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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Arshad v. Procurator Fiscal [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_26 (01 March 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_26.html
Cite as: [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_26, [2006] HCJAC 26

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Johnston

Lord Nimmo Smith

C.G.B.Nicholson, C.B.E., Q.C.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] HCJAC 26

Appeal No: XJ668/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

APPEAL

 

by

 

STATED CASE

 

in causa

 

WASIM MOHAMMED ARSHAD

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, Glasgow

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: G. Forbes; Balfour & Manson

Respondent: J. Hamilton, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

1 March 2006

 

[1] This is an appeal by way of stated case against a conviction at the Sheriff Court in Glasgow in respect of the following charge:

"On 4 March 2004 at 600 Aikenhead Road, Glasgow he did without lawful authority or reasonable excuse have with him in a public place an offensive weapon, namely a wooden truncheon;

Contrary to the Criminal Law (Consolidation)(Scotland) Act 1995 section 47(1)" (the Act).

There is no appeal against sentence.

[2] The sheriff found the following facts admitted or proved:

"1. On 4 March 2004, around 4 p.m. Owen Gallagher, aged 47, an

assistant works manager, drove into the car park at Holyrood Sports Complex, Aikenhead Road, Glasgow. He attended there to see a football match between boys' teams from Holyrood School and King's Park School. Kick-off was at 4 p.m.

2. Stephen Capaldi, aged 30, a teacher at King's Park School, was in

charge of the King's Park team, which included the appellant and the co-accused. Some of his team arrived by car and some on the school bus. Those boys who had come by car waited for the bus to arrive as there were some boys (not from King's Park School) hanging around in a threatening way. Before the match Mr Capaldi's team were in their changing room with him. He waited until all of the boys in his team had left the dressing room and proceeded on to the pitch before he locked up the dressing room and followed them.

3. As Mr Gallagher arrived at the car park within the Holyrood Sports

Complex he saw between ten and twenty boys on the pitch being chased by a boy behind them who was waving a baseball bat or truncheon (Crown Label number 1) from side to side above his head as if he was going to assault someone in the crowd. The boy with the baseball bat or truncheon was in a King's Park School football strip and the King's Park team was scattered about the pitch. The boys being chased were not dressed in football strips. The boy with the truncheon was between 16 and 17 years old and Asian. The boys in the crowd were younger than the King's Park boy with the truncheon. Mr Gallagher immediately reported what he had seen to the manager of the sports complex, Mr Newall.

4. The King's Park boy with the truncheon chasing the boys not in

football strips was the appellant.

5. When Mr Capaldi exited from the changing room, which is some

distance from the football pitch, an incident was taking place in that between seven and eight boys, not from King's Park School and not in football strips, were on the pitch. This group was demonstrating menace towards the King's Park boys including the appellant. His boys were still scattered over the pitch. Both his team and the other boys on the pitch were shouting at one another. Other boys, also not from King's Park School, were standing on the sidelines but not shouting or threatening the King's Park team. One of the King's Park boys had something in his hand.

6. Mr Capaldi proceeded to the centre of the pitch and saw that the

appellant and the co-accused were each holding something. He took Crown Label 1, a wooden truncheon, from the appellant and Crown Label 2, a metal baton, from the co-accused and gave them to the sports complex manager Mr Newall.

7. The appellant could have left the football pitch and returned to the

changing room to attract Mr Capaldi's attention, before Mr Capaldi came on to the pitch.

8. The police were called and arrived just before half-time. During half-

time police officers interviewed Mr Gallagher, Mr Capaldi, Mr Newall, the appellant and the co-accused. The truncheon and baton were seized as productions.

9. On 4 March 2004 at Holyrood Sports Complex Aikenhead Road,

Glasgow the appellant had with him in a public place an offensive weapon, namely a wooden truncheon without lawful authority or reasonable excuse in contravention of section 47(1) of the Criminal Law (Consolidation)(Scotland) Act 1995".

[3] The questions posed for the opinion of the court are as follows:

"1. Did I err in finding that the respondent had disproved that the appellant had a reasonable excuse for having the truncheon, namely self-defence?

2. Did I err in finding the appellant guilty of the charge?"

[4] The relevant section of the relevant Act is in the following terms:

"Any person who without lawful authority or reasonable excuse, the proof whereof shall lie on him, has with him in any public place any offensive weapon shall be guilty of an offence, ... ".

[5] Opening the appeal, counsel for the appellant informed the court that there was no dispute for the purposes of this case between the appellant and the Crown as to the issue of legal or evidential burdens. It was apparent from the note attached by the sheriff to the stated case that she had proceeded upon the basis that there was only an evidential burden upon the appellant in relation to the issue of reasonable excuse, which resulted in the Crown having to negative any suggestion that was being put forward in support of that position. This, it was agreed, was an approach favourable to the defence and the Crown were prepared to accept that position in the context of this case, without making any general concession as to how the questions of evidential and legal burden should be approached in questions involving section 47 of the Act. The advocate depute confirmed that was the case.

