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(RUPERT
KELLY |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
(
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(THE
QUEEN |
RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 5 of 1986
18th November, 1986
SIR JAMES A. SMITH P.
SIR ALBERT L. STAINE J.A.
KENNETH ST. L. HENRY J.A.
Appellant
in person
Mr. Fred Lumor for the Respondent.
Appeal
against conviction and application for leave to appeal against
sentence of 6 years imprisonment imposed for arson - Statement
made by accused - Section 89 of Chapter 75 - Judge failed
to warn jury to look for confirmation of statement - Judge
misrepresented contents of statement and encroached on functions
of jury by telling them what amounted to recklessness -
Appeal allowed - Conviction and sentence set aside - New
trial ordered.
J
U D G M E N T
The Appellant
was convicted of arson contrary to section 138(1) and (3)
of the Criminal Code, Chapter 84, the particulars of the offence
being that on the 24th day of February, 1986 at Belize City,
without lawful excuse, he destroyed by fire a dwelling house
belonging to Mary Rudon, intending to destroy such property
or being reckless as to whether such property would be destroyed.
He was sentenced to 6 years imprisonment. He appealed against
his conviction and sought leave to appeal against the sentence
imposed.
The prosecution's
case rested partly on circumstantial evidence and partly on
a statement allegedly given by the Appellant to the police.
That statement indicates that the Appellant was staying at
the home of one Mary Rudon and speaks of a misunderstanding
and subsequent argument with Mary Rudon about a butcher knife
and clothes pins which Mary alleged to have been stolen. The
statement then continues:
"I
then told Mary that I was going to leave her house and she
said that she was going to take a bath. Whilst she was bathing
I pulled down my clothes off my hanger and after she was
finish she change her clothes and said that she was going
to her neighbour. After she left I finished packed up my
clothes in a cloth valise which is mine. There was some
baby clothes inside the valise which belongs to Mary which
I took out and put on the table which has on a kerosene
lamp lighted. There was some left on the chair which was
beside the table and I picked those up and these were the
one that I threw on top of the table and this was when these
rest of clothes knock over the lamp shade off the lamp.
I did not pay much attention to this but I picked up my
bag and valise and went through the door. I did not have
a watch but I can assume that it was about 9.10 p.m. when
I left. I did not know something like this would have happened."
In so
far as it may be regarded as a confession the statement required
confirmation by virtue of section 89 of Cap. 75. That section
is as follows:
"If
an accused person, after having made any confession or admission
that he had committed a crime or offence, pleads not guilty
at his trial, he shall not be convicted on such confession
or admission alone without such confirmatory evidence as
the court thinks sufficient."
It was
therefore the duty of the learned trial judge to warn the
jury that they ought to look for confirmation of the statement
and not to treat it a confession in the absence of such confirmation.
He ought further to have indicated to the jury evidence which,
if they accepted it, was capable of confirming the statement
in so far as it could be regarded as a confession. This the
learned trial judge failed to do. The statement in fact did
no more than admit to behaviour which it was for the jury
to assess with a view to deciding whether it amounted to recklessness
on the part of the Appellant. The learned trial judge directed
the jury in the following terms:
"Now
he is saying that he threw those baby clothes which were
in the valise and threw them on the table and it hit the
lamp shade and may have caught fire but he did not pay much
attention to it, that he went off. That, if you admit that
as his own statement, then it shows recklessness".
Counsel
for the Crown has quite properly conceded that in giving the
directions the learned trial judge erred in two respects.
Firstly he misrepresented the contents of the statement which
nowhere mentioned that anything "may have caught fire".
Secondly he encroached on the function of the jury to decide
whether the conduct of the Appellant as disclosed in the statement
amounted to recklessness. Counsel for the Crown submitted
that notwithstanding these misdirections the conviction should
be affirmed in view of the circumstantial evidence. We cannot
accept that submission. The circumstantial evidence was given
by three witnesses-Mary Rudon and Bernadine Stephens who were
occupants of the house destroyed by fire and a 9 year old
girl Celia Nicholas. We have no means of knowing what was
the jury's assessment of the credibility of these witnesses.
The jury may well have felt, in the light of the learned trial
judge's directions, that once they found that the Appellant
had given the statement attributed to him, recklessness was
established and they need look as I further for any evidence
of it. We cannot say that if there had been no misdirection
the jury would inevitably have convicted the Appellant.
The appeal
must be allowed and the conviction and sentence set aside.
In the interest of justice however we order that there be
a new trial.
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