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 £1, 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!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Anderson v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_50 (26 September 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_50.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_50, 2007 SCCR 507, 2007 GWD 31-528, 2007 SLT 1232, [2007] HCJAC 50, 2008 JC 111

[New search] [Help]


APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Justice Clerk

Lord Eassie

Lady Paton

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJAC 50

Appeal No: XC479/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LADY PATON

 

in

 

APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION

 

by

 

COLIN ANDERSON

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

Appellant: Wheatley Q.C., Solicitor-Advocate; Capital Defence Lawyers

Respondent: K. Stewart, Advocate Depute; Crown Agent

 

26 September 2007

 

[1] The appellant was born on 14 November 1962. On 28 April 2005, when aged 42, he was convicted after trial of the following offence:

"On 23 December 2003 at [the locus], you did assault [the complainer] ... and seize hold of her, pull her onto a bed, lie on top of her, place your hand over her face, place your hand inside her clothing and handle her private parts, place your finger in her private parts, remove her trousers and pull her pants aside, and did rape her."

The appellant had not met the complainer (aged 23) before 23 December 2003.

[2] The appellant appeals against conviction. His Note of Appeal is in the following terms:

"There has been a miscarriage of justice in respect that the verdict returned by the jury was one which no reasonable jury, properly directed, could have returned in terms of section 106(3)(b) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 for the following reasons -

(a) the evidence of the complainer, ... the principal and essential Crown

witness in the case, was demonstrated by the overwhelming weight of the vast majority of the other Crown evidence to be so confused, contradictory and untruthful as to render her evidence as a whole, and particularly in relation to the alleged rape, incredible and unreliable; the complainer's evidence was contradicted by the other Crown evidence in respect of inter alia -

(i)                  her degree of intoxication through drink or drugs before, during and after the alleged offence;

(ii)                where, and in whose company, she had been before the alleged offence;

(iii)               her intimacy with the appellant in the period leading up to the alleged offence;

(iv)              the locus of the alleged offence;

(v)                the furniture within the locus of the alleged offence;

(vi)              how she came to be alone with the appellant within the locus of the alleged offence and whether he was already partially unclothed at that time;

(vii)             her description of the alleged rape and her account of how the appellant came to be divested of his clothing during it;

(viii)           how her underwear came to be torn and whether she had made any statement relative thereto to the police.

(b) the evidence of injury and distress relied on by the Crown for

corroboration of the complainer's evidence was equivocal and, in light of the complainer's general incredibility and unreliability, of insufficient materiality, substance and weight to support her allegation of rape."

Discrepancies in the evidence

[3] There were undoubtedly discrepancies in the evidence. In particular:

[4] The locus: The weight of the evidence pointed to the locus as being the locus libelled, namely the appellant's bedroom in his ground floor flat. The complainer's boyfriend J (aged 23 at the date of the trial), and the appellant's neighbours Mr and Mrs M (aged 46 and 34 respectively), gave evidence that J returned to the appellant's flat in the company of others, including the appellant's girlfriend L, to find the front door locked, preventing access. They banged on the door and shouted through the letter-box. The appellant eventually came to the door wearing only jeans, and let them in. L shouted and swore at him, demanding to know what was going on. The complainer was found in the bedroom in a very distressed state. She immediately complained that she had been raped. The appellant for his part told J and Mr and Mrs M that he and the complainer had slept together (i.e had consensual sexual intercourse.) He told Mr M that L had caught them in bed. However the complainer, when giving evidence in court, described a different locus. She denied that the incident occurred in the appellant's flat. She insisted that she had been raped in Mr and Mrs M's flat, which was situated at the top of the neighbouring block. She described a sequence of events (set out below) leading to her presence in their flat at the relevant time. Her evidence relating to the locus and the furniture at the locus was to a large extent contradicted by the evidence of the other witnesses, although she recognised the appellant's bed-head in the photographs.

[5] The sequence of events: There were many discrepancies relating to the sequence of events leading to the sexual intercourse complained of.

