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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Greenan v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_80 (13 October 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_80.html
Cite as: [2006] HCJAC 80, 2006 SCCR 659, 2007 JC 181, 2006 GWD 37-739, [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_80

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Justice General

Lord Kingarth

Lord MacLean

[2006] HCJAC 80

Appeal No: XC436/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD KINGARTH

 

in

 

NOTE OF APPEAL

 

by

 

LEONARD SMITH GREENAN

Appellant;

 

against

 

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Forbes, Advocate; Balfour & Manson

Alt: Murphy, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent

 

13 October 2006

[1] On 29 April 2005 at Kilmarnock Sheriff Court the appellant was found guilty of the following charge:

"between 15 October 2003 and 15 January 2004, both dates inclusive, at 77 Fergushill Road, Kilwinning you LEONARD SMITH GREENAN did produce a controlled drug, namely cannabis, a class C drug specified in Part III of Schedule 2 to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, in contravention of section 4(1) of said Act; CONTRARY to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971, section 4(2)(a)".

He has appealed against this conviction.

[2] The case against the appellant was that he was the owner and occupier of the premises named in the charge. On the night of 14-15 January 2004 two police officers, apparently engaged on a search for other purposes, discovered a well-lit room in the loft, which was warm and humid, had walls lined with tinfoil or similar material and which was filled by an array of plants growing in pots. Subsequently, a more formal drugs search disclosed that there were 44 growing cannabis plants in the room, together with harvested plant material, heaters, electrical transformers and specialist lighting systems. Also found were various personal papers made out in the name of the appellant.

[3] The appellant's position in evidence was that, although he was the owner and occupier of the premises, he did not grow the cannabis in the house and did not know that the plants were growing there. He said that his son, Robert Greenan, and his daughter, Katriona Greenan, were the persons involved in the production of cannabis there, unknown to him at the time. Prior the trial, a notice of special defence of incrimination was lodged on his behalf, naming both of his said children.

[4] The appellant's daughter Katriona Greenan was led as a witness for the defence. As appears from the transcript of her evidence, she was warned at the outset by the presiding sheriff that she was not obliged to answer any question the answer to which might tend to incriminate her or to suggest that she was guilty of a criminal act. She indicated that she understood. Thereafter, having indicated that she understood what her father was charged with, and having been shown certain photographs of the scene discovered by the police in the room in the loft, she said that her father did not grow the plants or have anything to do with the growing of the plants or with the setting up of the room. When asked "Who was responsible for the scene depicted in these photographs?" she replied, so far as relevant, "I was ... " and "I was responsible for the cannabis plants which was (sic) grown in that house". Thereafter, in evidence in chief, she answered a number of questions designed apparently to provide some more detail of her claimed responsibility. For example she said that she grew the cannabis herself rather than buy it off the street; that she learned how to grow it off the internet; that she bought materials off the internet and in shops; and that she had access to the flat by a key.

[5] The witness was cross-examined by the procurator fiscal depute at some length. It is clear from the transcript that the nature of the questioning was designed to challenge the credibility and reliability of the witness's claimed responsibility. In the main the witness answered freely the questions which were put to her. At some points, however, she declined to do so. And at some of these points, although not all, she was directed by the presiding sheriff that she was required to answer the questions, and having been directed to do so, she duly did.

[6] It is plain by their verdict that the jury did not accept her evidence as being credible and reliable.

[7] In the hearing before us counsel for the appellant advanced essentially two arguments in support of the appeal.

[8] In the first place, it was submitted that the sheriff erred in directing the witness Katriona Greenan to answer a number of questions which she should not have been required to answer, given her right not to incriminate herself. Although counsel referred to a number of questions and answers in the transcript where the sheriff had directed the witness to answer, despite the witness's apparent wish not to do so, it is enough, for present purposes, to note that counsel accepted that all were questions designed to elicit, and which did elicit, more apparent detail of what she had already admitted. For example, when asked who provided the money for all the equipment, the witness initially said "no comment". When directed to answer the question she indicated that the money came from savings from benefits of £120 per week which she received. Again, by way of example, when asked where she bought the transformers from, the witness again initially said "no comment". When directed to answer the question she said she bought them second-hand but that she did not "exactly know the person". Reference was made to Dickson, The Law of Evidence in Scotland (Grierson's edition) paras. 1789-90; Walker and Walker, The Law of Evidence in Scotland, 2nd edition, para. 12.13.2 and Macphail on Evidence at para. 18.06 - all for certain general comment on the privilege under consideration. Reference in particular was made to Dickson at para. 1789, where it is said:

"The right of declinature extends to examination on facts which indirectly infer guilt, or which may form links in a chain of circumstantial evidence against the witness, as well as to the direct question, whether he committed a specified crime".

