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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Beckley v. Procurator Fiscal, Greenock [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_74 (09 December 2008)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_74.html
Cite as: 2009 SCL 283, 2009 SLT 183, [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_74, [2008] HCJAC 74, 2009 GWD 4-62, 2009 SCCR 93

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Eassie

Lady Paton

C.G.B. Nicholson, CBE, QC,

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2008] HCJAC 74

Appeal No: XJ 820/08

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by C.G.B. NICHOLSON, CBE, QC

(sitting as a Temporary Judge)

 

in

 

APPEAL BY BILL OF SUSPENSION

 

in causa

 

PAUL BECKLEY

 

Complainer;

 

against

 

PROCURATOR FISCAL, GREENOCK

 

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Complainer: M.C.MacKenzie; Drummond Miller (for Stirling & Mair, Paisley)

Respondent: D.Young, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

9 December 2008

 

General background


[1] In this Bill of Suspension the complainer invites us to suspend a conviction which ensued at the conclusion of a summary trial at
Greenock Sheriff Court on 20 May 2008. For reasons which we shall examine in detail later the complainer was obliged to represent himself throughout that trial. The general background to that is as follows.


[2]
On 27 November 2007 a summary complaint was served on the complainer at the instance of the respondent. That complaint contained three charges, one of breach of the peace and two alleging contraventions of the Police (Scotland) Act 1967, section 41(1)(a). After sundry preliminary procedures the complaint called for an intermediate diet on 19 February 2008. On that date no legal aid was in place, and there was a defence motion for an adjournment which was not opposed by the Crown. The case ultimately called for trial on 28 March 2008 but, in the absence of essential Crown witnesses, the procurator fiscal depute moved for an adjournment which was not opposed on behalf of the complainer, and which was granted by the sheriff with a new trial diet being fixed for 2 May 2008. On that date the complainer was present along with his legal representative. However, it transpired that two defence witnesses, who had been present on previous occasions, were absent, apparently because they had not been cited for the new trial diet. What happened thereafter is examined in more detail later in this Opinion. Suffice it to say for the present that, in the course of the day, the complainer withdrew his instructions from his legal representative. At around 3 pm, the trial commenced with the complainer being required by the sheriff to represent himself. By 4 pm the Crown evidence (from two police officers) had been concluded. The procurator fiscal depute then sought, and was granted, leave to make an amendment to charge 1 on the complaint, and at the same time she indicated that the complainer's plea of not guilty in respect of charge 2 would be accepted. Due to the lateness of the hour the sheriff then adjourned the trial to 20 May 2008.


[3]
On that date the defence witnesses who had not been present on 2 May were available, and they gave evidence. At the conclusion of the defence evidence the sheriff found the complainer guilty of the charges as amended, and the case was continued for the preparation of a social enquiry report. On 11 June 2008 the sheriff deferred sentence until 10 September for the complainer to be of good behaviour. By that date the present Bill had been lodged, and accordingly the sheriff simply deferred sentence again in order to await the outcome of the appeal. In the Bill the complainer seeks suspension of his conviction, principally on the ground that it was a miscarriage of justice for him to have been required to conduct the trial without the benefit of legal representation.

Circumstances surrounding the withdrawal of instructions from the complainer's solicitor


[4]
The relevant facts in this case are set out by the complainer in the Statement of Facts contained within his Bill. They are also set out in the sheriff's report to this Court, and in Answers which were lodged on behalf of the Crown shortly before the date which had been assigned for the hearing of this appeal. Unfortunately, there are some striking differences between the accounts given in these three sources, and it is therefore necessary to examine each of them in some detail.