(a) The complainer described calling at Mr and Mrs M's top floor flat at about

7.50 p.m. on 23 December 2003. She was accompanied by her boyfriend J and her two-year-old daughter. The purpose of the visit was to collect a kitten for her daughter's Christmas. According to the complainer, Mr and Mrs M were not present in the flat, but the appellant and his girlfriend L were sitting watching TV. Mr and Mrs M's young son introduced the adults. The whole group went briefly to the appellant's flat to get cat-food, returning almost immediately to the top floor flat. Later, J left the flat with the complainer's child to look for Mrs M. The complainer and L were talking together in a bedroom. The appellant came into the bedroom, and sprawled bare-chested on the bed. He began arguing with L, who stormed out of the flat. The appellant then attacked and raped the complainer.

(b) Mr and Mrs M gave different evidence. They described being present in their flat when the complainer arrived at about 5 p.m. with J and the complainer's child to collect a kitten. R, a friend of Mr and Mrs M, was present, but not the appellant or his girlfriend L. At about 6.30 p.m. or 7 p.m., Mr and Mrs M and R took the complainer, J and the child to R's flat, which was situated two floors above the appellant's flat. A party was taking place in R's flat, and the appellant was a guest at that party. Everybody was drinking. According to Mr M, the complainer and the appellant were dancing and getting intimate on the couch, with the complainer sitting on the appellant's lap. According to Mrs M, the complainer was sitting on the appellant's knee having a carry-on. The complainer was kissing the appellant's cheek, and feeling his leg. Both Mr and Mrs M spoke of noticing that the complainer and the appellant had left R's flat, at approximately the same time as J and L left. About half an hour later, Mr and Mrs M heard a banging noise in the tenement close. When they went out to investigate, they found J and L trying to get into the appellant's flat. Mr and Mrs M then witnessed the finding of the complainer in the appellant's bedroom in a distressed state, complaining of rape.

(c) J's evidence about the sequence of events was again different. He described arriving at Mr and Mrs M's flat at about 8 p.m. with the complainer and her child. No-one was in, except Mr and Mrs M's young son. J and the complainer sat and waited. Mrs M then arrived. They had a conversation, during which Mrs M mentioned the appellant. J knew the appellant, and had in the past stayed in his flat. J wished to speak to the appellant. Accordingly J, the complainer, her child and Mrs M went to visit the appellant in his flat. J's recollection was that a party was taking place in the appellant's flat, with vodka and cans of beer. The appellant was there, as was his girlfriend L, several males and another female. J saw no kissing, cuddling or dancing involving the complainer and the appellant. At one stage, L offered to give J some cat-food, and so he, L and the child left to go to L's house. On their return, they could not get into the appellant's flat, as the front door was locked. They banged on the door. L became angry. Eventually the appellant opened the door. He was bare-chested and dressed only in jeans. In his evidence, J denied being in any other flat, such as R's flat.

(d) The appellant did not give evidence at the trial, but his account was heard by

the jury when the tape of his interview with the police was played in court. No reference was made to the contents of the tape or to the tape transcript in the course of the appeal, but it was clear from the extended notes of the cross-examination of the complainer, and from the judge's charge and his report to the Parole Board, that the appellant's position was that he and the complainer were in R's flat; the complainer danced with him, sat on his knee and kissed him; the complainer, J, L, and the complainer's child then accompanied the appellant downstairs to his flat where the complainer continued to drink and kiss the appellant; the complainer then suggested that J and L should take the child and go to L's flat to get cat-food; when that group left the flat, the complainer deliberately locked the appellant's front door from the inside; once in the bedroom, she took off her own clothes and the appellant's clothes; and they then indulged in a variety of consensual sexual activities including oral sex, anal stimulation, and sexual intercourse. According to the appellant, the complainer only changed her tune when the others arrived back at the flat.

