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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> McNairn v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_112 (18 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2005/HCJAC_112.html Cite as: [2005] HCJAC 112, [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_112 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord Hamilton Lord Wheatley Lord Macphail
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[2005HCJAC112] Appeal No: XC660/04 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD HAMILTON in APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION by GEORGE DOUGLAS CAMERON McNAIRN Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: D. Burns, Q.C.; Michael S Allan, Aberdeen
Respondent: J. Becket, Q.C.; Crown Agent
18 October 2005
[1] The appellant was convicted after trial of having, on 22 May 2003 at an address in Aberdeen, raped the complainer. [2] The complainer lived in a flat above that occupied by the appellant. They were on friendly terms. There was some inspecific evidence that she pestered him from time to time and wrote him notes. On the evening of 22 May the complainer went to the appellant's flat at about 8.00pm. Drink was taken and she decided to stay at his invitation. She undressed to the extent of removing her trousers and got into bed. The appellant remained in the same room, lying initially on a camp bed there. According to the trial judge's report, the appellant's evidence was that she fell asleep and was awakened to find the appellant having sexual intercourse with her. The intercourse, she testified, lasted for twenty minutes. Throughout that time she pretended to be asleep, as she was afraid of him. When intercourse finished, the appellant lit a cigarette and left the room. The complainer then got dressed and left the flat. She went to the flat of a male friend. She arrived there about 5.00am. [3] According to the notes taken at the trial by counsel for the appellant and by the Crown junior, the complainer's evidence was to the effect that she had wakened, shortly before sexual penetration took place, on being moved by the appellant. She had, however, from the point of wakening, pretended to be asleep. [4] In the course of the Crown case there was put in evidence a transcript of a tape recorded interview of the appellant by police officers, which had taken place a few days after 22 May. In the course of it the appellant gave an account of events in which he maintained that the complainer had been awake and that, on various grounds, he had believed that she was a willing party to the sexual intercourse which he admitted had taken place. Evidence was also led in the course of the Crown case of the condition of the complainer when she arrived at the male friend's flat at about 5.00am and also when she was later seen by a female friend. Evidence was further led from a witness, Robert Rennie, a friend of the appellant, about a conversation he had had with the appellant shortly after the latter had been detained, charged and arrested by the police in relation to the incident on 22 May. [5] In evidence-in-chief Rennie accepted that he had on the evening of Monday 26 May gone to the latter's flat. The appellant had told him that he had been arrested for the alleged rape of the complainer. The examination continued:"Did he say anything else?
- Nae really, no.
Did he go into details as to what had in fact happened?
- He told me that he did try sleeping with her but that is basically about all he said.
He told you that he did try sleeping with her?
- Aye.
What did you take that to mean?
- That he had tried it on.
That is what he told you?
- Well, basically, aye."
The Advocate Depute then moved on to other matters. Later he returned to the conversation on 26 May. The examination continued:
"And what did he have to say about [the rape allegation]?
- Well, he didnae ken what to say. I mean, he couldn't believe it, ken what I mean?
But did you not also tell us earlier that you got the impression that he had tried it on with the girl?
- Yes.
That he had tried to have sex with her. Did he say anything else?
- Basically, know what I mean, (inaudible) he didnae ken what to say."
The Advocate Depute then closed his examination-in-chief. Thereafter there was the following exchange between the trial judge and the witness:
"BY THE COURT: I want to be quite clear about this, Rennie. Earlier you said to the Depute, the first time you were asked about 26 May and you asked him about it and he said he was arrested for an allegation of rape and he said to you he did try sleeping with her. That is what you said?
- Well...
Is that right?
- What he told me is that she came down to his house and she got into his bed.
Well, that may be but earlier you did say he did try sleeping with her. Did he say that to you?
- Well, that is just what I took it, was that she got into his bed beside him."
When in cross-examination it was suggested to the witness that he could not really tell the court the words used by the appellant, he responded: "No, I cannae remember the exact words he used but he basically told me what he was lifted for." In re-examination the following exchange occurred:
"Now, when I was asking you questions before you told me that Mr McNairn did say that he had tried sleeping with her?
- Yes.
Now, those were the words you used, he had tried sleeping with her. Is that what he said?
- I cannae remember exactly what he said but from what he said, that is what I had taken it he meant.
Did he use words that gave you the impression that he had tried to sleep with her?
- I told you, I cannae remember exactly what he said but that is the impression he gave me.
You also told me earlier that you got the impression he had tried it on. Is that the impression you had from the words he used?
- Aye."
"Now, the third element in the case is a guilty state of mind. Well, ladies and gentlemen, that you have to view in this fashion. The starting point is once again the complainer. She says that she was asleep when he raped her, although she woke up at some point. Now, you have to accept her evidence that she was asleep. If you don't, then the Crown case fails. If she is asleep, then of course someone who is asleep cannot give or withhold consent, because they are unconscious. And the proof of her being asleep is essential to the Crown case.
Well, let us assume that is established, for the sake of the argument. Where do you get corroboration? Well, in this case, ladies and gentlemen, there is one other source of corroboration. Let me repeat, you cannot use her distress to corroborate her, but you can use, depending upon the view you come to about it, the evidence of Rennie, the friend. Now, what he said and what he retracted - because he did retract it at one point in his evidence - might amount to the fact that the accused tried it on, in other words that he did something very much without thinking, recklessly. What he said was in chief: 'When I saw him after his arrest he said, "I did trying sleeping with her"', and he thought by that he meant he tried it on. In re-examination he affirmed that, although it is fair to say that he did try to retract it. Now, of course, that makes him not the most satisfactory witness, and I have to say to you - and I direct you - that if you don't accept his evidence and the meaning attached to it, then the third leg simply isn't corroborated, and whatever you have in the other pegs (sic) of the case, if the third peg (sic) isn't corroborated then the whole charge simply has to go. If you are left in any reasonable doubt about any of these, then of course you have to acquit."