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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 >> McCarthy v R [2015] EWCA Crim 1185 (09 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/1185.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 1185 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
HHJ John Plumstead, St. Albans Crown Court
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal Criminal Division
MR JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE
and
MRS JUSTICE PATTERSON DBE
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JAMIE McCARTHY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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Mr S Heptonstall (representing the Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 3 and 4 June 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lady Justice Hallett :
Background
Prosecution case
Defence case
The morning of the trial
Ms Manley's note
The applicant's account
"Took a plea bargain… I took a less charge to Gbh… I'm looking at anything from 2 – 5 years".
Tracey McCarthy's account
Karen Ashton's account
Cecil Ashton's account
Tracey De Heer's account
Other material
Text message
Shaun Wallace's response
Advice to solicitors on plea
"James asked me if he pleaded guilty to either s18 or a lesser charge, would that mean he would have to accept that he had the knife and used it in the manner suggested by the prosecution and I told him that they wouldn't accept anything less.
I told him that if he was going to plead guilty, it would be on the basis that he had the knife for protection because of the reputation for handling stolen goods and its potential for violence."
I advised him that if he decided to change his plea, then the Crown would drop the s18 charge against Tracey…"
Advice on sentence
GROUNDS OF APPEAL
Conviction
1. The applicant's case was inadequately and / or incompetently prepared by his trial representatives in that:
a. Counsel failed to comply with the Bar Standards Board's Written Standards of Professional Conduct;
b. Counsel failed to conduct conferences in a professional manner;
c. Counsel failed to instruct an expert to inspect the knife for forensic links to the complainant.
d. Counsel failed to record in writing the reason for the plea and the fact the lay client had been given the opportunity to endorse a declaration stating that he had given instructions, of his own free will, to plead guilty;
e. Counsel failed to make a contemporaneous note of his advice as to plea at trial.
a. he failed to explain sufficiently or at all the differences between section 18 and section 20 apart from the fact one was a lesser offence. In particular he failed to spell out that to plead guilty to a section 18 offence one would have to admit an intention to cause really serious bodily harm. Those present at the conference on the morning of trial, in particular the applicant, were clearly confused about the advice given.
b. he advised that even if Mrs Sapsford produced the knife, the Applicant was guilty of the section 20 offence because he accepted he stabbed her.
c. his advice on the prospect of the judge's agreeing to admit the complainant's bad character and on the likelihood of the applicant's bad character being admitted was unduly pessimistic.
d. he failed to explain that the applicant had the option to plead on a written basis, which could accept and reject specific facts (if necessary to be litigated at a Newton hearing);
The legal principles
Boal
"This decision must not be taken as a licence to appeal by anyone who discovers that following conviction (still less where there has been a plea of guilty) some possible line of defence has been overlooked. Only most exceptionally will this Court be prepared to intervene in such a situation. Only, in short, where it believes the defence would quite probably have succeeded and concludes, therefore, that a clear injustice has been done. That is this case. It will not happen very often."
Nightingale
10. …….. It is axiomatic in our criminal justice system that a defendant charged with an offence is personally responsible for entering his plea, and that in exercising his personal responsibility he must be free to choose whether to plead guilty or not guilty. Ample authority, from R v Turner [1970] 2 QB 321 to R v Goodyear [2005] 1 WLR 2532, which amends and brings Turner up to date, underlines this immutable principle. The principle applies whether or not the court or counsel on either side think that the case against the defendant is a weak one or even if it is apparently unanswerable. In view of the conclusion that we have reached, we shall express no opinion whatever of our view of the strength of the case against the appellant.
11. What the principle does not mean and cannot mean is that the defendant making his decision must be free from the pressure of the circumstances in which he is forced to make his choice. He has, after all, been charged with a criminal offence. There will be evidence to support the contention that he is guilty. If he is convicted, whether he has pleaded guilty or found guilty at the conclusion of a trial in which he has denied his guilt, he will face the consequences. The very fact of his conviction may have significant impact on his life and indeed for the lives of members of his family. He will be sentenced -- often to a term of imprisonment. Those are all circumstances which always apply for every defendant facing a criminal charge.
12. In addition to the inevitable pressure created by considerations like these, the defendant will also be advised by his lawyers about his prospects of successfully contesting the charge and the implications for the sentencing decision if the contest is unsuccessful. It is the duty of the advocate at the Crown Court or the Magistrates' Court to point out to the defendant the possible advantages in sentencing terms of tendering a guilty plea to the charge. So even if the defendant has indicated or instructed his lawyers that he intends to plead not guilty, in his own interests he is entitled to be given, and should receive, realistic, forthright advice on these and similar questions. These necessary forensic pressures add to the pressures which arise from the circumstances in which the defendant inevitably finds himself. Such forensic pressures and clear and unequivocal advice from his lawyers do not deprive the defendant of his freedom to choose whether to plead guilty or not guilty; rather, the provision of realistic advice about his prospects helps to inform his choice. …….
16. In the final analysis, the question is not whether the Judge Advocate here contravened the principles which govern the giving of sentence indications. Of itself that would not be decisive. The question is whether the uninvited indication given by the judge, and its consequent impact on the defendant after considering the advice given to him by his legal advisers on the basis of their professional understanding of the effect of what the judge has said, had created inappropriate additional pressures on the defendant and narrowed the proper ambit of his freedom of choice.
17. Having reflected on the facts in this case, we conclude that the appellant's freedom of choice was indeed improperly narrowed. Accordingly, the plea of guilty is in effect a nullity. It will be set aside. The conviction based on the plea will be quashed.
Conclusions
Undue pressure
Inadequate representation
a. Holding conferences with his lay client at his home without a solicitor present and without keeping the solicitor informed of what he was doing and advice he was giving;
b. Failing to keep notes of his conferences;
c. Failing to explain the obvious strengths of the prosecution case until fairly late in the day;
d. Failing to consider whether a joint family conference in the circumstances was appropriate;
e Failing to ensure that the applicant endorsed his brief to indicate that he knew what has doing and the consequences of what he was doing and that he had made the decision to plead guilty of his own free will;
f. Failing to explore the basis of plea and record the same;
g. Failing to record his advice at court and client's agreement with it leading to change of plea;
h. Adopting far too informal an approach throughout which either exceeded or came close to exceeding the boundaries of the client and advocate relationship.
Inadequate legal advice
Substitution
Sentence
Conclusions