The result, overall, counsel maintained, was that the Crown was able to found on answers which the witness should not have been obliged to give, all to the apparent disadvantage of the appellant.

[9] Secondly, counsel argued that the sheriff had erred in adopting an approach to what the witness should and should not answer, which was difficult to justify and which was to a degree confusing. In particular he took the line (and at one point endeavoured to explain to the witness, outwith the presence of the jury) that she was not obliged to answer questions which might provide further detail of her involvement, but she was required to answer questions the answers to which were likely to incriminate, not her, but others (for example questions as to who provided the money). It was not clear that answers to the latter type of question would not give further detail of her own involvement, and indeed the answers did. Further, it was submitted, the approach of the sheriff was not always consistently followed. As a result, it was clear that the witness was confused to an extent which could be said to have adversely affected her credibility and reliability in the eyes of the jury - all of which was detrimental to the appellant's position.

[10] We deal shortly with the second of these submissions first - a submission which, in the event, was less strongly founded upon. It is indeed clear from the sheriff's report that he endeavoured to follow the approach referred to by counsel. Although he was plainly seeking to be fair to the witness, we agree with counsel for the appellant, for the reasons he submitted, that the distinction which the sheriff sought to observe, between questions which should and should not be answered, was difficult to sustain, and, in the event, it appears that it was not, at least in some few instances, always followed. However, we are unable to say, from a study of the whole transcript, that the sheriff's approach led to any confusion on her part which could be said to have affected her credibility and reliability. If there was any confusion in her mind, it appeared to stem from advice which, she informed the sheriff, she had had from a solicitor who had told her that she would be entitled to say "no comment" to any questions she did not want to answer - advice which, if given, was plainly erroneous, for reasons canvassed below. We say "if there was any confusion" advisedly, because in re-examination, as the sheriff informs us and as is clear from the transcript, she agreed that the way she had chosen to respond (or not as the case may be) to questions had been "a bit piecemeal", and agreed that this was because she was covering up for her brother Robert.

[11] As to the first main submission, we do not agree that the witness was required to answer any questions which she should not have been required to answer. In our view, agreeing with the advocate depute, the witness having clearly and unequivocally accepted full responsibility for the cultivation of the cannabis, the procurator fiscal depute was thereafter entitled to ask the witness, and she (if directed) was bound to answer, questions seeking to elicit (if possible) detail in respect of her accepted responsibility. The passage referred to in Dickson at para. 1789 does not appear to us to address this kind of situation at all. At para 1790, however, it is said, inter alia,

"The right of the witness is limited to a declinature to answer. He cannot resist being put on oath and asked the questions to which his privilege applies. Nor has the party against whom he is adduced any right to interfere. It seems to be pars judicis to inform the witness of his privilege. If he waives it, as he is entitled to do, his evidence is competent."

In our view, in claiming full responsibility for the cultivation of the cannabis on the premises, the witness waived her right not to answer questions in respect of that responsibility. Looking at it another way, once she accepted clearly and unequivocally her general responsibility in the matter, the questions asked thereafter could not be said to be questions the answers to which would tend to incriminate her. If that were not so, it would be open to the defence in any trial to lead an incriminee to claim general responsibility for a crime without the Crown being able - at least without renunciation of the right to prosecution - effectively to cross-examine that testimony; a situation which, on the face of it, would offend against all notions of a fair and balanced trial. As the advocate depute acknowledged, the situation would be different if questions were asked tending to suggest an involvement in a different crime or crimes, but that was not the situation in this case. Nor is this a case in which the witness could in any other respect be said to have been compelled to go beyond the scope of her waiver of privilege. In the result, the approach which the sheriff sought to adopt in the present case not only did not operate unfairly so far as the witness was concerned, but was more favourable to her interests than it should have been.

[12] Even if the witness was directed to answer questions which she should not have been, we are quite unable to see how this could found a right of appeal on the basis that the answers to such questions were unfavourable to the appellant. The privilege against self-incrimination is that of the witness alone. It is not a right which the appellant, or anyone else, has any direct interest to enforce. Indeed, it appears to be his claim that the more the relevant answers tended to suggest that the witness herself was not involved (which was the whole point of the cross-examination), and thus the less the risk that her answers would be used against her in any future prosecution, the more the appellant could seek to complain about those answers as being damaging to his interests. That cannot be right.

[13] For these reasons the appeal is refused.

 


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