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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Knight v R [2003] EWCA Crim 1977 (29 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/1977.html Cite as: [2004] WLR 340, [2004] 1 Cr App Rep 9, [2004] 1 WLR 340, [2004] 1 Cr App R 9, [2003] Crim LR 799, [2003] EWCA Crim 1977 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM (PORTSMOUTH CROWN COURT)
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE HUGHES QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MITTING
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RIVLIN
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PHILIP KNIGHT |
Appellant |
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- v - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Sharp (instructed by The Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Laws:
INTRODUCTORY
THE FACTS
"… this is what Mr Knight told you about that event: he said 'I hope I can hold my own quiet well in questioning, but I had been advised by Miss Cook, the duty solicitor, not to answer the police questions. I chose to accept the advice from the solicitor. I was asked by the police questions like whether I knew Linda Taylor, if I had a dog and the allegations were put. I said each time, "no comment". When you get arrested and accused of something you haven't done, you may get confused and answer the questions wrong. Matters were fresh in my memory when I was interviewed, but I thought the solicitor's advice was the best advice to take.' Mr Sharpe put this to him: 'you knew your story was false and that is why you hid behind the advice. If you were innocent you would have been eager to help the police. You didn't want to be tripped up in interview.' Mr Knight answered: 'no, I was not guilty of the charges and the solicitor advised me to make no comment. I expect without a advice I would have answered the police questions, but I may have misunderstood them and then given the wrong answers.'"
THE STATUTE
"(1) Where, in any proceedings against a person for an offence, evidence is given that the accused-
(a) at any time before he was charged with the offence, on being questioned under caution by a constable trying to discover whether or by whom the offence had been committed, failed to mention any fact relied on in his defence in those proceedings; or
(b) on being charged with the offence or officially informed that he night be prosecuted for it, failed to mention any such fact,
being a fact which in the circumstances existing at the time the accused could reasonably have been expected to mention when so questioned, charged or informed, as the case may be, subsection (2) below applies.
(2) Where this subsection applies-
…
(d) the court or jury, in determining whether the accused is guilty of the offence charged,
may draw such inferences from the failure as appear proper."
THE SUMMING-UP
"Members of the jury, the weight to be given to that prepared statement is entirely a matter for you, but Mr Knight admits that thereafter he refused to answer any of the questions put to him by the police. He said, 'No comment' after each question was put. Members of the jury, this failure to answer police questions may count against him. This is because you may draw the conclusion from his failure that he did not want to allow the police to scrutinise the account given in the prepared statement with their own questions. If you do draw that conclusion, you must not convict him wholly or mainly on the strength of it, but you may take it into account as some additional support for the prosecution's case and when deciding whether his case about these facts is true. You may draw such a conclusion against him only if you think it is fair and proper conclusion and you are satisfied about three things. First, that when he was interviewed he could reasonably have been expected to answer the police questions. Second, that the only sensible explanation for this failure to do so was that he had no answers that would stand up to the scrutiny of police questioning. And, third, that apart from his failure to answer the police questions, the prosecution's case against him is so strong that it clearly calls for an answer by him.
The defence invite you not to draw any conclusion from the defendant's silence when questioned on the basis that the defendant has told you that he did not answer any questions on the advice of his solicitor. Members of the jury, this fact does not automatically prevent you from drawing an adverse conclusion from his silence. Bear in mind that a person given legal advice has the choice whether to accept or reject it and that the defendant was warned that any failure to mention facts which he relied on at his trial when he was questioned might harm his defence. He has told you that he was concerned that he might get confused and say the wrong thing. You will make of that what you will and you will decide whether, if true, that justified his refusal to answer any of the police questions. Members of the jury, you should decide whether the defendant could reasonably have been expected to decide for himself whether or not to answer the police questions. You will bear in mind that Mr Knight is a mature man aged 51, he has been married for many years. You will bear in mind the explanation that he has given you about his concern that he would get confused and give the wrong answer. If you are sure that the defendant did not want to allow his account to be subjected to scrutiny at that stage by police questioning and he merely latched on to the legal advice as a convenient shield behind which to hide, you would be entitled to draw a conclusion against him. "
THE PARTIES' SUBMISSIONS
i) On a strict interpretation of s.34 the appellant did not mention when questioned facts on which he later relied; but had a prepared statement been given in response to a question such as, what do you say happened? no suggestion of adverse inference under the section could have arisen.
ii) No adverse inference may be drawn merely from a failure to answer questions, only from a failure to mention facts; and, it is said, the judge confused these two distinct conceptions. Argent [1997] 2 CAR 27 is referred to.
