(FERNANDO
MAYEN
|
APPELLANTS
|
and
(NEHRU SANKER
AND
|
|
THE
QUEEN
|
RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal Nos. 3 and 4 of 1983
25th May, 1983
SIR JOHN SUMMERFIELD P.
SIR JAMES SMITH J.A.
ALBERT L. STAINE J.A.
Criminal
Appeal against conviction and sentence for dangerous harm
- Common enterprise or common purpose to escape - Corroboration
- Need for trial judge to warn jury to treat incriminating
evidence with caution and to look for corroboration before
relying on it - First Appellant complaining on appeal that
evidence during the trial in the court a quo that
he was an 'escapee prisoner' was prejudicial to him and
trial judge should have directed the jury to disregard it
- First Appellant failing to make objection during the trial
- Section 150 (1) (d) of the Indictable Procedure Ordinance
making it mandatory that such an objection should be taken
during the trial - In determining complaint, Court of Appeal
to take account of the failure to make objection at the
proper time, and to weigh the prejudicial effect of the
evidence to see if there was a miscarriage of justice -
Juror - One of the jurors was a brother of a prosecution
witness - No court official involved in the trial aware
that juror was brother of prosecution witness - Appellants
challenging the qualification of the juror after exhausting
their preemptory challenges - Appellants not advancing any
reasons for challenging qualifications of juror - Trial
judge disallowing Appellant's challenge - Trial judge, court
officials and Appellants knowing of the relationship between
juror and prosecution witness after the trial - Whether
there was a need to order a venire de novo - Appropriate
circumstances in which a venire de novo should be
ordered - Burden of proof - Proper approach to summing up
prosecution's burden of proving its case beyond a reasonable
doubt - Gonzalo Rivas v R, referred to with approval
- Meaning of the word "satisfied" and its cognate
expressions in summing up burden of proof - Satisfied construed
to mean "satisfied so that you feel sure" - Role
of the Court of Appeal in criminal appeals - Need to ensure
there has been no miscarriage of justice - Section 31(1)
of the Court of Appeal Ordinance.
J
U D G M E N T
The two
Appellants were tried together on alternative charges of attempted
murder and dangerous harm. Named with them in each count as
being implicated with them in each offence was one Johnson
Franklin, who was not tried with the Appellants. The Appellants
were both found guilty of dangerous harm contrary to section
78 of the Criminal Code and each was sentenced to seven years
imprisonment with hard labour. Both appealed against conviction
and sentence. Neither was represented at the trial or on this
appeal.
The case
for the prosecution rested primarily on two witnesses, John
Flowers, a taxi driver, and P.C. Santiago Choc who was the
virtual complainant and the police officer injured in the
incident about to be related. What follows is based substantially
on their evidence.
On 27th
March, 1982 at about 5:45 p.m., P.C. Choc was on duty at the
junction of Western Highway and Hummingbird Highway. He received
certain information. Later he saw the Appellants and Franklin
emerge from the bush and head towards Belize City. He stopped
them and asked them their names which they refused to give.
One of the three had a white bucket containing gasoline. Asked
where they were going they said they were going to Mile 44
(on the Belize City/ Belmopan Highway) where they said they
had a pick-up which had run out of gas. A taxi driven by Flowers
came from the direction of Belmopan and P.C. Choc stopped
it. In it they all drove to the Belmopan Police Compound.
At the police station they were questioned by Corporal Logan.
Asked to give their names and addresses, the two Appellants
gave false names. Corporal Logan then asked P.C. Choc to accompany
them to Mile 44 to verify their story. Flowers agreed to take
them for a fee of $15.00.
They then
drove towards Mile 44 in the taxi driven by Flowers. Next
to Flowers in the front was the first Appellant. In the middle
of the back seat was Franklin. Next to Franklin on the right
of the back seat was P.C. Choc.
Before
they left a T.S.U. Officer handed P.C. Choc a revolver.
They drove
to Mile 44. No vehicle was seen. They continued to Mile 43.
Still no car was seen. The taxi made a U turn and started
heading towards Mile 44. Thereupon the first Appellant put
a hand around Flowers' neck and pulled his head back to the
seat. At the same time he put a sharp instrument to Flowers'
throat and said: "Freeze". The first Appellant then
told Flowers to stop the taxi and he did so.
