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(P.C.
NO. 149 T. RAMIREZ |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(JACOB
OLFERT |
RESPONDENT |
Supreme
Court
Inferior Court Appeal No. 13 of 1983
19th September, 1983
Moe, C.J.
Mr. G.
Quallo, for the Appellant.
Mr. A. Pitts, for the Respondent.
Inferior
Court Appeal - Burden of proof of prosecution and defence
- Charge of possession of 200 pounds of Indian Hemp - Evidential
value of an unsworn statement of a defendant - Decision
of Magistrate - Unreasonable and not supported by evidence.
D
E C I S I O N
The Respondent
was charged with the offence of having in his possession 200
pounds of Indian Hemp. The evidence for the prosecution was
that policemen were on a search mission for marijuana. They
went to the defendant's premises. He was not at home. He was
later found and brought to the premises where he was asked
if he had any marijuana at his house. He said yes and took
them to an outhouse which he said and which was about 20 yards
away from the dwelling house. He took the policemen upstairs
this outhouse and shoved them a number of sacks. Respondent
was cautioned. Twenty-seven sacks were gathered up. On a further
search five more sacks also containing what was suspected
to be marijuana were found in a large wooden box under an
old shed about 15 feet from the said outhouse. The defendant
when cautioned said the marijuana was not his but for some
friends whom he had granted permission to leave it there.
As to who the friends were he only know them by face not by
name. Matter was taken from 3 different bags and sent to a
Chemist in Belize City who gave a certificate that that matter
was Indian Hemp. When the Respondent was charged and cautioned
he gave a statement in which be said the police found some
weed in an old house in his yard. They asked him if the weed
was his and he told them no.
At the
close of the case for the prosecution Respondent's counsel
made a submission that the Respondent had no case to answer.
The magistrate ruled there was a case to answer and the Respondent
made an unsworn statement from the dock.
In his
unsworn statement from the dock the Respondent said some policemen
came to where he was at Guinea Grass and told him they had
searched his house and store-room and found marijuana in the
store-room. He told them he saw his houses less than three
days ago and nothing was there. He went to his premises with
the police where he was told he had marijuana in his store-room.
The police went upstairs of the store-room and there were
some bags. The police said this is Indian Hemp. He said he
knew nothing about this. He gave a statement at the Police
Station. The magistrate dismissed the case.
This appeal
against the magistrate's decision is on the ground (1) that
the magistrate misdirected himself (a) as to the burden of
proof and (b) the evidential value of an unsworn statement.
(2) That the decision was unreasonable and could not be supported
having regard to the evidence; and (3) the magistrate took
extraneous matter into consideration.
5. With
regard to the burden of proof the magistrate said as follows:
"The
burden of proof is on the prosecution to prove that the defendant
was in fact in possession of these dangerous drugs and that
he had knowledge of these drugs. The police must produce evidence
to show to the court that the defendant had these drugs in
his possession and that he had knowledge of these being there.
The defendant is not required to prove anything since the
burden of proof is on the prosecution. However after the prosecution
has proven its case, then the defendant has to show in his
defence, he either had no knowledge, or he was not in possession
of the articles (e.g. Dangerous Drugs - Indian Hemp)."
The magistrate was clearly correct in his statement that the
burden of proof is on the prosecution. He appeared however
to have stated that there is a burden on the defendant which
he does not have. As will appear later the question whether
the defendant discharged the burden as stated to be on him
did not arise and this stated error as to the burden of proof
does not affect the decision.
The magistrate
did not in his reasons make any reference to the unsworn statement
of the Respondent. If he gave any evidential value to the
unsworn statement he would have been in order. I refer to
Reg. v. Campbell 69 Cr. App. R. 221
"A
statement from the dock is not, of course, evidence. It
is, as many think - the fact that a defendant is still at
liberty to make a statement of fact from the dock, invite
a jury to consider his version of the facts without taking
the oath and without subjecting himself to cross-examination
- an anomalous historical survival from the days before
the Criminal Evidence Act 1898 when a person could not give
evidence on his own behalf. There it is anomaly or not;
the courts have to grapple with it and a statement from
the dock unsworn now seems to have taken on in current practice
a somewhat shadowy character half-way in value and weight
between unsworn evidence and mere hearsay. A jury cannot
be told to disregard it altogether. They must be told to
give it such weight as they think fit, but it can be properly
pointed out to them that it cannot have the same value as
sworn evidence which has been tested by cross-examination."