[6] At the end of the day, before the sheriff, the issue appears to have been focused on the question of self-defence as amounting to reasonable excuse and in this respect the sheriff says as follows:

"Turning to the question as to whether the respondent discharged the onus to disprove self-defence, there was no dispute that the locus was a full sized football pitch with fencing round it. Mr Capaldi spoke of a menacing atmosphere before the game and of the other boys and his boys on the pitch shouting at each other. Mr Gallagher said that the appellant was chasing between ten and twenty of the boys 'as if to hit people with it.' He was so concerned that he immediately ran to the office of the supervisor or manager (Mr Newall) to report what he had seen. Mr Capaldi said that there were around seven or eight boys not from his school on the pitch shouting at his boys who were shouting back. Accepting the evidence of Mr Gallagher and Mr Capaldi, the Crown had proved that the incident took place on a football pitch. The teacher in charge of the team and a manager of the sports complex were within the complex. I therefore considered that the Crown had proved that the appellant could have run off the pitch or run to find Mr Capaldi or staff at the complex, and that the danger was not as imminent, urgent or serious such as to make it reasonable for the appellant to have the truncheon for self defence."

[7] Finally, the sheriff comments as follows on her approach:

"I may not have said that I did not accept the appellant's evidence about the urgency of his situation, or that it caused me to have a reasonable doubt about the evidence of the Crown witnesses, but it must have been clear from the conviction that I did not. Mr McCaig was most helpful in his closing submission at the conclusion of the evidence in setting out the three self-defence criteria and of course the appellant did not require to establish anything. What the appellant said in his evidence did not raise a doubt in my mind that the respondent had proved that there was room to walk away and there were more of his own team there as well as Mr Capaldi and Mr Newall and thus had negatived the special defence".

[8] Before turning to the submissions of counsel it has to be noted that, firstly, the entire issue before the sheriff in terms of reasonable excuse appears to have been focused on the notion of self-defence and that, in effect, is the only issue she decided in favour of the Crown for the reasons she gives in her note.

[9] Counsel for the appellant before us accepted that he could not challenge the sheriff's findings on the issue of self-defence but, in essence, his submission was that given the facts, which were not seriously disputed, that the instrument in question, to use a neutral word, was thrown to the appellant in the course of the melee which is recorded in the findings in fact, any offence which might have been committed was not to do with possession of an offensive weapon but rather how it was used. This, it was submitted, contradicted the important distinction made in the case of Glendinning v Guild 1998 S.L.T. (N) 252 that those two elements required to be totally separated in terms of section 47 of the Act. Once, it was submitted, the use of the weapon in question entered the scene as a matter of fact, the Crown had to determine what offence should be charged in that respect and should depart from any issue of simple possession in terms of section 47 which plainly directed the issue of reasonable excuse to the reasons for possession rather than any issue of use. Properly understood the section should be looked at only in the context of a fact of possession of an offensive weapon, which was not in dispute in this case in terms of its definition, and a reasonable excuse for that possession. Accordingly, it was submitted, while the sheriff may have been entitled to determine the issue of self-defence on grounds of potential escape against the appellant she had not properly addressed the issue as to whether or not there was a reasonable excuse for being in possession of the instrument at the material time, namely, when it first came under his control, which is generally the sound ad hoc test of what is meant by possession.

[10] The response of the advocate depute was very simple but concise. There was no finding, he said, in the case by the sheriff that there was a reasonable excuse for the possession of the weapon at the material time, namely when it first came under the control of the appellant. In the absence of that and the fact that self-defence, which had been run as the only answer, had been defeated in the mind of the sheriff, the court was left with the simple proposition that the evidence revealed the possession of what would have to be regarded as an offensive weapon at the material time by the appellant and, accordingly, the conviction was justified.

[11] It has to be said that the findings of the sheriff are not entirely satisfactory. If they are supplemented by her note it seems that the eye-witness evidence establishes, firstly, that when the appellant left the changing room he was not armed with any weapon, and secondly he was subsequently seen pursuing people on the football pitch armed with it. What happened in between those events was said by counsel to be determined by the evidence of P.C. Martin, but he was merely narrating what the appellant had told him and, accordingly, how the instrument came into the possession of the appellant has to be only related to the evidence of the appellant as recorded.

[12] The problem in this respect is that the sheriff has not made any specific finding as to the credibility of the appellant. However, we consider it to be a reasonable implication, having regard to the position that she reached on self-defence, that she did not find his evidence acceptable, at least on the question of reason for possession.

[13] It must be emphasised that the aim of section 47 is to deal solely with a situation where a person is found in possession of an offensive weapon, however that may be defined, and cannot offer any reasonable excuse, it being for him to offer such in evidence and, thereafter, for the court to consider whether such has been made out. We accept that the issue of use is a wholly separate question in most circumstances. It would have been more appropriate if the sheriff had made a positive finding that she, in the absence of self-defence, would not have found the appellant to have a reasonable excuse for possession of the weapon once he obtained it. However, by implication we do not consider this is fatal to the Crown's position.

[14] In simple terms we consider that this case can be decided by us upon the basis that the facts stated yielded an argument before the sheriff that self-defence was the justification and, thus, reasonable excuse for possession of the weapon. She, quite legitimately, rejected that and accordingly, upon the findings, there is no other basis upon which any finding could be made supporting the idea of reasonable excuse for possession. Counsel did suggest we should remit the matter back to the sheriff for a further determination of issues of credibility but we have not considered that is appropriate or necessary.

[15] In these circumstances we consider, properly understood, that the findings here do not support the view that, at the material time, namely when he was seen with the weapon, the appellant had any reasonable excuse for being in possession of it.

[16] In these circumstances we do not find it necessary to answer question 1, but we will answer question 2 in the negative.

[17] Accordingly, the sentence imposed by the sheriff remains intact and the case requires to be remitted back to the lower court to consider or confirm the position in relation to sentence.

 


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