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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Styles, R v [2015] EWCA Crim 1619 (13 October 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/1619.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 1619 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Lewes Crown Court
Mr Recorder Morris-Coole and HHJ Scott-Gall
T20137529
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE FLAUX
and
MRS JUSTICE THIRLWALL DBE
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THE CROWN |
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- and - |
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STYLES |
Applicant |
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Copies of this transcript are available from:
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Mr Hepburne-Scott (instructed by Geoff White Solicitors) for the Applicant
Hearing date:17 September 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford:
Introduction
The Facts
:He's fucking made me like this. He fucking done this. He's fucking dead not hurt dead';
When Ms Banks said she would call the police, the appellant sent a text in return:
"calling the police is picking him over me. He acts big so let him be big';
'He's done tonight. I love you. I'm sorry xxxxx'.
Relevant events during the trial
Would you please let us know whether, in English law, the intent to murder, though it may be present in a person's mind for a fleeting second or more, if that person has a change of mind or begin to cool off during the course of their actions, does the intent become cancelled?
Grounds of Appeal against Conviction
Ground 1: "Intention"
When I come to look at the indictment I will be particularly drawing your attention to the offences which require intent. Intent in this case is the whole crux of the case, and it is the intent of the defendant that matters.
Intention bears its ordinary sense and its ordinary usage, it does not require any further definition than that. The intention which is referred to in these counts is his intention at the time of committing the act. It may be that when you come to consider intention you will find that what has happened in the past is relevant. You may find that certain things that have been said or done, certain acts or behaviour leading up even over a period of quite some time assists you in forming a view of this defendant's intention at the particular time.
What is the particular time? It is when he is walking down the London Road with the gun over his shoulder and he is stopped by the police. That intention may have been formed within a very short time of that moment I have just described, or it is an intention that may have built up over time, and the way you approach this, members of the jury, is in various ways. You have the evidence in this case and you look at it in the context of all of the evidence. Do not cherry-pick, you will find some parts are more useful to you than others, but look at it in the context of the whole.
Well, was it coincidence? These are matters that you have to consider, and you may be assisted by looking at any sort of exchanges there had been recently by text or otherwise, between Maddock and the defendant or the defendant and Chelsea. That is the way you approach intention, members of the jury, but also you look at it in a common sense light. Here is a young man who had got a gun licence, been trained in it and everything of that nature, and can you in some way find assistance from that and the circumstances to indicate what his intention was at the time when he walked along that road? He said his intention, he gave thought to it briefly, was to commit suicide. Well, it is something for you to consider as part of his case, but whether it tallies with his behaviour is another matter you may find all together.
When you go to count 1, the sole issue is that of the intent of the defendant at the particular time, and this is on 5th December.
The judge then set out a summary of the history, focussing particularly on the communications set out above and the events leading up to the appellant's arrest. He directed them:
The way you look at intention I have already directed you. I reiterate, do not in any way bring speculation into your considerations, but intention is largely the product of inference. Inference is not speculation, because it is based upon evidence in the case and your findings of fact, and it must have that basic route before you are entitled to draw any reasonable inference. When you are looking at intent it is not the same way as I was directing you to a date in count 2, you are looking at effectively the history of the evidence that has been placed before you, whether the altercations, things said in the heat of the moment in the past had really died away and lost their significance, or whether possibly there was this deep-seated emotion and feeling as far as the defendant was concerned, and that through the course of various events it flared up.
You may think the incident at the skate park, for instance, trying to find out where Michael Maddock lived, indicating that he was going to be hurt possibly that had passed into history, because months then passed before any sort of communications on that; or whether it was like a lingering cancer in the mind of this defendant, it was something that hadn't gone away or left him. These are matters that you have to assess on the basis of the evidence.
You may think that there are other passages which help you with this question of intention, but in count 1 the intention has to be that of murder, unlawful killing of another. If you are not satisfied so you are sure on that there must be a verdict of not guilty, and then you pass to count 3.
