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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 >> DM, R. v (Rev 1) [2016] EWCA Crim 674 (20 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/674.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 674, [2016] 4 WLR 146, [2016] 2 Cr App R 20, [2016] WLR(D) 392 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
RECORDER OF WINCHESTER
HIS HONOUR JUDGE CUTLER CBE
(Sitting as a judge of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
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"DM" |
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WordWave International Ltd trading as DTI
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Mr B Douglas-Jones appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE SIMON: The provisions of the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992 apply to this offence.
"The point is also put on the basis that the evidence on counts 1 to 3 would not otherwise have been admitted and this court should approach the case on the basis that the evidence on counts 1 to 3 was, in the event, not properly admitted. We reject that submission. It was essential that the jury should know - and the judge should only have ruled in this way - what happened in the years immediately preceding the attainment of the appellant's fourteenth birthday. It would have been wholly artificial and unsatisfactory if the evidence before the jury had commenced with the appellant's fourteenth birthday. The conduct of the appellant as alleged....must be considered by a jury as a whole."
"It is possible that were you to be sure that count 1 on this indictment did happen, that you came to the conclusion that it happened before [the appellant's] 14th birthday. You would of course have to be sure to begin with that it did happen, but if you were sure then potentially it could have happened before he was 14, and if that was your conclusion, then an additional feature comes in as far as count 1 is concerned. You could not convict [the appellant] on count 1 if you thought he was under 14, unless you are also satisfied so that you are sure, that at the time he did the act he knew that it was not merely naughty or mischievous, but that it was seriously wrong. Now I emphasise that would only apply to count 1 and firstly you would have to be sure that the incident happened, but if you were sure, and you thought it might have happened when he was under 14, you can't convict unless you're also sure that he knew it was seriously wrong."
"Do we have to agree that the incidents occurred within the dates specified on the indictment?"
"But you will recall what I said about count 1. That if you were to find that the incident in count 1 did happen, and it happened before his 14th birthday, then you couldn't convict him unless you were also satisfied, so that you are sure, that at the time he did the act, he knew that it was not merely naughty or mischievous, but that it was seriously wrong. Well that still applies, but of course it could theoretically also apply to counts 2 and 3 were you to find as a matter of fact that those incidents did occur and also that you found as a matter of fact that it was before his 14th birthday, but other than that ladies and gentlemen, the precise dates on the indictment are not what we call a material averment."
"64. A long and uncontradicted line of authority makes two propositions clear. The first is that the prosecution must prove that the child defendant did the act charged and that when doing that act he knew that it was a wrong act as distinct from an act of mere naughtiness or childish mischief. The criminal standard of proof applies. What is required has been variously expressed as in Blackstone, 'strong and clear beyond all doubt or contradiction', or in Rex v Gorrie (1918) 83 JP 136, 'very clear and complete evidence' or, in B v R (1958) 44 Cr App R 1, 3 per Lord Parker CJ, 'It has often been put in this way, that ... "guilty knowledge must be proved and the evidence to that effect must be clear and beyond all possibility of doubt"'. No doubt, the emphatic tone of some of the directions was due to the court's anxiety to prevent merely naughty children from being convicted of crimes and in a sterner age to protect them from the draconian consequences of conviction.
65. The second clearly established proposition is that evidence to prove the defendant's guilty knowledge, as defined above, must not be the mere proof of the doing of the act charged, however horrifying or obviously wrong that act might be. As Erle J said in Reg v Smith (Sidney) (1845) 1 Cox CC, 260 in his charge to the jury:
'a guilty knowledge that he was doing wrong - must be proved by the evidence, and cannot be presumed from the mere commission of the act. You are to determine from a review of the evidence whether it is satisfactorily proved that at the time he fired the rick (if you should be of opinion that he did fire it) he had a guilty knowledge that he was committing a crime'.
"Whether there continues to be a presumption that a child between the ages of 10 and 14 is doli incapax, and if so whether that presumption can only be rebutted by clear positive evidence that he knew that his act was seriously wrong, such evidence not consisting merely of the evidence of the acts amounting to the offence itself."