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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Ngyuen, R v [2008] EWCA Crim 585 (18 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/585.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Crim 585 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
Her Honour Judge Goddard QC
T2005/7656
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE MADDISON
and
SIR RICHARD CURTIS
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R |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Ngyuen |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
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Simon Denison (instructed by CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 26/02/2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Dyson, giving the judgment of the court:
Outline of the case
The Crown case in respect of the Earl of Chatham incident
The Crown case in respect of the Great Harry incident
The decision not to prosecute for the Great Harry assaults
The application and the ruling
"In my judgment, the prosecution were entitled to take the course they did as a matter of procedure but, if that course led to unfairness, their application would fail. In my judgment, it will not do so. The jury will have to be sure of the facts before they can use them, applying the criminal burden and standard of proof. I do not see that the directions to the jury will be so complicated that they cannot be followed. Juries do differentiate between counts and return different verdicts in other cases and there is no reason to think that there is room for prejudice."
The summing up
"You heard evidence that he has been accused before of using a glass as a weapon at the Great Harry public house on 7th December. It is important that you understand why you have heard this evidence and how you can use it. I have to and do emphasise that you must not convict him simply because he has been so accused before.
You hear about it because it may help you to resolve an issue or issues between the prosecution and the defence, namely the question as to whether he has a propensity, or a tendency, deliberately to use a glass as a weapon, the question as to whether he has a propensity, or a tendency, to do so unlawfully - - that is not in necessary and reasonable self-defence - - and the question as to whether on 23rd/24th December his intention was to cause at least really serious bodily harm.
First of all, you have to decide what happened in the Great Harry. There is no charge on the indictment so you will not be asked for a verdict. Nevertheless the prosecution have to make you sure of any fact before you can bring it into your consideration of the events of 23rd/24th December.
The facts that the prosecution say are relevant are three, that on 7th December:
(i) He deliberately broke a glass, intending to use it unlawfully as a weapon.
(ii) He used it with the intention of causing really serious bodily harm.
(iii) He used it unlawfully.
If you are not sure of any of those facts, the events in the Great Harry are irrelevant to your deliberations on the charge of murder.
If you are sure of those facts, how do you bring it into your deliberations? When you are considering your verdict on the charge of murder, you have to be sure that the prosecution have proved the elements in that charge, as I have directed you, before you can return a verdict of guilty. You cannot convict him only, or even mainly, on the basis of facts you find proved arising out of events on 7th December but, when you are considering whether the prosecution have proved murder, if the facts of 7th December make you sure that, bearing in mind it is only one incident, the defendant had a tendency deliberately and unlawfully to use a broken glass as a weapon, then you can consider whether that makes it more likely that he is guilty of murder.
So such a tendency amounts to some additional evidence pointing to guilt but you must bear in mind that, even if he did have such a tendency, it does not necessarily prove that he committed this offence."
"What is important is that you must be unanimous in your verdict. Before any verdict of guilty is returned, you must be sure that the ingredients of murder or manslaughter have been proved. In coming to that verdict, some may rely on some piece of evidence, others may attach importance to some other aspect of the evidence. In other words, you do not have to travel the same evidential route. Before any of you take the events of the Great Harry into account in your deliberations, you must be sure of all three relevant facts. Those of you who are sure of those relevant facts in the Great Harry are entitled to take it into account, bearing in mind that you cannot convict the defendant only or even mainly on events in the Great Harry.
In my written directions to you, I have pointed out that, even if you are sure that there is a tendency to use a glass unlawfully, that does not necessarily prove that the defendant committed the offence of murder or manslaughter.
Those of you who are not sure of the three relevant facts will not take it into account and, therefore, you do not all have to be agreed on the Great Harry. You all have to be sure of your verdict."
The appellant's submissions
Relevance
Unfairness
"77. The relevant underlying principle seems to us to be this. Prima facie all evidence that is relevant to the question whether the accused is guilty or innocent of the offence charged is admissible. In R. v Z [2000] 2 CrAppR 281 it was accepted by the defendant that the evidence of the three complainants in respect of whose complaints he had been acquitted was relevant to the question whether he was guilty of the offence of rape with which he had been charged. The issue was not whether the defendant was guilty of having raped the three other complainants; he was not being put on trial again for those offences. The only issue was whether he was guilty of the fresh allegation of rape. Lord Hope of Craighead said at p.283 that the guiding principle was that prima facie all evidence which is relevant to the question whether the accused is guilty or innocent of the offence charged is admissible. He said that the objection to the admissibility of the evidence was based on Lord MacDermott's statement in Sambasivam v Public Prosecutor, Federation of Malaya [1950] AC 458, 479 that the effect of the verdict of acquittal pronounced by a competent court after a lawful trial is not restricted to the fact that the person acquitted cannot be tried again for the same offence. He said that it is binding and conclusive in all subsequent proceedings between the parties of the adjudication.
Lord Hope went on:
"But I agree with my noble and learned friend Lord Hutton that the observation which is contained in the second of these two statements is in need of qualification in order to confine its application to its proper context. The principle which underlies both statements is that of double jeopardy. It is obvious this principle is infringed if the accused is put on trial again for the offence of which he has been acquitted. It is also infringed if any other steps are taken by the prosecutor which may result in the punishment of the accused on some other ground for the same offence. But it is not infringed if what the prosecutor seeks to do is lead evidence which was led at the previous trial, not for the purpose of punishing the accused in any way for the offence of which he has been acquitted, but in order to prove that the defendant is guilty of a subsequent offence which was not before the court in the previous trial."
78. If evidence of previous allegations is in principle admissible notwithstanding that the accused was acquitted of charges based on those allegations in a previous trial, it is difficult to see why in principle evidence relating to allegations that have never been tried (i.e. because of a stay for abuse of process) should not be admissible. The defendant's protection comes through the judge's discretion under s.101(3) or, in an appropriate case, through s.78 of the Police and Criminal Act 1984.
…"
Conclusion