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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Bennett, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 795 (07 July 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/795.html Cite as: [2024] 1 Cr App R 5, [2023] EWCA Crim 795 |
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202201714 B1 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT DERBY
HHJ SHANT KC SITTING WITH A JURY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE JAY
and
SIR NIGEL DAVIS
____________________
GARY BENNETT |
Applicant |
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- and – |
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THE KING |
Respondent |
____________________
Andrew Vout KC (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 30th June 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE JAY:
INTRODUCTION
THE APPLICATION FOR AN EXTENSION OF TIME
(1) Trial counsel and solicitors gave no advice on 16th December 2016 about the 28-day time limit for appealing.
(2) In March 2017 the applicant was "encouraged" by a prison officer to take advice about a possible appeal. Mr Richard English for the applicant accepts that it may well be that his client was made aware of the time limits at that stage.
(3) Between April 2017 and April 2020 a firm of solicitors acted informally for the applicant in relation to a possible appeal. It is unclear why the applicant's relationship with them was not placed on a formal basis, particularly given that a different firm of solicitors was instructed on a privately-funded basis in April 2020. In any case, these solicitors did not progress the case with due expedition, and in 2019 nothing happened at all.
(4) Following the instruction of Draycott Browne Ltd in the summer of 2020, matters proceeded slightly more speedily, although we note that there was delay between December 2020 and September 2021 which has not been explained.
THE FACTS
THE TRIAL
"What did [the applicant's] willy look like?
Did [the applicant] really put his willy in your mouth?
MN: have you seen things on [the applicant's] computer and made up that [the applicant] did those things to you?"
"She was to the left-hand side of me. I panicked. I turned the laptop to one side, and I did my best to turn it off. I was fumbling with it. I didn't think to close the lid. I believe I managed to turn it off. I was feeling awful. There was a 7-year-old girl sitting to the side of me, and I said, "Sorry, you should not have seen that". She asked what it was and said, "Is that what adults do?" I said, "That's what adults do. C used to do it, but she's now too old."
"MR VOUT: One other thought I just had: distress. The complainant became quite distressed. We all saw that.
JUDGE SHANT: Well, she became distressed when she was giving evidence which is rather different to the direction one normally gives. It's distress when making the complaint originally.
MR VOUT: That's true.
JUDGE SHANT: This is -- I don't propose to say anything about this distress. It's for them to work out how it affects her evidence as it were.
MR VOUT: Your Honour is quite right.
JUDGE SHANT: Yes, the distress direction is related to it being part and parcel near the time of the original complaint.
MR VOUT: Yes.
JUDGE SHANT: And whether it's referable to the complaint or not and that sort of thing so. Mr Stockwell, is there anything you want to say about that?
MR STOCKWELL: No. Thank you, your Honour."
THE GROUNDS OF APPEAL
"It's a matter for you whether she's inconsistent or inconsistent [sic] in how you assess that complaint, and whether the lack of disclosure about oral sex at an early stage is down to embarrassment or an indication that she is lying."
THE RESPONDENT'S NOTICE
DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSIONS
Ground 1
"11. There is a possibility that juries will make and/or be invited by advocates to make unwarranted assumptions. It is important that the judge should alert the jury to guard against this. This must be done in a fair and balanced way and put in the context of the evidence and the arguments raised by both the prosecution and the defence. …
12. Depending on the evidence and arguments advanced in the case, guidance may be necessary on one or more of the following supposed indicators relating to the evidence of the complainant: (1) Of untruthfulness:
…
(d) Lack of emotion/distress when giving evidence.
(2) Of truthfulness:
(a) A consistent account given by the complainant.
(b) Emotion/distress when giving evidence.
…
Example 7: Display of emotion/distress or lack of it when providing account to the police played to the jury and/or when giving evidence
[When W gave evidence she was crying and appeared to find it difficult to talk about the allegations.] You should not assume that the way W gave evidence is an indication of whether or not the allegation is true. Witnesses react to giving evidence about allegations of rape/sexual assault in a variety of ways. Some people will show emotion or distress and may cry. But other people will seem very calm or unemotional. The presence or absence of emotion or distress when giving evidence is not a good indication of whether the person is telling the truth or not."
"48. In our judgment the jury ought to have been directed as to the evidential value of the complainant's distress, particularly in a case such as this where that distress had been a prominent aspect of the evidence and was strongly relied on by the prosecution. Often, the reason why such a direction is necessary is that the jury will need to consider whether a witness's distress is genuine or feigned. In such a case, factors such as whether the distress has been observed close in time to the circumstances of the alleged offence and whether the complainant was aware that she was being observed will often be particularly relevant.
49. In the present case Mr Emanuel does not suggest that the complainant's distress was feigned, but he points out correctly that it was not necessarily indicative of the appellant's guilt. It was the appellant's case that the complainant's response to penetration, springing out of the bed and leaving in a state of agitation, was consistent with immediate regret on her part (she had said in her ABE interview that she had a boyfriend and would never have agreed to go to the bedroom with someone else), or with a failure to have appreciated what she had encouraged in circumstances where she was sleepy or drunk.
50. In such circumstances the jury should have been directed to consider at least the possibility that genuine distress could have been for reasons which did not support the appellant's guilt, such as remorse and anger with herself at having allowed matters to progress as they did while she was affected by alcohol, or failure on her part to appreciate the signals she was sending. If, having considered that possibility, the jury had rejected it, as they might have done, they would have needed to be careful not to attribute undue significance to the complainant's distress, but we see no reason why they should not have been entitled to regard it as providing some support to her evidence. As it was, however, the Recorder left them with the impression that there was no need to consider such a possibility and that the complainant's distress was itself potentially important support for the prosecution case."
Ground 2
Ground 3
Ground 4
Drawing these strands together
CONCLUSION