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(JOSHUA
LEVINE |
APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(CPL.
#660 BALDIMAR PUERTO |
RESPONDENT |
Supreme
Court
Appeal No. 6 of 1980
2nd October, 1981.
Alcantara, J.
Mr. Michael
Young, for the Appellant.
Mr. G. C. Gandhi, for the Respondent.
Inferior
Court Appeal - Offences of negligently and unlawfully causing
grievous harm through the negligent use of a motor vehicle
and driving a motor vehicle without due care and attention
- Section 88 of the Criminal Code and Section 62 of the
Motor Vehicles and Road Traffic Act - Appeal against conviction
- What constitutes driving without due care and attention
- Definition of "negligence".
J
U D G M E N T
This is
an appeal from the Inferior Court for the Stann Creek Judicial
District. The Appellant was convicted and fined for two offences
on the 12th June, 1980 by the learned Magistrate. The particulars
of the offences were:
For
that the said Joshua Levine on the 25th day of March, 1980
on the Southern Highway between Mile 13 and 14 in the Stann
Creek Judicial District negligently and unlawfully caused
grievous harm to John Zabaneh through the negligent use
of motor vehicle namely pickup No. C-7646 contrary to section
88 of the Criminal Code, Chapter 21 of the Laws of Belize,
Revised Edition, 1958.
For
that the said Joshua Levine on the 25th day of March, 1980
on the Southern road between Mile 13 and 14 in the Stann
Creek Judicial District you drove motor vehicle namely pickup
No. C-7646 on the said road without due care and attention
contrary to section 76 of the Motor Vehicles and Road Traffic
Ordinance, Chapter 62 of the Laws of Belize, Revised Edition,
1958.
A fine
of $75 for the first offence and a fine of $100 for the second
offence. Each carried a term of imprisonment in default of
payment.
From the
said convictions the Appellant has appealed to this Court
and his grounds of appeal in respect of both convictions are
the same:
-
The
decision was unreasonable and could not be supported having
regard to the evidence.
-
The
decision was erroneous in point of law.
-
The
decision was based on a wrong principle or was such that
the Inferior Court viewing the circumstances reasonably
could not properly have so decided.
The brief
facts of the case are that on the date in question, the 25th
March, 1980, the Appellant was driving his pick-up truck C-7646
along the Southern Highway in a northerly direction. It was
early morning and the road was very dusty. He was travelling
at a speed of 30 to 35 miles per hour. As he was approaching
a cut-off road on his left-hand side he looked into, "my
rear view and saw a whole pile of dust." He then put
his left trafficator and proceeded to turn into the cut-off
road. A collision took place.
Unknown
to him one Zabaneh had been travelling behind him at a higher
speed in another pick-up C-9523. Zabaneh decided to overtake
the Appellant on his left-hand side. He blew his horn a number
of times and proceeded to overtake just as the Appellant was
turning to his left. The collision then took place. Both vehicles
were damaged, and Zabaneh was injured.
Counsel
for the Appellant has argued that the accident or collision
was the fault of Zabaneh and not that of the Appellant. Zabaneh
was driving fast. It was a dusty road and he decided to overtake
at an intersection of which he was aware. The Appellant took
all the necessary precautions. Further, it was Zabaneh who
was guilty of careless driving and that it was through Zabaneh's
own negligence that he suffered grievous harm. Finally, that
the Magistrate misdirected himself when he said in his judgment
-
"Finding
the defendant guilty on the charge of negligent grievous
harm was consequential on his conviction on the charge of
driving without due care and attention."
Counsel
has referred me to Black's Law Dictionary, 1979, and
to the relevant Rules of the Road and to Section 8 of the
Criminal Code, this latter in relation to the second charge.
Counsel
for the Respondent has directed my attention to the test laid
down by Lord Goddard in Simpson v Peat (1952) 2 Q.B. 24,
and to the Rules contained in Volume 2 of Subsidiary Laws
of Belize, particularly Rules 114(l)(b), 114(2)(b), 114(3)
and 115. In addition, he has referred me to Baxter 41 C.A.R.
134, Ball Loughlin 50 C.A.R. 266. All the above authorities
in relation to the charge of careless driving.
With particular
reference to the second charge, that of causing grievous harm
by negligence, Counsel drew my attention to the Criminal Code,
Sections 88, 91, 8 and 7 and to the cases of Willard Bonner
v Queen C.A. 7 of 1979 and Sidney Stubbs 8 C.A.R. 238.