[6] The effect of drink and drugs: There were discrepancies in the evidence relating to the effect of drink and drugs. The complainer admitted having taken a couple of drinks of Buckfast and having smoked two or three joints of cannabis, but described herself as very sober at all relevant times. She denied being affected by drink or drugs. Other witnesses gave evidence tending to suggest that the complainer had been smoking cannabis all day, and that she had drunk a considerable amount of Buckfast. The complainer's boyfriend J estimated that she had drunk more than a quarter of a full-sized bottle of Buckfast, although he described her condition after consumption as "sensible". Mrs M described the complainer and J as sharing a bottle of Buckfast. The complainer "had a drink on her". Police Constable Lorna Colville (aged 28), who was called to the locus at 9.30 p.m., described the complainer as smelling of alcohol and barely able to explain what had happened to her, other than to say that she had been to a party and that someone had attacked her. The complainer subsequently told the constable that she had been smoking hash (cannabis) all day. The constable described the complainer as being in a state, with a hazy recollection of events which chopped and changed. The complainer could not say exactly where the events had occurred. Finally, Dr. Ross, the police surgeon who examined the complainer at 10 p.m., noted that the complainer's breath smelt of alcohol.

[7] The ripped underwear: Another significant discrepancy related to the complainer's underwear. Mrs M gave evidence that while speaking to the distressed complainer in the appellant's bedroom, the complainer showed her underwear (a thong) which she said had been stretched when the appellant forcibly pulled the garment during the rape. Mrs M said that during the demonstration, the complainer accidentally ripped the thong. Constable Colville gave evidence that the complainer frankly admitted having accidentally torn the garment when demonstrating to Mrs M. Nevertheless when giving evidence in court, the complainer insisted that the appellant had ripped the garment during the rape. She denied accidentally ripping it herself when speaking to Mrs M. She denied telling Constable Colville that she had done so.

Competing accounts of the intercourse

[8] In addition to the discrepancies in the evidence noted above, the jury were faced with two competing accounts of the sexual intercourse which had admittedly taken place.

[9] According to the complainer, the appellant grabbed her by the clothes at the back of her neck as she tried to leave the bedroom. He pulled her back onto the bed, and in so doing struck her right buttock on the bedside unit. He climbed on top of her and put his hand over her mouth and throat. She tried to struggle and push him off, but did not have sufficient strength. She also had an asthma attack and was unable to breathe properly. The appellant used his other hand to unbutton her jeans, and undo her belt and zip. He used his left foot to pull down her jeans, scratching the inside of her leg with his toe. He pulled and ripped her underwear (a thong) and penetrated her vagina with his fingers. He pulled down his own jeans and penetrated her vagina with his fingers and his erect penis. The complainer told him to stop, but he did not. The appellant only stopped when the group persistently banged and shouted at the front door. When the appellant let the group in, L was angry with the appellant but sympathetic towards the complainer. Mrs M did not believe the complainer, and refused to telephone the police. Faced with this situation, the complainer simply left the flat shortly before 9 p.m., in a very distressed state. Some passers-by called the police. The complainer was taken to a police station, where she gave a statement, and was medically examined and photographed. When looking at the photographs in the course of her evidence, the complainer explained marks on her stomach as having been caused by the appellant trying to undo her jeans and her belt. She attributed a red mark on her leg to his toe-nail scratching her leg as his foot pulled down her jeans. She explained marks on her right buttock as having been caused by being pushed against the bedside unit. The complainer denied ever being in R's flat earlier in the evening. She denied dancing with, or kissing and cuddling the appellant. She denied the appellant's version of events, put to her by the appellant's counsel.

[10] As already mentioned, the appellant did not give evidence. However his account during police interview was placed before the jury by giving them the transcript of his interview and playing the tape in court. Neither transcript nor tape was referred to in the course of the present appeal, but the appellant's position was clear from the cross-examination of the complainer, and the trial judge's charge and Parole Board Report, as noted in paragraph [5] (d) above.

