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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 >> Mulindwa, R. v [2017] EWCA Crim 416 (06 April 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/416.html Cite as: [2017] 2 Cr App R 10, [2017] WLR(D) 262, [2017] 4 WLR 157, [2017] EWCA Crim 416 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DINGEMANS
and
MR JUSTICE SPENCER
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
MULINDWA |
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Barnaby Jameson (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service, Appeals Unit) for the prosecution.
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Crown Copyright ©
JUDGE SPENCER:
Introduction
The brief facts and the circumstances of the defendant
The section 35 issue
"(1) At the trial of any person ... for an offence, sub sections (2) and (3) below apply unless- ... (b) it appears to the court that the physical or mental condition of the accused makes it undesirable for him to give evidence ...
"(2) ... the court shall, at the conclusion for the evidence for the prosecution, satisfy itself (... in the presence of the jury) that the accused is aware that the stage has been reached at which evidence can be given for the defence and that he can, if he wishes, give evidence and that, if he chooses not to give evidence ... it will be permissible for the ... jury to draw such inferences as appear proper from his failure to give evidence ...
"(3) ... The ... jury, in determining whether the accused is guilty of the offence charged, may draw such inferences as appear proper from the failure of the accused to give evidence ..."
"From a psychological point of view there has been an uncertainty about the answers he has given ... very difficult to concentrate on the task in hand if one is having an alternative conversation in one's mind ... there are other stimuli you are having to respond to. There is the possibility that what Mr Mulindwa is experiencing directs him to answer in a certain way."
She also confirmed that ensuring that questions were straightforward and in plain English would be helpful, but an intermediary could become more confusing.
The judge's ruling
"... In my judgment, it is clear, from Dr Birch's evidence, that there are safeguards that may assist this defendant. They are: that there should be short phases of evidence; questions should be asked in simple English; questions should be repeated when he appears not to understand; that his conduct would be explained by Dr Birch being available to give evidence, as necessary, and, indeed, Dr Birch remained, once I had made my initial ruling, to discover if the defendant wished that she stayed to assist in that regard; and that, following those criteria, a jury would then understand that he may answer some questions inappropriately. In my judgment, there would be clear indicators if he didn't answer his questions as would be expected of someone who fully followed the question being asked: that would be an opportunity then for those questions to be repeated. Accordingly, I do not find that it is undesirable for him to give evidence." (Emphasis added.)
A great deal of the argument has turned on the words "as necessary".
The grounds of appeal and submissions
"... The question posed by section 35 is a wide question for the judgment of the judge. It is plainly not sufficient that the defendant suffers from some ... physical or mental condition; it must be a mental condition which is such as to make it undesirable for him to give evidence. The fact that he may have some difficulty in giving evidence is insufficient to justify the conclusion that it is undesirable that he should do so. Many, if not most, difficulties that a defendant, or for that matter, any other witness may have in giving evidence are things which have to be assessed by the judge of the tribunal of fact in a Crown Court trial by the jury ..."
Discussion
"... What a court must be on its guard against is any attempt to detract from the jury's task of finding for themselves what evidence to believe. The court should therefore not allow evidence to be placed before the jury which does not allege any medical abnormality as the basis for the evidence of a witness being approached with particular caution by the jury ..."
"...The fact of mental ill health, however, does not mean that the witness ... cannot accurately be describing what has happened to her or that it would prevent her from (or make her incapable of) being reliable in her account. These issues of fact are not for resolution by doctors but are to be determined by the jury: as Kay LJ put it in R v V [2003] EWCA Crim 3917 (at para 29), evidence is admissible when it is necessary: â??to inform the jury of experience of a scientific and medical kind of which they might be unaware, which they ought to take into account when they assess the evidence in the case in order to decide whether they can be sure about the reliability of a particular witness.'"
"Counsel on behalf of Mr Mulindwa has suggested that a reason why you should not hold his silence against him is revealed by the agreed facts read to you earlier this morning and that is the material which forms agreed evidence 2 as it is headed. I will not read them again as you have had them read to you so recently. Dr Birch, whose opinions are there recited, is a clinical psychologist, she is an expert in her field. The agreement is as to what she has said, that is the opinion-those are the opinions that she has expressed. It is a matter for you as to how you apply that evidence. Her opinions are relied upon by the defence as an explanation why it might have been undesirable for the defendant to give evidence but it is a matter for you whether you accept her opinion and therefore hold the defence failure to give evidence against him or not because it was open to you to reach a conclusion adverse to his case."
Conclusion