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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE v. DAVID AXL BAILLIE [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_158 (12 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2012/2012HCJAC158.html Cite as: [2012] HCJAC 158, 2013 SCCR 285, [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_158, 2013 SCL 550, 2013 GWD 17-356 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord Mackay of DrumadoonLord Philip
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Appellant: Fairley, QC, AD; the Crown Agent
Respondent: I M Paterson, solicitor advocate; Paterson Bell (for Gavin Orr, Dumfries)
12 December 2012
The Charges
[1] The
respondent is charged with a variety of offences, which are alleged to have
occurred in the locality at Kelloholm and Kirkconnel, Dumfriesshire. One of
the charges (charge 5) is a racially aggravated breach of the peace in that, on
10 and 11 November 2011, while acting along with another, the respondent wrote
offensive slogans in white paint on, and in the immediate vicinity of, the
Kirkconnel war memorial. The memorial was daubed with "IRA", "PIRA" and "WAR
CRIMINALS" on the night before the Armistice Day service.
[2] A further charge
(charge 6) is in the following terms:
"...knowing that (DC) was a witness in a case against you, [you] did threaten said (DC) by means of letters sent to ... (SL) and in particular in a letter written on or about 27 November 2011 you did ask said (SL) to inform everyone that (DC) was a 'grass' and did state that you were going to slash him and further in a letter dated 6 December 2011 you did threaten to cut said (DC's) face open and threaten to kill him".
The two letters, which were written by the respondent from Dumfries Prison to his friend SL, were recovered from SL's possession and their content is not in dispute. It is clear from their terms that the respondent considered that DC had provided the police with false information about his (the respondent's) involvement in the war memorial incident. The first letter explains, in graphic terms, that the respondent was not at all pleased to be in prison and narrates that he knew nothing about the incident. It refers to DC as "that squint-eyed jonter bastard" and continues by asking SL to "Let every c**t ken that he's a grass n that he stuck me in". It states that the respondent is "gon tae slash the dafty". The second letter is in not dissimilar terms and states that "The next time a see that grassin bastard am gon tae cut his face open". It continues that if "the corrupt bastards find me guilty" he would "kill jonter" and "smash that scooper pr**k".
Preliminary Issues
Charge 6 Relevancy
[3] The
respondent took a preliminary objection to the relevancy of charge 6. In
essence, the submission was that there was no evidence that the threats had
ever been communicated to DC or any third party, or that they had caused any
distress to SL. In these circumstances there had been no completed crime.
There was extensive canvassing of authorities. The sheriff concluded that it
was helpful to broaden the categories of criminal threats, from the two
mentioned in Gordon: Criminal Law ((3rd ed) para 29.62),
into three. These were: (1) the crime of uttering threats of serious harm
directly to the person concerned (James Miller (1862) 4 Irv 238); (2)
uttering threats in the context of another crime, such as inducing a person to
commit perjury (Margaret Dunn and Ann McDaniel (1876) 3 Couper 271); and
(3) uttering threats of serious harm against a third party communicated
directly (as in the respondent's case) or indirectly (as in John Jaffrey (1815) Hume: Commentaries i, 441 footnote 2) to another party and intended to
cause fear, alarm or intimidation to that other party. The sheriff held that
since, in the respondent's case, the threats did not fall into any of these
categories, there was no crime libelled. He also held that, in any event, a
request to inform persons that an individual is a "grass" does not amount to a
threat.
Admissibility of Evidence on Charge 5
[4] The
respondent took a number of objections to the admissibility of evidence on
charge 5. This appeal is now only concerned with two of these. The first
relates to evidence of the recovery of a pair of trainers in the vicinity of
the respondent's house. The second concerns the relevance of material found on
the respondent's mobile telephone and in his bedroom at his parents' house.
[5] The
evidence of the recoveries came from a police officer, who had become aware of
the war memorial incident but had gone to the respondent's house in an attempt,
following earlier (and apparently unrelated) instructions, to detain the
respondent in connection with a separate matter. When the officer reached the
house, he observed white paint on the garden steps and path. As a result, the
officer suspected that the respondent might have been involved in committing
the crime. The respondent had appeared at an upstairs window, but had refused
to surrender himself. The officer did not consider that he was entitled, in
the absence of a warrant, to force entry into the house. However, he did
notice a pair of trainers on the front steps outside the house; the left shoe
being dry but the right shoe being wet. The significance of the wetness
relates to the need to cross a burn on one potential route from the war
memorial to the respondent's house. The officer, who stated that it would have
taken 2 to 3 hours to obtain a search warrant, decided to seize the trainers
with a view to comparing them to shoe impressions which he had observed, and
photographed, at the memorial.
