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Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 4 of 1978
22nd July, 1978
MICHAEL HOGAN, P.
CLIFFORD INNISS, J.A.
ALASTAIR BLAIR KERR, J.A.
Criminal
Appeal against convictions for use of deadly means of harm
contrary to section 77(c) of the Criminal Code and intentionally
and unlawfully causing dangerous harm contrary to section
76 of the Criminal Code - Wrongful admission of evidence
at a preliminary inquiry - whether it invalidates a committal
- Section 30(1) of Indictable Procedure Act requiring that
at a preliminary inquiry, the deposition of a doctor shall
"if necessary" be taken - Whether provision mandatory,
rendering non-compliance with it to nullify a committal,
or only directory - Defence of intoxication Section 24(4)
of the Criminal Code - Circumstances under which it is proper
for trial judge to leave defence of intoxication for determination
by jury - Challenges of committal proceedings before court
sitting to try an indictment - Challenges to be entertained
only in exceptional circumstances.
J
U D G M E N T
The Appellant
appeals against convictions before the Supreme Court on counts
for Use of Deadly Means of Harm contrary to section 77 (c)
of the Criminal Code and for Intentionally and Unlawfully
causing dangerous harm to Joseph Riverol, contrary to section
76 of that Code.
The evidence
at the trial was broadly as follows.
At about
2 a.m. on 4th July, 1976, there was an altercation in the
San Martin Restaurant, Orange Walk, between the Appellant
and Eldo Briceno on the one side, and Joseph Riverol and his
close friend, George Wade, on the other. During the course
of the dispute the Appellant, who had been urged by Briceno
"to shoot", was alleged to have opened his shirt
and shown Wade a revolver stuck in his pants. Wade then went
outside and on to the upstairs verandah, but there ensued
further words and some mutual pushing and shoving between
the Appellant and Riverol who claimed to have then heard a
gunshot in the restaurant, following which the Appellant and
Briceno left through the back door.
Ten minutes
later Riverol went out of the front door to where he was shot.
There
were two eye?witnesses of this incident ? Wade, who was still
on the upstairs verandah, and Riverol himself. Their testimony
differed in a number of respect ? notably, as to the course
taken by Riverol when he came out of the front door, what
words, if any, were spoken, where Riverol was when he was
shot, and where Briceno and Appellant were when the shot was
fired. Both were agreed, however, that there was only one
car parked right in front of the Restaurant, that Appellant
and Briceno were by it, that they and Riverol were the only
three persons outside the Restaurant in front of it except
for Wade on the upstairs verandah, that Appellant held his
right hand pointing in the direction of Riverol, that a flash
came from his right hand and there was a report, and that
Riverol was shot in his stomach. Neither witness, however,
actually saw the firearm.
Dr. Tembe,
to whom Riverol was taken for examination immediately after
the shooting, said that there was a single gunshot wound,
oval?shaped, clean?edged, about half an inch at its longest
part, on the abdomen slightly to the left of the middle line.
This was the only wound of entry and there was no exit wound.
He could feel, however, two to three medium?sized pellets
close together at the back of Riverol's body. In the Doctor's
opinion, there was internal abdominal damage and Riverol's
condition was dangerous: in the absence of medical treatment
he would have died.
The Doctor's
opinion as to the type of firearm which caused the wound and
the presence of pellets in Riverol's body was inconsistent
with the evidence of both Wade and Riverol as to what had
occured, and also with the further evidence of Riverol that
on his second operation at the Belize City Hospital, a bullet,
not a pellet, was removed from his back and shown to him by
the Doctor who removed it. This Doctor did not give evidence.
Dr. Tembe,
however, frankly admitted that he had never had a case of
a single bullet wound although he had read about them, that
he was not conversant with firearms, and did not know the
difference between a firearm which discharges a single bullet
and one which discharges a number of pellets.
From suggestions
made in cross?examination, Appellant's defence, or one leg
of it, seemed to be justification, but he neither testified
nor gave an unsworn statement from the dock, and these suggestions
were unsupported by any evidence. The defence eventually appeared
to boil down to a submission that Wade and Riverol had got
together to concoct a story to explain the shooting of the
latter and the jury should not accept it because they were
close friends. In any event the unreliability of their evidence
was underlined by the large number of differences between
them.
There
were, indeed, a large number of fairly substantial differences
between them. These were, however, put to the jury at some
length by Counsel for the Defence and also by the learned
Trial Judge.
They are
not the subject of any ground of appeal. The latter was confined
to other matters and have been ably argued before us.
The first
turns on the validity of the committal. It is alleged that
this was illegal and irregular because the magistrate did
not follow the requirements of the Indictable Procedure Ordinance,
Chapter 22, and the Evidence Ordinance, Chapter 18, in the
following matters.
(1)
The examining magistrate did not, as required by s. 30 of
the Indictable Procedure Ordinance, cause a doctor to examine
Riverol.
