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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Serrano, R v [2006] EWCA Crim 3182 (1 December 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/3182.html Cite as: [2007] Crim LR 569, [2006] EWCA Crim 3182 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE RAFFERTY DBE
MR JUSTICE WALKER
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R E G I N A | ||
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RAYMOND SAMUEL SERRANO |
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MR M DENNIS QC appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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"The trial judge failed to direct the jury on provocation when he was obliged to do so. The defence of provocation was therefore never considered by the jury. As a result of this, there is a real possibility that Mr Serrano's conviction for murder is unsafe."
This was not a ground which had been advanced by the appellant himself. He put forward a number of other grounds, but the Commission has declined to make a reference on those other grounds.
"He said it was punches only. How far drink might have led him to punch without thinking much harder than he intended."
He had not intended to cause her serious harm.
"Where on a charge of murder there is evidence on which the jury can find that the person charged was provoked (whether by things done or by things said or by both together) to lose his self-control, the question whether the provocation was enough to make a reasonable man do as he did shall be left to be determined by the jury; and in determining that question the jury shall take into account everything both done and said according to the effect which, in their opinion, it would have on a reasonable man."
"My Lord, is it possible, at the request of the jury, that you will consider such leniency as you can within your powers?"
Mr Rees accepts that the jury could have things other than provocation in mind when posing that question, but he submits that it is a real possibility that it was the provocative conduct of the deceased which led to the recommendation made by the jury.
"The public interest in the administration of justice is, in my opinion, best served if in any trial on indictment the trial judge leaves to the jury, subject to any appropriate caution or warning, but irrespective of the wishes of trial counsel, any obvious alternative offence which there is evidence to support. I would not extend the rule to summary proceedings since, for all their potential importance to individuals, they do not engage the public interest to the same degree. I would also confine the rule to alternative verdicts obviously raised by the evidence: by that I refer to alternatives which should suggest themselves to the mind of ordinarily knowledgeable and alert criminal judge, excluding alternatives which ingenious counsel may identify through research after the trial. Application of this rule may in some cases benefit the defendant, protecting him against an excessive conviction. In other cases it may benefit the public, by providing for the conviction of a lawbreaker who deserves punishment. A defendant may, quite reasonably fro m his point of view, choose to roll the dice. But the interests of society should not depend on such a contingency."
Lord Hutton expressed his agreement with that paragraph at paragraphs 61 and 62.
"It remained the duty of the judge to decide whether there was evidence of provoking conduct which resulted in the defendant losing his self-control if in the opinion of the judge, even on a view most favourable to the accused there is insufficient material for a jury to find that it is a reasonable possibility that there was specific provoking conduct resulting in a loss of self-control there is simply no issue of provocation to be considered by the jury."
Page 102D:
"It follows that there can only be an issue of provocation to be considered by jury if the judge considers that there is some evidence of a specific act or word of provocation resulting in a loss of self-control. It does not matter from what source that evidence emerges or whether it is relied on at trial by the defendant or not. If there is such evidence the judge must leave the issue to the jury. If there is no such evidence but merely the speculative possibility that there has been an act of provocation it is wrong for the judge to direct the jury to consider provocation."
"What is sufficient evidence in the particular context is not a question of law. Where the line is to be drawn depends on a judgment involving logic and common sense. The assessment of matters of degree and intense focus on the circumstances of the particular case. It is unwise to generalise on such matters. It is a subject best left to the good sense of trial judges. For the same reason it is not useful to compare the facts of decided cases on provocation with one another."
"It is for the judge to decide if there is evidence of provoking conduct, a loss of self-control. If there is sufficient evidence it is a matter for the jury. If there is insufficient material to find as a reasonable rather than as any speculative possibility, that there was provoking conduct and loss of self-control, there is no issue that the judge should not leave provocation to the jury. The trial judge is in many cases better placed than this court to assess the quality and effect of the evidence which has been placed before the jury."
