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Cite as: [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_28, [2006] HCJAC 28

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lady Cosgrove

Lord Penrose

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] HCJAC 28

Appeal No: XC1282/03

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD MACFADYEN

 

in

 

NOTE OF APPEAL

 

by

 

MOHAMMED ARSHAD

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: Shead; Drummond Miller

Respondent: McConnachie, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent

 

8 March 2006

 

Introduction

 

[1] On 6 November 2003 at the High Court in Edinburgh the appellant was convicted of a charge of breach of the peace and a charge of incitement to murder. The charge of breach of the peace involved the uttering of threats against the appellant's son-in-law, Abdullah Yaseen and members of his family. The charge of incitement to murder was in the following terms:

"(2) on 27 and 28 December 2001 at 17 Cleghorn Street, Dundee and at Moto Service Station, Kinross and the Swallow Hotel, Invergowrie, Dundee for the purpose of inciting a police officer known as Peter, c/o Tayside Police, Dundee, to murder Abdullah Yasin, your son-in-law, c/o Tayside Police, Dundee, you did provide him with photographs of said Abdullah Yasin and advise him that said Abdullah Yasin was believed to reside at 3 Highgate Close, Walsall and could be found there or at another address or addresses unknown in Dundee, Walsall or elsewhere in the United Kingdom, and did indicate to said police officer known as Peter that you wished members of the family of said Abdullah Yasin and in particular Fasihuddin Ahmed and Ageed Fatima Ahmed, 3 Highgate Close, Walsall, assaulted and injured and you wished said Abdullah Yasin to be murdered, request him to commit said assaults and murder on your behalf, agree to pay him £1000 to arrange for said assaults and murder to take place and pay him £200 as a deposit for same and you did incite said police officer known as Peter to assault said Fasihuddin Ahmed and Ageed Fatima Ahmed and to murder said Abdullah Yasin."

[2] On 4 December 2003 the appellant was sentenced to seven years imprisonment in cumulo with effect from 6 November 2003.

[3] The appellant presented a note of appeal against conviction and sentence. It contained three grounds of appeal against conviction. When the appeal called for hearing on 17 February 2006, Mr Shead, who appeared for the appellant, intimated that the third ground of appeal was not to be insisted in. In the course of the hearing, after he had advanced his submissions in respect of the first ground of appeal, Mr Shead indicated that he had received instructions not to insist in the second ground of appeal. As a result the only matter for consideration at this stage is the first ground of appeal. That ground of appeal relates to a motion to adjourn the trial made on 31 October 2003 and refused by the trial judge.

 

The ground of appeal

[4] The first ground of appeal was in the following terms:

"The trial judge erred in refusing a motion to adjourn the trial. The motion was made because an essential defence witness was ill and unable to travel from the United States of America to give evidence. The information available suggested that he would have been fit to give evidence by January 2004. His evidence was relevant to the central issues at the trial.

The effect of the refusal to grant the motion was to deny the appellant a fair trial at common law and by reference to Article 6(1) of the European Convention on Human Rights. Reference is made to s. 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998.

Separatim. In opposing the motion the Lord Advocate was acting incompatibly with the appellant's right to a fair trial guaranteed by Article 6(1). That act was ultra vires. Reference is made to section 57(2) of the Scotland Act 1998."

 

The trial judge's decision

[5] The motion to adjourn made on 31 October 2003 proceeded on two separate grounds. The first related to the state of the appellant's mental health. It is no longer maintained that the trial should have been adjourned on that ground. The second related to the availability of the defence witness mentioned in the first ground of appeal. That witness was Roger W. Shuy, said to be an expert in linguistics, who is based in Missoula, Montana, USA. He had reported on the recording and the transcript of the recording of meetings which had taken place between the appellant and the police officer known as Peter, who is referred to in the indictment. In her report, at pages 6 to 8, the trial judge dealt with that aspect of the matter in the following terms:

"I was advised that Professor Roger Shuy, a researcher from Montana, who specialised in linguistics and was on the defence list of witnesses, was not available due to incapacity. He had had to undergo surgery. He would not be available until some time at the beginning of 2004. He was the author of a report, Defence Production no. 1 and had analysed the recording and transcripts of the meetings between the appellant and the undercover policeman (Crown productions 15, 16 and 17) and the associated tapes.

