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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Petkar & Anor, R. v [2003] EWCA Crim 2668 (16 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2003/2668.html Cite as: [2004] 1 Cr App Rep 22, [2003] EWCA Crim 2668, [2004] 1 Cr App R 22 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT MIDDLESEX GUILDHALL
HHJ Smith
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DOUGLAS BROWN
and
SIR RICHARD TUCKER
____________________
Regina |
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- and - |
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Rafiq PETKAR & Martin FARQUHAR |
Appellants |
____________________
Mr Jeffrey Clarke for the appellant Farquhar
Mr Richard Milne for the Crown
Hearing dates : 20th June & 25th July 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rix:
The structure of the trial
"I think that as long as I tell the jury the framework of law and remind them of the salient facts, I don't think it's desirable for me to suggest a lot of inferences which might not be in their mind anyway."
The grounds of appeal
(i) that the judge failed clearly to identify the relevant inferences which the jury might draw;
(ii) that the judge failed to warn the jury that they should not convict wholly or mainly on the strength of an adverse inference;
(iii) that the judge failed to direct the jury that they could only draw an adverse inference if satisfied that the prosecution had established a prima facie case;
(iv) that the judge failed to direct the jury that they could only draw an adverse inference if they concluded that the only sensible explanation for the defendant's failure to mention the salient fact was that he had no answer at the time or none that would stand up to scrutiny; and
(v) the judge failed to remind the jury of the explanations given by the appellant for the appellant's failure to mention facts.
The prosecution evidence
Petkar's evidence
"The reason I was saying that I had none of the money was I was trying to distance myself from the situation. I lied at that time but everything I have said in court was the truth…
"I was telling [IBJ] that I was not a party to this theft and I was going to help them to recover the money. I suppose I would have gradually told them that I had some of it with me or available. Kevin Merry, however, never did call me in. I asked him what I should do and he [said]: Sit tight where you are."
"I lied during the interviews. I did them without a solicitor when I said that all of the – money had gone to Martin Farquhar. I said that because that was the same that I said to [IBJ]. So I continued with that lie.
"The reason I told the police I had no written contract over the investment was because of my problems with the [FSA]. I was frightened and I did not want to show anyone the contract."
Farquhar's evidence
Ground one: the section 34 direction
"(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 might 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, sub-section (2) below applies.
"(2) Where this sub-section 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."
"1. Before his interview(s) the defendant was cautioned. He was first told that he need not say anything. It was therefore his right to remain silent. However, he was also told that it might harm his defence if he did not mention when questioned something which he later relied on in court; and that anything he might say might be given in evidence.
"2. As part of his defence, the defendant has relied upon (here specify the facts to which the direction applies). But [the prosecution say/he admits] that he failed to mention these facts when he was interviewed about the offence(s). [If you are sure that this is so, this/This] failure may count against him. This is because you may draw the conclusion from his failure that he [had no answer then/had no answer that he then believed would stand up to scrutiny/ has since invented his account/has since tailored his account to fit the prosecution's case/(here refer to any other reasonable inferences contended for)]. 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 [evidence/case] about these facts is true.
"3. However, you may draw such a conclusion against him only if you think it is a fair and proper conclusion, and you are satisfied about three things: first, that when he was interviewed he could reasonably have been expected to mention the facts on which he now relies; second, that the only sensible explanation for his failure to do so is that he had no answer at the time or none that would stand up to scrutiny; third, that apart from his failure to mention those facts, the prosecution's case against him is so strong that it clearly calls for an answer from him.
"4. (Add, if appropriate:) The defence invite you not to draw any conclusion from the defendant's silence, on the basis of the following evidence (here set out the evidence). If you [accept this evidence and] think this amounts to a reason why you should not draw any conclusion from his silence, do not do so. Otherwise, subject to what I have said, you may do so."