[5]
The account given by the complainer in his Bill is to the following effect. Having described the earlier history of the case, he goes on, in Statement of Fact 2, to begin to describe what took place at the trial diet on 2 May 2008. He says:

"On that date the complainer appeared for trial. The complainer was legally represented. At the call over the complainer's legal representative commenced making submissions on behalf of the complainer, advising the Sheriff that two essential defence witnesses were not present. The defence witnesses had been present at both previous trial diets and were cited, although copies of the citations were not available at the time. The complainer's legal representative was not allowed to complete his submissions to the court, before the Sheriff indicated that the case would call later for trial. The case was adjourned to later in the day."


[6]
The Statement of Facts then continues:

"3. The case recalled at 3.00 p.m. The complainer due to what had occurred earlier withdrew his instructions from his legal representative. He was thus appearing in court, for a trial, without legal representation. The complainer made a motion to the Sheriff to allow him to instruct another solicitor. The complainer advised the Sheriff that there were essential witnesses not present. The complainer advised the Sheriff that he did not wish to conduct the trial without legal representation. The Crown made a motion to adjourn the trial to allow the complainer an opportunity to instruct another solicitor. That motion was disallowed. The Sheriff indicated to the complainer that the trial would proceed and that the complainer would be expected to conduct his defence personally. The complainer was not in a position to conduct his own defence. He was not qualified to do so. The charges that the appellant was called upon to answer were serious, involving police officers.

4. At the conclusion of the Crown case, legal submissions were made by the Crown amending the charges on the Summary Complaint. The complainer was not in a position to make legal submissions on this matter. He was not qualified to do so and did not have sight of any papers during the course of proceedings.

5. Thereafter the Sheriff adjourned the trial to 20 May 2008 due to a lack of time. He added that this would allow the complainer an opportunity to present his defence case and to cite and call his defence witnesses. On 20 May 2008 the trial recommenced. Although not formerly [sic] cited the defence witnesses attended and were examined by the complainer. The complainer was convicted."


[7]
The sheriff begins the relevant part of his report to this Court by saying that "on several aspects, the Statement of Facts is factually incorrect". He then goes on to say:

"When the case called before me on 2 May 2008, the complainer's solicitor indicated that his client was maintaining his pleas of not guilty. He thereafter moved that the trial be adjourned as the complainer had three defence witnesses who had failed to appear at the Court. This would have been the third occasion on which this trial would require to have been adjourned. I asked the agent for the complainer whether the three defence witnesses had been cited. I was advised that they had not been cited for the trial diet of 2 May 2008, but had been previously cited for a previous trial diet, although he could not produce the citations. I categorically deny as stated in Statement of Fact 2, that 'the complainer's legal representative was not allowed to complete his submissions'. I indicated to the agent for the complainer that as the defence witnesses had not been cited, the matter would proceed to trial later in the day."

The sheriff then narrates the nature of the business which occupied him thereafter, and continues:

"The trial against the present complainer called at approximately 3.00 pm. The agent for the complainer advised me that his client was adhering to his pleas of not guilty, but that his client had withdrawn instructions from him and that he was now no longer appearing for the complainer. This came as a considerable surprise to me, as I have had numerous dealings with this complainer during the years I have sat in Greenock Sheriff Court (as evidenced by his lengthy schedule of previous convictions) and he has always been represented by the same agent. I asked the complainer specifically whether it was correct that he had withdrawn his instructions from his agent. He stated that he had. I pointed out to him that by doing so, this did not mean that the trial would then be adjourned. I pointed out that there were witnesses present in connection with the trial. I advised him that if he wished to renew the motion to adjourn the trial at the conclusion of the Crown evidence, I would consider the same. The complainer, however, stated that he did not want the case adjourned."


[8]
The sheriff describes how he gave certain assistance to the complainer during the giving of evidence by the Crown witnesses, and he notes that he put it to both police officers that the complainer denied anything of what they had described had actually happened, and pointed out that, as far as the complainer was concerned, their evidence was a tissue of lies. This is followed by a narrative of the motions advanced by the procurator fiscal depute at the conclusion of the Crown evidence when, as noted above, she sought an amendment of charge 1 on the complaint and indicated that she would not be seeking a conviction in respect of charge 2. The sheriff notes that the Crown motion was "quite correctly made" in the light of the evidence; and he suggests that the complainer, having been given an explanation, was "in agreement with the motions proposed by the Crown".


