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(JACK
CABRAL JR. |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(REGINA
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RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 7 of 1977
5th November, 1977
MICHAEL HOGAN, P.
CLIFFORD INNISS, J.A.
W. A. H. DUFFUS, J.A.
Criminal
Appeal against conviction and sentence for three counts
of aggravated burglary and one count of housebreaking -
Grounds of Appeal - Appellant alleging that he had an unfair
tiral because Judge had passed a note to the Jury whenJury
went to deliberate and that Jury had taken three days to
arrive at a verdict - Ground not supported by evidence -
Appellant alleging that Prosecutor had misled Jurors at
trial knowing Appellant could not defend himself because
he had no Solicitor - Appellant failing to make submissions
in support of this Ground - Appellant alleging that trial
Judge had misled the Jurors at trial by directing the Jurors
to bring a guilty verdict - Record of summing up revealing
trial Judge had properly and correctly directed the Jury
as to presumption of innocence of Appellant, prosecution's
burden of proof, that the Jurors were sole judges of fact,
that an unsworn statement carried less weight that a statement
on oath because it could not be tested by cross-examination
- Effect of unsworn statement made by an accused person
from the dock - Trial Judge misdirecting Jury as to what
had to be proved in order to sustain the allegation of aggravated
theft in each of first three counts - Misdirection held
not to have prejudiced Appellant as on the evidence Jury
would have found him guilty of stealing all the outboard
motor engines if it found that he stole one of the motor
engines - Effect of misdirection - Indictment - Several
counts - When is it unproper to prefer several counts -
Need to avoid duplicity - Particulars of offence of Aggravated
Theft alleging stealing occurred from a "building"
- The word "building" not within the six categories
of places from which a theft would amount to Aggravated
Theft - Section 155(b) of the Criminal Code - Effect of
error - Appeal against conviction and application for leave
to appeal against sentence dismissed.
J U D G M E N T
On 5th
July, 1977, Appellant (to whom for convenience we will generally
refer as the Accused) was convicted before the Supreme Court
of Belize on three counts of Aggravated Theft and a fourth
of Housebreaking. The first count related to the theft of
one 20 horse power outboard motor, the property of Oscar O'Brien,
the second to the theft of one 25 horse power outboard motor,
the property of Bernado Corosica and the. Third to the theft
of one 20 horse power outboard motor and one outboard motor
gas tank, the property of David Teck, in each case from a
building which was the warehouse of the National Fishermen
Cooperative. The fourth count related to the breaking of the
building of that Co?operative. In respect of these convictions
the Accused was sentenced to two years imprisonment with hard
labour on each of the first three counts and three years imprisonment
with hard labour on the fourth count, all the sentences to
run concurrently. He now appeals against all these convictions
and sentences.
There
was evidence that the National Fishermen Co?operative Limited
owned a building at Angel Lane, Belize City, which included
a storeroom used for the storage of outboard motors belonging
to members of the Co?operative. There was also evidence that
between 4:30 and 5p.m. on 7th March, 1977, David Teck, a member
of the Co?operative, left his outboard motor and gas tank
in the storeroom. Four days before that another member, Oscar
O'Brien, had left his outboard motor in the storeroom; and
yet another member, Bernard Corosica, was keeping his outboard
motor there in the month of March, 1977, from an unspecified
day.
There
was no door leading from the main building to the storeroom.
The entrance to the storeroom, or warehouse, was a door facing
the Belize River. It was a metal door, which was fastened
by drawing it down from above and securing it by a padlock
on each side at the bottom.
At about
1 a.m. on the morning of 8th March, 1977, Kenneth Locke, watchman
for the Co?operative, tested the padlocks by pulling them,
and found them intact. Between 3 and 4 a.m., however, when
on his next round of inspection, he found the locks broken
but the door still shut. He reported the matter to the Police
and waited until they arrived.