[6] The officer
took the trainers to the memorial, but the comparison proved unsuccessful. He
then found an empty tin, formerly containing white paint, near the burn. He
decided to return to the respondent's house and to detain him for defacing the
war memorial. The respondent did not answer the door and the officer still did
not consider that he had sufficient authority to force entry. He did, however,
follow a trail of white paint round to the back door of the house, where he
located a second pair of trainers, also wet, on the steps. They appeared to be
a better match for the impressions. He seized these trainers. There was
evidence led before the sheriff that this officer considered that the second
pair of trainers were a match for the impressions at the memorial. However,
the sheriff ruled that this evidence was not admissible because of perceived
defects in the procedure adopted to secure the attendance of forensic
scientists. The Crown do not challenge that ruling.
[7] The
respondent objected to the evidence relating to the recovery of the second pair
of trainers. This objection was sustained by the sheriff. Under reference to
Renton & Brown: Criminal Procedure (6th ed, paras
7-26/27), the sheriff held that, by the time the police had returned to the
respondent's house for the second time, they were actively searching for
evidence and not stumbling across items. The sheriff considered therefore that
the search was irregular, in the absence of a warrant, and that this could not
be excused on the grounds of urgency, even although he accepted that the
officer was acting in good faith. He accordingly found that the evidence of
the recovery of the second pair of trainers was inadmissible. Although his
decision was influenced by his exclusion of the evidence of the comparison of
the trainers with the impressions, the sheriff reached the view that, without
the comparison evidence, the trainers had no evidential value as they could
have been wet "for any number of reasons and it was pure speculation that the
accused had come home via the burn". The sheriff held that the police had been
acting in good faith but could, presumably legitimately, have "taken the shoes
into safe custody pending application for a warrant to further detain the shoes
and compare them with the impressions...". He did not consider that there was
any urgency as a result, for example, of deteriorating weather conditions.
[8] Some weeks
after the war memorial incident, the police decided to search the respondent's
parents' home under a warrant. They seized a mobile 'phone belonging to the
respondent, which contained photographic propaganda tending to show support
for, amongst other organisations, the Irish Republican Army and the wartime
German Nazi Party. Items were also recovered from the respondent's bedroom,
which appeared to be associated with the British National Party, the Ku Klux
Klan and, again, the Nazi Party. A swastika flag was seized.
[9] The
sheriff sustained the respondent's objection to this material. In line with
the respondent's submissions, he determined that the material was irrelevant to
proof of the charge; holding that right wing extreme racist, white supremacist
and ultra pro-British views, whilst abhorrent, were linked to a form of
patriotism and that neither the BNP nor the Nazi party would have regarded the
soldiers who fell in the World Wars as "war criminals". He reasoned that,
while certain Nazi officials were condemned as war criminals in Nuremburg, it
was not part of Nazi ideology that British soldiers, who had fought in the
wars, were "war criminals". He commented that the Crown did not lead an expert
historian to inform him otherwise. The relevance, for example, of images of
Hitler and Himmler, which had been contained on the mobile phone, were said not
to be relevant to the defacement of the war memorial with IRA slogans.
Submissions
Appellant
[10] The advocate depute submitted that the sheriff had erred in the three
aspects of the case outlined above. First, in relation to the relevancy of
charge 6, it was not necessary for there to be a specific mention of a nomen
juris (Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, schedule 3,
para 2; Renton & Brown, Criminal Procedure (6th ed)
para 8-31). It was sufficient that the facts libelled disclosed a crime.
Although the common law of criminal threats was not well-developed (WM v
HM Advocate [2010] HCJAC 75, at para [17] under reference to
Gordon: Criminal Law (3rd ed) para 29.62), the uttering
of a threat of grievous violence was criminal in itself (Macdonald: Criminal
Law (5th ed) page 128, under reference to John Jaffray
(Hume: Commentaries i, 441 footnote 2; Christie: "Assault and
Related Offences"; "Criminal Law"; Stair Memorial Encyclopaedia
(re-issue) para 245; Gordon: Criminal Law (3rd ed)
para 29-62). It was not a requirement that the person to whom the threats
were addressed was the target of the threat itself. The "mens rea" was
to cause fear and alarm (Hume i, 441-442; Elizabeth Edmiston
(1866) 5 Irv 219. This could be inferred from the terms of the threat and it
was no defence to suggest that what had been done had simply been a joke.
[11] Actual fear
and alarm was not necessary if intent could be inferred (Macdonald (supra)
at 128, under reference to Margaret Dunn & Ann McDaniel (1876) 3
Couper 271). The libel of a serious threat was sufficient. It would be a
question for the jury to determine whether the intention had been to cause fear
and alarm. In holding that it was significant that no one had been alarmed,
the sheriff had confused the crime of uttering threats with that of breach of
the peace (Harris v HM Advocate 2010 SCCR 15). The sheriff had
erred: (i) in holding that the libel was irrelevant because it did not aver the
mens rea of the crime; (ii) in holding that there was a need for the
threat to cause fear and alarm; and (iii) in stating that the content of the
letter did not contain a threat directed towards DC, but rather a request to SL
to advise people that DC was "a grass".
[12] Secondly,
the Crown submitted that the Nazi material was highly relevant to a charge of
vandalising of a war memorial. The Crown did not seek to introduce the
material relative to the BNP or the KKK, but maintained that, in relation to a
Second World War memorial, the fact that the respondent had Nazi sympathies was
potentially relevant to the jury's consideration of him as the perpetrator.
[13] Thirdly, it
was submitted that although, at the time of the recovery of the second pair of
trainers, the police officers were conducting a "search", for which they had no
warrant, this search was not an irregular one, as the sheriff had thought, in
view of the degree of urgency. The sheriff had misunderstood the position. A
search without warrant is legitimate in a situation of urgency (HM Advocate v
McGuigan 1936 JC 16). Even if the search had been an irregular one, it
did not follow that the evidence should be excluded. The sheriff had accepted
that the police officers had been acting in good faith and had considered that
the seizure was a matter of urgency. Although he had not addressed the matter,
there was a minimal interference with the respondent's privacy, given the
location of the shoes. Even although the sheriff had focused on the fairness
of the comparison exercise, there was no obvious unfairness in admitting the
wet condition of the trainers as relevant to whether the wearer had crossed the
burn and had thus been at the war memorial. On the basis that the matter was
at large for this court, if there was a search, it was not an irregular one,
and if it had been irregular, it was excusable.
Respondent
[14] The respondent maintained that the letters had been private
communications to a friend. In that respect, the position was distinguishable
from John Jaffray (supra), where the letter had been left outside
a house and had been intended to have its content relayed to other
individuals. It would be an extension to the existing law to decide that
sending a private letter was criminal. The sheriff had not erred in holding
that charge 6 did not disclose a criminal act since a threat of violence was
not per se criminal (Kenny v HM Advocate 1951 SLT 363).
[15] The sheriff
had accepted that, in seizing the training shoes, the police officers had been
conducting a search for evidence. The police could easily have obtained a
warrant and, whilst doing so, could have stationed an officer by the trainers
to prevent their removal. The search had been unlawful, albeit that the
officers may have been acting in good faith. The respondent was in the
category of suspect at the material time and the police had engaged in a search
of the respondent's garden.
[16] In relation
to the Nazi material, the respondent was entitled to a fair trial and the
sheriff had been correct in holding that any Nazi sympathies, which were held
by the respondent, were irrelevant to the charge. This material would have an
inflammatory effect on the jury. There had been no Nazi slogans painted on the
memorial.
Decision
Relevancy
of Charge 6
[17] The issue
is whether charge 6 relevantly sets out a criminal act; not whether there is
sufficient evidence for a conviction. The sheriff has held that the libel is
irrelevant because the threats were against DC but communicated to SL and SL,
the sheriff states, was not in fact alarmed by them. Whether the latter
statement is correct or not is uncertain, in the absence of proof, but it is
not a material consideration when determining the relevancy of the charge.