(2)
The examining magistrate, contrary to s. 36 (3) of Cap.
18, took into consideration the medico legal report of Dr.
Tembe, which was tendered by a police witness, and did not
ensure the taking of the Doctor's deposition as required
by the said s. 30.
(3)
The examining magistrate did not hear and consider the evidence
of Gasper Ayuso from whom the prosecution had obtained a
statement and whom they had intended to call at the preliminary
inquiry but who failed to attend with the result that a
bench warrant was issued for him.
It would
seem that more than one answer could be made to the first
two grounds of complaint and in the court below the learned
Chief Justice rejected a similar submission on the ground
that s. 30 was directed to a more archaic form of preliminary
inquiry and had no relevance to the modern form where the
investigation was primarily the responsibility of the police.
Before
us this view has been attacked, primarily on the ground that
the scheme of the Ordinance is a consistent whole which leaves
no room for excisions of this kind.
We see
no need to reach any concluded opinion on this aspect as we
would approach the matter on a somewhat narrower front.
Counsel
for the Appellant has accepted that the onus of showing a
departure from the statute would rest on him, as he has alleged
it, but he claimed that this onus had been discharged, as
a perusal of the Preliminary Inquiry record disclosed no such
request by the Magistrate. We have reservations, to which
we will return, about this assumption that the Preliminary
Inquiry records which form no part of the Supreme Court trial
proceedings, should be persued in this way but, putting these
reservations aside for the moment, we are not satisfied that
the mere absence of a reference in the record of the Inquiry
would displace the presumption of omnia praesumuntar rite
esse acta. It would not, for example, displace the possibility
of a standing request to the police to secure a medical examination
in all such cases. Moreover, once the Magistrate was aware
that an examination had been made and a report was available
to him, we would not regard the omission, in these circumstances,
of the consequently meaning ritual of requesting an examination
which had already taken place as having any effect on the
validity of the Inquiry. This view might indeed be justified
by s. 32 (e) of the Ordinance, which authorises modification
of the procedure by the Magistrate so long as he does not
act inconsistently with the Ordinance. When the result contemplated
by the Ordinance has been achieved, the acceptance of that
fact can hardly be regarded as inconsistent. But, even apart
from the section, we do not think the validity of the Inquiry
could be impugned.
Similarly,
in respect of the Magistrate's action in taking cognisance
of Dr. Tembe's medico legal report, it is to be noted that
s. 36 of Chapter 18 enables other reports, but not those of
a doctor, to be so treated. The effect of the section as a
whole is not, however, to impose a prohibition but to leave
the magistrate without the specific enabling provisions contained
in s. 36 (1). It might possibly be argued that this could
again leave room for the operation of s. 32 (e) of Chapter
22, but, quite apart from that, it is well established that
under the provisions in England, which do not apparently contain
the relaxation provided by s. 36 (1) of Chapter 18, wrongful
admission of evidence does not invalidate a committal. See
R.v. Norfolk Quarter Sessions ex parte Brunson (1953) 1
A.E.R. 346, Halsbury's Laws of England (3r Ed.) Vol. 10, p.
362 and Archbold's 39th Ed. para. 359.
Counsel
sought to meet this point by arguing that s. 36 was a procedural
section which fell within the reservation expressed in Paley
on Summary Convictions (10th Edition) p. 55, when the
authors said:
"Provided
that the specified procedure is followed by examining justices
the reception of some inadmissible evidence would not vitiate
the committal".
We see
no reason, however, to differ from the view expressed by the
learned Chief Justice in the court below that the section
deals with the law of evidence and is not within the reservation.
To hold otherwise would fly in the face of the Norfolk
decision. This view is strengthened by the fact that section
36 does not add an additional prohibition to the law of evidence,
but merely provides for a limited relaxation.
The next
ground is again highly technical but somewhat more formidable.
Section 30 (1) of Chapter 22 says the deposition of the doctor
shall "if necessary be taken. It is of course questionable
whether a deposition, prior to the trial, was necessary in
this case where there was abundant evidence, quite apart from
the doctor, that the victim had been shot and seriously injured;
so it might well be that there was no departure from the section.
But assuming there was such a departure, then we think that,
unlike the circumstances in R . v. Gee and Others, 25 C.A.R.
198, it did not render the proceedings so defective as
to vitiate the committal. The provision can well be regarded
as directory rather than mandatory and the absence of a deposition
is not shown to have caused prejudice or the danger of prejudice
to anyone.
The last
procedural objection rests on section 33 of Chapter 22 which
requires the Examining Magistrate to take as evidence the
written statements of the witnesses for the prosecution in
accordance with the prescribed procedure and then, under the
provisions of section 40, to consider "the whole of the
evidence" at the close of the Inquiry.
