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(RICHARD
VERNON |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN
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(AND
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(THE
QUEEN |
RESPONDENT
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Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 1 of 1984
11th May, 1984
SIR JOHN SUMMERFIELD, P.
SIR ALBERT L. STAINE, J.A.
KENNETH ST. L. HENRY, J.A.
Criminal
Law - Homicide Defence of defence of Robbery - Availability
of defence if Appellant genuinety and in good faith but
mistakenly believed he was being robbed - What constitute
robbery - Effect of the use of excessive force in the Defence
of self-defence - Application of the proviso since no miscarriage
of justice - Mitigating circumstance which may reduce the
sentence for manslaughter.
J
U D G M E N T
The Appellant
was charged with the murder of Joseph Antonio on 21 August
1983 in Belize City. He was acquitted of murder but found
guilty of manslaughter and was sentenced to four years imprisonment
with hard labour.
The incident
occurred at about 8:30 a.m. Antonio approached the Appellant
on Freetown Road and said: "Give me some money".
The Appellant replied "You must go tell de man de".
Antonio then said "Make sure when you meet me again that
you got some money for me." Antonio then moved off. When
he had gone about five yards the Appellant said something
which resulted in Antonio saying "Gimme some money then."
Antonio then pushed his hand in the Appellant's side trouser
pocket. The hand did not get far in because the Appellant
stopped it and pushed the hand away. They then both stood
facing each other as if about to exchange blows. The Appellant
reached into his back pocket and brought out a knife. An onlooker
went up to them and said that it made no sense to go through
with this. The Appellant then pushed the knife at Antonio
and when Antonio then turned round blood was seen on his shirt.
The Appellant had inflicted a mortal wound in the abdomen
of Antonio from which he died shortly afterwards.
That was
the prosecution case. There was also evidence that the Appellant
and Antonio were friends.
In a statement
made to the Police less than an hour after the incident the
Appellant gave this account of it:
"As
I started to walk down Freetown Road one knows to me as
"Twilde" whom I have seen coming out of Douglas
Jones Street into Freetown Road approached me and asked
me if I had money. I told him that I did not have and asked
him why. Twidle then said that he wanted a five dollars,
I shook my head in a negative manner and Twilde walked away
in the direction from where he had come for about five paces
and walked away. Something told me to look behind me and
I saw Twilde coming back in my direction, Twidle came right
in front of me from my left side and saying that "he
wants some money", pushed his hands straight into my
left front trousers pocket. He, Twilde, did it with his
right hand. I had about seven one dollar bills and my lottery
that I just bought in my pocket and Twilde took it our and
put it straight into his right front pants pocket. Having
done this he came up with his right hand first made up as
if to punch me. I saw this and hauled out a knife that I
had in my left back pocket with my left hand in one motion
and pushed it towards Twilde and caught him right between
the opened shirt on the chest."
In an
unsworn statement from the dock he said:
"I
accept that I gave the Police a statement that is true confessing
that the knife that I used was to defend myself from this
felloe who was robbing me, I am sorry I did that. That is
all."
Clearly
his defence was that he was defending himself from robbery
at the time.
The learned
trial Judge fully recognised this. In the course of full and
adequate directions on all relevant aspects, including directions
on the defence against murder, manslaughter, dangerous or
grievous harm, he gave his directions in relation to defence
against robbery in these terms:
"If
your are satisfied and feel sure he did not feel fear of
death or dangerous or grievous harm, you must consider whether
he was defending himself against robbery. Robbery is defined
by Section 153 of the Criminal Code as follows:
"A
person is guilty of robbery of he steals and immediately
before or at the time of doing so and in order to do so
he uses force on any person or puts or seeks to put any
person in fear of being then and there subjected to force".
To steal is to take a thing belonging to another and to
do so without at least believing he had a right to it.
The
evidence in this case is that the deceased demanded the
money and the accused said "You must go tell de man
de". Thereupon the deceased says "Mek sure when
your meet me again that you have some money for me".
Does this sound like a person about to take some money he
had no right to or a person demanding something he believed
he had a right to? Does this sound like the prelude to a
robbery or does it sound like a disagreement between acquaintances
or friends over money? That is why the prosecution sought
to prove that they were friends and the defence sought to
disapprove it. You have the evidence of Diego that they
were friends, the accused and the deceased. If you accept
that evidence there were friends or at least acquaintances
who moved about together some of the time. When, therefore,
having demanded money and been told to tell "de man
de" Antonio said "Mek sure you have some money
for me" and turned away, do you think he was asking
for something he believed he had to get or putting Vernon
in fear of force? And when Vernon said something that made
Antonio come back and put his hand in Vernon's pocket was
he trying to rob Vernon by the use of force or was he trying
to take what he seemed to believe he has a right to take?