The statement
from the dock therefore added matter to the material which
the magistrate could have considered. But I am unable to say
whether he put the wrong value on the statement. The cause
for complaint that the magistrate took extraneous matter into
consideration was that the magistrate adverted to the fact
that other persons occupied the defendant's premises and were
at home when the police arrived but were not brought in for
questioning or charged jointly with the Respondent. This was
a charge of being in possession of Indian Hemp found as the
evidence shows in certain premises. The fact that persons
other than the owner of the premises occupied them is not
irrelevant. It is clearly relevant to the question who was
in possession of the Indian Hemp.
I turn
now to look at the evidence which the magistrate had before
him and determine whether his decision was unreasonable and
can not be supported. The real issue for the magistrate was
whether it was established that the Respondent was in possession
of the dangerous drugs, that is, that he had them in his charge
and control and knew that he had them. When at the close of
the prosecution's case the magistrate ruled that the Respondent
had a case to answer, he must have been satisfied that there
was a prima facie case against the Respondent and the
evidence was such that a reasonable tribunal might convict
on it. The defendant's counsel had submitted that the prosecution's
evidence was unreliable and he ruled against that submission.
Thus at that stage he must have determined that the prosecution's
evidence was not so discredited or so manifestly unreliable
that no reasonable tribunal could convict on it.
Having
then heard the Respondent's unsworn statement, the magistrate
was entitled then to look at the matter as a whole and come
to his decision. But no where in his reasons does it appear
that this statement had any effect on the magistrates decision.
The whole of his reasons was an exercise in showing the unreliability
of the evidence of the prosecution. The aspects of the prosecution's
case referred to by the magistrate as causing a dismissal
after calling for a defence and getting an unsworn statement
were as follows:
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Each
of the policemen gave some evidence which was inconsistent
with the evidence of the other policemen.
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The
policeman cautioned the Respondent at his premises at
Shipyard but did not take a cautioned statement.
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The
statement recorded from the Respondent at the police station
was in English while the defendant only understood the
German and Spanish languages.
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Two
of the three policemen were very unreliable.
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Other
persons occupied the Respondent's premises and were at
home when the police arrived but were not questioned or
charged jointly with the Respondent.
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The
Respondent was not present when the police first went
to the premises where the drugs were found.
The magistrate
concluded his reasons for decision by saying "the evidence
of the police could not be accepted as factual enough to convict
the defendant on it. Therefore giving the defendant the benefit
of the doubt created by the prosecution witnesses inaccurate
evidence, the court dismissed the case against the defendant."
What was
this doubt created by the inaccurate evidence of the prosecution?
Was this doubt fanciful or was it as to the real issue for
the magistrate's determination? It could hardly have been
as to the drugs being in the Respondent's premises. The Respondent's
statement added to the prosecution evidence that they were
there. The magistrate did not indicate in what way the inconsistencies
in the prosecution evidence created a doubt as to whether
the defendant had the drugs in his charge and control. Nor
does he indicate how the discrepancies in the prosecution
evidence alluded to have affected the issue whether the Respondent
knew he had the drugs. One is tempted to think that the doubt
he says he had was fanciful. By not stating the precise area
of his doubt the magistrate has not assisted me as to whether
he appreciated the real issue which he had to determine. I
think on the evidence the verdict was unsatisfactory.
Having
not seen and heard the witnesses I do not think that in this
case I should simply substitute a verdict of mine on the basis
of the record. I allow the appeal and order that the charge
be heard anew by another magistrate. The Respondent to pay
the costs of this appeal.
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