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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Horne v R. [2020] EWCA Crim 487 (02 April 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/487.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 487, [2020] 4 WLR 103, [2021] 1 Cr App R 2, [2020] WLR(D) 224 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT LEICESTER
HHJ DEAN QC
T20177398 / T201807263 / T20180446
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FULFORD
MRS JUSTICE CARR DBE
and
MR JUSTICE GOSS
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JOSHUA HORNE |
Appellant |
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- and – |
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The Queen |
Respondent |
____________________
Miss Nicola Moore (instructed by CPS Appeals & Review Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 24th March 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford:
Introduction
The Issue
The Facts
"Joshua Horne and Ryan Parry between 7 November 2017 and 1 July 2018 conspired to pervert the course of public justice by interfering with the witnesses in a case namely Liam Roberts and Barry Roberts"
The Respective Cases
Conviction as evidence of commission of offence.
(1) In any proceedings the fact that a person other than the accused has been convicted of an offence […] shall be admissible in evidence for the purpose of proving that that person committed that offence, where evidence of his having done so is admissible, whether or not any other evidence of his having committed that offence is given.
The Conviction Appeal
Ryan Parry's Guilty Plea
"In my judgment this is one of those rare occasions where if a formulation is not possible by way of an admission then the Crown should be permitted to adduce evidence of his guilty plea to count 5 and I will direct the jury that that guilty plea is not evidence against Mr Horne on count 5 or any other count on the indictment; that in the unusual circumstances of this case it does not have any meaning other than that it demonstrates that some, at least, of what Barry Roberts, Liam Roberts and Michelle Roberts have said is true and that that is relevant in turn to their overall credibility in this case."
The submissions
"What about count 5? Well now a conspiracy is no more than an agreement to do something unlawful. No formality is required, the agreement is usually tacit, that is inferred from the actions of the participants. In this case you know that Ryan Parry has pleaded guilty to count 5. You have heard about Ryan Parry's plea of guilty for one reason and one reason only, and that is because it demonstrates (that) Liam Roberts and Barry Roberts have told the truth about aspects of the case about Parry's contact with them, and his efforts to influence whether they gave evidence and what they should say in their evidence.
Beyond that Parry's plea is of no significance and it is not evidence that you can take into account at all other than how it may provide some support for the truthfulness of Liam and Barry Roberts.
To prove count 5 the prosecution must demonstrate, make you sure, that Joshua Horne agreed with Ryan Parry that they would do acts tending, and (intended) to pervert the course of justice, namely that they would contact Liam and Barry Robert with a view to influencing them concerning whether they would testify, that is give evidence, what they would say in their evidence. […]"
Later the judge added:
"I will deal with the cross-examination of Barry Roberts in a moment, but you will remember that I gave you a direction about the significance of Ryan Parry's guilty plea, that it did no more than confirm that both Liam and Barry Roberts had told the truth about certain aspects of what he, Barry Roberts and Liam Roberts were saying about Ryan Parry's involvement. The credibility, the truthfulness of Liam and Barry Roberts, has been very much attacked in this case, but you can take into account when deciding whether they have told the truth about what they say concerning Joshua Horne that they have told the truth about what Ryan Parry did […] That is the only relevance of the conviction of, the guilty plea of Ryan Parry, and the conviction and guilty plea of Daniel Horne."
Discussion
"16. We have been taken to the line of cases which begins with R v O'Connor [1987] 85 Cr App R 298 . They are well known; we need not review all of them. We should, however, refer to the helpful distillation of many of them in R v Kempster [1990] 90 Cr App R 14 in the judgment of Staughton LJ. That line of cases indicates that section 74 should be sparingly applied. The reason is because the evidence that a now absent co-accused has pleaded guilty may carry in the minds of the jury enormous weight, but it is nevertheless evidence which cannot properly be tested in the trial of the remaining defendant. That is particularly so where the issue is such that the absent co-defendant who has pleaded guilty could not, or scarcely could, be guilty of the offence unless the present defendant were also. In both those situations the court needs to consider with considerable care whether the evidence of the conviction would have a disproportionate and unfair effect upon the trial. With those cases can be contrasted the kind of case in which there is little or no issue that the offence was committed, and the real live issue is whether the present defendant was party to it or not. In those circumstances, commonly, the pleas of guilty of other co-defendants can properly be admitted to reinforce the evidence that the offence did occur, leaving the jury independently to consider whether the guilt of the present defendant is additionally proved.
17. We accept, as did the trial judge in this case, that this line of cases was decided before the passing of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 . We agree that that new Act does proceed, as the judge in this case said, upon the basis that in some respects the ambit of evidence with which a jury can be trusted is wider than the law formally allowed. That thinking is, we do not doubt, there to be discerned in the bad character provisions of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 and also in the relaxation of the rule against hearsay. It does not, however, follow that the approach of the line of cases to which we have been referred is simply out of date. It remains extremely relevant what the issue is in the case before the trial court. It remains of considerable importance to examine whether the case is one in which the admission of the plea of guilty of a now absent co-defendant would have an unfair effect upon the instant trial by closing off much, or in some cases all, of the issues which the jury is trying.
18. It remains a proper approach, we are satisfied, that if there is no real question but that the offence was committed by someone and the real issue is whether the present defendant is party to it or not, evidence of pleas of guilty is likely to be perfectly fair, though of course each case depends upon its own facts. However, it also remains true that such evidence may well be unfair if the issues are such that the evidence closes off the issues that the jury has to try. […]"
The Sentence Appeal
"(1) This section applies where –
(a) An offender is serving a term of imprisonment in respect of an offence, and(b) The offender has been remanded in custody […] in connection with the offence or a related offence […]
(8) In this section "related offence" means an offence, other than the offence for which the sentence is imposed ("offence A"), with which the offender was charged and the charge for which was founded on the same facts or evidence as offence A."