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(DEAN
VASQUEZ |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(THE
QUEEN |
RESPONDENT |
Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 7 of 1991
24th September, 1991
KENNETH ST. L. HENRY, P.
NICHOIAS J. 0. LIVERPOOL, J. A.
SIR JAMES A. SMITH, J. A.
Mr. Sampson,
for the Appellant.
Mr. Gonzalez, Ag. Director of Public Prosecutions, for the
Respondent.
Criminal Appeal against conviction for murder - Appellant
alleging that he was acting in self-defence - Whether trial
judge misdirected jury on burden of proof on specific issue
of self-defence and the law of self-defence - Whether trial
judge correctly identified possible alternative verdicts
open to jury based on the defence of self-defence - Defence
of provocation - Burden of proof - Onus is on the accused
and standard of proof is on a balance of probabilities -
Whether trial judge correctly addressed the law of provocation
in summing up.
J
U D G M E N T
On September
17, 1991 we dismissed this appeal and affirmed the conviction
for murder, for reasons which we promised to put in writing.
We now give those reasons.
The Appellant
and the deceased, Shimay Jordon, were living together as man
and wife up to August 12, 1990 when Shimay left him and went
to live with a friend, one Shirland Sanker. Some time between
2 and 3 o'clock in the morning of August 16 the Appellant
in an apparent attempt to effect a reconciliation went to
the home where Shimay was then living and sought admission.
When this was refused he became boisterous and eventually
forced his way into the house where according to the prosecution
witnesses he stabbed Shimay and dragged her out to the street.
She died from multiple stab wounds to the face, back and anterior
regions of the chest which caused hypovolemic shock.
In an
unsworn statement the Appellant indicated that he instinctively
reacted to an attempt by the deceased to stab him with a knife
which she took from her bosom.
The first
three grounds of appeal, which were argued together, are as
follows:
"The
Learned Trial Judge erred in law in that -
1. he
misdirected the jury on the burden of proof on the specific
issue of self defence;
11.
he failed adequately and properly to direct the jury on
the law of self defence;
111.
he failed at the end of a confusing and misleading summing?up
on self defence to tell the jury when indicating the various
verdicts open to them, that if they were in doubt as to
whether the accused acted in self-defence, they ought also
to acquit him."
In support
of these grounds counsel referred to the following passages
in the learned trial judge's summing up which, he submitted,
may have misled the jury into believing that there was some
burden on the accused to establish self defence.
At
page 58:
"You
might ask was he acting in excess of what was necessary
to defend himself if in fact he was defending himself? If
you accept his story. You might ask, if you accept this
evidence of Miss Sanker and Mrs. Armstrong, why did he drag
her outside?"
At
page 59:
"If
you are left in reasonable doubt by reason of this accused's
explanation or otherwise as to whether this accused was
acting in self defence that doubt should be resolved in
his favour and you should acquit him of course."
At
page 61:
"As
I said earlier the accused having raised the issue of self
defence in his dock statement it is for the prosecution
from the evidence tendered to support its case, to negative
that self defence beyond a reasonable doubt."
At
Page 61:
"If
he does not retreat when he has that opportunity or if in
retreating he would be losing the protection of what he
ought to be protecting then of course you cannot fault him
for that but if he has an opportunity and here you have
to look at the evidence, the room, he went into that room
when, if you accept his explanation, when Shimay pulled
out a knife, if she did, if you find that she did, was this
accused in a position since Shimay, according to the evidence,
both from Sherlan, Wilma and perhaps you may so find from
the explanation, Shimay was behind the door, was the accused
in a position instead of defending himself, was he not in
a position to come back out of the room?"
We do
not consider that these passages in the summing up could have
had the effect on the minds of the jury suggested by counsel
for the Appellant. In our view they merely reflected the factual
situation that the issue of self defence was raised only by
the unsworn statement of the accused and there was no evidence
whatever from the prosecution witnesses from which the jury
could find that the accused acted in self defence. It is true
that at one point in his summing up the learned trial judge
referred to the "defence" of self defence, but as
counsel for the Appellant quite properly conceded, the learned
trial judge repeatedly and correctly directed the jury on
the burden of proof both generally and in relation to the
issue of self defence. Viewing the summing up as a whole we
do not consider that those directions were vitiated by the
passages complained of.
Counsel
also referred to the omission by the learned trial judge at
the very end of his summing up reminding the jury of the several
verdicts open to them to tell them that if they were in doubt
as to whether the accused acted in self defence they ought
to acquit him. Such an omission was described by the court
in John Dawson v The Queen Criminal Appeal 5/89
as compounding another error by the learned trial judge in
that case. We do not however think that the omission by the
learned trial judge in this case can by itself constitute
a good reason for setting aside the conviction. In his summing
up the learned trial judge had more than once (including the
passage complained of at page 54) told the jury that if they
were in doubt as to self defence they ought to acquit the
accused. We do not consider that his omission to do so at
the end of the summing up is fatal to the conviction.
The fourth
ground of appeal is as follows:
"The
learned trial judge erred in law in that he misdirected
the jury on the law of provocation by placing before them
matters in the evidence which the accused was not in fact
asking the jury for consideration in proving "extreme
provocation" and "loss of self control" and
he failed to direct the jury that if they were in doubt
about any of the above, their verdict should be manslaughter."
In relation
to this ground counsel submitted that, the burden of proving
provocation being on the accused, the learned trial judge
ought to have directed the jury's attention only to the statement
of the accused and so much of the prosecution's evidence as
supported a finding of provocation when he was dealing with
the defence of provocation. We can see no justification for
this. It is the duty of a trial judge to present to the jury
both the case for the prosecution and the case for the defence.
Whether he does so by dealing separately with the evidence
overall or by dealing with the evidence in so far as relates
to each individual issue is a matter of style for the individual
preference of each judge. But it is probably more helpful
to a jury if they are reminded of the evidence in relation
to each issue when that issue is dealt with.
Counsel
also submitted that the learned trial judge ought to have
directed the jury that if they were in doubt in relation to
the issue of provocation they ought to resolve that doubt
in favour of the accused and convict of manslaughter. We do
not consider that such a direction was required. The concept
of reasonable doubt and the consequent necessity for such
a direction only apply in relation to the prosecution's case
where the standard of proof is proof beyond reasonable doubt.
It does not apply in relation to provocation where the onus
of proof is on the accused and the standard of proof is proof
on a balance of probabilities. This ground of appeal therefore
also fails.
It is
for these reasons that we dismissed the appeal.
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