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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 >> Malcolm, R v [2014] EWCA Crim 2508 (18 November 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2014/2508.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Crim 2508 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE STEWART
RECORDER OF LEEDS
(HIS HONOUR JUDGE COLLIER QC)
(Sitting as a Judge of the CACD)
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R E G I N A | ||
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GEORGE MALCOLM |
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Mr J Bearman appeared on behalf of the Crown
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LORD JUSTICE BEAN:
"Having carefully considered the evidence in front of all of us we are unable to find an agreement at this stage. We are in a 8 to 4 and would be grateful if you could guide us to the next step."
"I am going to have to say something to them to try help them... I am not going to ask them what they want me to say because they obviously don't know... But I am looking exceptionally at the Watson direction. I know that is a rare thing. It is the direction about obviously having your own views but collective agreement and give or take."
The discussion proceeded:
MISS AYLING: As I understand the Watson direction, it has variously been approved and disapproved and I believe more recently disapproved.
JUDGE ADER: Well, do you want some time to think about that before I give the jury --
MISS AYLING: I would like time to think about that because I have something in the back of my mind that it has recently been disapproved but I think there was something to suggest it had been reapproved."
"I think, although they have been at it sometime today, because of the nature of the case, we might be able to help them by giving them a little more time. Certainly, I think Monday would be the limit of a 'little bit more time' but I think a bit more time is what they need."
"Maybe I should just send them out. The only thing is that the note that they sent just before they were sent home said, 'Can you give us further guidance?' or, 'Guide us to the next step,' I think it was... So to that extent the jury are asking for help. And I don't know whether that counts as exceptional circumstances, may be coupling it with the length of time they have been in retirement, which his now quite a long time..."
"I think in the light of what you tell me from the authority of Arthur, if you were against the giving of such a Watson direction I would hesitate to do so and certainly not do it now but I think it's slightly unkind to the jury who were looking for help if I simply say, 'Go on and consider your verdict'. They are looking for me to say something."
"I haven't read the whole authority because I haven't had enough time but it doesn't surprise me that Pitchford LJ undertakes a careful analysis of all the authorities, that is entirely in keeping with what one has to expect of him, but it does kind of lead the bus hanging on the precipice as in the famous film as to whether you should give it or not. Exceptional circumstances -- every case is exceptional. There is no definition of what means."
"I think the request for help is unusual. Whether it is exceptional, I suppose I can say for my own experience it is. They normally say, 'We can't agree'. They haven't said that, they have said, 'We aren't in agreement. Can you help us and take us to next it step?' ... I think I am inclined to try and avoid the consequences that we know of, just accepting a disagreement which nobody wants and to achieve that the only step that I can take to guide them at all is to give them the Watson direction. I think this case -- it's an exceptional case in terms of its evidence but then many cases are. Every case is unique and this is a very unusual case, even of its type and it seems to me that if the jury are asking for help and I do have something I can say then I am inclined to do it, in the exercise of my discretion."
"That is as much as I am able to say to you by way of answer to your question and request for assistance."
(i) The learned judge erred in law in that the jury having sent a note they could not agree on the verdicts, the learned judge gave a Watson direction. Two-and-a-half hours later the jury delivered a guilty verdict on count 1 by a majority of 11 to 1, the verdict on the three other counts was not guilty.(ii)Given the evidence in the case such a finding by the jury was perverse and thus the conviction was unsafe.
"It was obvious to everyone in the court that this was a case of who the jury believed. There was no compromise about the way the findings of fact could be made. The allegations by [M] were of a continuing course of conduct. The defendant denied them. The allegations of all forms of sexual activity crossed over the years of [M's] ages 12 to 16."
"….Once the jury is in retirement it is of the first importance that no individual juror should feel under any compulsion or pressure to conform with the views of the majority if to do so would compromise their conscience and, therefore, their oath. Furthermore, the jury as a whole, despite the heavy cost and inconvenience of a re-trial, should not feel under any pressure to return a verdict if, conscientiously, they are not unanimous or cannot reach the required majority.... Exceptional circumstances may arise that will require the trial judge to deal with the exigencies of the moment but, in general, there is no occasion to make exhortations to the jury to arrive at a verdict. This is why the Watson direction is rarely given by trial judges and, when it is, only as a last resort following a prolonged retirement after the majority verdict direction has been given."
"...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."