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(MARK
AUGUST |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(THE QUEEN |
RESPONDENT
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Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 22 of 1983
11 May, 1984
SIR JOHN SUMMERFIELD, P.
Appeal
- Criminal law - Murder - Common Intention - Joint Venture
- Question of fact - Evidence - Misdirection of jury - Whether
on a charge of murder a verdict of guilty of unlawful harm
can be returned - Summing up satisfactory - Appeal dismissed.
J U D G M E N T
The Appellant
was charged with three others, including one by the name of
Bailey, with the murder of Walford Fuller. The four person
so charged will be referred to as the four accused.
The jury
was unable to agree on a verdict in relation to Bailey. The
Appellant was convicted of manslaughter and sentenced to 8
years imprisonment with hard labour. One of the others was
convicted of unlawful harm and sentences to 9 months imprisonment
with hard labour. This appears to contravene section 131,
of the Indictable Procedure Ordinance. With remission this
person will have served his sentence. The fourth was acquitted.
The prosecution
case was that the Appellant and the three others were acting
in convert in murdering Fuller, based on the following facts.
At about
2:15 a.m. in the morning of 24 May 1983 there was an altercation
between Fuller and Bailey in the course of which Fuller assaulted
Bailey and threatened him with a shotgun. No doubt Bailey
and others were incensed by this attack. It led to general
alarm among the bystanders which attracted the attention of
a police officer assisting a doorman at The Place Disco. The
police officer went into the street where he saw Fuller coming
from the direction of the Bonfire Club with the shotgun in
his hand. The police officer went up to Fuller and told him
to hand over the gun. Fuller refused. The police officer took
hold of the gun and a struggle started between them. During
the struggle Fuller fell to the ground on his back and the
police officer dropped to his left knee. On the ground they
were tussling and twisting with the gun until an ex police
officer came up, took hold of the gun and jerked it out of
their hands. The ex police officer walked away with the gun
and as he did so the four accused circled the police officer
on the ground and Fuller who was still lying on his back on
the ground. The four accused then started to stamp Fuller
with their feet and punch him with their fists as he lay on
the ground.
In less
than two minutes the four accused moved off and as they did
so the police officer saw Bailey with an 8 to 12 inch butcher's
knife in his right hand. The police officer went up to Bailey
who began to wave the knife in front of the police officer
to prevent him from taking it. The police officer did not
see any blood on the knife. The police officer then heard
something and, leaving Bailey, went to where Fuller's car
was parked. While he was trying to take the knife from Bailey
he had seen Fuller get up off the street and wobble towards
his car. When the police officer reached the car he saw Fuller
sitting behind the steering wheel with his left foot on the
ground. He was bleeding from the upper part of his body.
Fuller
was hastily taken to the hospital where he died within five
minutes after arrival from haemorrhage from a large stab wound
in his chest which had penetrated the heart. The wound was
consistent with having been made by a knife. Fuller also had
a small stab wound on the back of his neck.
In an
exculpatory statement to the police the Appellant said that
it was Bailey who stabbed Fuller. He described the knife and
said he had seen Bailey with it stuck behind his right side
inside his trouser. He did not say exactly when he saw it.
There
is no evidence that anyone saw any of the four accused use
a knife during the less than 2 minutes attack on Fuller with
feet and fists.
The learned
trial judge gave extensive direction in common intention,
joint venture and the responsibility of the participants for
the acts of the others where there is a common design. In
some respects his direction were repetitious. At al events
they could have left no doubt on the minds of the jury of
his directions in law in that regard. Some of the more important
directions as they relate to the Appellant were:
"Now
since the facts in this case raised that first, if you have
any doubt, reasonable doubt, that one or more of these accused
intended to kill - now it is quite possible that one intended
to kill and the others did not- if you find that one or
more of them did not intend to kill but that they nevertheless
participated in the attack on the basis of a common intention
or with a common purpose to cause harm to Walford Fuller
then those person who did not intend death, would, since
death resulted from the attack, if you are satisfied and
feel sure that death resulted form this attack on Walford
Fuller while he was on the ground, if you are satisfied
of that, then those person who attacked him even intending
to cause only unlawful harm, not death, would be guilty
of the offence of manslaughter of they knew death could
result from that causing of unlawful harm by them in furtherance
of a common intention to cause harm. So that of- what that
means is that if all of them participated in the attack,
all or maybe two or more of them with a common intention,
that is, an intention common to them to cause harm only
to Walford Fuller and you are satisfied so that you feel
sure that death followed from attack them those person who
participated even with the intention of only causing harm
are guilty of manslaughter if they knew death could result
from their joint attack on Walford Fuller."