[9]
In the next part of his report the sheriff states that, since it was by then, nearly 4.00 pm, he advised the complainer that he would be adjourning the trial due to lack of Court time. He continues:

"The complainer did not make a motion for the trial to be adjourned as earlier suggested by me. I considered, however, in fairness to the complainer that this was an appropriate course of action, to enable the complainer to consider his whole position and arrange for the attendance of his defence witnesses."

In passing, we note that, taken as a whole, this part of the sheriff's report appears to make it clear that the primary reason for this adjournment was lack of court time and not a desire to enable the complainer to consider his position. The latter was a possible consequence of the decision to adjourn, but not the main reason for it.

[10] The sheriff then continues his report by saying:

"With reference to Statement of Fact 3 in the Bill of Suspension, it is incorrect that the Crown made a motion to adjourn the trial to allow the complainer an opportunity to instruct another solicitor. While I was considering whether it would be appropriate to adjourn the trial on the motion of the agent for the complainer, the Crown intimated to me that they would not object to any such adjournment. They did not, however, make any formal motion."

The sheriff then considers the averment in Statement of Fact 4 to the effect that the complainer did not have any of the case papers. In that regard he says:

"I would have expected a solicitor whose services had been dispensed with on the instructions of a client to have passed any relevant papers to that client, particularly when it was obvious that a trial was to proceed."

Finally, it is to be noted that the sheriff narrates that the solicitor who had been representing the complainer remained in court, on the public benches, during the course of the proceedings on the afternoon of 2 May 2008.


[11]
As can be seen, there are several significant differences between the account of events set out in the Bill of Suspension and the account contained in the sheriff's report. There is a difference as to whether or not, at the stage of the call over of cases first thing in the morning, the complainer's solicitor was prevented from completing his submissions in respect of the absence of two defence witnesses. That difference may not be of great significance since the sheriff does seem to have been aware at that stage that the defence witnesses were missing. Of greater significance is the conflict as to what was said by the complainer when he came to address the sheriff in person when the case called for trial at 3 pm. As noted above, the complainer maintains that he made a motion to be allowed to instruct another solicitor, and that he advised the sheriff that he did not wish to conduct the trial without legal representation. The sheriff, for his part, makes no mention of any motion having been made by the complainer, but he does say that the complainer stated that he did not want the case adjourned. Equally significant is the conflict regarding a motion to adjourn at the instance of the Crown. The complainer says in his Bill that, at the calling of the case at 3 pm, the Crown made a motion to adjourn the trial to allow the complainer an opportunity to instruct another solicitor, but that that motion was 'disallowed'. The sheriff, by contrast, says that this is incorrect. Somewhat curiously, however, he goes on to say that, while he was considering whether it would be appropriate to adjourn the trial on the motion of the agent for the complainer, the Crown intimated that they would not object to any such adjournment. There is no mention elsewhere of a motion to that effect having been made by the complainer's solicitor, and it would, in our view, be strange, if not indeed inappropriate, that he should have sought to present such a motion at 3 pm by which stage his instructions had been withdrawn. It may be that what the sheriff is referring to is a motion made by the complainer's solicitor at the stage when he was addressing the sheriff in the course of the call over in the morning; but it is clear that what the complainer is referring to in his Bill is a motion made by him in the absence of his solicitor, and a comparable motion made by the Crown, at around 3 pm in the afternoon.