[18] The
uttering of a threat of violence towards a person is not, per se, a
crime. This is clear from Kenny v HM Advocate 1951 SLT 363, in which the jury convicted the appellant only of threatening violence towards an individual under
deletion of a reference to an intention to intimidate or to deter that
individual from giving evidence against the appellant in a forthcoming trial. As
was submitted by the appellant in that case, the jury's verdict had negatived
any unlawful motive and there had been no evidence (or libel) that serious
injury had been threatened. Lord Keith explained (p 364) that, the jury having
deleted the reference to intention, what remained would not have constituted a
relevant charge. Lord Russell stated (p 364) that the result of the jury's
verdict: "was to convict the accused merely of uttering a verbal threat to do
violence, without any further specification relevant to infer grievous bodily
harm or sinister intent" (emphasis added). This explains the
circumstances in which the uttering of a threat can constitute a crime.
[19] First, a
threat to do serious injury to a person, whether oral or written, is criminal
in itself (Macdonald: Criminal Law (5th ed) p 128; Hume: Commentaries
i, 439 - 440; Alison: Principles 579). This was, as in Kenny (supra),
the view taken in James Miller (1862) 4 Irv 238, where the Lord Justice
Clerk (Inglis) explained (pp 244 - 246) that there were two classes of threats:
first, those which involved "grievous bodily harm, or to do any serious injury
to his property..."; and, secondly, those in a "much larger class" which
contemplated lesser or vaguer harms. Only the former were criminal per se,
while the latter might acquire criminal status if they were used for an
unlawful purpose, such as extortion.
[20] There can
be no doubt that the libel in the respondent's case, which involves threats to slash
and kill the witness DC, is sufficient to bring it into the category of cases
where the threat is criminal per se. Furthermore, it is significant to
note that the libel also proceeds upon a narrative that the threat is directed
towards DC against a background of DC being a witness in the case against him. On
that basis, the libel would be relevant as a species of threat in the second
category, being threats made with an ulterior unlawful purpose; the latter
being, presumably, to persuade DC to alter his evidence in a manner which would
no longer incriminate the respondent (see eg Margaret Dunn and Ann McDaniel (1876) 3 Couper 271).
[21] For the
crime to be completed, it is not enough that the threat simply be spoken or
written. It must be communicated to a third party (Macdonald (supra)
p 128). However, it is not a requirement that the threat be conveyed
directly to the party threatened. Communication to a third party will suffice
(John Jaffray (1815) Hume i, 441, footnote 2).
[22] As with
almost all common law crimes, the act must be done deliberately. The accused
must have intended to do the act. Threatening a person is no doubt, in the
ordinary case, motivated by a desire to cause that person, or a third party to
whom the threat is communicated, fear and alarm and/or to do something which he
would not otherwise have done. However, it is not necessary, for a libel to
meet the test of relevancy, that it specify either motive or result. Unlike
breach of the peace, where the acts may not be unlawful when looked at in
isolation, the communication of a threat of serious harm to the potential
object of the harm or to a third party, is itself unlawful. The necessary
criminal intent is inferred from the carrying out of the act itself (Elizabeth
Edmiston (1866) 5 Irv 219, LJC (Inglis) at 223). It is no defence that,
for example, the act was intended to amuse in a situation where, objectively,
it was likely to cause fear and alarm.
[23] In the
respondent's case, the libel alleges that the respondent's actions in writing
the letters amounted to a threat directed towards DC. The terms of the letters
are indicative of a desire to have the respondent's threat communicated by SL
to DC, one way or another. In this context, the jury would be well entitled to
the view that advising members of the local community that DC was a "grass" was
an act intended to put some form of pressure on DC to retract whatever
statement he had given. It matters not whether an accusation of "grassing"
might, using the sheriff's phraseology, "besmirch" a person's reputation in all
circumstances but whether, within DC's social circles, this would be the
consequence.
[24] Accordingly,
the court will allow the appeal in so far as the sheriff "dismissed" charge 6.