I will
deal first with the case of careless driving. There is no
doubt in my mind that the learned Magistrate came to the right
decision on the evidence before him. He found as a fact that
the Appellant contravened Rule 115. I think a couple of quotations
from the learned Magistrate's Reasons for Decision will suffice.
At page 5 he has this to say:
"Evidence
revealed that defendant slowed down and angled his vehicle
to left - all under a cloud of dust. Defendant agreed that
any number of vehicles could have been in the cloud of dust
he saw in his rear view mirror. Putting on an indicator
when turning in a cloud of dust hardly serves any purpose
nor does it justify such a turning. All this, to my mind,
constitutes driving without due care and attention."
And at
page 3:
"Whether
or not Zabaneh is guilty of an offence was not the matter
before the Court. Whether he should have been or should
be prosecuted is, I think, a matter for the Director of
Public Prosecutions to resolve. In either case, none of
the above warranted the dismissal of Defendant's case as
he was the one prosecuted and brought before the Court to
be dealt with according to law."
The argument
and legal authorities produced by Counsel for the Respondent
fully support the learned Magistrate's decision. I have found
an authority which might be of interest in this case. It is
to be found in Mahaffy and Dobson on Road Traffic Vol.
1 at p.478: -
"In
Sorrie v Robertson, 1944 S.C. (J.) 95, the driver
of a motor lorry who knew that there was a motor cyclist
behind and gradually overtaking him, signalled in the appropriate
manner that he was about to turn across the road to the
right, his intention being to enter a garage. After giving
the signal, he concentrated on turning into the garage and
took no steps to ascertain whether his signal had been observed.
A collision resulted, and he was convicted of an offence
under what is now this section. Lord Carmont said (at p.
97): "A driver cannot, in my view, after putting out
his hand to indicate that he proposes to cross traffic,
thereafter remove his attention entirely from a vehicle
which he has seen behind him and travelling in the same
direction, and which he has, if he has given any sufficient
attention to it at all, reason to believe is gradually diminishing
the distance between them. He has a duty to observe whether
the signal that he has given has been appreciated by the
following traffic, and to see what it is that following
vehicles which he has reason to believe may be overhauling
him are doing. If he does not do so, and an accident occurs
by collision between his own and one of the overtaking vehicles,
I think the inference is justified that there was careless
driving of the vehicle which so crosses the traffic. . .
. I say nothing to suggest that in such cases the driver
of the overtaking vehicle is free from responsibility to
take care.""
Charge
No.1 is much more difficult. Counsel for the Respondent, quite
properly accepts that the learned Magistrate misdirected himself
when he said:
"Finding
the defendant guilty on the charge of negligent grievous
harm was consequential on his conviction on the charge of
driving without due care and attention."
Counsel,
however, tries to save the day by saying that notwithstanding
the misdirection there was before the Magistrate sufficient
evidence to convict and that this Court should uphold the
conviction. He says that there was the same degree of negligence
to sustain both convictions.
In his
submission to this Court he argued that the law in Belize
is different to the law in England in that in Belize there
is only one standard of negligence, that contained in section
7 of the Criminal Code, and that that standard was civil negligence.
There was no distinction between criminal and civil negligence.
Under section 7 of the Code mere inadvertence was negligence
and quoted Willard Bonner v Queen for this proposition.
I have read this case and the ratio decidendi is that
Section 7 of the Code is applicable to the Prison Ordinance,
the question of inadvertence was touched very superficially
and does not attain even the status of obiter dictum.
The definition
of negligence in section 7 of the Code is very wide:
"a
person causes an event negligently if, without intending
to cause the event, he causes it by a voluntary act done
without such skill and precaution as are reasonably necessary
under the circumstances, or as he is in the particular case
bound by law to have and use, for preventing the event from
being caused."
It is
significant that under the new Code section 10 negligence
is better defined. It reads:
"A
person causes an event negligently, if he fails to a grave
degree to observe the standard of care which he ought reasonably
to observe in all the circumstances of the case."
I am of
the opinion that the Appellant could not have been convicted
of negligently causing grievous harm under the definition
of negligence under the new Code, taking into account the
driving of Zabaneh, which under this particular offence is
highly relevant.
Am I bound
to say that the law has changed or am I entitled to say that
negligence is the same under both Codes in that there must
be some gravity? I think that the latter is the better opinion.
Section 88 is not a petty offence. Even though the offence
can be committed negligently there must be some element of
criminality. It is certainly not an absolute offence.
In the
circumstances and also because of the misdirection I feel
I should allow the appeal on this particular charge.
Appeal
against causing grievous harm allowed.
Appeal
against driving without due care and attention dismissed.
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