"The next thing is what happens if a person is being questioned by the police, the modified right of silence, so to speak, we had for the last five or six years. If a person is proceeded against for an offence, as both defendants were, and when they are questioned by the police if one or either of them fails to mention a fact relied on in his defence in the trial: if it is something which in the circumstances at the time you take the view he could reasonably have been expected to mention under questioning, then, you may draw inferences from the fact that he did not mention it.
"And I do not want to be specific here but such inferences where he had not thought it up, he had not decided on his defence, he had not decided whether to make use of that particular thing, it is entirely a matter for you.
"Examples here, and they are only examples, the fact that Mr Petkar failed to mention the contract, although it seems that the solicitor had a copy or that he had not repaid or he had not passed on the whole of the money to Mr Farquhar.
"In Mr Farquhar's case, he did not mention the threat of the two men, Ritchie and Gary, at all. Said he knew nothing about the transactions. Those are examples of how this might apply here.
"It does not affect the right of silence in the sense that nobody has to answer questions and the prosecution must still prove the case against them and they have got to have something by way of evidence, other than merely…that the defendant did not mention part of his defence. And it is for you to decide whether it is right to draw any inference, you do not have to."
"1. The judge will have told the jury that the burden of proof remains upon the prosecution throughout and what the required standard is.
2. It is necessary for the judge to make clear to the jury that the defendant is entitled to remain silent. That is his right and his choice…
3. An inference from failure [to give evidence/to mention a fact] cannot on its own prove guilt. That is expressly stated in section 38(3) of the Act.
4. Therefore, the jury must be satisfied that the prosecution have established a case to answer before drawing any inferences from silence…
5. If, despite any evidence relied upon to explain his silence or in the absence of any such evidence, the jury conclude the silence can only sensibly be attributed to the defendant's having no answer or none that would stand up to [cross-examination/scrutiny], they may draw an adverse inference."
And in R v. Argent [1997] 2 Cr App R 27 at 32/33 Lord Bingham of Cornhill CJ analysed section 34 as requiring six formal conditions, of which the fifth and sixth are relevant to mention: namely (5) that the alleged failure by the defendant must be to mention any fact relied on in his defence; and (6) that the failure is to mention a fact which in the circumstances existing at the time the accused could reasonably have been expected to mention. Those two matters are of course taken directly from the language of the statute.
"Moreover, it is always open to an accused person who has failed to mention some important fact at interview, to communicate it to the police at any time before trial; but unless it is done promptly, it is unlikely to rebut any inference which might otherwise be drawn."
"The Court was reluctant to countenance the view that direction of a jury called for the mouthing of a number of mandatory formulae, and departure by the trial judge from a prescribed form of words would by no means always justify the upsetting of a jury's verdict. However, standard directions were devised to serve the ends of justice and the Court must be astute to ensure that these ends were not jeopardised by failure to give directions where they were called for. The drawing of inferences from silence was a particularly sensitive area…"
"It would in our view have been desirable for the judge to include a direction of the kind suggested, namely that no question of drawing an adverse inference could arise unless the jury were sure that there was a case to answer. However, we do not think that this trial could possibly be held to be unfair or the conviction unsafe on that ground. That is because no jury could possibly have concluded that there was no case to answer on the facts."
(i) The facts which the accused failed to mention but which are relied on in his defence should be identified: see para 2 of the model direction and Chenia at paras 87/89, where Clarke LJ said that this requirement must be approached in a common-sense way.
(ii) The inferences (or conclusions, as they are called in the direction) which it is suggested might be drawn from failure to mention such facts should be identified, to the extent that they may go beyond the standard inference of late fabrication: see para 2 of the model direction.
(iii) The jury should be told that, if an inference is drawn, they should not convict "wholly or mainly on the strength of it": see para 2 of the model direction and Murray v. United Kingdom 22 EHRR 29 at 60, para 47. The first of those alternatives ("wholly") is a clear way of putting the need for the prosecution to be able to prove a case to answer, otherwise than by means of any inference drawn. The second alternative ("or mainly") buttresses that need.
