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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> R v Clegg [1995] UKHL 1 (19 January 1995) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1995/1.html Cite as: [1995] UKHL 1, [1995] 1 AC 482, [1995] AC 482, [1995] 1 All ER 334 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/255
Regina
v.
Clegg
(Appellant)
(On Appeal from the Court of Appeal in Northern
Ireland)
JUDGMENT
Die Jovis 19° Januarii 1995
Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to
whom was
referred the Cause Regina against Clegg, That the
Committee had
heard Counsel as well on Wednesday the 9th as on
Thursday the
10th days of November last upon the Petition and
Appeal of Lee
William Clegg currently detained at Her Majesty's
Prison,
Wakefield, praying that the matter of the Order set forth
in the
first Schedule thereto, namely an Order of Her Majesty's
Court
of Appeal in Northern Ireland of the 30th day of March
1994,
might be reviewed before Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court
of
Parliament and that the said Order might be reversed, varied
or
altered or that the Petitioner might have such other relief
in
the premises as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court
of
Parliament might seem meet; as upon the case of the Director
of
Public Prosecutions in Northern Ireland (on behalf of
Her
Majesty) lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and
due
consideration had this day of what was offered on either side
in
this Cause:
It is Ordered and Adjudged, by
the Lords Spiritual and
Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her
Majesty the Queen
assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's
Court of Appeal
in Northern Ireland of the 30th day of March 1994
complained of
in the said Appeal be, and the same is hereby,
Affirmed and that
the said Petition and Appeal be, and the
same is hereby,
dismissed this House: And it is further Ordered,
That the
certified question be answered as follows:
"On the facts stated and assuming no other
defence is
available, the soldier or police officer will be guilty
of
murder and not manslaughter."
Cler: Parliamentor:
HOUSE OF LORDS
OPINIONS
OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL
FOR JUDGMENT IN THE CAUSE
REGINA
v.
CLEGG
(APPELLANT)
(NORTHERN IRELAND)
ON 19TH JANUARY 1995
Lord Keith
of Kinkel
Lord Browne-Wilkinson
Lord Slynn of Hadley
Lord
Lloyd of Berwick
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
LORD KEITH OF KINKEL
My Lords,
For the reasons
given in the speech to be delivered by my noble and
learned friend
Lord Lloyd of Berwick, which I have read in draft and with
which I
agree, I would dismiss this appeal, and answer the certified
question
as he proposes.
LORD BROWNE-WIKINSON
My Lords,
For the reasons
given in the speech of my noble and learned friend
Lord Lloyd of
Berwick I too would dismiss the appeal.
LORD SLYNN OF HADLEY
My Lords,
I have had the
advantage of reading in draft the speech to be given by
my noble
and learned friend Lord Lloyd of Berwick. I agree that for
the
reasons he gives the appeal should be dismissed.
- 1 -
LORD LLOYD OF BERWICK
My Lords,
On the night of
30 September 1990 the appellant, Lee William Clegg,
a soldier
serving with the Parachute Regiment, was on patrol in Glen Road,
West
Belfast, when the driver of a stolen car and one of his passengers
were
shot and killed. Private Clegg was charged with murder of the
passenger, and
attempted murder of the driver. His defence was
that he fired in self-defence.
He was convicted on 4 June 1993,
after a trial before Campbell J. without a
jury. His appeal to the
Court of Appeal was dismissed. The Court of Appeal
held that the
firing of the shot which killed the passenger was, on the facts
found
by the judge, a grossly excessive and disproportionate use of force,
and
that any tribunal of fact properly directed would so have
found. The certified
question of law for your Lordships is whether
a soldier on duty, who kills a
person with the requisite intention
for murder, but who would be entitled to
rely on self-defence but
for the use of excessive force, is guilty of murder or
manslaughter.
The patrol
consisted of 15 men under the command of Lieutenant
Oliver. It was
accompanied by a police constable from the Royal Ulster
Constabulary.
The purpose of the patrol was to catch joyriders. But this was
not
explained to Private Clegg. The patrol was divided into 4 teams
or
"bricks." Brick 11 formed a vehicle checkpoint at a
bridge on the Glen Road
about 6 miles west of Belfast. Brick 10A,
consisting of Lieutenant Oliver,
Private Clegg, Private Aindow and
another, were moving down the road
towards Belfast. Private Aindow
was on the right hand side of the road. The
others were all on the
left hand side. Bricks 12 and 14 were still further
down the road,
around a corner. As the stolen car approached the bridge
from the
west, it was stopped by a member of Brick 11. The car
then
accelerated away in the centre of the road towards Brick 10A
with its
headlights full on. Someone in Brick 11 shouted to stop
it. All four members
of Brick 10A fired at the approaching car.