Witness
Locke knew the Accused. That night, while on duty he had seen
the Accused, who was a fisherman and familiar with the Co?operative
building, bring a machine to be kept in custody. It was then
7 p.m. He later saw the Accused between 12:00 and 1:00 on
one of the boats which were close to the building.
The Police
arrived at the Co?operative building at about 5 a.m. on 8th
March, 1977. Later that morning Sgt. Andrews also visited
the scene. After inspecting the door to the storeroom and
finding it broken in a way which indicated that a hacksaw
or file had been used to break the locks, Sgt. Andrews, on
information received, went in search of the Accused. He found
him at the California Club, and invited him to the C.I.B.
Office. There, not having made up his mind to charge Accused,
Sgt. Andrews questioned him. As a result, Accused said he
would show him where he had hidden some machines.
Accused
took him to a house at the end of Caesar Road which was closed
and had a padlock on the door. No one was in it. It had broken
sidings through which Sgt. Andrews saw 3 Johnson outboard
motors and a gas tank.
Sgt. Andrews
made enquiries for the owner and learnt he was one Joe Almendarez,
but he could not find Almendarez that day. Sgt. Andrews returned
to the house that day with the Accused who, on Andrews' directions,
took the motors and the gas tank out of the house through
a window at the back, which was loose.
The motors
and gas tank were deposited at the C.I.B. Accused then made
a brief written statement after caution which simply related
that on 8th March, 1977, he had taken the Police to a small
house in Yarborough where three outboard motors were and had
assisted them to take the motors out of the house.
The motors
and the gas tank were subsequently identified by Teck, O'Brien
and Corosica as being those they had left in the Co?operative
Storeroom, and which were missing from it.
Sgt. Andrews
had on 8th March left a message for Joe Almendarez with a
neighbour. This was passed to Almendarez when the latter returned
from work with Prosser Fertiliser and the next morning Almendarez
went to the Police Station and gave a statement.
According
to his testimony the Accused, whom he knew, had come to his
house one morning in March about 3:00 to 4:00 a.m. and asked
his permission to leave three machines there. Knowing Accused
was a fisherman and thinking nothing of it, Almandarez allowed
the Accused to leave the machines in his house and went to
his work at Prosser Fertiliser. He paid no attention because
to him it was getting late. He said he did not know at the
time the machines were left that they were stolen and that
had he done so, he would not have allowed Accused to leave
them there.
In his
Defence, Accused gave an unsworn statement from the dock.
In it he denied having stolen the machines, and explained
his knowledge of their whereabouts by saying that one morning
in March, Joe Almendarez had taken him to Almendarez' house
and asked him if he could get somebody to buy the three machines
which he saw there. Accused agreed and went to the California
Club where the Police met him.
It was
as a result of the threat of force being used upon him that
he took the Police to Almendarez' house. The suggestion that
the Police had threatened to use force upon him was not put
to Sgt. Andrews in cross?examination. Nor did Accused put
to Joe Almendarez in cross?examination any suggestion that
Almendarez had stolen the machines or that he had asked the
Accused to sell them for him.
The Accused
has stated four grounds in support of his Appeal. In the first
he contended that he had had an unfair trial.
Apparently
in support of this ground, although not having expressly alleged
it, he said that the Judge had passed a note to the Jury after
they had retired to consider their verdict and insisted that
they had been locked down for three days before they gave
their verdict.
The allegation
relating to the note was unsupported by any affidavit, and
the Director of Public Prosecutions, who appeared for the
Prosecution at the trial, assured the Court that he knew nothing
of any note from the Judge to the Jury. With regard to the
length of time the Jury were in retirement, the Record states
at p. 15 that on 5th July, 1977, the Jury retired at 11:25
a.m., and returned to Court at 3:10 p.m., and gave their verdict,
all on the same day. This accords with the recollection of
the Director of Public Prosecutions as expressed to us.
Unsupported
in any way, as it is, this allegation seems to us an afterthought
and not to merit serious consideration.
Accused
made no submissions in support of his second ground of appeal,
which was that the Prosecutor had misled the Jurors knowing
that the Accused could not defend himself because he had no
Solicitor.