(iv) The jury should be told that an inference should be drawn "only if you think it is a fair and proper conclusion": para 3 of the model direction. This is not stated in the statute, but is perhaps inherent in that part of it emphasised in Lord Bingham's sixth condition. In R v. McGarry [1999] 1 Cr App R 377 at 383G this court glossed that condition as requiring a jury "not arbitrarily to draw adverse inferences".
(v) An inference should be drawn "only if…the only sensible explanation for his failure" is that he had no answer or none that would stand up to scrutiny: para 3 of the model direction, reflecting Lord Taylor's fifth essential in Cowan. In other words the inference canvassed should only be drawn if there is no other sensible explanation for the failure. That is analogous to the essence of a direction on lies.
(vi) An inference should only be drawn if, apart from the defendant's failure to mention facts later relied on in his defence, the prosecution case is "so strong that it clearly calls for an answer by him": para 3 of the model direction. This is a striking way to put the need, reflected in Lord Taylor's third and fourth essentials in Cowan, for a case to answer. A note, note 16, to the JSB guideline explains that it reflects "a cautious approach".
(vii) The jury should be reminded of the evidence on the basis of which the jury are invited not to draw any conclusion from the defendant's silence: see para 4 of the model direction and R v. Gill [2001] 1 Cr App R 11 at paras 30/31. This goes with point (iv) above, because it is only after a jury has considered the defendant's explanation for his failure that they can conclude that there is no other sensible explanation for it.
(viii) A special direction should be given where the explanation for silence of which evidence has been given is that the defendant was advised by his solicitor to remain silent: see para 5 of the model direction.
"20. Once the preconditions to the operation of section 34 are satisfied the jury are entitled to draw:
"such inferences from the failure as appear proper."
"21. The usual inference which the jury are invited to draw is that at the time of the interview the defendant had no answer to the allegations being made against him or none that would stand up to questioning. In other words, his subsequent defence is a late fabrication or one which has been tailored to fit the prosecution case. But the prosecution in this case did not invite the jury to draw such inferences. In his directions to the jury the judge does not say what inference the jury could properly draw if they decided to do so. We think he should have done. He should have reminded the jury of the inference which the prosecution invited them to draw along the lines of the specimen direction.
"22…It was incumbent on the judge in his summing-up to identify the relevant inference."
"Turning to the second ground of appeal, we accept that if the jury was to be permitted to draw an inference a careful direction was required, for two interrelated reasons. First, there were matters on which the defendant was entitled to rely to explain the silence at interview, despite the form of the caution administered to him. [Sc Secondly,] At that stage he had not seen the video film, he was therefore unaware of the full weight of the prosecution case against him and in the light of his solicitor's advice he may have been understandably reluctant to admit a lesser but still serious offence. That made it particularly important in this case for the judge to say to the jury that they should only be prepared to draw an adverse inference if satisfied that the only sensible explanation for the appellant's failure to give in interview the explanation which he gave in his defence statement and at trial was that at the time of the interview he had no answer to the charge, or none that would stand up to questioning and investigation. It was important that the jury not be left at liberty to draw an adverse inference notwithstanding that it might have been satisfied with the plausibility of the appellant's explanation for his silence (see Condron v. United Kingdom (2001) 31 EHRR 1 at paragraph 61 and R. v. Betts and Hall [2001] 2 Cr. App. R. 251, at paragraph 48)."
The second ground: a warning against the evidence of a co-defendant.
"Now, you do obviously need to make separate decisions on each defendant and each count…
"As I have said, each defendant in effect blames the other and says the other is guilty. But that does not mean that if you decide to acquit one of them and then move on to consider the position of the other, you must find the other guilty.
"What you need to do really is to consider each defendant separately and consider the evidence for and against him and make your decision. Up to you which order you decide to take them in. You may find that they are both guilty or one or the other or you may not be sure about either.
"If you end up saying, "Well, on a particular £420,000 occasion I can't be sure that Mr Petkar knew that this money came from [IBJ]. On the other hand, we cannot be sure that what Mr Farquhar did was not done through fear": well, then, you do not have to find someone guilty. You must acquit them both because each is entitled to a separate decision as if they – almost as if they were in the dock alone."
