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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Hussain & Ors, R. v [2023] EWCA Crim 697 (16 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2023/697.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Crim 697 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT WORCESTER
HH Judge Burbidge KC
T20207123, T20207111
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY
and
MR JUSTICE COTTER
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MOHAMMED SADDAM HUSSAIN FAISAL FIAZ ADAM CARPENTER |
Applicants |
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- and - |
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THE KING |
Respondent |
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(all counsel assigned by the Registrar of Criminal Appeals)
Michael Burrows KC (instructed by CPS Appeals Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 31 January, 1 February 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Holroyde:
Summary of facts:
The submissions of no case to answer:
The defence cases:
The judge's directions:
"Joint responsibility for a crime
A crime can obviously be committed by a person acting alone or indeed by two or more people acting together. Indeed a crime may be committed by people who are present but engage very little or not at all in the activity of the crime. However, to be jointly responsible they must assist or encourage and intend to assist or encourage the other participant or participants to commit the crime in question. So a person can participate in a crime in different ways, provided he intentionally assisted or encouraged the offence to be committed however great or small his participation in that way is. Mere presence at the scene of a crime or association with another who commits crime is not enough to prove guilt and that is something you must bear in mind in this case given the positions of [Carpenter] and [Fiaz], but if an accused was deliberately present at the scene and by his presence either assisted or encouraged or did participate intending to, he would be guilty of the particular crime alleged.
There are two routes to the consideration of murder in this case.
First route: The prosecution allege that this was a case where the shared intention by those who were involved was to rob [Bryan]. It is the prosecution case that if this was a conspiracy to rob, those who were engaged in it would anticipate that [Bryan] would not necessarily allow his property to be taken by the mere threat of force, but the person carrying out the robbery would need to use some actual physical violence. If it was intended that the person carrying out the robbery would if necessary use physical violence with intent to cause serious bodily injury, that would be murder by the person who carried out the physical violence with that intent and any person who encouraged or assisted him to so with that shared intent. This is sometimes called a "conditional intent".
Second route: The prosecution say that whether or not what was being carried out by Hammad was a conspiracy to rob with the intention to take his drugs and money, there was what might in the vernacular be called a 'turf war'. A straightforward attack by a rival supplier of drugs, and Hammad's intention was, in fact, to kill [Bryan] or cause him really serious injury. This would be another way that murder is committed. If that was his intention and anybody knew of his intention and shared it and encouraged him or assisted him in carrying out that attack with that intention, they too would be guilty of murder
An overwhelming supervening event [going beyond the plan]. Note this is a consideration in relation to both the offence of murder and manslaughter.
If you were satisfied that the defendant you are considering encouraged or assisted [Hammad] in an unlawful act or an attack on [Bryan], before you could convict of murder or manslaughter you would have to be sure that the prosecution have proved that [Hammad's]actual conduct in stabbing was not an overwhelming supervening act which nobody in the defendant's shoes (who you are considering) could have contemplated might happen, such that it relegated the defendant's act of assistance or encouragement to history. If [Hammad's] act may be such an overwhelming supervening act in this way, then the defendant you are considering would be acquitted of murder and manslaughter.
An overwhelming supervening event might be the use of a knife by [Hammad] especially if a defendant was not aware such a weapon existed or would be used. However, lack of knowledge of a knife does not necessarily mean the use of it would be an overwhelming supervening event. It is a matter for you in the circumstances of all the facts of the case what would amount to an overwhelming supervening act such that a secondary party/accessory would not be responsible for it because it consigns what he did to history in the course of the events.
So if it were the case when considering the individual cases of [Saddam/Carpenter/Fiaz] you were sure that they were involved in a conspiracy to rob [Bryan] with [Hammad] or indeed had planned and intended an attack on [Bryan] by him, but it might be the case that [Hammad] stabbing [Bryan] was an overwhelming supervening act that nobody in the shoes of the defendant you are considering could have contemplated might happen, such as to relegate the encouragement or assistance of the defendant you are considering to history, that defendant would not be guilty of murder or manslaughter."
The convictions and sentences:
The grounds of appeal - Saddam:
"The question in this case was whether the possibility that he washed his hands, panicked, threatened Wayne Anglin and told him not to call the police, and took the gun and ammunition(thereafter disposing of them) because he had just shot his friend and was frightened of the consequences of the shooting rather than because he had been in possession of the gun before he arrived at the flat. It appears to this court that when the question is postulated in that simple way, the possibility of panic as an explanation for his actions after the shooting cannot be eliminated. His actions were consistent with someone who was unaware of the gun until after he arrived at the flat, but who reacted in shock after it had been accidentally discharged. If that possibility could not properly be excluded on the available evidence, then a jury could not have safely concluded that the only inference to be drawn from that conduct was his guilt of the count of possession of the weapon before arriving at the flat. The submission that the count should not have been left to the jury should have been allowed ."
The grounds of appeal - Fiaz:
" (2) Where a key issue in the submission of no case is whether there is sufficient evidence on which a reasonable jury could be entitled to draw an adverse inference against the defendant from the combination of factual circumstances based upon evidence adduced by the prosecution, the exercise of deciding that there is a case to answer does involve the rejection of all realistic possibilities consistent with innocence. (3) However, most importantly, the question is whether a reasonable jury, not all reasonable juries, could, on one possible view of the evidence, be entitled to reach that adverse inference. If a judge concludes that a reasonable jury could be entitled to do so (properly directed) on the evidence, putting the prosecution case at its highest, then the case must continue; if not, it must be withdrawn from the jury."