Flowers
then saw Franklin in the back seat snap P.C. Choc's hand.
The second Appellant got out of the front seat, opened the
back door, and helped Franklin get P.C. Choc out. All the
while the first Appellant held the knife against Flowers.
The first Appellant then used the knife to poke at the courtesy
light. He broke the bulb in it and extinguished the light.
He then let go of Flowers and went out through the same back
door as P.C. Choc had gone. All three, together with P.C.
Choc, were then out of the taxi.
Flowers
heard P.C. Choc grunt twice. Flowers made his escape from
the taxi and lay in the long grass. He heard one of the three
say "Let's go back and finish the dumb bitch". They
returned to the car and opened a door. One of them said "the
bitch carry the key too". The door was slammed. One said:
"which way to Belize City " and they all ran off.
Flowers
then helped P.C. Choc into his taxi. He was complaining about
his back and Flowers pulled a knife blade from it. P.C. Choc
was taken to hospital where he was found to be in respiratory
distress. He was cold and clammy and bleeding from the nostrils
and mouth. He had fluid in the left lung. Apart from bruises
on his face, he had no less than five penetrating stab wounds
half an inch thick; one on the right side of the neck, three
on the right shoulder blade and one on the left lower down.
P.C. Choc's
account of the main incident complements that of Flowers.
He said he was squeezed by Franklin against the door before
it stopped. Then the second Appellant got out of the front
and opened that door. He was pushed out and fell into a drain.
He tried to get up and run but was tripped and fell on his
stomach. Franklin grabbed his hand. He felt blows on his back.
The second Appellant was nearby at the time, grabbed his other
hand and started punching him in the face. Thereupon the first
Appellant joined in and hit P.C. Choc on the back twice while
the first Appellant held on to his hand. The second Appellant
grabbed Flowers' revolver. P.C. Choc ran towards the taxi,
got in, and lost consciousness.
Of course,
one of the main issues at the trial was whether the Appellants
were engaged in a joint enterprise, acting with a common purpose
jointly and this aspect was dealt with at great length and
in detail by the learned trial judge. If acting in concert
each would have been responsible for the wounds inflicted
on P.C. Choc by one more of them.
In an
unsworn statement from the dock the first Appellant's version
leading up to the time just before P.C. Choc received his
wounds had much in common with the prosecution evidence. He
admitted extinguishing the courtesy light but claimed that
he had first asked Flowers to turn it off. He did not explain
why he wanted it off. He spoke of a "hassle" with
Flowers after which he alleges both let each other go. On
leaving the car he saw P.C. Choc down on the ground. He claims
that he then panicked and ran into the bush. He said he did
not harm or threaten P.C. Choc in any way.
The first
Appellant called Franklin as a witness. Franklin's evidence
also had something in common with the prosecution evidence
but with a gloss which exornerated the first Appellant from
any violent acts and implicated the second Appellant as the
culprit. He claimed that P.C. Choc had shoved the gun into
his side; that he got excited, grabbed it and that a struggle
ensued. Following the struggle the second Appellant ran away
and Franklin followed. He claims that while running the second
Appellant admitted to having "juked the policeman".
It does, however, appear from Franklin's evidence that the
first Appellant was actively engaged in the escape-no doubt
the central theme of the joint enterprise. Re said that the
first Appellant, whose witness he was, said: "Let's get
out of here because those policemen trying to kill us".
In the
course of his cross examination, Franklin said: "We walked
in the bushes. We were escaped prisoners so we walked through
the bushes". That was a matter of complaint by the second
Appellant on this appeal. He claimed that "it was prejudicial
and that the learned trial judge should have directed the
jury to disregard it."
The second
Appellant also gave an unsworn statement from the dock. He
claimed that after the taxi had turned around a hassle started.
He got out because two men were struggling with a gun behind
him. The hassle, according to him, was between Franklin and
P.C. Choc and they all ran off in the same direction. He claimed
that he did not cause any kind of harm to P.C. Choc. His supporting
witness did not assist the substance of his defence in any
way.
