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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 >> Coley & Ors v R [2013] EWCA Crim 223 (12 March 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/223.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 223 |
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201106475D4 (2) 201204187D2 (3) |
ON APPEAL FROM WOLVERHAMPTON CROWN COURT (1)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ONIONS
T20110752
ON APPEAL FROM BLACFRIARS CROWN COURT (2)
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MAURICE-COOLE
T20117025
ON APPEAL FROM CARDIFF CROWN COURT (3)
HIS HONOUR CHRISTOPHER LLEWLLYN JONES QC
T20117741
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HICKINBOTTOM
and
MR JUSTICE HOLROYDE
____________________
SCOTT COLEY (1) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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COLIN MCGHEE (2) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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DARREN HARRIS (3) |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
____________________
JULIAN WINSHIP (instructed by Registrar of Criminal Appeals) for the Appellant
JOHN PRICE QC and JULIAN JONES (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent (2)
ANDREW FISHER QC and SIMON GOODMAN (instructed by Registrar of Criminal Appeals for the Appellant
JOHN PRICE QC and MATTHEW COBBE (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent (3)
Hearing dates:
30 January 2013 (1)
31 January 2013 (2)
31 January 2013 (3)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hughes:
Coley
i) A defendant is insane in law when he suffers from a defect of reason attributable to a disease of the mind, such that he does not know the nature and quality of his act, or does not know that it is wrong: M'Naghten's case (1843) 8 ER 718.ii) The psychiatrists gave evidence that if he was in the course of a brief psychotic episode this defendant would lose touch with reality; at some points in their evidence some of them said either that he might not have known the nature and quality of his act or that he might not have known that it was wrong.
iii) A psychotic episode is a defect of reason attributable to a disease of the mind.
iv) It does not matter whether the defect of reason attributable to the disease of the mind is long-lasting or transient.
v) Accordingly, insanity was in question.
"But drunkenness is one thing and the diseases to which drunkenness leads are different things, and if a man by drunkenness brings on a state of disease which causes such a degree of madness, even for a time, as would have relieved him from responsibility if it had been caused in any other way, then he would not be criminally responsible".
We also agree that, as Lord Birkenhead also made clear, insanity which is temporary is as much insanity as that which is long-lasting or permanent. Davis was a case of a defendant suffering (temporarily) from delirium tremens. That, self evidently, is not intoxication. It is, if anything, the opposite. It is a condition brought about by the protest of the brain and nerve receptors against the removal of intoxicants to which the body has become accustomed.
"Our task has been to decide what the law means now by the words 'disease of the mind'. In our judgment the fundamental concept is of a malfunctioning of the mind caused by disease. A malfunctioning of the mind of transitory effect caused by the application to the body of some external factor such as violence, drugs, including anaesthetics, alcohol and hypnotic influences cannot fairly be said to be due to disease. Such malfunctioning, unlike that caused by a defect of reason from disease of the mind, will not always relieve an accused from criminal responsibility. A self-induced incapacity will not excuse – see R v Lipman [1970] 1 QB 152, nor will one which could have been reasonably foreseen as a result of either doing, or omitting to do something, as, for example, taking alcohol against medical advice after using certain prescribed drugs or failing to have regular meals while taking insulin. From time to time difficult borderline cases are likely to arise. When they do, the test suggested by the New Zealand Court of Appeal in Reg v Cottle [1958] NZLR 999, 1011, is likely to give the correct result, viz: can this mental condition be fairly regarded as amounting to or producing a defence of reason from a disease of the mind ?"
It will be seen that there are two stages to this decision. Lawton LJ held that since the cause of the defendant's condition was the application of an external factor, this was not insanity. Secondly, he held that whilst it might be automatism, that condition did not amount to a defence if it was voluntarily self-induced or caused by doing, or omitting to do, something which the defendant ought to have foreseen might lead to the condition. Later in another hypoglycaemia case, R v Bailey (1983) 77 Cr App R 76, also a case of claimed automatism, this court applied that approach and observed (at 80) that mere failure to take food after an insulin injection may not necessarily involve the criticism that the consequences should have been foreseen. The appeal, however, failed because automatism was inconceivable on the facts. However, in saying what it did, the court drew a sharp distinction from voluntary intoxication. That is because voluntary intoxication with alcohol or illegal drugs is an a fortiori case. No further enquiry is needed into whether the consequences ought to have been foreseen. All of this is thus entirely consistent with the voluntary intoxication rule to which we have referred. Drugs or alcohol are an external factor. When voluntarily taken their acute effects are not treated by the law as a disease of the mind for the purposes of the M'Naghten rules. Such a case is governed by the law of voluntary intoxication.
