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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> ATT & Anor, R. v [2024] EWCA Crim 460 (08 May 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2024/460.html Cite as: [2024] WLR(D) 247, [2024] EWCA Crim 460, [2025] 2 WLR 89 |
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202401245 B2 |
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT DERBY
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HURST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MORRIS
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER JOHNSON
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REX |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ATT BWY |
First Respondent Second Respondent |
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Mark McDonald and Sadaf Etemadi (instructed by Bhandal Law Limited) for the First Respondent
Stuart Lody (instructed by The Johnson Partnership) for the Second Respondent
Hearing date : 18 April 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Note - include here the details of any specific reporting restrictions that have been made by the court. This will have been identified in the Criminal Appeal Office Summary under the Reporting Restrictions heading or from the Court Order. The wording of any reporting restriction must appear in RED TEXT.
LORD JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS :
Introduction
The Court of Appeal may not reverse a ruling on an appeal under this Part unless it is satisfied—
(a) that the ruling was wrong in law,
(b) that the ruling involved an error of law or principle, or
(c) that the ruling was a ruling that it was not reasonable for the judge to have made.
The factual background
The judge's ruling
The submissions on appeal
Discussion – statutory interpretation
(1) A person ("D") is guilty of an offence if—
(a) a child or vulnerable adult ("V") dies as a result of the unlawful act of a person who—
(i) was a member of the same household as V, and
(ii) had frequent contact with him,
(b) D was such a person at the time of that act,
(c) at that time there was a significant risk of serious physical harm being caused to V by the unlawful act of such a person, and
(d) either D was the person whose act caused V's death or—
(i) D was, or ought to have been, aware of the risk mentioned in paragraph (c),
(ii) D failed to take such steps as he could reasonably have been expected to take to protect V from the risk, and
(iii) the act occurred in circumstances of the kind that D foresaw or ought to have foreseen.
(2) The prosecution does not have to prove whether it is the first alternative in subsection (1)(d) or the second (sub-paragraphs (i) to (iii)) that applies.
"Serious physical harm" was defined as harm amounting to grievous bodily harm for the purposes of the Offences against the Person Act 1861.
"The victim must also have been at significant risk of serious physical harm. The risk is likely to be demonstrated by a history of violence towards the vulnerable person, or towards others in the household. The offence will not apply if the victim died of a single blow when there was no previous history of abuse, nor any reason to suspect a risk."
Although the 2004 Explanatory Notes did not form any part of the legislative scheme, the proposition that the serious physical harm of which there had to be a risk could not be coterminous with the serious physical harm which led to death was clear from the words of the section. Section 5(1)(c) stipulated that "at that time" (the time of the causing of the harm which led to death) "there was a significant risk of serious physical harm" i.e. the risk was in existence before the act causing death. This interpretation is confirmed by the wording of section 5(1)(d)(i)/(ii). That sub-section provides for liability on the part of a person who allowed the death where that person has actual or constructive knowledge of the risk of serious physical harm mentioned in section 5(1)(c) yet failed to take reasonable steps to protect the child or vulnerable person from the risk. Such a person could not be in a position to take any steps to protect the victim from the risk of harm if that risk only arose at the point at which the fatal act was committed. The words "the risk mentioned in paragraph (c)" are critical in this respect.
(1) A person ("D") is guilty of an offence if—
(a) a child or vulnerable adult ("V") dies or suffers serious physical harm as a result of the unlawful act of a person who—
(i) was a member of the same household as V, and
(ii) had frequent contact with him,
(b) D was such a person at the time of that act,
(c) at that time there was a significant risk of serious physical harm being caused to V by the unlawful act of such a person, and
(d) either D was the person whose act caused the death or serious physical harm or—
(i) D was, or ought to have been, aware of the risk mentioned in paragraph (c),
(ii) D failed to take such steps as he could reasonably have been expected to take to protect V from the risk, and
(iii) the act occurred in circumstances of the kind that D foresaw or ought to have foreseen.
(2) The prosecution does not have to prove whether it is the first alternative in subsection (1)(d) or the second (sub-paragraphs (i) to (iii)) that applies.
"The extended offence will….apply only where the victim was at significant risk of serious physical harm (section 5(1)(c) of the 2004 Act). The risk is likely to be demonstrated by a history of violence towards the vulnerable person, or towards others in the household. The extended offence will not apply if there was no previous history of abuse, nor any reason to suspect a risk."