It may
be observed that there were no direct denial that the three
were engaged in a common enterprise to escape. If anything
their admissions strengthen that aspect of the prosecution
case and certainly it must have been the common intention
at the point in time when they fled together in the same direction.
It should
also be observed that the learned trial judge warned the jury
to approach the evidence of Franklin with caution in so far
as it incriminated the second Appellant and he directed that
they should look for corroboration before acting on it against
the second Appellant. There was, of course, ample corroboration.
Dealing
first with the complaint of the second Appellant concerning
the statement by Franklin that they were escapee prisoners.
It is correct that the learned trial judge did not direct
the jury to disregard that evidence. Equally, any complaint
about the admission of that evidence should have been made
at the trial but was not. One recognises that the second Appellant
was not represented at his trial but if he was sufficiently
articulate to make the complaint to this court he could have
made it at the trial if he felt aggrieved. Indeed, it is mandatory
that such an objection should be made at the time the evidence
was given, section 150 (l)(d), of the Indictable Procedure
Ordinance. Unless so taken the Supreme Court was precluded
from entertaining the objection - section 150(2). This would
not preclude this Court from evaluating the prejudicial effect
of any evidence improperly admitted in appropriate cases,
but this Court would also have to take account of the failure
to take objection at the proper time. Had objection been taken
as required by section 150(1)(d), the learned trial judge
could have determined its relevance as constituting a motive
for the common enterprise to escape from P.C. Choc and, further,
whether its probative value outweighed its prejudicial effect.
As it was, no mention was made of this evidence in the summing
up. In the circumstance of this case, as will appear when
an important ground is dealt with later, this isolated lapse
could not have led to a miscarriage of justice.
The second
ground of complaint was that one of the jurors was the brother
of a prosecution witness, Sgt. Manuel Vivas. This allegation
was not supported by affidavit but this Court caused enquiries
to be made and it turns out that one juror was, in fact, the
brother of Sgt. Vivas and that that juror had been challenged
by both Appellants. The challenge was disallowed.
What happened
was that both Appellants had exhausted their five preemptory
challenges when the brother of Sgt. Vivas was called. The
Appellants objected assuming that they had further preemptory
challenges to exercise. They gave no reason for the challenge.
In fact it is admitted that there was no reason they could
have put forward by way of challenge for cause as they did
not know at the time that the prospective juror was related
to Sgt. Vivas. They only became aware of the fact some time
after the trial. The preemptory challenge in excess of quota
allowed by law is disallowed. There is nothing to suggest
that the trial judge, prosecuting counsel or any court official
was aware of the relationship. Indeed, one can safely assume
that they did not.
Had it
come to notice at any time before verdict the trial judge
could have made an order, if he saw fit, under section 150(3)
of the Indictable Procedure Ordinance. It did not so come
to notice.
There
is nothing to suggest that the juror concerned was disqualified
for service as a juror under section 6 of the Juries Consolidation
Ordinance or exempted from such service under section 7 of
that Ordinance. Prima facie he was qualified to serve
as a juror. In the circumstances he could only have been prevented
from serving on the jury if he had been successfully challenged
by the Appellants or one of them under section 24 of that
Ordinance. The only ground on which he had been challenged
was under section 24(2)(g) namely-
"(g)
any circumstance which in the opinion of the Court is likely
to cause prejudice against the accused person or which renders
a person as improper as a juror."
No doubt
if so challenged, any trial judge would have excused the prospective
juror on the ground that, as a brother of a prosecution witness,
it would not be proper for him to serve as a juror. However,
that was not done for the very good reason that no one concerned
with selection was aware of the situation.
According
to Halsbury's Laws of England 3rd. Ed. Vol. 23 p. 29 para.
55:
"If
facts relating to the qualification of a juror which could
have constituted grounds for a challenge for cause becomes
known to a part only after the trial, the court will normally
order a "venire de novo", except in a case
where there has been an impersonation of a juror or a mistake
as to identity."
There
is nothing to suggest inpersonation or mistake as to identity.
As the qualification of the juror is not in dispute there
is still less reason to order a venire de novo.