The grounds of appeal - Carpenter:
The submissions of the respondent:
Analysis:
The applications for leave to appeal against conviction: grounds relating to the submissions of no case to answer and possible alternative inferences:
"12. Once encouragement or assistance is proved to have been given, the prosecution does not have to go so far as to prove that it had a positive effect on D1's conduct or on the outcome: R v Calhaem [1985] QB 808. In many cases that would be impossible to prove. There might, for example, have been many supporters encouraging D1 so that the encouragement of a single one of them could not be shown to have made a difference. The encouragement might have been given but ignored, yet the counselled offence committed. Conversely, there may be cases where anything said or done by D2 has faded to the point of mere background, or has been spent of all possible force by some overwhelming intervening occurrence by the time the offence was committed. Ultimately it is a question of fact and degree whether D2's conduct was so distanced in time, place or circumstances from the conduct of D1 that it would not be realistic to regard D1's offence as encouraged or assisted by it.
88. in some cases the prosecution may not be able to prove whether a defendant was principal or accessory, but it is sufficient to be able to prove that he participated in the crime in one way or another.
89. In cases of alleged secondary participation there are likely to be two issues. The first is whether the defendant was in fact a participant, that is, whether he assisted or encouraged the commission of the crime. Such participation may take many forms. It may include providing support by contributing the force of numbers in a hostile confrontation.
90. The second issue is likely to be whether the accessory intended to encourage or assist D1 to commit the crime, acting with whatever mental element the offence requires of D1 (as stated in para 10 above). If the crime requires a particular intent, D2 must intend (it may be conditionally) to assist D1 to act with such intent.
92. In cases of secondary liability arising out of a prior joint criminal venture, it will also often be necessary to draw the jury's attention to the fact that the intention to assist, and indeed the intention that the crime should be committed, may be conditional. The bank robbers who attack the bank when one or more of them is armed no doubt hope that it will not be necessary to use the guns, but it may be a perfectly proper inference that all were intending that if they met resistance the weapons should be used with intent to do grievous bodily harm at least.
93. Juries frequently have to decide questions of intent (including conditional intent) by a process of inference from the facts and circumstances proved. The same applies when the question is whether D2, who joined with others in a venture to commit crime A, shared a common purpose or common intent (the two are the same) which included, if things came to it, the commission of crime B, the offence or type of offence with which he is charged, and which was physically committed by D1. A time honoured way of inviting a jury to consider such a question is to ask the jury whether they are sure that D1's act was within the scope of the joint venture, that is, whether D2 expressly or tacitly agreed to a plan which included D1 going as far as he did, and committing crime B, if the occasion arose.
94. If the jury is satisfied that there was an agreed common purpose to commit crime A, and if it is satisfied also that D2 must have foreseen that, in the course of committing crime A, D might well commit crime B, it may in appropriate cases be justified in drawing the conclusion that D2 had the necessary conditional intent that crime B should be committed, if the occasion arose; or in other words that it was within the scope of the plan to which D2 gave his assent and intentional support. But that will be a question of fact for the jury in all the circumstances.
96. If a person is a party to a violent attack on another, without an intent to assist in the causing of death or really serious injury, but the violence escalates and results in death, he will be not guilty of murder but guilty of manslaughter. So also if he participates by encouragement or assistance in any other violent act which all sober and reasonable people would realise carried the risk of some harm (not necessarily serious) to another, and death in fact results.
97. The qualification to this is that it is possible for death to be caused by some overwhelming supervening act by the perpetrator which nobody in the defendant's shoes could have contemplated might happen and is of such a character as to relegate his acts to history; in that case the defendant will bear no criminal responsibility for the death.
98. This type of case apart, there will normally be no occasion to consider the concept of 'fundamental departure' as derived from R v English. What matters is whether D2 encouraged or assisted the crime, whether it be murder or some other offence. He need not encourage or assist a particular way of committing it, although he may sometimes do so. In particular, his intention to assist in a crime of violence is not determined only by whether he knows what kind of weapon D1 has in possession. Knowledge or ignorance that weapons generally, or a particular weapon, is carried by D1 will be evidence going to what the intention of D2 was, and may be irresistible evidence one way or the other, but it is evidence and no more."
"132. [In Calhaem] the Court of Appeal held at p813 E-G that the word 'counselling' does not imply any causal connection between the counselling and the offence. True enough, the actual offence must have been committed by the person counselled. To that extent there must be contact between the parties and, in that sense, a connection between the counselling and the offence.
133. Likewise, in [Stringer], Toulson LJ (as he then was) explained that the accessory's conduct must be 'relevant' to the offence of the principal and, in that sense, there must be a 'connecting link'. So encouragement should have the capacity to act on the principal's mind ([49]). Then at [50] he stated:
'If D provides assistance or encouragement to P, and P does that which he has been encouraged or assisted to do, there is good policy reason for treating D's conduct as materially contributing to the commission of the offence, and therefore justifying D's punishment as a person responsible for the commission of the offence, whether or not P would have acted in the same way without such encouragement or assistance.'
134. There is no additional requirement for the prosecution to prove that the encouragement or assistance did contribute to the commission of the offence. "
The applications for leave to appeal against conviction: other grounds:
The applications for leave to appeal against conviction: grounds relying on fresh evidence:
The applications for leave to appeal against sentence:
Conclusion: