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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Bratty v Attorney General of Northern Ireland [1961] UKHL 3 (03 October 1961) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1961/3.html Cite as: [1963] AC 386, [1961] 3 All ER 523, [1961] UKHL 3 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1079
HOUSE OF LORDS
BRATTY
v.
ATTORNEY-GENERAL FOR NORTHERN IRELAND
3rd October, 1961
The Lord Chancellor
my lords.
Lord
Chancellor
Lord
Tucker
Lord
Denning
Lord
Morris
of
Borth-y-
Gest
Lord
Hodson
This is an
appeal from the Court of Criminal Appeal in Northern Ireland,
the
judgment having been delivered by Lord MacDermott, L.C.J. On the
4th
May, 1961, the Petitioner was convicted at the Downpatrick Assizes
of
the murder of Josephine Fitzsimmons on the 22nd December, 1960.
The
Petitioner appealed to the Court of Criminal Appeal and by
Order dated 18th
July, 1961, his appeal was dismissed. On the 27th
July, 1961, counsel on
behalf of the Petitioner applied, pursuant
to the provisions of subsections (1)
and (2) of section 1 and
subsection (1) of section 2 of the Administration
of Justice Act,
1960, for a certificate that a point of law of general
public
importance was involved in the decision of the Court of
Criminal Appeal,
and for leave to appeal to the House of Lords.
The Court certified that the
decision involved two points of law
of general public importance, namely:
Whether,
his plea of insanity having been rejected by the jury,
it was
open to the accused to rely upon a defence of automatism:
and
If the
answer to (1) be in the affirmative, whether, on the evidence,
the
defence of automatism should have been left to the jury.
Further it
appeared to the Court that the points of law so certified ought
to
be considered by the House of Lords, and the Court granted leave
to
appeal to this House.
Josephine
Fitzsimmons, who was eighteen years old, lived with her
widowed
mother near Hillsborough in the Monument Road—a road which
has
been described as lonely and quiet. Her mother had a cousin,
Miss
Morrow, who resided with her brother at 44 Irwin Place,
Donacloney, a
village six or seven miles from Hillsborough. With
them there lived the Peti-
tioner, George Bratty, a young man of
about twenty-six. He had been living
with the Morrows for about
twenty years. On the 22nd December, 1960, the
Petitioner asked
Miss Morrow if she would come with him in the car to visit
the
Fitzsimmons in order to deliver Christmas boxes for Mrs.
Fitzsimmons
and Josephine. The families were in the habit of
seeing each other regularly
and often. He had a black Ford Popular
car in which he and Miss Morrow
left Donacloney about 8.20 p.m.
and arrived at Mrs. Fitzsimmons' house
about 8.40. Miss Morrow
went into the house and after the Petitioner had
turned the car
and got out Josephine came out and asked him to drive her
into
Hillsborough to deliver a message and get some sweets. She was
seen
in Hillsborough but neither she nor the Petitioner reached
her home again.
At 11.15 p.m. her dead body was found in Grove
Road on the grass verge.
She had been strangled by a stocking from
her left leg. She had not been
sexually assaulted but her
underpants had been removed and were found
with her left boot a
short distance from the body on the grass verge. The
Petitioner
did not call back to take Miss Morrow home, but drove his
car in
the direction of Donacloney. When some two or three miles
from
Donacloney the car broke down and was left at the side of the
road, an
offer of a tow having been refused. He arrived at
Donacloney on foot
about 4 a.m. He was found by the police nearly
an hour later in a garage
at the bottom of the Morrows' garden and
taken to the Police Station.
Shortly
after 1 p.m. on the 23rd December the Petitioner was seen
by
Detective Head Constable Russell, Dr. Howard of the Forensic
Science
Laboratory being present. Russell asked what was the cause
of two scratches
2
on his
neck. The Petitioner said: " It was a young girl did it."
He was
then cautioned and made the following statement: —
"
Something terrible came over me. When I went up last night to
"
the young girl's house—turned the car. I had the engine
stopped
" and got out of her. I noticed her coming running
out. She asked
" me to take her down to Hillsborough to get
some sweets and deliver
" a message. I done so. and coming
back again, just about halfways
" up the road from her house,
I had some terrible feeling, and then a
" sort of a
blackness. Just with that, I took one look at her, caught
"
her, threw her right over the back of the seat into the back. I
caught
" her with my two hands. When I caught her with my two
hands
" I took one of her stockings and put it round her
neck. I tightened
" the stocking. Afterwards I went down the
road a piece—down the
" road to the left of her
house—took her out of the car, and left
" her on the
side of the road ; drove on towards home. Halfways
" down the
Ballygowan Road, the battery gave up on me. I got help
"
later on to try and get her started. Couldn't get her started. Then
"
we pushed her into side of a field gateway. I walked home after-
"
wards. I saw a policeman. I went into the garage, and the police
"
came. I didn't mean to do what really happened. Many's the time I
"
took her down to Hillsborough at week-ends, and nothing like that
"
happened until last night. I apologise for what happened.
" I
don't think it would have happened only that terrible feeling came
"
over me at the time. I don't know really what caused it at all.
"
I think that's about all I can say."
In
evidence the Petitioner later described the terrible feeling that
came
over him as a feeling that he wanted to put his arms round
the girl.
Without setting out any further evidence in detail, but
having in mind
particularly this description of the "
terrible feeling". the scratches on
the Petitioner's neck,
and the removal of the underpants, I agree with the
Court of
Criminal Appeal when they say—
"
That the Appellant killed Miss Fitzsimmons is not in dispute. On
"
the evidence there can be no doubt at all that he made some sort
"
of advance which was resisted, and that he attacked the girl,
breaking
" a small bone in her neck and then caused her death
by taking off
" one of her stockings and tying it tightly
round her neck. It is also
" beyond question that, at some
stage, the Appellant got the girl from
" the front passenger
seat to the back of the car, and that it was he
" who removed
the body from the car and dumped it on the grass
" verge."
