![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> RN v R. (Rev 1) [2020] EWCA Crim 937 (20 July 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2020/937.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Crim 937 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT DURHAM
HHJ ADKIN
T20197143
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FULFORD
MR JUSTICE GARNHAM
and
MRS JUSTICE FARBEY DBE
____________________
RN |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
REGINA |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Shaun Dodds (instructed by CPS Appeals & Review Unit) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 2nd July 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Fulford :
Introduction
The Facts
"Count 2
Q1 Are we sure that RN caused the fresh subdural brain bleed? If Yes then she is guilty of count 1 and you would not need to consider Q2, if no. i.e. you are not sure she caused the subdural brain bleed then go to Q2.
Q2 Are we sure that RN was aware (or ought to have been aware) that there was a significant risk that H would be caused serious physical harm by being assaulted by another ( here CM) and she failed to take steps to protect H from serious violence. If you are sure she was aware of that risk and failed to protect H then she is guilty, if you are not sure then she is not guilty.
Count 1
Q1 Are we sure that RN caused any of H's fractures? If Yes then she is guilty of count 1 and you would not need to consider Q2, if no. i.e. you are not sure she caused any limb fracture then go to Q2.
Q2 Are we sure that RN was aware (or ought to have been aware) that there was a significant risk that H would be caused serious physical harm by being assaulted by another ( here CM) and she failed to take steps to protect H from serious violence. If you are sure she was aware of that risk and she failed to protect H then she is guilty, if you are not sure then she is not guilty."
"Gentlemen, can I just raise one slightly unusual point of procedure? I am given to understand from the usher that the foreman of the jury was dissatisfied with the way that he gave the verdicts. I think – I don't want to make a great big fuss about it – but I don't think he was quite asked the right questions in respect of the female defendant."
JUDGE ADKIN: Mr Foreman, can I just ask you, whilst you're on your feet to confirm your verdicts in respect of count two whilst you have got that document in front of you.
THE FOREMAN OF THE JURY: Yes, your Honour.
JUDGE ADKIN: I've recorded that in respect of count two, you'd reached verdicts upon which you were all agreed in respect of both defendants and that your verdict in respect of CM was a verdict of guilty on count two. Is that right?
THE FOREMAN OF THE JURY: Correct, your Honour.
JUDGE ADKIN: And that your verdict in respect of RN was a verdict of not guilty.
THE FOREMAN OF THE JURY: Correct, your Honour.
JUDGE ADKIN: Thank you very much indeed.
MR HAWKS: May she be discharged, your Honour?
JUDGE ADKIN: Yes, you may be discharged, RN, if you would like to leave the dock.
"It seems to me that the only proper inference that can be drawn from the note was that the jury were expecting more questions to be asked of them. The reference to question two must be a reference to their route to verdict, which asked two questions of each count. And so, the inevitable inference from that is that confusion has crept in about the contrast between the route to verdict asking two questions of each defendant per count and the indictment itself which asks one question. Time pressed on and by five past 10 (sic) I had the jury back and sent them home with the usual warnings that a judge would give a jury who were mid-retirement.
What is the way forwards? Mr Hawks accepts that the judge has a discretion to allow the jury to go back into retirement to consider their verdict but he urges that that discretion should be exercised in favour of his lay client and the not guilty verdict should stand. Mr Dodds take a contrary view and says this is a confusion case and that authority suggests that the jury should be given the opportunity to enter a proper and considered verdict. I have also considered the Criminal Procedure Rules. The overriding objective is that criminal cases are dealt with justly, the innocent are acquitted, the guilty convicted, and that the prosecution and defence should be dealt with fairly.
It seems to me if one poses the rhetorical question, "Would the acquittal of RN be just if it was based on a misunderstanding of what the jury were being asked?", I don't think so. I am convinced that a court has the discretion to allow the jury to reconsider their verdicts after Andrews 82, C.A. 148, Court of Appeal. The judge has a discretion to allow an alteration to be made. Factors to consider are the length of time that has elapsed between the original verdict and the moment the jury expressed their wish to alter it, the probable reason for their desire to change it, the necessity to ensure justice was done, not only to the defendant but to the prosecution too. If the jury had been discharged and if a jury had been dispersed it might well be impossible for the judge to allow the alteration to be made. It is notable, reading the facts of Andrews that there is a superficial similarity between the two cases. They both involve issues as to whether a defendant was a perpetrator or failed to protect.
The case of Tantram, [2001] CLR 824, is cited by Mr Hawks where a delay of I think just over 40 minutes between a verdict being given and the judge allowing the jury to change the verdict is reported. In due course the Court of Appeal quashed convictions. There is a distinction, though, because in my judgment this is not a changing of the mind of the jury. They had been confused about what they were being asked. There's no suggestion in this case that the integrity of the jury has been in any way compromised. The period of time that elapsed between discharge and the expression of unhappiness in respect of count one was very short. On count two there seems to have been some initial disquiet, though admittedly before the jury wrote the note, a longer period of time had expired. That being said, again I reiterate there is no suggestion that the integrity of this jury has been in any way compromised.
