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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Scully, R. v [2013] EWCA Crim 2288 (05 December 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/2288.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 2288 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Guildford Crown Court
His Honour Judge Moss
T20127197
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE COX DBE
and
MRS JUSTICE SLADE DBE
____________________
Regina |
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- and - |
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Mark Christopher Scully |
____________________
Miss Ruby Selva (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 19 September 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford :
Introduction
The Facts
The issues and the cases for the prosecution and the defence
Grounds of Appeal against Conviction
Ground 1: the conviction on count 2 is logically inconsistent with the acquittals on counts 1 and 3; and
Ground 2: the verdict is unsafe because the judge gave a "Watson Direction" at the same time as the Majority Direction.
Submissions and discussion
Ground 1: inconsistent verdicts
"In the case of Hunt (1968) 52 Cr.App.R. 580, Lord Parker, the then Lord Chief Justice, cited from the unreported case of Stone which was tried in 1954 and quoted what he described as a useful passage from the judgment of Devlin J. in regard to the approach that the court should adopt in cases of inconsistent verdicts. This is how it reads: "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.
We do not know whether the Court of Appeal has ever previously formally adopted the view expressed there by Devlin J., as he then was, that the burden is upon the appellant to show that verdicts upon different counts are not merely inconsistent, but are so inconsistent as to demand interference by an appellate court. Be that as it may, for our part we are satisfied that it is right and we now formally express our approval of that proposition and adopt it."
"... it would be anomalous that a jury, directed that the facts were for them, that they should consider the charges separately without any obligation to decide all the counts in relation to each complainant the same way, and that they should not convict unless they were quite sure, should then be held to have returned irrational or logically inconsistent verdicts because they took the judge's direction at its face value and gave effect to it.
The cases to which we have referred in our view make quite plain the proper approach. In a case other than the Cilgram type of case (which is in a class of its own), it is ordinarily for an appellant to show a logical inconsistency between the verdicts criticised and then to demonstrate that it is not possible to postulate a legitimate chain of reasoning which could explain the apparent inconsistency. The court will not interfere with the verdict of the jury unless those tests are satisfied."
48 […] we have concluded that these verdicts are logically inconsistent. There is no satisfactory explanation of them which can render them consistent. […] we do not think that a fair-minded jury, having regard to the evidence before them, could reasonably have found both that the incidents in counts 1 and 3 did occur but that the oral sex covered by count 4 did not. We do not say that the jury were bound to find that any of these incidents occurred; plainly that was a matter for them, and in principle they could have been so unimpressed with the evidence from both complainant and appellant that they were not satisfied that they could be sure of anything. But having accepted as true and reliable the complainant's evidence that the incidents in counts 1 and 3 occurred, it would in our view have been perverse for them to reject her evidence that the incident in count 4 occurred, given that the appellant in an admission against interest corroborated her evidence by admitting that it did indeed occur. The perversity of such a finding would in our view cast sufficient doubt as to the jury's approach to the evidence as to render the convictions potentially unsafe.
49 […] In our view no reasonable jury could have concluded that the appellant had a reasonable belief that the complainant was consenting to the oral sex but not the touching of the breasts referred to in count 3. Again, there was no evidential basis for drawing a distinction in this regard between counts 3 and 4. It was not as if the evidence showed that the oral sex in count 4 had occurred some time after the breast touching in count 3. Had that been the case then it might just have been possible to justify an inference that the appellant's reasonable perception of whether the complainant was consenting could have changed in the meantime. But the evidence was that they occurred virtually at the same time. […]
"42. […] Here the various alleged offences are simply different facets or acts in the course of a single sexual encounter. In these circumstances, if the jury are unsure of the complainant's evidence with respect to one count on the grounds that it may be unreliable or lacking credibility, it is likely to be more difficult than it would be with respect to chronologically separate encounters for a jury to be sure that the evidence on the other counts is reliable and credible."
Ground 2: the "Watson" and Majority Directions
Ladies and gentlemen, each of you have taken an oath to return a true verdict according to the evidence, and you must be absolutely true to your oath. That is the strength of the jury system – each of you takes into the jury box with you your individual experience and wisdom and your task is to pool that experience and wisdom, and you do that by giving your views and listening to the views of others. There must necessarily be discussion, argument, and give and take with[in] the scope of your oath, and in that way agreement is reached.
If, unhappily, you cannot reach a unanimous verdict, I am now able to accept from you a majority verdict – that is a verdict with which at least ten of you are agreed. If, unhappily, ten of you cannot reach agreement, then you must say so. Thank you very much.
I invite you to retire and strive to reach a unanimous verdict if you can. Thank you very much.
But can I just remind you of something that I said during the early stages of my summing up to you. Each of you has taken an oath to return a true verdict according to the evidence, and no one must be false to that oath. But you have a duty not only as individuals but collectively to reach verdicts in the case and that is the whole strength of the jury system. Each of you takes into the jury room your individual experience and wisdom, and your task is to pool that experience and wisdom and you do that by the airing of your views and listening to the views of others on the remaining counts with an open mind so that you can consider them, and there must necessarily be discussion and argument and give and take within the scope of that oath, and that is the only way on some occasions in which agreement can be reached.
