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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Norman, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 1112 (01 September 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/1112.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Crim 1112 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MALES
MR JUSTICE HOLGATE
MR JUSTICE HILLIARD
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R E X |
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- v - |
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BENJAMIN NORMAN |
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Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected] (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr C Ward-Jackson appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Friday 1st September 2023
LORD JUSTICE MALES:
Introduction
The Facts
The Appellant's Defence
The Evidence concerning the Appellant's use of cannabis
The Expert Evidence
Summary of the Evidence
The Agreement between Counsel
The Ground of Appeal
The Submissions
Discussion
"Mr Clegg's third and final argument is that even if Mr Neave was rightly allowed to state his findings, he should not have been permitted to give his opinion on the very issue before the jury. He said: 'My conclusion on count 1 is that the photos strongly support the view that the suspect and the robber are the same man.' He went on: 'There is limited information, but I think the exhibits reveal that there is support for the view that the robber and the suspect are the same man on count 2, but it is not anything like as strong as the support on count 1'."
(The expert discipline in that case was facial mapping.)
"Whether an expert can give his opinion on what has been called the ultimate issue, has long been a vexed question. There is a school of opinion supported by some authority doubting whether he can (see Wright (1821) Russ & Ry 456, 458). On the other hand, if there is such a prohibition, it has long been more honoured in the breach than the observance (see the passage at page 164 in the judgment of Parker LJ in Director of Public Prosecutions v A and BC Chewing Gum Ltd [1968] 1 QB 159 and the cases cited at page 501 of Cross on Evidence (7th ed.).
Professor Cross at page 500 of that work said:
'It is submitted that the better and simpler solution, largely implemented by English case law, and in civil cases recognised in explicit statutory provision, is to abandon any pretence of applying any such rule, and merely to accept opinion whenever it is helpful to the court to do so, irrespective of the status or nature of the issue to which it relates.'
The same view is expressed by Tristram and Hodkinson in their work on Expert Evidence Law and Practice at pages 152 to 153, where, after referring to the case of Wright, they say that in that case the expert witness could not express an opinion as to whether the particular facts before the court constituted an act of insanity. He could, however, state what types of behaviour demonstrated insanity in persons generally, from which the jury could draw inferences in the particular case. The learned authors went on as follows:
'There is little doubt however that such a distinction is not now rigorously observed, and given that expert evidence of this kind is to be put before a jury, it may be suspected that the often casuistic distinction between the general and the particular is either ignored by juries, or seen as a distinction of form rather than substance. It has been suggested too that some defences in criminal proceedings can in effect only be raised by adducing expert evidence, and that: 'it would put an insuperable difficulty in the way of insanity' if such evidence were to be excluded by an ultimate issue or other analogous rule.'
The rationale behind the supposed prohibition is that the expert should not usurp the functions of the jury. But since counsel can bring the witness so close to opining on the ultimate issue that the inference as to his view is obvious, the rule can only be, as the authors of the last work referred to say, a matter of form rather than substance.
In our view an expert is called to give his opinion and he should be allowed to do so. It is, however, important that the judge should made clear to the jury that they are not bound by the expert's opinion and that the issue is for them to decide."
"20. However, Mr Shaw also accepted that the ultimate effect of the expert's evidence (and we stress again that we do not have a transcript of that evidence) reflected the joint report which the two neurologists made, the critical paragraph of which was as follows:
4. We understand that Mr Costantini's behaviour while driving the car just before the accident was very abnormal to the extent that it is unlikely that it could be explained by merely careless or dangerous driving, bad road conditions or suicidal intent. This being the case, it is in our opinion probable that he experienced some alteration of cerebral function producing, for example, altered awareness, confusion, visual impairment or spatial disorientation.'
We do not say that that was necessarily the precise terms in which the evidence finally emerged, but Mr Shaw accepts that, in effect, it was the essential terms.
21. Precise or essential terms or not, the fact remains that in effect what the experts were being asked to do was to give their legitimate medical opinion based upon their understanding of the facts of the case. So far as the facts of the case are concerned, by which we mean not only the mechanical facts of what the car did but all the possible explanations of how that had come about, whereas they had of course to have some substratum of fact for their medical opinion, nevertheless the decision of what the actual facts were and how those facts were to be weighted, one possibility against the other, was ultimately a matter for the jury. Unless we could say that the jury's verdict was a perverse one, unless it was, in effect, a verdict to which no jury could properly come properly directed, we have to conclude, as is our duty, that the jury are the deciders of fact and the ultimate tribunal and it would not be right for us to interfere."
Rix LJ added at [22] that on this ground of appeal the jury's verdict could not be said to be perverse or unsafe. Ultimately, it was for them to say on all the evidence whether the doctors had persuaded them that some unknown medical condition had caused the accident.
36. In any event, we do not accept that the epilepsy experts would have given evidence of any assistance to the appellant. The views expressed in their reports are heavily qualified.
"6.7 Based on the available information, it is my opinion that one of the extrinsic factors in [the appellant's] case is consumption of cannabis, which could have extinguished [the appellant's] brain functions for a brief period at the material time. However, [the appellant] has reported to have been using cannabis regularly for many years prior to the alleged index offence. He has not reported taking an excessive amount of cannabis and has not reported any side effects after using cannabis the night prior to the alleged index offence. His blood levels indicated that there was some cannabis in his body. However, based on the limited information, in my opinion, it is less likely that the cannabis would have led to [the appellant's] episode of loss of brain functions for brief period. Nevertheless, it is a matter for the jury to decide if his use of cannabis led to totally extinguishing [the appellant's] brain functions at the material time, thereby leading to automatism.
6.8 Based on the reports from various experts in the field of neurology, I note that [the appellant] has received a diagnosis of epilepsy. In my opinion epilepsy is one of the medical conditions that can totally extinguish brain functions for a brief period when an individual is experiencing an epileptic fit. If the Court accepts that [the appellant] had an epileptic fit at the material time of the alleged index offence, in such instance, on the balance of probability, it is my opinion that [the appellant's] epileptic fit is likely to have totally extinguished his brain functions for a brief period."