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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Sooklal and Francis Mansingh v. The State (Trinidad and Tobago) [1999] UKPC 37 (21st July, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1999/37.html Cite as: [1999] UKPC 37, [1999] 1 WLR 2011, [1999] WLR 2011 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 40 of 1998
(1) Narine Sooklal and
(2) Francis Mansingh Appellants
v. The State Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TRINIDAD
AND TOBAGO
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL, Delivered the 21st July 1999 ------------------Present at the hearing:-
Lord Slynn of HadleyLord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Hope of Craighead
Lord Clyde
Lord Hutton
[Delivered by Lord Hope of Craighead] ------------------
1. The appellants Narine Sooklal ("Sooklal")
and Francis Mansingh ("Mansingh") together with Sooklals 15 year
old son Sharma Sooklal (known as "Ding") were charged jointly with the
murder of Mobina Ali on the night of 10th December 1992. The case was tried in
the High Court of Justice by Volney J. and a jury in May 1996. During the trial
Ding was acquitted on a submission that there was no case for him to answer. On
24th May 1996 Sooklal and Mansingh were found guilty of the murder. They were
sentenced to death. They appealed against their convictions to the Court of
Appeal of Trinidad and Tobago. On 26th February 1997 the Court of Appeal
(Sharma, Ibrahim and Permanand J.J.A.) dismissed their appeals and affirmed the
convictions and sentences. Reasons for the decision were given on 26th September
1997. On 23rd February 1998 the appellants were given special leave to appeal to
their Lordships Board.
2. The victim of the killing was a 52 year
old woman who had worked for about two years as a housemaid at the home of
Sooklals father-in-law, Harry Narine Singh. The case for the State depended
mainly upon written confession statements provided to the police by the
appellants after they had been arrested and taken into custody. These statements
were received into evidence without objection. There was no real dispute about
the background. The outcome of the trial depended very largely on such
inferences as could be drawn from admissions made by the appellants about the
part which they had each played in the incident.
3. Sooklals wife believed that the
deceased had been trying to persuade her father to change his will and leave his
property to her instead of to his own family. It was decided that something
should be done to prevent this. Sooklal agreed with Mansingh that the deceased
should be given a beating to frighten her away. At about 10.30 p.m. on the
evening of 10th December 1992 Sooklal, Ding and Mansingh collected the deceased
by car from her home under the pretext that Harry Narine Singh was ill and
needed her attention. Instead of taking her to his house they took her to a
quiet spot where they stopped the car at the side of the road. Mansingh began to
slap and then to strangle the deceased. She was pushed out of the car, whereupon
Mansingh cut her throat with a cutlass. She was found dead at about 7.35 a.m. by
a watchman the next day. A post mortem report revealed that death was due to the
injuries which were inflicted when her throat was cut. Two days later the
appellants were arrested and, under caution, gave written statements to the
police in which they each gave detailed descriptions of their part in the
incident. Mansingh admitted that he slapped and attempted to strangle the
deceased and then cut her neck with a cutlass. Sooklal admitted that he was
present throughout, that he saw Mansingh beating the deceased and then cutting
her throat with the cutlass and that after it was all over he and the other two
drove back home.
4. Mansingh gave evidence at the trial. He
maintained that he had been drinking on the day of the incident. He said that he
could not remember what happened because he was under the influence of alcohol.
His only defence was that he lacked the intention which was necessary for
murder. His counsel invited the jury to convict him of manslaughter. Sooklal did
not give evidence. His defence was that he was party to a joint enterprise whose
only purpose was to slap the deceased in order to frighten her, and that
Mansingh departed from what was agreed when he attacked the deceased with the
cutlass and cut her throat. His counsel submitted that for this reason he was
not guilty of murder. But he accepted that he might be guilty of manslaughter.
5. At the time of the trial the common law
rule of constructive malice, known as the "felony/murder" rule, was
thought still to be part of the law of murder in Trinidad and Tobago. The State
did not need to rely on this rule against Mansingh. On his own admission, he was
the person who had killed the deceased by cutting her throat with the cutlass.