In the
opening speech for the defence at the trial the jury were asked
to
rind "one of three separate and completely independent
verdicts"—
The
primary verdict requested which it was submitted was the
proper
one was that of Not Guilty on the basis that the Petitioner
"
was not master of the situation but that he was in a state of
automa-
" tism ". (The only cause suggested for his
being in such a state was
psychomotor epilepsy.)
Secondly,
if the jury rejected the first defence, then it was sub-
mitted
that the Petitioner was incapable of forming the
particular
intent to constitute murder, that is, an intent to
kill or cause grievous
bodily harm, on the ground that " his
mental condition was so impaired
" and confused and he was
so deficient in reason that he was not capable
" of forming
this intent", and that the verdict should be manslaughter.
(3) Thirdly,
it was submitted that, if the jury were unable to come to
either
the first or second verdict, " at the material time the accused
may
" be guilty but he was insane " on the ground that
he did not know the
nature and quality of his acts, or if he did,
that he did not know that
they were wrong.
On the
first and second of these submissions it was claimed that the
Petitioner
should get the benefit of any doubt, the implication
being that the Crown
must prove that the acts of the Petitioner
were conscious and voluntary acts.
3
The
learned trial judge left the defence of insanity to the jury.
The
insanity alleged was that the Petitioner was suffering from an
attack of
psychomotor epilepsy and as a result had such a defect
of reason as not to
know the nature and quality of his acts or, if
he did, not to know that they
were wrong. As respects that defence
the Court of Criminal Appeal said—
"
There is now no complaint of the summing up as respects this
"
defence, and it is no longer disputed that, on the material before
them,
" the jury were fully entitled to reject it as in fact
they did."
The
learned judge refused to leave the first and second defences to
the
jury and it was from this refusal that the main grounds of the
appeal to the
Court of Criminal Appeal and ultimately to this
House arise.
In his
notice of appeal to the Court of Criminal Appeal the
Petitioner's
first ground was stated in these words—
" The
learned trial judge was wrong in law in failing to leave to the
"
jury the issue as to whether the killing was committed by the
Appel-
" lant in a state of automatism and whether his
actions resulting in the
" said killing were voluntary or
conscious."
Automatism
was defined by the Court of Criminal Appeal in this
case " as
connoting the state of a person who, though capable of action,
"
is not conscious of what he is doing ... It means unconscious
"
involuntary action, and it is a defence because the mind does not
go
" with what is being done."
This is
very like the words of the learned President of the Court of
Appeal
of New Zealand in R. v. Cottle ([1958]
N.Z.L.R. 999 at p. 1020) when he
said—
"
With respect, I would myself prefer to explain automatism simply
"
as action without any knowledge of acting, or action without any
"
consciousness of what is being done."
The first
portion of the argument before them that " automatism "
should
have been left to the jury was summarised by the Court of
Criminal Appeal
as being that the whole of the evidence on the
issue of insanity was relevant
on the issue whether automatism
itself existed however it was caused ; in view
of the onus being
on the defence to show on a preponderance of probability
that the
necessary constituents of the M'Naghten formula were present, it
was
therefore submitted that, although the evidence might have failed
to
prove some constituent of insanity, the lack of consciousness
itself might
have seemed a genuine possibility to the jury, and
the jury might at least
have had a reasonable doubt as to whether
the Appellant was conscious
of his acts so as to be guilty of
murder.
Before your Lordships the argument was advanced in this way—
The
ultimate burden on the Crown is to prove that the crime was
a
conscious and voluntary act.
There was
a volume of evidence showing that the act was not
conscious and
voluntary.
The jury
should be told to examine this evidence with a view to
answering
the following questions : —
A. Are you
satisfied that the acts resulting in the death were
involuntary or
unconscious conduct?
B. If this
is so you must go on to consider whether this was
due to a defect
of reason from disease of the mind of such a
kind that the
defendant did not know the* nature and quality of
his act, in
which case the form of acquittal would be guilty of
the acts
charged but insane at the time.
C. If you
are satisfied that the acts were not conscious and
voluntary but
not satisfied that they are due to a defect of reason
from disease
of the mind, then the verdict should be not guilty
4
because
the prosecution have failed to satisfy you that the acts
were
conscious and voluntary.
D. If you
are left in doubt as to whether the acts were conscious
or
voluntary then, if the acts were not within the M'Naghten Rules,
the
proper verdict would still be not guilty.
The Court
of Criminal Appeal rejected that " first portion of the argu-
"
ment" on the ground that the learned judge was right in not
leaving to
the jury the defence of automatism in so far as it
purported to be founded
on a defect of reason from disease of the
mind within the M'Naghten Rules.
In this I think that they were
right. To establish the defence of insanity
within the M'Naghten
Rules the accused must prove on the preponderance
of probabilities
first a defect of reason from a disease of the mind, and,
secondly,
as a consequence of such a defect, ignorance of the nature
and
quality (or the wrongfulness) of the acts. We have to consider
a case in
which it is sought to do so by medical evidence to the
effect that the conduct
of the accused might be compatible with
psychomotor epilepsy, which is a
disease of the mind affecting the
reason, and that psychomotor epilepsy
could cause ignorance of the
nature and quality of the acts done, but in
which the medical
witness can assign no other cause for that ignorance.
Where the
possibility of an unconscious act depends on, and only on.
the
existence of a defect of reason from disease of the mind
within the M'Naghten
Rules, a rejection by the jury of this
defence of insanity necessarily implies
that they reject the
possibility.
The Court
of Criminal Appeal also took the view that where the
alleged
automatism is based solely on a disease of the mind within
the M'Naghten
Rules, the same burden of proof rests on the defence
whether the " plea "
is given the name of insanity or
automatism. I do not think that statement
goes further than saying
that when you rely on insanity as defined by the
Rules you cannot
by a difference of nomenclature avoid the road so often
and
authoritatively laid down by the Courts.