[12]
Against that background it is now necessary to look at what is said on behalf of the Crown in their Answers to the Bill. Of significance is what is said in response to the third paragraph of the Statement of Facts in that Bill. Answer 3 for the Crown is as follows:

"3. Admitted the case recalled at 3.00 pm. Admitted that the complainer withdrew his instructions from his legal representative. Admitted that the complainer was appearing in court, for a trial, without legal representation. Admitted that the complainer advised the Sheriff that there were essential witnesses not present. Admitted that the Crown made a motion to adjourn the trial to allow the complainer an opportunity to instruct another solicitor. Admitted that the Sheriff indicated to the complainer that the trial would proceed and that the complainer would be expected to conduct his defence personally. Admitted the charges the appellant was called upon to answer were serious, involving police officers. Not known and not admitted that the complainer made a motion to the Sheriff to allow him to instruct another solicitor. Quoad ultra denied. Explained and averred that the Crown asked the Sheriff whether he would consider a motion to allow the complainer to instruct fresh representation to which the Sheriff replied in the negative. Explained and averred that the complainer stated to the Sheriff that he did not want the case to go ahead and that he did not know what questions to ask."


[13]
On one view, there is something of an inconsistency between the clear admission, near the beginning of the above Answer, that the Crown made a motion to adjourn the trial to allow the complainer an opportunity to instruct another solicitor and, on the other hand, the later explanation that the Crown 'asked the Sheriff whether he would consider' such a motion. We suspect, however, that this may simply be a distinction without a difference. What is clear is that, contrary to what is said by the sheriff in his report, the Crown supports the complainer's position that, by whatever means, such a motion was indeed advanced by the Crown at the stage when the complainer was no longer represented. The sheriff, of course, did not have the Crown's Answers available to him at the stage when he was drafting his report. However, in the course of the hearing before this Court, the advocate depute advised us that, being aware of the conflict with what had been said by the sheriff, he had expressly checked the position with the procurator fiscal depute who had conducted the trial, and had received an assurance that what is contained in the Answers is correct. We also note that the last sentence of the Answer quoted above is at odds with that part of the sheriff's report where he asserts that the complainer stated that he did not want the case adjourned.


[14]
Some further light was shed on the foregoing inconsistencies in the course of the submissions which were advanced at the appeal hearing, and we now turn to consider those submissions.

 


Submissions for the complainer


[15]
Miss MacKenzie began her submissions on behalf of the complainer by addressing some of the factual issues to which we have just referred. She dealt first with the matter of the complainer not having any papers after he had withdrawn his instructions from his solicitor. She advised us that this would indeed be the case since, as she understood the position, there is a Law Society rule in place which prohibits a solicitor whose services have been dispensed with from handing over his papers to the lay client. Moreover, there is also a Crown Office rule whereby any Crown statements or precognitions which are made available to a defence solicitor or counsel under disclosure procedures must be returned to Crown Office if instructions are withdrawn from that solicitor or counsel. The advocate depute confirmed the existence of that Crown Office rule though neither he nor Miss MacKenzie was able to confirm the existence of the Law Society rule. For present purposes, however, we are prepared to proceed on the basis that the complainer's former solicitor was entitled, even if not bound, to retain all of the case papers after his instructions had been withdrawn with the consequence that the complainer, not having any sight of those papers, might well have suffered prejudice on being required to conduct the trial on his own. It is clear, therefore, that on this matter the sheriff was mistaken when, as noted above, he said that he would have expected relevant papers to have been passed to the former client.


[16]
Miss MacKenzie then went on to deal with what actually occurred from the point, at around 3 pm on 2 May 2008, when the complainer began to represent himself. In that connection she advised us that, as reported by the sheriff, the complainer's former solicitor took a seat in the public benches during the rest of the afternoon's proceedings. She also advised us that, in the course of those proceedings, he took a note of what occurred, as nearly as possible verbatim. Miss MacKenzie read to us what the solicitor had noted, and the gist of that is that the complainer said to the sheriff that he wanted to instruct another lawyer but was told by the sheriff that the trial 'will proceed to-day'. The note then went on to say that the Crown, on two occasions, invited the sheriff to adjourn the trial to allow another solicitor to be appointed but were told that that was not going to happen. According to the solicitor's note, the sheriff said that it is a common situation for a solicitor to come out and for a person to have to represent himself, and he went on to say to the complainer: "You have no choice. You have dispensed with the services of Mr Kerr, so you have to do the trial yourself".


