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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> MM v. PF Inverness [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_43 (06 June 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_43.html
Cite as: [2006] HCJAC 43, 2006 SCCR 373, [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_43, 2006 GWD 19-398, 2006 SLT 691

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Johnston

Lord Nimmo Smith

C.G.B. Nicholson, CBE, QC

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2006] HCJAC 43

Appeal No: XJ1542/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

STATED CASE

 

by

 

M. M.

Appellant;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, INVERNESS

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Appellant: Keenan, Solicitor Advocate; Gilfedder & McInnes

Respondent: Di Rollo, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

6 June 2006

[1] This is a case stated by the sheriff at Inverness at the request of MM (the appellant) consequent upon her conviction in that court of a contravention of section 12(1) of the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1937, as amended.

[2] That charge was libelled as follows:

"On 29 July 2004 at the house occupied by Norman MacPhee at 16 St Mary's Avenue, Inverness you being a person having attained the age of 16 years and who has parental responsibilities in relation to a child or young person under that age or has charge or care of a child or such a young person namely AG, born 9 March 2001, you MM did wilfully expose said child in a manner likely to cause him unnecessary suffering or injury to health and did take him to the said house knowing that said Norman MacPhee was on the Sex Offenders Register, consume alcohol until you were intoxicated, allow said AG to be in a bed occupied by you and said Norman MacPhee and in close proximity to a knife and a bucket containing excrement: CONTRARY to the Children and Young Persons (Scotland) Act 1937, Section 12(1) as amended."

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

"1. During 29th July 2004 and around 0010 hours on 30th July 2004 the Appellant was in charge of and had care of AG (the child).

2. The child's mother AG, born on 17th April 1981, had left him in the care of the Appellant.

3. The Appellant was the mother of AG and the grandmother of the child.

4. Accordingly, the Appellant had attained the age of sixteen years.

5. The child was born on 9th March 2001 and was aged three years and four months.

6. At 00.10 hours on 30th July 2004 police officers attended at 16 St Mary's Drive, Inverness, the home of Norman MacPhee and found the Appellant, the child and the said Norman MacPhee asleep in the same bed.

7. Police witnesses [sic] Russell MacMorran radioed his headquarters and was advised that the said Norman MacPhee was on the system [sic] as a registered sex offender. He passed this information on to the other police witnesses involved in the case.

8. As at 29th July 2004 the said Norman MacPhee was on the Sex Offenders' Register.

9. The Appellant stated to police officers under caution, 'I know Norman is an ex-policeman. I know he used to baby-sit for Kirsty and her brother. I know he is on a paedophile list. As far as I know he had interfered with kids. I don't believe it. My late husband had more contact with him than I did. I believe he had to keep away from children.'

10. The Appellant knew that Norman MacPhee was on the Sex Offenders' Register.

11. She knew Norman MacPhee to be a convicted paedophile.

12. She had consumed alcohol until she was intoxicated.

13. She allowed AG to be in a bed occupied by her and said Norman MacPhee.

14. The child was in his underclothes asleep and lying next to Norman MacPhee.

15. Norman MacPhee was wearing only his boxer shorts.

16. In close proximity to the bed were a large hunting knife in a sheath and a bucket containing excrement.

17. The child showed no signs of having been caused unnecessary suffering or injury to health.

18. The Appellant wilfully exposed the child in a manner likely to cause him unnecessary suffering or injury to health."

[4] It has to be noted at once that Norman MacPhee, referred to in the charge, was on the Sex Offenders' Register ("the Register"). While the only external evidence of that came from a police officer who gave evidence that he had examined entries on the Police computer, and no extract conviction was produced, that matter was not itself seriously challenged at the appeal hearing.

[5] Mr Keenan, appearing for the appellant, founded to some extent on the fact that this was derived from hearsay evidence; but also, and more importantly he submitted that there was no evidence as to the nature of the charge or charges which had resulted in MacPhee being on the Register; and this, he submitted, was of considerable importance as it bore upon whether or not the child in question, in the circumstances established, was at risk from him as a paedophile. There could, it was submitted, be all sorts of reasons why MacPhee was on the Register consequent upon a criminal conviction or convictions. In the absence of any evidence that he was on the register for convictions involving children, evidence about that was potentially of little significance.

[6] Mr Keenan founded on that, and went on to submit that, if one disregarded the reference to the Register, the overall circumstances, as displayed by the findings in fact, did not disclose that the child was in any danger or likely to be in any danger. He referred us to McF v Normand 1995 S.C.C.R. 380, as an example of the necessary test not being established.

[7] The Advocate Depute in turn founded upon the case of Lees v Orr 1993 S.C.C.R. 900 as properly establishing the test to be applied. He submitted that overall the circumstances disclosed in the findings of fact indicated that there was a risk to the child irrespective of the question of the Register. He submitted that the sheriff was entitled to reach the conclusion he did.

[8] In seeking to resolve this matter, we are concerned that the Crown did not establish the precise basis upon which Norman MacPhee was placed on the Register. That is something which could easily have been done by the lodging of an extract conviction or convictions together with background material relevant to it or them. We consider this should be an essential part of the proof at trial if presence on the Register is to form part of a crime involving either an accused or an accomplice. We recognise at once that if it had been established that MacPhee was on the Register as a paedophile, his presence in the bed with a drunken woman and the child in question would have been more than sufficient to meet the terms of the statute and the test laid down in Lees.

[9] However that case raises a jury question for consideration by the court in the context of the charge under consideration. That test is succinctly stated by the Lord Justice General at page 909 of the report, as follows:

"The appropriate standard is what the reasonable parent in all the circumstances would regard as necessary to provide proper care and attention to the child. Failure to achieve that standard may reasonably be described as neglect, whether this was due to a deliberate decision or positive act on the one hand or to an omission to do what was required on the other But the offence will only be constituted if it is also shown by the evidence this was done in a manner likely to cause the child unnecessary suffering or injury to health."

[10] It is to be noted that later on in the report the court discusses the issue of intoxication, which plainly has a bearing on whether the child is being properly looked after in appropriate circumstances.

[11] We consider that the case of McF is special in as much that it cannot be said to lay down a general proposition that to leave a young child in a locked car in a public street cannot ever establish neglect in terms of the statute. It has to be noted that in that case the sheriff does not appear to have considered the question of distress or other likely consequences from the child being left in that position, and therefore on that basis the court was unable to conclude that the necessary standard was met in terms of the test to be applied. We are not therefore persuaded that that case has anything to offer on the issue to be decided before us.

[12] Putting aside as we have done the issue of the Register, for the reasons we have given, we are however satisfied that the overall picture painted by the findings in fact, with particular reference to both persons being in the bed with the child between them in an intoxicated state which could in itself lead to the child being suffocated, the presence in the room of the bucket to which reference is made with its contents and a hunting knife, would cause a reasonable person entering the room immediately to conclude that the child was potentially at risk and that that risk was real. It has to be borne in mind that the police, when entering the house, obviously came to that conclusion because they removed the child at once.

[13] In these circumstances we consider that the sheriff was entitled to conclude that the section had been contravened, irrespective of the issue of the Register. If, or course, it had been demonstrated to the court that MacPhee was a paedophile, the matter would have been put beyond any doubt whatsoever.

[14] In the circumstances we will answer the question stated by the sheriff in the affirmative, and we will refuse this appeal.

 


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