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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 >> Batchelor, R v [2013] EWCA Crim 2638 (29 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2013/2638.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Crim 2638 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE SUPPERSTONE
MR JUSTICE JEREMY BAKER
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R E G I N A | ||
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WILLIAM LUCAS BATCHELOR |
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Mr D O'Mahoney appeared on behalf of the Crown
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"(unchecked) ... The requirements of a particular defence are that the threat relied upon has to have been one of serious injury or death, that the harm has to have been directed at the defendant, a member of his immediate family, or someone else close to him and someone whose safety the defendant reasonably regards himself as being responsible for. The defendant genuinely and reasonably has to believe that the threat, but for his compliance, will be carried out immediately or almost immediately, and the threat of a defendant's reasonable belief has to be the direct cause of the defendant's actions. The reasonable person in the defendant's situation would have been driven to act as the defendant did, the reasonable person being treated as being stable or ordinary firmness, of the same age and gender of the defendant but otherwise sharing his relevant characteristics. Of course it is agreed that there has to have been no action to evade the effects of the threat being available; in other words, if there were available to a defendant a reasonable course of action for him to take to evade the threat, he is expected to take it."
"I did have the opportunity but there was no way that I was going to because of the threats that I was under, both to me and those close to me."
" Reminding myself, as I must, as to what is required to raise in law the defence of duress, I have come to the view that it has not been raised. There is not sufficient evidence to amount to duress in this case. There was ample opportunity to evade the threats which the defendant says he was subject to. I also remind myself as to the particular offence of which the defendant is accused and the harm that was threatened of the defendant, which he tells us about, was not directed to him to commit this particular crime directly. This is not one of those cases where someone has a gun at someone's back and says 'commit this particular crime'. The defendant has, on his own account, resorted to committing this VAT fraud in an effort to raise money to pay others."
Taking evasive action
"The defendant may excuse his criminal conduct on grounds of duress only if, placed as he was, there was no evasive action he could reasonably have been expected to take. It is necessary to return to this aspect also, but this is an important limitation of the duress defence and in recent years it has, as I shall suggest, been unduly weakened."
He then returned to the point at paragraph 28 and made it plain that the requirement should be very strictly applied:
"... It should however be made clear to juries that if the retribution threatened against the defendant or his family or a person for whom he reasonably feels responsible is not such as he reasonably expects to follow immediately or almost immediately on his failure to comply with the threat, there may be little if any room for doubt that he could have taken evasive action, whether by going to the police or in some other way, to avoid committing the crime with which he is charged."
"The recent English authorities have tended to lay stress on the requirement that a defendant should not have been able, without reasonably fearing execution of the threat, to avoid compliance. Thus Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest in R v Lynch [(1975) AC 653], at p 670, emphasised that duress
'must never be allowed to be the easy answer of those who can devise no other explanation of their conduct nor of those who readily could have avoided the dominance of threats nor of those who allow themselves to be at the disposal and under the sway of some gangster-tyrant.'
Lord Simon of Glaisdale gave as his first example of a situation in which a defence of duress should be available (p 687):
'A person, honestly and reasonably believing that a loaded pistol is at his back which will in all probability be used if he disobeys ...'
In the view of Lord Edmund-Davies (p 708) there had been
'for some years an unquestionable tendency towards progressive latitude in relation to the plea of duress.'
27. In making that observation Lord Edmund-Davies did not directly criticise the reasoning of the Court of Appeal in its then recent judgment in R v Hudson and Taylor [1971] 2 QB 202, but that was described by Professor Glanville Williams as 'an indulgent decision' (Textbook of Criminal Law, 2nd ed, 1983, p 636), and it has in my opinion had the unfortunate effect of weakening the requirement that execution of a threat must be reasonably believed to be imminent and immediate if it is to support a plea of duress. The appellants were two teenage girls who had committed perjury at an earlier trial by failing to identify the defendant. When prosecuted for perjury they set up a plea of duress, on the basis that they had been warned by a group, including a man with a reputation for violence, that if they identified the defendant in court the group would get the girls and cut them up. They resolved to tell lies, and were strengthened in their resolve when they arrived at court and saw the author of the threat in the public gallery. The trial judge ruled that the threats were not sufficiently present and immediate to support the defence of duress but was held by the Court of Appeal to have erred, since although the threats could not be executed in the courtroom they could be carried out in the streets of Salford that same night. It was argued for the Crown that the appellants should have neutralised the threat by seeking police protection, but this argument was criticised as failing to distinguish between cases in which the police would be able to provide effective protection and those when they would not. The Court of Appeal placed reliance on the decision of the Privy Council in Subramaniam v Public Prosecutor [1956] 1 WLR 965. That case, however, involved a defendant who sought at trial to advance a defence of duress under a section of the Penal Code of the Federated Malay States which provided that, with certain exceptions
'nothing is an offence which is done by a person who is compelled to do it by threats, which, at the time of doing it, reasonably cause the apprehension that instant death to that person will otherwise be the consequence ...'
The appeal was allowed because evidence relied on by the appellant to show that he had had a reasonable apprehension of instant death was wrongly excluded. It is hard to read that decision as authority for the Court of Appeal's conclusion. I can understand that the Court of Appeal in R v Hudson and Taylor had sympathy with the predicament of the young appellants but I cannot, consistently with principle, accept that a witness testifying in the Crown Court at Manchester has no opportunity to avoid complying with a threat incapable of execution then or there. When considering necessity in R v Cole [1994] Crim LR 582, 583, Simon Brown LJ, giving the judgment of the court, held that the peril relied on to support the plea of necessity lacked imminence and the degree of directness and immediacy required of the link between the suggested peril and the offence charged, but in R v Abdul-Hussain [[1999] Crim LR 570], the Court of Appeal declined to follow these observations to the extent that they were inconsistent with R v Hudson and Taylor, by which the court regarded itself as bound."
" It is important however to acknowledge the submission made by Mr Bell on the appellant's behalf that the ruling in truth usurped the function of the jury and therefore deprived the appellant of a fair trial or a proper trial in English law. He says that there should be no minimum evidential requirement for a defence to be left to the jury. It is certainly true that once a defence such as duress is left to the jury then it is for the Crown to disprove it to the criminal standard. In our judgment, if the case is one where no reasonable jury properly directed as to the law could fail to find the offence disproved, no legitimate purpose is served by leaving it to the jury. It is not generally within a jury's constitutional function to arrive at what ex hypothesi would be a perverse result in circumstances such as these. There must at least be some evidence upon which a jury could properly conclude the defence of duress had not been negative."
He went on to say that there was no breach of Article 6 in these circumstances.
" If there is evidence of duress, then the judge is duty bound to leave the issue to the jury. The fact that a judge may think that no reasonable jury could fail to find the defence disproved provides no justification for not leaving the issue to the jury."