The motion to adjourn was opposed by the advocate-depute. My attention was drawn to the fact that the trial had already been adjourned on a number of occasions, on defence motion, one of which was on 19 September 2003, when a defence Minute of Postponement called before Lady Paton. One of the reasons advanced on that occasion was that Professor Shuy was incapacitated and would remain so for about 6-8 weeks. The Minute was refused. The advocate-depute submitted that it was, accordingly, known to the appellant and his advisers that Professor Shuy might well not be available for a trial in a sitting starting on 28 October. In any event, consideration of his report gave rise to doubts about the competency and relevancy of his evidence.

I considered the terms of Professor Shuy's report. Such criticisms as he makes of the recordings of the conversations and the transcripts appeared to be ones that were all capable of being made by the defence in cross examination and I was at a loss to understand how and why a linguistics expert would be required to enable them to be articulated. I could not see from the report that a professor of linguistics was in any better position to make these criticisms than counsel was or that there arose any technicality or speciality of the study of linguistics upon which the jury would require instruction if they were to understand any criticism that counsel sought to make. I also took note of the fact that the defence did appear to have been aware of the real risk of the unavailability of the witness as long ago as 19 September (sic) but had left it until 31 October to seek to found on his non-availability, despite the fact that the case had called on 2, 16 and 29 October. It was difficult to avoid the conclusion that had Professor Shuy's evidence truly been regarded as essential, something would have been done about seeking a replacement witness or an adjournment to a date that he would be available, prior to 31 October.

In all these circumstances, I reached the view that the absence of Professor Shuy would not result in unfairness to the appellant and I refused the motion to adjourn."

 

Procedural history

[6] It is evident from the foregoing excerpt from the trial judge's report that the procedural history of the case played a material part in her decision. It is therefore convenient to set out at this stage a summary of that history. Although it was provided to us by the Advocate depute, it is securely founded in the minutes and in other documents, and we do not understand it to be disputed.

·        On 31 December 2001 the appellant appeared on petition in Dundee Sheriff Court and was committed for further examination.

·        On 7 January 2002 the appellant was fully committed, and released on bail.

·        The appellant was indicted for trial in the High Court in Glasgow in a sitting commencing on 2 December 2002.

·        On 14 November 2002 the court dealt with a Crown motion to allow the undercover police officers to give evidence anonymously.

·        On the same date an adjournment was sought by the defence, and the case was adjourned to a sitting in Glasgow commencing on 13 January 2003.

·        On 24 January 2003 a defence motion to adjourn was made on the grounds that (1) new agents had been instructed, and (2) a psychiatric report on the appellant was to be obtained. The case was adjourned to a sitting of the High Court in Forfar commencing on 24 March 2003.

·        On 24 March 2003 the case called in Forfar and a further defence motion to adjourn was made. The grounds for the motion were (1) that a neuropsychiatrist was to be instructed to report on the appellant, (2) that a linguistics expert was to be instructed to report on the transcripts of the exchanges between the appellant and the undercover officers, and (3) that the defence wished to precognosce on oath the person who had tipped off the police. The adjournment was opposed by the Crown. It was granted, but only on the first of the three grounds advanced. The adjournment was to the sitting of the High Court in Glasgow commencing on 6 May 2003.

·        Professor Shuy's report bears the date 7 May 2003. It is not clear when it came into the hands of the defence agents.

·        On 12 May 2003 the case was further adjourned, on the ground that the appellant was not fit to stand trial, to the sitting of the High Court in Forfar commencing on 16 June 2003.

·        On 16 June the case called in Forfar. The appellant was then in a psychiatric hospital. On defence motion the case was adjourned to the sitting of the High Court in Stonehaven commencing on 28 July 2003.

·        On 28 July 2003 the case called in Stonehaven and was adjourned, on defence motion, to the sitting of the High Court in Aberdeen on 23 September 2003.

