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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> McGrory, R. v [2013] EWCA Crim 2336 (07 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/2336.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 2336 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(SIR BRIAN LEVESON)
MR JUSTICE ROYCE
SIR DAVID MADDISON
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REGINA |
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v |
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JOHN FAIRWEATHER MCGRORY |
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"Members of the jury, you heard about that statement and its contents because the prosecution contend that it is relevant to an issue between the prosecution and the defence as to whether ... the defendant had a propensity, that is a tendency to resort to strangling her and the prosecution submit that on this occasion in January he was resorting again in effect to his usual behaviour rather than it being as a result of the loss of control. The purpose of this evidence is not to generate prejudice against the defendant and you must guard against that. You know and I have reminded you that the defendant denies that he ever took hold of her throat in a violent way at all and says that her statement about these matters is untrue. The statement was made to a police officer but you know that the contents of it have never been tested, there has been no trial at which it has been subjected to cross-examination and of course there has been no opportunity to observe Mrs McGrory, to observe her demeanour in speaking about these matters. The defendant was never convicted of any of those matters and indeed he was never charged with any of them and there is no other evidence that supports what Mrs McGrory says. You also know what that Mr McGrory made a statement on the 23rd September to a police officer, so presumably when Mrs McGrory called the police on that day."
The judge went on to remind the jury of the account which the applicant gave at that time, in essence that she had gone for him and he had restrained her, and continued:
"If you are not sure that the defendant behaved towards Mrs McGrory as she described in that statement, strangling her, then you will ignore what she said. No propensity by the defendant to behave in that way would have been proved and you should therefore ignore, as I say, what she said about those matters. It is only if you are sure that what she said is true and accurate could you find that he did have some propensity. If he did, it will be for you to decide what assistance that gives you in deciding the issue as to whether he did lose control on this occasion, or whether it was resorting to his usual behaviour without losing control. Even if you were sure, you would have to bear in mind that the events referred to in the statement of 2005 were a very long time ago and even if you accept the defendant had a tendency to act in that way, when he had not lost control in the past, it does not follow that he did not lose control on this occasion. The defence submit on this, that you could not be sure that these events in the statement ever happened for the reasons I have just stated and he has always right from the very start denied any such behaviour and furthermore it is submitted by Mr Raggatt, that the occasions upon which the statement refers to the defendant allegedly behaving in that way are all to do with domestic incidents which in the context of this case are relatively minor as being the cause for those and cannot be said to have been therefore part of the crisis of 2005."
"And they [that is the prosecution] submit to you that if you were sure he strangled her in the past, and you know the defendant denies that he did and the defence say you could not be sure he ever did, that if you were sure that he did, at a time when he was not depressed, then the prosecution submit that there is a propensity for the defendant to strangle her, that is to control her, which had nothing to do with depression."
"The learned Judge failed to properly or otherwise adequately direct the jury as to the approach that they should take to evidence of the Applicant's mental health at the time of this killing as it might affect or support his defence of 'Loss of Control' pursuant to sections 54 and 55 of The Coroner and Justice Act 2009. It is respectfully submitted that the summing-up contains no direction that adequately deals with this matter which said failure renders fundamentally flawed in this respect."
"The learned Judge further mis-directed the jury as to the proper meaning and scope of the defence of 'Loss of Control' by importing into her directions concepts that were or appear to have been based upon the law as it related to the former - and now entirely abolished - defence of 'provocation' in that she purported to define this defence in terms that are not included anywhere in the statutory definition and that were therefore inherently confusing and otiose to a proper consideration of the issues raised by it."
"Self-control is the same thing as self restraint. It is a person's ability to resist an impulse or an urge to act. Loss of control is something more than mere anger. A defendant loses his self control if his ability to restrain himself was so overwhelmed that he could not resist the impulse to attack. In other words he was no longer master of his actions."
"A person of D's sex and age, with a normal degree of tolerance and self restraint and in the circumstances of D might have reacted in the same or in similar way to D."
"The law expects us to exercise self restraint in the face of violence and when things are said and done which are of an extremely grave character and causes us to have a justifiable sense of being seriously wronged, but the law acknowledges that there may be circumstance in which any man might react, and you will have to consider whether a man with a normal degree of tolerance and self restraint but in the defendant's circumstances might have reacted in the same or a similar way to the manner he did ie to strangle her with a ligature and asphyxiate her."
"Throughout her summing up the learned Judge entirely failed to give the jury any proper or adequate guidance as to the inter relationship between the two defences that fell to be considered and how to approach the medical evidence in the case as it impacted upon each of them separately.
Given the difference in the burden and standard of proof as far as each is concerned and upon whom it lay in each instance this too is a fundamental flaw in her approach to the case."