What I
have said does not mean that, if a defence of insanity is
raised
unsuccessfully, there can never, in any conceivable
circumstances, be room
tor an alternative defence based on
automatism. For example, it may be
alleged that the accused had a
blow on the head after which he acted
without being conscious of
what he was doing or was a sleep-walker. There
might be a
divergence of view as to whether there was a defect of reason
from
disease of the mind (compare the curious position which arose
in
Regina v. Kemp [1957] 1 Q.B. 399). The jury might
not accept the evidence
of a defect of reason from disease of the
mind, but at the same time accept
the evidence that the prisoner
did not know what he was doing. If the
jury should take that view
of the facts they would find him not guilty.
But it should be
noted that the defence would only have succeeded because
the
necessary foundation had been laid by positive evidence which,
properly
considered, was evidence of something other than a defect
of reason from
disease of the mind. In my opinion, this analysis
of the two defences
(insanity and automatism) shows that where the
only cause alleged for the
unconsciousness is a defect of reason
from disease of the mind, and that
cause is rejected by the jury,
there can be no room for the alternative defence
cf automatism.
Like the Court of Criminal Appeal, I cannot therefore
accept the
submission that the whole of the evidence directed to the issue
of
insanity should have been left to the jury to consider whether there
was
automatism due to another cause. It was conceded before this
House, and
this is stated in the judgment of the Court of Criminal
Appeal, that there
was nothing to show or suggest that there was
any other pathological cause
for automatism.
I next
consider the submission that even so the question of automatism
ought
to have been left to the jury.
Great
reliance was placed on a passage in the judgment of North, J. in
the
New Zealand case to which I have already referred (R. v.
Cottle [1958]
N.Z.L.R. at 1029). Strictly this passage was
obiter in view of the findings
on the first two grounds of appeal
but its importance is none-the-less obvious.
5
" For
the reasons I have earlier mentioned, however, as the autho-
"
rities at present stand he (the judge) would not treat a plea of
auto-
" matism as something akin to insanity, and therefore
subject to the
" same rule as to the burden of proof for this
would be an unwarranted
" extension of the rule laid down so
positively in Woolmington's case
" (1935 A.C. p. 462)
... On the other hand in cases like the present
" one,
where the form of the plea is that the prisoner acted unconsciously
"
—in a state of automatism—the rejection of the evidence
that he was
" suffering from a disease of the mind does not
wholly dispose of the
" defence, for it is still possible,
though perhaps unlikely, that the jury
" may not be
completely satisfied that the act was the conscious and
"
intended act of the prisoner. In my opinion the presiding judge
must
" anticipate this possible situation. He must be
careful to tell the jury
" that—apart from the plea of
insanity—the onus of proving all the
" facts necessary
to establish guilt rests on the Crown. Consequently,
" if
the jury is of opinion that it has not been made out that the
prisoner
" was suffering from a disease of the mind, it must
remember that it
" is the responsibility of the Crown to
satisfy it that the prisoner had
" known and understood the
nature of the act he committed."
If by this passage in his
judgment North, J. meant to imply that in every
case where
insanity is raised, automatism must always be left to the jury
as
a defence, I should, with respect, be unable to accept what he says
as a
correct statement of the law. But what North, J. said must
be considered
in the light of the view expressed by the whole
court (and set out in the
headnote to the report) that not only
must automatism be expressly put
forward as a defence but also
that a proper foundation must be laid for
it. In my view the
learned judge was only considering the situation where
there was
positive evidence which would justify a finding by the jury that
the
accused acted in a state of automatism. This is in accordance
with
the view taken by this House in Mancini v. Director of
Public Prosecutions
[1942] A.C.1, in which it was pointed out
that the decision in Woolmington's
case (supra) did
not mean that the judge must deal in his summing-up with
the
issues of accident and provocation merely because these defences
were
raised. There must be some evidence of accident or
provocation on which
a reasonable jury could act. I think that
this provides the synthesis between
the reasoning of the Court of
Criminal Appeal in the present case and the
passage just quoted
from North, J. It is necessary that a proper foundation
be laid
before a judge can leave " automatism " to the jury.
That founda-
tion, in my view, is not forthcoming merely from
unaccepted evidence of a
defect of reason from disease of the
mind. There would need to be other
evidence on which a jury
could find non-insane automatism. What the Court
of Criminal
Appeal say about the onus of proof must be read in the
context
of evidence directed simultaneously to defences of insanity
and
automatism.
Certain
very relevant problems were discussed in Hill v. Baxter
[1958]
1 Q.B. 277, where the Court (Lord Goddard, C.J., Devlin
and Pearson, JJ.
(as they then were)) held that, in spite of the
justices accepting the defendant's
evidence that he became
unconscious while driving, there was no evidence
which justified
the justices in finding that the defendant was not fully
responsible
in law for his actions. Lord Goddard expressed the view that
the
onus of proving that the defendant was in a state of automatism
was
on him because automatism is akin to insanity and further is a
fact exclu-
sively within his own knowledge. The other members of
the Court reserved
this point. Nevertheless Devlin, J. at pp.
284/5 used these words, with
which I respectfully agree and which
are relevant to the present case—
" It
would be quite unreasonable to allow the defence to submit
"
at the end of the prosecution's case that the Crown had not proved
"
affirmatively and beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused was
"
at the time of the crime sober, or not sleepwalking or not in a
trance
" or blackout."
Later on p. 285 he continued—
" In
my judgment there is not to be found in the case stated evidence
"
of automatism of a character which would be fit to leave to a
6
"
jury ... he was not saying that he was a victim of any disease of
the
" mind. Unless there was evidence that his irrationality
was due to
" some cause other than disease of the mind, the
justices were not
" entitled simply to acquit."
