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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 >> BQC, R. v [2021] EWCA Crim 1944 (17 December 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2021/1944.html Cite as: [2021] EWCA Crim 1944 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE CUTTS
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BLAIR QC,
The Honorary Recorder of Bristol
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R E G I N A |
Respondent |
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- v - |
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BQC |
Appellant |
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Mark Fenhalls QC appeared on behalf of the Crown Prosecution Service
Hearing date : 26 November 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
See : AMENDED ORDER ON THE APPEAL
Lord Justice Popplewell :
Introduction
The alleged abuse
(1) The judge failed to provide her directions of law to the jury in writing, or in draft form to counsel for discussion in advance. The directions were given orally over a period of two and a half hours, and then some were reiterated in different terms and at different stages including during the summary of the evidence. As a result a number of the important and complex legal directions necessary in the case, including those on cross-admissibility, hearsay, good character and bad character were given in a way which would have confused the jury and made them very difficult for the jury to follow or apply. Even if counsel had been able properly to consider those directions in advance, and even if there had not been errors within them, no jury could properly have absorbed and applied them in the course of their deliberations without receiving them in writing.
(2) There were misdirections in relation to:
(a) cross admissibility;
(b) evidence from TM, C1's grandmother, of a complaint of sexual abuse by the appellant made to her by C1 when C1 was about 3 years old;
(c) the appellant's good character, and the effect on it of evidence that the appellant had sexually abused a fifth victim, his niece (BP), for which he had been tried and acquitted in 2015, such evidence having been admitted as bad character evidence under s. 101(d) Criminal Justice Act 2003;
(d) the topic of recent and first complaint.
(3) The hearsay evidence of TM was wrongly admitted.
(4) The evidence of the allegations of abuse by BP was wrongly admitted as bad character evidence.
The course of the proceedings before the summing up
"(2) If a previous statement by the witness is admitted as evidence to rebut a suggestion that his oral evidence has been fabricated, that statement is admissible as evidence of any matter stated of which oral evidence by the witness would be admissible."
The summing up
10 November morning
10 November morning break
10 November morning resumption
"Quite often when you hear phrases like the defendant has a tendency to commit offences of the kind [with] which he is charged, that doesn't mean a tendency to be a rapist or a tendency to be a sexual assaulter it means a tendency to commit sexual offences against a particular group of people. Do you follow? So don't get too tied up with specifics as far as that is concerned."
10 November lunch break
10 November afternoon
"You have heard that as far as [BQC] is concerned, he is a man with no previous convictions for any criminal offence and that in that sense he is a man of hitherto good character. However you have also heard that he stood trial in relation to the [BP] case in 2017 [in fact 2015] and was acquitted of the sexual offences in relation to his niece."
"….do not forget that apart from that previous trial he is a man, as your admissions tell you, without any previous convictions and generally that is something that you should take into account in his favour when you are considering the evidence he has given before you. But again I am going to come back to that when I deal with his evidence and deal with how you should approach considering good character because you take into account not only the fact that he has no previous convictions but everything else you know about him, his working life and family life and so on and so forth. All right. So we'll come back to that but don't forget good character aside from the trial we are dealing with."
10 November after jury sent home
11 November morning
11 November lunch break
The Grounds
Ground 4
Ground 3
"… In as much as the rule [i.e. rebuttal of recent fabrication] forms a definite exception to the general principle excluding statements made out of court and admits a possibly self-serving statement made by the witness, great care is called for in applying it. The judge at the trial must determine for himself upon the conduct of the trial before him whether a case for applying the rule of evidence has arisen and, must exercise care in assuring himself not only that the account given by the witness in his testimony is attacked on the ground of recent invention or reconstruction or that the foundation for such an attack has been laid- but also that the contents of the statement are in fact to the like effect as his account given in his evidence and that having regard to the time and circumstances in which it was made it rationally tends to answer the attack."
Ground 2
Ground 2(a): misdirection on cross-admissibility
"It will be in rare circumstances, if at all, that the jury might be directed to consider both these possibilities in the same case (although it is not so unusual for the jury to consider the effect of a relevant previous conviction as demonstrating a relevant propensity and the unlikelihood that similar but independent complaints are, as between themselves, coincidental or malicious). Whichever is the basis upon which the jury is directed that they may consider the evidence given in relation to one count as support for another, they will require careful directions as to their proper approach to the evidence and, in the case of an alleged propensity, a specific warning as to the limitations of such evidence."
Ground 2(b): misdirection on good character
Ground 2(c): misdirection in relation to TM's evidence
Ground 2(d): recent complaint
Conclusion on Ground 2
Ground 1: no written directions
"19. …counsel argues that the failure in and of itself on the part of the judge to give written directions to the jury renders the verdict unsafe in a case such as this. In circumstances in which an oral direction only is provided a conviction will, in normal circumstances, be quashed because that oral direction was wrong or materially confusing, etc. It will not be because of the mere omission of written directions. It might be that the exercise of crafting written directions would have led to the errors being avoided but the errors remain those embedded in the oral directions and not in the mere fact that no written equivalent was given. We do not however rule out the possibility that, exceptionally, a direction might be so complex that absent an exposition in writing a jury would be at a high risk of being confused and misled in a material manner."