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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 >> Dossett, R v [2013] EWCA Crim 710 (14 May 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/710.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 710 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CROWN COURT AT WINCHESTER
Her Honour Judge Evans Q.C.
T20117247
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR. JUSTICE FULFORD
and
MR. JUSTICE IRWIN
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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STEVEN EDWARD DOSSETT |
Appellant |
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Mr. Francis Abbott (instructed by the Crown Prosecution Service) for the respondent
Hearing dates : 24th April 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Moore-Bick :
Identification
Bad character
"The jury had to decide whether the two appellants were the two young men who committed the offence. The evidence of bad character was capable of establishing that they had a propensity to commit an offence of street violence, and to do so together. That evidence was capable of lending support to the conclusion which the Crown invited the jury to reach, namely that the two appellants were correctly identified as those who committed the attack."
"Now of the conviction together for robbery Mr. Dossett and Mr. Ganney this was a robbery in 2010 and the officer said that the details […] are that both Mr. Ganney and Mr. Dossett and another male entered the Shell Garage in Old Worting Road. One attempted to leave with a basket of goods. The shopkeeper was hit, pushed and pulled and the men left."
"In relation to Mr. Dossett alone in 2010 the ABH on Mr. Gallagher. [The officer] said this was an elderly man out for an evening walk in South Ham Road. He said two men approached him in an alley. He was nudged and stumbled to the ground. He got up. Later he was kicked on the ground and [the officer] … said … that Mr. Dossett and another male gave themselves up in an intoxicated state with blood on them and blood from Mr. Gallagher was found on Mr. Dossett's shoe and when he was interviewed Mr. Dossett said that he had not punched Mr. Gallagher. Mr. Gallagher had in fact set upon him and the then said, "I was so pissed I kicked him once when he was on the floor" and he said, "I pleaded guilty to ABH". "
"Now what about the Defendants' previous convictions? Well you have heard that in May 2010 both Defendants pleaded guilty to an offence of robbery that took place at a filling station on Worting Road not far from the scene of the robbery that you are now concerned with. Now that robbery was of a different nature to the one now alleged because […] it involved a basked being filled with alcohol and then an attempt to leave the shop without paying and then the shop keeper being pushed and hit as he struggled with the basket. Now in addition to Mr Dossett you have heard that in the same month in 2010 he was involved with another male in an unprovoked attack on a retired man in which the man was knocked to the group and he was kicked on the ground and that too happened fairly close to the scene of the robbery, an attack that you are now considering.
Now the prosecution argues that this evidence is relevant to the question of whether Mr Ryan has correctly identified Mr Dossett as one of the robbers. They say firstly what are the chances that Mr Ryan would mistakenly pick out from a line of nine males on an identification procedure the person who happened to have a previous conviction for robbery and ABH committed very close to the scene of the attack? As well as that they say what are the chances that of all the people that Mr Dossett committed that previous robbery with it turns out to be Mr Ganney who is the man whose blood is found on the receipt that was in Miss Riley's handbag?
Now secondly the prosecution say that the fact that Mr Dossett has that previous conviction for robbery with Mr Ganney and a conviction for ABH committed with another male shows that he Mr Dossett has got a propensity or a tendency if you like to commit an offence of robbery with Mr Ganney and a propensity or a tendency to be violent towards older people having attacked Mr Gallagher in a similar way to the way the prosecution say that Mr Ryan was attacked and they say that those factors make it more likely that Mr Dossett was involved in these offences.
[. . .]
Now it is for you (to) decide whether in relation to Mr Dossett, the evidence of his previous convictions provides any support for the correctness of the identification by Mr Ryan and/or whether it does in fact show a propensity or a tendency as the prosecution suggest.
[. . .]
Now the defendants both accept that they do have those convictions. But they say that the robber that the prosecution rely upon is of a very different nature to the one that they now both face. They say in effect that the robbery was a shoplifting gone wrong. Very different to the street robbery now alleged and as well as that they say that they both pleaded guilty to the robbery of the filling station and Mr Dossett says that he pleaded guilty to the ABH upon Mr Gallagher. It is a matter entirely for you to decide the extent to which if at all the evidence of previous convictions establish what the prosecution suggest and if it does the extent to which it assists you in determining guilt.
What is very important is that evidence of previous behaviour is only part of the evidence in this case. Its importance should not be exaggerated and you should not convict either or both defendants wholly or mainly upon the evidence of bad character. It does not follow that just because the defendant behaved in a certain way in the past he did so again on this occasion. Bad behaviour in the past cannot alone prove guilt."
"If a judge has directed himself or herself correctly, this Court will be very slow to interfere with a ruling […] as to admissibility […]. It will not interfere unless the judge's judgment as to the capacity of prior events to establish propensity is plainly wrong, or discretion has been exercised unreasonably in the Wednesbury sense (compare R v Makanjuola [1995] 2 Cr App R 469 at 473E)."
Note 1 See Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000, section 155 (1). [Back]