I have
also read with great interest and profit the Victorian case of
Regina
v. Carter [1959 V.R. 105] and the Queensland cases of The
Queen
v. Foy (Queensland Vol. LIII, Part III 225) and
Cooper v. McKenna (in
Part IV. at p. 406). I do
not think that this is the occasion to pursue the
particular facts
or the effect of particular statutes but it seems to me that none
of
the learned judges would question the proposition that, for a defence
of
automatism to be " genuinely raised in a genuine fashion
", there must be
evidence on which a jury could find that a
state of automatism exists. By
this I mean that the defence must
be able to point to some evidence, whether
it emanates from their
own or the Crown's witnesses, from which the jury
could reasonably
infer that the accused acted in a state of automatism.
Whether
or no: there is such evidence is a matter of law for the judge
to
decide. In the case before your Lordships, in my opinion.
McVeigh, J.
was right in ruling that there was no evidence on this
point fit to be left
to the jury. I have already dealt with the
unsuccessful attempt to prove
psychomotor epilepsy and the
concession before us that there was nothing
in the evidence to
show or suggest that there was any other pathological
cause. If
one subtracts the medical evidence directed to the establishment
of
psychomotor epilepsy. I am of opinion that there was not any
evidence
on which a jury could properly have considered the
existence of automatism.
Counsel for the Petitioner directed our
attention to the Petitioner's state-
ment, to his evidence and to
his previous conduct. In my view they do
not provide evidence
fit to be left to a jury on this question. They could
not form
the basis of reasonable doubt.
McVeigh,
J. did not, therefore, have to consider what direction he would
have
given to the jury if he had felt that there was evidence fit for
them
to consider. It is not, strictly speaking, necessary for the
decision of this
appeal for this House to consider what this
direction should have been,
but in view of the mention of onus in
the judgment of the Court of Criminal
Appeal and the argument
addressed to us, I think that it is right for
me to deal with it.
Where the
defence succeeds in surmounting the initial hurdle (see Mancini
v.
Director of Public Prosecutions, supra), and satisfies the
judge that there
is evidence tit for the jury to consider, the
question remains whether the
proper direction is—
that the
jury will acquit if, and only if, they are satisfied on the
balance
of probabilities that the accused acted in a state of automatism,
or
that they
should acquit if they are left in reasonable doubt on
this point.
In favour
of the former direction it might be argued that, since a defence
of
automatism is (as Lord Goddard said in Hill v. Baxter (supra))
very
near a defence of insanity, it would be anomalous if
there were any distinc-
tion between the onus in the one case and
in the other. If this argument
were to prevail it would follow
that the defence would fail unless they
established on a balance
of probabilities that the prisoner's act was uncon-
scious and
involuntary in the same way as, under the M'Naghten Rules, they
must
establish on a balance of probabilities that the necessary
requirements
are satisfied.
Nevertheless,
one must not lose sight of the overriding principle, laid down
by
this House in Woolmington's case (supra), that it is
for the prosecution
to prove every element of the offence charged.
One of these elements is
the accused's state of mind ; normally
the presumption of mental capacity
is sufficient to prove that he
acted consciously and voluntarily and the pro-
secution need go no
further. But, if, after considering evidence properly
left to them
by the judge, the jury are left in real doubt whether or not
7
the
accused acted in a state of automatism, it seems to me that on
principle
they should acquit because the necessary mens rea—if
indeed the actus reus
—has not been proved beyond
reasonable doubt.
I find
support for this view in the direction given by Barry, J. to the
jury
in Reg. v. Charlson [1955] 1 W.L.R. 317. In that case the
prisoner
was charged on three counts, namely, causing grievous
bodily harm with
intent to murder, causing grievous bodily harm
with intent to cause grievous
bodily harm, and unlawful wounding.
The defence raised the issue of
automatism and called medical
evidence in support of it. The learned
judge, on the basis—which
has aroused some discussion—that insanity did
not come into
the case, after directing the jury that on each of the first
two
charges the prosecution must prove the specific intent, went
on to deal
with the third charge, that is, unlawful wounding, in
these words:
"
Therefore, in considering this third charge, you will have to ask
"
yourselves whether the accused knowingly struck his son, or whether
"
he was acting as an automaton without any knowledge of, or control
"
over, his acts ... If you are left in any doubt about the matter,
"
and you think that he may well have been acting as an automaton
"
without any real knowledge of what he was doing, then the proper
"
verdict would be ' not guilty' . . . ''
I am also
supported by the words of Scholl, J. in Regina v. Carter
(supra)
at p. 111 when he said:
" It
must be for the defence in the first instance genuinely to raise
"
the issue, but if the defence does raise the issue in a genuine
fashion
" then the Crown which, of course, may call rebutting
evidence on
" the matter, is bound in the long run to carry
the ultimate onus of
" proving all the elements of the crime
including the conscious perpe-
" tration thereof."
My
conclusion is, therefore, that once the defence have surmounted
the
initial hurdle to which I have referred and have satisfied the
judge that
there is evidence fit for the jury's consideration, the
proper direction is that,
if that evidence leaves them in a real
state of doubt, the jury should acquit
On the
second ground of appeal, that the learned judge was wrong in
failing
to leave the issue of manslaughter to the jury, I find myself in
entire
agreement with the words of Lord MacDermott in giving the
judgment of
the Court of Criminal Appeal on this point and
respectfully adopt his
reasoning.
I think that this appeal should be dismissed.
Lord Tucker
MY LORDS,
I agree. I
also desire to express my agreement with the Opinion to be
delivered
by my noble and learned friend, Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest.
which
I have had the advantage of reading in print.