Medical evidence and evidence of distress

[11] The jury also had to consider medical evidence; evidence of distress on the part of the complainer; and the appellant's response to each of these issues during his interview with the police, namely that he could not explain any marks or injuries on the complainer, and that any distress exhibited by the complainer was attributable to her fear of being "battered" (i.e. physically assaulted) by L for having sex with the appellant.

[12] Medical evidence: Dr. Joan Ross, a police surgeon for Central Scotland, gave evidence that she examined the complainer at 10 p.m. on 23 December 2003. The complainer was distressed and tearful. Her breath smelled of alcohol. There was tenderness of the scalp and at the nape of the neck. There were bruises on the right elbow, upper inner right arm, and left elbow. There were red marks on the upper left breast, a bruise on the abdomen, red marks around the waist, tenderness and a recent developing bruise on the right lower back, and a bruise on the right lower buttock. There was an oblique abrasion on the front of the right lower leg, a line of bruising on the inner right lower thigh, and a red linear bruise on the inner left lower thigh. The marks and bruising were considered to be consistent with the time of attack alleged by the complainer, and certainly not to be more than three or four days old. Vaginal examination revealed reddening and tenderness at the posterior part of the vaginal opening, and a one centimetre superficial split of the vaginal opening, suggestive of force or pressure being applied to that area. Dr. Ross stated that such a split would be painful. Dr. Ross further confirmed that the various marks and injuries were consistent with the complainer's account, and explained that a lack of preparedness for intercourse would mean an absence of the normal lubrication caused by vaginal secretions, resulting in a greater likelihood of minor trauma such as reddening. However it was not possible on the medical evidence to state with any certainty whether the encounter had been a drink-and-drug-fuelled consensual act of intercourse, or a non-consensual rape.

[13] Evidence of distress: J gave evidence that, on his return to the appellant's flat, the complainer was sitting on the bed, crying. He said: "It was like a scream; she was actually pulling at her hair". The complainer told J that the appellant had raped her. She was very distressed and upset. Mrs M spoke of finding the complainer in the appellant's bedroom after the group had gained entry to the appellant's flat. She described the complainer as "hysterical ... saying that he [the appellant] raped her". Mr M gave evidence that the complainer was sitting on the bed. She was not crying, shouting, or saying anything. It was L who was shouting at the appellant. Mr M subsequently added that he believed that the complainer started shouting rape. Constable Colville gave evidence that she was called to the scene at 9.30 p.m. on 23 December 2003. She found the complainer in the street with her child and boyfriend. The complainer was in a very distressed state. She was crying, and could not really talk. Dr. Ross, the police surgeon, gave evidence that during the medical examination the complainer was very distressed and tearful.

Submissions for the appellant

[14] Referring to section 106(3)(b) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, Mr. Wheatley Q.C., Solicitor Advocate, submitted that there had been a miscarriage of justice. The verdict of the jury was one which no reasonable jury properly directed could have returned. The overwhelming weight of other evidence showed the complainer's evidence to be confused, contradictory, and untruthful. The complainer was therefore incredible and unreliable. Reference was made to King v H M Advocate, 1999 J.C. 226, at pages 228G - 229B; and AJE v H M Advocate, 2002 J.C. 215; 2002 S.C.C.R. 341. Unlike cases such as King cit. sup., and Donnelly, 2000 S.C.C.R. 861, the present case was not a strong prosecution case where it was very much a jury question what evidence to accept, and what to reject. While there was a sufficiency of evidence, there was no support for the complainer's version of events in the other evidence. The other prosecution witnesses differed from her on almost every point. The other evidence threw great doubt on the complainer's evidence, because it was so different.

[15] Reference was then made to various passages in the evidence, under the headings set out in the Grounds of Appeal. In relation to (i) intoxication, J's evidence showed that there had been more drinking than the complainer acknowledged, and for a longer period. Constable Colville stated that the complainer could barely explain what had happened to her; also the complainer spoke of smoking hash all day, and her recollection was hazy. Mr and Mrs M gave evidence that the complainer had been drinking. Mr Wheatley submitted that all the evidence (other than the complainer's) suggested a greater consumption of drink and drugs than someone who had just had a few sips and a joint.

