|
(MARK
AUGUST |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
(
(AND
( |
|
|
(THE
QUEEN |
RESPONDENT
|
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 22 of 1983
23 May, 1984
KENNETH C. ST. L. HENRY, J.A.
Mr. Hubert
Elrington for the Appellant
Mr. G. C. Ghandi for the Respondent
Criminal
Law - Homicide - Joint enterprise - co-accused acting out
side the scope of the joint enterpise - Directions to the
jury on the possible verdict.
J
U D G M E N T
The Appellant
was one of four person charged with the murder of Walford
Fuller on May 24, 1983. He was acquitted of murder, convicted
of manslaughter and sentenced to 8 year imprisonment with
hard labour. Of the other three persons one, Linsford Bailey,
was ordered to be retried after the jury failed to agreed
on a verdict, one was convicted of unlawful harm and one was
acquitted.
The fact
on which the prosecution relied have been set out with admirable
clarity in the judgment of the learned president and I will
not repeat them. It is apparent from those facts that the
prosecution was alleging a joint enterprise between the four
accused as a consequence of which the deceased met his death.
It is therefore important to ascertain what is the principle
to be applied when a joint enterprise is alleged and to determine
whether in his direction to the jury the learned trial judge
correctly set out that principle.
The principle
is in fact expressed in the judgment of Lord Parker C.J. in
R. v. Anderson; R. v. Morris (1966) 1 Q.B.
at p.118 as follows:
"....where
two person embark on a joint enterprise, each is liable
for the acts done in pursuance of that joint enterprise,
that that includes liability for unusual consequences if
they arise from the execution of the agreed joint enterprise
but (and this the crux of the matter) that, if one of the
adventurers goes beyond what has been tacitly agreed as
part of the common enterprise, his co-adventurer is not
liable for the consequences of that unauthorized act."
The learned
Chief Justice went on to refer to the cases of R. v. Smith
(Wesley) (1963) 1 W.L.R. 1200, and R. v. Betty (1964)
48 Cr. App. Rep. 6 as supportive of this principle. An
examination of these cases makes it clear that in applying
the principle it is essential to determine the nature and
extent of the joint enterprise and, where the use of violence
is part of that joint enterprise, the extent of violence which
is or may reasonably be regarded as being within the contemplation
of the parties to it. When death results, it is of particular
importance to determine whether the act which resulted in
death was one which was within the scope of the enterprise.
If it was, it becomes the responsibility (albeit in varying
degrees) of all the parties to the joint enterprise. If it
was the act of one adventurer who went beyond what had been
tacitly agreed as part of the joint enterprise then that adventurer
alone would be liable. In the instant case it was therefore
vital for the jury to consider not merely whether death resulted
from the attack on the deceased but whether the particular
act and the use of a weapon were within the contemplation
of the parties to that attack and consequently within the
scope of their joint enterprise. This was not a case where,
as in R. v. Reid (1976) 62 Cr. App. Rep. 109
all the co-adventurers were, on the evidence, armed and it
could therefore be considered that "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 the very least they intend
to do with them is to cause fear in another, there is, in
our judgment, always a likelihood that, in the excitement
and tensions of the occasion, one of them 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 on an enterprise which envisage
some degree of violence, albeit nothing more than causing
fright they will be guilty of manslaughter."
Here there
was no evidence from the prosecution witnesses that any of
the four attackers were armed and indeed the police officer
who was on the ground with the deceased attempting to take
away the shotgun from him before the attack by the four men
only saw a knife in the hand of one of those men after the
attack and the fatal injury to the deceased. The only indication
that the Appellant may have known that one of his co-adventurers
had a knife was the written statement allegedly given by him
to the police in which the following appears: "Further
to the above statement I made I would like to add that it
was Linsford Bailey who stab Walford Fuller on the 24.5.83
with a butcher knife the knife is about 12 to 13 inches in
length with wooden handle. I know the knife I had seen Bailey
with it stuck behind his right side inside his trousers."