But the case against Sooklal was presented on the basis that it was sufficient
for the State to prove that he was a party to a plan to commit acts of violence
on the deceased and that the deceased died from injuries sustained while that
plan was being carried out. The trial judge gave the traditional felony/murder
directions when he dealt with Sooklals position in the course of his summing
up. He mentioned the fact that Mansinghs defence was that he had acted while
under the influence of alcohol. But he told the jury that if they were not sure
that he had the necessary intention for murder they should acquit him, not that
they should find him guilty of manslaughter. The Court of Appeal held, after
examining the facts, that if the jury had been properly directed by the trial
judge they would have returned the same verdicts. They applied the proviso in
Sooklals case because of the inferences which they drew from his confession
statement. In Mansinghs case they held that the argument that he was so
intoxicated as to be guilty only of manslaughter was untenable, as it was clear
from his statement that he was faithfully carrying out the instructions which
had been given to him by Sooklal.
6. At the hearing of the appeal before
their Lordships Board the argument for Mansingh was presented first, as he
was the first named accused at the trial. Their Lordships have found it
convenient to follow the same order in setting out their reasons for the
judgment which they propose to issue in this case.
Mansingh.
7. The trial judge gave the following
direction to the jury with regard to Mansinghs defence that he lacked the
requisite mens rea for murder because he was intoxicated:-
"Now, let me tell you in relation to that statement that the accused has said certain things about the intake of alcohol, puncheon rum. If you think, having considered all the evidence in this case on that issue and in determining what was his intent, if you find that he is the one who cut the woman in her throat, if you think because of drink he may have lacked the necessary intention, you will acquit him. You will convict him only if the prosecution has satisfied you so that you are sure that, notwithstanding the drink that he had taken, he did have the intention either to kill or to do grievous bodily harm."
8. Mr. Kentridge Q.C. for Mansingh said
that the sole issue in his appeal was whether he was entitled to a direction
that, if he lacked the specific intent for murder because he was drunk, he
should be found guilty of manslaughter. The evidence against him consisted of
his confession statement and the evidence which he gave on oath at the trial.
There was no dispute that the confession statement had been properly admitted by
the trial judge. In his statement he said that he and Sooklal had taken two
drinks each of puncheon rum, and that he did not know what had got into his head
when he chopped the deceaseds neck with the cutlass. His explanation for what
he had done was: "I get so stupid". Mr. Kentridge accepted that this
was a rather thin basis for the submission that Mansingh lacked the specific
intent for murder because he was intoxicated. But he was able to show that
Mansingh enlarged upon this point when he gave evidence at the trial. In his
evidence he said that he and Sooklal had drunk some alcohol and had become
intoxicated. When his own counsel asked him to say what had happened after he
and Sooklal had picked the deceased up from her house, his reply was:-
"A. I dont remember. I had alcohol in my head.
Q. Whats that? You cannot remember
A. I cannot remember because I was under alcohol."
9. The point was put to him again when he
was being cross-examined by Sooklals counsel:-
"Q. Mr. Mansingh, Im trying to understand. What youre saying is on the night of the incident .. are you saying that you drank so much alcohol that you were drunk that night?
A. Yes, I was drunk, yes."
10. Mr. Kentridge submitted that so long as
there was some evidence that the accused was drunk at the time when the offence
was committed the judge must leave it to the jury to consider whether he was
guilty of manslaughter. In this case it was plain that the judge did not think
that there was no evidence that Mansingh lacked the necessary intent for murder.
This was because he decided to give the jury a direction about this in his
summing up. What he had omitted to do was to leave it to them to consider
whether he was guilty of manslaughter.
11. Mr. Kentridge developed his argument by
reference to authority. He submitted that in Reg. v. Majewski [1977] AC 443, 454H455A Lawton L.J. summarised the existing state of the
authorities correctly when he said, after referring to Lord Birkenhead L.C.s
speech in Director of Public Prosecutions v. Beard [1920] A.C. 479:-
"Whatever differences of opinion there may be about what Lord Birkenhead L.C. meant by a "specific intent" there can be none about the relevance of evidence as to self-induced intoxication when there is a charge of murder; it can reduce murder to manslaughter but cannot bring about an acquittal."
In Bullard v. The Queen [1957] AC 635, 644 Lord Tucker said that every man on trial for murder had the right to have the issue of manslaughter left to the jury if there was any evidence on which such a verdict could be given. Mr. Kentridge accepted that in this case, by directing an acquittal rather than a reduction of murder to manslaughter, the trial judge had given the appellant a more favourable direction than that to which he was entitled. But he said that, far from helping him, this had been to his prejudice. The test was that which had been explained in Reg. v. Maxwell [1990] 1 W.L.R. 401, 408F:-
"What is required in any particular case, where the judge fails to leave an alternative offence to the jury, is that the court, before interfering with the verdict, must be satisfied that the jury may have convicted out of a reluctance to see the defendant get clean away with what, on any view, was disgraceful conduct."
