BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> McGirr v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_7 (26 January 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_7.html
Cite as: [2007] HCJAC 7, 2007 GWD 4-59, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_07, 2007 JC 83, 2007 SCCR 80, [2007] HCJAC 07, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_7

[New search] [Help]


 

APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Osborne

Lord Johnston

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJAC 7

Appeal No: XC851/03

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK

 

in the appeal of

 

JAMES McGIRR

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

_______

 

For the Appellant: Shead; Balfour& Manson

For the Crown: KD Stewart AD; Crown Agent

 

26 January 2007

 

The conviction

[1] On 12 June 2003 the appellant was convicted at Glasgow High Court of the following charge:

"on 3 or 4 December 2002 at Flat 1/2, 203 Crossloan Road, Glasgow you did assault John Blair, residing there, and repeatedly strike him on the head and body with a knife and did murder him."

 

 

The background

[2] Soon after the incident libelled the appellant was interviewed at Govan Police Office. In the course of the interview, the appellant admitted that he had killed the deceased. He said that over a period of 15 years his former wife had made unfounded allegations that he had physically and sexually abused his son and grandson. He said that these allegations had been repeated by the deceased, perhaps on more than one occasion but certainly immediately before the incident that resulted in his death.

[3] He then gave an account of the incident. It was, in brief, that he had bought a quantity of drink for the deceased, who was his upstairs neighbour, and had gone to the deceased's flat. The appellant was sitting in an armchair in the livingroom. The deceased had an acrimonious telephone call with his girlfriend. Then, in the words of the appellant at the police interview,

"The next thing he went oot and came back in wae the Stanley knife and said 'Ya fuckin' stote the baw'".

 

There was evidence that this latter expression refers to someone who sexually abuses children. According to the appellant, the deceased attacked him. There was a struggle and, as the deceased lay on the floor, the appellant inflicted several incised wounds on his neck with the knife, one of which was fatal.

[4] The deceased was found to have had a blood alcohol level of 349mgs/100mls.

 

The issue at the trial

[5] The sole issue at the trial was whether the appellant should be convicted of murder or of culpable homicide. The Crown led evidence of three statements made by the appellant. The first two could have been construed as admissions to murder. The third was the police interview, of which there was a tape recording and a transcript. The appellant did not give evidence, but relied on the terms of the interview in which he had set out the reasons why he claimed to have killed the deceased under provocation.

[6] Senior counsel for the appellant addressed the jury solely on the question of provocation.

 

The trial judge's charge

[7] The trial judge had to direct the jury inter alia on the question of the appellant's statement to the police. That raised the question whether the statement was a mixed statement. In the context of the general rule against hearsay, he gave the following direction.

"Now the exception, and I have perhaps already identified it, to the rule against hearsay is a statement made by an accused person as we have alleged to have occurred here. Where evidence of these statements have been led by the Crown as we have here and which are capable of being interpreted both as pointing towards the guilt of what the Crown have charged Mr McGirr with but also pointing in the direction of Mr McGirr not being guilty of what is charges against him; that is murder. If you take the view that that is the character of the statements here, then you are entitled to consider the whole of the statement. Both the parts of the statement which you may feel point to the accused being guilty of what he is charged with and those parts which do not and it is for you to determine whether you accept all of the statement, part of the statement and very importantly, it is for you to decide what you make of it. The interpretation of the statement is a matter for you. You will bear in mind that what was said in these occasions is not said on oath and it is not subject to cross-examination and you will attach precisely what weight which you think is important. You may attach more weight to parts of them than to others ... (at pp 17-18).

 

[8] We should say at this stage that this was clearly a misdirection and that the Crown accepts that. The words "If you take the view that that is the character of the statements here, then you are entitled to consider the whole of the statement" in effect left it to the jury to decide whether the interview constituted a mixed statement, whereas it was for the trial judge to make that decision (Jones v HM Adv, 2003 SCCR 94).

[9] The trial judge twice returned to the subject as follows:

"If you decide that the accused killed the deceased ... while acting under provocation, you would find him guilty of the crime of culpable homicide. It is open to you to find provocation in the basis of all the evidence that has been led before you, including the evidence which came from the transcript of the formal police interview and indeed what the police officers, the other police officers, said the accused said to them ... " (ibid, p 29)

 

" ... Now you heard evidence of what Mr McGirr is said to have said to Constable Green, to Constable Dowds and at the interview which you have the transcript of to Detective Constable Hutchison, the lady police officer, and Detective Sergeant McClellan. You heard the tapes, you have heard what he said or what he is said to have said and it is not really challenged that that is the accused's voice on the tape and you've heard how he said it and that all he says on that tape is available to you, both if it's for him or against him" (ibid, p 31).

