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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Kearney v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_3 (11 January 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_3.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_03, [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_3, [2007] HCJAC 3, [2007] HCJAC 03

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Justice General

Lord Osborne

Lord Johnston

[2007] HCJAC 3

Appeal No: XC917/03

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

NOTE OF APPEAL

AGAINST CONVICTION

 

by

 

ARTHUR KEARNEY

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Shead; Turnbull McCarron

Alt: Mackay, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

11 January 2007

 

[1] On 29 July 2003 at the High Court in Edinburgh the appellant was convicted by unanimous verdicts on charges 4, 5, 8 and 10 of the indictment.

[2] The charges were all allegations of assault. The charges, conviction on which is under appeal are charges 5, 8 and 10. The jury made certain deletions and the form of the charges now before this court are as follows:

"(5) on 30 October 2002 at 37 Randolph Crescent, Bannockburn, Stirlingshire, you did assault Karin Ross or Martin, c/o Central Scotland Police, Stirling and ... punch her on the head, knock her to the ground ... all to her ... injury;

you did commit this offence while on bail, having been granted bail on 14 March 2002 at Stirling Sheriff Court;

(8) on 5 November 2002 in the kitchen at 37 Randolph Crescent, Bannockburn, Stirlingshire, you did assault Karin Ross or Martin, c/o Central Scotland Police, Stirling and repeatedly punch ... her on the head and body, ... and press a screwdriver or similar instrument to her face, ... all to her injury;

you did commit this offence while on bail, having been granted bail on 14 March 2002 at Stirling Sheriff Court;

(10) between 5 November 2002 and 7 November 2002, both dates inclusive, at 37 Randolph Crescent, Bannockburn, Stirlingshire, you did assault Karin Ross or Martin, c/o Central Scotland Police, Stirling, further repeatedly punch and kick her on the head and body, forcibly detain her against her will, brandish a ... bread knife or similar instrument, threaten to disfigure her, press the ... bread knife to her face, drag her from a couch and threaten further violence towards her, sit on top of her ... and press your hands ... against her throat ..., bite her on the arm and bind her ankles and wrists with telephone flex and tape, all to her severe injury and to the danger of life...".

[3] It is to be noted in passing, although of no moment at this stage of these proceedings, that this case has already been to Privy Council on an issue as to whether the use of a temporary judge in a High Court trial was compatible with the Convention on Human Rights and in particular Article 6. The Privy Council decided this point in favour of the Crown, but this explains the delay in this case coming before this court in relation to the charges now under consideration.

[4] The complainer in each of the relevant charges was the common-law partner of the accused and they lived together at the locus. She gave evidence, but so far from incriminating the accused she did her best to exculpate him. She had incriminated him in statements given to the police but she retracted those. Her evidence was therefore of no moment so far as this appeal is concerned in relation to any of the three charges.

[5] Counsel for the appellant, in respect of each of the relevant charges, supported grounds of appeal relating first to lack of sufficiency of evidence, and secondly to alleged misdirections in relation to each of the charges. He submitted, generally, that in relation to each of the charges, which he accepted were free-standing, there was nevertheless a correlation of mistakes in the case which could lead cumulatively to a miscarriage of justice. We doubt there is much force in that point and propose to consider each of the charges separately since they involve separate incidents.

 

Charge 5

[6] The principal witness in relation to this charge was the complainer's niece, Arlene Robertson, who lived close by. On 30 October 2002 the complainer's son Ross came to her, that is Miss Robertson's house, worried about his mother and asked if she would go along to her house, i.e. that of Mrs Martin. She complied and found the complainer upstairs lying on the bed with a black eye. With some difficulty Miss Robertson persuaded the complainer to return with her to her house and, as she was doing so and as the ladies came down the stairs, the accused appeared from the kitchen and in the course of conversation, which was to the effect that he was going to try to prevent Mrs Martin going anywhere, he admitted to Miss Robertson that he had hit her. She deponed that the appellant was in a very violent mood. It appeared that the complainer also had an injury to her elbow.

[7] In cross-examination she was not greatly shaken by suggestions that there had been fight between the complainer and the appellant and reasserted the admission by the appellant in her presence that he had hit the complainer.

[8] The other principal witness in this charge was Ross Martin himself, who was reluctant to give evidence but when pressed accepted that certain things he had said to the police in a police statement were correct relating to the incident on Wednesday 30 October 2002. (See pages 41 to 43 of the transcript.) The effect of this was that he had been in the house and heard an argument. He did not see the appellant assaulting his mother. Part of the content of that statement, it seems, may have contained an assertion that he had left the house because of the arguing, to which on page 34 of his charge the trial judge makes reference. However, unfortunately, that part of the statement was not adduced in front of the jury, although the latter part of the statement relating to a telephone call made by his mother to him and a subsequent meeting where she appeared to be injured, was before them. The judge's reference forms a ground of an allegation of misdirection, to which we shall return.