When one
examines the evidence of Sgt. Vivas it is clear that it does
not carry the case further in relation to either Appellant
one way or the other. His evidence amounted to a link in a
chain identifying the Appellants as two of the three persons
who set off from the police station in Belmopan with Flowers
and P.C. Choc to Mile 44. As it turned out identification
was not an issue. His evidence was, therefore, unnecessary
and, at best, a mere formality. He was not even cross-examined
by either Appellant.
There
is nothing to suggest that either Appellant suffered any prejudice
by reason of the juror concerned serving as a juror. The jury
can return a majority verdict of 7 to 2. Here the verdict
was unanimous. There is no reason to suppose that there could
have been any miscarriage of justice.
Consideration
can now be given to an aspect raised by this court of its
own volition but which had not been raised as a ground of
appeal by either Appellant. Having read the record this Court
considered it right to invite the learned Director of Public
Prosecutions to address the Court on the adequacy of the directions
on the burden and standard of proof and to allow the Appellants
to reply.
In the
summing up the general direction on this aspect was in the
following terms:
"In
a criminal trial the burden of proof is on the prosecution,
always. What that means in effect is that the prosecution
must prove to your satisfaction that these accused committed
the offences with which they are charged. The accused do
not have to do anything. They may question the witnesses,
they make a statement from the dock as they have done in
this case, they may call witnesses on their behalf; but
all that will be is an attempt to show that the prosecution
case is not good enough. It is not encumbent on them to
prove anything. They can just stay silent and say you are
accusing me of this offence, you prove it. And it is, throughout
the evidence of this case, the duty of the prosecution to
satisfy you on the facts. Now I deliberately used the word
satisfy in the first instance but bearing in mind that in
most human affairs one cannot be satisfied a hundred percent,
the law does not require the impossible - you are required
therefore to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt. Now
a reasonable doubt is not a fanciful doubt, I mean, not
saying well I am not sure, I kind of feel it is so. Your
doubt must be related to the facts and you must feel sufficiently
uncertain to say I am not satisfied that the accused is
guilty of this offence. The prosecution will seek to prove
from the evidence that there is sufficient evidence for
you to be satisfied that it was these accused who did what
the prosecution says they did. It is for you to decide whether
you are reasonably sure that that is how the thing happened.
And once you feel reasonably sure about certain facts you
will then put the facts together to see whether they constitute
the offence which I will define to you as a matter of law."
That is
inadequate. It does not convey sufficiently to the jury the
high standard of proof that they have to apply in determining
the issues before them so as to justify a conviction.
Much of
what is contained in that direction is unexceptionable. But
a reasonable doubt is a case of saying "well I am not
sure". The standard contained by the expression "reasonably
sure" (used twice) is below that which applies in this
jurisdiction. This court has dealt with this aspect fully
in the recent case of Gonzalo Rivas v. R. Criminal Appeal
No. 2 of 1983 and so it is unnecessary to deal with the
matter at length in this judgment. It is clear from that judgment
that the above quoted direction standing on its own is unacceptable.
Some observations
on the use of the expression "satisfied" and its
cognates may be of assistance. In England it would appear
that in cases other than those involving the doctrine of recent
possession, the expression "satisfied" in defining
the standard of proof required is acceptable: e.g. Blackburn
v. R. 39 C.A.R. 84 (a case involving fruad). That that
approach is acceptable in this jurisdiction would appear to
be reflected in the decision of this court in Frederick
Reynolds v. R. Criminal Appeal No. 3 of 1978. It is, therefore,
not open to this court to say that that expression in a proper
context insufficiently conveys the high standard applicable.
However, as will appear from Rivas' case, there is
much merit in using the expression "satisfied so that
you feel sure" or the expression "sure" alone
in an appropriate context. Equally, "completely satisfied"
appears to be acceptable in English cases involving recent
possession (where "satisfied" alone has been held
to be insufficient) e.g. R. v. Hepworth and Fearnley 1955
39 Cr. App. R. 152.
Having
expressed a view on the general direction it becomes necessary
for this Court to examine the summing up as a whole and to
determine whether in the light of the overall effect there
are grounds for intervention. Further, this Court must analyse
as a whole to determine how it should exercise its powers
within the framework of section 31(1) of the Court of Appeal
Ordinance 1967 which is in the following terms:
"The
Court on any such appeal against conviction shall allow
the appeal if it thinks that the verdict of the jury should
be set aside on the ground that it is unreasonable or cannot
be supported having regard to the evidence, or that the
judgment of the Court before which the Appellant was convicted
should be set aside on the ground of a wrong decision of
any question of law or that on any ground there was a miscarriage
of justice and in any other case shall dismiss the appeal:
Provided
that the court may, notwithstanding that it is of opinion
that the point raised in the appeal might be decided in
favour of the Appellant, dismiss the appeal if it considers
that no substantial miscarriage of justice has actually
occurred."