Private Clegg's evidence was that
he fired three shots at the
windscreen, and a fourth shot into the side of the
car as it was
passing. He then replaced his safety catch. According to
Private
Clegg he fired all four shots because he thought Private Aindow's
life
was in danger. However, scientific evidence showed, and the
trial judge
found as a fact, that Private Clegg's fourth shot was
fired after the car had
passed, and was already over 50
feet along the road to Belfast. It struck a
rear-seat passenger,
Karen Reilly, in the back. It was later found lodged
beneath her
liver. The judge found that Private Clegg's fourth shot was an
aimed
shot fired with the intention of causing death or serious bodily
harm.
Although another bullet passed through Karen Reilly's body,
Private Clegg's
fourth shot was a significant cause of her death.
In relation to
the first three shots, the judge accepted Private Clegg's
defence
that he fired in self-defence or in defence of Private Aindow.
But
with regard to the fourth shot he found that Private Clegg
could not have been
- 2 -
firing in
defence of himself or Private Aindow, since, once the car had
passed,
they were no longer in any danger.
Having rejected
Private Clegg's defence in relation to the fourth shot,
the judge
went on to consider, as was his duty, whether there was any
other
defence open on the evidence, even though Private Clegg had
not raised the
defence himself. One possible defence was that
Private Clegg fired the fourth
shot in order to arrest the driver.
Section 3(1) of the Criminal Law Act
(Northern Ireland) 1967
provides:
"A person may use such force
as is reasonable in the circumstances in
the prevention of crime,
or in effecting or assisting in the lawful arrest
of offenders or
suspected offenders or of persons unlawfully at large."
The judge held
that there was insufficient evidence to raise such a
defence.
Accordingly he convicted Private Clegg of murder.
When the case
reached the Court of Appeal, the court reviewed the
whole of
Private Clegg's evidence. In a number of his answers he had said
that
he fired to stop the driver of the car after it had, as he thought,
struck
Private Aindow. Accordingly there was, in the court's view,
evidence on
which the judge should have considered the defence
under section 3 of the Act
of 1967.
It should be
noted in passing that the car did not, in fact, strike
Private
Aindow. The judge held that bruising found on Private
Aindow's left leg was
caused, not by the car, but by another
soldier stamping on him in order to
create the appearance that he
had been struck by the car. In those
circumstances, Private Aindow
was charged with perverting the course of
justice as well as
attempted murder. He was convicted on the former count
and
sentenced to two years' imprisonment. His appeal on that count
was
dismissed.
Having held
that there was evidence to raise the defence under section
3, the
Court of Appeal went on to consider whether any miscarriage of
justice
had actually occurred by reason of the failure of the
judge to consider that
defence. Section 3 of the Act of 1967
allows a person to use "such force as
is reasonable in the
circumstances . . .". So the question for the Court of
Appeal
was whether Private Clegg, in firing the fourth shot, used only
such
force as was reasonable in the circumstances, or whether the
force which he
used was excessive.
In the course
of his cross examination Private Clegg was asked
whether he was
aware of any circumstances which would have justified him
in
firing after the car had passed. He replied that he had no reason to
fire at
that stage.
- 3 -
"Q.29: And if you had fired any more you know of no
justification for that action?"
"A.29: That's correct. That's why I applied my safety catch as
the car went past me."
There was no
suggestion in Private Clegg's evidence, as the Court of
Appeal
pointed out, that he thought that the driver was a
terrorist, or that if the driver
escaped he would carry out
terrorist offences in the future. In those
circumstances the use
of lethal force to arrest the driver of the car was, in the
court's
view, so "grossly disproportionate to the mischief to be
averted" that
any tribunal of fact would have been bound to
find that the force used was
unreasonable. It followed that if the
defence under section 3 had been raised,
which it was not, it
would have failed. Accordingly, Private Clegg's appeal
was
dismissed.
At the
conclusion of the judgment delivered by the Lord Chief Justice
of
Northern Ireland, the court took the opportunity to make two
important
observations. The first relates to the so-called Yellow
Card. That card is
entitled "Instructions for opening fire in
Northern Ireland." Paragraph 5
provides:
"You may only open fire against a person:
a) If he is
committing or about to commit an act likely to
endanger life, and
there is no other way to prevent the danger.