·        On or about 25 August 2003 the defence agents received a letter from Professor Shuy dated 18 August 2003 in which he intimated that he expected to undergo surgery as soon as possible, that 20 September had been identified as a tentative date, and that he would require six to eight weeks recovery time thereafter, and suggested a continuance of the case until the beginning of the year (2004). The defence agents thus appear to have been aware of Professor Shuy's prospective unavailability from about 25 August, not from 19 September as indicated by the trial judge in the third paragraph of the excerpt from her report quoted in paragraph [5] above.

·        A minute of postponement was lodged and called before Lady Paton on 19 September 2003. It was opposed by the Crown. The minute of proceedings records that the minute of postponement was refused, "in respect that the Crown have raised an argument with regard to the admissibility of the evidence of Professor Roger Shuy, referred to in the Minute, his report not being available at this hearing, and the number of previous postponements". It is not recorded, and was not explained to us, why Professor Shuy's report was not available to the court on that occasion.

·        The case next called on 2 October 2003. A motion to adjourn on account of the appellant's illness was granted. The adjournment was to the sitting of the High Court in Dunfermline due to commence on 20 October 2003.

·        On 13 October 2003 an interlocutor was pronounced appointing a hearing on 16 October in respect of a devolution minute lodged on the appellant's behalf. It raised an issue under Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights, in respect of (1) the appellant's inability, by reason of his mental state, to give instructions for his defence, and (2) the unavailability of Professor Shuy.

·        On 16 October 2003 the devolution minute was withdrawn.

·        On or about 21 October 2003 a further letter from Professor Shuy, dated 13 October 2003, reached the appellant's solicitors. It explained that Professor Shuy had undergone surgery, that his recovery would be slower than had been expected, and that he could not consider overseas travel until mid January 2004.

·        On 29 October 2003 the case called in Dunfermline and was transferred to Edinburgh.

·        On 31 October 2003 the case called in Edinburgh. By that date the case had been adjourned on seven occasions, all on defence motion. The defence had been aware since 25 August that Professor Shuy would not be available as a witness until early 2004.

 

The hearing on 31 October 2003

[7] At the hearing of the appeal, we had before us a transcript of the hearing before the trial judge on 31 October 2003. The passage dealing with the second ground on which the adjournment of the trial was moved begins at page 20/11. Counsel referred to Professor Shuy's letter of 13 October 2003 (20/15). The trial judge noted its terms and pointed out that it did not tell her anything about what relevance his evidence would have at the trial (20/23). Counsel explained that Professor Shuy was a research professor of linguistics, with a very distinguished academic record (21/1-9), and that he had made an analysis of the recording of the conversations between the undercover policeman and the appellant, and asserted that his evidence was "obviously a crucial part of the case" (21/12-16). Professor Shuy's report was then laid before the trial judge (22/23). The trial judge questioned whether the points made required to be dealt with by an expert (23/4). Counsel suggested that there was a cultural clash between the undercover officer and the appellant, whose native language was not English (25/9-13) (although he had lived in Dundee from an early age). The trial judge continued to question whether the points made in Professor Shuy's report required expert evidence, and could not be made by cross-examination (26/4-10).

[8] The Advocate depute's submissions are recorded at page 32 et seq. At 33/4-7 he made the point that Professor Shuy's report raised difficult issues of the competency and relevancy of his evidence. The trial judge observed that it was impossible to tell what expertise Professor Shuy was asserting (33/8-13). The Advocate depute offered certain criticism of Professor Shuy's report (33/14 to 35/1). He submitted that his evidence would usurp the function of the jury (35/10-16).

[9] On the basis of these submissions the trial judge concluded (at 35/21-25):

"I am not satisfied that good reason is advanced in support of the motion for adjournment which is made on behalf of the [appellant] and therefore I refuse that motion."

 

The appellant's submissions

[10] In submitting to us that the trial judge had erred in refusing to grant an adjournment on the ground of Professor Shuy's unavailability, Mr Shead drew our attention to the fact that the Scottish Legal Aid Board ("SLAB") had granted sanction for the employment of Professor Shuy. His attendance to give evidence would be expensive. It was therefore evident that SLAB must have been satisfied that Professor Shuy's attendance as a witness was in the interests of justice. A substitute expert would have required fresh sanction from SLAB.