[16] In the context of (ii) where, and in whose company the complainer had been before the alleged offence, and (iii) her intimacy with the appellant in the period leading up to the alleged offence, Mr. Wheatley drew attention to the discrepancies outlined in paragraph [5] above. The complainer denied any form of contact or intimacy with the appellant prior to the alleged offence. However Mr and Mrs M gave clear evidence of intimate contact between the complainer and the appellant during a party.

[17] In relation to (iv), the locus of the alleged offence, reference was made to passages illustrating the divergence in evidence about the locus, set out in paragraph [4] above. The complainer's insistence that the rape had occurred in Mrs M's flat was unsupported by any other evidence. The complainer gave evidence about the furniture in the room of the alleged offence which did not accord with other evidence.

[18] As for (vi), how the complainer came to be alone with the appellant within the locus of the alleged offence and whether he was already partially unclothed at that time, reference was made to various discrepancies in the evidence, including those referred to in paragraph [5] above.

[19] Finally, reference was made to passages of evidence relevant to the last two sub-headings in the Grounds of Appeal, namely (vii) the complainer's description of the alleged rape and her account of how the appellant came to be divested of his clothing during it, and (viii) how her underwear came to be torn and whether she had made any statement relative thereto to the police: cf. paragraphs [7] to [9] above. Mr. Wheatley submitted that instead of support for the complainer, the evidence demonstrated contradictions.

[20] In conclusion, Mr. Wheatley submitted that, with the exception of the medical evidence, the evidence disclosed no support for the complainer. That was the very situation envisaged by Parliament when enacting section 106(3)(b). On such evidence, no jury properly directed could bring in a verdict of guilty. There was no evidence to give support to the complainer's account, and on major issues, the evidence from more than one witness contradicted the complainer. The case came within the category envisaged in section 106(3)(b). The appeal should be allowed, and the conviction quashed.

Submissions for the Crown

[21] The Advocate Depute submitted that the appeal should be refused. There had been a sufficiency of evidence. No common law submission directed to the quality or character of the evidence had been made at the trial. Counsel for the appellant had made an aggressive jury speech, characterising the complainer's evidence as rubbish and lies. But at the core of the case was the fact that the complainer had given evidence that she had been raped. The jury had heard all the evidence, with their attention being drawn in the speeches and the charge to the difficulties now founded upon by the appellant. The conflict about the locus; the conflict about the torn underwear; the divergences in evidence about times, places, and amounts of drink, were all matters put before the jury for their consideration. The Advocate Depute submitted that those matters were collateral to the essential matter of the alleged rape.

[22] Reference was made to King v HM Advocate, supra,, Lord Justice General Rodger at pp. 228-229. The jury had the benefit of seeing the witnesses, hearing their words, and assessing their demeanour. An appeal court should not lightly interfere, by substituting its own views, which would result in trial by the bench. The jury were entitled to accept parts of what the complainer told them, and to reject other parts. The trial depute had not asked the jury to accept everything that the complainer had told them, but had asked them to discern a central core of truth, and to find the complainer credible and reliable about the essentials. The jury would be entitled to form the view that Mr and Mrs M were ultimately not favourably disposed to the complainer: yet the appellant's submission was in effect requesting that Mr and Mrs M be given a badge of credibility.

[23] Reference was then made to AJE v HM Advocate, supra, particularly the passages at paras [29], [30], and [31] of the Opinion. In that case, there had been an objective identifiable doubt arising on a logical analysis of the evidence. However in the present case, there was no objective error which would compromise the verdict of the jury. Evaluation of demeanour, attitude, and body language in a case such as the present was often as important as the words used. Juries were well qualified to make such an evaluation. Furthermore, unlike the circumstances in AJE v HM Advocate, the complainer's account was corroborated by objective medical evidence. The doctor had identified signs of forcible penetration, and a scratch on the complainer's leg consistent with her account of the appellant using his foot to remove her jeans and in so doing scratching her leg with his toe-nail. There was also evidence of distress.

