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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> AG v Goodchild [2023] JRC 176 (29 September 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2023/2023_176.html Cite as: [2023] JRC 176 |
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Grave and criminal assault and larceny - bad character evidence - reasons for the ruling given.
Before : |
R. J. MacRae, Esq., Deputy Bailiff |
The Attorney General
-v-
Mark Goodchild
M. R. Maletroit Esq., Crown Advocate.
Advocate C. R. Baglin for the Defendant.
JUDGMENT
THE DEPUTY BAILIFF:
1. On 7 September 2023, I gave a ruling in relation to the Crown's application to introduce evidence of the Defendant's bad character in this case pursuant to the provisions in the Police Procedure and Criminal Evidence (Jersey) Law 2003 ("the Law"). I now give my reasons for the ruling that I gave.
2. In short, the Defendant has pleaded not guilty to grave and criminal assault and larceny. The Crown's case is that at approximately 2.30 am on 12 September 2022 the Defendant, together with his co-defendant Addison Mazurke, committed a grave and criminal assault in King Street, St Helier, upon the complainant who was prior to the assault unknown to both the Defendant and Mr Mazurke. The assault was a serious one leaving the complainant with a fractured left collarbone. The complainant was knocked to the floor and punched and kicked on the floor. After the assault his shoes were taken. Both defendants are charged with assault and larceny. Mr Mazurke admits presence and inflicting a common assault upon the complainant but denies grave and criminal assault and larceny. The Defendant denies he was present and in his defence case statement says that at the time of the alleged assault he was indoors at the address of a friend. The Crown rely on the identification evidence of a police officer who has viewed various CCTV footage of the Defendant and Mr Mazurke and recognised the Defendant from school; the fact that the Defendant and Mr Mazurke were out in St Helier together at about the same time the following night and that on that occasion trainers and a cap were seized from the Defendant which the Crown say are similar or identical to those that the CCTV footage shows that the Defendant was wearing the previous night. The Crown also rely on the fact that in his second interview the Defendant denied knowing Mr Mazurke which the Crown say was plainly false.
3. The Crown seek to adduce various previous convictions of the Defendant for assault and for drunk and disorderly behaviour committed between 2008 and 2022. I will return to the detail of those convictions, when necessary, below.
4. The Crown's written application to introduce the evidence of the Defendant's bad character says that the convictions show the Defendant has a propensity to commit offences of the kind with which he is charged and accordingly rely upon Article 82F of the Law.
5. The Crown said that the bad character evidence was relevant to a matter in issue, accepting that the key issue in this case, so far as the Defendant was concerned, was identity. The complainant had no recollection of who assaulted him owing to the injury and intoxication. The Crown say that its case on identity was strong and that the Defendant's record demonstrating a history of violence and in particular attacks on unknown males was evidence that may assist to establish, if the jury accept it, that:
(i) the Defendant has a propensity to commit offences of the nature of which he is accused; and
(ii) the evidence may support the accuracy of identification of the police officer who knows the Defendant and the other identification evidence, as it would be a coincidence if there were to be a number of men with a propensity to attack strangers bearing a close resemblance to the Defendant.
6. Before looking at the authorities, it is appropriate to recite the defence argument in response to the Crown's submission. The defence argued that the previous convictions would unfairly prejudice the Defendant in his defence to these charges and that the essential issue for the jury was identification, not propensity. As the issue was identification and not propensity, all the jury needed to see was the CCTV footage and the evidence relevant to identity upon which the Crown sought to rely. The introduction of this character evidence would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the Court ought not to admit it under Article 82E(2). Furthermore, in relation to the specific offences which the Crown sought to admit, the offences of drunk and disorderly were irrelevant and the Crown in any event had not provided or sought to rely upon the circumstances of the three convictions for being drunk and disorderly.
7. It is argued that the offence of domestic violence on 18 June 2014 is of a different character to a sufficient degree to render it irrelevant.
