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(INSPECTOR
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Supreme
Court
Inferior Court Appeal No. 7 of 1979
14th February, 1980
Moe, J.
Mr. Dean
O. Barrow, for the Appellant.
Mr. H. Elrington, for the Respondent.
Inferior
Court Appeal - Charge of dishonestly receiving thirteen
16 gauge shot guns knowing the same to have been stolen
- Guns found in room rented by Appellant to which other
people had access sometimes during absence of Appellant
- Whether mere presence of guns in room amount to possession
- Whether Appellant had a duty to offer a reasonable explanation
as to an innocent possession of the stolen articles - Onus
of proof - Onus of proving guilty knowledge remains with
the prosecution - Whether magistrate correctly directed
himself - Appeal dismissed.
J
U D G M E N T
The Appellant
was convicted in the Magistrate's Court on an information
which charged that he, between the 21st and 23rd day of December,
1976, at Belize City in the Belize Judicial District, dishonestly
received thirteen 16 gauge shot guns, Savage Stevens brand
valued at $1,352.00 Belize currency, the property of Santiago
Castillo Ltd. knowing the same to have been stolen. He appeals
from this conviction on the ground that the verdict was unreasonable
and against the weight of the evidence.
2. The
evidence led for the Prosecution showed that on or about the
23rd December, 1976 a quantity of shot guns belonging to Santiago
Castillo Ltd. were stolen from the firm's department. On the
27th December, 1976, two plastic bags containing thirteen
of these guns were found by the police in the presence of
the Defendant in the ceiling of a room which the Defendant
rents and occupies.
3. Counsel
for the Appellant pointed out as the magistrate himself stated
in his reasons for decision that the Prosecution's case depended
on a finding of recent possession in the Defendant. That being
the case, the decision was unreasonable and could not be supported
from the various points of issue dealt with hereafter. His
first submission was that the evidence did not warrant a finding
that the Defendant was in possession of the thirteen guns.
In the first place, he contends the magistrate was not justified
in finding that the Defendant lived in the room, far less
than he lived there all alone. This finding of fact is not
warranted by the evidence. Three Prosecution witnesses including
the Defendant's landlord and also the Defendant's witness
gave evidence which shows that the Defendant does not live
there. Mr. Barrow's submission, as I understood it, was that
this wrong finding of the magistrate must have affected the
finding that the Defendant was in possession. This wrong finding
of fact in my view is not fatal. The evidence is that the
Defendant is the tenant of the room and uses it, but that
other persons had easy access to the room. Mr. Barrow further
argued that the mere presence of the guns in the room which
the Defendant occupies without more is not enough to establish
possession in the Defendant, and particularly so when the
evidence is that more persons than the Defendant used that
room.
4. It
is clear that mere occupation of premises without more is
not sufficient to invest the occupant with the possession
of articles found therein, but the something more may be "just
a little more" and need not be substantial. See R
v. Monica Williams 16 W. I. R. 74. The Magistrate does
not state specifically in his reasons that he addressed himself
to this issue, but he found and referred to factors which
amount to adequate material from which the something more
may be inferred in this case. These are the following factors
(a) the quantity of guns and thus two bulky bags found; (b)
the position of the two bags in the ceiling of the room; (c)
the man-hole admitted into the ceiling being highly undetectable;
and (d) the key to that room is kept at Defendant's residence.
In my view, therefore, there was sufficient evidence from
which the magistrate could have found that the Appellant was
in possession of the guns which were found in the ceiling
of the room which he occupies.
5. Mr.
Barrow submitted, further, that even if it could properly
be held that the Defendant was in possession of the guns,
the magistrate again erred in law by misdirecting himself
as is shown in the reasons for decision where he stated: -
"In the absence of reasonable explanation from the Defendant
as to an innocent possession of the stolen articles, the court
may safely conclude that he dishonestly received them. To
my mind, the Defendant's explanation was "nebulous."
Later on he says, "The Court was not all impressed by
the Defendant's explanation." It is wrong to suggest
either that there is an onus on the accused in possession
of stolen property recently after the stealing to give a satisfactory
account of his possession, or that if the explanation given
by him is not satisfactory, he should be convicted. The onus
of proving guilty knowledge always remains on the Prosecution.
It was laid down in R v. Aves 34 C. A. R . 159 that
where the only evidence against the Defendant is that he was
in possession of recently stolen property the jury should
be directed that they may infer guilty knowledge (i) if the
Defendant has offered no explanation to account for his possession
of the property, or (ii) if he is satisfied that the explanation
given is untrue. If an explanation offered leaves him in doubt
as to the knowledge of the Defendant that the property had
been stolen, the offence has not been proved and the verdict
should be not guilty.
6. In this case, an explanation was offered. The evidence
certainly does not justify in finding that the Defendant's
explanation is nebulous. In his evidence the Defendant said
that when the Police Constable found the two bags of guns,
he the Defendant said, "I don't know nothing about this."
The Defendant explained that he rents the room for the purpose
of tailoring. That he teaches sewing there, that among his
students are policemen. That he is out of Belize frequently
and when he is out, the key to the room is left at his residence
in charge of one Sylvester Crawford. That those who want to
go to the room to sew get the key from Crawford and go to
the room. Crawford gave evidence and confirmed this. The Defendant's
landlord in his evidence for the Prosecution also stated the
Defendant uses the room as a tailor shop. Sometimes for weeks
he, the landlord, does not see the Defendant there, and when
he does see the Defendant he sees other persons there including
the Defendant's relatives.
7. The
explanation therefore was, I don't know anything about the
guns. I didn't put them there. It is possible that some other
person who had access to the room could have put them there.
Here again the magistrate does not specifically state that
he was satisfied that the explanation given was untrue so
that he inferred guilty knowledge on the part of the accused
(which would be clearly in accord with the principle laid
down in R v. Aves), but the magistrate was satisfied
(or to use his own words, "he had no doubt in his mind")
about guilty knowledge on the part of the Defendant. The explanation
offered did not leave him in any doubt as to the guilty knowledge
of the Defendant.
8. In
the circumstances, I do not find that the magistrate's decision
was unreasonable or cannot be supported having regard to the
evidence. The appeal is therefore dismissed. Appellant to
pay costs.
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