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(MIGUEL
DEPAZ |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(THE
QUEEN |
RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 5 of 1983
17th November, 1983
J.A. SMITH Ag. P.
A.L. STAINE J.A.
K. HENRY J.A.
Mr. Dennis
Barrow for the Appellant
Mr. G. Ghandi for the Respondent
Criminal
Appeal against conviction and sentence - Manslaughter -
trial judge misdirecting jury in summing up as to what constitutes
manslaughter - Appeal set aside - conviction for causing
grievous harm substituted.
J
U D G M E N T
The Appellant
was charged with the murder of Victor Milian and on April
15, 1983 convicted of manslaughter and thereafter sentenced
to imprisonment for fifteen years with hard labour. This is
an appeal against the conviction and sentence.
The medical
evidence led by the prosecution indicated that Victor Milian
sustained two separate gunshot wounds, one to the chest and
one to his left elbow. Pellets from the cartridges penetrated
his lung and fractured his elbow. He died as a result of shock
and haemorrhage. Evidence led by the prosecution suggests
that the killing was premeditated but the Appellant's case
is that he fired the first shot in self defence and the second
with the intention of warning the deceased, but with no intention
to kill.
The principal
ground of appeal argued before us was :-
"The
learned trial judge erred in law and misdirected the jury
in saying that manslaughter is killing of a person without
the intention to cause death, the doing of an act which
kills a person without intending to kill him."
In the
course of his submissions counsel for the Appellant pointed
to several passages in the summing up in which the learned
trial judge dealt with the question of manslaughter in a somewhat
confusing way.
The learned
trial judge at the very end of his summing up, having recalled
the jury in order to clarify his previous directions to them,
summed up the possible verdicts open to them as follows: -
"So
if I may sum up the possible verdicts for you-if you come
to the conclusion that the first shot was self defence and
that the second shot was fired at random and hit the deceased
and that that shot could possibly have caused the broken
elbow and that since he did not fire with the intention
to kill but he fired in the direction of the deceased and
did in fact break his elbow knowing that he could possibly
cause harm to the deceased by firing in his direction you
could find him guilty of the offence of maim. If you come
to the conclusion that both shots were justifiable in the
circumstances as self defence-it is something that the defence
itself does not say, then of course you will find him not
guilty. If you find that he fired the second shot not intending
to kill and that he only possibly caused the injury to the
elbow but that that injury contributed to causing death
and that the first shot was in self defence then on the
second shot you could find him guilty of the offence of
manslaughter. If you find that he fired both shots without
justification at an unarmed man you will find him guilty
of the offence of murder."
In arriving
at their verdict of guilty of manslaughter the jury must,
following these directions, be taken to have found that the
appellant fired the first shot in self defence and the second
shot with no intention to kill but that the second shot caused
the injury to the deceased's elbow and contributed to his
death. There was however no real evidence that the injury
to the elbow, if it was the second injury, could have contributed
to the death of the deceased. The doctor's evidence was that
death would have occurred within minutes of the injury to
the chest. The evidence indicated that after the first shot
was fired and the deceased retreated from his verandah into
his house and, according to the Appellant, because the deceased
was shouting he fired the second shot through the door of
the room where the deceased was. It is true that the doctor
in evidence said that the deceased "died of shock and
haemorrhage due to gunshot wounds over chest and left elbow".
But if the first injury was the one to the chest then the
deceased must, having regard to the lapse of time, have been
on the point of death when the second shot was fired. The
injury to the elbow included fractures of it. Accordingly
on what must be taken to have been the jury's finding the
appropriate verdict would be one of causing grevious harm.
There was ample evidence of which they could reach such a
verdict. In the circumstances, we therefore allow the appeal,
set aside the conviction and sentence for manslaughter and
substitute therefore a conviction for causing grevious harm
for which we impose a sentence of 5 years imprisonment with
hard labour.
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