BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> GJB v R. [2011] EWCA Crim 867 (01 April 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2011/867.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Crim 867 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT CHESTER
His Honour Judge Woodward
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HENRIQUES
and
MR JUSTICE FOSKETT
____________________
GJB |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
The Queen |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Karl H Scholz (instructed by South Cheshire CPS) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 18 March 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Stanley Burnton:
Introduction
The facts in outline
The grounds of appeal
(1) The "scarring" of MT's memory
"… the prosecution say the detail is important because some things he can't remember, some things he can remember in very great detail, things that would otherwise would through life just fade into insignificance and the prosecution say that's significant because something must have happened in that bedroom to scar his memory, that's the effect of it."
"Now you my think it's not surprising that []the appellant] can remember his own bedroom. He did so, but he doesn't have any particular reason to which he can explain why [MT] may have such a clear recollection."
The italics are of course ours. This comment, at a crucial point in the summing up, effectively reversed the onus of proof. For this reason too, it should not have been made.
(2) The Lucas Direction
"Another separate point is that the prosecution have suggested that the defendant may have deliberately lied to the police in interview about the issue of whether or not he stayed at the home of his Aunt …, but be careful with any suggestion that a person deliberately lied. You've got to consider two things. First of all is it actually a lie, a lie is a deliberate choice to mislead to a greater or lesser degree or could it have been confusion, could it have been a mistake, could it have been he was over-awed by the whole situation and he just came out with that.
Now if you're not sure that it's a lie then the point is gone and you just ignore it but if you are sure that it's a lie and a deliberate lie, you've then got to go and ask why the lie was given because people can lie for many different reasons. They can lie because they're frightened, they can lie to try to protect themselves because for example they may think that they don't have much of a defence to put and particularly a person who may be faced with a case where they've got the problems of delay may well seem to fall back in lies simply to try to create a defence because they themselves know that they're innocent and therefore they don't feel they've done anything particularly wrong and are just trying to protect themselves. So don't jump to the conclusion the fact that somebody has lied means that they're guilty.
If a person lies and you're satisfied it's a deliberate lie, it may help you but its only if you say to yourselves well we're satisfied so that we're sure here that there was no innocent explanation for the lie in the sense I've explained and we're sure that the only real explanation is that it was to cover his tracks that it could assist you in the case."
(3) The missing year
"From his father's death, which is a date that is known, to the date that his mother moved into Belmont Avenue, that month we've always known and there's somewhere that he must've been living beside those addresses because there's effectively a missing year. That was pointed out to him although he wasn't able to help about what he said happened, he just couldn't answer that one."
The assumption that there was a missing year for which the appellant could not account must have been seen by the jury as damaging his credibility. Whether the defence could and should have anticipated the need to produce objective evidence of the date of the appellant's mother's move into the house in Belmont Avenue is now difficult to identify, as is the basis for the prosecution question. In our judgment, the interests of justice require us to take that evidence into account. It follows that the appellant's credibility was wrongly damaged.
(4) The good character direction
30. Good character. The Appellant was plainly entitled to the classic two limb good character direction. In the event it was as from 13G:
"But, it is something that you must take into account in his favour and you do that in two ways. First of all, when somebody gives evidence like this defendant has done, and called evidence as with anyone of good character, it can support his credibility. That means it is something that perhaps you can take into account when deciding whether you believe his evidence.
Secondly, because he is now 63 and has no convictions on his record or no cautions, it may be – and you are entitled to take this view – that he is less likely to start committing this sort of offence now, although of course, you have to bear in mind that although 63 now, the time that the young ladies were talking about was (inaudible) years ago. Nevertheless, that is something you are entitled to consider here."
As to the first limb, the words "something that perhaps you can take into account" are unacceptably diffident by reference to the JSB Direction, viz "it is a factor which you should take into account." As to the second limb, we comment as follows. The opening words reflected a reading from the JSB Direction viz., "In the second place the fact that he is of good character may mean that he is less likely to commit this crime now." Given the Appellant's age and history, this was self-evident – and for the jury's purpose effectively irrelevant. It is unfortunate that the judge did not pick up the addendum to this Specimen Direction viz., "In cases where it is necessary to give the Delay direction, see direction 37, para 4." Reference to the latter serves to supply a precedent particularly germane to the instant case as serving to identify the relevance of good character for second limb purpose.
"Having regard to what you know about this defendant and in particular the […] years since the date of the alleged offence and that no similar allegation has been made against him you may think he is entitled to ask you to give considerable/more than usual weight to his good character when deciding whether the Prosecution has satisfied you of his guilt."
Obviously a mere failure to adopt a Specimen Direction cannot in itself found an appeal, but the inadequacy of this truncated second limb direction does serve, in our judgment, to contribute to our finding that the delay directions were seriously flawed.
"A defendant of good character will be able to assert that the absence of any further and similar allegation is significant."
