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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Harvey v R. [2009] EWCA Crim 469 (18 March 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2009/469.html Cite as: [2009] EWCA Crim 469 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BLACKFRIARS CROWN COURT
His Honour Judge Hillen QC
T20070523
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HEDLEY
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RUSSELL, RECORDER OF PRESTON
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Nadia Anne Harvey |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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The Crown |
Respondent |
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Miss R Harris (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Crown
Hearing date: 11th February 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moses :
"At the last stage my arms were being held and my legs were freer, but I couldn't lift them. Malika was on top of me with her hair covering my face. I was on my back on the ground."
She felt pressure on her chest and abdomen, she was finding it difficult to breathe, she was trying to wriggle and it was at that stage she bit the complainant's nose to get the complainant off her; it had the desired effect.
"…if you are sure that the accused, Nadia Harvey, was either the aggressor or had deliberately provoked the attack upon her by words and actions with the intention of assaulting the alleged victim, then self-defence does not arise unless the violence offered by the victim, or in this case the group to which she belonged, was or may have been so out of proportion to the accused aggressor's attack or the provocative words and actions that she honestly believed she was in immediate danger and had no other means of escape.
The reason for the words following 'unless' is because in that case she would not have continued to be the aggressor. To use Ms Zentler-Munro's words that she used during her speech: 'the tables would have been turned'."
"Were you to think that she did or may have believed honestly that it was necessary to use force to defend herself then you ask yourself a second question, which is whether the type and amount of force she used was reasonable.
A person who is under attack may react on the spur of the moment and cannot be expected to work out exactly how much force she needs to defend herself."
He then gave the conventional extreme example of shooting someone who had raised their fist and continued:-
"You have got to ask yourselves therefore if whether the type and amount of force she used was reasonable. If she goes over the top and uses force out of all proportion to the anticipated attack on her or more force than is really necessary to defend herself then the force would not be reasonable, and in making that judgment, as I say I have given you an extreme example, you will not be surprised to know that juries have to deal with situations where it is not so extreme, so maybe that judgment, coming from that decision, you have got to take into account the nature of the attacking; you find it to be on her, and what she actually did.
If you are sure that the force that she used was unreasonable then she cannot be acting in lawful self-defence but if it was or may have been reasonable she would be entitled to be acquitted."
"The prosecution say that she (the defendant) was the aggressor and knew that she did not need to resort to violence. They say that she did not honestly believe that it was necessary to use force to defend herself and that the reasonableness of the force does not arise. But the prosecution say that if you thought it was or might be the case that she believed honestly that it was necessary to use force to defend herself, then the biting of the alleged victim's nose with such force as to cause the injuries you can in the photograph, was disproportionate to the level of attack upon her, which consisted, they say, of hair-pulling and holding at the time of the bite, and therefore they say self-defence, if you have got to this question, is disproved because as Mr Coxhill opined to you a few days ago that the accused, Miss Nadia Harvey, went over the top.
On the other hand, the defence say that at the point at which she bit Malika Assaouci she was unable to move her arms, she tried but failed to move her legs, she could not breathe and was under attack. She believed not only by the alleged victim, Malika Assaouci, but also by the large group of Malika Assaouci's friends, and, the defence say, not being able to judge the precise degree of force necessary, did the only thing she could and bit the alleged victim.
If you are sure the force she used was unreasonable then she cannot have been acting in lawful self-defence, but if it was or may have been reasonable she is entitled to be acquitted." (Our emphasis).
"It is not accurate to say that a person who kills someone in a quarrel which he himself started, by provoking it, or entering into it willingly, cannot plead self-defence if his victim then retaliates. The question whether the plea of self-defence is available depends, in a case of that kind, on whether the retaliation is such that the accused is entitled then to defend himself. That depends on whether the violence offered by the victim was so out of proportion to the accused's own actings as to give rise to the reasonable apprehension that he was in immediate danger from which he had no other means of escape, and whether the violence which he then used was no more than was necessary to preserve his own life or protect himself from serious injury."
"There may be a temptation whenever it is open to a jury to conclude that the defendant went to an incident out of revenge or was the aggressor to direct the jury that if they reached that conclusion then self-defence cannot avail the defendant. If the judge wishes to give a direction along these lines the facts will usually require something rather more sophisticated where the possibility exists that the initial aggression may have resulted in a response by the victim which is so out of proportion to that aggression as to give rise to an honest belief in the aggressor that it was necessary for him to defend himself and the amount of force that he used was reasonable." (§21)
No reference to that authority or to the situation in which the tables are turned upon an initial aggressor was to be found in the Crown Court Bench Book available to the judge. Indeed, there is no reference in the current guidance either to Rashford or to Burns.
"…must consider whether the defendant honestly believed she had to defend herself and whether her response was reasonable. If the Crown has made you sure that she was the initial aggressor and that she remained the aggressor throughout, then you may think that she did not honestly believe she needed to defend herself."
She bases that suggestion on Dyson LJ's judgment in Rashford at §21. In that case, the judge's error, which did not affect the safety of the verdict, lay in failing to direct the jury that they could only reject the defence assertion that he honestly believed that it was necessary to defend himself if they concluded that he was the aggressor throughout.
"The directions must be tailored to the factual dispute."
The directions in law needed do no more than to guide the jury as to what the essential factual dispute was and the conclusions to be drawn from the different findings open to them on the evidence.