[11] Mr Shead submitted that there had been procedural flaws at two levels in the way in which the matter had been considered by the trial judge. In the first place, the trial judge had not had the relevant papers in advance of the hearing. In the second place, the trial judge had had no detailed information in advance as to what the Crown case was to be. The trial judge had been confronted with the issue of adjournment with incomplete knowledge of the circumstances relevant to the critical issue, namely the competency of Professor Shuy's evidence. The test which the trial judge ought to have applied was whether Professor Shuy's evidence was necessary to ensure that the appellant had a fair trial. The trial judge had not, however, had the benefit of any detailed analysis of Professor Shuy's report. What took place before the trial judge was not the right way to resolve the serious issue about the competency of his evidence. In effect, the issue of competency was foreclosed by the trial judge's decision before it was properly considered. Without proper consideration of the question of competency, there was no adequate reason for refusing the motion for adjournment.

 

The Crown submissions

[12] The Advocate depute submitted that at the hearing on 31 October 2003 the main focus of the appellant's submissions was on his own unfitness, a point no longer maintained. The submissions made on the appellant's behalf to the trial judge did not explain what would be lost to the appellant's case if Professor Shuy's evidence was not heard. There was nothing laid before the trial judge to suggest that there had been any change of circumstance since Lady Paton's decision of 19 September 2003. When the appellant learned of the difficulty over Professor Shuy's availability, there was nothing to prevent him from seeking an alternative witness. The only explanation of the relevancy of Professor Shuy's evidence (as expert linguistics evidence) offered by Mr Shead in response to questions from the court had related to the passage at page 12 of his report relating to frames of reference. Nothing said to the trial judge or to this court supported the view that linguistics evidence was required to enable the jury to undertake its task. The appellant did not give evidence. There was therefore no evidence that he was confused by the language of the undercover police officer, misunderstood him, or experienced any linguistic difficulty in dealing with him. In that situation, Professor Shuy's evidence would not have been admissible. Further, the Advocate depute submitted, Professor Shuy's report was not an impartial expert report. It went beyond his expertise as an expert in linguistics. It was a partisan effort to discredit the tape recordings of the meetings between the appellant and the undercover police officer. The trial judge was entitled to take the view that Professor Shuy's report armed the defence with lines of cross-examination, the points being capable of being as well made in that way as by the leading of Professor Shuy's evidence. The absence of Professor Shuy's evidence as a result of the refusal of the motion to adjourn did not result in the appellant being deprived of a fair trial.

 

Professor Shuy's report

[13] We have had the opportunity of considering Professor Shuy's report at greater leisure than was available to the trial judge. We were able to invite Mr Shead to explain to us the respects in which Professor Shuy offered real expertise which would have assisted a jury in coming to a fair decision on the interpretation of the evidence of the exchanges between the undercover officer and the appellant. As we understood him, the only passage in the report on which he specifically relied in that regard was the passage at page 12 relating to "frames of reference".

[14] It seems to us that to a substantial extent the views expressed by Professor Shuy in his report went beyond the proper scope of his claimed expertise in linguistics. The first point which he made was that "The undercover officer lacks scientific objectivity". That does not seem to us to depend to any extent on the science of linguistics. His second point was that "The undercover officer is vague and ambiguous in his representation of proposed illegal activity". That point is elaborated under reference to the practice of the FBI in the United States of America. Professor Shuy accepts that he is "unacquainted with the requirements of Scottish undercover law enforcement officers". That chapter of the report also seems to us to go beyond the science of linguistics. It is based on knowledge of FBI practice but ignorance of Scottish practice. Looking at the matter from the Scottish point of view, it seems to us clear that the vagueness criticised by Professor Shuy is the very avoidance of leading the suspect that would be expected in Scottish practice. Professor Shuy's third point is that "The undercover officer fails to capture all the evidence on tape". Again the point seems to us to be nothing to do with linguistics. It is a glimpse of the obvious that if the tape is not started at the beginning of the conversation, what was said before the tape was started is lost. The point can be made in cross-examination, without the support of expert evidence. The fourth point in the report is that "The undercover officer does not take 'no' for an answer". We would not expect him to do so. The fifth point is that "The officer fails to understand that his frame of reference is different from Arshad's frame of reference". While this, as Mr Shead appeared to recognise, is the closest that Professor Shuy comes to making a point based on linguistics, we are not persuaded that it needs the support of expert evidence, and cannot simply be made in cross-examination. In this part of his report, Professor Shuy again goes beyond his expertise (at page 15), by offering a view on the "going rate" for solicitation of murder in the United States, as if that were applicable in Scotland. The sixth point made in the report is that "The officer has a conflict in the elapsed time of December 27 taped meeting with the announced times on the transcript". Again we fail to see what that has to do with expertise in linguistics. Finally, the point is made that "The officer interrupts Arshad, thus preventing him from expressing himself fully". That too, in our view, is a point perfectly capable of being made by cross-examination, without the support of expert evidence.

