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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Cook v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_82 (09 November 2006)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2006/HCJAC_82.html
Cite as: 2006 SCCR 687, 2007 SLT 81, [2006] HCJAC 82, 2006 GWD 36-730, [2006] ScotHC HCJAC_82

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Osborne

Lord Abernethy

Lord Johnston

[2006] HCJAC 82

Appeal No: XC179/05

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION

 

by

 

JOHN WISHART COON COOK

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

Respondent:

 

______

 

 

 

Act: Shead; Castle Law, Edinburgh

Alt: Prentice, A.D.; Crown Agent

 

9 November 2006

 

[1] After trial, at Stirling Sheriff Court on 11 February 2005, the appellant was convicted of two charges in the following terms:

"(001) on 09 April 2003, you did break into the dwellinghouse owned by [the complainers] at Lochend House, Port Of Menteith, Stirling and steal a video camera, a camera, a quantity of jewellery, a jewellery box, a handbag, a cheque book, a spectacles cleaning cloth, a key ring, a driving licence, a watch, a pot, a ring box, cufflinks, a pair of sunglasses and a set of car keys; and

(002) on 09 April at Lochend House, Port Of Menteith, Stirling, you did steal motor vehicle registered number N1 NRN;".

[2] Much of the evidence was not disputed and was contained in a Joint Minute, particularly with regard to the proceeds of the housebreaking and forensic evidence in relation to two motor cars involved in the matter, one being the motor car specified in the second charge and the other being a Vauxhall Vectra, found abandoned not far from the locus after the event. At the time of the indictment being served the appellant was accompanied on it by a co-accused James Patrick Paul Boyle but, immediately before the trial started, Boyle pleaded guilty to the second charge without any amendment. His plea of not guilty to the first charge was accepted by the Crown. He thereafter gave evidence for the Crown along with a local farmer named Erskine who deponed to seeing the stolen car (the Porsche) being driven away from the locus by one person whom he could not identify and a Caroline Dickson who deponed to the appellant attempting to sell her a watch and some jewellery some time in April of 2003, the month when the housebreaking took place, but she could not be precise about the date.

[3] Against that background the appellant lodged a number of grounds of appeal but adhered to three of them in the following terms:

"1. The Sheriff misdirected the jury on the approach they should take to

the evidence of the witness James Boyle. At the trial diet he had pleaded guilty to charge 2 on the indictment. Subsequently he gave evidence that he had not been responsible for the theft of the car but rather that he drove the car apparently knowing that it had been stolen. He explained that the Appellant had brought the car to Glasgow. Since his evidence was inconsistent with the terms of his plea of guilty the Sheriff should have given the jury some guidance on how they should approach this material discrepancy.

Separatim. Given the evidence linking the witness to the theft of the car (and by implication the first charge) and the evidence of the witness Erskine who gave a description of the thief which appeared to be consistent with the appearance of the witness it was incumbent on the Sheriff to direct the jury to approach his evidence with particular care. This was all the more important in the light of the fact that the Crown presented its case to the jury on the basis that only one person was responsible for the housebreaking.

2. The evidence of the finding of the appellant's fingerprints on the door

of the Vauxhall Vectra and the jacket in the car which contained the letter was not, it is submitted, sufficient to entitle the jury to convict of either charge. That being so it was necessary to direct the jury to acquit the appellant if they did not accept the evidence of Boyle and Caroline Dickson.

3. The Sheriff erred in the directions that he gave the jury on the doctrine

of recent possession. In order to apply the doctrine the jury would have had to be satisfied that the appellant was in possession of stolen items in criminative circumstances. It was accordingly necessary that the jury should understand the concept of 'criminative circumstances'. It is submitted that the directions given were inadequate for the purpose.

Separatim. As the Sheriff observed in his charge there was no evidence to establish the value of the stolen property and accordingly there was no basis on which to establish the necessary criminative circumstances.