12. There was an obvious danger that this
is what had happened in this case. Moreover the trial judge had gone to
considerable lengths in his summing up during his presentation of the arguments
based on the felony/murder rule to tell the jury that, once they were satisfied
that there was a common plan to commit any violence, their verdict against both
accused must be murder. The jury may have decided to convict the appellant of
murder irrespective of the view which they formed of his evidence that he was
intoxicated, either because they were unwilling to acquit him as directed by the
trial judge or because they felt obliged to do so because they were confused by
the felony/murder rule.
13. The question in the case of this
appellant is whether there was a sufficient basis in the evidence for the
argument that he lacked the specific intent for murder because he was
intoxicated. If there was, their Lordships are in no doubt that the direction
which the judge gave was a misdirection. He should have said to the jury that,
if they were satisfied on this point, their verdict should be manslaughter. He
was wrong to say that they should acquit him. But it is not enough for the
reduction of a charge from murder to manslaughter that the evidence shows that
the accused was drunk. As Lord Mustill said in Reg. v. Kingston [1995] 2 AC 355, 369C:-
" it is no answer for the defendant to say that he would not have done what he did had he been sober, provided always that whatever element of intent is required by the offence is proved to have been present. As was said in Reg. v. Sheehan [1975] 1 W.L.R. 739, 744C, a drunken intent is nevertheless an intent."
14. Whenever reduction of a charge of
murder on the ground of self-induced intoxication is in issue, the ultimate
question is whether the accused formed the mens rea for the crime
charged: Smith & Hogan, Criminal Law, 8th edition, (1996) p. 225. What is
required is evidence that the accused was so intoxicated that he lacked the
specific intent which is essential for murder: that is the intent to kill or to
inflict grievous bodily harm upon the victim: Reg. v. Doherty (1887), 16
Cox C.C. 306, 308, per Stephen J.: Director of Public Prosecutions v. Beard [1920]
A.C. 479, 499 per Lord Birkenhead L.C.; Reg. v. Majewski [1977] A.C.443,
498H-499A, per Lord Russell of Killowen.
15. This test is not satisfied by evidence
that the accused had consumed so much alcohol that he was intoxicated. Nor is it
satisfied by evidence that he could not remember what he was doing because he
was drunk. The essence of the defence is that the accused did not have the
guilty intent because his mind was so affected by drink that he did not know
what he was doing at the time when he did the act with which he has been
charged. The intoxication must have been of such a degree that it prevented him
from foreseeing or knowing what he would have foreseen or known had he been
sober. This was made clear by Lord Denning in Bratty v. Attorney-General for
Northern Ireland [1963] AC 386, 410, in a passage which was quoted by
Widgery L.J. in Reg. v. Lipman [1970] 1 Q.B. 152. 156:-
"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 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 Beards case."
In Attorney-General for Northern Ireland v. Gallagher [1963] AC 349, 381 Lord Denning gave some helpful examples of the application of this principle:-
"If a man is charged with an offence in which a specific intention is essential (as in murder, though not in manslaughter), then evidence of drunkenness, which renders him incapable of forming that intention, is an answer: see Beards case. This degree of drunkenness is reached when the man is rendered so stupid by drink that he does not know what he is doing (see Reg. v. Moore (1852) 3 Car. & Kir. 319), as where, at a christening, a drunken nurse put the baby behind a large fire, taking it for a log of wood (Gentlemans Magazine, 1748, p. 570); and where a drunken man thought his friend (lying in his bed) was a theatrical dummy placed there and stabbed him to death ("The Times", January 13, 1951). In each of those cases it would not be murder. But it would be manslaughter."
16. In their Lordships judgment the
evidence in this case does not come anywhere near the required standard. In his
statement Mansingh said that he and Sooklal had taken two drinks of puncheon
each earlier in the day before picking peas, going to Sooklals house,
cleaning the peas, going home for a bathe and then returning to Sooklals
house in the evening. He gives a clear account of his actions throughout the
incident, during which he claimed to have been acting throughout on Sooklals
instructions. He makes no mention in this statement of being drunk, and it is
impossible to take from it any suggestion that he was incapable of forming the
necessary special intent. When he gave evidence at his trial four years later he
said that it was after he had bathed and changed his clothes that he and Sooklal
went on a little lime and drank some alcohol. When he was asked to say what
happened after that he replied that he could not remember because he was drunk.
