are freed from the necessity of invoking the formula of the reasonable man equipped with an array of unreasonable ‘eligible characteristics’, they will be able to explain the principles in simple terms. Provided that the judge makes it clear that the question is in the end one for the jury and that he is not seeking to ‘impose a fetter on the right and duty of the jury which the Act accords to them’, the guidance which he gives must be a matter for his judgment on the facts of the case.”
“It seems to me that the standard of reasonableness in this context should refer to a person exercising the ordinary power of self-control over his passions which someone in his position is able to exercise and is expected by society to exercise. By position I mean to include all the characteristics which the particular individual possesses and which may in the circumstances bear on his power of control other than those influences which have been self-induced. Society should require that he exercise a reasonable control over himself, but the limits within which control is reasonably to be demanded must take account of characteristics peculiar to him which reduce the extent to which he is capable of controlling himself. Such characteristics as an exceptional pugnacity or excitability will not suffice. Such tendencies require to be controlled. Section 3 requires that the accused should have made reasonable efforts to control himself within the limits of what he is reasonably able to do. This is not to destroy the idea or the reasonable man nor to reincarnate him; it is simply to clothe him with a reasonable degree of reality. But as the statute prescribes, the matter comes to be one of the circumstances of the case and the good sense of the jury. Although the statute expressly refers to a reasonable man it does not follow that in directing a jury on provocation a judge must in every case use that particular expression. The substance of the section may well be conveyed without necessarily importing the concept of a reasonable man.”
“May the provocative events such as you find they to be taken in combination before the infliction of the fatal injuries have been such as to cause a reasonable 19 year old, having the degree of self-control to be expected of an ordinary sober young man, bearing in mind he is the brother of Terry Jenkins, may any provocation have caused the reasonable young man in his circumstances with his characteristics to have acted as he did? You decide what he did.”
“It may further be said that [a secondary party] must be taken to have had within their contemplation the possibility that life might be put at risk. The issue is whether it follows as a consequence that they cannot be heard to say that the murder was a different crime from the attack which they contemplated, and so cannot escape liability for the murder an the ground that it was outside the common design. To accept this type of reasoning would be to fix an accessory with consequences of his acts which he did not foresee and did not desire or intend”
“At the time of such participation [in the joint enterprise] the defendant realised that David Jenkins might, as a real possibility, use the knife to injure such a boy intending to kill or to cause serious bodily harm.”
Having taken the jury through the seven stages, the judge concluded (p 55):
“The essence is the participation of a defendant in unlawful planned violence knowing that another participant on his or her side had the knife and might use it with the necessary intention but nonetheless went along and participated.”
“The question is why. Is it proved he was there as an act of participation intending to assist his friend David Jenkins and with that intention in fact give encouragement and support to David Jenkins in the agreed planned violence?”
Mr Aylett submits that the judge should have followed that question with an alternative question such as: “Is it possible that, notwithstanding his proximity, he was not involved in that way?”