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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Maguire v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2009] ScotHC HCJAC_48 (16 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2009/2009HCJAC48.html Cite as: 2009 GWD 19-307, [2009] HCJAC 48, [2009] ScotHC HCJAC_48, 2009 SCL 1140 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord WheatleyLady PatonLord Reed
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[2009] HCJAC 48
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD WHEATLEY
in
REFERRAL BY THE SCOTTISH CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION
in the case of
STEPHEN MAGUIRE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent:
_______
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Appellant: Shead; McAuley, McCarty & Co, Glasgow
Respondent: Ogg, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent
16 April 2009
[1] In this case the appellant was charged with
an assault and robbery which took place on 7 February 2000. For various reasons,
the trial did not take place until 29 and 30 May 2002. The evidence of
identification against the appellant consisted in the first place of DNA evidence detected on a
piece of skin like material, discovered inside a mask made from a distinctively
coloured jersey, which had been discarded at the locus by one of the three
persons involved in the robbery. The DNA material related to the appellant. The only other evidence
of identification came from the shopkeeper who described the man who had
discarded the mask as having dark hair, being of medium build and height, and
thin faced. The complainer also said that the man was local because he had seen
the person on several occasions before. This description, for present purposes
only, we accept as one which could have applied to the appellant. However, the
shopkeeper not only failed to identify the appellant, he specifically said that
the man who had discarded the mask was not the person sitting in the dock. The
appellant was found guilty by a majority verdict of the jury.
[2] The appellant then lodged an appeal based
on a supposed insufficiency of evidence which was heard some 6 years ago, and
the opinions delivered by the Court following the appeal are reported at 2003
SCCR 758. The appeal was unsuccessful, the Court taking the view that the
presence of the DNA
material in the circumstances and the general description of events given by
the complainer, plus the failure on the part of the appellant to offer any
explanation as to how his DNA came to be within the mask, was sufficient evidence in law
to justify a verdict of guilty on the part of the jury. It is clear from the
reports that the description of the robber given by the complainer in evidence
was thought to have little value. The appellant then took his case to the
Scottish Criminal Cases Review Commission, who referred the matter back to this
Court broadly on the same grounds as before. Once again, we understand that
the Crown would have vigorously opposed the original grounds of appeal now
before us.
[3] However, on the morning of the appeal, a
fresh ground was tabled by the appellant. This ground reads as follows:
"4. The advocate depute erred when he invited the jury to assess for themselves whether the description of one of the robbers given by the complainer corresponded with the physical appearance of the appellant:-
(page 15, line 11 - Closing Speech Advocate Depute).
'And it is a matter for you, ladies and gentlemen to assess and you have the opportunity of looking at the man in the dock and it is for you to assess if that man is of medium height, medium build, dark hair and thin face, it's a matter for you to form an impression ladies and gentlemen.'
Separatim
The learned trial judge failed to direct the jury to ignore the invitation made
by the advocate depute, and instead he directed the jury as follows:-
(Page 20 Line 7 - Judge's Charge)
'and whether you draw the inferences from the evidence that the Crown wish you to draw are entirely matters for you. They are entirely matters within your function'.
Accordingly there has been a miscarriage of justice."
Although lodged on behalf of the appellant, it quickly became clear that the drafting of this ground of appeal had been inspired by the Advocate depute, who on reading the papers for the appeal had become aware, for the first time, of what he considered to be a serious problem with the way in which the case had been presented to the jury by the prosecution, and as a result with the jury's verdict. Although it was not immediately clear what the ground of appeal meant, the Advocate depute, in a careful and measured submission, indicated the nature of his concern.
[4] The original appeal had been presented on
the basis that the DNA
evidence by itself provided insufficient evidence in law to justify a
conviction. This argument was rejected by the Court having regard to the
circumstances under which the DNA evidence was discovered and the failure of the appellant to
offer any explanation. The Advocate depute specifically maintained that the
decision of the Appeal Court in 2003 was correct.
[5] The Advocate depute referred however to the
speech for the prosecution at the trial and the way in which the trial judge as
a consequence of that speech required to direct the jury on the question of
sufficiency of evidence. The Advocate depute at the trial specifically did not
ask the jury to convict on the DNA evidence alone; in other words he did not rely on the
circumstances of this discovery to provide the necessary inference that the
appellant must have been responsible for the robbery. Rather he relied on the
partial description given by the complainer for the necessary corroboration,
notwithstanding that the complainer had in his evidence specifically excluded
the appellant as being the person who had discarded the mask in the course of
the robbery. This in turn led the trial judge to direct the jury that that was
the way, and the only way, in which the Crown could ask for a conviction. The
original appeal had therefore been presented on a basis which did not reflect
the basis on which the Crown case had been presented to the jury.
[6] The difficulty with the basis on which the
case had been presented to the jury, in the Advocate depute's submission, was
that although the jury had a general description of the robber, there was no
evidential link to relate that description to the appearance of the accused at
the date of the robbery. The jury had simply been asked to look at the accused
at the date of the trial (over two years later) and to decide whether he
matched the complainer's description in order to provide corroboration of the DNA evidence. The Advocate
depute argued that there had to be evidence that, at the date of the offence,
the accused's appearance matched the description provided by the complainer,
given that the complainer's evidence had specifically exculpated the accused as
being the robber. There was however no such evidence before the jury.
Although the jury were entitled to consider the appearance of the accused in
assessing the evidence, they were not entitled to supply a deficiency in the
evidence by inferring from the appearance of the accused at the trial that he
had matched the description of the robber two years earlier.
[7] We decided that it was in the interests of
justice to allow this additional ground of appeal to be received and argued.
It was then conceded by the Advocate depute that there had been a misdirection
of the jury in that regard, for the reasons which he had earlier explained, and
that in consequence a miscarriage of justice had occurred. Since the point has
been conceded, and the Crown do not seek to support the conviction, it is unnecessary
for us to consider whether the Advocate depute's submissions were
well-founded. We accept that, if there was a misdirection as the Advocate
depute submitted, it follows that the only corroborating evidence relied on by
the Crown was not properly put before the jury, and the basis on which they
were asked to convict was therefore flawed. In these circumstances it also
follows that a miscarriage of justice has occurred and we therefore quash the
conviction.
[8] It only remains for us to record our
surprise that this critical point was only raised on the morning of the appeal,
and by the Crown, some 8 years after the original conviction. It was not
raised in the original appeal, nor is it referred to in the present reference
or in the original grounds of appeal before us, despite lengthy consideration
and preparation over a period of years.
[9] In the circumstances, we have not heard any
submissions in support of the original grounds of appeal. In quashing this
conviction therefore we wish to make it particularly clear that we regard Maguire
v HM Advocate as still representing the law of Scotland in this area and that without the
intervention of the Crown in this responsible manner, there remains the
distinct possibility that this conviction would have stood.