[17]
Before turning to her main submissions Miss MacKenzie also dealt with a point which we raised with her. That was whether the complainer had taken any steps to challenge what had happened during the period of three weeks or so between 2 and 20 May when the part-heard trial was adjourned. She advised us that the complainer had indeed sought legal advice during that period but had been advised by (an unnamed) counsel that, since the trial had started, nothing could be done by way of suspension or otherwise until after the trial had concluded. We make no comment regarding the soundness of that advice. For present purposes it is sufficient that the complainer sought, and obtained, advice during the period in question and was therefore not guilty of any sort of acquiescence in allowing the trial to continue.


[18]
Against the foregoing background Miss MacKenzie submitted that the proceedings in this case, taken as a whole, made the complainer's conviction unsound. She noted that the sheriff founds on the fact that the complainer is not unfamiliar with court proceedings but, she submitted, that is nothing to the point in the present case. The complainer, on his own, had no means of being prepared to conduct his defence and, as a result, the defence case may well not have been properly put to the Crown witnesses. Miss Mackenzie acknowledged that the sheriff had attempted to assist the complainer to a certain extent but, as she pointed out, the sheriff, for obvious reasons, could not have known what the defence case was to be and, as a result, was not in a position to put relevant, and potentially significant, matters to the Crown witnesses. In those circumstances, therefore, the sheriff should have given favourable consideration to the motions seeking an adjournment to enable the complainer to obtain the services of a new solicitor; and his failure to do so amounted to a miscarriage of justice.


[19]
In support of the foregoing submissions Miss Mackenzie referred to a number of authorities. The first of these is Venters v. HM Advocate 1999 SLT 1345. That was a case in which the appellant was tried on indictment for attempted murder and assault. Special defences of alibi and incrimination had been lodged and, on that basis, the Crown witnesses led on the first day of the trial were cross examined to the effect that the appellant was not present and that their evidence identifying the appellant was either false or mistaken. On the second day of the trial the appellant changed his defence to one of self defence, and that occasioned the withdrawal of his counsel and instructing solicitors. There was then some discussion between the appellant and the trial judge as to how the case should proceed, in the course of which the appellant indicated that he would like to have another counsel. The trial judge then asked if the appellant was happy to go ahead and represent himself to which the appellant replied in the affirmative. In due course he was convicted. On appeal, it was held, by a majority, that justice had not been seen to be done. In that connection the Lord Justice Clerk (Cullen), in the penultimate paragraph of his Opinion, said that he had come to the conclusion that, when passages in the discussion between the trial judge and the appellant were looked at as a whole "there was a failure on the part of the trial judge to ensure that justice was seen to be done". The Lord Justice Clerk went on to express some sympathy for the trial judge, not least having regard to the fact that there had been a number of previous adjournments at the instance of the defence, and to the fact that the position ultimately adopted by the appellant represented a radical change of direction. Nonetheless, the Lord Justice Clerk concluded that justice was not seen to be done.


[20]
The next case referred to by Miss MacKenzie is Bullock v. H M Advocate 1999 JC 260. This is a somewhat unusual case in that, initially, the appellant voluntarily undertook to represent himself at a trial on indictment before a sheriff and jury on charges of thefts by housebreaking and breaking into property, and one charge of theft of a motor vehicle. It appears that, as the trial progressed, the sheriff became concerned about what he saw as the inept way in which the appellant was conducting his defence. However, matters seem to have come to a head when, on the one hand, the procurator fiscal began to lead evidence on matters which did not form part of the charges on the indictment and, on the other hand, the appellant brought out his own previous convictions. At that stage, apparently, the appellant sought an adjournment in order to obtain legal representation, but that motion was refused. In due course the appellant was convicted, and he thereafter appealed against that conviction. Even in the somewhat unusual, and arguably unpromising, circumstances of this case, this Court took the view that the sheriff's refusal of an adjournment amounted to a miscarriage of justice, and the appeal was allowed.


