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(GLENROY
BOWEN
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APPELLANT |
BETWEEN |
(AND
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(P.C.
18 TONY ANTHONY |
RESPONDENT |
Supreme
Court
Inferior Court Appeal No. 6 of 1981
2nd October, 1981.
Alcantara, J.
Mr. D.
R. Lindo, for the Appellant
Mr. G. Gandhi, for the Respondent
Inferior
Court Appeal against conviction - Magistrate misapplying
the law and taking into consideration irrelevant matters
- Magistrate misdirecting himself as to onus of proof -
Magistrate making a conviction under a wrong law - Whether
conviction could be saved by Appeal Court (Supreme Court)
substituting its own verdict under Section 139(1) of Supreme
Court Ordinance - Discretion of the court of substitute
its own verdict - Court refusing to exercise discretion.
J
U D G M E N T
This is
an appeal from the Inferior Court of the Belize Judicial District.
The Appellant was convicted of wantonly throwing a missile,
to wit, a stone to the danger of P.C. Anthony on the 17th
March, 1981, contrary to section 4 (1)(xv) of the Summary
Jurisdiction Ordinance. He was convicted on the 5th June,
1981 and fined $45.
The Appellant
now appeals on the following grounds:
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The
Magistrate took extraneous matters into consideration.
-
The
decision was based on a wrong principle.
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The
decision is unreasonable and cannot be supported having
regard to the evidence.
- The
decision was erroneous in point of law inasmuch as the Magistrate
wrongly applied section 58 of Chapter 24.
(a)
the complaint was based on Chapter 23; the Defendant was
found guilty under Chapter 21, and
(b)
the offence as contained in the complaint does not include
the commission of the offence found by the Magistrate.
In the
Court below P.C. Anthony gave evidence that on the 17th March,
1981 he was patrolling in a landrover with Sgt. Segura as
the result of a civil disturbance. The vehicle stopped, Anthony
got out. He said he saw the Appellant throw a stone towards
him and that the stone hit him on his right foot. Thereupon
he went up to the Appellant and arrested him.
The only
other witness was the Appellant himself who denies ever throwing
a stone, and alleges that he was wrongly arrested and certainly
not in the place where P.C. Anthony says he was arrested.
I think
it is proper for me to read the Reasons for Decision of the
Magistrate in full:
"In
this case there is only one witness for the prosecution and
the Defendant's version of what happened on 17th March, 1981.
The Defendant giving sworn testimony did not impress me as
a truthful witness. He was caught twice in cross-examination
about the time he took from his work at the pier to the fire-burn
where he said he was picked up by the police. He said he took
1½ hours also taking refreshment. Moreover, he said
he worked 5 years at the pier at Yarborough and the pier only
there about 2 years. Observing Defendant demeanor in witness
box, I did not believe his evidence and therefore I found
him guilty of an assault upon P.C. Tony Anthony. Vide sec.
58 of Chap. 24 which states every complaint shall be deemed
divisible, etc.
As I believe
the version given by P.C. Anthony in the witness box, that
he saw Defendant stone him and P.C. Anthony went right over
and arrested Defendant."
Counsel
for the Appellant has referred me to two cases:
Lloyd
Alfred v. Nicholas Burgos Criminal Appeal 8/1980
Adolphus Rosales v. Oliver Gibson Supreme Court 1967
I think
that the two main points of Counsel for the Appellant are
(i) that the Magistrate placed too much emphasis on whether
he believed the Appellant or not rather than on whether the
Prosecution had proved their case beyond any reasonable doubt,
and (ii) the misapplication of section 58 of the Summary Procedure
Ordinance.
Counsel
for Respondent concedes that section 58 was wrongly applied
when the Appellant was convicted by the learned Magistrate
of common assault. However, he says that I have powers under
section 139 (1) Supreme Court Ordinance to remedy this defect
by bringing a verdict of wantonly throwing a missile, as there
was sufficient evidence for this offence.
Referring
to the learned Magistrate's Reasons for Decision he admits
that the learned Magistrate did place too much emphasis saying
he disbelieved the Appellant, but he did say he believed the
informant P.C. Anthony.
I have
read Rosales v. Gibson and I agree with it.
The learned
Magistrate's reason that "observing the Defendant demeanour
in the witness box, I did not believe his evidence" followed
by "and therefore I found him guilty of an assault upon
P.C. Anthony" is a fatal misdirection as to onus of proof.
This misdirection is not cured by saying that he believed
P.C. Anthony in the witness box.
In the
Reasons for Decision there are two misdirections. Section
58 and the onus of proof.
I have
however reviewed the evidence as a whole and I cannot say
with certainty that the learned Magistrate arrived at the
right decision by convicting. In any case I am not disposed
to exercise my powers under section 139 (1) of the Supreme
Court Ordinance to substitute a verdict. I allow the appeal.
Appeal
allowed.
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