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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 >> Pettitt, R. v [2022] EWCA Crim 1377 (16 September 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2022/1377.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Crim 1377 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MRS JUSTICE CHEEMA-GRUBB DBE
MRS JUSTICE COCKERILL DBE
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R E X | ||
- v - | ||
KARL PETTITT |
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Lower Ground, 18-22 Furnival Street, London EC4A 1JS
Tel No: 020 7404 1400; Email: [email protected]
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER:
Introduction
The facts
(1) dealer lists recovered from the applicant's home and storage unit. These too are the subject of one of the proposed grounds of appeal against conviction and we shall discuss them further below;
(2) inferences that the prosecution sought to draw from the applicant's silence in interview; and
(3) the applicant's bad character in the form of his previous convictions for possession with intent to supply cocaine in 1996, and being concerned in the supply of cocaine in 2007, on the basis that that evidence demonstrated a propensity both to commit the offences and also to tell lies.
(1) Message 750 – Marsh to the applicant: "Alright pal I'll come to the shop tomozz with my mate that runs it about for me aswell an well have a chat an sort summat out better for both of us init" The applicant replied with a thumbs up emoji.
(2) Message 752 – Marsh to the applicant: "Yh like I said pal if you can lay it on I'll just get it off you an stop getting it off my mate then both of us are winning mate but year I'll see you tomorrow at around 3:30 if okay mate". The applicant relied with a thumbs up emoji.
(3) Message 753 – Marsh to O'Donnell: "I've told him half 3 so make sure ya up bro".
(4) Message 883 – From Marsh to O'Donnell: "That guys phone got nicked but he just rang me told me to ring him at 10 he needs to see me".
(5) Message 967 – Marsh to unknown number: "Look on hull daily mail that guy who I get my stuff off got raided this morning both of his houses an his shop he been locked up for money laundering [two heart emojis]".
The prosecution submitted that the messages showed Marsh and the applicant arranging the supply of cocaine. Messages 750, 752, 753 and 883 were said not to be hearsay evidence because they were not sent with the intention of persuading the recipient of the truth of the matter stated. They were admissible pursuant to section 118(7) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 ("the 2003 Act") as statements made by a party to a common enterprise. Message 967 was not hearsay because it was not relied upon for the truth of the matter stated.
16. Having reached those conclusions, the judge addressed the question of prejudice. He declined to exclude the messages and concluded that they were relevant, highly probative and properly admissible in the case.
"Your conclusion about whether or not there was a conspiracy depends on what you make of all of the evidence, not just what was said. If you are sure on all of the evidence that there was a conspiracy you can take account of the evidence of what was said when you are deciding whether or not the [applicant] was involved in it."
"In essence, much caution is required when considering this evidence. If you consider that the defence submission is or may be correct in that Jordan Marsh was simply showing off to his girlfriend as an act of bravado, then you should ignore the evidence. Equally, if you reject the inferences suggested by the prosecution in relation to the text messages between Marsh and
[another defendant], ignore them. Even if you are sure that the prosecution are correct, you must avoid over-reliance upon the messages. It is merely one feature of the prosecution case and should be considered in the context of all the evidence you have heard."
The appeal
Analysis and conclusion
"(i) The learned judge erred in failing to exclude the evidence of the debtor's/dealer's lists.
The judge did not err and there is nothing in this ground. A seized dealer list is admissible per se, as was accepted by you, and is a relevant matter for the jury to hear about in the context of a trial regarding drugs supply. As the judge rightly stated, the evidence was plainly relevant to both charges. You denied possession. You said that either the police or someone else planted the drugs within the business premises, within a rucksack, which you accepted belonged to you and contained some of your personal possessions. In considering that issue, it was plainly relevant for the jury to know that a dealer list was found at your home address and a separate business premises or lockup. It is a matter for the jury to determine the list's nature (including its age), and the weight to give to it. As you state, the issue to consider was whether this evidence ought to be excluded under section 78 of PACE.
(ii) During the course of the trial a bad character application was made in relation to the admission of the dealer list (this related to both charges). The judge was right to grant it. The evidence was relevant to an important matter in issue between the defence and the prosecution pursuant to section 101(1)(d), namely propensity, as you denied drug dealing post your release from prison (up to the indictment period) and these lists could be said to show that that was false. As the judge stated, if the jury were sure that the dealer lists related to the two or three year period prior to the seizure of the drugs and rejected your account that they related to 2003, they would then be entitled to conclude that you had a tendency to supply drugs between 2016 and April 2019, and that that tendency made it more likely that you conspired with Jordan Marsh. Whilst you maintained that these were dealer lists from your previous prosecution, it was for the jury to determine whether that was so. The judge was right to consider that the admission of the evidence would not have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to admit it, which issue he considered carefully, balancing all the relevant considerations.
(iii) The learned judge erred in determining that the text messages sought be excluded by the defence did not amount to hearsay; and the text messages relied upon by the prosecution amounted to hearsay and should have been excluded.
The judge ruled that the text messages were not hearsay and even if they were, he would have ruled that they were admissible in the interests of justice. His analysis of the relevant issues at pages 11-14 of his ruling cannot be faulted. He took proper account of the relevant authorities, applied them correctly and gave the right answers to the questions which arose. Moreover, he gave the jury a very careful and cautious direction as to how they should use these text messages, which direction was agreed between both counsel. It follows that the judge did not err as alleged on this ground."
We agree with those observations.
Sentence application