8. It is accepted that the offences involving attacks on strangers were or may be relevant to the issue of propensity but that was not the principal issue in this case - namely the issue of presence / identity with the Defendant relying on alibi. The defence accepted that this was not a case of the Crown attempting to adduce character evidence in order to bolster a weak identification case, but argued that the admission of this evidence would be unfair in all the circumstances of the case.
9. The defence argued, a matter not foreshadowed in the documentation filed prior to the hearing, that the evidence of the Defendant and Mr Mazurke conversing with police officers approximately twenty-four hours later when they were again out together (on the Crown's case) on the streets of St Helier and when drunk, unhelpful (for the police) and disorderly should not be adduced. It is argued that this too was evidence of bad character, including evidence at the end of the body worn footage of the Defendant being arrested on suspicion of assault.
10. The Crown's case was this was not evidence of bad character but relevant evidence and therefore admissible at customary law. If it was evidence of bad character, then it was relevant to the issue of identification because it shows the two defendants:
(i) together (relevant to the fact that they appear to deny knowing each other);
(ii) out in St Helier at 2.30 am twenty-four hours after the assault;
(iii) drunk and in some respects disorderly; and
(iv) the Defendant wearing the same hat and footwear as he was wearing the previous night.
11. It was also argued that this evidence might amount to important explanatory evidence under Article 82E without which the jury would not understand how it was the police came to seize the footwear and hat of the Defendant.
12. The Crown agreed that the evidence was prejudicial, as is often the case with prosecution evidence, but it was not unfairly so and should be admitted, notwithstanding Article 82E(2).
13. With those arguments in mind, I now turn to consider the authorities that were placed before me.
14. My attention was drawn by the Crown to the 2023 edition of Archbold which, at paragraph 13-40, consider the English legislation directly equivalent to the corresponding Jersey gateway for the admission of bad character evidence, namely where the defendant's bad character is admissible as it is "relevant to an important matter in issue between the defendant and the prosecution" and says:
15. Archbold goes on to observe that a matter in issue for the purpose of this gateway may be the entirety of the prosecution case or some component part of it. At paragraph 39-42 Archbold says:
16. As to the authorities in respect of the admission of bad character evidence in identity cases, I was referred to the cases of Eastlake and Spittle - both referred to in the extract from Archbold above.
17. Eastlake was a decision of the Criminal Division of the English Court of Appeal where the trial judge certified grounds of appeal asking whether evidence of propensity to commit offences was capable of supporting the accuracy and reliability of identification evidence when identification was the only issue in the case.
18. In Eastlake, the two complainants were set upon by three males including, the Crown said, the two appellants. Both said they were not involved in the attack and were elsewhere at the time. They relied upon alibi at trial. The Crown sought leave to adduce evidence of their bad character by way of propensity for violence pursuant to the English equivalent legislation and the judge allowed the application.
19. Both appellants (brothers) had previous convictions for common assault - one brother had convictions for street violence and the other for convictions of common assault with the circumstances unparticularised in the judgment, save that two were offences committed with his brother.
20. The judgment of the Court was given by Dame Heather Steel:
21. The Court of Appeal was content with the direction that the trial judge gave to the jury:
22. Accordingly, it appears that in that case, as in this, a Turnbull direction will be given in the usual way, but a matter for the jury to weigh in the balance (if this evidence is admitted) when considering the disputed identifications are the previous convictions for violence. The judgment in Eastlake at paragraph 31 noted the requirements of a Turnbull direction which were helpfully summarised as follows:
23. In R v Spittle the Criminal Division of the English Court of Appeal considered the evidence of a police officer who noticed a vehicle being driven at excessive speed by a male driver. The police officer in question told his colleague he recognised the driver, that he could not put a name to him but he had seen him earlier in the year. After the incident, the constable returned to the police station and identified the defendant from photographs of the driver. He repeated that identification on a video identification procedure thereafter, as did his colleague. The trial judge permitted the Crown's application to admit evidence of three previous convictions for driving whilst disqualified. The defendant submitted that the trial judge should withdraw the case from the jury on the ground that the identification evidence was so poor there was no case to answer. He declined to do so.