In his
third ground of appeal, the Accused alleged that the learned
Trial Judge had misled the Jurors while he addressed the Court.
Apparently, in support of this ground, he submitted that the
Judge had told the Jurors to bring in a verdict of guilty.
Nowhere in the record of the summing?up have we found any
such direction to the Jury. On the contrary, it appears from
the Record that the Judge told the Jury that the burden of
proving the charges rested on the prosecution and that the
Accussed was presumed to be innocent until the prosecution
satisfied them so that on the evidence they felt sure of his
guilt. He added, inter alia, that whenever they had a real
doubt, they should resolve it in favour of the Accused. He
also told the Jury that they were the sole Judges of the facts
of the case and were not obliged to accept any opinion on
fact from anyone, not even from the Judge. Further, he went
through the Prosecution evidence at some length and also put
to the Jury the Defence as stated in the Accused's unsworn
statement from the dock, telling them, however, correctly
(see per Shaw J. in Joseph John Coughlan (1977) 64 Cr.
App. R. 11 at p. 17), that an unsworn statement carried
less weight than a statement on oath because it could not
be tested by cross examination, but that they must take it
into account along with the evidence in the case. He also
dealt with the circumstances in which they should find the
Accused not guilty as well as those in which they should find
him guilty. In our opinion, there is no substance in the Accused's
allegations in this regard.
Questions
arose, however, as to the sufficiency of certain directions
given by the learned Trial Judge to the Jury. At p. 32 of
the Record he told the Jury:?
"Well
now looking at the case as a whole, if you believe his story
that he was innocent in this whole thing, that he did not
steal, that he was innocently disposing of these things
for Almendarez, then you would have to acquit him of the
crime of housebreaking and aggravated theft because he is
not guilty".
The question
was whether the Judge should have added that if his story
left them with a reasonable doubt as to his guilt, they should
also acquit him.
In this
connection the Director of Public Prosecutions, as we understood
him, made two submissions-
(1)
that the direction must be read in conjunction with the
directions given at the very beginning of the summing?up
in which the Trial Judge told the Jury - "Whenever
you have a real doubt, that is a doubt of substance, you
should resolve every such doubt in favour of the accused
and you should not find him guilty unless you feel sure
of his guilt. And this is so not only when you are considering
the charges on a whole, but whenever you have such a doubt.";
and
(2)
that by using the word "believe" in the passage
at p. 32, the Trial Judge gave the Accused the benefit of
having his unsworn statement treated as evidence, which
he ought not to have done in the light of the decision in
Coughlan (supra).
We agree
with these submissions. The directions as to the standard
of proof required which ware given at the beginning of the
summing?up ware strong and clear, and indeed the passage cited
above was reinforced by other directions similar in effect,
notably at pages 28 and 29 of the record. It seems to us that
these directions must have been present to the minds of the
Jury throughout the summing?up, which was not a very long
one, and it must have been clear to them that if they were
left with a reasonable doubt, they should give the benefit
of it to the Accused.
With regard
to the second submission of the Director of Public Prosecutions,
we are indebted to him for directing our attention to the
case of Coughlan, 64 Cr. App. R. 11, decided in the
current year. In that case Shaw J. said at p. 17???
"The
section" (i.e. S. 1(h) of the Criminal Evidence Act,
(1898)" makes a clear distinction between the position
where an accused person elects to assume the role of a witness
in his defence and the situation where he makes an unsworn
statement. In the latter case, he is not a witness and he
does not give evidence. Nonetheless, in preserving his right
to make an unsworn statement, the statute tacitly indicated
that something of possible value to the person charged was
being retained. What is said in such a statement is not
to be altogether brushed aside; but its potential effect
is persuasive rather than evidential. It cannot prove facts
not otherwise proved by the evidence before the jury, but
it may make the jury see the proved facts and the inferences
to be drawn from them in a different light. In?as?much as
it may thus influence the jury's decision they should be
invited to consider the content of the statement in relation
to the whole of the evidence. It is perhaps unnecessary
to tell the jury whether or not it is evidence in the strict
sense. It is material in the case. It is right, however,
that the jury should be told that a statement not sworn
to and tested by cross?examination has less cogency and
weight than sworn evidence."