Now if, unhappily, at the end of the day, unsatisfactory though it will be from everyone's point of view, ten of you cannot reach verdicts on the remaining counts then, of course, you will have to say so, but it is my hope that you will, after further deliberation, be able to return verdicts on the strength of at least ten being in agreement.
In Watson (1988) 87 Cr.App.R. 1, [1988] Q.B. 690, the direction known as the " Walhein direction" was disapproved. In giving the judgment of the Court Lord Lane C.J. said at p. 7 and p. 700 respectively:
"… a jury must be free to deliberate without any form of pressure being imposed upon them, whether by way of promise or of threat or otherwise. They must not be made to feel that it is incumbent upon them to express agreement with a view they do not truly hold simply because it might be inconvenient or tiresome or expensive for the prosecution, the defendant, the victim or the public in general if they do not do so.
Experience has shown that the Walhein direction [see (1952) 36 Cr.App.R. 167], sometimes in its original form, sometimes amended, may contravene that cardinal rule. In some cases the very short time required by the jury to reach a unanimous or majority decision after the Walhein direction shows the impact it must have had on a minority who up to that time had apparently been unmoved by argument. The mere exhortation to listen to the contrary views seems unlikely to have had such a dramatic effect. The suggestion of expense and inconvenience is doubtless a much more potent incentive to agree. Hints that it may be of benefit to the defendant if the jury can only sink their differences may be misleading if, as is usually the case, the minority are for an acquittal. Agreement will in those circumstances mean conviction, continued disagreement will mean at the worst a retrial with the consequent chance of acquittal.
There are occasions when the circumstances will show that the Walhein direction did not impose any pressure on the jury, but the risk that it may do so has convinced us that the time has now come for judges to stop using it in its original form. If it is objectionable as imposing pressure on a jury, it is objectionable at whatever stage it is used, whether during the summing up proper or before or after any majority direction.
In the judgment of this Court there is no reason why a jury should not be directed as follows:
'Each of you has taken an oath to return a true verdict according to the evidence. No one must be false to that oath, but you have a duty not only as individuals but collectively. That is the strength of the jury system. Each of you takes into the jury box with you your individual experience and wisdom. Your task is to pool that experience and wisdom. You do that by giving your views and listening to the views of the others. There must necessarily be discussion, argument and give and take within the scope of your oath. That is the way in which agreement is reached. If, unhappily (10 of) you cannot reach agreement you must say so.'
It is a matter for the discretion of the judge as to whether he gives that direction at all and if so at what stage of the trial. There will usually be no need to do so. Individual variations which alter the sense of the direction as can be seen from the particular appeals which we have heard, are often dangerous and should, if possible, be avoided. Where the words are thought to be necessary or desirable, they are probably best included as part of the summing up or given or repeated after the jury have had time to consider the majority direction"
It is perfectly clear from that judgment and in our experience that there is rarely any need for the " Watson direction" to be given and that when given it should be given either during the summing-up or after the jury have had a reasonable time to consider the majority direction. It should never be combined with the majority direction. Moreover, judges should confine themselves to the precise wording of the " Watson direction" and not add anything to it (see Holt (unreported December 13, 1988)).
However, having carefully considered the terms of the judge's direction in the present case, although obviously it should not have been given with the majority direction and the last sentence of it should have been omitted, we are not persuaded in all the circumstances that this direction would have caused the jury to feel under any kind of pressure. We note particularly the fact that the jury retired after the direction at 12.52 p.m. and did not return until 14.35 p.m. This ground of appeal […] fails. Accordingly this appeal is dismissed.
44. As the decisions to which we have referred demonstrate, if complaint is made about the trial judge's words of explanation, encouragement or exhortation the question for this court is whether the words used were appropriate in the circumstances or carried with them the risk that jurors would feel undue pressure to reach a verdict. If the effect of the judge's direction to the jury is to create a significant risk that the jury or individual jurors may have felt under pressure to compromise their oaths, the verdict is likely to be unsafe. No juror should feel required to compromise their oath in order to fall in with the majority and no jury should feel under pressure to reach a verdict if to do so would require any one of them to compromise their oath. The danger is that all jurors, particularly the minority, will feel pressure to return a verdict unanimously or by an acceptable majority at the expense of conscientious consideration of the evidence. The closer the jury is to unanimity or to an acceptable majority the greater is the pressure to which the minority may feel exposed. As these decisions demonstrate each case must be considered on its own particular facts.
Conclusion on the appeal against conviction
Sentence
The sentencing remarks
Submissions and discussion
"As to sentence, the judge was entitled to form his own view on the evidence overall as to what happened between you and the complainant, consistent with the jury's verdicts, and to conclude that this assault was much more serious than level 3 in the Sentencing Council guideline, with elements of level 1. It is not arguable that your sentence of 5 years 4 months was manifestly excessive. "
Conclusion on the appeal against sentence