24. Giving the judgment of the Court, Dyson LJ said:
25. As to the previous convictions that the Crown seek to adduce involving violence against the person they are, where particularised by the Crown (two of the three drunk and disorderly convictions have not been particularised):
(i) Common assault in August 2012 - an unprovoked assault on a stranger late at night when the Defendant was under the influence of alcohol;
(ii) In June 2014, common assault and resisting arrest - a domestic assault where the Defendant attended his ex-partner's address in the early hours of the morning whilst under the influence of alcohol, got into her property and assaulted her by punching her and was aggressive on arrest.
(iii) In July 2016, grave and criminal assault on a stranger when the Defendant was under the influence of alcohol following a disagreement outside a public house.
(iv) In January 2019, an offence under the Crime (Disorderly Conduct and Harassment) Law where the Defendant was located outside a flat, intoxicated, and was aggressive towards the police and ambulance staff, shouting at an ambulance worker and hitting him on the leg.
(v) In November 2022, common assault - an unprovoked assault on a stranger late at night when the Defendant was under the influence of alcohol, having been ejected from a nightclub in St Helier.
26. Under Article 82E of the Law the relevant provisions are as follows:
27. Bad character evidence is defined in Article 82C of the Law as follows:
28. "Misconduct" is defined in Article 82A(1) as "the commission of an offence or other reprehensible behaviour".
29. In respect of propensity, Article 82F provides:
30. Finally, Article 82E(2) provides:
31. It has been established that where propensity to commit an offence relied upon, there are three questions for the Court to consider:
(i) Do the convictions in question establish a propensity to commit the offence of the kind charged?
(ii) Does that propensity make it more likely the Defendant committed the offence charged?
(iii) Is it unjust to admit the convictions and in any event will the proceedings be unfair if they are admitted?
32. In my judgment, the convictions to which I have referred that are particularised by the Crown (I exclude the drunk and disorderly offences) are relevant to the matter in issue in the case, do establish a propensity to commit offences of the kind charged and that propensity makes it more likely the Defendant committed the offences charged in this case.
33. It is clear from the authorities referred to that the fact that the issue in this case is identification does not render the convictions inadmissible. Although it is not necessary for there to be a similarity between the offences the Crown seek to rely on and the offence charged, there is a similarity between many of the convictions referred to in this case which involve attacks on strangers which this case, on the Crown's case, was.
34. These convictions may strengthen the evidence of identification if the jury accept that they do so. The evidence of bad character is capable of establishing that the Defendant had propensity to commit the offence of street violence with which he was charged.
35. In respect of the Court's power to exclude evidence prima facie admissible under Article 82F, I am of the view that the admission of the conviction for domestic violence is unnecessary and, in the circumstances, would have such an adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the Court ought not to admit it and that conviction and its circumstances are excluded.
36. As to the events of the following night captured on body worn camera footage, which I have viewed, I agree with the defence submission that this is bad character evidence. It is not evidence which has to do with the alleged facts of the offence with which the Defendant is charged but does amount to reprehensible behaviour by reason of the conduct of both defendants as revealed by the video evidence. If I am wrong on this issue then I agree with the Crown that the material is prima facie admissible as relevant evidence by virtue of the general customary law principle that all relevant evidence is admissible. Having said that, the body worn camera footage is extensive and it would be inappropriate for the jury to give too much weight to its content. Accordingly, I directed when ruling that the evidence was admissible that the footage needs to be edited in order to be of sufficient length to allow the jury to be able to assess the Defendant's appearance and clothing including his footwear and hat the night after the alleged assault, and to enable them to have sufficient opportunity to consider the demeanour of both defendants.