The following are
some examples of acts where life could be
endangered, dependent
always upon the circumstances:
i) firing or being about to fire a weapon;
ii)
planting, detonating or throwing an explosive device
(including a
petrol bomb);
iii)
deliberately driving a vehicle at a person and there is no
other
way of stopping him.
b) If you know
that he has just killed or injured any person
by such means and he
does not surrender if challenged and
there is no other way to make
an arrest."
The court
observed that on the literal application of paragraph 5(b) read
with
paragraph 5(a)(iii) a soldier would be justified in opening
fire where a person
had been injured by a car, irrespective of the
seriousness of the injury. The
court considered it desirable for
the army authorities to re-draft the Yellow
Card to make it clear
that a minor injury caused by a car does not justify a
soldier in
opening fire. The court's first observation does not call for any
- 4 -
further comment
from your Lordships. It is not suggested that the Yellow
Card
has any legal force.
It is the
second observation which has given rise to the certified
question
of law. So it is desirable to quote what the court had to say in
full.
"A further
observation which we wish to make is this. The
trial judge found
that the fourth shot fired by Private Clegg killed
Karen Reilly
and that he had no legal justification for firing that shot.
Under
the existing law, having found that Private Clegg fired that
shot
with intent to kill or cause grievous bodily harm, the trial
judge was
obliged to find Private Clegg guilty of the heinous
crime of murder
which carries a mandatory sentence of life
imprisonment, and it was
not open to the judge to find Private
Clegg guilty of the lesser crime
of manslaughter where the judge
can sentence the accused to the period
of imprisonment which he
considers appropriate in all the
circumstances of the crime.
"There is
one obvious and striking difference between Private
Clegg and
other persons found guilty of murder. The great majority
of
persons found guilty of murder, whether they are terrorist
or
domestic murders, kill from an evil and wicked motive. But
when
Private Clegg set out on patrol on the night of 30 September
1990 he
did so to assist in the maintenance of law and order and
we have no
doubt that as he commenced the patrol he had no
intention of
unlawfully killing or wounding anyone. However, he
was suddenly
faced with a car driving through an army checkpoint
and, being armed
with a high velocity rifle to enable him to
combat the threat of
terrorism, he decided to fire the fourth shot
from his rifle in
circumstances which cannot be justified and the
firing of his fourth
shot was found to be unlawful.
"It is
right that Private Clegg should be convicted in respect of
the
unlawful killing of Karen Reilly and that he should receive a
just
punishment for committing that offence which ended a young
life and
caused great sorrow to her parents and relatives and
friends.
"But this
court considers, and we believe that many other fair-
minded
citizens would share this view, that the law would be much
fairer
if it had been open to the trial judge to have convicted
Private
Clegg of the lesser crime of manslaughter on the ground
that he did
not kill Karen Reilly from an evil motive but because,
his duties as a
soldier having placed him on the Glen Road armed
with a high
velocity rifle, he reacted wrongly to a situation
which suddenly
confronted him in the course of his duties. Whilst
it is right that he
should be convicted for the unlawful killing
of Karen Reilly, we
consider that a law which would permit a
conviction for manslaughter
- 5 -
would reflect more clearly the
nature of the offence which he had
committed."
In the light of
that observation the court concluded that Parliament should
consider
making a change in the existing law. The certified question
arising
out of the second observation is as follows:
"Where a
soldier or police officer in the course of his duty kills a
person
by firing a shot with the intention of killing or seriously
wounding
that person and the firing is in self-defence or in defence
of
another person, or in the prevention of crime, or in effecting
or
assisting in the lawful arrest of offenders or suspected
offenders or of
persons unlawfully at large, but constitutes force
which is excessive
and unreasonable in the circumstances, is he
guilty of manslaughter
and not murder?"
The certified question can be considered under the following heads:
Does the existing law allow a
verdict of manslaughter instead of
murder where the force used in
self-defence is excessive?
Is the position the same where
the excessive force is used in prevention
of crime or in
effecting or assisting in the lawful arrest of offenders?
Is there any difference between
the position of a soldier or police
officer acting in the course
of his duty, on the one hand, and an ordinary
member of the
public on the other?
If a verdict of manslaughter is
not available under the existing law in
any of the above cases,
is it open to this House to change the law?