The duty
imposed on this Court and the approach it should have to any
case under appeal is clear. The examination and analysis must
be fair and realistic. A prime function is to determine whether
there has been a miscarriage of justice.
The learned
trial judge put the defences of the two Appellants to the
jury very thoroughly and fairly. Indeed, he went so far as
to treat and refer to, their unsworn statements as "evidence".
He dealt fully with the evidence of Franklin, the witness
called by the first Appellant and gave a warning as to the
necessity for corroboration in so far as it implicated the
second Appellant. Franklin was obviously an accomplice.
Towards
the end of his summing-up the learned trial judge directed
the jury in these terms:
"If
you accept the evidence that Mayen did nothing you can act
on that and discharge Mayen. If, however, you feel he is
lying, you still have to examine the evidence of the prosecution
and be satisfied that things happened the way Choc and Flowers
say they happened before you can convict these accused of
anything. This would necessarily mean you also disbelieved
their dock statements. If you disbelieve the accused and
you disbelieve Franklin, and if you believe the prosecution
case, you must then satisfy yourself that the attack on
P.C. Choc was made by both accused with the common intention
of either killing him, in which case it would be attempted
murder or of causing him serious harm, in which case it
would be the offence of causing dangerous harm. If you believe
the accused or even if you are not satisfied with the prosecution
witnesses, you will find that accused not guilty of any
offence. If you believe Franklin that it was Sanker who
stabbed and that Mayen took no part in the assault, which
means you disbelieve Flowers and Choc in so far as their
evidence relates to Mayen, you will find Mayen not guilty
and then try to decide which of these offences Sanker has
committed."
At this
stage the learned trial judge directed the jury that the issue
was whether they believed Flowers and P.C. Choc. That was
made very clear to the jury. It is equally clear from their
verdict that the jury did believe those witnesses. Once their
evidence is believed then it must follow that the Appellants
and Franklin were acting in consort even though the common
plan to effect escape may have come about spontaneously when
the taxi turned to return them to Belmopan, their ruse about
their pick-up running out of gasoline at Mile 44 having been
exposed. With P.C. Choc armed with the revolver, escape must
necessarily have required force. The case against the two
Appellants was extremely strong once Flowers and P.C. Choc
were believed. The Appellant's own unsworn statements and
the evidence of Franklin lent support to the conclusion that
they were acting in concert in a common enterprise to escape
forcibly. Once that was established it did not matter whose
hand it was that used the knife.
In fact,
a simple common approach to undisputed fact demonstrates what
an overwhelming case it was against the two Appellants. It
is not in dispute that the two Appellants and Franklin set
off for Mile 44 seated in Flowers' taxi as described earlier.
It is not in dispute that Flowers was driving and that P.C.
Choc was with them armed with a revolver. It is not in dispute
that they passed Mile 44, saw nothing significant and went
on to Mile 43 where the taxi turned to return. It is not in
dispute that the incident (or "hassle") occurred
following this turn. That incident left P.C. Choc unconscious
with five stab wounds and Flowers hiding in terror for his
life in the long grass until help arrived. That incident enabled
the two Appellants to make their escape (as prison escapees
they no doubt had a motive) into the bush and they were not
picked up until some time later. What is the obvious inference
from those unchallenged facts without the detailed evidence
of Flowers and P.C. Choc about the incident or "hassle"
leading to escape?
This Court
can confidently rule out the possibility of a miscarriage
of justice and apply the proviso to section 31 of the
Court of Appeal Ordinance.
As to
sentence, it is certainly not manifestly excessive. No one
who commits an attack of this nature on police officers can
look to this Court for any sympathy.
The appeals
against conviction and sentence are dismissed.
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