Lord Denning
MY LORDS,
In the
case of Woolmington v. The Director of Public Prosecutions
[1935]
A.C. 462 at p. 482 Viscount Sankey, L.C., said that "
when dealing with a
" murder case the Crown must prove (a)
death as the result of a voluntary
" act of the accused
and (b) malice of the accused ". The requirement that
it
should be a voluntary act is essential, not only in a murder case,
but also
in every criminal case. No act is punishable if it is
done involuntarily: and
an involuntary act in this context—some
people nowadays prefer to speak of
it as " automatism
"-—means an act which is done by the muscles without
8
any
control by the mind such as a spasm, a reflex action or a
convulsion;
or an act done by a person who is not conscious of
what he is doing such as
an act done whilst suffering from
concussion or whilst sleep-walking. The
point was well put by
Stephen J. in 1889: "Can anyone doubt that a man
" who,
though he might be perfectly sane, committed what would otherwise
"
be a crime in a state of somnambulism, would be entitled to be
acquitted?
" And why is this? Simply because he would not
know what he was doing ",
see The Queen v. Tolson
(1889) 23 QBD 168, at page 187. The term
" involuntary
act" is, however, capable of wider connotations: and to
prevent
confusion it is to be observed that in the criminal law an act is
not
to be regarded as an involuntary act simply because the doer
does not
remember it. When a man is charged with dangerous
driving, it is no defence
to him to say " I don't know what
happened. I cannot remember a thing ",
see Hill v. Baxter
[1958] 1 Q.B. 277. Loss of memory afterwards is never
a
defence in itself, so long as he was conscious at the time, see
Russell v.
H.M. Advocate, 1946 S.C. (J) 37. Regina
v. Podola [I960] 1 Q.B. 325.
Nor is an act to be
regarded as an involuntary act simply because the
doer could not
control his impulse to do it. When a man is charged
with murder,
and it appears that he knew what he was doing, but he
could not
resist it, then his assertion. "I couldn't help myself",
is
no defence in itself, see Attorney-General for South
Australia v. Brown
[1960] AC 432: though it may go
towards a defence of diminished
responsibility, in places where
that defence is available, see Regina
v. Byrne (19601
2 Q.B. 396: but it does not render his act involun-
tary so as to
entitle him to an unqualified acquittal. Nor is an act to
be
regarded as an involuntary act simply because it is unintentional or
its
consequences are unforeseen. When a man is charged with
dangerous
driving, it is no defence for him to say, however truly,
" I did not mean to
" drive dangerously ". There is
an absolute prohibition against that offence,
whether he had a
guilty mind or not. see Hill v. Baxter [1958] 1 Q.B.
277 at
p. 282 by Lord Goddard C.J. But even though it is
absolutely prohibited,
nevertheless he has a defence if he can
show that it was an involuntary act in
the sense that he was
unconscious at the time and did not know what he was
doing, see
H.M. Advocate v. Ritchie 1926 S.C. (J) 45, Regina v.
Minor
(1955) 15 W.L.R. (N.S.) 443 and Cooper v.
McKenna, 1960 Queensland
Reports 406.
Another
thing to be observed is that it is not every involuntary act
which
leads to a complete acquittal. Take first an involuntary act
which proceeds
from a state of drunkenness. If the drunken man is
so drunk that he does
not know what he is doing, he has a defence
to any charge, such as murder
or wounding with intent, in which a
specific intent is essential, but he is still
liable to be
convicted of manslaughter or unlawful wounding for which no
specific
intent is necessary, see Director of Public Prosecutions v.
Beard
[1920] A.C. 479 at pages 494, 498. 504. Again, if the
involuntary act
proceeds from a disease of the mind, it gives rise
to a defence of insanity,
but not to a defence of automatism.
Suppose a crime is committed by a
man in a state of automatism or
clouded consciousness due to a recurrent
disease of the mind. Such
an act is no doubt involuntary, but it does not
give rise to an
unqualified acquittal, for that would mean that he would
be let at
large to do it again. The only proper verdict is one which
ensures
that the person who suffers from the disease is kept
secure in a hospital
so as not to be a danger to himself or
others. That is, a verdict of guilty
but insane.
Once you
exclude all the cases I have mentioned, it is apparent that
the
category of involuntary acts is very limited. So limited
indeed that until
recently there was hardly any reference in the
English books to this so-called
defence of automatism. There was a
passing reference to it in 1951 in
Regina v. Harrison-Owen
[1951] 2 A.E.R. 726, where a burglar, who broke
into houses,
said he did not know what he was doing. I should have thought
that,
in order to rebut this defence, he could have been cross-examined
about
his previous burglaries: but the Court of Criminal Appeal
ruled otherwise.
I venture to doubt that decision. The next is the
singular case of Regina
v. Charlson [1955] 1 W.L.R.
317. Stanley Charlson, a devoted husband
9
and
father, hit his ten-year old son on the head with a hammer and
threw
him into the river and so injured him. There was not the
slightest cause
for the attack. He was charged with causing
grievous bodily harm with
intent, and with unlawful wounding. The
evidence pointed to the possibility
that Charlson was suffering
from a cerebral tumour, in which case he would
be liable to a
motiveless outburst of impulsive violence over which he would
have
no control at all. Now comes the important point—no plea of
insanity
was raised, but only the defence of automatism. Barry J.
directed the jury
in these words: " If he did not know what
he was doing, if his actions were
" purely automatic and his
mind had no control over the movement of his
" limbs, if he
was in the same position as a person in an epileptic fit, then
"
no responsibility rests upon him at all, and the proper verdict is '
Not
" ' Guilty ' ". On that direction the jury found him
Not Guilty. In striking
contrast to Charlson's case is
Regina v. Kemp [1957] 1 Q.B. 399. A
devoted
husband of excellent character made an entirely motiveless
and irrational
attack upon his wife. He struck her violently with
a hammer. He was
charged with causing her grievous bodily harm. It
was found that he suffered
from hardening of the arteries which
might lead to a congestion of blood
in the brain. As a result of
such congestion, he suffered a temporary lack
of consciousness, so
that he was not conscious that he picked up the hammer
or that he
was striking his wife with it. It was therefore an involuntary
act.
Note again the important point—no plea of insanity was
raised but only
the defence of automatism. Nevertheless, Devlin J.
put insanity to the jury.