The existing law
Strictly
speaking, the first of the above issues does not arise on the
facts
of the present case. Since the danger had already passed when
Private
Clegg fired his fourth shot, there could be no question of
self-defence, and
therefore no question of excessive force in
self-defence. But it is convenient
to deal with this issue all the
same, since it forms the background to the
remaining issues.
The starting
point is the Report of the Royal Commission appointed to
consider
the law relating to indictable offences: (1879) 36 H.L. Papers
157.
The chairman was Lord Blackburn. One of the members was Sir
James
Stephen. The underlying principle is stated at p. 167:
"We take
one great principle of the common law to be, that though it
sanctions
the defence of a man's person, liberty and property against
illegal
violence, and permits the use of force to prevent crimes, to
- 6 -
preserve the
public peace, and to bring offenders to justice, yet all this
is
subject to the restriction that the force used is necessary; that is,
that
the mischief sought to be prevented could not be prevented by
less
violent means; and that the mischief done by, or which
might
reasonably be anticipated from the force used is not
disproportioned to
the injury or mischief which it is intended to
prevent."
In Note B. at
p. 201 there is a lengthy discussion of the scope of the defence
of
self-defence in relation to homicide. Nowhere is it suggested that
excessive
force in self-defence reduces what would otherwise be
murder to
manslaughter. There is a specific provision in section
176 of the draft code
for the reduction of murder to manslaughter
in the case of provocation. There
is no similar provision in the
case of excessive force hi self-defence. It is
clear from a note
to section 176 that the commissioners were stating the law
as they
believed it to be.
There does not
appear to have been any development in the law until
The Queen
v. Howe (1958) 100 C.L.R. 448 decided by the High Court
of
Australia in 1958. There was an extensive citation of all the
authorities in this
corner of the law going back to Rex v. Cook
(1640) Cro. Car. 537. The
decision of the court is well
summarised in the following paragraph of the
headnote:
"Where a
plea of self-defence to a charge of murder fails only because
the
death of the deceased was occasioned by the use of force going
beyond
what was necessary in the circumstances for the protection of
the
accused or what might reasonably be regarded by him as necessary
in
the circumstances, it is, in the absence of clear and
definite
decision, reasonable in principle to regard such a
homicide as reduced
to manslaughter."
Twelve years
later the same point came before the Privy Council on
appeal from
the Supreme Court of Jamaica: see Palmer v. The Queen
[1971]
A.C. 814. Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest, giving the
opinion of the Privy
Council, declined to follow Howe's case,
preferring the decision of the West
Indian Federal Supreme Court
in De Freitas v. The Queen (1960) 2 W.I.R.
523.
After setting
out the elements of the defence of self-defence, he said
at p.
832:
"... if
the prosecution have shown that what was done was not done
in
self-defence then that issue is eliminated from the case. If the
jury
consider that the accused acted in self-defence or if the
jury are in
doubt as to this then they will acquit. The defence of
self-defence
either succeeds so as to result in an acquittal or it
is disproved in
which case as a defence it is rejected."
- 7 -
In other words,
there is no half-way house. There is no rule that a defendant
who
has used a greater degree of force than was necessary in
the
circumstances should be found guilty of manslaughter rather
than murder.
In 1971 a Court
of Appeal consisting of Edmund Davies L.J. and
Lawton and Forbes
J.J. approved and followed Palmer's case: See Reg.
v.
Mclnnes [1971] 1 W.L.R. 1600, at p. 1608:
"But where
self-defence fails on the ground that force used went
clearly
beyond that which was reasonable in the light of the
circumstances
as they reasonably appeared to the accused, is it the law
that the
inevitable result must be that he can be convicted of
manslaughter
only, and not of murder? It seems that in Australia that
question
is answered in the affirmative . . . , but not, we think, in
this
country. On the contrary, if a plea of self-defence fails for
the reason
stated, it affords the accused no protection at all."
Of course, as
the court pointed out, the verdict may be reduced from murder
to
manslaughter on other grounds, for example, if the prosecution fail
to
negative provocation, where it arises, or fail to prove the
requisite intent for
murder. But so far as self-defence is
concerned, it is all or nothing. The
defence either succeeds or it
fails. If it succeeds, the defendant is acquitted.
If it fails, he
is guilty of murder.
