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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Supreme Court >> McInnes v Her Majesty's Advocate (Rev 1) (Scotland) [2010] UKSC 7 (10 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKSC/2010/7.html Cite as: [2010] UKHRR 287, 2010 SLT 233, 2010 SCCR 286, 2010 GWD 8-136, 2010 SC (UKSC) 28, 2010 SLT 266 |
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Hilary Term
[2010] UKSC 7
On appeal from: [2008] HCJAC 53
JUDGMENT
McInnes (Appellant) v Her Majesty's Advocate (Respondent) (Scotland)
before
JUDGMENT GIVEN ON
10 February 2010
Heard on 8 and 9 December 2009
Appellant John Carroll Moira MacKenzie (Instructed by McClure Collins Solicitors) |
Respondent Paul McBride QC Gordon Balfour (Instructed by Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service) |
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2nd Respondent & Intervener The Baron Davidson of Glen Clova QC Mark Lindsay (Instructed by Office of the Solicitor to the Advocate General for Scotland) |
LORD HOPE
The statements
"…I identified the men standing at positions four and six as being similar to the persons to whom I referred to [sic] in my earlier statement to the police. Numbers 4 and 6 looked very familiar and I would say that one of them was the guy that kicked Mr Sweeney on the face that night that resulted in him being knocked to the ground. I am unsure of this identification."
"I identified the person at position number three as similar to the person I described to the police in my statement. This person had the same facial features as I described in my original police statement.
I cannot be sure if it was the same person as on the night who [sic] I have partially indentified."
"He later attended an identification parade for Paul McInnes and he indicated that he was similar to the man in the leather jacket. He appeared to him to be familiar. Facially he was different because he had a goatee beard which the person at the dancing had not had, he was therefore unsure about this identification at that time but indicated that without the beard he was certainly more like to one in the leather jacket than the person he identified at the Gary Easedale [sic] parade."
The proceedings in the courts below
"It was because I told to the police at the time he never had a goatee beard but on the line up he had a goatee beard and I couldn't identify him positively and I told that to the police."
"Information about the outstanding charges might therefore have played a useful part in the defence effort to undermine the credibility of the Crown's principal witness on charge 2. At least, that possibility cannot be excluded. One cannot tell, for sure, what the effect of such cross-examination would have been. But applying the test suggested by Lord Justice General Clyde in Hogg v Clark 1959 JC 7, 10, I cannot say that the fact that counsel was unable to cross-examine in this way might not possibly have affected the jury's (majority) verdict on charge 2 – and hence their verdict on charge 3."
"Lord Rodger's test has been used (or abused) in argument in this jurisdiction to suggest that the threshold for reversing the verdict of a jury in non-disclosure and analogous cases is low. This may be a misreading of Lord Rodger's words. In the context of determining whether there has been a miscarriage of justice (or, we venture to think, an unfair trial) a robust test is required. The test of a real risk of prejudice to the defence was, rightly in our view, adopted in Kelly v HM Advocate [2005] HCJAC 126, 2006 SCCR 9."
In Kelly v HM Advocate, where a statement to the police by the complainer was not made available to the defence, counsel for the appellant based his submission on the test that had been suggested in Hogg v Clark, which he said had been approved by Lord Rodger in Holland v HM Advocate, at para 82. Delivering the opinion of the court in Kelly, Lady Cosgrove did not adopt that approach. She rejected the submission that non-disclosure of the statement might have made a difference to the outcome, saying that it did not give rise to "any real risk of prejudice to the appellant": para 33. She said that in all the circumstances the court was of the opinion that the appellant was not denied a fair trial, and that as a consequence there was no miscarriage of justice: para 35.
The issue before this court
The test
"It is now necessary to consider whether, taken as a whole, the appellant's trial was fair in terms of article 6(1)."
Having examined the significance of the Crown's failures in paras 78-85, he said that he had arrived at the conclusion that the failures to disclose and the Advocate Depute's reliance on dock identifications were incompatible with the Convention right since, taken together, they had resulted in an unfair trial.
Conclusion
LORD RODGER
LORD WALKER
LORD BROWN
"A substantial miscarriage of justice will actually occur if fresh, admissible and apparently credible evidence is admitted which the jury convicting a defendant had no opportunity to consider but which might have led it, acting reasonably, to reach a different verdict if it had had the opportunity to consider it."
"In the Board's view the law is now clearly established and can be simply stated as follows. Where fresh evidence is adduced on a criminal appeal it is for the Court of Appeal, assuming always that it accepts it, to evaluate its importance in the context of the remainder of the evidence in the case. If the Court concludes that the fresh evidence raises no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused it will dismiss the appeal. The primary question is for the Court itself and is not what effect the fresh evidence would have had on the mind of the jury. That said, if the Court regards the case as a difficult one, it may find it helpful to test its view 'by asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial, might reasonably have affected the decision of the trial jury to convict' (Pendleton at p83, para 19 [R v Pendleton [2002 1 WLR 72]). The guiding principle nevertheless remains that stated by Viscount Dilhorne in Stafford (at p906 [Stafford v Director of Public Prosecutions 1974 AC 878]) and affirmed by the House in Pendleton:
'While . . . the Court of Appeal and this House may find it a convenient approach to consider what a jury might have done if they had heard the fresh evidence, the ultimate responsibility rests with them and them alone for deciding the question [whether or not the verdict is unsafe].'"
LORD KERR