This is not part of the original statement but appears as
a sort of addendum to it. The jury would have to consider
whether it was made by the appellant and, if so, whether it
was true or merely an attempt by him as an after thought to
put the blame on someone else, particularly since in his unsworn
statement at the trial he said, "I did not see anybody
with no knife and I had no knife." If the joint enterprise
to which the Appellant may have been a party did not extend
to the use of a knife or a weapon because he had no knowledge
that any of his co-adventurers had a knife or weapon, he would
be entitled to an acquittal. The jury ought to have been clearly
directed to distinguish that situation from one in which death
had unexpectedly resulted from the use of violence of the
nature and degree contemplated by the parties to the joint
enterprise. As was observed R. v. Anderson; Morris (supra)
at p. 120:
"It
seems to this court that to say that adventurers are guilty
of manslaughter when one of them has departed completely
from the concerted action of the common design and has suddenly
formed an intent to kill and has used a weapon and acted
in a way which no party to that common design could suspect
is something which would revolt the conscience of people
today."
It does
not seem to me that the jury were clearly directed in this
regard. If the death of the deceased had unexpectedly occurred
as a consequence of the blows inflicted by the persons who
kicked and punched him then the directions of the learned
trial judge in the earlier part of his summing up would no
doubt have been appropriate. He failed however to direct the
jury's attention to the crucial issue of whether the act which
resulted in death was outside the scope of any joint enterprise
to which the Appellant may have been a party. In the earlier
portions of his summing up the learned judge made no mention
of the Appellant's knowledge of the existence of a knife as
an issue for the jury to consider. He said, "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 persons who did not intend death,
would, since death resulted from the attack, if you are satisfied
and feel sure that death resulted from this attack on Walford
Fuller while he was on the ground, if you are satisfied of
that, then those persons who attacked him even intending to
cause only unlawful harm, not death, would be guilty of the
offence of manslaughter if they knew death could result from
that causing of unlawful harm by them in furtherance of a
common intention to cause harm. So that if - 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 that attack then those persons 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 Puller."
Later
he said, "if you find that the common intention was something
less such as to cause unlawful harm then as I have told you
already since death resulted from the attack, that is, if
you are satisfied it resulted from the attack, the offence
that they would be guilty of would be manslaughter",
and, "But if you are satisfied they formed a common intention
and attacked the deceased, any of them, then each of them
is liable for all the acts of the others but if the intention
of those who participated other than the person who stabbed
was only to cause unlawful harm they would at most be liable
for the death only to the extent of being liable - guilty
of manslaughter, if they did not themselves have the intention
to kill then they are not liable for murder but they could
nevertheless be liable for death having resulted from the
attack to the extent that they will be liable for manslaughter."
It is
only towards the end summing up that he mentioned the Appellant's
knowledge of the knife when he said. "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 killing Fuller? If he took part in it with 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
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."
But even here the jury may well have felt that the issue they
had to consider was whether the Appellant had an intention
to kill or merely to cause harm.
Eventually
the learned trial judge dealt with the possible verdicts open
to them in relation to the Appellant as follows: "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 that 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 event 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."
At no stage did he make it clear to the jury that if the act
which resulted in death was outside the scope of the joint
enterprise the Appellant was entitled to be acquitted. In
my view at best the jury must have been confused and the Appellant
was deprived of the opportunity of an acquittal.
For these
reasons I conclude that the Appeal ought to be allowed and
a new trial ordered for manslaughter. The Appellant has been
acquitted of murder and that acquittal not being the subject
of the appeal cannot be interferred with by this court.
Before
parting with this appeal I would endorse the observations
of the learned president that this court was in error in Criminal
Appeal 5/83 Miguel De Paz v R. as regards the possible
verdicts open on a charge of murder, because Section 131 of
the Indictable Procedure Ordinance had not been brought to
its attention.
_________
OO ________
|