[24] In such circumstances, any evidence about how the appellant and the complainer came to be together was of limited significance. The jury were entitled to conclude that a rape had occurred, not in Mr and Mrs M's flat, but in the appellant's ground floor flat. There were conflicts in testimony, but it was within the province of the jury to resolve those conflicts and to return a verdict of guilty: cf. the circumstances in Kerr v HM Advocate, 2004 S.C.C.R. 319; Holland v HM Advocate, 2003 S.C.C.R. 616, paras [17] and [53]; Harper v HM Advocate, 2005 S.C.C.R. 245, para [35]; Smith v HM Advocate, [2005] HCJAC 3, para [23]. This was not a case where the sheer volume of contrary evidence overwhelmed the evidence on which the Crown relied. The bulk of the contrary evidence was collateral. The Crown case found support in the objective evidence of the doctor. There was no internal logical inconsistency in the jury's verdict, unlike the circumstances in Rooney v HM Advocate, 2007 SCCR 49, particularly paras [22] and [23].

[25] Ultimately, the matter focused on what happened between the appellant and the complainer in the bedroom. There was a conflict between the complainer's account, and the appellant's account in his police interview. The many conflicts in evidence referred to by Mr. Wheatley were adminicles of evidence which the jury were entitled to disregard if they accepted the complainer on the essentials of the complaint of rape. The prosecution relied on evidence which was necessarily dependent upon what the jury made of it. For example, it was for the jury to consider whether there had been distress, whether that distress was genuine, and whether it was truly referable to what the complainer was complaining of. Those matters were quintessentially matters for the jury. Much of the jury's interpretation might hinge upon the demeanour and attitude of the complainer in the witness-box, in addition to the words she used. It was accepted that there had been great hurdles for the jury to overcome before they could accept the complainer as credible and reliable in respect of her complaint of rape. But in the present case, the jury had felt able to negotiate those hurdles. The court should be reluctant to interfere, save where it could be shown that the verdict could not be consistent with the evidence. This was not such a case. There was no overwhelming body of evidence pointing away from a conviction. On the contrary, there was the complainer's evidence supported by the medical evidence. Matters such as the confusion over the locus and the way in which underwear was torn were not irreconcilable with evidence of rape: rather they presented hurdles which the Crown had to overcome for its case to succeed. The inconsistencies were no more numerous or marked than those in King v HM Advocate, cit. sup.

[26] The Advocate Depute then reviewed the medical evidence and the jury speeches. Both the trial depute and defence counsel had drawn the jury's attention to all the difficulties and discrepancies standing in the way of a conviction. Defence counsel had emphasised the complainer's consumption of drink and drugs; had described the complainer as not credible or reliable and her evidence as "rubbish"; and had invited the jury to use their common sense, for example, in connection with the fact that no marks or injuries were found on or near her mouth, yet she had described the appellant's hand remaining over her mouth during the attack.

[27] The jury had been faced with a classic jury question. They had to evaluate competing accounts, and resolve conflicting bodies of evidence. The complainer's evidence was supported by the medical evidence - for example, the wound in the vagina. In relation to some of the issues relied upon by the appellant, the Advocate Depute pointed out that neither J nor Mr and Mrs M had described the complainer as being obviously drunk, while the police officer's description of the complainer as being barely able to describe what had happened to her was as eloquent of distress and shock as it was of drink and narcotics. In relation to the furniture in the bedroom, the complainer had at least appeared to recognise the head-board of the appellant's bed when shown the photographs of the appellant's flat. As for the conflict of evidence about the torn underwear, that simply presented a further barrier which had to be surmounted before the jury could convict.

[28] In conclusion, the Advocate Depute submitted that the conflicting evidence was not strong enough for the court to take the radical step of granting an application in terms of section 106(3)(b). The test set out in section 106(3)(b) had not been met. The jury could not in the circumstances be described as unreasonable. The appeal should be refused.