The complaint made by the foreman as they left the court was essentially within a minute or a minute and a half of the verdict on count one being entered. So, it's my judgment that the jury should be brought back into court. I propose to give them a further short direction, which I will discuss in a moment with counsel, and they should be asked to reconsider their verdicts or asked their verdicts in respect of RN […]."
"Ladies and gentlemen, I think that some confusion has crept into your deliberations because of the difference in approach between, on the one hand, the questions that you are asked in the route to verdict, in your legal document, which has two questions per defendant per charge. On the other hand, the actual charge on the indictment has one question per defendant, just guilty or not guilty. When you go through your route to verdict, you are specifically asked whether you are sure a defendant was a perpetrator or failed to protect. I say, "failed to protect". That is shorthand because what the prosecution must prove is set out in detail in your legal direction. All right? So, you're right. On the route to verdict you are being asked two questions. Now, you remember on the indictment, the charges, you are only ever asked one question in relation to each factual scenario: count one, the fractures, count two, the brain injury. When it comes to considering your verdicts on the charges you are only asked one question, "Guilty or not guilty". That is because each charge on the indictment contains both ways of committing the same crime, either (a) "causing [H] serious physical harm by an unlawful act", or (b) "being aware of the risk and failing to such steps", etc., etc. So, when you are giving your verdicts, the only issue is "guilty or not guilty", i.e., "Are you sure the defendant was either a perpetrator or failed to protect". If you were sure of either of those scenarios, then your verdict would be guilty, and if not sure, your verdict would be not guilty. Right?
So, what I am going to ask you to do is to back out into retirement to consider your verdicts in relation to RN. Okay?'
Submissions
Discussion
"It seems to this Court, both on those two authorities (Parkin [1824] 1 Mood. C.C. 45; 168 E.R. 1179 and Vodden [1853] Dears. C.C. 229; 169 E.R. 706) and as a matter of general principle, that the position in law is as follows: where the jury seeks to alter a verdict which has been pronounced by the foreman, the judge has a discretion whether to allow the alteration to be made. In exercising that discretion he will, it goes without saying, take into account all the circumstances of the case; in particular the important considerations will be the length of time which has elapsed between the original verdict and the moment when the jury express their wish to alter it, the probable reason for the initial mistake, the necessity to ensure that justice is done not only to the defendant but also to the prosecution. The fact that the defendant has been discharged from custody is one of the factors but is not necessarily fatal to the judge's discretion to alter the verdict to one of guilty. If the jury have been discharged and a fortiori if they have dispersed, it might well be impossible for the judge to allow the verdict to be changed. That however it is unnecessary to decide upon the instant appeal. Clearly if there were any question of the jury's verdict being altered as a result of anything they heard after returning their initial verdict, then there could be no question of allowing a fresh verdict to be returned." (our emphasis)
"It would in our judgment set a very dangerous precedent if, save in quite extraordinary circumstances, an apparently unanimous verdict of a jury delivered in open court, and not then and there challenged by any juror, were to be re-opened and subjected to scrutiny. Suppose, for example, a majority verdict of 10 to 2 were publicly announced without contradiction and a third juror thereafter claimed to have dissented. Or suppose there were in the circumstances of a case such as the present, disagreement whether the jurors had dissented or not. It is very difficult to see how that is a question which this court could properly investigate."
"42. There is, on the authorities, no doubt that the trial judge in the present case had a discretion whether or not to permit amendment of the verdicts which had been delivered. But in our judgment, not without some hesitation, we are of the view that he exercised his discretion wrongly and in a way which was not open to him. We say this because the 27 minute delay between the jury leaving court and sending the second note, even allowing for the three minutes or so it would have taken to walk from the court to the jury room and for the note to be delivered, was such as to provide the opportunity for further deliberation. When to this feature is added the varying numbers in relation to unanimous verdicts to which we have drawn attention this, as it seems to us, is a case not only outwith the category of prompt correction but one in which both the opportunity for further deliberation and the possibility of a change of mind both arise. In our judgment and as Mr Nolan QC for the Crown rightly accepted, a possibility that the jury may have changed their minds is sufficient to question the reliability of the amendments to their verdicts. As Lord Justice Watkins pointed out in Williams [1987] 84 Cr App R 274 at 277
" The appearance of things may be as important as almost anything else "
43. Accordingly we do not regard this case as being one in which it was appropriate for the judge to re-open the 10 unanimous verdicts which had been delivered without dissent." (our emphasis)