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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Osbourne, R v [2007] EWCA Crim 481 (13 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/481.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 481 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HAWKINS QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HENRIQUES
and
SIR RICHARD CURTIS
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R |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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GARY OSBOURNE |
Appellant |
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LORD CARLILE QC & MS A LEVITT for the Appellant
Hearing date : 30 January 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
The Facts
The Issue
The doctor stated:
"He gave his name as Gary Ozzie Osbourne. He said he'd been suffering from paranoid schizophrenia for many years and he referred to tablets he was taking – two a day for about two years; and the last time that he had taken it was eight months ago. He also said he refused to see a psychiatrist. Medication was given to him by his GP".
"If he did not take his medication, he was liable to snap at any time. He would be very aggressive for no reason at all – both to me and Shane; shouting at us. But he was never violent".
The appellant had stayed with her over Christmas and was not seen to take any medication. The appellant and Miss Impey were on friendly terms at that time.
"I come to the conclusion that it is important explanatory evidence; that without it the jury would find it difficult properly to understand, in other words, and evaluate the other evidence in the case and that its value for understanding the case as a whole is substantial".
The judge also rejected a submission that the evidence should be excluded under Section 78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 ("the 1984 Act")
The Law
"References in this Chapter to evidence of a person's "bad character" are to evidence of, or of a disposition towards, misconduct on his part, other than evidence which –
(a) has to do with the alleged facts of the offence with which the defendant is charged, or
(b) is evidence of misconduct in connection with the investigation or prosecution of that offence."
Section 112, an interpretation section, provides:
" "Misconduct" means the commission of an offence or other reprehensible behaviour".
"For the purposes of section 101(1)(c) evidence is important explanatory evidence if –
(a) without it, the court or jury would find it impossible or difficult properly to understand other evidence in the case, and
(b) its value for understanding the case as a whole is substantial."
"Where it is necessary to place before the jury evidence of part of a continual background of history relevant to the offence charged in the indictment and without the totality of which the account placed before the jury would be incomplete or incomprehensible".
"Surely in an ordinary prosecution for murder you can prove previous acts or words of the accused to show his estranged feelings of enmity towards the deceased, and that is evidence not merely of the malicious mind with which he killed the deceased, but of the fact that he killed him. You can give in evidence the enmity of the accused towards the deceased to prove that the accused took the deceased's life."
"… medical evidence was adduced to show the severity of the fatal injury and also to show that this very young child had on earlier occasions sustained injuries of a kind which were unlikely to have been sustained accidentally. The earlier injuries were also relevant as tending to show that right up to the time of the fatal injury the child would have been in some pain, and so more liable to be fractious than a normal healthy baby. The prosecution was then, in our judgement, entitled to lead evidence to show how on other occasions the appellant reacted to the crying baby, so that they could invite the jury to infer that on the critical occasion the appellant was so irritated that he resorted to gross violence. In other words, the evidence now challenged was evidence of motive. It went to the actus reus and the mans rea."
"Persuasively though these submissions are put, we do not accept them. We do not doubt the Pettman principle as elaborated in the commentary to which we have referred, but we think it is important to bear in mind the Law Commission's warning that the label "background evidence" may be a vehicle for smuggling in otherwise inadmissible evidence for less than adequate reasons. Relevance and necessity are the touchstones of the principle. The fact that a man who is not shown to have any tendency to lose his temper and react violently towards human beings becomes frustrated with the violent towards inanimate object is, we think, irrelevant. Those of us who are ham-fisted or over ambitious DIY enthusiasts would be horrified to learn that frustration in this difficult field of endeavour could be used against us. By the same token it was not necessary for the jury to know about this. It was prejudicial and could only have diverted their attention from the very serious issue which they had to try. Nor could it be said that the case was incomplete or incomprehensible without the admission of this evidence. So we conclude that the judge should not have admitted it at the time he did."
The Evidence
"[During the 18 months or so together in Derby] he was prescribed something for his head because he was a paranoid schizophrenic, I can't remember what they were called. They were sort of like yellow tablets, I can't remember what the hell they were called … He was supposed to take it like three times a day.
…
I remember there was a couple of times he didn't. It was like when he came down to my dad's. I never saw him with any of his medication on him when he come down to my dad's.
Q. How was he when he did not take his medication?
A. Sometimes he would be aggressive and shout, a lot of shouting.
Q. For any reason?
A. Well, just over little things like, if I was saying something to Shane or saying something to Shane that he didn't like, he say, 'don't say that to him', or just something, you know, small that would annoy him.
Q. Would that stay at shouting or would he be violent or just shouting?
A. Just shouting, he was never violent.
Q. When he would go like this, who was it to? Who would be on the receiving end of this?
A. Sometimes it would (inaudible), most of the time it would be me because if I was like shouting at Shane because I was like tired and that, and he would be like "Don't be like that with him, he's only a baby". You know because sometimes I would be getting up early in the mornings with Shane and sometimes because I was tired I would shout at him and Gary would be like, "There's no need to shout at him like that", and well, you know, its not my fault, I'm tired, because I was bringing him up on my own and I was finding it hard and not sleeping very well anyway.
Q. [Describe] His behaviour, how he would be.
A. I don't, I can't describe it, it's you know.
Q. Can you just try and help us a bit?
A. Sometimes, you know, I don't know. Sometimes he was okay, other times he was just, you know, he'd just shout over something, you know what I mean, sometimes he was okay, it's just sometimes he would like, have a go at me if I said something to Shane when he'd done something he shouldn't have. I shouldn't have done that to him like, you know."
Further Submissions
Conclusion on Admissibility
Safety of Conviction
"I am going to turn to another topic, members of the jury, right of the outset of Karen Impey's evidence; and this was her evidence as to how the defendant behaved when not taking his pills"
"Members of the jury, so far as this evidence is concerned, the prosecution say it shows he would be aggressive – that is, to the extent she describes – if not on his pills, and would behave in that way to persons he was close to. This, the prosecution say, may help to explain other evidence in the case, and the case as a whole. I should make clear, members of the jury: that is its sole possible relevance in the case. The medical condition itself is not a matter to take account of.
I have told you what the prosecution say. What do the defence say?
The defence say it adds nothing to the prosecution's case. In the words of counsel in his closing speech, whatever you make of his comments, it simply amounted to shouting, being boisterous and aggressive in words alone; and the witness made clear that it was a response to her.
Members of the jury, whether you find the evidence reliable – because that is a factual matter – and, if you do, how far it helps you in the case (if at all) is entirely a matter for you. If you accept the defence submission, you should ignore it altogether. But if you do find it reliable and significant evidence and a help in explaining other evidence in the case, there are important matters to bear in mind. You should not conclude that the defendant is guilty just because of this evidence. This evidence does not of itself mean that he committed the fatal act; and it is important that you put the evidence in its proper context and assess it in the light of the other evidence in the case.
Having dealt with her evidence, so far as that is concerned, in a separate category, let us look at her evidence generally in the case."
Consistent with his direction that the medical condition itself was not a matter to take account of, the judge did not mention that condition when summarising the evidence of the doctor about his examination of the appellant following arrest. The judge correctly directed the jury that they should not take account of the medical condition and we do not doubt that they followed that direction.
Conclusion