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Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 3 of 1985
13th June, 1985
SIR JAMES A. SMITH P.
SIR ALBERT L. STAINE J.A.
KENNETH ST. L. HENRY J.A.
Appeal
against conviction and sentence of death imposed for murder
- statement made under caution - allegation by appellant
in voir dire that he was beaten by police and sustained
injuries for which he had been treated by a doctor - evidence
not refuted by Prosecution - presumption that if a person
is injured while in the custody of the Police, Police are
responsible for injuries - reasonable doubt as to voluntariness
of statement - onus not discharged by Prosecution - statement
ought not to have been admitted in evidence - no other evidence
capable of supporting verdict - appeal allowed - conviction
set aside.
J U D G M E N T
On January
30, 1985 the Appellant was convicted for the murder of Walter
Belisle and sentenced to death. This is an appeal against
that conviction.
Evidence
led by the prosecution indicated that the deceased, a 76 year
old farmer, lived alone but occasionally gave lodging to persons
in need of it. The Appellant was seen in the deceased's premises
on Sunday, Monday and Tuesday the 15th, 16th and 17th July,
1984 and was last seen there by one Roy Joseph at about 6
p.m. on Tuesday July 17. The following day at about 7 a.m.
the body of the deceased was found lying in the bed in his
home. The body had two stab wounds in the neck approximately
½ centimeter apart piercing the internal carotid artery
and jugular vein and fracturing the second vertebra of the
neck. Haemorrhage from these wounds caused death. At the time
the body was discovered the appellant was not on the premises
and money which had been counted in his presence and placed
in a purse and a bottle was missing. So was a radio. On July
31 1984 the Appellant was found in an unoccupied house outside
Santa Elena Town. According to Cpl. Valentine he cautioned
the Appellant who said that he wished to speak to his mother
and after being afforded an opportunity of doing so gave a
written statement to the police. According to the Appellant
he was illtreated by Cpl. Valentine and gave a written statement
to avoid further illtreatment. After a hearing on the voire
dire the learned trial judge expressed himself as satisfied
beyond reasonable doubt that the statement was given freely
and voluntarily and ruled that it was admissible in evidence.
This ruling is the subject of the first ground of appeal which
complains that the ruling was unreasonable having regard to
the evidence.
Two witness
gave at the hearing on the voire dire- Cpl. Wellington
Valentine for the prosecution and the Appellant. The gist
of Cpl. Valentine's evidence was that he took a statement
from the Appellant that no force or pressure was used on the
Appellant and that the Appellant gave his statement freely
and voluntarily. The Appellant on the other hand said that
Cpl. Valentine boxed him on his right jaw, punched him in
his belly and struck him on the foot with a staff and that
he gave a statement to avoid further punishment. If the matter
had ended there, it would have been a straight issue of fact
for the learned trial judge to decide with a view to determining
whether the prosecution had discharged the onus of proving
beyond reasonable doubt that the statement was voluntary and
therefore admissible. But the matter did not end there. In
answer to the learned trial judge the Appellant said that
he had been taken to a doctor and treated for the injuries
he received. In cross examination he had already said that
he had reported his illtreatment to prison officer Flowers
and to an attorney, Mr. Sampson, and he rejected the suggestion
that he had a fight with a prisoner after the statement was
taken and before he was brought to Belize. We recognize that
the learned trial judge had the inestimable advantage of observing
the witnesses and as an appellate court we would not ordinarily
question his assessment of their credibility. We also recognize
that the appellant's evidence suggesting that at the time
of the trial in January 1985 he still had marks of the bruises
he said he suffered some six months earlier appears incredible.
Nevertheless at the conclusion of the hearing on the voire
dire there was clear evidence from the Appellant that
he had suffered injuries after being apprehended by the Police.
Not only was this evidence unrefuted by the prosecution but
the suggestion put to the Appellant in cross examination of
a fight with another prisoner appears to indicate that the
prosecution accepted that the appellant had suffered injury
but was alleging that it was not at the hands of the Police.
However no evidence to support the suggestion was ever led,
nor was any attempt made to call the doctor who the Appellant
said had treated him, with a view to ascertaining the nature
and extent of his injuries, if any. Prima facie
if a person is injured while in the custody of the Police
the presumption must be that the Police are responsible for
these injuries. In the circumstances it was in our view essential
to their case for the prosecution to call evidence by way
of rebuttal.
The learned
trial judge gave no reasons for his decision but with great
respect to him it seem to us that on the evidence as it stood
the allegation by the Appellant must at least have raised
a reasonable doubt as to the voluntariness of the statement.
Consequently the prosecution failed to discharge the onus
which lay on them of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
the statement was voluntary and admissible. In our view the
ruling of the learned trial judge that the statement was voluntary
was unreasonable having regard to the evidence, and the statement
ought not to have been admitted in evidence.
It was
the statement which placed the Appellant on the scene at the
relevant time and contained an admission that he then struck
the deceased, albeit with a crowbar, an implement which could
not have caused the fatal wounds. The evidence for the prosecution
apart from the statement does not go beyond placing the appellant
on the deceased's premises at about 6 p.m. on July 17. There
is no direct evidence as to what took place on those premises
after the witness Norman Garcia locked them at about that
time and indeed Garcia's evidence is that he did not then
see the Appellant on the premises. The Appellant in his unsworn
statement from the dock said that he left the deceased alive
at about 9:40 p.m. on July 17 and went to stay in a friend's
house where the Police eventually found him. The medical evidence
places the time of death as between 11 p.m. on July 17 and
1a.m. on July 18. There is no evidence that any of the articles
missing from the deceased's house was found on the Appellant.
The evidence apart from the written statement is circumstantial
and not in our view sufficient to support the conviction.
In view
of the conclusion which we have reached in relation to this
ground of appeal it is not necessary to consider the other
grounds of appeal.
The appeal
is allowed and the conviction set aside
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