When he was being cross-examined by Sooklals counsel he said that he had
drunk so much alcohol that he was drunk that night. When he was asked whether he
remembered chopping the deceased, he replied: "Sir, I cant remember
chopping she, but under alcohol maybe". He maintained the position that he
could not remember what he had done throughout his evidence. But he also said in
answer to a question in cross-examination by Dings counsel that the statement
which he gave to the police was true, although he added that he told the police
what was in that statement because they were beating him. In answer to
prosecuting counsel he agreed that he had said that the statement was true and
correct. No questions to the contrary were put to him by his own counsel, who
did not suggest that the statement was inadmissible on the ground that it was
not voluntary. There was no other evidence to the effect that he was drunk that
evening.
17. That being the state of the evidence,
their Lordships agree with the Court of Appeal that the trial judge gave the
appellant the benefit of a direction which was not on the facts juridically
sustainable. The appellant was entitled to rely on those parts of his evidence
which were in conflict with his confession statement, because it was open to the
jury to accept those parts of his evidence in preference to what he was said to
have told the police. But for the most part he did not contradict that statement
and he agreed in cross-examination that it was true. Even accepting therefore
that he was drunk and under the influence of alcohol, there is no getting away
from the fact that on his own admission he did what he did in response to
instructions which he said he had received from Sooklal. Nor was it disputed
that he was able to give a clear account of his actions two days later to the
police. This case is far removed from those where a verdict of murder must be
reduced to one of manslaughter because the accused did not know what he was
doing due to intoxication by alcohol.
18. Mr. Kentridge invited their Lordships
to take into account the fact that the trial judge thought it appropriate,
having heard the evidence, to direct the jury to consider the question whether
the appellant had the necessary intent. The suggestion was that this showed that
there was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on this point. In their
Lordships view the fact that the trial judge was acting out of an abundance
of caution does not resolve the issue in the appellants favour. The issue is
whether he was deprived of the benefit of a direction as to an alternative
verdict of manslaughter to which he was entitled in the light of the evidence.
The trial judge was overgenerous to the appellant when he directed the jury to
acquit him if the prosecution had failed to satisfy them that he had the
specific intent for murder. But there was no miscarriage of justice, because
there was no evidence before the jury which would have entitled them to hold
that it had not been proved that he had that intent because he was drunk.
Sooklal.
19. Mr. Sells Q.C. for Sooklal advanced
several grounds in support of his appeal, in addition to his fundamental and
undisputed point that the trial judge was wrong to direct the jury on the basis
of the felony/murder rule. The first was that the judge, having decided to
direct Dings acquittal after Mansingh had given evidence, ought to have
discharged the jury and ordered a retrial in view of the prejudice which the
cross-examination of Mansingh by Dings counsel had caused to Sooklal. The
second was that Sooklals case had not been adequately put to the jury by his
own counsel, as he did not cross-examine Mansingh sufficiently on his assertion
in the course of his evidence that his statement to the police was true. He said
that counsels whole approach to the case had plainly been based on the
assumption that the case against Sooklal depended upon the application of the
felony/murder rule. The third was that the trial judge erred in telling the jury
that Mansingh had adopted his statement as true, and that he also erred in
omitting to direct the jury that they could not rely upon a statement which Ding
had given under caution to the police in so far as it might tend to incriminate
Sooklal. The fourth was that the trial judge ought to have given an accomplice
warning with regard to Mansinghs evidence. And the fifth was that the Court
of Appeal had been wrong to apply the proviso.
20. Their Lordships wish to make it clear
at the outset that, although the trial judge must be held to have misdirected
the jury when he applied the felony/murder rule, he was following the regular
practice in this jurisdiction when he decided to base his summing up on this
rule when he was dealing with the case against Sooklal. The situation in this
case is similar to that which arose in Stafford v. The State,
(unreported), Privy Council Appeal No. 7 of 1998; 30th July 1998, which went to
trial shortly after the jurys verdict in this case. Giselle Stafford and Dave
Carter were convicted of murder on 14th June 1996 following a summing up which
was based on the felony/murder rule. Then on 18th and 19th June 1996 the hearing
of the appeal in Moses v. The State [1997] AC 53 took place before this
Board. On 29th July 1996 their Lordships delivered their judgment in that case.