In a subsequent
case in Australia, Viro v. The Queen (1978) 141
C.L.R. 88,
the High Court decided by a bare majority over a strong dissent
by
Barwick C.J. to follow Howe in preference to Palmer. Mason
J. suggested
that in self-defence cases juries should be directed
in accordance with six
propositions which he formulated at the end
of his judgment, and which, in
his view, best accorded "with
acceptable standards of culpability." But the
propositions
proved to be unworkable in practice. Juries found difficulty
in
applying, or perhaps even understanding them. As a result, a
full court of
seven judges was convened to reconsider the position
in Zecevic v. D.P.P.
(Victoria) (1987) 162 C.L.R. 645. The
High Court decided by a majority of
five to two to revert to the
law as stated in Palmer and Mclnnes, and declined
to
follow Howe and Viro. Wilson, Dawson and Toohey JJ. said at p.
665:
"Believing,
as we do, that the law as we have set it out is dictated by
basic
principle upon a matter of fundamental importance, it is
unthinkable
that the court should abdicate its responsibility by
declining to
declare it accordingly. It has the virtue of being
readily
understandable by a jury. It restores consistency to the
law relating to
self-defence whether raised in the case of
homicide or otherwise.
Finally, it has the effect of expressing
the common law in terms which
are in accord with the views
expressed in Palmer (adopted in England
in Mclnnes) and
which are generally consonant with the law in the
code States."
- 8 -
The point
raised in the present case might have arisen for decision by
your
Lordships in Attorney General for Northern Ireland's Reference
(No. 1
of 1975) [1977] A.C. 105. That case also concerned a
soldier on patrol in
Northern Ireland. He shot and killed an
unarmed man, who ran away when
challenged. The trial judge found
that, unlike the present case, the
prosecution had failed to prove
that the soldier intended to kill or cause
serious bodily harm,
and further found that the homicide was justifiable under
section
3 of the Act of 1967 on the ground that the use of force
was
reasonable in the circumstances. The questions for the opinion
of the House
were first whether, on the facts set out in the
reference, the soldier had
committed a crime at all and secondly
whether, if so, the crime was murder
or manslaughter. The House
held that the first question was not a question
of law at all, but
a pure question of fact, which, on the facts proved at the
trial,
had been answered in favour of the soldier; and that the second
question,
though a question of law, did not arise on the facts.
But it is to be observed
that Viscount Dilhorne said in relation
to the second question at p. 148:
"I now
turn to the second point of law referred, whether if a crime
was
committed in the circumstances stated in the reference it was
murder
or manslaughter. The Attorney-General indicated that he
would like
it to be held that it was manslaughter and, while I
appreciate his
reasons for doing so, I can find no escape from the
conclusion
that if a crime was committed, it was murder if the shot
was fired
with intent to kill or seriously wound. To hold that it could
be
manslaughter would be to make entirely new law. If a plea of
self-
defence is put forward in answer to a charge of murder and
fails
because excessive force was used though some force was
justifiable,
as the law now stands the accused cannot be convicted
of
manslaughter. It may be that a strong case can be made for
an
alteration of the law to enable a verdict of manslaughter to be
returned
where the use of some force was justifiable but that is a
matter for
legislation and not for judicial decision."
It is sometimes
said that the law of Scotland allows a verdict of
culpable
homicide in cases of excessive force in self-defence. Thus in
the
report of the House of Lords Select Committee on Murder and
Life
Imprisonment, session 1988-89 (H.L. Paper 78-1), the
Committee
recommended in para. 89 that there should be a qualified
defence of excessive
force in self-defence, and noted that this
would bring the law of England and
Wales into line with the law of
Scotland. But in Crawford v. H.M. Advocate
[1950] J.C. 67
at p. 70, the Lord Justice-General, Lord Cooper, said that
"the
special defence of self-defence must either result in
complete exculpation or
be rejected outright."
Counsel for the
appellant, drew attention to a passage from Gordon,
The
Criminal Law of Scotland, 2nd ed. (1978) p. 765, as follows:
- 9 -
"If a
soldier kills while on duty, or in what he reasonably believes to
be
his duty, but the circumstances are not such as to justify his
action
because, for example, he acted hastily, or used more
violence than was
justifiable, he will be treated as guilty only
of culpable homicide,
unless the excess was gross."
But the context
in which this was said is a list of so-called "unofficial
categories"
of culpable homicide, in contrast to legal categories such
as
provocation and diminished responsibility. The unofficial
categories cover
cases in which, as a matter of practice, only
culpable homicide is charged
although a charge of murder could
properly be brought. In the present case
Private Clegg was, of
course, charged with murder.
