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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Stead & Anor, R v [2002] EWCA Crim 1697 (4th July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2002/1697.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Crim 1697 |
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2001/00739/W3 |
COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ROGERS QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE NELSON
and
MR JUSTICE McCOMBE
____________________
R | ||
- v - | ||
Brian STEAD And Jason LAWLOR |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Andrew Campbell-Tiech appeared for the appellant Jason Lawlor
Brian Higgs QC and Simon Denison appeared for the Crown
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AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
Stead
“ Let us look at joint responsibility. Where a criminal offence is committed by two or more persons each of them may play a different part, but if they are in it together as part of an agreement or a joint plan to commit the offence, then they are jointly guilty.
The word ‘plan’ or ‘agreement’ does not mean that there has to be any formality about it. An agreement to commit an offence may arise on the spur of the moment. Nothing need be said at all and an agreement can be implied, can it not, from the behaviour of the parties to it.
The essence of joint responsibility is that each defendant shared the intention to commit the offence and took some part in it so as to achieve that aim. Your approach ought, therefore to be as follows: Look at the case against James Lawlor and the case against Brian Stead quite separately. If you are sure that with the intention to kill or cause really serious injury, then the defendant you are considering committed the offence of murder with that same intention took part in committing it with his co-accused, then he is guilty. It comes to this quite simply: You consider each quite separately. Are you sure either that he was the one that was responsible for killing Roy Brooker with the intention I have indicated or alternatively if he did not actually do it was he with that intention to kill or cause serious injury taking some part in the offence?
Now I want to say something quite separate, but associated with that. Brian Stead’s case is I was there, but I played no part. Mere presence at the commission of an offence does not amount to guilt. However, if you find that Brian Stead was not only present at the scene of the killing, but intended by his presence alone encourage James Lawlor to carry out the offence, then he could be guilty of murder. What it comes to in this case is this, is it not, if you think it possible that Brian Stead was simply there and was not intending to be involved and was not involved, then he is not guilty. He is only guilty if he was there, because, as I have already indicated with the intention I have set out, he did the killing or played some part in it with that same intention or alternatively was there present at the scene intending by his presence to encourage James Lawlor.”
Lawlor
“I never knew Jason at all. I met him once in a pub. He was serving a nine year sentence so I never met him.”
“It has been accepted for a very long time in English practice that there are powerful public reasons why joint offences should be tried jointly. The importance is not merely one of saving time and money. It also affects the desirability that the same verdict and the same treatment shall be returned against all those concerned in the same offence. If joint offences were widely to be tried as separate offences, all sorts of inconsistencies might arise. Accordingly it is accepted practice, from which we certainly should not depart in this Court today, that a joint offence can properly be tried jointly, even though this will involve inadmissible evidence being given before the jury and the possible prejudice which may result from that. Of course the practice requires that the trial judge in such a case should warn the jury that the evidence is not admissible, ....
However the question of severance is primarily one for the trial judge. The discretion was properly exercised in the present instance, and notwithstanding the fact that there must have been some risk of prejudice the decision of the judge, we think, was right. Of course if a case is strong enough, if the prejudice is dangerous enough, if the circumstances are particular enough, all rules of this kind must go in the interests of justice, but this is not the sort of case in which the ordinary rule of practice in our judgment will operate unduly to the detriment of the accused and therefore it is a case in which we should apply the ordinary rule.”
“I think that in charges of this sort justice ordinarily requires that the whole matter should be tried as one case, and that it needs a very strong and exceptional case before it is split up into two separate trials. If separate trials were to be ordered as a matter of course simply because one prisoner proposed to attack the character of another, then a separate trial, and the possible advantages in the case of the guilty prisoner, could always be obtained simply by the threat that one prisoner proposed to attack the character of his fellow-prisoner.”
“We are also conscious of the necessity to maintain intact so far as possible the discretion of the judge in this and in other cases (see Salmon LJ in Flack (1969) 53 Cr App R 16, 171. However, we have come to the conclusion that this was a wholly exceptional, if not unique, case and that the judge gave insufficient weight to the fact that separate trials would do little, if any, harm to co-defendant or prosecution, whilst a joint trial would almost guarantee that the appellant would be convicted whatever direction was eventually given to the jury as to how they should approach the difficulty.”
“Also bear this in mind and it is associated with it, Brian Stead has had a lot to say about the Lawlors and in particular about Jason who is not charged with murder. I give you this warning. The only reason that he has been permitted to make those allegations is because the defence of duress requires you to consider the state of mind, does it not, because you have to determine whether or not he might have been frightened in the way he says and, therefore, he is entitled to say to you I was frightened because. Do not take into account against the two co-defendants his allegations of what he says he knows about them. We have not even attempted to find out whether those allegations are true or false and it does not matter. All that is important is that he says they had an effect upon his mind, so their evidence that you take into account in determining his assertion of duress, but ignore all of them as far as his co-defendants are concerned. Let me put it to you quite simply. In the end, in count 1, you really have to determine whether James Lawlor was there in 5 Acanthas Drive playing the part he is said to have played. Concentrate on that. You are not helped by all sorts of allegations about other things. Put those out of your mind; similarly with Jason.”
We consider that to be a clear and accurate statement of the position. The judge was also correct to make no reference to Stead’s statement that the appellant had served a long prison sentence.