They held that the felony/murder rule was no longer part of the law of murder in
Trinidad and Tobago. The abolition of the distinction between felonies and
misdemeanours by section 2(1)(a) of and Schedule 1 to the Law Revision
(Miscellaneous Amendments) (No. 1) Act 1979 had had the effect of abolishing the
felony/murder rule also. The statute had made no mention of the felony/murder
rule. But felonies had ceased to exist, and it was impossible to have a
principle of felony/murder if there was no such thing as a felony.
In Stafford v. The State the Board made the following observations about the effect of the decision in Moses which their Lordships think it desirable to repeat in this case as an introduction to the view which they have formed about Sooklals appeal:-
"Their Lordships are under no illusions about the gravity of the situation which the decision in Moses has revealed. It was most unfortunate that a direction in the terms approved by this Board in Gransaul v. The Queen, (unreported), 9th April 1979, Appeal No. 26 of 1978, only a few months before the commencement date of the Miscellaneous Amendments Act, and which had been routinely given in this jurisdiction during the intervening 16 years after that date, had now to be held to have been a misdirection. It was even more unfortunate that the flawed direction should be one relating to murder, where there is such an obvious public interest in the conviction and punishment of the criminal. But fundamental principles of justice require that the law must receive effect. If the proviso to section 44(1) of the Supreme Court of Judicature Act cannot be applied, and if a substitute verdict of manslaughter under section 45(2) of that Act is not available, the conviction must be quashed. That was what had to be done in Moses. The question which their Lordships have to address is whether the same result must follow in this case also. As Lord Mustill observed in Moses at p. 69C-D, the fact that a direction given in accordance with the felony/murder rule must now be held to have been a misdirection need not inevitably lead to the quashing of the conviction. A careful analysis of the evidence may show that there was no miscarriage of justice, or at least that a verdict of manslaughter may properly be substituted."
21. The central issue in Sooklals case,
in view of this misdirection, is whether the Court of Appeal was entitled to
apply the proviso. Section 44(1) of the Supreme Court of Judicature Act
provides:-
"The Court of Appeal on any such appeal against conviction shall allow the appeal if it thinks that the verdict of the jury should be set aside on the ground that it is unreasonable or cannot be supported having regard to the evidence, or that the judgment of the court before whom the appellant was convicted should be set aside on the ground of a wrong decision on any question of law or that on any ground there was a miscarriage of justice, and in any other case shall dismiss the appeal; but the Court may, notwithstanding that they are of opinion that the point raised in the appeal might be decided in favour of the appellant, dismiss the appeal if they consider that no substantial miscarriage of justice has actually occurred."
22. As their Lordships had occasion to
point out in Stafford v. The State, it has been said many times that it
is not the function of the Judicial Committee to act as a second Court of
Criminal Appeal. Save in exceptional circumstances, the Judicial Committee will
not embark upon a rehearing of issues such as the weight which may properly be
given to the evidence or the inferences which may properly be drawn from it.
These are matters which will be left to the Court of Appeal. Its decision as to
whether the evidence was sufficient to support the conviction will not normally
be reviewed by this Board: Buxoo v. The Queen [1988] 1 W.L.R. 820 at p.
822; Gayle v. The Queen, (unreported), Appeal No. 40 of 1995, 12th June
1996. As a general rule the same is true as to the application of the proviso: Lee
Chun-Chuen v. The Queen [1963] A.C. 220 at p. 231 per Lord Devlin. But, as
Lord Devlin made clear in that case, the Board will disregard the finding of the
appellate court if that court has approached the problem in the wrong way, such
as by taking into account evidence which it should have left out of account or
misdirecting itself as to the state of the evidence.
23. The test which must be applied to the
application of the proviso is whether, if the jury had been properly directed,
they would inevitably have come to the same conclusion upon a review of all the
evidence: Woolmington v. Director of Public Prosecutions [1935] AC 462,
per Viscount Sankey L.C. at pp. 482-483. In Stirland v. Director of Public
Prosecutions [1944] A.C. 315 at p. 321 Viscount Simon said that the
provision assumed "a situation where a reasonable jury, after being
properly directed, would, on the evidence properly admissible, without doubt
convict". Two distinct situations can be envisaged as to the application of
this test. The first is where the verdict is criticised on the ground of a
misdirection and no question is raised about the admission of inadmissible
evidence. In such a case the application of the proviso will depend upon an
examination of the whole of the facts which were before the jury in the
evidence. The second is where the verdict is criticised on the ground of
inadmissible evidence, as where the trial judge allowed evidence to be led at
the trial which was inadmissible or where he failed to direct the jury that they
must disregard some part of the evidence which was properly before them against
a co-accused when considering the case against the appellant. In such a case the
application of the proviso will depend upon an examination of the admissible
evidence, leaving wholly out of account the evidence which was inadmissible.