"The defendant A has given evidence which [damaged B's case] [tended to show that the defendant B was involved in some way in the commission of the offence(s) which you are trying.] Examine that evidence with particular care for A, in saying what he did, may have been more concerned about protecting himself than about speaking the truth. Bear that in mind when deciding whether you can believe what A has told you about B."
"2. The above direction should not be given where co-defendants give evidence against each other. See R v Burrows [2000] Crim LR 48."
"The rule of practice that some warning, but not necessarily a full corroboration warning, is required where a witness, e.g. a co-defendant, may have a purpose of his own to serve was reaffirmed in Knowlden…"
and the passage at 100 from the judgment of Watkins LJ was cited.
"Held, dismissing the appeal, that the judge had faced a stark difficulty. Any warning would have had to apply to both defendants, and would have meant directing the jury to treat each defendant's evidence with caution, just because it inculpated the other. That might have led to a complaint that the jury had not been allowed to approach the case with open minds. It was impossible in this case to give the normal warning. He did, however, underline the extreme care with which the jury should approach the allegations against each defendant, and in the circumstances the court could see no lack of safety in the verdict."
"For all of these reasons, then, the right course of action in such a case was considered to be to steer what Lord Taylor called a "middle course", giving a milder form of warning to the jury that the co-accused might have an axe to grind (or words to that effect). It does not appear that his Lordship would have exempted from this the case where the whole thrust of A's evidence is to [place] blame on B (quite the reverse) and it is far from clear that he would have been persuaded to change his mind, at the time, if the facts were such that B's evidence was equally damning of A. But that was before the law was changed: the "axe to grind" warning is no longer a "middle course". Nowadays a Makanjuola warning, which might well take this form, is the most that can be given where an accomplice gives evidence for the prosecution. Thus it could well be that the case of the cut-throat defences equally requires a degree of reading down. Lord Taylor was an enthusiast for the abolition of corroboration warnings (see Cheema at p.205) and might well have ruled differently had the 1994 Act been in force.
"Be that as it may, the solution of the present case is clearly right if common sense is the guide. Most juries would already be distinctly unimpressed by a tale of grown men eating chocolate eggs, discarding the toys and, as if by chance, discovering an immediate use for the linings. When the point is reached at which the two linings become confused I certainly found it hard to stifle a giggle, and, had I been a juror, there would have been no need for me to be warned that both men might be trying to save their own skins by landing the other in it. Where the risk is so obvious, but the accused still hopes for an acquittal, the warning could be said to be prejudicial in that it comes too close to telling the jury what to find. Better to say nothing."
"The reason given was that such a direction might indicate that the judge has formed a view about the way in which the evidence of each defendant should be approached. However, as argued at Criminal Law Week 99/29/9, it is submitted that this reasoning is unconvincing. It also seems inconsistent with previous authority."
"37. Mr Harrington [counsel for the Crown] submitted that the approach in Burrows is to be preferred to that in Cheema in the circumstances of this case, because Cheema was not a direct cut-throat case, whereas Burrows was…
"38. Mr Harrington also submitted that the judge's general directions to the jury as to how they should approach the evidence in this case sufficed in the circumstances. He referred to: the judge's direction…as to the need for separate treatment of the cases for and against each defendant, to his general direction…as to the need to consider the credibility of each witness in the case and whether it is self seeking or given to protect or to reflect badly on one defendant rather than another; and to his direction…as to the need for the jury to take the same care in their consideration of the evidence of each of the defendants as they did in respect of any other witness in the case. Those three directions, submitted Mr Harrington, taken together, were sufficient for the purpose.
