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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 >> Farnon & Anor, R v [2015] EWCA Crim 351 (10 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/351.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 351 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CROYDON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MITTING
and
MR JUSTICE GOSS
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Regina |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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John Farnon and Nia Ellis |
Appellants |
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John McGuinness QC and Jocelyn Ledward for the respondent
Hearing date: 17 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Thomas of Cwmgiedd, CJ:
Introduction
The evidence
i) NE admitted she had been into the building on the day of the fire and on a previous occasion. She had seen a tin of baked beans on the table but did not remember AL warning them that there might be someone in the building. She did not think there was anyone in the building.ii) JF said in interview that he used his lighter to light some paper and a log on the table. When NE had set light to the duvet, he blew on his little fire and it spread. They had left because of the smoke. He admitted he knew people slept there. On an occasion a few months before the fire when he and his friends had been there he had spoken to a homeless man who had told them that someone else there had axes and knives. When he went on the day of the fire he went to the area where people slept and because he did not see a light he believed that there was no-one there. If he had thought that there might be someone there he would have stopped and told the others to do the same.
The judge's direction to the jury
"A person acts recklessly if he is aware that his act has created a risk that damage may be caused i.e. that the fire would spread to the tyres and to the building and it is in the circumstances known to him unreasonable to take such a risk"
"Firstly it must be proved that at the time of starting the fire the defendant foresaw or contemplated the possibility that some person or persons, known or unknown, might be in the building.
Secondly, the unlawful act has to be a dangerous one in that all sober and reasonable people would inevitably have recognised that such person or persons might sustain some physical harm however slight resulting from the fire. It is immaterial whether or not the defendant actually knew or actually realised that the act was dangerous in the sense I have defined it for you and whether or not he intended any harm to result therefrom. And the sober and reasonable man is endowed with the knowledge which the defendant possessed before and at the time of starting the fire."
"That it was done either intentionally i.e. intending to cause damage to the building or recklessly. What is meant by recklessly? A person acts recklessly if he/she is aware that his/her act has created a risk that damage may be caused i.e. that the fire would spread to the tyres and to the building and it is in the circumstances known to him unreasonable to take such risk.
That at the time of setting the fire he/she was reckless whether the life of another or others would thereby be endangered. What has to be proved by the evidence is that the defendant was actually aware of a risk that his setting fire to the building would endanger the life of another or others and that in the circumstances that were known to him/her it was unreasonable to take that risk. If that is proved by the evidence, then he/she is guilty."
The case law
(a) The requirement of dangerousness in relation to the unlawful act
"A man who rushes into a house flourishing a naked razor and wounds someone, even accidentally, is still guilty of manslaughter if that person dies."
In considering that direction the Court of Criminal Appeal (Viscount Caldecote, CJ, Humphreys and Asquith JJ) made clear the distinction between gross negligence manslaughter and unlawful act manslaughter; for the latter, the act had not only to be unlawful, it also had to be dangerous.
"Perhaps it is as well once more to state the proposition of law which has been stated by Judges for generations and, so far as we are aware, never disputed or doubted.
If a person is engaged in doing a lawful act, and in the course of doing that lawful act behaves so negligently as to cause the death of some other person, then it is for the jury to say, upon a consideration of the whole of the facts of the case, whether the negligence proved against the accused person amounts to manslaughter, and it is the duty of the presiding Judge to tell them that it will not amount to manslaughter unless the negligence is of a very high degree. The expression most commonly used is "unless it shows the accused person to have been reckless as to the consequences of the act". That is the law where the act is lawful.
Where the act which a person is engaged in performing is unlawful, then if at the same time it is a dangerous act, that is, an act which is likely to injure another person, and quite inadvertently the doer of the act causes the death of that other person by that act, then he is guilty of manslaughter."
The decision therefore made clear that the test for establishing dangerousness where death resulted from an unlawful act which was dangerous was objective.
"… the conclusion of this court is that an unlawful act causing the death of another cannot, simply because it is an unlawful act, render a manslaughter verdict inevitable. For such a verdict inexorably to follow, the unlawful act must be such as all sober and reasonable people would inevitably recognise must subject the other person to, at least, the risk of some harm resulting therefrom, albeit not serious harm." See, for example, R v Franklin; R v Senior; R v Larkin in the judgment of the court delivered by Humphrey J; R v Buck & Buck; and R v Hall."
"It makes it plain (a) that an accused is guilty of manslaughter if it is proved that he intentionally did an act which was unlawful and dangerous and that that act inadvertently caused death and (b) that it is unnecessary to prove that the accused knew that the act was unlawful or dangerous. This is one of the reasons why cases of manslaughter vary so infinitely in their gravity. They may amount to little more than pure inadvertence and sometimes to little less than murder.
…
The test is still the objective test. In judging whether the act was dangerous the test is not did the accused recognise that it was dangerous but would all sober and reasonable people recognise its danger."
(b) The requisite state of mind
"… mens rea being now an essential ingredient in manslaughter (compare Andrews v DPP and R v Church that could not be established in relation to [unlawful act manslaughter] except by proving that element of intent without which there can be no assault."
"R v Lamb was referred to by Lord Denning M.R. for the proposition that in manslaughter there must always be a guilty mind. This is true of every crime except those of absolute liability. The guilty mind usually depends on the intention of the accused. Some crimes require what is sometimes called a specific intention, for example murder, which is killing with intent to inflict grievous bodily harm. Other crimes need only what is called a basic intention, which is an intention to do the acts which constitute the crime. Manslaughter is such a crime: see R v Larkin, and R v Church. R v Lamb is certainly no authority to the contrary."
i) The acts that constituted the crime in the present case were malicious damage to the building. The judge, as we have set out, directed the jury that they had to be sure that the appellants either intended that damage to the building or were subjectively reckless.ii) The judge then went on to direct the jury on the basis that the prosecution had to prove that the appellant had, at the time he or she started the fire, foreseen or contemplated the possibility that some persons might be in the building.
The first direction required the jury to have the mens rea applicable to the unlawful act – the malicious damage to the building - as established by R v G [2004] 1 AC 1034; that was plainly sufficient in the light of Lamb and Newbury. The second direction went further than was required, as it stated the law more favourably to the appellants. It appears to have been derived from the decision of this court in R v Bristow [2013] EWCA Crim 1540, [2014] Crim LR 457, where issues of joint enterprise were engaged. That decision does not require the gloss on the well-established law which the judge set out in the further direction given by him to the jury in the present case.
"In the longer term, common law manslaughter ought to be revisited by the Law Commission, since its most recent review of homicide law was focused on other matters and consequently treated this form of manslaughter rather cursorily: Law Com. No.304, Murder, Manslaughter and Infanticide (2006), pp.61–64. It is unlikely that the conflict of principle referred to [earlier in the comment] will be resolved to the satisfaction of all, but it is more appropriate that there be wide consultation on detailed questions about the ambit of any such offence than that these issues be resolved piecemeal by the courts, without clear parameters to guide them."
The appeal against sentence