24. This case falls into the second
category. But before coming to the evidence against Sooklal their Lordships must
first deal with the other points raised in his appeal about errors and omissions
on the part of his counsel and by the trial judge.
25. The first point was that the trial
judge ought to have discharged the jury and ordered a retrial when he decided to
acquit Ding. Their Lordships are not persuaded that there is any substance in
this ground of appeal. In the ordinary course of events submissions of no case
to answer should be made on behalf of all the accused at the end of the
prosecution case. Due to a misunderstanding the submission by Dings counsel
was not made until after Mansingh, who was the first named accused, had given
evidence and had been cross-examined by counsel for Ding, who was the third
named accused. It was in the course of that cross-examination that Mansingh said
in the clearest terms that the statement which he had made to the police was
true. He had not been asked to say whether it was true when he was being
examined by his own counsel, and counsel for Sooklal, who was the second named
accused, had decided when his turn came to put no questions to him in
cross-examination. The argument is that, if Ding had been acquitted before
Mansingh gave evidence, the jury would not have had any evidence as to the truth
of the statement. But the point might well have been raised by prosecution
counsel in his cross-examination, as he had an obvious interest in pursuing this
point. So it is by no means clear that this evidence would not have emerged
before Mansingh completed his evidence. Also, the trial judge granted a request
by Sooklals counsel to cross-examine Mansingh after he had been
cross-examined by Dings counsel, having regard to the fact that he had said
in answer to Dings counsel that his statement was true. In their Lordships
opinion this removed any risk of prejudice to Sooklal, because of the
opportunity which his counsel had to challenge that part of Mansinghs
evidence.
26. The other grounds which were advanced
by Mr. Sells in support of the appeal all related in one way or another to
deficiencies on the part of Sooklals counsel and the trial judge in regard to
Mansinghs evidence. Mr. Sells said that counsel had failed to mount an
adequate challenge to Mansinghs evidence that his statement to the police was
true and that the trial judge erred in his summing up when he told the jury that
Mansingh had said that everything in his statement was true and correct. There
is nothing in either of these two criticisms. The approach to be taken to this
issue in cross-examination was a matter for counsel to decide in the exercise of
his professional judgment at the trial. Mansingh said that his statement was
true in answer to Dings counsel, and in answer to prosecuting counsel he
agreed that he had said that his statement was true and correct. So there was a
basis in the evidence for the references to this point which the trial judge
made in his summing up.
27. There is however more force in the
remaining two grounds, which were these. First, the trial judge omitted to tell
the jury that Dings caution statement was inadmissible against Sooklal. The
terms of this statement were led in evidence from Inspector Frederick during the
prosecution case before Ding was acquitted, and as Ding did not have occasion to
enter the witness box he did not adopt it in his evidence as a true statement.
During his account of the incident to the police Ding said that Sooklal passed
the cutlass to him before he gave it to Mansingh. This was the only mention in
any of the three caution statements that Sooklal handled the cutlass during the
incident. Mr. Sells said that this was clearly prejudicial to Sooklal, and that
the jury should have been told to disregard this statement. And secondly, the
trial judge also omitted to give the appropriate accomplice warning in regard to
Mansinghs evidence.
28. The proper approach to these last two
grounds of appeal is that which is to be found in the words of the proviso. It
is whether it can be said that, despite these omissions on the part of the trial
judge, no substantial miscarriage of justice has occurred. Mr. Cassel Q.C. for
the State submitted that there was no real dispute between Mansinghs
statement and the statement which Sooklal had given to the police. As Mansinghs
evidence had not undermined Sooklals defence, there was no need for an
accomplice warning in this case. He also submitted that, as Dings statement
was not mentioned again in the trial after Inspector Frederick had completed his
evidence, no substantial prejudice to Sooklal resulted from the judges
omission to tell the jury to disregard it. Their Lordships prefer however to
approach the application of the proviso upon the basis that the jury should have
been given these directions and that, if they had been given, the jury would
have disregarded this evidence. On this approach the only relevant evidence
against Sooklal was his own statement to the police.