 

Discussion

[15] It seems to us that there is some force in the point made by Mr Shead that the way in which the motion to adjourn the trial was dealt with before the trial judge was unsatisfactory. As he pointed out, the trial judge did not have sight of Professor Shuy's report in advance of the hearing. It appears, too, from the transcript that she did not rise to take time to read the report thoroughly. The submissions which she heard were superficial. The questions of the competency and relevancy of Professor Shuy's evidence were not fully explored in the course of the hearing. In these circumstances we consider that it would be unsatisfactory to deal with the appeal by simply considering whether the decision to refuse the motion to adjourn was one which was within the discretion of the trial judge. Instead, we are of opinion that we should consider afresh the question whether an adjournment should have been granted, taking into account the whole material which was put before us at the hearing of the appeal.

[16] While we accept that the proper test is whether the refusal of an adjournment prejudiced the appellant's right to a fair trial, we do not consider that that question can be answered by reference exclusively to the appellant's assertion that Professor Shuy's evidence was crucial to his defence. We consider that we must make an objective assessment of the significance of Professor Shuy's evidence, as foreshadowed in his report, and assess the significance of the loss of that evidence against the procedural history of the case and the way in which, in the event, the trial proceeded.

[17] It is, in our view, essential to take into account the procedural history of the case, which we have set out fully in paragraph [6] above. There had been seven previous adjournments on defence motion, and one transfer. The unavailability of Professor Shuy had been known to the defence agents from 25 August 2003. It had been the subject of a minute of postponement heard on 19 September. That minute had been refused. There had been no real change of circumstance between 19 September and 31 October. A devolution minute raising Professor Shuy's unavailability as an Article 6 issue had been raised and abandoned. Despite all that, no attempt had been made to obtain an alternative expert. We accept that to seek an alternative expert would have involved seeking further sanction from SLAB, but nothing was said to us which suggested that an alternative expert could not have been obtained in this country. Professor Shuy's "eminence" does not, to our mind, rule out alternative expert witnesses, if expertise was required.

[18] In the event, the appellant did not give evidence. There was no suggestion that he did not understand the undercover police officer, or that there was any linguistic difficulty that explained away what he was recorded as having said. In that situation, it is not clear what relevancy, if any, Professor Shuy's evidence would have had.

[19] It seems to us, however, that the most telling justification for refusal of the motion to adjourn is to be found in an examination of Professor Shuy's report. The trial judge expressed the view that it did not bring to bear any relevant expertise. On the fuller examination to which we have been able to subject the report, we are satisfied that the trial judge's impression was correct. The majority of the points made by Professor Shuy are not founded on expertise in linguistics. Some of the points are based on American practice, and fail to consider whether the same point can be made with the same force in the context of Scottish practice. Some are obvious. The majority are capable of being made by cross-examination, and do not require the support of expert evidence. Looking at the matter as a whole, little, if anything is lost by the exclusion of Professor Shuy's evidence. In that situation, we do not consider that it is necessary to reach a concluded opinion on the formal question of competency.

[20] We should add that we do not regard the fact that SLAB sanctioned Professor Shuy's employment as a consideration of any weight. The decision made by SLAB no doubt depended on the representations made to them about the relevancy and importance of the evidence in question. We do not know in what terms these submissions were made.

[21] Taking these considerations together, we are satisfied, looking at the whole matter afresh, that the trial judge reached the correct conclusion, and was right to refuse the motion to adjourn.


Result

[22] The appeal against conviction is therefore refused. The case will be continued to enable the appeal against sentence to be considered.

 


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