[9] On the question of sufficiency, counsel simply stated that the evidence of Martin, although competently admitted through statements which he adopted in evidence, was not sufficient to corroborate the evidence given by Miss Robertson.

[10] However, the position of the Advocate Depute was that Martin corroborated the fact that his mother was injured at the material time, that the incident had occurred and that he had heard argument. This was capable of confirming the evidence given by Miss Robertson as to the admission (Fox v HMA 1998 S.C.C.R. 115).

[11] With this we agree, and therefore we shall refuse this aspect of this ground of appeal. There is sufficient corroboration, given what he heard in the house and the evidence of injury, to support the position of the Crown.

[12] Counsel then turned to the issue of misdirection and focused specifically on the mistake made by the trial judge in page 34 of his charge by including in his quotations from the statement given by Martin to the police, to the effect

"because of the arguing I decided to leave the house".

It was accepted by the Crown that in fact this part of the statement in question had not been given in evidence, although it was in the statement as taken by the police.

[13] This, counsel submitted, amounted to a material misdirection because it was highly prejudicial to the appellant's position, at least in respect of general background.

[14] With some hesitation, since it is plainly a mistake which might amount to a misdirection, we have come to the conclusion that in the overall context of the circumstances given in evidence surrounding this charge it is not sufficiently material to constitute a miscarriage of justice. We accept, as counsel put it to us, that the jury were bound to accept the directions given by the trial judge, but this generally relates to issues of law rather than fact and this mistake, which is the way we prefer to categorise it, simply amounts to a misrecollection of the evidence, and that is covered by the general directions given at the start of the charge by the judge that when it came to those issues, i.e. those of evidence, it was the recollection of the jurors that mattered.

[15] In these circumstances, for this reason, we consider this aspect of this ground of appeal also fails.

Charge 8
[16
] Again in relation to this charge the evidence of the complainer was of no assistance to the Crown. The principal witness was Jamerie Currie, who was Ross Martin's girlfriend. She deponed that on the night in question, 5 November, she and Ross had gone to a local bonfire and returned to the house about 8.00 o'clock going upstairs to Ross's room. The appellant entered the room and there was an incident involving him and Ross and a golf club. He was in a very violent mood. The witness and Mrs Martin went downstairs to the kitchen. The appellant followed and according to the witness he grabbed the complainer, threatened her with a screwdriver and punched her on the face and head. All this took place in the kitchen of the house.

[17] Ross Martin did not go into the kitchen, in fact leaving the house by the upstairs window because, presumably, he was frightened as a result of the assault upon him by the complainer. Counsel submitted he could not therefore corroborate what had happened in the kitchen which location was a central part of the Crown case in this charge because of the way it had been averred.

[18] However, there was another witness for the Crown in relation to this charge, namely Dionne Martin, who was Ross Martin's sister and therefore the complainer's daughter. She came to the house at the material time and did depone to an incident between the complainer and the appellant but, as is apparent from pages 6 to 8 of the transcript of her evidence, she was deponing into an entirely different type of incident effectively involving a fight between the appellant and the complainer. Counsel therefore submitted there was no conjunction of testimony between Miss Martin and Miss Currie so as to make the former capable of corroborating the latter's evidence.

[19] It is perhaps significant that the trial judge makes no mention whatsoever in his charge to the evidence of Dionne Martin in this context and it may reasonably be assumed that he thought it was nothing to the point for the reasons already alluded to by counsel for the appellant.

[20] The Advocate Depute valiantly sought to suggest that the evidence of Ross Martin was sufficient to provide corroboration of what happened in the kitchen, but we are unable to accept that proposition. None of his evidence related to anything happening in the kitchen. The evidence of Jamerie stands uncorroborated.

[21] For this, again, narrow reason we are of the opinion that there is not sufficient evidence by way of corroboration to support the evidence given by Jamerie and thus render this conviction incapable of being supported.

[22] In these circumstances, in relation to charge 8, the appeal will be allowed and the conviction quashed.

 

Charge 10
[23
] In relation to this charge, it is to be observed that, in terms of the conviction, it extends in time over a period of some two days and substantially focuses on a wide ranging series of assaults over that time.

[24] Here again the principal witness was Jamerie, who had already deponed to the incident which she observed on 5 November to which reference has already been made. However, this charge is not confined to a particular occasion in the kitchen. In this respect the evidence of Dionne Martin could be of some significance. More importantly, she deponed that she had gone back to the house on 6 November, went into her mother's bedroom and found her mother injured with a badly bruised face. The only other person in the house was the appellant. When she went back again on 7 November she heard an argument in the bedroom. She did not see her mother alone. She was concerned and telephoned the police. The police eventually arrived and a police woman attending duly gave evidence. The latter deponed that the complainer had substantial bruising to her face and blood on the top of the mouth. She was very reluctant to speak, although she suggested that she had been involved in a fight with a woman from Cowie. The appellant was present at this time trying to prevent the complainer from making any statement to the police and encouraging her to make reference to the Cowie incident. The police in fact summoned an ambulance and when it arrived the complainer, who had gone to a house with a friend, was confronted by the appellant running from his house in his shorts, angry and swearing, and making as if to prevent her getting into the ambulance. He was subsequently arrested and charged with three separate charges, making extremely offensive replies.