29. When the Court of Appeal came to
consider the application of the proviso to Sooklals case it confined its
examination of the evidence against him to the contents of his statement to the
police and to a consideration of the inferences which could be taken from that
statement alone as to the part which he had played in the incident. In Stafford
v. The State their Lordships held that the Court of Appeal had taken into
account evidence in Giselle Staffords case which should have been left out of
account, and that it had proceeded in Dave Carters case upon a wrong view of
the evidence. That being so, the whole matter as to the application of the
proviso was at large for decision by the Board. In the present case the Court of
Appeal did not take into account any inadmissible evidence. So the question to
which their Lordships must now address their attention is whether the
application of the proviso in Sooklals case was based by the Court of Appeal
upon a wrong view of the evidence.
30. The prosecution case was that Mansingh
used the cutlass to kill the deceased and that Sooklal was a secondary party to
the murder as he himself did not use the cutlass. As their Lordships have
observed in Anthony Nevada Johnson v. The State, the Court of Appeal
should be slow to apply the proviso where, as the result of an erroneous
application of the felony/murder rule, the question as to what the secondary
party contemplated in relation to the use of a deadly weapon was not considered
at the trial. It follows that in such cases the Board will examine with
particular care the reasons which the Court of Appeal has given for the
application of the proviso, and if these reasons are not satisfactory it will
reconsider the matter afresh in the light of the relevant evidence. But there
may be cases, unlike that of Anthony Nevada Johnson in which the decision
was set aside and the case remitted to the Court of Appeal to consider whether
an order should be made for a retrial, where it is abundantly clear from the
evidence which was led at the trial that the accomplice contemplated that the
deadly weapon would be used to kill or to inflict really serious injury. Where
the evidence is of that character the test for the application of the proviso
will normally be held to have been satisfied.
31. The statement which Sooklal gave to the
police contained a detailed account of the incident in which he admitted to
having devised a plan to frighten the deceased so that she would keep away from
his father-in-law: "hit she a few slaps and thing". He admitted to
having involved Mansingh and Ding in this plan, and to their having collected
the deceased by car from her house. They then drove on the highway with her in
the back seat beside Mansingh. The statement continued with these words:-
"While going up the road I heard lash passing in the back and I saw Francis beating the woman. I didnt tell him nothing because I know is only frighten we want to frighten she. Francis then say he strangling the lady but she wasnt saying nothing. When we reach a certain way on the road Francis say stop and pull she out the car and me boy was in the front seat. Francis say pass the cutlass for him and me boy Ding give him the cutlass and Francis chop the lady in she neck and leave she they. She had on a red dress and I think a black handbag. From they we drive back home and park up and I didnt tell my wife nothing. She ask where I went and I said out the road. When Francis chop the woman in she neck he throw the cutlass in the bush. Francis take up the cutlass from home by mus."
32. The Court of Appeal drew the following
inferences from this statement. The first was that Sooklal was well aware that
there was a cutlass in his car. This was because of his statement in the last
sentence that Mansingh had taken it from his (Sooklals) home. The second was
that, as Sooklal stopped the car at Mansinghs request, heard him ask for the
cutlass and was aware that the cutlass was being passed to him, he must have
known that his purpose was no longer merely to beat and frighten the deceased.
The third was that there was ample opportunity for Sooklal to drive away when
Mansingh and the deceased had left the car if he wished to disassociate himself
from the act of using the cutlass. Instead what he chose to do was to remain
where he was while Mansingh used the cutlass to cut the deceaseds throat, and
then to drive him back home when it was all over.
33. In their Lordships opinion it cannot
be said that Court of Appeal was not entitled to conclude that if the jury had
been properly directed they would have come to the same conclusion and that they
would have returned the same verdict. Indeed the terms of Sooklals statement
were such that, if the jury had been properly directed that Sooklal would only
be guilty if he contemplated that Mansingh might use the cutlass to kill the
deceased or to cause her really serious injury, they would inevitably have
convicted Sooklal of murder. The Court of Appeal did not employ precisely the
same language as that indicated by Viscount Simon in Stirland v. Director of
Public Prosecutions [1944] A.C. 315 at P. 321 when he used the words
"without doubt convict". But it is sufficiently clear from its
judgment that the Court of Appeal was applying this test. There is no indication
that it approached the question in the wrong way or that it attached weight to
the statement which was gravely out of proportion to its true value: Lee
Chun-Chuen v. The Queen [1963] A.C. 220 at p. 231. On the contrary it is
clear from Sooklals statement that he was in charge of the plan which was
being put into effect that night and that he was well aware of what was going on
throughout the incident. The decision of the Court of Appeal was well within the
limits of the proper exercise of the function of analysing the evidence and
assessing the weight to be attached to it which the Board will normally leave to
that court.