At a
later stage he said:
"
the prosecution's case is that these accused attached Walford
Fuller with a common intention of causing the death of Walford
Fuller, that is, the prosecution is saying that they all
intended to kill Walford Fuller. Now it is for you to decide:
(1)
whether there was a common intention.
If you
decide that there was a common intention it is then for you
to decide what that common intention was. If you find it was
a common intention to kill then of course it would be murder
but if you find that the common intention was something less
such as to cause unlawful harm them as I have told you already
since death resulted from the attack, the offence that would
be guilty of wound be manslaughter. Now what is meant by common
intention? Common intention is a common purpose or a common
design common to those person who participated in the attack."
again, a little later he elaborated thus:
"What
you have to do is examine what each accused has done, what
your are satisfied each accused has done, and decide whether
that indicates to you with certainty that each of them intended
to cause harm to Walford Fuller. If that was so then all
four has a common intention. If each of them had that intention
to cause harm to Walford Fuller then the purpose with which
the four of them, or two, three of them or two of them launched
the attack would be common purpose. There is no requirement
of agreement. What is required is that the purpose of the
intention should be common- to them- the people who participated.
So for example, all the evidence shows that an incident
did occur between Fuller and Bailey. Now if you are satisfied
so that you feel sure that the second, third or fourth accused
participated in the attack on Walford Fuller then you must
give your mind to the question of whether each had an intention,
whether each intended on his own or whether the three of
them were- whether the intention that the three of them
had was to attack the person who had slapped their friend.
If their intentions was to hit or strike at- when I say
strike at I don't mean physically - I mean to get at, to
kick or punch the man who had earlier slapped their friend
Bailey, if each of them had that intention, then there would
be a common intention between them to do that. So it is
not necessary that they should have consulted with each
other. Each forms an opinion, an intention and acts on it.
If you are satisfied that the intention formed by them was
a common to them, namely to attack Fuller, then you have
a common intention. If you are satisfied that two or more
of these accused had a common intention to attack Fuller
then you will go on the next question and try to decide
what that common intention was.
Was the
common intention one to kill Fuller or was the common intention
only to cause harm to Fuller? That is a question of fact that
you have to decide by looking at the evidence."
There
were further directions in a similar vein which were to some
extent repetitious.
The learned
trial judge clearly left to the jury the question of the scope
of the common intention as well as the intent of each of the
four accused at the relevant time and the extent of the participation
of each.
He did
not in so many words say that a participant could not be convicted
of an offence beyond the scope of the common design but that
was implicit in his positive directions explaining and limiting
what they could be convicted of in the various permutations
of intent and participation in furtherance of a joint venture
or common design.
Of course,
if two assailants act in concert in an attack on a victim
one intending to kill or cause dangerous harm to the victim
by stabbing him and the other intending only unlawful harm
there is still a common intention between the two at the level
of causing unlawful harm to the victim because common to both
intents is the intent to cause unlawful harm, the more serious
intent subsuming the lesser.
The learned
judge did not approach his directions on the basis of what
the consequences of a missing element would be in the several
permutations of facts that the jury might find. In effect
what he did was to deal with the possibilities in descending
order of seriousness. He explained what the consequence was
if a certain set of facts alleged by the prosecution were
proved. Starting with murder he explained what facts put forward,
if accepted, would justify a conviction of murder in relation
to one or more accused. He then went on to explain that if
the findings of fact fell short of those necessary to support
a charge of murder in relation to any accused or if the jury
had any reasonable doubt on any relevant fact then the case
fell short of murder and that the jury could consider the
offence of manslaughter, setting out the facts which would
justify a conviction of that offence in relation to any accused
person. Again he made clear that if they had any reasonable
doubt as to any relevant fact which would support the offence
of manslaughter the case fell short of that offence and the
jury could then consider the offence of unlawful harm setting
out the facts which would support that offence. In this respect
the learned Judge was wrong because a verdict of guilty of
unlawful harm cannot be returned on a charge of murder. Section
131 of the Indictable Procedure Ordinance makes this clear.
The general provision, section 141, cannot override the specific
provisions of section 131. To be fair it is only right to
point out that this court was in error in relation to the
same point in Criminal Appeal No. 5 of 1983 - Miguel Depaz
v. The Queen - because section 131 had not been brought
to notice.
However,
this misdirection is of no consequence in relation to the
Appellant as he was not convicted of unlawful harm. Had he
been so convicted then this court would be obliged to quash
the conviction and set aside the sentence since in the circumstance
of this case, the only verdicts open to the jury on the charge
of murder were guilty as charged, not guilty as charged but
guilty of manslaughter or not guilty. The misdirection is
relevant to the conviction of the co-accused, Louis Gladden,
and this court would certainly entertain an application to
appeal out of time from him.