"'When I touched her private parts with my fingers I did not deliberately injure them. I should not think I would have done so accidentally. It all depends on the movements you are using. In my love-making I was being normal.' With regard to her anus, he said, 'We were both laughing at the idea that I could not get a proper erection; from time to time such a thing has happened to me. It is nothing serious. I take it as a matter of course. I didn't feel humiliated and lose my temper. She wasn't laughing at me. She was giggling because I could not get an erection. That is not why this happened. I cannot account for the injuries to her anus, though I have thought about it."
That is no basis, in our judgment, for a claim that provocation should have been left to the jury.
"Now I come to next question. Why did he hit her? Well, his evidence was that was this, and it is continuing his account that he gave to his own counsel about the events after he said he did up his zip, and said, 'Better get ready now, I should be on my way home how.' He went on to say, as she put on her trousers, that she said, 'Make it worth my while now.', and that he said that no money had been spoken of. He said, 'We have just been out for a few drinks,' and that would be the finish. 'Then,' he said, 'she threatened to shout and cause me trouble if I did not pay. She said I had plenty of money on me and I wouldn't notice it.' 'Suddenly,' he said, 'she dipped down, she picked something up and was throwing it in my general direction. So I ducked out of the way and she ran forward and grabbed me and I pushed her away. She came forward again and threw some punches at me. One caught me on the end of the nose. Next thing, she was down on the deck. I hit her before I even realised.' He said it was the reflex action of a boxer, to hit in combination punches with both hands, leading with his left. He says, 'She spun away and fell forward and hit the ground, making no attempt to break her fall. Her body hit the ground a heavy blow.' I pause there again, because that is the end of his account of the finance. A little later on in his evidence, still being asked by his learned counsel, he said, dealing with why he hit her, 'I took it at first that I had been set up, that she was acting as a decoy for somebody to rob me.' 'I had been in the merchant navy,' he said, 'and it is a thing that happens at foreign ports.' On the occasion that he said she threatened to scream that passed through his mind."
"The Crown suggest that it was because it was this fact and her amused reaction to it, that must have caused him to lose his temper, that he did not want to disclose to the police. The accused says, 'The reason I didn't mention it was simply because I thought it didn't matter.' Well, he did say, as I have reminded you, in evidence that his failure caused the laughter, but he said that they both laughed together about it and it was not her laughing at him."
Again that is evidence which does not present a case of provocation.
"He did also say in his evidence that momentarily he did lose his control."
"Specific provoking conduct resulting in a loss of self-control."
"Anyway, he says his loss of control was not because she had thrown something at him. So had it occurred when she hit him on the nose? And he was cross-examined about that, and said this, 'When she hit me I just hit out without even thinking about it. If anybody struck at me I would automatically hit out. You don't think when you have had drink. Actions you do in drink seem normal at the time. I have had five months thinking about it. It was just done in a couple of seconds. She just caught me on the end of the nose. I suppose that stung me. I am used to being punched and it would not worry me.' [The judge then corrected his reading of his notebook]. No, I am sorry. 'I am used to taking punishment and it would not worry me. I just hit out on instinct. It just happened. I don't remember when I hit her. You don't aim at a particular place. I just hit out at her face without thinking. I now know she was utterly defenceless."
"Provocation is some act or series of acts done or words spoken by the dead man to the accused which would cause in any reasonable person and actually does cause in the accused, a sudden and temporary loss of self-control, rendering the accused so subject to passion as to make him or her for the moment not master of his mind."
The words "by the dead man or his accused" have, of course, been superseded by subsequent authority.
"... specific provoking conduct resulting in a loss of self-control."
"Justice in a criminal trial rightly and necessarily concentrates on justice for the appellant. But the court must not overlook the matter of justice for those concerned with the victim also, nor the requirements of a proportionate criminal appellate system, which include that those who are surely and fairly shown to be guilty of murder, and have been so found by a jury, should not escape that consequence on gossamer grounds. In our judgment, the unavoidable facts of this case and the necessary logic of the jury's verdict rule out any possibility of a miscarriage of justice -- see Franco paragraph 19."