Sentence: Coley
McGhee
i) Insanity was not and is not in issue.ii) There is no challenge to the ruling that the intoxication was voluntary.
iii) There is no suggestion, now, that McGhee might have been in a state of automatism at the time of the first assault, on Mr Williams.
iv) But the recorder was wrong to withdraw automatism on counts 2/3.
"I do not think it was organised conscious control. It may be a small amount of conscious control. I suspect probably not."
A little later came this exchange:
"Q: You said that conscious control may not be what we are seeing here ?
A: No that is right….
Yes, I mean, bits of it look as though it could be a sort of automatic kind of behaviour."
Mr Winship focuses on those answers as providing an evidential base requiring the question of automatism to be left to the jury.
"I think he was probably reacting spontaneously to something which…I was talking about, the core of the onion, the aggressive behaviour which came out as the result of being disinhibited.
I do not feel that conscious control is really the way of describing it. I mean, conscious control means that you have actually thought about it and you have decided that this is the course of action to take."
The second passage cited above was followed immediately by this:
"Q: So parts of it look as though they could be automatic….Which parts of what you see look as though they could be ?
A: Well, his response to whatever was the provocation in the fight, and perhaps coming back again."
There were further questions and answers to like effect. Thus the evidence made it clear that what Professor Birch was speaking about were the paradoxically disinhibiting effects of temazepam plus alcohol and the manner in which that can lead to a person behaving in an aggressive fashion from which he would normally be restrained in the absence of the substances taken. Disinhibition is exactly not automatism. Moreover, one has only to look at the camera footage and the defendant's clearly voluntary behaviour in the shop and outside it over quite an extended period for it to be apparent that automatism was simply not in question. Intention was, on the count laid under section 18, but not automatism. The recorder was quite right.
Harris
"…one instinctively recoils from the notion that a defendant can escape the criminal consequences of his injurious conduct by drinking himself into a state where he is blind to the risk he is causing to others. In R v Caldwell it seems to have been assumed…that the risk would have been obvious to the defendant had he been sober."
Lord Steyn, at [60], associated himself with those remarks. Lord Rodger, in the only other substantial speech, did not attempt to answer the question of voluntary intoxication, but drew attention to the view of Lord Lane CJ (obiter) in the earlier case of R v Stephenson [1979] QB 695 that intoxication represented an exception to the generally subjective test of recklessness. There remains some room for doubt as to whether the aggravated offence of reckless arson, charged in the present case, is governed by this principle or should be regarded as an offence of specific intent – see for example the (dissenting) opinion of Lord Edmund-Davies in Caldwell at 361D and the passing obiter reference in R v Heard [2008] QB 43 at [31], where, however, the offence under consideration (sexual assault) was one requiring not recklessness but (basic) intent. We see some force in the argument that voluntary intoxication ought not to be a defence to an offence involving recklessness, even subjective recklessness; it may fall for decision in a later case whether Lord Lane's view in Stephenson correctly represents the law now that Caldwell recklessness has passed away.
"Alcoholic psychosis describes a cluster of different psychotic conditions relating to alcohol misuse. It includes delirium tremens and alcoholic hallucinosis…
The occurrence of agitation paranoia, auditory and visual hallucinations and confusion following sudden withdrawal of alcohol would point towards a diagnosis of delirium tremens. In certain circumstances there might be seizure associated with it. I note that Mr Harris has a history of seizures in the past….The complete resolution of symptoms is usually within a few days of stopping alcohol, with or without medication."
The defendant's condition was also complicated by clinical depression. He was in fact continuing to take both anti-depressant and anti-psychotic medication.
Postscript