He held that hardening of the arteries
was a " disease of the mind " within
the M'Naghten Rules
and he directed the jury they ought so to find. They
accordingly
found Kemp guilty but insane.
My Lords,
I think that Devlin J. was quite right in Kemp's Case
in
putting the question of insanity to the jury, even though it
had not been
raised by the defence. When it is asserted that the
accused did an involuntary
act in a state of automatism, the
defence necessarily puts in issue the state
of mind of the accused
man: and thereupon it is open to the prosecution
to show what his
true state of mind was. The old notion that only the
defence can
raise a defence of insanity is now gone. The prosecution are
entitled
to raise it and it is their duty to do so rather than allow a
dangerous
person to be at large. The Trial of Lunatics Act, 1883,
says that where
" it is given in evidence " that the
person was insane, the jury shall return
a verdict of guilty but
insane. It does not say that the defence alone can
give such
evidence. The prosecution can give it. And in either case
inasmuch
as the verdict is one of acquittal, see Felstead v. The
King [1914]
A.C. 534, it should be decided on the balance of
probabilities. So it has
been held in England that where a man
sets up a defence of diminished
responsibility, the prosecution
are entitled to show that he was insane,
see Regina v.
Bastion [1958] 1 W.L.R. 413: and conversely when a man sets
up
insanity, the prosecution are entitled to give evidence of
diminished
responsibility, see Regina v. Nott (1958)
43 Cr. Ap. R. 8.
Upon the
other point discussed by Devlin J. namely, what is a " disease
"
of the mind " within the M'Naghten Rules, I would agree with him
that
this is a question for the Judge. The major mental diseases,
which the
doctors call psychoses, such as schizophrenia, are
clearly diseases of the
mind. But in Charlson's case, Barry
J. seems to have assumed that other
diseases such as epilepsy or
cerebral tumour are not diseases of the mind,
even when they are
such as to manifest themselves in violence. I do not
agree with
this. It seems to me that any mental disorder which has mani-
fested
itself in violence and is prone to recur is a disease of the mind.
At
any rate it is the sort of disease for which a person should be
detained
in hospital rather than be given an unqualified
acquittal.
It is to
be noticed that in Charlson's case and Kemp's case the
defence
raised only automatism, not insanity. In the present case
the defence raised
both automatism and insanity. And herein lies
the difficulty because
of the burden of proof. If the accused says
he did not know what he was
doing, then, so far as the defence of
automatism is concerned, the Crown
must prove that the act was a
voluntary act, see Woolmington's case [1935]
A.C. 462 at p.
482. But so far as the defence of insanity is concerned, the
10
defence
must prove that the act was an involuntary act due to disease of
the
mind, see M'Naghten's case (1843) Cl. & F. at p.
210. This apparent
incongruity was noticed by Sir Owen Dixon, the
Chief Justice of Australia,
in an address which is to be found in
31 Australian Law Journal 255 and it
needs to be resolved. The
defence here say: Even though we have not
proved that the act was
involuntary, yet the Crown have not proved that
it was a voluntary
act: and that point at least should have been put to the
jury.
My Lords,
I think that the difficulty is to be resolved by remembering
that,
whilst the ultimate burden rests on the Crown of proving every
element
essential in the crime, nevertheless in order to prove
that the act was a
voluntary act, the Crown is entitled to rely on
the presumption that every
man has sufficient mental
capacity to be responsible for his crimes: and
that if the defence
wish to displace that presumption they must give some
evidence
from which the contrary may reasonably be inferred. Thus a
drunken
man is presumed to have the capacity to form the specific
intent
necessary to constitute the crime, unless evidence is given
from which it
can reasonably be inferred that he was incapable of
forming it, see the
valuable judgment of the Court of Session in
Kennedy v. H.M. Advocate,
1944 S.C. (J.) 171 at p.
177 which was delivered by Lord Normand. So also
it seems to me
that a man's act is presumed to be a voluntary act unless
there is
evidence from which it can reasonably be inferred that it was
in-
voluntary To use the words of Devlin J. the defence of
automatism "ought
" not to be considered at all until
the defence has produced at least prima
" facie
evidence." see Hill v. Baxter [1958] 1 Q.B.
277 at p. 285; and the
words of North J. in New Zealand "
unless a proper foundation is laid," see
Regina v.
Cattle, 1958 N.Z. L.R. at p. 1025. The necessity of laying
this
proper foundation is on the defence: and if it is not so
laid, the defence of
automatism need no; be left to the jury, any
more than the defence of
drunkenness, (Kennedy v. H.M.
Advocate, supra) provocation (R. v.
Gauthier. 21
Cr. Ap. R. 113) or self-defence (Regina v. Lobell [1957]
1
Q.B. 547) need be.
What then
is a proper foundation? The presumption of mental capacity
of
which I have spoken is a provisional presumption only. It does
not
put the legal burden on the defence in the same way as the
presumption
of sanity does. It leaves the legal burden on the
prosecution, but neverthe-
less, until it is displaced, it enables
the prosecution to discharge the ultimate
burden of proving that
the act was voluntary. Not because the presumption
is evidence
itself, but because it takes the place of evidence. In order
to
displace the presumption of mental capacity, the defence must
give sufficient
evidence from which it may reasonably be inferred
that the act was involun-
tary. The evidence of the man himself
will rarely be sufficient unless it is
supported by medical
evidence which points to the cause of the mental
incapacity. It is
not sufficient for a man to say " I had a blackout":
for
"Black-out" as Stable J said in Cooper v.
