![]() |
[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 >> O, J and S, R v [2008] EWCA Crim 463 (06 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/463.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 463 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT READING
HIS HONOUR JUDGE CRITCHLOW
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
and
MR JUSTICE DAVID CLARKE
____________________
R |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
O, J and S |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr M. Parroy, QC and Mr D Maunder for O
Miss T Ayling, QC and Mr F Laird for J
Mr M. Fitton, QC and Mr R Duval for S
Hearing dates : 14th February 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
President of the Queen's Bench Division :
"1. The suggestion that the defendant J returned to the Carterton site one night in a Range Rover that the witness associated with O.
2. The alleged comments made by R to M between 8.30 and 9.30 am 'the next day' to the effect of "They've only gone and done a museum" etc. and any reference to whom he meant by "they" (this evidence is not probative and is inadmissible against O and J in any event).
3. The suggestion that the defendants O and J were involved subsequently in wrapping unknown items in the woods/forest adjacent to the Carterton site.
4. The suggestion that the defendants O and J were involved in loading a transit van with the unknown items.
5. The suggestion that the Transit van broke down and had to be towed back to the site still containing the unknown items.
6. The suggestion that the defendants O and J were involved in unloading the Transit and loading a Jeep/4x4 vehicle with those items, after which the witness saw the jeep go past him loaded "chock-a-block".
7. The alleged conversation with R "a few days later" when he showed Margerrison something and said it would be the "undoing of them" (inadmissible against O and J in any event).
8. Later conversations with or between R and J, around the campfire or elsewhere, where he states "they discussed boxes" and "from what was said some boxes were taken", together with any reference to box(s) getting damaged/wet and being discarded (all inadmissible against O in any event)."
(a) The prosecution's present application is based on what is said to be an inconsistent approach to the case by the judge, and the contrast between his rulings that there was a case to answer and that the continuation of the trial would not represent an abuse of process, and his subsequent decision about the admissibility of Margerrison's evidence. The submission overlooks the importance of the late correction of the date of the Madresfield Court burglary which was made after the conclusion the evidence for the prosecution. If the judge's rulings that the case should continue had been given after the full impact of the corrected information had been assimilated and drawn to his attention, so that they were fully before him when he made his rulings, the Crown's submission would have considerable force. The reality, however, is that their actual and potential significance was not drawn to his attention until after his ruling. As the judge himself recognised, the sequence of these events was most unusual, and unsatisfactory, but that did not absolve him from his duty to give an appropriate ruling when invited to do so. He could not reject well founded submissions on admissibility on the basis that he had already ruled that the case should proceed.
(b) The decision that there was a case to answer was made at a time when it was understood that all Margerrison's evidence would be placed before the jury. The subsequent rulings undoubtedly deprived Margerrison's evidence of virtually all, if not all of its force. The effect was to return the prosecution to the position in which it was placed before Margerrison's evidence became available, when it had taken the principled decision that the evidence was insufficient to justify prosecuting any of these three defendants. In that sense, and for that reason, the prosecution was maintaining a logically consistent position.
(c) To the extent that there was some implicit criticism of the prosecution's good faith when the judge was invited to discharge the jury, we reject it. It is, of course, true that the trial could have proceeded on the basis of the judge's directions that Margerrison's evidence should be disregarded. Without that evidence, the defendants undoubtedly stood a very good chance of acquittal. Indeed the likelihood is that the prosecution would have had to offer no further evidence. In one sense therefore it is true that the prosecution was seeking to deprive the defendants of the benefit of the jury's verdict at the trial. However the submission ignores the further reality, that any such verdict would be based, if the prosecution were correct, on incomplete evidence and in disregard of admissible evidence of which the jury would have been deprived by the judge's incorrect ruling.
Jurisdiction
"It does not follow from the fact that this is an evidentiary ruling that it is not also a ruling which "relates to one or more offences included in the indictment" and thus is within s58 if the Crown is prepared to give the s58(8) agreement that if the appeal fails the Defendant must be acquitted. As a matter of ordinary language this clearly is a ruling which relates to the counts of the indictment. It relates to them because it is a decision about what evidence is admissible to the Crown in its attempt to prove them… there is thus no reason why a single ruling should not qualify both as a s58 ruling in relation to a count on the indictment (assuming the Crown agree to an acquittal if the appeal fails) and also as an evidentiary ruling under s62, in respect of which the right of appeal will be broader if implemented. In the ordinary language of the criminal trial, many rulings made daily by trial judges can properly be described both as relating to counts on the indictment and as being evidentiary."
"(a) following the making of the ruling, it
(i) informs the court that it intends to appeal or
(ii) requests an adjournment to consider whether to appeal, and
(b) if such an adjournment is granted, it informs the court following the adjournment that it intends to appeal"
The Application