iii) Given the congruity of the prepared statement with the appellant's evidence in court, there can be no inference that the appellant's account was a later fabrication, or that the appellant was not prepared to have it investigated and scrutinised by the police.
iv) The judge should have told the jury that reliance on legal advice can justify a failure to mention facts. So far as Howell holds that there must be a "soundly based objective reason" (paragraph 26) for silence if an adverse inference is to be avoided, it is inconsistent with Argent, Betts and Hall [2001] CAR 257, and also with Condron [2000] Crim LR 679 and Beckles (2002) ECHR 44652/98; and is therefore incompatible with Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights.
v) The judge should have directed the jury that the prepared statement could justify a subsequent failure to mention facts when questioned.
i) S.34(1)(a) is specifically drawn so as to allow adverse inferences when there is a failure to mention facts when being questioned. The making of a pre-prepared statement is quite outwith the scope of the subsection, and cannot preclude the drawing of an adverse inference.
ii) The reason for this, so it is said, is that the policy of the subsection is to encourage suspects to submit what they have to say to the process of scrutiny and testing constituted by the police interview; and attention is drawn to part of paragraph 2 of the Judicial Studies Board guideline direction (set out in the current addition of Archbold at paragraph 15 – 334):
"… you may draw the conclusion from his failure that he had had no answer then/had no answer that he then believed would stand up to scrutiny…"
iii) Howell was not decided per incuriam, since Argent, Betts and Hall, Condron and Beckles were all referred to. So far as there is a difference between Howell and the line taken in Betts and Hall, Howell should be followed.
iv) So far as the judge's direction to the jury involved a modification of the JSB guideline, that was justified in light of Howell.
THE ISSUES REFINED
THE FIRST QUESTION
"(3) Although in practice most statements are given in evidence even when they are largely self-serving, there may be a rare occasion when an accused produces a carefully prepared written statement to the police, with a view to it being a part of the prosecution evidence. The trial judge would plainly exclude such a statement as inadmissible."
THE SECOND QUESTION
"23… It seems to us that this provision [sc. s.34] is one of several enacted in recent years which has served to counteract a culture, or belief, which had been long established in the practice of criminal cases, namely that in principle a defendant may without criticism withhold any disclosure of his defence until the trial. Now, the police interview and the trial are to be seen as part of a continuous process in which the suspect is engaged from the beginning. Of course he retains a right to silence, which the statute protects: not in absolute terms, but by providing, in the words we have emphasised, that adverse inferences may be drawn only in those cases where he could reasonably have been expected to mention the facts in question.
24. This benign continuum from interview to trial, the public interest that inheres in reasonable disclosure by a suspected person of what he has to say when faced with a set of facts which accuse him, is thwarted if currency is given to the belief that if a suspect remains silent on legal advice he may systematically avoid adverse comment at his trial. And it may encourage solicitors to advise silence for other than good objective reasons. We do not consider, pace the reasoning in Betts & Hall, that once it is shown that the advice (of whatever quality) has genuinely been relied on as the reason for the suspect's remaining silent, adverse comment is thereby disallowed. The premise of such a position is that in such circumstances it is in principle not reasonable to expect the suspect to mention the facts in question. We do not believe that is so. What is reasonable depends on all the circumstances… There must always be soundly based objective reasons for silence, sufficiently cogent and telling to weigh in the balance against the clear public interest in an account being given by the suspect to the police. Solicitors bearing the important responsibility of giving advice to suspects at police stations must always have that in mind."
"Sometimes they [sc. the jury] may conclude that it was reasonable for the defendant to have held his peace for a host of reasons, such as that he was… worried at committing himself without legal advice, acting on legal advice, or some other reason accepted by the jury… Only rarely would it be right for the judge to direct the jury that they should, or should not, draw the appropriate inference."
But this reasoning does not, in our respectful opinion, suggest that the mere giving of advice to remain silent may – far less will – itself immunise the suspect from adverse inferences under s.34. As for Betts & Hall, we set out the material passages of this court's judgment in that case (paragraphs 53 – 54) at paragraph 22 in Howell. We will not replicate them here. We do not understand the court in Betts & Hall to have held that proven reliance on a solicitor's advice to stay silent without more immunises the suspect from later adverse inference, whatever the quality of the advice. If, however, the text of Betts & Hall might be thought to express such a view, we would disavow it. So far as the bite of precedent is concerned, any difference between Betts & Hall and Howell goes not so much to the reach of any rule of law as to the practical impact of the statute's phrase "a fact which in the circumstances existing at the time the accused could reasonably have been expected to mention when so questioned". A shift of view upon such a matter is not to be ruled out of court on grounds of stare decisis. The rules of precedent, not least in the field of our criminal law, by no means require so rigid an approach.
CONCLUSION