In the
instant case the Accussed's allegations to the effect that
it was Almendarez who had taken him to his house, shown him
the motors and asked him to try to find a buyer, for them,
rested entirely on his unsworn statement from the dock and
were not proved otherwise by any evidence in the case. In
these circumstances the Judge's direction that if the Jury
believed the Accused's story, they should acquit him was indeed
putting the matter in a manner over favourable to the Accused.
In our view, a direction on an unsworn statement of an accused
person from the dock should be along the lines indicated in
the above?cited passage from Coughlan, adding, if it has not
otherwise been made clear, that if on the whole of the case
they are left with a reasonable doubt so that they are not
sure of the guilt of the Accused, they should find him not
guilty.
A question
also arose as to the adequacy of the Judge's directions regarding
what had to be proved in order to sustain the allegation in
each of the first two counts that an outboard motor had been
stolen and in the third count that an outboard motor and an
outboard motor gas tank had been stolen.
At page
18 the learned Trial Judge told the Jury:?
"Well
although the counts on the indictment charge the accused
with stealing several articles, that is ? three outboard
motors and one along with the gas tank, it would be sufficient
for the purposes of this indictment, if you found that he
had stolen only one of those items, a gas tank or one of
the outboard motors, which one of them and that would be
sufficient because stealing if any, as stealing a dollar
is the same offence. It is only a matter of quantity."
In our
view, there was a danger that the Jury might have understood
this direction to mean that if they found that the Accused
had stolen only one of the items alleged to have been stolen,
whether it be a gas tank or one of the outboard motors, that
would be sufficient to justify them in finding the allegation
of stealing in all the first three counts proved.
In our
opinion that would not be so, for each of the first three
counts was a separate and distinct charge and all the allegations
in it had to be proved.
At page
21 the learned Trial Judge to some extent corrected himself
by telling the Jury:?
"Now
there are counts of housebreaking and aggravated theft,
for each and every one of them is a separate charge and
it would be open to you to find the accused guilty of one
not guilty of the other or to find him guilty of all of
them or to find him not guilty of all of them. They are
not in law what we call separate and alternative charges,
they are cumulative charges."
At page
33, however, he reverted to his original direction when he
told the Jury:?
"So
these are the verdicts open to you as I say, although he
is charged with stealing three outboard motors, it would
be sufficient for this purpose, if you found he stole even
one motor or just a gas tank."
The Jury
found the Accused guilty of Aggrevated Theft on each of the
first three counts and had the evidence in the instant case
been other than it is, these errors in the Judge's direction
might have had substantial consequences. As it is, however,
in our opinion, the circumstances indicated by the evidence
are such that if the Jury found that the Accused had stolen
any one of the items in question, as they clearly did, they
must have found that he stole all of those items. In other
words, in our opinion, on a right direction, the Jury must
inevitably have come to the same conclusion as was expressed
by their verdict, namely, that the Accused stole the item
or items mentioned in each of the first three Counts. There
is therefore no cause for us to interfere on the ground of
this misdirection.
Two questions
were also raised as to the correctness of the indictment.
The first was whether it was proper to make each of the motors
the subject of a separate count, or whether they should all
have been included in one count. On this question, the Director
of Public Prosecutions submitted that the motors being heavy
and each hanging on its own railing, each must have been the
subject of a separate taking and carrying away. He added that
each had been made the subject of a separate count in order
to avoid allegations of duplicity.
In
Director of Public Prosecutions v. Merriman, 756 Cr. App
R. 28 Lord Morris of Borth?y?Gest said at p. 775?
"It
is furthermore a general rule that not more than one offence
is to be charged in a count in an indictment
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The question arises ? what is an offence. If A attacks B
and, in doing so, stabs B five times with a knife, has A
committed one offence or five. If A in the dwelling house
of B steals ten different chattels, some perhaps from one
room and some from others, has he committed one offence
or several? In many different situations comparable questions
could be asked. In my view, such questions when they arise
are best answered by applying common sense and by deciding
what is fair in the circumstances".
