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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Knight, R v [2007] EWCA Crim 3027 (20 November 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/3027.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 3027 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE OPENSHAW
MR JUSTICE IRWIN
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R E G I N A | ||
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PETER JAMES KNIGHT |
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MISS K BRUNNER appeared on behalf of the Crown
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"Mrs Johncock says this. Having found the diary when [F] was out, she says 'I cannot remember exactly what I read and I didn't read every page. She had written about Pete, that she would do anything to please him, even though some stuff had hurt. He had made her feel good. She didn't like clothes pegs being used but would do anything to keep him. He had been with someone else who was young, but although he had left this girl when pregnant that wouldn't happen to [F] if she pleased him enough. There was also mention of her feelings towards her family and us [that is to say the aunt and uncle] for keeping her from her friends; none of it complimentary. She felt that when she was 16 we wouldn't be able to keep her and she would return to her old life. Some entries describe what he had said when phoning her while she was with us. I can't remember exactly what, but it seems she was confused about his feelings for her."
She then went on to say:
"I did confront her about what was in her diary. We discussed if someone does things that hurt you physically, it can't be love. She was angry that I had read her diary, and after that she burned it and other letters."
That is the end of the quotation from the Judge's ruling.
"(1) In this Chapter references to a statement or to a matter stated are to be read as follows.
(2) A statement is any representation of fact or opinion made by a person by whatever means; and it includes a representation made in a sketch, photofit or other pictorial form.
(3) A matter stated is one to which this Chapter applies if (and only if) the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the person making the statement appears to the court to have been-
(a) to cause another person to believe the matter, or
(b) to cause another person to act or a machine to operate on the basis that the matter is as stated."
This section was interpreted in N, a case which also concerned a diary made out by a young complainant in a case of underage sexual activity. In that case the complainant's diary was still extant and extracts were introduced into evidence as the basis for suggesting that they were inconsistent with the complainant's evidence. The Crown then in that case sought to rely on the diary extracts as evidence of the truth of their content, pursuant to section 120 of the Act, and the judge ruled in favour of the Crown.
"The argument adduced by the Appellant is straightforward. It is this. The diary was compiled on the basis that no one but L would see it. [L being the complainant] Therefore, the purpose of the statements were not 'to cause another person to believe the matter' contained in it within the meaning of s 115(3(a) of the Act. On the contrary, its purpose was L's use alone."
The judge went on to say:
"[16] To our mind it would be a very strange state of the law if a Defendant could introduce a diary such as this on the basis that it is an inconsistent statement, but yet it remained outside the provisions made by Ch 2 of the Act for the regulation of the admission of statements other than those made in court. Nevertheless, if that is the conclusion which the statute compels, we must give effect to it. In our judgment the fallacy in this argument is the underlying assumption that if the diary is not admissible hearsay, it cannot be admissible at all. The rule against hearsay is, was and always has been an exclusionary rule. That is to say, it operates to render inadmissible what would otherwise be relevant and thus admissible. The rationale has always been that assertions out of court may be false either because they are untruthful or because innocently inaccurate, and, unlike sworn testimony, those possibilities cannot be rectified by being tested in examination and cross-examination."
McCombe J then continues at paragraph 21 as follows:
"If, as the Appellant contends, the diary was never intended to be read by anyone, it was not hearsay because it did not fall within s 115. But that does not mean it is not admissible. On the contrary, if relevant it is admissible. It is real or direct evidence outside the hearsay rule. The statutory restrictions upon the admissibility of hearsay have no occasion to apply to an action by the Complainant which never had as its purpose, principal or supplementary, that any other person should believe or act upon it."
"This is evidence of some potential importance if you accept that [F] wrote the diary in the terms that she and her aunt describe that she did. It would seem that she did so never intending that anyone should read it and a very long time before she made any complaint to the police about that which she says the defendant did to her."
"[F] said that in the diary she had recorded some of what had gone on between herself and the defendant and the feelings towards him. Mrs Johncock gave evidence to you about what she read in the diary and the nature of the advice she gave to [F] as a result."
At letter E:
"And Mrs Johncock said this, 'There was an obvious relationship that had been going on between herself and Pete. Some of it I found quite disturbing. I cannot remember the exact words. There were things about things that had happened, that had happened to her that had hurt her physically. There was something about clothes pegs being used and things that hurt, that she had not done it much so if she kept on it would get easier. She indicated that she would do anything to keep him."