The section
seems to be directed more at the manner of taking the evidence
than anything else but, quite apart from that, Counsel recognised
that his argument depended on Ayuso falling within the expression
"witness for the prosecution", which he contended
Ayuso did, because the police had a written statement from
Ayuso, had summoned him and had obtained a bench warrant when
he did not attend. Mention was also made of the fact that
he had given evidence at an earlier abortive Inquiry.
The short
answer is that none of these things either taken singly or
together made him a witness at the Inquiry in question. There
may have been an intention, at one time, to call him as a
witness but he did not assume that role at the second Inquiry.
The point
is without merit and we turn to the second ground of appeal
which is briefly a complaint that the judge did not leave
to the jury a specific issue as to intoxication and its effect
on the intent which the Appellant was alleged to have formed
in respect of each charge.
In support
of this complaint, Counsel referred to section 24 (4) of the
Criminal Code, which reads as follows:
"Intoxication
shall be taken into account for the purpose of determining
whether the person charged had formed any intention, specific
or other wise, in the absence of which he would not be guilty
of the offence".
This,
Counsel suggested, differed from the law in England where
the leading case of D.P.P. v. Beard (1921) A.C. 479
propounded the view that it was only drunkenness, which rendered
an accused incapable of forming the specific intent required
for certain crimes, that had to be taken into account.
Both Counsel
referred at length to Broadhurst v. The Queen (1964) A.C.
441, where the provision in Malta, which corresponds precisely
with our section 24 (4), was under consideration. Lord Devlin,
who delivered the opinion of the Privy Council, thought it
unnecessary to explore whether there was any real difference
between it and the British test because where, as in the Broadhurst
case, there was no direct evidence as to the accused's state
of mind, and intent had to be inferred from surrounding circumstances,
only evidence as to being incapable of forming the necessary
intent and nothing less could be considered. Counsel for the
Appellant had reservations about the logical justification
for the distinction and suggested that the judgment eventually
resiled from it: a construction we find difficult to accept.
Be that as it may, a similar position appears to prevail,
as Counsel for the Crown submitted, in the instant case, where
we have no direct evidence as to the Appellant's state of
mind and very little as to what he had drunk. There is one
brief reference in Wade's evidence when he said:
"I
know that (Appellant) had been drinking but I would not
say that he was drunk".
Apart
from that, Counsel for the Appellant has made a valiant effort
to extract from the references to the Appellant's behaviour,
stance and conversation some facets which would suggest that
the Appellant's faculties were affected by drink, but it was
an uphill struggle that met with little success. As an example,
we found difficulty in accepting Counsel's submission that
we could extract from the fact that the Appellant was seen
leaning over the back of a car outside the restaurant, before
the shooting, an inference that the Appellant was unable to
stand.
It is
abundantly clear that the evidence of intoxication was negligible
and fell far short of that in the Broadhurst case where
the Privy Council thought intoxication could properly have
been withdrawn from the jury.
Whilst
we fully accept Counsel's contention that intoxication, if
it exists, is a factor to be left to the jury to be considered
with other matters when deliberating on intent, the question
as to whether it existed need only be raised for consideration
when there is material on which a conclusion could be based.
To use
the words adopted in Phipson on Evidence, 11th Edition,
para. 101, to which we have been referred, and also in
R. v. Gill, 47 C.A.R. 166, 171, 172, material had not
been placed before the court to make intoxication " a
live issue fit and proper to be placed before the jury".
Consequently, we think the judge was justified in refusing
to ask the jury to consider it when drawing conclusions as
to the intent of the accused. This ground of appeal cannot
be sustained.
We may
add that we have dealt at some length with the matters raised
under the first ground of appeal, but we are by no means satisfied
that the Appellant was entitled to raise them in the fashion
adopted in either this Court or the court below.
The court
sitting to try an indictment is not there to act in an appellate
or revisory capacity in respect of the committal proceedings
and there is much authority for the view that its power to
go behind the indictment and explore how it came to be preferred
are limited. Thus in R. v. London County Sessions ex parte
Downes, 37 C.A.R. 148, a very strong Divisional Court
said:
"The
only ground on which the court can examine the depositions
before arraignment is to see whether, if a count is included
for which there has not been a committal, the deposition
or examination taken before a justice in the presence of
the accused discloses that offence".
In the
same case, an indication is given of the very limited range
of circumstances which can arrest arraignment and trial once
an indictment is before the court and although these include
a motion to quash, the judge's ruling in respect of the latter
will be made upon the form and matter on the face of the indictment
save in the one instance where there has been no committal
for the offence charged and it is alleged not be disclosed
by the depositions. See Archbold, 39th Ed. paras. 99A and
120, and R. v. Jones and others, 59 C.A.R. 120, 126.
The point
has not been raised or argued before us and we make no finding
in respect of it, but we mention these matters now lest the
action of this Court and the lower court in overlooking these
obstacles should be taken as a precedent in the future.
The appeal
is dismissed.
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