In Jemmison
and Priddle, 56 Cr. App R. 229, Widgery L.C.J.
said at p. 233:??
"The
principles which determine the circumstances in which an
information will or will not be bad for duplicity are not
clearly laid down. There are various landmarks, as it were,
in the subject for guidance, but there is a substantial
area in between where the court must, in my judgment, retain
a measure of discretion."
Having
adverted to the two above?mentioned cases and also to Ballysingh
37 Cr. App. R. 28, we do not think it was improper in
the circumstances of this case to make each motor the subject
of a separate count in the indictment.
The other
question which arose on the Indictment was whether the allegation
of Aggravated Theft in the Statement of Offence in each of
the first three counts was sufficiently sustained by the relevant
allegations in the respective Particulars of Offence, which
were "stole from a building, that is to say, the National
Fishermen Co?operative situate on Angel Lane ......".
The word "building" in this part of the Particulars
did not fall within any of the six categories of places stealing
from which, by virtue of s. 155 (b) of the Criminal Code,
amounted to Aggravated Theft.
The Director
of Public Prosecutions readily conceded that in the case of
each of the three counts the words "warehouse of the
National Fisherman Co?operative" should have been included
in the Particulars of Offence instead of the words "building
Co?operative".
We have
addressed our minds to the question whether the error had
any effect on the relevant convictions.
In Archbold
Criminal Pleading Evidence & Practice (39th Edition) 913
it is stated?
"Where
it is alleged that the indictment is bad for duplicity in
that it charges more than one offence in one count, an appeal
lies as of right and the court, if they so find, will quash
the conviction though objection was not taken at the trial
. Where other defects of less gravity are alleged,
generally no effect is given to this ground."
In the
instant case, the evidence clearly indicated that the outboard
motors were kept in a storeroom (or warehouse) of the National
Fishermen's Co?operative and in the summing?up at p. 18, the
trial Judge told the Jury:?
"Aggravated
Theft is merely stealing in particular circumstances. In
this case, it is stealing from a warehouse"; and at
the bottom of page 18 he further told them:?
"to
make the offence aggravated theft, it has to be in this
case, from a warehouse or storeroom."
In our
view, it must have been clear to the Jury that in order to
find the Accused guilty of the charge of Aggravated Theft
as laid in each of the three counts, they had to be sure that
the stealing was from a warehouse. Consequently, no injustice
resulted to the Accused from the defect in the relevant Statement
of Offence and we see no reason for interfering on this ground.
We have
also given careful consideration to the question whether the
issue of accomplice vel non arose on the evidence in
relation to the witness Almendarez and have come to the conclusion
that it did not and that the Trial Judge was right in not
leaving it to the Jury.
For the
reasons we have given, we see no reason for interfering with
any of the convictions recorded against the Appellant before
the Supreme Court.
We turn
now to the Appellant's application for leave to appeal against
sentence.
The sentences
imposed on him were 2 years imprisonment with hard labour
on each of the first three counts and 3 years imprisonment
with hard labour on the fourth, all the sentences to run concurrently.
The Appellant
has submitted that the sentences were too heavy seeing that
he had no previous conviction.
We bear
in mind on the other hand that each of these motors was of
considerable value and that by stealing them the Appellant
was depriving the owners of their means of livelihood since
without the motors they could not put to sea to fish. The
Director of Public Prosecutions has assured us that in passing
sentence the learned Trial Judge observed that because of
these considerations, he took a serious view of the case.
We agree
with this view and see no reason for interfering with any
of the sentences, the total effect of which will be 3 years
imprisonment with hard labour.
The appeal
against conviction and the application for leave to appeal
against sentence are accordingly dismissed and the convictions
and sentences affirmed.
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