REGINA
v
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BERESFORD GAMBOA, GILROY THOMPSON,
JOSEPH WALKER AND ERNEST VERNON
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Supreme
Court
May 4, 1981
Staine, CJ.
Mr. D.R.
Lindo, S.C. for Vernon
Mr. G.C. Gandhi, for Prosecution
Criminal
law - Submission of No case to answer - charge of receiving
stolen goods - Accused Ernest Vernon inviting police officers
into his house where the police officers identified 8 bales
of clothing forming the basis of the charge - Accused Ernest
Vernon alerting the police officers to the presence of Accused
Gamboa who was trying to make good his escape and who had
brought the clothing to Vernon's house - Charge of receiving
stolen goods - Elements - Whether mere physical handling
amounted to possession - Regina v Attlee (1973) 58 CAR
348, applied - Submission of No case to answer successful.
At the
conclusion of the Prosecution's case, Counsel for the accused
Ernest Vernon, Mr. D. R. Lindo, S. C., submitted on behalf
of the accused Vernon that there was no case to answer on
the charge of receiving. This is the only charge the accused
faces on the indictment, whereas the other three accused face
charges of housebreaking and aggravated theft. However, it
appears from the evidence that the accused Vernon was at an
earlier stage in the proceedings, himself also charged with
housebreaking and aggravated theft, although the evidence
surrounding this is none too clear. Nor is it clear at what
stage the former charges were discontinued.
The submission
is based on Regina v Attlee (1973) 58 CAR 348. This
case is authority not only for the conditions which should
be prudent before such a submission is made to the Court,
but it is also instructive in detail as to the procedure the
Court should adopt in dealing with such a submission.
The substance
of Senior Counsel's arguments ran thus: In order to succeed
on an indictment for receiving, the Prosecution has to prove
that the accused had possession of the goods he was charged
with having received, and that in order to prove possession
it was necessary to proceed beyond proof of a mere handling
of the goods named. Mr. Lindo then proceeded to deal with
the Prosecution's evidence as it affected the accused Vernon.
In the main, he submitted that in the words of Corporal Nicholas,
a Prosecution witness, it was at the invitation of the accused
Vernon that the Police entered his home around 3:00 a.m. -
4:00 a.m. on 30th September, 1980 and there Police saw 8 bales
of cloth, later to be identified as stolen goods. And I use
the identified, in a generalized sense, without intending
to convey the impression that the import of that expression
was met in entirety.
Mr. Lindo
continued that apart from the accused's evidence that it was
he who invited the Police to his house the accused drew the
attention of the Police to a man (Gamboa) who at that moment
was attempting to make good his escape. It was Mr. Lindo's
submission that the accused Vernon in so doing was drawing
attention to the person who had brought the 8 bales of cloth
which were found in the accused's sitting room and later identified
by Jose Awad. If it was argued that this was a self serving
statement, there was the evidence of P.C. McFadzen and Corporal
Nicholas whose evidence was to the effect that it was their
impression the goods belonged to the man who was fleeing and
that was quite apart from anything the accused Vernon might
have stated. The accused Vernon seemed to admit that Gamboa
was coming to arrange and to negotiate about the cloth found
in his house, but the timely or untimely intervention of the
Police had left matters in limbo, so that Vernon never reached
the stage where he had possession of the goods. The most that
could be said was that the accused Vernon was assisting the
Police to apprehend the real culprit who was seeking to make
good his escape. And it may or may not be of significance
that Gamboa was not apprehended until 3rd January, 1981.
So argued
Mr. Lindo, the Prosecution had failed to prove the most vital
element in the offence of receiving, possession, so there
was no case to answer.
In reply,
Mr.Gandhi drew the Court's attention to a number of authorities
and principles, some of them not altogether germane or relevant
to the issues before the Court.
Mr. Gandhi
relying on the case of R v Barker (1977) 65 CAR 287
argued that Falconer v Atlee had been over taken by
this latter decision which showed how the Court was now thinking,
but nothing in his arguments illustrated this. He submitted
there could be joint possession, but this was not the fact
in this case. The facts showed that physical handling alone
did not amount to possession, and the law on this point has
not changed.
Further,
on the authority of R v Young (1964) 48 CAR the trial
judge is entitled, in fact obliged, to stop the case where
the evidence is so tenuous that no jury properly and correctly
instructed would return a verdict of guilty on the evidence
before it.
I am of the opinion that the submission of no case to answer
is well founded and must succeed. If that failed I would have
no hesitation in withdrawing the case from the jury on the
grounds that on the evidence so far led no jury properly directed
would return a verdict of guilty against the accused Vernon.
Accordingly,
I shall direct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty
against the accused Vernon.
I have deliberately refrained from going beyond the limits
of criticism necessary for this ruling. But they are many,
so it should come as no surprise if unanticipated action follows.
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