McKenna, 1960 Queensland
Reports at p. 419, " is one
of the first refuges of a guilty conscience and a
popular excuse
". The words of Devlin J in Hill v. Baxter [1958] 1 Q.B.
at
p. 285 should be remembered: " I do not doubt that there
are genuine cases
"of automatism and the like, but I do not
see how the layman can safely
" attempt without the help of
some medical or scientific evidence to distinguish
" the
genuine from the fraudulent". When the only cause that is
assigned for
an involuntary act is drunkenness, then it is only
necessary to leave drunken-
ness to the jury, with the
consequential directions, and not to leave
automatism at all. When
the only cause that is assigned for it is a disease
of the mind,
then it is only necessary to leave insanity to the jury, and
not
automatism. When the cause assigned is concussion or
sleep-walking, there
should be some evidence from which it can
reasonably be inferred before
it should be left to the jury. If it
is said to be due to concussion, there
should be evidence of a
severe blow shortly beforehand. If it is said to
be sleep-walking,
there should be some credible support for it. His mere
assertion
that he was asleep will not suffice.
Once a
proper foundation is thus laid for automatism, the matter becomes
at
large and must be left to the jury. As the case proceeds, the
evidence
11
may weigh
first to one side and then to the other: and so the burden may
appear
to shift to and fro. But at the end of the day the legal burden
comes
into play and requires that the jury should be satisfied
beyond
reasonable doubt that the act was a voluntary act.
This
brings me to the root question in the present case: Was a
proper
foundation laid here for the defence of automatism apart
from the plea
of insanity? There was the evidence of George Bratty
himself that he
could not remember anything because " this
blackness was over me ". He
said: " I did not realise
exactly what I was doing ", and added afterwards:
" I
didn't know what I was doing. I didn't realise anything ". He
said
he had 4 or 5 times previously had " feelings of
blackness " and frequently
headaches. There was evidence,
too, of his odd behaviour at times, his
mental backwardness and
his religious leanings. Added to this there was
the medical
evidence. Dr. Sax, who was called on his behalf, said there
was a
possibility that he was suffering from psychomotor epilepsy. It
was,
he said, practically the only possibility that occurred to
him. Dr. Walker,
his general practitioner, said you could not
leave the possibility out of
account. Dr. Robinson, a specialist,
who gave evidence on behalf of the
Crown, said he thought it was
extremely unlikely that it was an epileptic
attack, but one could
not rule it out. All the doctors agreed that psycho-
motor
epilepsy, if it exists, is a defect of reason due to disease of
the
mind : and the Judge accepted this view. No other cause was
canvassed.
In those
circumstances, I am clearly of opinion that, if the act of
George
Bratty was an involuntary act, as the defence suggested,
the evidence
attributed it solely to a disease of the mind and the
only defence open
was the defence of insanity. There was no
evidence of automatism apart
from insanity. There was, therefore,
no need for the Judge to put it to
the jury. And when the jury
rejected the defence of insanity, they rejected
the only defence
disclosed by the evidence.
I think
that McVeigh J. was right in the course he took at the trial, and
I
find myself in entire agreement with the judgment of Lord
MacDermott.
C.J., in the Court of Criminal Appeal. I would,
therefore, dismiss the
appeal.
Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest
MY LORDS,
The Court
of Criminal Appeal certified that their decision in dismissing
the
Appellant's appeal involved two points of law of general public
import-
ance. The first was " whether, his plea of insanity
having been rejected by
" the jury, it was open to the
accused to rely upon a defence of automatism ".
This raises
the question whether a person who by legal tests and standards
is
sane and who is charged with a criminal offence could be held to
be
non-accountable for his actions so as to be not guilty of the
offence charged
against him on the basis that his actions had been
unconscious ones and
in that sense involuntary. My Lords, I can
conceive that this could be
so though the cases where such a
situation could arise must be very rare.
Each set of facts must
require a careful investigation of its own circumstances
but if,
by way of taking an illustration, it were considered possible for
a
person to walk in his sleep and to commit a violent act while
genuinely
unconscious, then such a person would not be criminally
liable for that act.
Apart altogether from any question as to
whether some particular criminal
charge requires proof of some
particular intent, in the possible case that
I have postulated
there would be immunity from any conviction for the
reason that
the act in question could not really be considered to be the
act
of the person concerned at all.
The "
golden " rule of the English criminal law that it is the duty
of
the prosecution to prove an accused person's guilt (subject to
any statutory
exception and subject to the special position which
arises where it is given
12
in
evidence that an accused person is insane) does not involve that
the
prosecution must speculate as to and specifically anticipate
every conceivable
explanation that an accused person might offer.
The evidence of the com-
mission of certain acts may suffice to
prove that they were intentional. In a
charge of murder malice may
by implication be proved where death occurs
as the result of a
voluntary act of the accused which is (i) intentional and
(ii)
unprovoked. When evidence of death and malice has been given
an
accused person may, however, either by adducing evidence or by
examining
the circumstances adduced by the Crown, show that his
actions were either
unintentional or provoked. In such a situation
the continuing and constant
obligation of the prosecution to
satisfy the jury beyond any reasonable
doubt is in no way abated
(see Woolmington v. Director of Public Prosecu-
tions [1935] AC 462). In the conceivably possible case that I have
postulated
(of a violent act committed by a sleep-walker) it would
not necessarily
be the duty of the prosecution in leading their
evidence as to the commission
of the act specifically to direct
such evidence to negativing the possibility
of the act having been
committed while sleep-walking. If, however, during
the trial the
suggested explanation of the act was advanced and if such
explanation
was so supported that it had sufficient substance to merit
con-
sideration by the jury, then the onus which is upon the
prosecution would
not be discharged unless the jury, having
considered the explanation, were
sure that guilt in regard to the
particular crime charged was established so
that they were left in
no reasonable doubt. The position would be analogous
to that which
arises where a defence of self-defence is raised. Though the
onus
is upon the prosecution to negative that defence, the obligation to
do
so only arises effectively when there is a suggestion of such
defence (see
Regina v. Lobell [1957] 1 Q.B. 547).
Before an
explanation of any conduct is worthy of consideration
such
explanation must be warranted by the established facts or be
supported
by same evidence that has been given by some witness.
