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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 >> Dreszer, R. v [2018] EWCA Crim 454 (14 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/454.html Cite as: [2018] EWCA Crim 454 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MORRIS
T20147606
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KING
and
MR JUSTICE ANDREW BAKER
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Regina |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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Kamil Dreszer |
Appellant |
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Mr A Jones QC and Mr M Henley (instructed by Registrar of Appeals) for the Appellant
Hearing date: 20th February, 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Treacy:
Background
"I must have £18,500 or I am really fucked;"
"For the last two days I have been tortured in some kind of attic;"
"Sort it out please because they will kill me."
"However, the result of the way in which the issue developed after the jury had retired led to confusion and contradiction in the way they had been instructed. It also deprived the defendant of the benefit, through Mr Bott, of addressing the jury on what became the basis upon which they were told they could convict. In those circumstances, on this ground alone, the appeal must be allowed."
The Judge's Directions
"1…It is for you to determine whether there was a joint plan and, if so, the scope of it and whether the defendant was participating in it at the time Andrezj Kulesza was killed. The prosecution say the joint plan was to carry out serious and repeated assaults on Andrezj Kulesza, with the intention of causing him at the very least really serious injury…in the offences of murder and manslaughter, the principal party is the party who actually carried out the criminal act or acts which caused the death…A secondary party is one who willingly and knowingly participated in a joint plan which caused the death
2. Murder/manslaughter. A person is guilty of murder as a principal party if he unlawfully kills another person and, at the time of doing so, he intended to kill that person or cause him really serious injury…
It is not necessary for the prosecution to prove who the principal was, the precise time of the killing or the precise means by which it was carried out. In this case it is not possible for the prosecution to prove any of these things. The prosecution, therefore, invites you to consider the case against the defendant as a secondary party.
3. Secondary party murder, count 1. For the defendant to be guilty of murder as a secondary party, the prosecution must prove so that you are sure:
(a) there was a joint plan with Misiak, in the course of which Andrezj Kulesza was murdered by the principal party.
(b) the defendant agreed to participate and was participating in the joint plan at the time of the killing.
(c)
(i) He either intended that at least one of those participating in the joint plan would assault Andrezj Kulesza in the course of it, with intent to kill him or cause him really serious injury, or
(ii) realised that there was a real possibility that, in the course of the joint plan, at least one of those then participating in it might assault Andrezj Kulesza, with intent to kill him or cause him really serious injury.
I deal with (a) and, in particular, the requirement that, in the course of the joint plan, Andrezj Kulesza was murdered by the principal party. Was the principal party guilty of murdering Andrezj Kulesza?
You cannot convict the defendant of murder as a secondary party unless you are sure the principal party, whoever he was, was guilty of murder."
"If you are sure of (a) and (b) above but not (c), you should consider the offence of manslaughter. For the defendant to be guilty of manslaughter as a secondary party the prosecution must prove so that you are sure:
(d) There was a joint plan with Misiak and/or Janek in the course of which Andrezj Kulesza was unlawfully killed.
(e) The defendant agreed to participate and was participating in the joint plan at the time of the killing.
(f) The defendant realised that at least one of those participating in the joint plan might assault Andrezj Kulesza in the course of it, as a result of which he might suffer some injury, but you consider that he did not realise or may not have realised that such an assault would be carried out, with intent to kill Andrezj Kulesza or cause him really serious injury.
If you are sure of (d), (e) and (f) above your verdict will be guilty of manslaughter."
"1. Are you sure that Andrezj Kulesza was unlawfully killed in the course of a joint plan? If no, your verdicts are not guilty on counts 1 and 2. If yes, go to question 2.
2. Are you sure that the defendant was participating in the joint plan at the time of the killing? If no, your verdicts are not guilty on counts 1 and 2. If yes, go to question 3.
3. Are you sure that the principal party murdered Andrezj Kulesza? If yes, go to question 4. If no, go to question 5.
4. Are you sure that, in participating in the joint plan, the defendant either
(a) intended that at least one of those then participating in it should assault Andrezj Kulesza, intending to kill him or cause him really serious injury or
(b) realised there was a real possibility that at least one of those then participating in might assault Andrezj Kulesza, intending to kill him or cause him really serious injury? If yes, your verdict is guilty of murder. If no, your verdict is not guilty of murder, and go to question 5."
The Appellant's Submissions
The Crown's Submissions
"In approaching appeals in respect of convictions prior to the decision in Jogee, consideration has to be given to the extent to which the verdict could only properly be interpreted in accordance with the common law principles of joint enterprise (two or more people setting out to commit an offence, crime A, or intending to encourage or assist in the commission of that offence) rather than parasitic accessorial liability."
"As we have explained, secondary liability does not require the existence of an agreement between D1 and D2. Where, however, it exists, such an agreement is by its nature a form of encouragement and in most cases will also involve acts of assistance. A long established principle that where parties agree to carry out a criminal venture, each is liable for acts to which they have expressly or impliedly given their assent, is an example of the intention to assist which is inherent in the making of the agreement."
i) that Misiak and the appellant were parties to a joint plan, that at least one of them should intentionally inflict really serious harm on Kulesza;
ii) Misiak as principal had murdered Kulesza in the course of putting that joint plan into effect;
iii) the appellant was still a party to that joint plan at the time of Kulesza's murder.
Discussion and Conclusion
"The effect of putting the law right is not to render invalid all convictions which were arrived at over many years by faithfully applying the law as laid down in Chan Wing-Siu [1997] UKHL 45 and in Powell and English [1985] AC 168. The error identified, of equating foresight with intent to assist rather than treating the first as evidence of the second, is important as a matter of legal principle, but it does not follow that it will have been important on the facts to the outcome of the trial or to the safety of the conviction."
"…even in relation to in time appeals, the fact that the jury were correctly directed in accordance with the then prevailing law does not automatically render the verdict unsafe."