[21]
Reference was also made by Miss MacKenzie to Mason & McDougall v. H M Advocate 2008 SLT 656. That was a case in which two accused persons were convicted of committing a series of concerted assaults and robberies within a short period of time. The first appellant submitted that justice had not been seen to be done in his case when regard was had in particular to the fact that he had been left without legal representation after his agent withdrew following his failure to sign a mandate clarifying instructions, and a request for an adjournment to seek new legal representation was refused by the trial judge on the basis that the case had already been adjourned to later sittings of the court on two occasions. In delivering the Opinion of the Court, which allowed the appeal, the Lord Justice General (Hamilton) said (at para. [36]):

"What we have said should not be taken as discouraging judges from taking all reasonable steps to expedite the progress of trials - including in appropriate circumstances encouraging accused persons to remain with their existing counsel and solicitors. Where, however, that is not achieved, an accused must generally be given a proper opportunity of applying for an adjournment to obtain fresh representation, which application will fall to be decided on its merits."


[22] By reference to the foregoing authorities Miss MacKenzie submitted that there was nothing in the present case to suggest that the complainer was being deliberately obstructive, or that he was simply trying to delay his trial. Moreover, any inconvenience to the Crown arising from the grant of an adjournment would be minimal since the only witnesses for the Crown were two local police officers. That, it was submitted, was in marked contrast to the position in Mason & McDougall where one of the Crown witnesses had travelled from abroad and where there were two interpreters present in court.


[23]
Miss MacKenzie also submitted that the course taken by the sheriff in the present case was oppressive, with reference being made in that regard to Fraser and Another v. MacKinnon 1981 SCCR 91. Three questions are posed in the Opinion of the Court in that case (at page 95), and Miss Mackenzie suggested that, with any necessary modification, the same questions might be asked in the present case. The first question is: Was it necessary in the public interest for this particular trial to proceed when it did on the order of the sheriff? The second question is: Was it necessary to avoid prejudice to the prosecutor to require this particular trial to proceed? And the third question is: Was there or was there not likely to be prejudice to the complainer if he was required to go on trial on that day without the assistance of a solicitor? In Fraser and Another the Court answered the first two questions in the negative; and in respect of the third question its answer was that there was obviously likely to be prejudice to the complainers in the taking of the decision which the sheriff took. Miss MacKenzie submitted that, in the present case, the foregoing questions might appropriately be asked and, in that event, they should be answered in the same manner. On the whole matter Miss Mackenzie's submission was that the sheriff in the present case had been wrong to refuse the motion for adjournment. Indeed, she went further and submitted that, in the light of the authorities referred to, he ought properly to have adjourned the trial ex proprio motu.

Submissions for the Crown


[24]
The advocate depute's response was quite brief. He submitted that an accused person has no absolute right to representation at a trial, and that the test must be whether a refusal of an adjournment in order to allow such a person to secure representation can properly be regarded as amounting to an injustice. In the present case, it was submitted, there was no injustice as a result of the decision taken by the sheriff. The case involved a single accused; the charges were simple; the trial was taking place at summary level; there were only two Crown witnesses; and no complex legal propositions were involved. The advocate depute also founded on the need to process court business efficiently. He did, however, concede that his submissions might be seen as lacking force in light of the fact that, as accepted by the Crown, the procurator fiscal depute at the trial had herself made a motion in favour of an adjournment of the trial.

