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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Harrison v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_140 (23 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2005/HCJAC_140.html Cite as: [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_140, [2005] HCJAC 140 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
|
Lord Justice GeneralLady Cosgrove Lord Sutherland |
[2005HCJAC140]Appeal No: XC462/04OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by THE LORD
JUSTICE GENERAL in NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST
CONVICTION by MARK HARRISON Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Respondent: A. Stewart, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent
[1] The
appellant along with a co-accused Andrew Stewart Malone stood trial on a charge
of murder. According to the terms of
that charge, on
[2] The
co-accused lived with the appellant in the top flat of a four-storey building
in
[3] At
about
[5] It
is not in dispute that there was sufficient evidence to entitle the jury so to
convict the appellant of culpable homicide.
There was evidence that, prior to being interviewed by the police, he volunteered the remark to a police officer: "Andy
Malone will speak up now he knows I have been detained. He tried to stab him in the arse but missed".
The appellant was interviewed by the police on two occasions on the morning of
"DC When both you and Andrew left your house,
did you see Andrew pick up a knife or have in his hand a knife in your house.
A He had a knife in the house, yea
DC Is that just as you ran out of your
house, you both go down the stairs.
A He had it on him before we went out
DC Did you see him with the knife as you
were going out of the house
A Aye, he
was the first one out the door but he had it on him before a couple of seconds
before we left".
The trial judge states that the
appellant went on to say that he had seen the co-accused pick something up from
the arm of the chair or the table as he had told the co-accused that the
deceased was at the door. He also
admitted fighting with, and striking, the deceased. We should perhaps add that in the course of
one of his police interviews the appellant stated that at some point earlier in
the day he said to Claire Petrie that he was going to smash the deceased's head
"all over the place" (which could account for the jury including the evincing
of malice and ill will in the conviction).
[6] In
his evidence
[7] The
appellant gave evidence that in the course of the day he had consumed a
quantity of valium and prescription methadone.
The co-accused did not look happy about the information which Claire
Petrie had given about the deceased assaulting her, but he did not think that
he would injure the deceased. He did not
see the co-accused pick up anything.
Claire Petrie told him and Murray to go downstairs after the co-accused,
which they did. On the way down he was
delayed by falling. Looking down the stair
he saw the co-accused struggling with the deceased, rolling about on the ground
and then getting to their feet. He saw
the co-accused punch the deceased, and the deceased
run away. At no point did he see the
co-accused with a knife or any weapon.
For his own protection he had taken downstairs an ornamental sword,
which was in its scabbard and wrapped in two bin bags. He was concerned that the deceased might have
friends there. He denied using the sword
or becoming involved at all in the fight.
It may be noted that Claire Petrie stated to the police that she
remembered the appellant stating that he had hit the deceased with the
sword. In evidence she said that she
accepted that this was true. The
appellant gave evidence that Claire Petrie's statement was a lie. The appellant
also gave evidence that when the co-accused was using a knife in the kitchen at
about
[9] The
trial judge gave the jury general directions as to the law of concert in terms
to which no exception is taken (pages 31-33 of the transcript). He asked them to consider whether there was a
common criminal purpose; and, if so, what it was. They should then consider separately in
relation to each accused whether he was a party to that common criminal purpose
and, if so, to what extent. He reminded
them that the Crown case was that the evidence demonstrated a joint or common
purpose to assault the deceased with a lethal weapon and that both accused were
guilty of murder. He then directed the
jury, in accordance with the statement of the law in Mackinnon v H M Advocate 2003 SCCR 224 at paragraph 32, that
where an accused actively associates himself with a common criminal purpose
which is or includes the taking of human life or carries the obvious risk that
human life will be taken, he may be guilty of murder even if the fatal injury
is inflicted by the other person.
[10] At page 34 the trial judge went on to say:
"Where the
position is that the accused is proved to have participated in some less
serious common criminal purpose than the one I've just identified - that is to
say the one that includes the taking of human life or the obvious risk that
human life will be taken - if there is a less serious common criminal purpose
even one that involves weapons but perhaps... for example, simply to frighten a
person, then the accused person who participates in such a purpose and knows
that weapons are being carried albeit for a limited purpose then that
accused may be guilty of culpable
homicide if in the course of that more limited purpose the person is killed and
in that circumstance again it does not matter who inflicted the fatal injury,
both are guilty acting in concert".
At page 35 the trial judge added
that if they did not find it proved that there was a common criminal purpose at
all, they had to look at the actings of each of the accused individually and
determine his individual responsibility without reference to the common
criminal purpose. He then referred to evidence founded on by the Crown and the
defence in regard to the appellant.
[11] For the appellant Mr Shaffer submitted that the trial judge's
charge was deficient in that he failed to direct the jury that, before
convicting the appellant, they required to be satisfied that he was aware that
the co-accused had a knife when he left the flat and went downstairs. The fact that the jury did not convict the
appellant of murder suggested they were not satisfied that, so far as he was
concerned, there was an obvious risk that the deceased was likely to be
severely wounded. There was no evidence
of any antecedent concert. There was
abundant evidence that the co-accused had snatched up the knife and left the
flat. Events had unfolded suddenly. There was no evidence that the two accused
planned or discussed the use of the knife for a limited purpose, which might
have entitled the jury to take a sympathetic view of the appellant's
involvement. (As for the co-accused, it
could be inferred that the jury considered that he must have turned a blind eye
to such a risk, rejecting his account that he sought only to frighten the
deceased). It was conceivable that the
jury did not consider that the appellant had seen the knife being taken, but
convicted him because he had taken the sword with him. However, he said that he had taken it on the
spur of the moment. He might have
intended to confront the deceased, using it as a stick, or punching and kicking
him, whereas the co-accused went on to stab the deceased. As Lord Moncrieff pointed out and illustrated
in Doherty v HM Advocate 1945 J C 89
at page 96, secondary responsibility for a criminal act arises only in cases of
reasonable expectation. There was
evidence that Murray, who ran downstairs with the appellant and saw no weapon,
said to the police that he had been intending to fight and "kick
[14] The appellant's appeal against conviction is accordingly
refused.