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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Reid, R v [2010] EWCA Crim 1478 (16 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1478.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1478 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WILKIE
HIS HONOUR JUDGE LORAINE-SMITH
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CRIMINAL DIVISION)
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R E G I N A | ||
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JASON REID |
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Mr P Lodder QC and Mr C Shroff appeared on behalf of the Crown
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"The trial process is a remarkably robust and flexible instrument, and, in my judgment, it would be wrong to press on urgently to the finishing line of the trial knowing that this issue had been flagged up as something of significance for
Mr Tedman and, indeed, potentially, for Mr Reid.
There is a distinction to be drawn between this stage of the trial and a consideration of such an application post-trial, because we have not reached the finishing line; we can allow extra time in the trial to investigate this. We do not have the same public policy considerations that perhaps apply to the Court of Appeal when they might be confronted with someone who has lost the first leg and wants a replay and wants to try and change things in his favour. We have not got to that stage yet; and that is the fundamental difference.
It seems to me, the trial process being as robust and flexible as it is, that this significant issue can and should be explored before the jury. "
"1. The Judge has a discretionary power to allow the recall of a witness or a defendant at any stage of the trial subsequent to his initial evidence and prior to the summing up for the putting of such questions as the exigencies of justice require – see Sullivan [1922] 16 Cr. App. R.ep 121 and McKenna 40 Cr. App. R.ep 65.
2. Once a defendant has made himself a witness, he is liable, like any other witness, to be recalled for the purpose of answering such questions as the judge permits to be put to him.
3. A judge will permit a defendant to be recalled only to deal with matters which have arisen since he gave evidence if he could not reasonably have anticipated them and if it appears to be in the interests of justice that he should be recalled.
4. A judge should never permit a defendant to be recalled so that he may resile from evidence already given and advance a new version of events where that version was available to him when he was first in the witness box.
"51. ... Mr Davis submits that the decision was wrong, essentially on the basis that the interests of justice required that once Parveen had fully appreciated the implications of Ikram's evidence, she had been moved to tell the truth, and should be allowed to do so.
52. Again, we disagree. Although the defendant cannot be deprived of the opportunity to give evidence in her own defence, and to advance whatever case she wishes, the opportunity to give her full and complete account of relevant events is only available once. It is difficult to imagine circumstances – unless bizarre in the extreme - in which the defendant should be granted the privilege of giving evidence twice in order to advance contradictory defences at the same trial. Naturally, a judge may be inclined, as a matter of discretion and in the interest of justice, to allow a defendant to be recalled to clarify some feature of his evidence or to address a possible source of misunderstanding, or for example, to allow the first defendant, faced with new allegations by the second defendant which for one reason or another were not put to him when he was cross-examined, to be given the opportunity to answer such allegations. However the defendant cannot seek to be recalled after the conclusion of the evidence of the other defendant, or indeed after the close of the evidence, in order to give evidence in support of a new defence which contradicts the evidence he has already given. That would normally constitute an abuse of process.
53. In R v Hakala [2002] Cr. L.R578, EWCA Crim 730, addressing a reference by the Criminal Cases Review Commission, this court was in effect invited to assume that the appellant's evidence at trial 'was perjured, to avoid the potential tactical disadvantage created by his previous conviction'. The Court observed:
'the trial process is not a tactical game. Under the rules which govern every trial at any given stage in the evolution of the criminal justice process, forensic steps taken by one side, or the other, carry forensic consequences. None of the tactical decisions appropriate to meet contemporary rules are predicated on the basis that any witness, and in particular any defendant who chooses to exercise his right to give evidence, is somehow entitled to depart from the fundamental requirement that his evidence should be truthful evidence. As a corollary, the opportunity for the defendant to give his evidence is provided at his trial, and that is where he must take it. It follows that this court will only permit an appellant to present a factual case inconsistent with his instructions and sworn testimony at the trial at which he was convicted in the most exceptional circumstances.'
54. The situation here was analogous. Parveen gave one account of the facts: she was not permitted to give a second, contradictory account. Hakala gave one account at trial: the court was being invited to admit a contradictory account at the hearing of his appeal. The attention of the judge, and our attention, was drawn to R v Cook [2005] EWCA Crim 2011 where a situation indistinguishable from the present arose. Smith LJ summarised the principles relating to the discretionary power of the judge to allow the recall of a witness or a defendant after the conclusion of his evidence, and before the summing up, adding:
'3. A judge will permit a defendant to be recalled only to deal with matters which have arisen since he gave evidence if he could not reasonably have anticipated them and if it appears to be in the interests of justice that he should be recalled.
4. A judge should never permit a defendant to be recalled so that he may resile from evidence already given and advance a new version of events where that version was available to him when he was first in the witness box.'
55. With one small reservation, we respectfully agree. In the light of Hakala, and similar cases to which the attention of the Court was not apparently drawn, we doubt whether the judicial discretion identified in the passage cited in Cook can be subject to quite such an absolute and immutable fetter. Never is a long time, and when the exercise of a judicial discretion in a criminal trial is under consideration, "never say never" is a valuable working principle. That is what the court had in mind in Hakala when expressing itself as it did on the question whether a defendant should be allowed, in the language used in argument before us, a second bite at the cherry. In short, although like the court in Cook, we cannot presently imagine of a situation in which the interests of justice would permit a defendant to be recalled at his own trial, to advance a new account of the facts, contradicting his earlier evidence, it is impossible to be sure that a situation in which the interests of justice may require such an unusual course could never arise. However that may be, it certainly did not arise in this one."