That is a matter for you to decide as a question of fact.
If you have a reasonable doubt on this aspect of the evidence
then you must find the accused not guilty of any offence.
If, however, you are satisfied and feel sure that this was
not an attempted robbery but a dispute between friends or
acquaintances then if you are also satisfied and feel sure
that the accused could not have feared death or dangerous
or grievous harm, then you will conclude that the harm caused
to Antonio was caused without justification and you will
go on to decide whether the harm was caused with a murderous
intention."
That is
clear enough and an accurate explanation of the offence of
robbery, with particular reference to the element of dishonesty
in the ingredient of stealing, having regard to section 146
(1) (a) of the Criminal Code. The complaint, as it developed
in argument, was that this direction would leave the jury
with the impression that, if the offence of robbery was not
committed or attempted because, in his mind, the assailant
believed that he had in law the right to deprive the victim
of the article being appropriated, the victim cannot avail
himself of the defence of defence against robbery however
genuinely the victim believed that he was being robbed. That,
of course, is not the position as section 27(1) of the Code
would operate in his favour. Section 27(1) reads:
"A
person shall not be punished for an act which by reason
of ignorance or mistake of fact in good faith he believes
to be lawful."
As the
argument developed it was emphasized that what was operating
in the victim's mind (here, the appellant) was the important
factor. Even if, technically, the offence of robbery was not
being committed did the appellant mistakenly, in good faith,
believe that he was being robbed and that he could lawfully
defend himself against the robbery?
There
can be no doubt that a further direction on these lines, explaining
the operation of section 27(1) would have been desirable and
would have rounded off an otherwise unexceptional direction.
The question
for this court is whether the absence of such a fuller direction
is a fatal flaw in an otherwise sound summing up.
It is
significant that the substituted ground of appeal lodged at
the commencement of the hearing of the appeal was that the
learned Judge had misdirected the jury with regard to the
defence of defence against robbery under section 35(4)(e)
of the Criminal Code. When it became apparent that the direction
was accurate in the light of section 146(1)(a) the complaint
now relied on development from exchange between Bench and
Bar. It nevertheless is a point which must be fully considered
to determine whether there was any miscarriage of justice.
In reality
the point turns on a fairly sophisticated analysis of the
relevant passages of the summing up, imputing to the whole
passage a meaning which does not readily strike the listener
or reader until there has been that penetrating analysis.
Indeed, that imputed meaning could not have been obvious to
learned Counsel after examining the record initially as otherwise
he would have framed his substituted ground of appeal accordingly.
Likewise, the meaning which can be extracted from the passage
was not apparent to the Bench until there had been the exchange
with learned Counsel.
In the
circumstances, could the jury have been misled or been confused
by this passage? Read in the ordinary way it is clearly an
explanation of the ingredients of the offence of robbery with
questions posed, in relation to the evidence, as to whether
in reality it was a prelude to a robbery or a disagreement
between friends over money. That is how it must have struck
the jury. One must keep a proper perspective in these matters
and not allow one's common sense to fly out of the window.
On the
other side of the coin, the learned Judge gave no direction
in relation to the use of excessive force in self defence.
As he left the matter with the jury, if the Appellant was
acting in self defence, against grievous harm etc. or robbery,
or may have been, then jury should acquit irrespective of
the amount of force used to repel the aggressor. There was
not direction that the Appellant would be responsible for
any significant excess of force over and above that necessary
to defend himself. That was a benign approach to this defence
which could have operated very much to the Appellant's advantage.
Had the jury been fully directed on this aspect one would
have expected a reasonable jury to reach the verdict it did
on the basis of excess use of force in defence against apprehended
robbery. It should be remembered that Antonio was unarmed.
He merely attempted to put his hand in the Appellant's pocket
and accompanied his actions with verbal demands for money.
The two were friends. It was hardly a very serious intrusion
in all the circumstances.
As it
is, on the directions given, it would appear that the jury
reached its verdict on the basis of the absence of any intention
to kill on the part of the Appellant.
Looking
at the case as a whole we are satisfied that there has been
no miscarriage of justice. While conceding that the refinement
in the summing up adverted to earlier would have been desirable,
its omission could not have resulted in a miscarriage of justice
in the circumstances of this case, and the proviso may properly
be applied.
The appeal
against conviction is dismissed.
As to
sentence, it would appear that due account was taken of the
jury's recommendation of mercy, the Appellant's contrition
and his assistance in getting Antonio to the hospital for
treatment immediately after the accident. The sentence is
substantially less than others involving the spontaneous response
of lunging out with a knife with fatal consequences. There
are no grounds for intervening.
The appeal
against this sentence is dismissed.
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