Discussion

[29] Section 106(3)(b) of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, as amended by section 17 of the Crime and Punishment (Scotland) Act 1997, provides:

"By an appeal under subsection (1) above a person may bring under review of the High Court any alleged miscarriage of justice, which may include such a miscarriage based on -

... (b) the jury's having returned a verdict which no reasonable jury, properly directed, could have returned."

[30] In King v. H.M. Advocate, supra, at pp 228G to 229A and 229I to 230B, the appeal court observed:

"In seeking to formulate the appropriate test we begin with the words of section 106(3)(b). If we ask in what circumstances there may be the kind of miscarriage of justice which the provision covers, then it is obvious first of all that the jury will have returned a verdict convicting the appellant, since section 106 as a whole deals with appeals by persons who have pled guilty or been convicted by a jury. So the verdict to which section 106(3)(b) refers is a guilty verdict. The miscarriage of justice therefore arises where the jury return a guilty verdict which no reasonable jury properly directed could have returned. The test is objective: the court must be able to say that no reasonable jury could have returned a guilty verdict on the evidence before them. Since in any case where the provision is invoked the jury will ex hypothesi have returned a guilty verdict, their verdict will have implied that they were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty. What the appellant must establish therefore is that, on the evidence led at the trial, no reasonable jury could have been satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty ...

It follows from what we have said about the approach which this court should adopt that, although we require to examine the evidence which was before the jury, it is not for us simply to substitute our view of that evidence for the view which the jury took. In particular, a miscarriage of justice is not identified simply because, in any given case, the members of this court might have entertained a reasonable doubt on the evidence. If that were all that was required, Parliament would have gone far towards replacing trial by jury with trial by the judges of this court. The words in the provision were clearly chosen to avoid any risk of that. Applying the words which Parliament has enacted, we can quash the verdict of a jury only if we are satisfied that, on the evidence led at the trial, no reasonable jury could have been satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty."

[31] In Kerr v H.M. Advocate, supra, the appeal court confirmed that issues of credibility and reliability are pre-eminently for a jury to resolve, and rejected submissions that no jury could have accepted a certain witness's evidence as a proper basis for conviction.

[32] In Harper v. H.M. Advocate, supra, the appeal court again emphasised the limited nature of the court's powers in terms of section 106(3)(b). The court observed at paragraph [35]:

"Following that approach, the question has to be asked whether the verdict in this case, on the evidence before the jury, could have had a rational basis. In that connection it is to be noted that, in a case where there was a body of evidence which was quite inconsistent with the accused's guilt, for example that supporting an alibi, a jury could reasonably reject such evidence precisely because it was inconsistent with Crown evidence which they had decided to accept. No more elaborate explanation for rejection need be sought. In Smith v H.M. Advocate, supra, at paragraph 23, it was indicated that there might be cases in which the evidence against the Crown case might be so overwhelming in comparison with the evidence relied upon by the Crown that no reasonable jury could convict. In these circumstances it becomes necessary to assess the evidence in the present case with a view to identifying whether the jury had a rational basis for their rejection of [certain evidence] ..."

[33] Further, the court stated at paragraph [38]:

"As is apparent from the statutory provisions to be found in section 106 of the 1995 Act, the function of this court is not to conduct a general review of jury decisions and, in the event of its being persuaded that they are mistaken, substituting its own view in place of the jury's verdict. The terms of section 106(3)(b) provide the sole criterion for the assessment of a jury verdict in the light of the evidence. If we were to decide on some general basis that the verdict in this case was unsatisfactory in the light of the evidence, and quash the conviction, we would be engaging in an activity which Parliament has not authorised ..."

[34] Accordingly, applying the test set out in section 106(3)(b) against the background of the authoritative guidance noted above, we can quash the verdict of the jury only if we are persuaded that, on the evidence led at the trial, no reasonable jury could have been satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant was guilty.