Discussion


[25]
Given, as we have noted above, that there are some significant factual conflicts as between, on the one hand, the account of events on 2 May 2008 set out by, and on behalf of, the complainer, and largely supported by the Crown, and, on the other hand, the account set out by the sheriff in his note, we consider that the first matter for us is to see if those conflicts can be reconciled and, if not, to decide which version to prefer for the purposes of this appeal. In approaching that task we readily recognise that, in a busy sheriff court, where many cases have to be dealt with in the course of a day, it may not be possible for a sheriff to recall some time later precisely what was said in the course of discussions relating to a particular case. We also recognise that, in respect of summary proceedings, there is no official record of exchanges which have taken place between an accused person, or his solicitor, and the presiding sheriff. On the other hand, the complainer's version of events in the present case is supported not only by the procurator fiscal depute who conducted the trial (with her recollection having been expressly confirmed by the advocate depute shortly before the appeal hearing) but also by the nearly verbatim notes which were made by the complainer's former solicitor who had remained in the public benches during the period in question. In the whole circumstances we have come to the conclusion that the factual conflicts which arise from the sheriff's note cannot be reconciled with the narrative of events which comes from other sources: and, having regard to the nature of this appeal, we consider that we should proceed on the basis that the account contained in the complainer's Bill is substantially accurate.


[26]
That being so, we must next consider whether, on those facts, the sheriff's refusal to adjourn the trial amounted to a miscarriage of justice. In that regard, we should begin by making it clear that we do not consider that the sheriff is open to criticism for declining to adjourn the trial at the stage of the early morning call over when he was addressed by the complainer's then solicitor and was advised of the fact that two essential defence witnesses were not in court. By deciding that the case would call for trial later in the day the sheriff was arguably doing no more than to cater for the possibility that the missing witnesses might simply arrive late. Moreover, it is possible that at that stage he had in mind that, if the case was called for trial later in the day, it might not, as in fact happened, be concluded because of lack of time in which event there would, of course, be another opportunity for the missing witnesses to turn up at an adjourned diet. Bearing in mind that, at the stage of the call over, the complainer was still represented by his solicitor, there could be no unfairness or prejudice if the trial were to be started later that day with a continued diet being fixed for a later date. That would, instead, represent a sensible use of court resources.


[27]
However, by 3 pm in the afternoon of 2 May circumstances had changed significantly in that the complainer no longer had the services of his solicitor; and in that situation the primary question for the sheriff should no longer have been whether the trial might be adjourned part-heard so as to allow a further opportunity for the defence witnesses to attend. The primary question by then should have been whether the trial as a whole should be adjourned so as to give the complainer an opportunity to seek alternative representation.


[28]
Looking at the sheriff's report as a whole, we are not satisfied that he gave that question the attention which it required. It is clear from the cases referred to by Miss MacKenzie in the course of her careful submissions that, if an accused person finds himself without representation either just before the commencement of a trial or indeed in the course of a trial, the presiding judge or sheriff must give careful consideration to whether that accused person may be exposed to prejudice and injustice if not given an opportunity to instruct a new representative. As has been seen in the cases referred to, the need for such consideration arises even where the accused person indicates a willingness to proceed on his or her own; and, in our opinion, that need will be all the more compelling when the accused person expressly asks for an adjournment, as happened in the present case if, as we consider must be the case, the complainer's account of events is accepted as being substantially accurate.


[29]
We recognise, of course, that a decision as to whether or not to adjourn is ultimately one for the discretion of the presiding judge or sheriff. However, there will always be a number of matters and considerations which will require to be taken into account when that discretion is being exercised, though, of course, the nature of such matters and considerations, and the weight to be attached to them, may well vary from case to case. What, then, were the 'matters and considerations' which ought to have been taken into account in the present case, and what weight ought to have been given to them?


[30]
The first consideration must, we think, be whether an accused person is likely to be prejudiced if required to conduct a trial without legal representation. The sheriff appears to have been influenced to some extent in respect of that by the fact that, to his knowledge, this complainer was no stranger to the criminal courts and was therefore "well aware of trial procedure". On this matter, however, we agree with Miss MacKenzie that the complainer's previous experiences in the criminal courts are nothing to the point since what was in issue was not whether he was familiar with trial procedure but whether he had the skills to conduct his own defence, including the cross examination of Crown witnesses, in a competent manner. Indeed, we have some doubts as to the appropriateness of the sheriff taking any account at all of the complainer's record in determining this matter.


