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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Skachill v Procurator Fiscal, Edinburgh [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_131 (25 September 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2012/2012HCJAC131.html Cite as: [2012] ScotHC HCJAC_131 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
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Lord Justice ClerkLord Mackay of Drumadoon Lord Philip
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XJ575/12
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD CARLOWAY, the LORD JUSTICE CLERK
in
APPEAL BY STATED CASE
by
JORDAN SKACHILL
Appellant;
against
PROCURATOR FISCAL, EDINBURGH
Respondent:
_____________ |
Appellant: N Allan, solicitor advocate; George More & Co
Respondent: A F Stewart, QC AD; Crown Agent
25 September 2012
[1] On 28 March
2012, at Edinburgh Sheriff
Court, the appellant was convicted of two offences
committed at Boswell Parkway, Edinburgh
on 23 July 2011.
The first was a contravention of section 38(1) of the Criminal Justice and
Licensing (Scotland) Act
2010, by threatening to assault police officers. No issue is taken with that
conviction. The second was a contravention of section 47(1) of the Criminal
Law (Consolidation) (Scotland)
Act 1995 by having with him an offensive weapon, namely a screwdriver.
[2] The
evidence was in short compass. At about 12.30am,
two police officers went to Boswell Parkway
to trace certain persons said to have been involved in criminal activity,
possibly an assault or a housebreaking. They came across the appellant, who
matched the description that they had been given. When the police approached,
the appellant told them to "f.. off" and lunged aggressively at them. He was
then handcuffed. He was found to have an 8 inch
Phillips screwdriver in his pocket. During the course of the subsequent
struggle, he said that he would stab one of the police officers with the
screwdriver and also enlist the assistance of his father to assault the police
further.
[3] The sheriff
convicted the appellant of the contravention of section 47(1). In explaining
his reasons for doing so, he took into account not only the timing and place of
the offence but also the remark made by the appellant to the police after he
had, in effect, been restrained. The sheriff took the view that the case was "on
all fours" with Normand v Matthews 1993 SCCR 856.
[4] The
argument presented, both at the trial and at the appeal, was that there was
insufficient evidence to demonstrate that the appellant had the screwdriver for
the purpose of causing personal injury. In that regard, of course, the
screwdriver could only be classified as offensive if the Crown demonstrated
that the appellant had the screwdriver with him with the intention of causing
injury to the person; a so-called category 3 item (see Gordon: Criminal
Law (3rd ed) para 30.44). Under reference to R v Jura
[1954] 1 QB 503; Ohlson v Hylton [1975] 2 All ER 490 and Glendinning
v Gill 1987 SCCR 304, it was submitted that the remark about stabbing
the police could not be used as proof of the appellant's purpose at the earlier
time, when he had the screwdriver with him and was free to use it. Put another
way, the remark made after the appellant had been restrained, could not be used
to prove what his purpose had been prior to his restraint.
[5] In
response, the Crown supported the reasoning of the sheriff and his reference to
Normand v Matthews 1993 SCCR 856. Reference was made also to McKenzie
v PF Dundee, High Court, 11 April, unreported.
[6] The
circumstances of this offence involved the finding of the appellant in a public
place in the early hours of the morning with a screwdriver in his possession.
No legitimate reason was advanced for that possession. This distinguishes the
case from both R v Jura [1954] 1 QB 503 and Ohlson v Hylton
[1975] 2 All ER 490 in
which it was established that the accused persons had legitimate reasons for
having the relevant items (a fairground air rifle and a carpenter's hammer)
immediately prior to their use. Similarly, in Glendinning v Guild
1987 SCCR 13, the appellant was carrying a flail on his way to use it at
martial arts class. The court has some sympathy for the view that the case
might not be entirely "on all fours" with Normand v Matthews (supra),
in which the accused had told the police searching him that he had a knife with
him for "protection". However, it is of the view that the sheriff was entitled
to take into account what the appellant had said after being restrained in
order to draw the appropriate inference about the purpose for which he was carrying
the screwdriver in the first place.
[7] In any situation,
it will be a matter of facts and circumstances what legitimate inference can be
drawn from possession coupled with any associated remark. In this case, having
regard to the time and place of the incident, and to the remark, which suggests,
at least on one view, that the appellant had in mind that the screwdriver might
be used for violence, the court is of the view that the sheriff was entitled to
draw the inference which he did. It will accordingly answer the two questions
in the affirmative and refuse the appeal.
DL