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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 >> Slack and Johnson, R v [2010] EWCA Crim 1149 (28 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1149.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Crim 1149 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE ROYCE
and
MR JUSTICE NICOL
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R |
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- v - |
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SLACK and JOHNSON |
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Mr Vincent Coughlin QC and Miss Katherine Moore for Johnson
Mr Simon Spence QC and Mr Richard Potts for the Crown
Hearing date : 30 April 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
Rulings in the course of the trial
The grounds of appeal
Johnson: bad character evidence
"It stopped at one stage and [the Deceased] fell back into his chair … he was bloody nosed and his face looked as if he's had enough and Johnson sat back down. I thought that was the end of everything."
"Johnson was egging him to stop. She was egging him to stop."
"I think he was getting the pillows while the punching was going on. [The Deceased] had fallen back in the chair and Johnson was not punching him in the chair."
"He said there was no real break from the one event, punching and the pillows."
Johnson: refusal of the application to discharge the jury
Johnson: the summing up
"In the old days, juries were usually not told about a defendant's previous convictions. This was because of the fear that such information would prejudice the jury against the defendant and that they would give it more weight that it deserved. Today, such evidence is often admitted because a jury understandably wants to know whether what the defendant is alleged to have done is out of character or whether he or she has behaved in a similar way before. Of course, a defendant's previous convictions are only background. They do not tell you whether he or she has committed the offence with which he or she is charged in this case. What really matters is the evidence that you have heard in relation to that offence, so be careful not to be unfairly prejudiced against the defendant by what you have heard about his or her previous convictions."
"The defendant accepts by her plea of guilty to the added count of assault occasioning actual bodily harm that she attacked [the Deceased], but of course she has always vehemently denied any allegation that she participated in the subsequent attack on him involving the use of a walking stick or that she formed any intent in relation to that matter."
"When you consider that issue, you may consider it relevant that on two previous occasions, the defendant had been convicted of using violence in the manner just set out. The prosecution say that those convictions plus her now admitted actions on this day show that she has a tendency to use uncontrolled violence injuring old people in their own homes and minimise her actions. It is for you to decide if that assertion by the prosecution is correct and the extent to which, if at, the previous convictions assist you in deciding that issue. I must also emphasise to you that such convictions would be equally relevant to a consideration of manslaughter and do not relate to your consideration for the murder count anymore than they relate to the manslaughter count."
"In the case of all three defendants, do not use the convictions for any other purpose than that which I have set out, and in all cases, do not assume guilt because they have previously been convicted of criminal offences."
"The guidance proffered in paragraph 18 of Hanson as to what a summing up should contain was, whilst … not intended to provide a blueprint, departure from which will result in the quashing of a conviction. What the summing up must contain is a clear warning to the jury against placing undue reliance on previous convictions, which cannot, by themselves, prove guilt. It should be explained why the jury has heard the evidence and they ways in which it is relevant to and may their decision, bearing in mind that relevance will depend primarily, though not always exclusively, on the gateway in section 101(1) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003, through which the evidence has been admitted … provided the judge gives such a clear warning, explanation and guidance as to use, the terms in which he or she does so can properly differ. There is no rigid formula to be adhered to."
"If there are problems in this case with anything I have said factually or in law I do hope I am going to be told."
Slack
"… there are a number of warnings and directions which I will give you at this point … The first one is to reiterate the general warning I have already given you on numerous occasions about how you deal with any allegations which defendants have made about other defendants which were not made under oath in the witness box in this courtroom. On occasions, they were made to friends or relatives or acquaintances. In the case of Comer and Johnson, allegations were made in police interviews which you have in summary form. Although you have heard this many times before, I must remind you yet again that those out of court statements are not evidence against other defendants. Those defendants were not there at the time and were not in a position to deal with the matters which were being raised."
Conclusion