 

 

The submission for the appellant

[10] The ground of appeal is that the misdirection that we have quoted left it open to individual jurors to decide for themselves whether the interview constituted a mixed statement, and thereby to disregard the appellant's statement that he acted under provocation. Since it clearly was a mixed statement, the trial judge should have directed them to that effect (Jones v HM Adv, supra). The statement was critical to the appellant's plea of provocation and therefore to the nature of the verdict.

 

The submission for the Crown

[11] The advocate depute submitted that the misdirection had had no prejudicial effect when considered in the context of the whole charge. The trial judge had directed the jury that they were the masters of the facts (Charge, p 3), even in relation to expert evidence (p 5). He had directed them that the question was not what happened, but how to characterise what was agreed to have happened (p 6). He had later described accurately the evidential value of the statements in the passages that we have quoted (pp 29, 31), and had concluded by reminding them that they alone were to determine what they made of the evidence (at p 34). On a realistic view of the circumstances of the whole case (Jones v HM Adv, supra, at para [16]), there had been no miscarriage of justice.


Conclusions

 

[12] We repeat once more that it is for the trial judge and not the jury to decide objectively whether a statement made by the accused is a mixed statement, that is to say one that is partly incriminatory and partly exculpatory in its effect (cf McCutcheon v HM Adv, 2002 SCCR 101; McIntosh v HM Adv, 2003 SCCR 137, per Lord Justice Clerk Gill at para [18]). Where the Crown leads evidence of such a statement, the trial judge must direct the jury that its contents are available as evidence for or against the accused, whether or not the accused gives evidence (Jones v HM Adv, supra); and that they must determine whether the whole or any part of the statement is to be accepted by them as the truth. He should also specifically direct them that if they believe the exculpatory part or parts of the statement, or if the statement creates in their minds a reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused, they must acquit (cf Scaife v HM Adv, 1992 SCCR 845, at p 848).

[13] The trial judge erred in leaving it to the jury to decide whether the statement in question was a mixed statement. We accept the submission of counsel for the appellant that, in theory at least, that left it open to individual jurors to decide that the statement was not a mixed statement at all, when it plainly was. However, a misdirection must always be assessed in the context of the issues as they emerged at the trial and in the context of the charge as a whole.

[14] The entire line of defence was that the appellant should be convicted of culpable homicide on the basis that he acted under provocation. Since the appellant did not give evidence, the only evidence on which the defence could rely was that of the statement. We may reasonably infer that that must have been the centrepiece of defending counsel's address to the jury. Despite the misdirection, the trial judge later directed the jury, correctly, that they could find provocation in all the evidence led, including specifically the evidence of the transcript of the police interview (Charge, p 29, supra). Then he said that all that the appellant had said on the tape of the interview, which they had heard, was available to them, both if it was for him or against him (p 31).

[15] In this respect this case is a fortiori of McGowan v HM Adv (2006 SCCR 186), which was also a murder case in which one of the accused sought a conviction for culpable homicide. In that case it was held that although the trial judge had failed to direct the jury as to the evidential value of mixed statements, in circumstances where there was no possibility of an acquittal, he had by inescapable implication directed them that they could use the contents of the statements in their determination of the crucial issues. In this case the trial judge's directions to that effect (supra) were quite explicit.

[16] Taking a realistic approach to the charge as a whole in the context of the defence that was presented at the trial, we conclude that in the event the jury were left in no doubt that they could take the interview into account in considering the central issue of provocation.

 

The question of the appellant's mental state

[17] At the end of his submissions counsel for the appellant raised with us the possibility that the appellant had not been of sound mind at the time of the offence or at the time of the trial. The appellant had been detained in the State Hospital Carstairs for some time while he was awaiting trial. He had been in the State Hospital since the trial. Counsel had no definite information to tender as to the appellant's mental state, either now or at the time of the offence. He proposed that if we were against him on the question raised in the appeal, we should continue the appeal to enable him to obtain a psychiatric assessment of the appellant's mental state at the time of the offence.

[18] We are not prepared to accede to counsel's motion. The question of the appellant's mental state was considered at the time of the trial. It is referred to by the trial judge in his Report. The Crown led evidence from Dr Douglas Gray, an experienced forensic psychiatrist, apparently at the request of the defence. Dr Gray said that when the appellant was initially remanded, he had been sufficiently concerned that the appellant suffered from a delusional disorder to recommend his transfer to the State Hospital. However, after further assessment, he concluded that the appellant was not suffering from any mental illness, that he was sane and fit to plead and that his condition was not such as to form a basis for a finding of diminished responsibility.

[19] This appeal has been in dependence for over three years. It was open to the appellant's advisers at any time during that period to obtain relevant psychiatric evidence and lodge an additional ground of appeal if expert opinions supported it. There is no information before us to suggest that if a continuation were granted, evidence would be likely to emerge that could support an additional ground of appeal.

 

Disposal

[20] We shall refuse the appeal.


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_7.html