In Canada, the
Supreme Court has rejected the Howe doctrine, in
relation
to self-defence as well as the use of force in the prevention of
crime:
see Gee [1983] D.L.R. 587 and Brisson [1983]
D.L.R. 685.
I do not find
it necessary to go through the earlier English authorities
relied
on by counsel, since they were all reviewed at length by Lord
Morris
in Palmer's case. I respectfully agree with his
analysis. Counsel did not
advance any fresh arguments. In my
opinion the law of England must now
be taken to be settled in
accordance with the decision of the Privy Council in
that case.
Thus the consequence of the use of excessive force in
self-defence
will be the same in the law of England, Scotland,
Australia, Canada and the
West Indies. I consider later whether,
despite this uniformity, some change
in the law may, nevertheless,
be desirable.
The second
question is whether there is any distinction to be made
between
excessive force in self-defence and excessive force in the
prevention
of crime or in arresting offenders. In Attorney-General
for Northern Ireland's
Reference Lord Diplock said at p. 139
that the two cases were quite different.
But I do not think it
possible to say that a person who uses excessive force in
preventing
crime is always, or even generally, less culpable than a person
who
uses excessive force in self-defence; and even if excessive
force in preventing
crime were in general less culpable, it would
not be practicable to draw a
distinction between the two defences,
since they so often overlap. Take, for
example, the facts of the
present case. The trial judge held that Private
Clegg's first
three shots might have been fired in defence of Private Aindow.
But
he could equally well have held that they were fired in the
prevention of
crime, namely, to prevent Private Aindow's death
being caused by dangerous
driving. As is pointed out in Smith
and Hogan: Criminal Law 6th ed., p.
244, the degree of
permissible force should be the same in both cases. So
also should
the consequences of excessive force.
The third
question is whether it makes any difference that Private
Clegg was
a member of the Security Forces, acting in the course of his
duty.
The argument in favour of making an exception to the general
rule in such a
case was put with great force by Mr. Samuel Silkin
Q.C. A.-G. in the course
- 10 -
of his
submissions in the Attorney-General for Northern Ireland's
Reference.
At p. 112, he said:
"In
considering whether in principle a verdict of manslaughter
is
possible one must consider two points: (a) The basis of this
question
is not simply a failed defence of justifiable homicide;
honest belief in
one's duty is an additional element and it must
considered whether it
makes a difference, (b) There has emerged
from the recent cases a
renewed vigour in regarding the common law
as an instrument for
enabling the courts to do what is just in
relation to criminal offences
and defences: see Director of
Public Prosecutions for Northern Ireland
v. Lynch [1975] AC 653, 672, 684-5, 696-7. The common law is
wide enough to achieve a
just result without leaving the matter to the
executive and, where
its principles allow this, it should be done. In
reducing the
crime to manslaughter it is not the intention of the soldier
which
is relied on but his honest belief as to his duty. As to the use
of
excessive force, see Smith and Hogan, Criminal Law, 3rd
ed.
(1973), pp. 263-264. An unreasonable but honest man who
killed
might be guilty of manslaughter only."
The special
position of a soldier in Northern Ireland is reflected in
Lord
Diplock's speech in the same case, at pp. 136-137:
"There is
little authority in English law concerning the rights
and duties
of a member of the armed forces of the Crown when acting
in aid of
the civil power; and what little authority there is relates
almost
entirely to the duties of soldiers when troops are called upon
to
assist in controlling a riotous assembly. Where used for
such
temporary purposes it may not be inaccurate to describe the
legal
rights and duties of a soldier as being no more than those
of an
ordinary citizen in uniform. But such a description is in my
view
misleading in the circumstances in which the army is
currently
employed in aid of the civil power in Northern Ireland
... In theory
it may be the duty of every citizen when an
arrestable offence is about
to be committed in his presence to
take whatever reasonable measures
are available to him to prevent
the commission of the crime; but the
duty is one of imperfect
obligation and does not place him under any
obligation to do
anything by which he would expose himself to risk of
personal
injury, nor is he under any duty to search for criminals or
seek
out crime. In contrast to this a soldier who is employed in aid
of
the civil power in Northern Ireland is under a duty,
enforceable under
military law, to search for criminals if so
ordered by his superior
officer and to risk his own life should
this be necessary in preventing
terrorist acts. For the
performance of this duty he is armed with a
firearm, a
self-loading rifle, from which a bullet, if it hits the human
body,
is almost certain to cause serious injury if not death."
