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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Lewis & Ors, R v [2010] EWCA Crim 496 (17 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/496.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 496 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CARDIFF
Mr. Justice Wyn Williams
T20077497
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SILBER
and
MR JUSTICE KENNETH PARKER
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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RHYS THOMAS LEWIS LEE JAMES WARD MARK DAVID COOK |
Appellants |
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Mr. Gerard Elias Q.C. for the second appellant
Mr. Cook in person
Mr. John Charles Rees Q.C. for the respondent
Hearing dates : 4th February 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
Background
Count 1: Murder of Ryan Edwards;
Count 2: Causing grievous bodily harm with intent to Ricky Williams;
Count 3: Causing grievous bodily harm to Ricky Williams (alternative);
Count 4: Attempting to cause grievous bodily harm with intent to Ashley Evans;
Count 5: Attempting to cause grievous bodily harm with intent to Mark Kilnan;
Count 6: Violent disorder.
The appeals and applications
(a) Count 1, murder and manslaughter
(i) The evidence
(ii) Joint enterprise
(iii) The judge's direction
(iv) Inconsistency – Lewis and Cook
(v) Inconsistency - Ward
"When an appellant seeks to persuade this Court as his ground of appeal that the jury has returned a repugnant or inconsistent verdict, the burden is plainly on him. He must satisfy the court that the two verdicts cannot stand together, meaning thereby that no reasonable jury who had applied their mind properly to the facts in the case could have arrived at the conclusion, and once one assumes that they were an unreasonable jury, or that they could not have reasonably come to the conclusion, then the convictions cannot stand. But the burden is on the defence to establish that."
The court formally approved and adopted that as a correct statement of the law. Having done so it was satisfied that no reasonable jury who had applied their minds properly to the facts in the case could have arrived at the two differing conclusions and therefore held that the conviction was unsafe.
"By their verdict of guilty on the count of driving at a dangerous speed it is plain that the jury did reach the view that the speed was dangerous, and it is also plain by their verdict that on the broad issue of who was telling the truth the jury preferred, and indeed accepted, the evidence of the police officer, at least so far as that evidence was concerned with the speed at which the car was being driven.
As a matter of common sense and justice the jury might seem to have reached a very reasonable conclusion. They brought in a verdict of guilty of dangerous speed. They felt, or this is a fair interpretation of what they may well have felt, that really in those circumstances it was quite unnecessary, and perhaps indeed unfair, to bring in a verdict of guilty of driving in a dangerous manner since that verdict added nothing to the guilt of the appellant, who in their view was to blame for driving too fast. Nevertheless, as Mr Levene has submitted, those verdicts are as a matter of legal logic inconsistent."
"Mr Rylance for the Crown in the course of some very helpful observations pointed out that, though the legal logic of the matter is that these verdicts are inconsistent, the practical common sense of the jury in reaching the verdict that they did reveals no inconsistency in approach, but rather reflects the way in which the case for the Crown had been presented to them. He reminded the court that the jury might well have seen this case as consisting of two parts, linked of course, but nevertheless capable of being assessed separately. One part was the dangerous driving in coming suddenly without warning out of a minor road on to a major road, in overtaking at the brow of a hill and in zigzagging. The other part was the continuous high speed to which the officer spoke and which the officer said in his opinion was a dangerous speed. The jury may well have thought that it sufficed, for the reasons we have indicated, to bring in a verdict of guilty to the dangerous speed and to reach no final conclusion on the other incidents of the driving but to give the defendant the benefit of an acquittal there.
Inconsistent? Yes, in law. Unsafe, unsatisfactory or lacking in common sense? No, a perfectly understandable approach, in the view of this court. This is not a puzzling case. In Reg. v Drury (1971) 56 Cr. App. R. 104 the court was puzzled. In this case we are not; and certainly the existence of a formal logical inconsistency does not lead us to doubt the safety of the verdict on speed.
At the end of the day it is for this court to make up its mind under section 2 of the Criminal Appeal Act 1968 whether the verdict of guilty in all the circumstances was safe and satisfactory. We have reached the unhesitating conclusion that, although it is formally inconsistent with the verdict of not guilty on driving in a dangerous manner, it is nevertheless a safe, satisfactory and sensible verdict once the jury had decided that they preferred the evidence of the police officer to the evidence called for the defence."
"The general rule in this Court is that where the jury convict on one count but acquit on another, this Court will quash the conviction on grounds of inconsistency if, and only if, the conclusion reached by the jury is one at which no reasonable jury who had applied their minds properly to the facts of the cause could arrive. (See the unreported decision of Devlin J. in Stone [1955] Crim.L.R. 120 C.C.A., formally adopted by this Court in Durante (1972) 56 Cr. App. Rep. 708, 714, [1972] 1 W.L.R. 1612, 1617E). But in the case of Trundell (unreported, June 28, 1991) it was emphasised that the fact that two verdicts were shown to be logically inconsistent might not by itself be a reason for quashing a verdict unless the only explanation for the inconsistency must or might be that the jury was confused and/or adopted the wrong approach, thus making the verdict complained of unsafe.
In this case, these verdicts were clearly inconsistent. Might the reason for that have been that the jury was confused and/or adopted the wrong approach? The appellant submits that that might have been the case. The submission is that as the only basis for acquittal on the affray charge is that the appellant was not acting unlawfully because he was acting in self-defence, so the jury must have believed that self-defence only reduced murder to manslaughter, rather than offering a complete defence.
The appellant has not satisfied us that that is a possibility. The jury here were trying the most serious crime of the calendar. Central to that was self-defence. They had had the direction on self-defence three times, put in the clearest terms. To emphasise the point, the last time was in the passage last quoted above – a plain and unambiguous answer to the jury's specific question. It is inconceivable that they misunderstood it.
The matter can be approached in another way by testing that conclusion against what other explanations there may be. Here, this jury, having taken time, acquitted of murder and convicted of manslaughter. They could justifiably have felt that they had then reached the only important decision in this case and that all that followed, namely count 2 affray, was academic — as in reality it was. A consecutive sentence would have been wrong as all arose out of the same incident. We regard the acquittal on the relatively minor charge of affray as reflecting no more than that. Certainly that acquittal goes no way to persuading us that this jury misunderstood the main issue on the murder charge. To make such a finding on so slight a basis would be an insult to the jury."
(vi) Cook – other grounds
(b) Count 4, Attempting to cause grievous bodily harm to Evans
" . . . typically involves a group of people who may well be shouting, struggling, threatening, waving weapons, throwing objects, exchanging and threatening blows and so on. Again, typically it involves a continuous course of conduct, the criminal character of which depends on the general nature and effect of the conduct as a whole and not on particular incidents and events which may take place in the course of it. Where reliance is placed on such a continuous course of conduct it is not necessary for the Crown to identify and prove particular incidents."
"Different considerations may, however, arise where the conduct which is alleged to constitute an affray is not continuous but falls into separate sequences. The character of the conduct relied on in each sequence may in such a case be quite different and so may the effect on persons who are (or might hypothetically be) present at the scene. The possibility then arises that half the jury may be persuaded that the first sequence amounted to an affray and the second did not, and the other half of the jury may be persuaded that the second sequence amounted to an affray and the first did not. The result would then be that there was no unanimous jury verdict in support of conviction based on either sequence."
(c) Sentence