In my
view it is not for a trial judge to regale a jury with an
exhaustive thesis on any branch of the law he is directing
them on. His duty is to explain the law as it applies to the
facts of the case in a manner which will make his explanations
meaningful to them. Usually there is no set formula for a
direction; each judge has his own distinctive style and approach.
The function of this Court is to determine whether there is
any danger of there having been misinformed or misled by any
direction. One should not pick at a summing up and criticize
odd passages on the grounds that they do not conform to some
direction with which one is more familiar or as it appears
is some authority. What matters is the overall effect of the
summing up and the impression it would leave on the minds
of the jury on the essentials on which they should be directed.
On should also have faith and confidence in out institutions,
such as the jury, and credit them with intelligence and common
sense in following the purport of summing up.
In my
view the learned Judge explained the law as it applied to
this case in manner which would have been meaningful to an
intelligent jury. There are, of course, other approaches to
the same directions, but in the event, one has to decide if
the jury could have been in any doubt as to what they had
to find as facts to justify the main verdicts of guilty open
to them. The summing up was punctuated with numerous reminders
of the burden of proof in relation to such verdicts, with
appropriate exhortation to give the accused the benefit of
any reasonable doubt the jury might entertain in relation
to such verdict which would then fall away by reason of that
doubt.
The learned
Judge reviewed the evidence exhaustively and when he came
to the case against the appellant he put it thus:
"Now
the evidence against the second accused is very briefly
what both Goldson and Brackett say that the second accused
was one of those who kicked and stamped, kicked, stamped,
punched Fuller while he was on the ground and after the
gun been taken away by Oshon. If you are satisfied so that
you feel sure that August did take part in kicking and punching
Fuller, you will also bear in mind the contents of August's
statement, these statements will be made available to you
to look at. Two things are relevant in relation to August
in that statement. One is that he knew Bailey had a knife.
That does not mean that Bailey had a knife. He knew someone
of them had a knife. It may not have been Bailey. It may
even have been himself but he knew someone of the assailants
had a knife and he knew that Fuller was stabbed in the incident.
Now in his statement to the police and in Court, August
said that he "took no part in this hassle". That
is his position. It is for you to consider that against
the prosecution's evidence and decide whether you are satisfied
so that you feel certain that he did take part in the incident
them you must also decide with what intention he took part
in the incident. Did he take part in the incident with the
intention of causing unlawful harm to Bailey or with the
intention of - to Fuller, or with the intention of killing
Fuller? If he took part in it wit the intention of causing
unlawful harm to Fuller and you are satisfied so that you
feel sure that he knew a knife could be used and death resulted
from this attack on Fuller then if you are also satisfied
so that you feel sure that he, August, participated with
a common intention with whoever caused the death of Fuller,
August would be guilty of the offence of manslaughter."
And
later:
"Now
in relation to the accused August if you are satisfied so
that you feel sure that August participated in an attack
on Fuller while he was on the ground in furtherance of a
common intention you will again examine whether that intention
was to cause death or to cause unlawful harm. If the intention
was to cause death he would be equally guilty of murder
even if he himself did not inflict the fatal wound. If the
intention was only to cause harm to Fuller and you are satisfied
and feel sure that August knew a knife could be used that
Fuller died in the course of attack then Bailey will be
guilty - I mean, sorry, August would be guilty of the offence
of manslaughter. If however, you have a reasonable doubt
as to whether he had any - a common intention with the other
accused, that is, if you are- if you have a reasonable doubt
as to whether he was acting along with them on a common
purpose or that he was acting on his own then you will give
him the benefit of that doubt and conclude that he was acting
on his own. In that even he will only be responsible for
the acts that he himself did which is to kick and punch
and therefore will be liable only for unlawful harm. If
you have any reasonable doubt that he participated in the
attack at all you will give him the benefit of the doubt
and acquit him of all charges."
In my
view that is unexceptional and leaves all questions of fact
firmly in the hands of the jury.
The law
is summed up succinctly in Archbold 40th Edition (the latest
available) at paragraph 2535 in these words:
"Where
two adventurers embark on a joint enterprise, each is liable
for acts done in pursuance of it, and also for the unusual
consequences of such acts, provided that they arise from
the execution of the joint enterprise; but if one of the
adventurers goes beyond what has been tacitly agreed as
the scope of the enterprise, his co-adventurer is not liable
for the consequences of that extraneous act. Where, therefore,
two person tale part in a concerted attack, and one departs
completely from the scope of the common design, and having
formed a sudden intent to kill or cause grievous bodily
harm, uses a weapon in a manner in which the other party
had no reason to suppose he would act, and so causes death,
or other party is not necessarily liable to be convicted,
and may be entitled to an acquittal, of manslaughter: R.
v Anderson; R. v Morris 91966) 2 Q.B. 110: 50 Cr. App. R.
