![]() |
[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 >> Evans, R v [2004] EWCA Crim 1441 (15 June 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/1441.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Crim 1441 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM SWANSEA CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge Gerald Price QC
T20017262
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BELL
and
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE KEITH
____________________
REGINA |
||
- and - |
||
TERRENCE MORGAN EVANS |
____________________
Mr S Rees appeared for the Crown
Hearing date: 14 June 2004
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Keith:
"First, it transpired that there had in fact been no attempt to obtain confirmation from the planning authorities as to when the site, on which the caravan in which the incident in count 1 is alleged to have taken place had stood, had been redeveloped. Secondly, the complainant's grandfather had only arrived in the aftermath of that incident. All he could have given evidence about ….. , had he been alive, was what he had been told about why the complainant was crying. In view of the complainant's difficulty in getting across what he says happened, what his grandfather understood he was being told would not have helped one way or the other. Thirdly, the lines of enquiry which the defence could no longer investigate about ….. Mr Jones and about the man involved in ….. the Haverfordwest incident do not sound particularly productive, but, in any event, a proper direction about the disadvantages which the defence are under when defending such stale allegations would have gone some way towards meeting the defence's concern. Fourthly, medical examination at the time might have revealed injuries consistent with buggery, but, even if they had not, a lack of physical evidence confirming anal penetration would not have been inconsistent with buggery. And finally, the prosecution had undertaken that it would itself introduce the allegation of criminal damage against the complainant as part of its case with the result that its revelation would not have exposed the complainant to the risk of being cross-examined on his previous convictions."
"On the whole, the best time to assess whether a case is fit to be left to the jury is not before the trial has started but at the end of the trial when a judge is in a position to take into account the actual evidence presented to the jury by the prosecution and by the defence. As far as we are aware no application was made to this judge to rule again at the end of the trial. We certainly do not criticise those who were involved in the case for that. If the judge had been minded to take a different view to that he had indicated on the application for a stay, we are confident that he would have made that clear to counsel, and counsel, no doubt appreciating that, were not going to make an unnecessary application. Accordingly, we are satisfied that no complaint can be made about the judge's decision to allow the case to go to the jury for a verdict."
"27. However, there remains in this court a residual discretion to set aside a conviction if we feel it is unsafe or unfair to allow it to stand. This is so even where the trial process itself cannot be faulted. It is a discretion which must be exercised in limited circumstances and with caution. When we exercise that discretion we must be conscious that we are not only involved in deciding where justice lies for the appellant. We must do justice to the prosecution, whose task it is to see that the guilty are brought to justice. We must also do justice to the victim. In this case we are particularly conscious of the position of the victim. If she is right, she was treated in a most disgraceful way by someone whom she should have been entitled to trust: her stepfather. For years, for understandable reasons, as we have already indicated, she felt unable to make public what had happened. She is entitled to justice as well. But we also have to do justice to the appellant. At the heart of our criminal justice system is the principle that while it is important that justice is done to the prosecution and justice is done to the victim, in the final analysis the fact remains that it is even more important that an injustice is not done to a defendant. It is central to the way we administer justice in this country that although it may mean that some guilty people go unpunished, it is more important that the innocent are not wrongly convicted.
28. In this case it has to be recognised that because of the delay that occurred, in our judgment the appellant was put in an impossible position to defend himself. He was not, as [his counsel] says with force, able to conduct any proper cross-examination of the complainant. There was no material he could put to the complainant to suggest that she had said that something had happened on one occasion which could be established to be incorrect. There was no material in the form of notes that were given to the doctors which showed that she had changed her account. All that the appellant could do was to say that he had not committed the acts alleged against him. [His counsel] says that to say to a jury, when faced with allegations of the sort that were made here, 'I have not done it' is virtually no defence at all.
29. We have looked at all the circumstances of this case. We have sought to act in accordance with the principles we have set out earlier. In the end we have come to the conclusion that this is one of those residual cases where in the interests of justice we must set aside [these] conviction[s]. That may be an injustice to the victim. It may be an injustice to the public in the sense that a guilty person is not going to suffer any further punishment than he has. But, nonetheless, having regard to the lapse of time, the very limited evidence that was available in this case, we have come to the conclusion that it is our duty to allow this appeal."
"71. It is to be noted that the delay in that case was of the order of 30 years. We find no statement of principle in the judgment given by that court that that period, or any other period, should be regarded as being determinative of a decision in relation to a stay on the grounds of abuse of process by reason of delay.
72. Indeed, it is apparent from the many authorities in this area, that the length of delay is but one of the factors to be considered in the exercise of the trial judge's discretion as to whether or not to grant a stay.
73. It is also to be noted that, in B, there was but a single complainant. It is also to be noted that the defence in that case was that she was confused and may therefore have been mistaken in her recollection."
Pausing there, we are not convinced that that was right. We rather think that the defence in B was that the complainant made it all up. Be that as it may, Rose V-P continued:
"As is apparent from what we have already said, there are 15 complainants in the present case, and the defence is not confusion but lies.
74. Furthermore, the Lord Chief Justice, in paragraph 26 of the judgment said:
'One thing is clear: the jury saw the witnesses and we have not. Therefore they were in a better position to judge where the truth lay than this court. Furthermore, the trial process depends upon our confidence in the jury system. We have to have confidence that they made the appropriate allowance here for delay.'
There is, in our judgment, nothing in B to sustain this appellant's appeal."
"…..we also have to have in mind the intervention of Parliament. Parliament made the decision as to where they considered the right balance between the prosecution and the defence should lie in regard to the question of corroboration. We must not seek to go behind the decision of Parliament. Therefore juries in cases of this sort must be left with the difficult task of determining where the truth lies."