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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG -v- B [2016] JRC 023 (25 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2016/2016_023.html Cite as: [2016] JRC 023, [2016] JRC 23 |
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Hearing (Criminal) - application by the defendant to exclude statements made by the complainant.
Before : |
J. A. Clyde-Smith, Esq., Commissioner, sitting alone. |
The Attorney General
-v-
B
C. M. M. Yates, Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate E. L. Wakeling for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE commissioner:
1. The defendant is due to stand trial before the jury accused of two counts of grave and criminal assault (Counts 1 and 3) and one count of sodomy (Count 2).
2. The Crown will be relying, principally, upon the evidence of the defendant's wife, the complainant, and her employers Mr and Mrs C and I have been provided with statements.
3. Counsel have agreed that elements of those statements should not be adduced by the Crown because they constitute hearsay, but the defendant applies to exclude statements made by the complainant as to the history of violence within their relationship over nine years of marriage, namely the following:-
"(a) He pulls my hair, slaps me in general and kicks me. He usually kicks me in the stomach, but it could be anywhere, he could find any bit on my body.
(b) "The first time he assaulted me [in Madeira] - he put the palm of his hand on my eye and pushed me backwards, making me fall on top of the sofa. After this he left the house. I was left with a right black eye for 2 or 3 weeks."
(c) "[B subjected her to various sexual indignities] ...At the start, I thought this behaviour was normal, but later realised it wasn't. He made me feel abused and worthless. I think that in B's (illegible) I was only good for this and nothing else."
(d) "Other times if anyone made any comment about me it was reason enough for him to hit me. He said he had already told me before about some of my actions or about not speaking to other people. Anything was reason enough. Usually I wouldn't say anything because I knew what I would get. He would kick me in the stomach, kick my legs, my back where (illegible). He also ended up hitting my head against the wall, and would bite me, always in places where it was difficult to see. B wouldn't hit me in the face, so there wouldn't be any marks."
(e) "B was always criticising my work, and would say I trusted customers too much. B would always go to the café in the morning before work, after work and when he picked me up. If he ever saw me speaking to a customer, he would just look at me, as if to say he was watching me. On these days I knew I was going to get [illegible (although the Crown contends the word is Portuguese slang for "beating")] when I arrived at home,"
(f) "B always hit me for the same reasons, because there was something he didn't like. B saw me as a sexual instrument, never as a wife, he never gave me any affection or attention."
4. Advocate Wakeling, for the defendant, submitted that these allegations of historic violence represent alleged misconduct by the defendant on occasions other than those charged and should be excluded on the basis that it is bad character evidence and the defendant has not lost his shield.
5. The defendant also seeks to exclude the following passages from the statements of Mr and Mrs C:-
"(a) There were times when I saw B argue with D in front of everyone, which would make her cry and scared in front of everyone. If she was late finishing work that would be enough for him to start an argument for no reason, because he was always drunk." (Mrs C's Statement - paragraph 7).
"(b) D went home with B but not long after I got home, D was on the phone to my wife and I had to go quickly and collect D from Robert's Garage at Springfield because B had hit her. I took D home and she was talking to my wife but B rang her and said if she didn't come home she would never see her daughter again, so she left and went home to him" (Mr C's Statement - paragraph 13).
6. Advocate Wakeling argues that these paragraphs from their statements should be excluded on the basis that they go to general propensity.
7. Advocate Yates contended that this is a case where background allegations should be put to the jury in order to make the case complete and comprehensible, notwithstanding that those background allegations include evidence which may establish that the defendant is guilty of offences for which he is not charged.
8. Counsel have referred me to the Court of Appeal decision in U v AG [2012] (1) JLR 349, relevant extracts from the current and 2003 edition of Archbold, (the latter showing the position under English law prior to the introduction of the Criminal Justice Act 2003), relevant extracts from Blackstones 1998, R v Fulcher [1995] 2 Cr App R 1251 and R v Bond [1906] 2 KB 389.
9. The guiding principle is set out in a judgment of Nutting JA in U v AG at paragraphs 39-41 as follows:-
10. He went on to say at paragraphs 44 and 45:-
11. Advocate Wakeling submits that it would be perfectly possible for the Crown to adduce evidence of the grave and criminal assaults as isolated acts of alleged violence, without going into the history of the relationship between the defendant and the complainant. On the Crown's case, the background of violence between the defendant and the complainant permeates all of the actions of the complainant, including the way she brought the matter to the attention of the police, and her account would be incomprehensible without understanding the nature of that relationship. It would technically be very difficult for her to give an account without going into that background.
12. In his interview with the police, which will be before the jury, the defendant states that he had become "a little jealous" when his wife spoke to other people but that he loved her and denied any physical attacks upon her. If he chooses to give evidence, it is reasonable to suppose that he will make statements to similar effect before the jury. That being the case, the Crown must be entitled to ask that the jury be given what it says is the full picture, namely that these are not isolated incidents out of character, but arose out of a relationship marked by violence brought about by excessive jealousy.
13. In my view, it would be wholly unrealistic to expect the complainant to give her account of the incidents which are the subject of the charges without going into the background of their relationship. It seems to me that when dealing with allegations of violence conducted between people in a relationship and within the privacy of their home, it will almost always be necessary for the jury to be given the full picture as to the nature of that relationship. It will, of course, be for the jury to decide whose evidence as to the nature of that relationship is to be believed.
14. Matters have moved on to this extent that the defendant does now admit in relation to Count 3 that he hit the complainant on the arm and leg with his boot, but he denies subsequently biting her arm and finger. It is currently proposed, subject to further discussion between counsel and approval by the Court, to divide Count 3 into two counts, on the basis that the defendant will plead guilty to the first part of the alleged assault with the boot, but not the second part, namely the biting.
15. In relation to the allegation of sodomy, Advocate Wakeling said that the defendant's case was that they had "an ordinary sex life" and she agreed in discussion with me that the Crown must be able to counter that with the evidence of the complainant that they did not - in other words, the Crown must be able to put what it alleges is the full picture in relation to this aspect of their relationship before the jury.
16. Advocate Wakeling complained of the unfairness of the defendant being placed with unparticularised historical incidents of alleged violence, which put him at a disadvantage in trying to rebut them. They should, she said, be the subject of separate charges or not referred to at all.
17. Advocate Yates said those incidents, which had been sufficiently particularized to form the basis of a charge, had been charged. Furthermore, the complainant's allegations as to the violent nature of their relationship come from the complainant herself, not from other witnesses, save to the extent that Mr and Mrs C corroborate the same.
18. I conclude that the evidence to which the defence object is relevant in that firstly it shows the history of the relationship between the defendant and the complainant without the totality of which the account placed before the jury would be incomplete or incomprehensible and secondly, it rebuts the suggestion of the defendant that he loved his wife and had never physically assaulted her and that they had a normal sex life.
19. There is an element of unfairness in a defendant having to counter allegations about his relationship with his wife going back some years, but this background is relevant and its admission does not so adversely affect the fairness of the proceedings that I ought to exclude it under Article 76 of the Police Procedures and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003.
20. The application to exclude is therefore dismissed.
21. I do have a concern as to the admissibility of the statement of Mr C to which the defence take objection and as set out above, on the different ground that it appears to be entirely hearsay. Advocate Yates said he was alert to this; clearly Mr C cannot give evidence of what his wife told him from her telephone conversations with the complainant. I note that neither his wife nor the complainant refer to this incident in their statements in any event.