Though questions
as to whcthcr evidence should or should not be
accepted or as to the weight
to be attached to it are for the
determination of the jury, it is a province
of the judge to rule
whether a theory or a submission has the support of
evidence so
that it can properly be passed to the jury for their
consideration.
As human behaviour may manifest itself in infinite
varieties of circumstances
it is perilous to generalise, but it is
not every facile mouthing of some easy
phrase of excuse that can
amount to an explanation. It is for a judge to
decide whether
there is evidence fit to be left to a jury which could be the
basis
for some suggested verdict.
My Lords,
the fact that a plea of insanity was advanced on behalf of
the
accused did not of itself prevent the raising of alternative
or additional
matters, and in regard to the first point of law
presented by the Court of
Criminal Appeal I consider that though
the Appellant's plea of insanity
was rejected by the jury it was "
open " to him to rely upon the suggested
defence which is
denoted by the word " automatism ".
On this
basis the second point of law certified by the Court of
Criminal
Appeal calls for consideration. It was expressed in these
words: " If the
" answer to (1) be in the affirmative,
whether, on the evidence, the defence
" of automatism should
have been left to the jury." This raises the question
whether
there was any evidence of " automatism " which was fit to
be left
to the jury. The argument on behalf of the Appellant
involved consideration
both of the medical evidence and of the
non-medical evidence. In his
statement made on the 23rd December,
1960, the Appellant had spoken of
" a sort of blackness "
and in his evidence in Court he had spoken of a
" blackness "
having come over him and of previous occasions when he had
had
feelings of blackness. There were three medical witnesses called
(either
by the prosecution or by the defence) during the trial. In
questions that
were put to them and in the course of 'their
evidence the only pathological
explanation of what the Appellant
might have been suffering from that was
suggested or in any way
canvassed was the 'possibility that he might have
been suffering
from psychomotor epilepsy. Psychomotor epilepsy was said
to toe a
functional disorder amounting to defect of reason due to disease
13
of the
mind. There was some evidence that during an attack of psycho-
motor
epilepsy a person might commit a violent act unconsciously. There
was
no medical evidence which was directed to the suggestion of "
auto-
" matism" other than automatism of an epileptic
character. It was,
however, urged that in spite of this and
notwithstanding that the plea of
insanity was rejected the jury
should have been told that the medical
evidence could still
support the view that the Appellant though sane had
acted
unconsciously. It was urged that the jury on a balance of
probabili-
ties might not have considered that the Appellant was
insane but might
have had reasonable doubts as to whether his
actions were conscious ones
and accordingly had this possible view
of the matter been left to them
might have returned a verdict of
not guilty. The only medical evidence,
however, which could lend
any support at all to the suggestion that the
Appellant had acted
unconsciously was such evidence as could tend to
show that he
might have suffered from psychomotor epilepsy—which was
a
disease of the mind. When the plea of insanity failed the
presumption
of sanity remained and no medical evidence was adduced
which was at all
directed to the question whether on the
assumption that the Appellant was
sane he might yet for some
reason have acted unconsciously. The submission
on behalf of the
Appellant that the medical evidence could support a plea
of
automatism so that the jury might have 'had reasonable doubt
whether
the actions of the Appellant which caused the death were
conscious and
voluntary involved in effect a repetition of the
plea of insanity while
endeavouring to avoid the well-established
rules as to how insanity must be
established.
The
non-medical evidence which was relied upon as supporting the
sug-
gestion that the Appellant had acted in a state of automatism
was the
evidence of the Appellant himself and all the evidence as
to his general
behaviour and backwardness and his characteristics
and all the evidence
relating to the circumstances attending the
death of the deceased. The
argument for the Appellant was that
there was evidence upon which the
jury would have been warranted
in finding that the Appellant acted un-
consciously because he was
in a state of automatism which was not due
to a disease of the
mind and that either on this basis or on the basis of
having
reasonable doubts as to whether the actions of the Appellant
were
conscious and voluntary ones the jury would have been
warranted in returning
a verdict of not guilty. In his statement
on the 23rd December, 1960,
the Appellant gave an account of what
he had done. The Appellant said
in the witness box that he did not
at the time know what he was doing
or " did not realise
exactly " what he was doing or realise at the time what
he
had done or did not remember what he had done. He also said that
he
had not " meant to do any harm ". A consideration of
his evidence and
of the other evidence in the case leads me to the
view that it did not
provide a proper foundation for a submission
that (apart from any question
of insanity) the actions of the
Appellant had been unconscious and involun-
tary. There was no
sufficient evidence, fit to be left to a jury, on which
a jury
might conclude that the Appellant had acted unconsciously
and
involuntarily or which might leave a jury in reasonable doubt
whether this
might be so. There was much evidence which showed
that the Appellant
had been and was in many respects backward. He
had, however, always
been well-behaved and ordinarily he was quiet
and kindly: his actions on
the 22nd December, 1960, seemed out of
keeping with his character. The
evidence amply warranted the
learned judge in saying to the jury that they
" might think
he was an odd fish, an odd fish, this boy—indeed not only
"
as a boy but when he grew up later he was an odd sort of a being,
not
" just quite normal, and that he behaved in these,
perhaps minor, ways of
" abnormality". However relevant
all the evidence so referred to might
have been if a different
defence than insanity had been available and
however relevant it
may be in considering questions which are not for
your Lordships'
determination, such evidence does not tend to support a
plea that
the actions of the Appellant were unconscious ones. Accordingly
I
consider that the learned judge at the trial was right in the course
that
he took.
14
I am in
agreement with the reasons given by the Court of Criminal
Appeal
for concluding that the learned judge was right in not leaving
the
issue of manslaughter to the jury.
I would dismiss the appeal.
Lord Hodson
my lords,
I agree
with the speech which has been delivered by my noble and
learned
friend on the Woolsack, and also with that which has just
been delivered
by my noble and learned friend, Lord Morris of
Borth-y-Gest.
(31688) Wu 8118—81 35 11/61 St.S/PA/19