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I would
particularly emphasise the last sentence in the above quotation.
In
most cases of a person acting in self-defence, or a police
officer arresting an
offender, there is a choice as to the degree
of force to be used, even if it is
a choice which has to be
exercised on the spur of the moment, without time
for measured
reflection. But in the case of a soldier in Northern Ireland, in
the
circumstances in which Private Clegg found himself, there is no scope
for
graduated force. The only choice lay between firing a high
velocity rifle
which, if aimed accurately, was almost certain to
kill or injure, and doing
nothing at all.
It should be
noticed that the point at issue here is not whether Private
Clegg
was entitled to be acquitted altogether, on the ground that he was
acting
in obedience to superior orders. There is no such general
defence known to
English law, nor was any such defence raised at
the trial. As long ago as
1816 it was held in Rex v. Thomas
that a sentry who fired in the belief that
it was his duty to
do so had no defence to a charge of murder. For a
recent
illustration, see the emphatic view expressed by the High
Court of Australia
in A v. Hayden (No. 2) (1984) 156 C.L.R.
532, followed by the Privy Council
in Yip Chiu Cheung v. The
Queen [1994] 3 W.L.R. 514. The point is rather
whether the
offence in such a case should, because of the strong
mitigating
circumstances, be regarded as manslaughter rather than
murder. But so to
hold would, as Viscount Dilhorne said in
Attorney-General for Northern
Ireland's Reference, be to
make entirely new law. I regret that under existing
law, on the
facts found by the trial judge, he had no alternative but to
convict
of murder.
Counsel sought
to raise in his printed case a possible defence of
provocation.
But no such defence was raised before the trial judge, or in
the
Court of Appeal, where Private Clegg was represented by
leading counsel.
The point is not covered by the certified
question, no doubt because it was
never open on the evidence. I
say no more about it.
Counsel also
sought to argue that the Court of Appeal ought not to
have applied
the proviso under section 2(1) of the Criminal Appeal
(Northern
Ireland) Act 1980 in relation to the defence under
section 3 of the Act of
1967. There is nothing in that point. The
Court of Appeal were entitled to
hold, having reviewed all the
evidence, that the use of lethal force to kill or
wound the driver
of the car in order to arrest him was, in the circumstances,
so
grossly disproportionate to the mischief to be averted as to deprive
him of
a defence under section 3, and that any reasonable tribunal
of fact, if properly
directed, would inevitably have so found.
Accordingly, the Court of Appeal
having raised the point itself,
and having dealt with it fully and properly, was
entitled to
dismiss the appeal.
Should the law be changed?
I have already
mentioned some of the arguments in favour of changing
the law when
dealing with the third question. They have never been
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expressed more
persuasively, or with greater insight, than they were by the
Court
of Appeal in the present case. The ground had already been covered
by
the Criminal Law Revision Committee in its 14th Report in 1980
(Cmnd.
7844), at a time when the Australian law had not yet been
brought back into
line with Palmer's case. In paragraph 73
of the recommendations we find:
"Where a
person kills in a situation in which it is reasonable for some
force
to be used in self-defence or in the prevention of crime but
the
defendant uses excessive force, he should be liable to be
convicted of
manslaughter not murder if, at the time of the act,
he honestly believed
that the force he used was reasonable in the
circumstances."
In paragraph 59
of the Law Commission's Draft Criminal Code for England
and Wales
(1989) (Law Com. No. 177) we find:
"A person
who, but for this section, would be guilty of murder is not
guilty
of murder if, at the time of his act, he believes the use of
the
force which causes death to be necessary and reasonable to
effect a
purpose referred to in section 44 (use of force in public
or private
defence), but the force exceeds that which is necessary
and reasonable
in the circumstances which exist or (where there is
a difference) in
those which he believes to exist."
Finally, the
Select Committee on Murder and Life Imprisonment, to which I
have
already referred, found the argument in favour of a qualified defence
of
using excessive force in self-defence to be convincing. I would
refer in
particular to the memorandum prepared by Viscount
Colville of Culross, vol.