The illustrated direction includes the following:
"There is one effect of delay which you may regard as supportive of the defendant's case. The defendant is now in middle age. At the time of these events, and since, the defendant has had access to several other children within the family environment. Yet, it is not suggested that he has behaved improperly with them on any other occasion."
"The final point that I want to deal with before you go off to your lunch is the defendant's character. Now he's told you that he's a person of good character, that he's never been in trouble with the police and that's not challenged by the prosecution at all. Now of course good character cannot be a defence to a charge because we all start life with good character but it is something that you should take into a person's account, a defendant's account in his favour in two ways. First of all, it supports his credibility, that's to say his evidence, it makes it more likely doesn't it that he's telling you the truth? A person of good character is more likely to tell you the truth about something than not to tell you the truth, and the other way that it helps you is that it may mean that he's less likely to have committed the offence because again you may say a person who has got to a certain age and life without previous convictions may be less likely a person to have done what they're alleged to have done.
Now I said that these are things that you should take into account in the defendant's favour and I'm not resiling from that but what week you give them is free you to decide. You decide in the context of this case how much weight you give to the defendant's good character, a matter entirely for you."
(5) The delay before MT's complaint
"[MT] said 'I didn't tell anyone about what had happened although I was aware something wrong had occurred but I didn't understand". Now he would have been five then so it may have been just a few days after his birthday, it was the day of his birthday party and you've got to try, a very difficult to do, a very difficult thing, you've got to try and put yourself in the mind of a 5 year old who has just experienced that from his uncle and ask yourself well, is it right that a child would actually inevitably say to somebody what had happened or may some children speak, some children not and what are the consequences of not speaking?
When you don't speak about something that's profoundly affect you, how is that going to affect you as you go through life? Does it make it more likely or less likely that you're going to speak? Is there a time when may be there can be a trigger for speaking out and it seems that according to [MT] the very first time he spoke about it was, it's in those formal admissions, I think it was 2006, to his partner. So that was the first and only person he'd confided in about it until he spoke to his mother and we'll come to that in a bit."
"You are entitled to consider why these matters did not come to light sooner. The defence say that it is because they are not true. They say that the allegations are entirely fabricated, untrue and they say that had the allegations been true you would have expected a complaint to be made earlier and certainly once either defendant … was out of the way ... of the complainant. The defence say that she could have complained to her mother or her grandmother before she left the country or to her mother on the plane, or to the headmaster of the school … or to the social worker who came on one occasion to speak to her (although again bear in mind there is no evidence that the complainant was ever given any contact details or instructions as to how to make such a complaint, or that she could have complained sooner to a family or extended family member once she was safe in Jamaica.
On the other hand the prosecution say that it is not as simple as that. When children are abused they are often confused about what is happening to them and why it is happening. They are children and if a family member is abusing them in his own home or their own home, to whom can they complain? A sexual assault, if it occurs, will usually occur secretly. A child may have some idea that what is going on is wrong but very often children feel that they are to blame in some way, notwithstanding circumstances which an outsider would not consider for one moment them to be at blame or at fault. A child can be inhibited for a variety of reasons from speaking out. They may be fearful that they may not be believed, a child's word against a mature adult, or they may be scared of the consequences or fearful of the effect upon relationships which they have come to know, or their only relationship."
The judge then enlarged on the reasons why the complaint may not have been made for some time. For present purposes, what is to be noted in that direction is that the defence's case was clearly put. That did not happen in the present case. It should have done. At the very least, the direction should have been preceded by making the comment conditional on the abuse having happened. Instead, it assumed that the buggery had indeed happened.
(6) The "can of worms"
"He said he wasn't providing her enough priority or financial assistance and then the can of worms was opened and I'll read to you my note about what [RT] said about his brother's behaviour and again, you've got to think to yourself now if this is a pack of lies was it a prepared version? If it wasn't a prepared version, if he didn't have to foresight to think that he might have been asked about that, what was the impression that he was making on you about this and does this, if you believe it's a genuine account of his brother's behaviour, does this tie in with a person who may have suffered as [MT] says he had.
He said, "From the age of 6 he became very closed and he wouldn't show affection very easily. He would just shut off and he wouldn't let anyone inside. When he was younger he was very different, he was very lively and open" and he remembers in particular his seventh birthday party and he came then. He saw other people where there and that was it, he was gone. Never wanted a fuss made of him on his birthday. [MT] just separated himself from others. He's not trusting in other people, he has to grow trust in people". He said "I never saw the defendant act inappropriately towards [MT]", it was never suggested that he had any inkling that anything had happened before and he said about his own experience that he was going to keep it private. His words were: I would have carried what had happened to me forever if [MT] hadn't told me what happened to him", he said. That was his account, you will want to make an assessment."
(7) The earlier complaints
"2. In May 2006 [MT] disclosed to his fiancée … that he had been buggered by his uncle. He told her that this had happened when he was 6.
3. In the summer of 2006 [RT] disclosed to his wife … that he had been abused. He did not then to into any detail."
Conclusion