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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Oshungbure & Anor, R v [2005] EWCA Crim 709 (10th March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/709.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Crim 709 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 Thursday, 10th March 2005 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVID CLARKE
MR JUSTICE CHRISTOPHER CLARKE
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R E G I N A | ||
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KAZEEM LADIE OSHUNGBURE | ||
AYODELE OLUSEYE ODEWALE |
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MR J DUNN-SHAW appeared on behalf of the APPELLANT ODEWALE
MR C KERR & MR S ROSE appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"In my opinion this argument overlooks the fundamental importance of the Convention right to an independent and impartial tribunal... As Lord Clarke said in Rimmer v HM Advocate (unreported) 23 May 2001, the question of impartiality, actual or perceived, has to be judged from the very moment when the judge or tribunal becomes first seized of the case. It is a question which, at least in a case of perceived impartiality, stands apart from any question that may be raised about the character, quality or effect of any decisions which he takes or acts which he performs in the proceedings."
At paragraph 64D, Lord Hope said:
"...if circumstances exist which give rise to a suspicion about the judge's impartiality, those circumstances are themselves sufficient to disqualify although in fact no bias exists."
And at paragraph 65, Lord Hope said:
"The principle of common law on which these cases depend is the need to preserve public confidence in the administration of justice... It is no answer for the judge to say that he is in fact impartial, that he abided by his judicial oath and there was a fair trial. The administration of justice must be preserved from any suspicion that a judge lacks independence or that he is not impartial."
Mr Penny also submitted that authority is to be found in Millar v Dickson for the proposition that for any defendant to waive his Article 6 rights to a fair and impartial tribunal, the waiver must be voluntary, informed and unequivocal.
"...a real danger of bias might well be thought to arise if in a case where the credibility of any individual were an issue to be decided by the judge he had in a previous case rejected the evidence of that person in such outspoken terms as to throw doubt on his ability to approach such person's evidence with an open mind on any later occasion; or if on any question at issue in the proceedings before him the judge had expressed views, particularly in the course of the hearing, in such extreme and unbalanced terms as to throw doubt on his ability to try the issue with an objective judicial mind... The mere fact that a judge, earlier in the same case or in a previous case, had commented adversely on a party or witness, or found the evidence of a party or witness to be unreliable, would not without more found a sustainable objection. In most cases, we think, the answer, one way or the other, will be obvious. But if in any case there is real ground for doubt, that doubt should be resolved in favour of recusal."
We bear in mind Mr Kerr's submission, on behalf of the Crown, that Locabail was a civil case. The principles which it enunciates, however, as it seems to us, apply in appropriate circumstances in criminal proceedings also. Mr Kerr also, rightly, accepted that it is a question of degree whether a judge's remarks at one stage of a case are properly to be interpreted as giving rise to a perception of bias as and when the judge has himself determine another part of the case. Mr Kerr also accepted, rightly, that once a judge has made remarks giving rise to a perception of bias, it is extremely difficult to put the genie back into the bottle by way of subsequent corrective statement.