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(LINCOLN
MYVETT and
(SANDRO SANTOS |
APPELLANTS |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(THE QUEEN |
RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeals Nos. 3 and 4 of 1994
9th May, 1994
KENNETH ST. L. HENRY, P.
SIR LASCELLES ROBOTHAM, J.A.
PROFESSOR TELFORD GEORGES, J.A.
Mr. K.
Anderson appearing on behalf of Appellant Myvett
Mr. F. Lumor appearing on behalf of Appellant Santos
Mr. E. Thompson appearing on behalf of the Respondent
Appeal
- Criminal law - Trial judge erred in permitting dock identification
- Dock identification must be by features of the accused
person - No identification parade held - Practice to identify
accused in the dock for the first time is undesirable -
Prejudicial effect outweighs probative value - Appeal allow
- Conviction quashed.
J
U D G M E N T
The appellants
were convicted of two offences, one of maim contrary to section
78 of the Criminal Code and the other of use of deadly means
of harm contrary to section 79 of that Code. The offences
arose out of an incident which took place across the street
from the Parrot Bar in Belize City on August 18, 1991.
A number
of grounds of appeal were filed on behalf of both appellants
but for the purposes of this appeal only two need to be considered
namely that the trial judge erred in permitting a dock identification
of the appellant Lincoln Myvett and that the trial judge failed
to withdraw the case from the consideration of the Jury when
there was evidence that the police and/or the Crown had failed
to observe the guidelines for the identification of suspects.
The facts
need only briefly be recounted. Staine, the injured victim,
had earlier had a fight in the Parrot Bar with a taxi?driver
Jeffrey Holiday. The differences between them had apparently
been settled and they had parted with Holiday telling Staine
that they were "bally" meaning friends.
Staine
had then walked across the street with a bottle of rum he
had been drinking in the bar to join some friends who were
sitting there also drinking.
Shortly
afterwards he saw Holiday's taxi driving up with Holiday driving.
As the taxi came up Holiday pointed at him, drove past and
stopped some 10 yards from him. As the taxi stopped four men
got out, two from each of the front doors and two from each
of the back doors. They were armed with machetes. They all
rushed at him making "whopping" blows with the machetes.
He had no weapon. He raised his arm to ward a blow aimed at
his head. As a result he suffered a chop on the right arm
which almost severed the arm at the wrist. It was later surgically
amputated. After his arm had been chopped Holiday told the
men "Let's go" and they left in the taxi in which
they had come.
Staine
described the person who came out from the driver's side door
as a "dark guy". He had seen that person on visits
to the gas station to buy lubricating oil. He did not know
the person's name. The men who came out of the back doors
he described as "a fair skin one and strapping dark one."
He did not know the names of either and had never spoken to
any one of these person's before but he knew their faces.
The incident had taken place about 4: 00 p.m. It was a clear
day and his view of his attackers was unobstructed.
The evidence
of identification of the appellant Lincoln Myvett reads ??
"Seeing
him often enough I must know him. At that time I did not
know his name. I saw that person afterwards in a car parked
in front of Steve Craig's Lumber Yard. I also saw him out
there when I passed nearby by Chou Saan by Majestic Alley.
I gave the name of that person to the Police about three
months after the incident. I got to find out the name of
the person by brother Dean Augustus. I gave the name Lincoln
Myvett to the Police.
Q. Do
you see in Court that person here today?
A. Yes that person there."
Defence
Counsel objected to this as being a dock identification. Counsel
for the Crown is recorded as saying that the Crown was trying
to prove visual identification of one of the witness' attacked.
The trial
judge's ruling is noted as follows ?
"The
identification is not by name but by features. The objection
is overruled."
It seems
to us indisputable that the identification which purported
to take place in the Court was a dock identification. A dock
identification must necessarily be by the features of the
accused person.
The detailed
code adopted in England for the holding of identification
parades to have suspects identified is intended to ensure
that the identification of a suspect by a witness takes place
in circumstances where the recollection of the identifying
witness is tested objectively under safe?guards by placing
the suspect in a line made up of like looking suspects, the
English procedure is in practice followed here in Belize.
The fact
that no identification parade had been held was confirmed
by Staine. He is recorded as stating ??
"I
agree that today is the second time since the 18th of August
that 1 pointed to these two fellows as two of the ones that
attacked me. The first time was at the P. I. on 2nd November
1993."
That would
have been 2 ½ years after the incident. This was clearly
a case in which an identification parade should have been
held. Staine did not know his attackers by name. He appears
to have been certain that they were persons whom he had seen
before and whom he could recognize but his descriptions of
them to the police were conspicuously lacking in detail. His
ability to recognize his assailants should have been put to
the test at a parade.
The problems
of identification are aggravated by Staine's evidence that
all the names he had given to the Court at the hearing he
had got from his brother. The evidence reads ??
"Between
the incident and the report I had already known the faces,
all I had to do was to talk to my little brother as he is
a gang banger."
The brother
was not present at the time of the attack. The process by
which the names became attached to the faces which Staine
purported to remember remains necessarily undisclosed.
The investigating
officer was asked why he had not held an identification parade.
He replied ??
"Because
1 was sure of the names and the identifies of defendants
along with the complainant."
Later
he stated to the Court ??
"I
did my own investigation and was sure of the attackers.
I got these names from other persons who did not wish to
give any statement or come to court, they were afraid."
This emphasises
how seriously flawed was the entire approach to the process
of identification in this case. Staine was invited to identify
the Appellants for the first time in the dock. This practice
has been described as undesirable ? R. v. Cartwright
(1914) 10 Cr. App. R. 219.
Its Prejudicial
effect outweighs its probative value and in this case the
judge could properly have ruled it inadmissible.
In any
event at the close ?of the case of the prosecution no evidence
confirmatory of the identification had been adduced. Such
evidence as has been adduced established that there had been
no good reason for not holding an identification parade and
raised justifiable suspicions about the manner in which Staine
had been able to attach names to the faces which he said he
knew. The submission that there was no case to answer should
have been accepted. The quality of the identification evidence
was totally unsatisfactory.
Having
read the record it was clear that there would be difficulty
in sustaining the convictions. Accordingly on the opening
of the appeal counsel for the Crown was asked to advance his
arguments in support of the conviction. He did not quite properly
seek to support it.
For the
reasons hereinabove set out we allowed the appeals and quashed
the conviction.
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