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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 >> Zarezadeh, R. v [2011] EWCA Crim 271 (01 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/271.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 271 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM EXETER CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COTTLE
T20080441
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE WILKIE
SIR DAVID KEENE
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REGINA |
Prosecution |
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- and - |
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RYAN DAVID ZAREZADEH |
Defendant |
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Mr R. Linford (instructed by Hansell Drew & Co) for the Defendant
Hearing dates : 17 February 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WILKIE :
• Introduction
• The facts
• The relevant evidence
"Q. So your case is that a prison officer must have put in this false entry, is that right?
A. What I am saying is that someone has put a false entry in, yes; it's not myself."
At that stage the judge intervened in the following terms:
"Judge Cottle. Well who could have done that?
A. I don't know your Honour.
Judge Cottle. Well what sort of person could have done it? I mean a prison officer, a prisoner…
"A. A prison officer, if the room is left open a prisoner, I wouldn't know, I wasn't on the wing on that morning, I was on the wing that afternoon I think."
• Defence Counsel's concerns and Grounds of Appeal
The relevant legal principles
"Interventions to clear up ambiguities, interventions to enable the judge to make certain that he is making an accurate note, are of course perfectly justified, but the interventions which give rise to a quashing of a conviction are really three fold: those which invite the jury to disbelieve the evidence for the defence which is put to the jury in such strong terms that it cannot be cured by the common formula that the facts are for the jury and you, members of the jury, must disregard anything that I, the judge, may have said with which you disagree. The second ground giving rise to a quashing of a conviction is where the interventions have made it really impossible for counsel for the defence to do his or her duty in properly presenting the defence, and thirdly, in cases where the interventions have had the effect of preventing the prisoner himself from doing himself justice and telling the story in his own way."
"In our view this was a case in which the Judge, by his comments and the manner of his questioning, to which we have referred, gave the clear impression to the jury that he doubted the case for Mr Copsey. He also took on the role of cross-examining in a way which is more suitable for a prosecuting counsel than for a judge. The frequency and nature of the questioning causes us particular concern, as does the Judge's statement that what was an important part of Mr Copsey's case was "bizarre." Therefore we have reached the conclusion that the appellant did not have a fair trial in respect of count 1 and therefore his conviction was unsafe…"
"24….we add that, if the court is driven to the conclusion that the defendant has not had a fair trial when the matter is looked at in the round, the natural conclusion will be that the verdict is unsafe because our system of criminal justice is dependant upon the fundamental principle of the provision of a fair trial. To allow an appeal in such circumstances, even though the evidence for the prosecution may have been exceedingly strong, is not to allow an appeal on a technicality but to allow it upon a fundamental principle which underlines our criminal justice system.
25. We therefore turn to assess the nature and effect of the Judge's interventions in the case. It cannot be done by a simple statistical approach. It is not suggested that the appellant was thrown off course by the Judge's interventions so as to be unable to put his case across to the jury. What is suggested is that the Judge fell foul of the first principle in Hamilton as applied in Hulusi namely that the Judge must avoid intervening in such a way as to cause prejudice which cannot be undone by using the formula in the summing up that the facts are entirely for the jury.
26. There is no doubt that in this case the Judge asked a large number of questions which were of the nature of hostile cross-examination. On repeated occasions throughout the three days in which the appellant was in the witness box he asked questions which were frankly designed not to elucidate the appellant's evidence but to discredit it."
The court then identified a significant number of such passages. At paragraph 34 the court expressed particular concern about the questions put in the course of examination in chief, saying that a judge should be particularly careful about refraining from intervening during a witness's evidence in chief because, however improbable the appellant's story might have been, he was entitled to explain it to the jury without being subjected to "sniper fire" in the course of so doing.
"We have been driven in this case to the regretful conclusion that the nature and extent of the interventions over the three days in which the appellant gave his evidence deprived him of the opportunity of him having his evidence considered by the jury in the way that he was entitled. The conclusion from that is that we do not consider that he received the quality of a fair trial to which he was entitled. That was not curable by a summing up which reminded the jury that the facts were for them because their process of forming their opinion as to where the truth of the facts lay would have begun as they listened to the evidence unfold"
"We take the view that the length of the cross-examination was unnecessary and by asking so many questions the judge did run the risk of giving the impression to the jury that he was not accepting what the defendant said.
24. Time and again this court has had occasion to comment that it is quite unnecessary for a judge to have another go at a defendant after he has been cross-examined by the prosecution. Indeed it is no part of his function to cross-examine a defendant at all lest he runs the risk of demonstrating his own approach to the evidence that the defendant had given. So often these occasions arise where there is a strong case against the defendant and a judge proves unable to resist the temptation to descend into the arena. But those cases are those where it is quite unnecessary and unfair for a judge to do so. This is by no means one of the worst cases but we have to say that the judge did go too far."
• Analysis and conclusions