Objections to the Evidence
Trainers
[25] The court
doubts whether the actions of the police, in walking around to the back door of
a house, involved such an invasion of a person's right to privacy or property
that a search warrant would normally be required. However, proceeding on the
basis that it would, such search as the police carried out would only be
classified as "irregular", requiring excusal for the admissibility of any
evidence recovered, if there were no urgency in the situation. If the police
were acting in circumstances of urgency, no warrant would be required and the
search would have been "quite regular" (HM Advocate v McGuigan
1936 JC 16, LJC (Aitchison) at 18).
[26] The police
had gone to the respondent's house on the second occasion with a view to
detaining him on suspicion of defacing the war memorial. Having discovered the
second set of trainers, they had the option of either seizing the trainers
there and then or leaving the premises and seeking a warrant to search the
premises and thereafter returning to the premises in the hope that the trainers
would still be there.
[27] The
situation was that the respondent's house was located within private garden
ground, which was accessed through a gate. If the police considered that a
search warrant was required to enter the respondent's premises, they would have
been compelled to leave the house (and garden) pending its receipt. They would
have had no authority to remain at the back door guarding the trainers if they
had been asked to leave. The court is not aware that any intermediate lawful
step of "taking [items] into safe custody pending application for a warrant to
further detain" them exists. Where items are taken from private property, they
are either seized under the authority of a search (or other) warrant or they
are not. If they are not, they are either lawfully seized by virtue of a
regular search, such as one taking place in a situation of urgency, or they are
not. In the latter event, they will only be admitted in evidence if the
seizure is excused applying the principles of fairness, including the balancing
of public and private interests, set out in Lawrie v Muir 1950 JC 19.
[28] The problem
with finding the trainers on the back door step was not so much that the
weather conditions might have caused the impressions to disappear, were the
police to have elected to await a warrant. The risk was that, were the police
to have spent 2 or 3 hours obtaining a warrant, the trainers might well no
longer have been available for seizure upon their return to the garden. In the
circumstances set out by the sheriff, where it was accepted that the police had
acted in good faith throughout and considered that there was urgency in seizing
the trainers, it is impossible to draw any conclusion other than that there was
a situation of urgency which merited seizure of the trainers there and then. Whether
their wetness is significant is a matter primarily for the jury to resolve, but
the court cannot agree with the sheriff that it has no evidential value or that
the trainers could have been wet "for any number of reasons".
[29] Even if the
search had been irregular, it is of importance to note that the degree of
invasion of the respondent's right either to privacy or property was minimal.
No entry into private property was forced. The police had not been asked to
leave the premises and refused to do so. Where such minimal infringement is
involved and the evidence recovered may have significant value, the case
becomes one where excusal of any irregularity is merited.
[30] The court
will accordingly allow the appeal on this aspect and repel the objection to the
evidence of the recovery and condition of the second pair of trainers set out
in paragraph 2(i) of the respondent's minute.
Nazi and IRA Material
[31] The court
is unable to agree with the sheriff's view of history. The crime alleged involves
the vandalising of a memorial to the fallen in, amongst other conflicts, the Second World War. The act involved writing "war criminals" on the memorial. This, on one possible
interpretation, suggests that the perpetrator regarded those who had fought
against fascism in the war as "criminals". It may be that the perpetrator did
not have a particularly knowledgeable view on the rules of international
conflict or a sophisticated approach on what persons should be categorised
within the international regime as "war criminals". A jury would be entitled
to the view that the desecration of a war memorial would be more likely than
not to be carried out by a person with sympathies for those on the other side
of the conflict from those named on the memorial. In these circumstances,
evidence of sympathy for the Nazi party would be relevant to a jury's
consideration of the case against the respondent.
[32] This court
was not asked to express a view on whether the material, which suggested
support for the BNP and KKK, ought also to have been admissible. Suffice it to
say, on the assumption that it is reasonable to classify the actions of the
fallen as having been taken in the interests of democracy and freedom and
directed against the spread of fascism, it may be that any material displaying
sympathy for ultra right wing interests should be regarded as relevant to a
jury's consideration. This is so even if it may be difficult to ascertain the
link in the alleged perpetrator's mind between right wing groups and the IRA or
between his views on authority and that of fascism.
[33] The court
will again allow the appeal and repel the objections set out in paragraphs
2(iv) to (vi) of the respondent's minute in so far as they relate to material
tending to show sympathy for the Nazi party.