III, p. 542. These recommendations are
all one way. They are entitled to
great weight. But Parliament has
not yet acted on them. The question thus
arises whether this House
can itself develop the law along the lines
recommended, without
waiting for the legislature. Encouragement to take
such a course
is to be found in the majority decision of the House in Director
of
Public Prosecutions v. Lynch [1975] AC 653. In that case the
question
was whether duress was available as a defence to a person
charged with aiding
and abetting murder. The House held, by a
majority, that it was. Lord
Wilberforce said, at pp. 684-685:
"The broad
question remains how this House, clearly not bound by any
precedent,
should now state the law with regard to this defence in
relation
to the facts of the present case. I have no doubt that it is open
to
us, on normal judicial principles, to hold the defence admissible.
We
are here in the domain of the common law: our task is to fit what
we
can see as principle and authority to the facts before us, and it
is
no obstacle that these facts are new. The judges have always
assumed
responsibility for deciding questions of principle
relating to criminal
liability and guilt, and particularly for
setting the standards by which
the law expects normal men to act.
In all such matters as capacity,
sanity, drunkenness, coercion,
necessity, provocation, self-defence, the|
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common law,
through the judges, accepts and sets the standards of
right-thinking
men of normal firmness and humanity at a level which
people can
accept and respect. The House is not inventing a new
defence: on
the contrary, it would not discharge its judicial duty if it
failed
to define the law's attitude to this particular defence in
particular
circumstances."
But there are
difficulties in adopting this broad approach in the present
case,
attractive though it might be. In the first place, Director
of Public
Prosecution v. Lynch has since been overruled by
this House in Reg. v. Howe
[1987] AC 417. The dissenting
speech of Lord Simon of Glaisdale in
Lynch's case has been
vindicated.
Secondly, the
background is different. The defence of duress was the
creation of
the common law. So also, of course, were the defences of
self-
defence and the use of force in the prevention of crime. The
difference is that
in the latter case Parliament has already taken
a hand by enacting section 3 of
the Criminal Law Act 1967.
Parliament did not, in doing so, see fit to create
a qualified
defence in cases where the defendant uses excessive force
in
preventing crime.
In Reg. v.
Howe, one of the reasons given for overruling Lynch was
that
Parliament had not acted on a recommendation made by the
Law
Commission ten years before: see per Lord Bridge of
Harwich at p. 437 and
Lord Griffiths at p. 443. This reasoning has
been criticised, with some
justice, by Smith and Hogan at
p. 233. There may be many reasons for a
failure to legislate. But
the criticism does not have the same force in the
present case,
where Parliament has indeed acted in the very field which is now
in
dispute, as well as in closely related fields, such as those covered
by
sections 2 and 3 of the Homicide Act 1957, section 2 of the
Suicide Act 1961
and section 1 of the Abortion Act 1967.
In his
dissenting speech in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Lynch
Lord
Simon of Glaisdale said, at p. 695:
"I am all
for recognising frankly that judges do make law. And I am
all for
judges exercising this responsibility boldly at the proper time
and
place - that is, where they can feel confident of having in mind,
and
correctly weighed, all the implications of their decision, and
where
matters of social policy are not involved which the
collective wisdom
of Parliament is better suited to resolve (see
Launchbury v. Morgans
[1973] AC 127 at pp. 136F-137A,
137G). I can hardly conceive of
circumstances less suitable than
the instant for five members of an
appellate committee of your
Lordships' House to arrogate to ourselves
so momentous a
law-making initiative."
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Like Lord
Simon, I am not averse to judges developing law, or indeed making
new
law, when they can see their way clearly, even where questions of
social
policy are involved. A good recent example would be the
affirmation by this
House of the decision of the Court of Appeal
(Criminal Division) that a man
can be guilty of raping his wife
(Reg. v. R. [1992] 1 AC 599). But in the
present case I
am in no doubt that your Lordships should abstain from law
making.
The reduction of what would otherwise be murder to manslaughter
in
a particular class of case seems to me essentially a matter for
decision by
the legislature, and not by this House in its judicial
capacity. For the point
in issue is, in truth, part of the wider
issue whether the mandatory life
sentence for murder should still
be maintained. That wider issue can only be
decided by Parliament.
I would say the same for the point at issue in this
case.
Accordingly I would answer the certified question of law as
follows.
On the facts stated, and assuming no other defence is
available, the soldier or
police officer will be guilty of murder,
and not manslaughter. It follows that
the appeal must be
dismissed.
LORD NICHOLLS OF BIRKENHEAD
My Lords,
I agree that,
for the reasons given in the speech of my noble and
learned
friend, Lord Lloyd of Berwick, this appeal should be dismissed.
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