[25] It is not without significance that various other findings in the locus by the police would suggest that somebody had been subjected to sustained violence and that had to be the complainer. The screwdriver mentioned in the previous charge was found in the kitchen and there was blood on the furniture in the livingroom.

[26] What is much more important to our mind in relation to this charge is that the jury were entitled to take into account all the evidence in the case relevant to the appropriate time period, which revealed a pattern of violence, a number of incidents all involving the complainer and the appellant and nobody else, with subsequent serious injuries at times being sustained by the complainer. The attitude of the appellant at the time the police arrived and his subsequent behaviour is to our mind entirely confirmatory of guilty involvement and certainly can amount to an adminicle of corroboration. The evidence of Ross Martin as to the overall violent behaviour over the relevant period is also highly significant. In these circumstances we have no difficulty in holding that the pattern of the evidence is more than capable of providing corroborated evidence from more than one source of violent conduct perpetrated by the appellant on the complainer such as is found in the narrative of charge 10 accepted by the jury in their conviction.

[27] In this respect, therefore, the appeal under this part of this head fails.

[28] The final but important point taken by counsel in relation to his appeal under this charge, under the general head of misdirection, relates to a part of the trial judge's charge to the jury at page 39 where he says, as follows:

"But ladies and gentlemen, where you have evidence from an eyewitness identifying someone whom the eyewitness knows as the assailant and you accept that evidence as credible and reliable, assuming you do then not very much more is needed to corroborate that evidence..."

[29] Counsel attacked that statement as being an unsound statement of law. He accepted that it could be derived from a passage of the Lord Justice General in a case relating to identification evidence, Ralston v H M Advocate 1987 S.C.C.R. 467 at page 472:

"It has been said before in a number of cases that where one starts with an emphatic positive identification by one witness then very little is required. That little else must of course be evidence which is consistent in all respects of the positive identification which has been given."

Counsel also referred us to a similar statement of law in the context of confessions in Meredith v Lees 1992 S.C.C.R. 459. If, submitted counsel, these cases reflected the proper state of the law at the relevant times they were decided, they had been disapproved, at least indirectly by a five judge case, to which reference is already made, namely Fox. That case in fact specifically overruled a previous case of Mackie, but counsel submitted by implication it rendered the dicta in both Ralston and Meredith ineffective. He also referred us to a more recent case of Gonshaw v HMA 2004 S.C.C.R. 482 which he submitted confirmed the new pattern if it was properly to be regarded as such.

[30] It is important to note that in Murphy v H M Advocate 1995 S.C.C.R. 55 at page 60 the Lord Justice Clerk, commenting specifically on the passage to which reference has already been made in Ralston, said as follows:

"In that passage the Lord Justice-General is simply making the point that evidence may afford corroboration and even though it is small in amount, provided it has the necessary character or quality and it will have the necessary character or quality if it is consistent with the positive identification evidence which requires corroboration."

That passage seems to us to explain, and properly place in context, the passage in Ralston and does not have the effect that the court is suggesting that the requirements for corroboration are less or devalued in the context of a clear identification or confession position. Even before Fox, we do not consider that either of the cases in question did not require corroboration by the means of an independent and material source of evidence. While it might be small in quantity it could be very high in quality and it is for the jury to determine its effect. In Fox, where the court talks about confirmation rather than consistency in relation to the nature of corroborated evidence, we consider that is doing no more than re-stating that basic position, even though the terminology may be slightly different.

[31] Having said that, however, we do not consider that it is advisable or helpful for trial judges to use the expression used in this case, to which reference has been made. We consider that the general rules relating to the requirement of corroboration should not be diminished or devalued simply because there is one clear fundamental source of evidence against the accused for which corroboration is being sought. We consider it to be the wiser course for a trial judge simply to direct the jury that having identified the primary source of evidence against the complainer to emphasise that there must be a secondary independent source confirmatory of the substance of the case. Whatever may be its quantity, it is its quality that the jury has to assess independently of the primary source.

[32] While, therefore, in the context of the present case, the phrase used by the trial judge is capable of criticism, we do not think it amounts to a misdirection and certainly not to creating a miscarriage of justice in the whole context of this case. In the relevant context corroborative evidence was undoubtedly present to be accepted by the jury if they so determined.

[33] For these reasons this aspect of this ground of appeal in respect of this charge also fails.

[34] In these circumstances the appeal in relation to charge 8 is allowed. That conviction will be quashed. Quoad ultra the appeal is refused. It will however be necessary for the case to be continued to consider whether this decision bears upon the issue of sentence having regard to the fact that the charges under appeal attracted a cumulo sentence from the trial judge.

 


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