"39. Whether the defences are "mirror-image" cut-throat defences, the law, since R v. Prater…has been that some such warning should normally be considered and given. Burrows was a case in which, as Judge LJ, giving the judgment of the Court said, "the difficulty facing the trial judge was somewhat stark". Any warning he might have given applied equally to each of the two co-defendants, whose cut-throat defences were almost a mirror-image of each other. Each had given evidence casting all possible blame on the other. It may be, as Judge LJ said, that within the confines of that particular case, the trial judge could not warn the jury to approach the evidence of each defendant with care because he had an axe to grind, without indicating to the jury that he had formed an adverse view about the way in which it should be approached by the jury. Though, why that was so, even in the particular circumstances of that case, is not readily apparent to me.
"40. A judge, even in a case of a mirror-image cut-throat defences, in the separate interest of each defendant, should be able to tailor a warning about the evidence of each against the other in a way that would not indicate that he, the judge, had formed an adverse view as to the defence of one or other or both. Even though the cross allegations are inextricably bound up in the defences of each, it is for the judge, in a neutral way, to give the jury such assistance as he can in their evaluation of the credibility of the evidence of each defendant as it is of that of all the witnesses in the case, whether for the prosecution or the defence.
"41. We see no reason to depart from the approach of this Court in R v. Knowlden & Knowlden…and confirmed in Cheema, that a judge, in exercising his discretion as to what to say to the jury should at least warn them, where one defendant has given evidence adverse to another, to examine the evidence of each with care because each has or may have an interest of his own to serve. Cheema was, as Mr Aubrey has observed, a cut-throat defence.
"42. There was also, as Mr Aubrey commented in argument, a particular need for some such warning in this case, where Jenkins, unlike Jones, had refused to answer questions in interview and was therefore able, if he wished, to tailor his defence to the facts in evidence.
"43. In our view, the failure to give such a warning was a serious omission and unfairly prejudicial to Jones' defence, and also, though possibly to a lesser extent, to that of Jenkins. Accordingly, we do not consider that the general directions as to evidence of the judge to which Mr Harrington referred us were sufficient for the purpose.
"44. Our attention has been drawn to current guidance of the Judicial Studies Board in the form of a note to its specimen direction No 26, which advises a form of warning to a jury where one defendant has given evidence which may have an adverse effect on a co-defendant. The guidance in the note is that such warning should not be given where co-defendants have given evidence against each other. The authority given for that proposition is Burrows.
"45. It follows from what we have said that we consider that no such general principle can be extracted from the case of Burrows, where it is plain from Judge LJ's judgment that the Court was heavily influenced by the facts of that case.
"46. Mr Aubrey has ventured an approach, which may be appropriate in many or most cases where a trial judge has to consider what if any warning to give where co-defendants have given evidence against each other. It seems to us to accord broadly with the general observations we have made about the principles derived from Knowlden & Knowlden and Cheema, subject always of course to what justice demands on the particular facts of each case.
"47. Mr Aubrey suggested that a judge, when dealing with the case against and defence of each co-defendant, might consider four points to put to the jury – points that would not offend any sense of justice and certainly would not cast the judge in the light of one who has formed an adverse view against either or both co-defendants. First, the jury should consider the case for and against each defendant separately. Second, the jury should decide the case on all the evidence, including the evidence of each defendant's co-defendant. Third, when considering the evidence of the co-defendants, the jury should bear in mind that he or she may have an interest to serve or, as it is often put, an axe to grind. Fourth, the jury should assess the evidence of the co-defendants in the same way as that of the evidence of any other witness in the case. That seems to us to be a useful – and suitably focused – approach when judges are faced with this particular problem, and we commend it."
Ground three: Mrs Wells' statement
"No question of being unwilling to come to court but again this statement is not accepted and has not been tested in court."
"You heard a statement read out from her. This one and one other [ie Mrs Wells'], which I will come to later, of course [are] different from all of the agreed statements that were read to you because this one of Karen Sweeney is not agreed so you have to consider what she says in it, bearing in mind it has not been tested in cross-examination in court…"
Ground four: the new evidence relating to Petkar's RBS account at Ealing.
Safety of the convictions
Petkar's appeal against sentence