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Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Court of Appeal in Northern Ireland Decisions >> Meneice, R v [2018] NICA 30 (7 September 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NICA/2018/30.html Cite as: [2018] NICA 30 |
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Ref: MOR10726
Neutral Citation No: [2018] NICA 30
Judgment: approved by the Court for handing down
(subject to editorial corrections)*
Delivered: 07/09/2018
MORGAN, LCJ (delivering the judgment of the Court)
Background
The Issues in the Appeal
Makanjuola
"The fact that she told a lie, and repeated it several times, means you must consider her credibility as a whole and whether you can believe her evidence as a whole, particularly when looking at her evidence in relation to the offences you are considering. The defence case is that her entire evidence about sexual activity is a lie and is false. The prosecution case is that it is not. You are entitled to consider her explanation as to why she lied and take into account her age and the surrounding circumstances that you have heard about. Ultimately it is a matter for you whether you consider her evidence to be reliable."
"Whether, as a matter of discretion, a judge should give any warning and if so its strength and terms must depend upon the contents and manner of the witness's evidence, the circumstances of the case and the issues raised. The judge will often consider that no special warning is required at all. Where, however the witness has been shown to be unreliable, he or she may consider it necessary to urge caution. In a more extreme case, if the witness is shown to have lied, to have made previous false complaints, or to bear the defendant some grudge, a stronger warning may be thought appropriate and the judge may suggest it would be wise to look for some supporting material before acting on the impugned witness's evidence."
"(1) Section 32(1) abrogates the requirement to give a corroboration direction in respect of an alleged accomplice or a complainant of a sexual offence, simply because a witness falls into one of those categories.
(2) It is a matter for the judge's discretion what, if any warning, he considers appropriate in respect of such a witness as indeed in respect of any other witness in whatever type of case. Whether he chooses to give a warning and in what terms will depend on the circumstances of the case, the issues raised and the content and quality of the witness's evidence.
(3) In some cases, it may be appropriate for the judge to warn the jury to exercise caution before acting upon the unsupported evidence of a witness. This will not be so simply because the witness is a complainant of a sexual offence nor will it necessarily be so because a witness is alleged to be an accomplice. There will need to be an evidential basis for suggesting that the evidence of the witness may be unreliable. An evidential basis does not include mere suggestions by cross-examining counsel.
(4) If any question arises as to whether the judge should give a special warning in respect of a witness, it is desirable that the question be resolved by discussion with counsel in the absence of the jury before final speeches.
(5) Where the judge does decide to give some warning in respect of a witness, it will be appropriate to do so as part of the judge's review of the evidence and his comments as to how the jury should evaluate it rather than as a set-piece legal direction.
(6) Where some warning is required, it will be for the judge to decide the strength and terms of the warning. It does not have to be invested with the whole florid regime of the old corroboration rules.
(7) It follows that we emphatically disagree with the tentative submission made by the editors of Archbold in the passage at paragraph 16.36 quoted above. Attempts to reimpose the straitjacket of the old corroboration rules are strongly to be deprecated.
(8) Finally, this Court will be disinclined to interfere with a trial judge's exercise of his discretion save in a case where that exercise is unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense."
The Prosecution's Closing Speech
"…this is where your own experience of life, you know, you're all various ages, you might have children that age. Some of the younger ones might have brothers or sisters that age, nieces, nephews, no doubt you've got a 14-year-old thereabout somewhere in your family social circle. And you know the way… And you were all 14 yourselves at one stage, so you all know how that time of life, when you're just blossoming into adult and puberty is hit big-time perhaps and you know the sort of emotions and things that go on people's lives. So, that's where you use your own experience of life and your own common sense about the way a child might think about this big hard man with his tattoos and his piercings and: Oh, you know, I, he fancies me and all that sort of thing. It's a matter for you, members of the jury, but I want you to think about how a child might think about that type of attention that she was getting from this man."
"Members of the jury, his Honour will direct you of why he isn't coming into that… The defendant isn't coming into the witness box to tell you that, because you think that if any of you were accused, any of the males among you or, in fact, the females, any of your male relatives were accused of something of this nature, you would probably want to get in there and tell the people you didn't do it. But that's a matter for you, members of the jury."
"Now, I'll tell you, when I was 14 a mobile phone had never been invented, but I can tell you if I'd had one and my daddy was going to see messages for some reason, you can rest assured I probably would have cleared all my messages. Would that not be the most natural thing in the world? The same way as it's the most natural thing in the world that as soon as you, and think of your experiences in life, as soon as you get onto a bus or train whatever, or you sit down to have a cup of coffee and you're on your own, is the first thing you do not to get your phone out of your pocket or your bag and have a wee nosey at it to see your messages; is that not what people do nowadays?"
Conclusion