[31]
The charges which the complainer faced were far from being the most serious known to the criminal law. Nonetheless, they were not trivial and, on a finding of guilt, might well have resulted in a custodial sentence. Accordingly, it was, we think, important to consider carefully whether the complainer could be expected to conduct his own defence in a competent manner. In that connection, Miss MacKenzie advised us that there was in fact a substantive defence to the charges which would require to be put to the Crown witnesses, but we are unable to say whether the complainer was aware of the details of that defence, particularly since, as has been noted, he did not have the papers which his solicitor had prepared for the case. More to the point, the sheriff would certainly have been unaware of any substantive defence which might have been advanced on behalf of the complainer: and in that situation any assistance which he might have felt able to offer to an unrepresented accused would have been severely limited. The potential prejudice accruing to an unrepresented accused in such circumstances is, we think, self-evident.


[32]
The next consideration must be (to echo one of the questions set out in the case of Fraser and Another, referred to above) whether it was necessary in the public interest for this trial to proceed when it did. In that connection the sheriff seems to have been to some extent influenced by the fact that this trial had previously been adjourned: but we note that on the previous occasion when that happened the adjournment was granted on a Crown motion arising from the non-availability of the Crown witnesses. Moreover, this was in any event a trial which involved only two Crown witnesses both of whom were local police officers. No doubt it is always desirable to try to reduce the drain on police manpower which inevitably occurs when officers have to spend time in the precincts of a courthouse. However, given that an adjournment has been held to be necessary even where the consequences for witnesses and others were much more serious (Mason & McDougall v. H M Advocate), we do not consider that it can be said that it was necessary in the public interest that the two Crown witnesses in the present case should not be required to attend court again on a future occasion. Nor is this a case where it can be said that the complainer was trying to be deliberately obstructive. There is nothing to suggest conduct of that kind in any of the accounts of what took place on 2 May, and, consequently, we do not consider that it can be said that the public interest would be prejudiced if the trial did not proceed on that date. Finally, in this connection, there is the position of the Crown. Quite properly, the Crown is always alive to the need to safeguard the public interest where possible in the course of criminal proceedings: but, in the present case, as has been seen, the Crown were not only content for there to be an adjournment but in fact made a motion for that to be allowed. That, in our opinion, is eloquent of the fact that the Crown did not see any potential prejudice to the public interest were an adjournment to be granted

Decision


[33]
Taking all of the foregoing considerations into account, we are of opinion that the sheriff erred in declining to allow an adjournment of this case on the afternoon of 2 May 2008 in order to allow the complainer an opportunity to instruct another solicitor. The consequence of that error was that the complainer did not have a fair trial: and that constitutes a miscarriage of justice. We shall therefore pass this Bill and suspend the conviction complained of.

A Devolution Minute


[34]
There is one further matter which we must mention before concluding this Opinion. That is that, only a very few days before the hearing of this appeal, a document purporting to be a Devolution Minute was lodged on behalf of the complainer. It had not been prepared by Miss MacKenzie but by a different counsel who had drafted the Bill of Suspension and who, it appears, had been acting on behalf of the complainer thereafter, though, at the end of the day, he did not appear on behalf of the complainer at the appeal hearing. In that Minute it is averred that, by lodging Answers to the Bill of Suspension, the Crown had acted in a way which was incompatible with the right to a fair trial as guaranteed by Article 6 of the ECHR.


[35]
We have very considerable doubts about the relevancy of a Devolution Minute which bears to proceed on such grounds. However, in the course of the appeal hearing, Miss MacKenzie very properly recognised that the Devolution Minute could simply be ignored if, at the end of the day, we were to decide the appeal in the complainer's favour. Since that is what has now happened, we need say no more about this document.

 


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