216. The headnote in R. v Betty (see s 2539,
post), should be regarded as possibly too wide: ibid.
In R.
v Reid (1976) 62 Cr. App. R. 109, C.A. the court in a
reserved judgment applied the distinction drawn in R. v.
Anderson and Morris, ante, between a "mere unforeseen
consequence of an unlawful act" (for which the accused
would be liable) and "an overwhelmingly supervening event
which is of such character that it will relegate into history
matters that would otherwise be looked on as causative factors".
Dismissing the appeal, the court in R. v . Reid said:
"when two or more men go out together in joint possession
of offensive weapons such as revolvers and knives and the
circumstances are such as to justify an inference that they
very least they intend to do with them is to cause fear in
another, there is, in our judgment, always a likelihood that
will use his weapon in some way which will cause death or
serious injury. If such injury was not intended by the others,
they must be acquitted of murder, but having started out in
an enterprise which envisaged some degree of violence, albeit
nothing more than causing fright, they will be guilty of manslaughter.
See R. v Larkin (1943) 29 Cr. App. R. 18".
And at
paragraph 2539 (although it is suggested that in Betty's case
the headnote is possible too wide) the principle is explained
thus:
"Where
two person were jointly charged with manslaughter arising
out of a fight, and the evidence showed that a concerted
attack by them started without any intention of killing
or causing grievous bodily harm in the mind of either of
them, but that, as the fight developed, one of them conceived
in his mind an intention to kill or cause grievous bodily
harm or did some act outside the concerted scope, and that
the death of the victim was caused thereby, the fact that
that person was in law guilty of murder did not absolve
the person who did not go outside the scope of the concerted
attack from liability to be convicted of manslaughter:
R. v Betty (1963) 48 Cr. App. R. 6."
After
the jury retired they returned with a request for further
directions in relation to Bailey. In the course of giving
those directions the learned Judge again dealt briefly with
each accused. In relation to the Appellant he said:
"In
relation to august if you are satisfied and feel sure that
August participated in the attack with common intention
with one more of the other accused to cause unlawful harm
and you are satisfied and feel sure that August knew that
one or more of the others had a knife then he would be guilty
of manslaughter. If he did not participate in the act he
would of course not be guilty of any offence. If he participated
in the attack but not on a common intention with the others
and all he did was to kick and punch the fallen Fuller then
he would only be guilty of causing unlawful harm."
That was
not a full as the earlier directions. It is unfortunate that
he failed to remind them that they should be satisfied that
he knew that he failed to remind them that they should be
satisfied that he knew that the knife could be used but he
had made that point time and again in his summing up and the
jury must have had it entrenched in their minds. In any event,
at that stage, they were only concerned about directions in
relation to Bailey. Although he said "If he did not participate
in the act he would of course not be guilty of the offence,"
that was not intended to indicate that that was the only way
be could be relieved of liability. This is apparent from the
subsequent sentence and his frequent reminders that if there
was a reasonable doubt as to any of the facts which would
support a verdict of guilty of an offence that offence had
not been established.
Taken
as a whole I cannot see that the jury would be misled or confused
in relation to the Appellant or that there could be any miscarriage
of justice.
That dispose
of grounds 1(b) and (c).
As to
ground 1(a) it is true that an no point in his summing up
did the learned Judge put a definition of manslaughter before
the jury. However, he did explain what facts had to be proved
to establish the offence of manslaughter in the context of
this case. In his lengthy summing up it emerged clearly that
the difference between murder and manslaughter was the ingredient
of an intention to kill in the former. The jury must have
known from his summing up what had to be proved to establish
the offence of manslaughter as appears, inter alia, from the
passages quoted. There is no substance in this ground.
It is,
perhaps, unfortunate that evidence emerged of what one accused
said about another in statements to the police, including
statements of this kind in relation to the Appellant. However,
the learned Judge made very clear to the jury in a lengthy
direction, and more than once, that such statement could only
be evidence against the maker of the statement and not against
any co-accused. The jury could have been in no doubt as to
their approach to any such statement.
In my
view there is no substance in any of the other grounds of
appeal.
The learned
Judge reviewed the evidence against the Appellant extensively
and in unexceptional terms. He also place the essence of the
Appellant's defence, in his unsworn statement, before the
jury twice, reminding them that in that statement he disclaimed
any knowledge of the possession of a knife by Bailey or anyone
else, albeit that he did not remind them of this when dealing
with the prosecution case.
There
was certainly evidence before the jury on which the jury could
properly reach the verdict it did. Although there is some
room for criticism in relation to some of the approached to
the directions I am satisfied that there could have been no
miscarriage of justice and that taken as a whole, the summing
up was satisfactory.
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