[35] At the outset we observe that it is well settled that a jury may accept parts of a witness's evidence, and reject other parts. So the fact that the complainer's evidence was in parts contradicted by other witnesses does not mean that her entire testimony must be rejected, even assuming the contradictory evidence to have been accepted by the jury. Thus the jury in the present case were entitled to conclude that the complainer was wrong in her evidence about the locus. The jury may also have rejected the complainer's evidence as to her sobriety at the time, and the circumstances in which her underwear came to be torn. But equally the jury were entitled to accept other parts of the complainer's evidence. For example, the jury were entitled to accept the evidence of the complainer and J (and thus to reject the evidence of Mr and Mrs M) on the question whether there had been any intimate behaviour such as kissing and cuddling between the complainer and the appellant before the intercourse complained of: cf dicta in Harper v H M Advocate, supra, at para [35].

[36] That said, there were perhaps more discrepancies between the complainer's evidence and the evidence of other witnesses than is commonly found in criminal trials of this kind. However those discrepancies related largely to peripheral matters. Setting aside the complainer's plainly mistaken understanding of the locus of the sexual activity, and analysing the evidence relating to that activity, we consider that there was indeed support for the complainer's account of non-consensual sexual intercourse. As already noted, the intercourse was admitted by the appellant. As to its non-consensual nature, the jury were entitled to rely upon the medical evidence. The medical practitioner found various marks and bruises, and in particular a wound to the vaginal opening, a reddening of the vaginal area, a scratch to the lower limb consistent with its attribution by the complainer to the appellant's toe-nail, and developing bruising to the lower back and buttock, also consistent with the complainer's account of striking her buttock on the bedside unit. Further, there was evidence from a number of witnesses about the complainer's state of distress.

[37] In these circumstances, while at first sight the discrepancies identified by the appellant's solicitor-advocate might appear so striking as to lead one to think that the complainer's testimony was intrinsically unreliable, on closer examination of the evidence it is apparent that the discrepancies related largely to matters preceding the admitted sexual activity. On the crucial question of the consensual or non-consensual nature of that activity there was a significant amount of support for, and corroboration of, the complainer's version. Given that a jury may accept a witness's evidence in part, we cannot say that the jury were not entitled to accept the complainer's account of the non-consensual nature of the sexual intercourse. We are also unable to say that the verdict lacks any rational basis. The verdict can be rationalised on the view that the jury accepted the complainer's account on the core, or crucial, question of consent (for which support could be found in the medical evidence and the evidence of distress) while discarding the complainer's sometimes confused, and sometimes undoubtedly wrong, evidence respecting prior events such as the various movements of people between flats.

[38] We have had the opportunity of reading a transcript of the jury speeches made by the trial depute and the counsel then appearing for the appellant. It is evident that the trial depute was alert to the problems arising from the manifest inconsistencies between the complainer's evidence and the other evidence in the case. The depute acknowledged those inconsistencies, but invited the jury to concentrate on the core or crucial question of consent to the sexual activity, and to analyse the evidence carefully. That was a proper invitation to make, and the appellant's solicitor-advocate made no criticism of the trial depute's speech. The depute then presented the jury with the same analysis as that given by the Advocate Depute in this appeal. The trial defence counsel, for his part, placed great emphasis on the discrepancies in the evidence, to the extent that he submitted to the jury not simply that the complainer was inherently unreliable, but that she was being deliberately and consciously untruthful throughout her evidence. Thus the discrepancies in the evidence were thoroughly explored before the jury by both prosecution and defence. The jury evidently preferred the trial depute's invitation rather than the less discriminating approach suggested by defence counsel. The evidential issues having been presented in this way to the jury, we are fortified in our view that the jury had a rational basis for their decision. We are unable to hold that the ground of appeal in terms of section 106(3)(b) has been made out, or that a miscarriage of justice has occurred.

[39] For these reasons, we refuse the appeal.


BAILII:
Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_50.html