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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 >> Woodside v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2009] ScotHC HCJAC_61 (26 June 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2009/2009HCJAC61.html Cite as: 2009 SCL 1267, [2009] HCJAC 61, 2009 GWD 23-371, [2009] ScotHC HCJAC_61 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice Clerk Lord Osborne Lord Nimmo Smith
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[2009] HCJAC 61Appeal No: XC23/03
OPINION OF THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK
In the APPEAL by
ALEXANDER WOODSIDE
Appellant;
against
HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE
Respondent: ______ |
For the appellant: Shead, Richardson; Culley & McAlpine, Perth
For the Crown: K D Stewart QC, AD; Crown Agent
26 June 2009
[1] On 5 August 1998 the appellant and his
brother Alan Woodside were convicted at Glasgow High Court on the following
charge:
"On 17 January 1998 at Croftend Avenue, Croftfoot, Glasgow, near Lugar Place, you ALAN WILLIAM WOODSIDE, ALEXANDER WOODSIDE ... did assault John Hampson ... and chase him, throw a bottle at him which struck him on the head whereby he was knocked to the ground, strike him repeatedly on the head and body with knives or similar objects and did murder him."
We have already dealt with two grounds of appeal. We now have to consider whether the trial judge misdirected the jury.
[2] In my Opinion on the previous grounds dated
18 February
2009 I
described the evidence in the trial at some length. For the purposes of the
present ground of appeal I need describe the Crown case in only the briefest
outline. On the evening before the murder the appellant was attacked by
members of a local gang, one of whom pushed a broken bottle into his face. At
the scene of the attack the appellant threatened revenge. Later that night he
told his mother that he would "murder the bastard who slashed him." On the
night of the murder, he was one of a party who assembled at the home of his
sister and his brother-in-law and armed themselves with various lethal weapons,
all of which were openly on display. The appellant armed himself with an axe.
His brother armed himself with a bayonet. The group then set off to confront
the gang who had attacked the appellant.
[3] At the approach of the appellant's group,
the deceased failed to make his escape. The appellant and his group surrounded
him and attacked him. The appellant's brother stabbed the deceased through the
heart. There was evidence that the appellant was directly involved in the
attack.
[4] On the following day, at a gathering in his
parents' house, the appellant said that perhaps it was he who had killed the
deceased because he had smashed the back of his head like a coconut. The
appellant and his brother then went into hiding in Coventry. According to the appellant's
mother, when the appellant was in custody he admitted to her and his father
that he had "hit the boy on the back of the head with a hatchet" before his
brother stabbed him.
[5] The appellant's evidence was that he set
off with the group for the confrontation, but left them before they reached the
locus; that he took no part in the attack; and that he was not at the locus
when the deceased was stabbed.
[6] The Crown sought a conviction of murder
against the appellant on the basis of concert.
[7] The trial judge directed the jury on the
definition of murder and on the principle of concert. The advocate depute
submitted to us that, in substance, the trial judge also gave a direction on
the possibility of their convicting the appellant of culpable homicide; but in
my view, even on the most contrived reading of the charge, it cannot be said that
he gave such a direction. On the contrary, I think that it is obvious that he
did not intend to do so.
[8] It is accepted on behalf of the appellant
that, in his address to the jury, his solicitor advocate did not raise the possibility
of their convicting the appellant of culpable homicide. The sole issue is
whether the trial judge was nevertheless obliged to direct the jury on that
question.
[9] Decisions of this court since the trial in
this case establish that where two or more accused have taken part in an attack
on the deceased and the Crown seeks a conviction of murder against one or more
of them on the basis of concert, the trial judge must direct the jury on the
possibility of their convicting any of those accused of culpable homicide if, in
the circumstances, such a conviction could reasonably be returned (McKinnon
v HM Adv 2003 JC 29; Touati and Gilfillan v HM Adv 2008 JC 214; Ferguson
v HM Adv 2009 SCCR 78; Hopkinson v HM Adv 2009 SLT 292). All of these are
decisions in cases where, it seems, the appellant admitted that he took part in
an attack on the deceased.
[10] This case is entirely different. The
appellant's defence was that he dissociated himself from the group of
assailants before they reached the locus, and that he was not involved in the
attack in any way.
[11] I shall assume that in a case such as this, the
trial judge may be obliged to direct the jury on culpable homicide on a hypothesis
of fact that the accused expressly denies. Even on that assumption, I do not
consider that the trial judge in this case was obliged to give such a direction.
[12] In every case of this kind, it is for the
trial judge to decide whether a conviction of culpable homicide could be
justified on any reasonable view of the evidence. We may infer that the trial
judge did not consider that in the circumstances of the case a conviction of the
appellant of culpable homicide was a live issue. In my view, he was right.
[13] On the evidence that I have summarised, the
only realistic options for the jury were to acquit the appellant on the basis
that he did not take part in the attack or, if they decided that he did, to
convict him of murder on the basis that his actions and statements were such
that no other verdict could reasonably be returned.
[14] I propose to your Lordships that we should
refuse the appeal on the present ground and continue it for consideration of
the one remaining ground.