34. Their Lordships have considered whether
there is room on Sooklals case, as he was not the primary party, for the
substitution of a verdict of manslaughter under section 45(2) of the Supreme
Court of Judicature Act. In Stafford v. The State it was held that the
Court of Appeal was wrong to apply the proviso but that there was sufficient
material in the evidence to justify the appellants conviction for
manslaughter. In the present case their Lordships are satisfied that the Court
of Appeal was entitled to apply the proviso. So it must inevitably follow that
the court was entitled to do what the proviso enabled it to do and dismiss the
appeal. But there is further ground on which the possibility of substituting a
verdict of manslaughter must be rejected in Sooklals case.
35. Mr. Cassel Q.C. said that, applying the
principles discussed in Reg. v. Powell (Anthony) [1999] 1 AC 1, it was
not open to him on behalf of the State to ask for the substitution of a verdict
of manslaughter in Sooklals case. He recognised the result in his appeal
would have to stand or fall on the proposition that he was guilty of murder. For
their part Sooklals counsel accepted on the authority of that case and Reg.
v. Uddin [1999] QB 431 that the alternative verdict of manslaughter
was not available.
In Reg v. Powell (Anthony) at p. 28D Lord Hutton accepted as correct the submission by counsel in the appeal of English that to be guilty under the principle stated in Chan Wing-Siu v. The Queen [1985] AC 168 the secondary party must foresee an act of the type which the principal party committed. In Englishs case that test was not satisfied. The joint enterprise was to attack the deceased with wooden posts, and English may not have known that his companion was armed with the knife which he used to stab the deceased. The use of a knife was fundamentally different to the use of a wooden post. At p. 30C Lord Hutton said:-
"As the unforeseen use of the knife would take the killing outside the scope of the joint venture the jury should also have been directed, as the Court of Criminal Appeal held in Reg. v. Anderson, that English should not be found guilty of manslaughter."
In Reg. v. Uddin at p. 440, Beldam L.J. said:-
" if one party to a joint enterprise suddenly forms an intention to kill making use of a deadly weapon and acting in a way which no party to the common design could suspect kills using that deadly weapon the others taking part in the common enterprise are to be judged as secondary parties and are not guilty of murder unless the actions of the party causing death are of a type which they foresee but do not necessarily intend."
36. In a later passage at p. 440 Beldam L.J.
observed that the analysis of risk which is contemplated by the joint enterprise
rules, whilst appropriate in the case of criminals who agree in advance to
commit an offence such as armed robbery, does not readily fit the spontaneous
behaviour of a group of irrational individuals who jointly attack a common
victim, each intending to inflict serious harm by any means at their disposal.
But the underlying principle is clear. If there is agreement to use minor force,
or if only minor force is foreseeable, and unintended and unforeseen major force
by means of a deadly weapon is used by the primary party, only the primary party
is guilty of the homicide.
37. Applying that principle to the facts of
this case, if Mansinghs use of the cutlass was not foreseen by Sooklal and he
had no reason to suspect that deadly force would be used, it would follow that
he would be entitled to be acquitted not only of murder by also of manslaughter.
This is because there was a fundamental and obvious difference between the use
of the cutlass which caused the deceaseds death and the other acts of minor
physical violence which were directed against her in accordance with the common
plan while she was still in the car. But on the view which the Court of Appeal
took of the evidence, Sooklal was aware from the outset that the cutlass was in
the car and that it was available for use on the deceased by Mansingh. He was
also aware that it was being passed to Mansingh after the deceased had been
pushed out of the car, yet he did nothing to dissuade him or to prevent him from
using it on the deceased. When it was all over he assisted Mansinghs
departure from the scene of the crime by driving him home. It may be that
Sooklal did not set out with the intention that the deceased should be killed.
But once he knew that Mansingh had asked for and been given the cutlass he had
the necessary degree of foresight to render him liable for her murder if it was
used by him to inflict fatal injury.
38. The result is that there can be no
question of substituting an alternative verdict of manslaughter in Sooklals
case. The conviction of murder must be affirmed on the ground that the Court of
Appeal was entitled to apply the proviso and to dismiss the appeal.
Conclusion.
39. For these reasons their Lordships have
decided that these appeals must both be dismissed.
[37]