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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Higgins & Anor v The Crown [2010] EWCA Crim 308 (24 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/308.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 308 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CHELMSFORD
HHJ BALL QC
T20097016
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MACKAY
and
MR JUSTICE GRIFFITH WILLIAMS
____________________
Craig John Higgins and Richard Michael Phillip Guy |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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The Crown |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr J A Lyons for Richard Guy
Mr R J Livingston for the The Crown
Hearing date: 23 February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
Mr Bryan [for Higgins] in cross examination "I am going to suggest to you that everything that happened that night to you was with your consent and with your participation" – answer "that is not true". Question – "and this is why you told the police through your father that it was a case of a lost wallet and the reason you went to the bank machine and then to the shop is because when you were in the bowling alley you were sharing cocaine with Richard and Craig at the alley". Answer "that is not true, I don't do drugs" – "and you decided a bit later on that you would like some more" – "that is not true" – he answered. The next question – "and they told you it was going to cost £400 and you agreed to go to a bank machine to get the money". Answer "that is not true, the police did a hair sample" "What" asked Mr Bryan – "the police did a hair sample to see whether I had done any drugs that night". "Well" said Mr Bryan and there was a pause, "you have given some very different descriptions of what took place that night haven't you" – "no he answered" and then moved on to a different topic. That is it, verbatim. That is the only passage of evidence in this case concerning hair samples in respect of the issue of drugs.
"Clive Sparton junior said he had had a drug test, who requested it, when was this done, what were the results".
Before I forget, I will do some housekeeping as well. The note that one of you sent yesterday about the hair sample, I have been provided with a transcript of a little piece of evidence that touched on that. It occurred during Mr Bryan's cross-examination of Clive Sparton, and Mr Bryan was suggesting to Clive that at the bowling alley he was sharing cocaine with the two defendants.
Clive said: "That's not true. I don't do drugs."
From Mr Bryan: "You decided a bit later on that you would like some more."
Answer: "That's not true."
Question: "And they told you it was going to cost £400, and you agreed to go to a bank machine to get the money."
Answer: "That's not true. The police did a hair sample."
"What?"
"The police did a hair sample to see whether I done any drugs that night."
That was the passage in which he referred to the hair and the drug sample, clearly indicating -- although there is no further evidence on the point -- clearly indicating (a) that he does not do drugs and (b) they checked his hair to deal with that point.
That is the totality of the evidence that you have on it. Whether you draw the inference that what he is saying there, is asserting there, is that, when they tested it, it proved negative for drugs, that might be what you read into it; but that is all you have to go on.
Now before I remind you of the piece of evidence in the case about that, before I remind you of that let me just prefix it by this observation – disregard everything that has been previously said about this piece of evidence, so wipe the slate clean in terms of any comment or observation or any erroneous reaction that was earlier given to you.
What I propose doing now is quite simply unvarnished reading to you the passage of evidence in which this topic arose. The only passage of evidence in the entire case and what you make of this piece of evidence is entirely a matter for you.
That is the only passage of evidence in this case concerning hair samples in respect of the issue of drugs.
You have heard evidence, and you have heard quite extensive evidence, of the bad character (as the lawyers call it) of these two defendants, in contradistinction to Clive Sparton, who you know is not of bad character, has not been taken before the courts and prosecuted for any sort of crime.
What is the role of bad character in a case such as this? Well, you have got two contrasting accounts. You have the defendants, each in turn, through their lawyers and, in Mr Higgins's case, through him giving evidence himself, saying that Clive Sparton Jnr is telling a pack of lies; he is a perjurer; he is framing these two innocent defendants -- it seems to boil down to because he wants to get money back from the building society which he could not get back if he had simply lost his card with the PIN number in the wallet; and so Clive Sparton, although he has got no previous convictions, is telling a pack of lies about these two defendants and what they have done. He has been subject, as I say, to close scrutiny and attack.
In a situation such as that, a court of law will say: well, hang on a moment, let us have a certain levelness of the playing field here. If you are making these attacks against this witness, let us know something about the person that is making the attack, because it may assist you in forming conclusions about the credibility of the attack, the credibility that attaches to the person that is making all these accusations of dishonesty and perjury.
The people who are making these accusations of dishonesty and perjury have, by any stretch of the imagination, a miserable record. They have been before the courts, although now still very young, many, many times. They are not people who have learned their lesson from the salutary experience of being taken to court, but they have come back time and again. It is not an exaggeration. Richard Guy has been taken to court, that is to say, he has been caught offending and they have decided to prosecute him, and they have taken him to court on 15 separate occasions by the age of 22. In the case of Craig Higgins, he has been caught offending on many, many occasions and his offending has resulted in nine court appearances.
You know the sorts of things that they have been involved in. In the case of Richard Guy: stealing, assault, arson, burglary and theft, criminal damage, disorderly behaviour, criminal damage, aggravated vehicle taking, possessing cannabis, using vehicles improperly, attempted theft, assault, aggravated vehicle taking, attempted arson, taking without consent, stealing from a vehicle, interfering with a vehicle, criminal damage, criminal damage, stealing a bicycle, stealing, stealing, and so on. That is him. It tells you something about him.
Craig Higgins: handling stolen goods, fraudulently using an Excise licence, disorderly behaviour, fraudulent use of an Excise licence and other driving matters, criminal damage, disorderly behaviour, assaulting a constable, disorderly behaviour, assault, disorderly behaviour, disorderly behaviour, pursuing a course of conduct amounting to harassment, and so on.
So, you might think long and hard before acting upon the word of someone like that or the accusations made through their counsel of someone like that.
But there is an important caveat. It must always be understood in a criminal trial that the mere fact that someone has come this way before and has got previous convictions does not make them guilty of the crime before the court. However dim a view you may have of them and however reluctant you might be to accept a single word they say, you do not convict someone with a bad record unless the evidence in the instant case makes you sure of their guilt. (Underlining added)
61. Mr Vere-Hodge [for Taylor] referred us to the case of Goodman (CACD, Dyson LJ, Silber J and HHJ Ann Goddard QC) unreported, 12 July 2002 (No 200005645/Z4). In that case the court held that the summing-up was "extremely unbalanced" and the appellant did not have a fair trial. The court said:
"16. ... The references to 'you may think' and 'it is a matter for you' were no more than formulaic expressions which did not touch the substance of what the judge was saying and how that would have been understood by the jury. It seems to us that this summing-up was so unbalanced and unfair that the appellant did not receive a fair trial."
62. ... it is now accepted that judges should not express their own views on contentious issues. It is fairer to summarise to the jury the rival arguments of the prosecution and the defence rather than use the "formulaic expressions" of "you may think" and "it is a matter for you". It avoids the risk of an unbalanced summing-up and, we add, the costs associated with an appeal and a possible setting aside of the conviction. We should also not forget the strain which an appeal can impose in this kind of case on the victim's family and friends.
Well if ... he didn't go in the witness box because he was scared of being exposed by cross examination then plainly it is something you could put into the scales against him but you would not convict him wholly or mainly on the strength of that, it is just a factor which you could put in the scales as some slight support for the crown's case but you would not draw an adverse conclusion from somebody not giving evidence unless you thought it was fair or proper and also you would not hold it against him unless you were satisfied that the prosecution's case was so strong that it required an answer and secondly that the only reason he had not got an answer was because he feared cross examination would expose the weaknesses in his side of the story, such as it is. (Underlining added)