The starting point is count 1 in the indictment, and likewise this also applies if you are actually considering count 3, because both are offences of specific intent. I will take count 1 as an example of the two, that on this particular day, 5th December 2013, "the defendant had with him a firearm, namely a shotgun, with intent to commit an indictable offence, namely, murder." What that means in relation to your question is that if on this day at a time when the defendant had the shotgun in his possession he had the intent to commit murder then that constitutes the offence. I have already directed you that the word "intent" should bear its ordinary everyday meaning and I would not propose to define it further; that remains so. But, I think it is right that I should remind you that the prosecution puts its case here that this defendant set out from home with his loaded shotgun and walked that distance until he was stopped by the police and he had that intent to murder throughout up until the time that he was stopped. That is the prosecution case. When you look at count 3, the intent to cause fear of violence has to be approached in the same way as I have just directed you, because that is a different form of specific intent that in all other respects the same considerations apply.
There we are, members of the jury, I am going to ask you to retire again and continue your deliberations.
Ground 2: "Bad Character"
You have heard in the course of this case that this defendant, Mr. Styles, has previous matters recorded against him. This constitutes what lawyers often term bad character. Well now let me remind you. Back when he was thirteen he was reprimanded for a common assault. Although the word has not been used, what it might boil down to was a bit of bullying against another school child, and it caused that child to report it to his mother, and so the process was set in train. He also received a caution when he was fourteen years old. It seems that it was opportunist and he was trying to steal some lead from what he said was a derelict building. These accounts of the facts have not been challenged, members of the jury, and you may feel confident in accepting that that is what these amount to. They are not convictions, they are a form that the law enforcement agencies use for dealing with matters at a lesser level than involves the courts or the juvenile court.
The events which you are concerned with are when the defendant was aged eighteen, so time has moved on. But there are other factors of his character which fall into the categorisation of bad character, or misconduct is probably a better expression. He is a man who has admitted to cannabis use, cannabis of course, an illegal substance. He has admitted to driving without a licence when he was unsupervised. On that occasion he went off down to the skate park with his relative, and unbeknown to him with mother in pursuit. He has admitted that he has contravened the conditions of his gun licence. Well you may, from common sense if not from particular knowledge, be perfectly prepared to conclude that the conditions of a gun licence are serious matters. A person is not given a licence until they are deemed a fit and proper person to hold a firearm which is described in that licence. The fact that there was a mix up over names or there had to be a clarification of names you may think has an innocent explanation to it and is no more sinister than that, not sinister in the least, in other words. What this is is part of the evidence in this case. It does not of itself prove guilt at all and you must never take it out of proportion. It is part of, if you like, the character of this young man, because on the counter side you have heard much of good character about him, references, both oral in this court and written have been read to you, where people, not just family members but social members and people that he has worked with speak highly of him. So in the same way that all the good references are not just one side of the total picture of this man, there are the other matters which I have mentioned which are the other side. But, it is not for you to conduct a balancing exercise. You must be careful not to place too much emphasis on these instances of misconduct, you have got to set them in their context, and his age and matters of that nature. You must not allow the defendant to be unfairly prejudiced by this, and the only way that this bad character or this misconduct evidence can be used is as providing support for the prosecution case. At the end of the day, members of the jury, it is entirely a matter for you. You may find that it does not help you either way, it is simply a more complete picture of this young man, and that is relevant when you come to look at what is called the specific intent that is required of these offences. It may assist you amongst the other evidence in forming your view on this question of intention.
And later in the summing up:
You have heard character references. I do not just brush over them, they are evidence in this case. I have mentioned them previously, and so I am not going to go over them again, except to say all the persons who came forward in various respects spoke highly of the defendant.
Ground 3: "Pressure of time"
Conclusions as to the appeal against conviction
Grounds of Appeal against Sentence