It can be seen that the final sentence of the explanation for the sub-section was not in precisely the same terms as it had been in 2004. It did not specifically exclude a "a single blow" causing serious physical harm. However it maintained the position that the offence would not apply in the absence of a previous history of abuse or a reason to suspect a risk of serious physical harm, and that the risk would be "likely" to be demonstrated by a history of violence.
"The risk is likely to be demonstrated by a history of violence towards the vulnerable person, or towards others in the household. The extended offence will not apply if there was no previous history of abuse, nor any reason to suspect a risk. Where there is no reason to suspect the victim is at risk, other members of the household cannot reasonably be expected to have taken steps to prevent the abuse."
"Directions on Offence The offence is designed to combat difficulties of proof, but it will be a challenging task to explain to juries precisely what it is that they must be satisfied of….Essentially, the jury must be satisfied that D (being a member of the same household etc.) either caused the victim's death by D's own unlawful act (carrying a significant risk of serious physical harm) or, if not, that D failed to take steps that D could reasonably have been expected to take to protect V from the risk of such harm from an unlawful act by another member of the same household and D ought to have both been aware of the significant risk and to have foreseen the circumstances in which the unlawful act occurred. The circumstances need only be of the same kind as, and need not be identical to, those which should have been foreseen (Khan (Uzma) [2009] EWCA Crim 2, where it was also said (at [36]) that 'generally speaking a direction framed in accordance with the statute pre-empts any criticism'). See also Ikram [2008] EWCA Crim 586 (at [62]) for an example of 'a helpful way of directing a jury about the ingredients of the offence'."
"A, on or about the … day of…, being a member of the same household as a child [or vulnerable adult] V and having frequent contact with him, fell into one or other of the following alternatives, it being immaterial, and unnecessary to prove, which one it was, that is to say that
either he caused the death of V as a result of his (A's) own unlawful act which carried a significant risk of serious physical harm being caused to V,
or, alternatively, he failed to take such steps as he could reasonably have been expected to take to protect V from the significant risk of serious physical harm from the unlawful act which caused V's death, the unlawful act having been committed in this alternative not by A but by another person who was a member of the same household as V and who had frequent contact with V, the significant risk in this alternative being one which A was aware of or ought to have been aware of and the other's unlawful act occurring in circumstances of the kind which A foresaw or ought to have foreseen."
"….between the 2nd day of March 2018 and the 4th day of March 2018 having been a person who was a member of the same household as and had frequent contact with (H), a child who suffered serious harm between those dates as a result of the unlawful act of such a person, and there having been at that time a significant risk of serious physical harm being caused to (H) by the unlawful act of such a person, either (a) caused serious injury to (H) by his own unlawful act or (b) was or ought to have been aware of that risk, and failed to take such steps as he could reasonably have been expected to take to protect (H) from the risk, the unlawful act having occurred in circumstances of the kind that he foresaw or ought to have foreseen."
In our view those particulars properly set out the offence which the prosecution had to prove. It was not challenging for the prosecution to explain what the elements of the offence were or what they had to prove.
Discussion – judge's ruling on the facts
"When the judge has exercised his discretion or made his judgment for the purposes of and in the course of a criminal trial, the very fact that he has had carefully to balance conflicting considerations will almost inevitably mean that he might reasonably have reached a different, or the opposite conclusion to the one he did reach. Leave to appeal under section 67 of the 2003 Act will not be given by this court unless it is seriously arguable, not that the discretionary jurisdiction might have been exercised differently, but that it was unreasonable for it to have been exercised in the way that it was. "
There will be cases where a judge makes a judgment as to the sufficiency of the evidence in relation to which another judge reasonably could have reached a different conclusion. The mere fact that this is the position will not provide the basis for a successful appeal whether by the prosecution on a terminating ruling or by the defence after conviction.
"To use this case as an example, these injuries on a 6 foot adult in the fullness of health would be less serious than on, for instance, an elderly or unwell person, on someone who was physically or psychiatrically vulnerable or, as here, on a very young child. In deciding whether injuries are grievous, an assessment has to be made of, amongst other things, the effect of the harm on the particular individual. We have no doubt that in determining the gravity of these injuries, it was necessary to consider them in their real context."
"We should remember too that we are talking about "a significant risk of serious physical harm'. That is quite a high threshold. The signs of that risk would be very evident. In many cases, the risk of harm is all too evident from previous harm that a member of the household has inflicted on the child or on others."
Conclusion