Separatim. Since there was no such evidence the Sheriff ought not to have given the directions which he did at pages 18-19 of the charge."

[4] Grounds 2 and 3 passed the sift. With regard to ground 1, leave was refused at the first sift but this court allowed the matter to proceed subsequent to an appropriate application. Accordingly, the matter was argued before us in respect of all three grounds of appeal remaining in the case.

[5] We shall deal with each ground separately, since they are all freestanding. Mr. Shead attempted, at one stage, to suggest to us that effectively the three should be treated cumulatively as amounting to a miscarriage of justice, but we are not prepared to accede to that position.

[6] It also requires to be recorded that neither at the trial nor before us was it suggested that there was insufficient evidence in the case to convict the appellant. The grounds of appeal were all directed towards alleged deficiencies or inadequacies in the sheriff's charge to the jury.

 

Ground 1

[7] This matter arises in a somewhat unusual way. As we have already indicated the co-accused, Boyle, gave evidence, the substance of which was that he had not been to Lochend House. He had only been involved with the Porsche in Glasgow, which he had not left in the course of the day in question. On the face of it, it was submitted by Mr. Shead, this conflicted markedly with the terms of the plea tendered by Boyle and accepted by the Crown which, of course, included the locus and therefore implied, if not expressed, the position that he, Boyle, had been there. Although the matter was argued at some length, the real issue as we see it was simply whether or not, in these circumstances, the sheriff should have pointed to that fact, namely the inconsistency, in his charge to the jury and directed them to proceed, as a consequence of it, with care. This appeared to the position often to be taken up by Mr. Shead although, for much of his submissions, he seemed to stop at the point of suggesting that the sheriff was required to give "some guidance". However, as we have said, at the end of the day the real issue seems to us to be whether or not the sheriff failed in his duty to the jury in respect of the fact that he did admittedly not make any reference to the apparent conflict or, accordingly, give any warning as to how the jury should treat the evidence of Boyle as a consequence of that issue.

[8] The advocate depute's position in relation to this matter was a simple one. The sheriff had properly directed the jury as to its task in relation to the assessment of evidence as a matter of credibility and reliability and was not bound to do any more than that in the context of Boyle's evidence The jury were well aware of the terms of the plea and had of course heard his evidence. It was, it was submitted, entirely a matter for them to assess what they made of it and the sheriff need not go any further.

[9] In his report to us the sheriff accepts that the apparent conflict was there but stated that he deliberately made no reference to it because he was in a dilemma, particularly not knowing precisely why the plea was taken against the background of the evidence that Boyle actually gave and which the Crown must have presumably have known he was going to give before he went into the witness box. We have considerable sympathy with that position.

[10] Properly understood we consider that there may not in fact be an inconsistency between the evidence and the plea in as much that he, Boyle, accepted that he had driven the stolen car in Glasgow and was involved in its theft, as opposed to any question of reset thus, indirectly at least, inferentially connecting him with both the car and the locus. Secondly, we should observe that Mr. Shead referred us to the case of Dickson v H.M. Advocate 2004 S.C.C.R. 426, a somewhat unusual case where this court upheld a direction to the jury by the trial judge in the context of a co-accused pleading guilty and giving evidence, that the jury should treat with care that evidence having regard to the fact that there might have been an inducement by the Crown in response to which the witness agreed to become a witness and ceased to be a co-accused after tendering a plea. In that case there was some suggestion that the Crown had indicated to the witness that, if she gave evidence in the terms of a statement she had already given to the police, the Crown would probably not move for sentence.

[11] We consider that that case was exceptional, hopefully so, because this type of plea bargaining does not commend itself to this court. What was much more important, however, was that there was no suggestion that the inducement, if offered, was to invite the witness to give false evidence but merely adhere to her prior statement. It should be understood that whenever a co-accused tenders a plea and then gives evidence for the Crown in the same matter it does not follow that some direction or advice from the trial judge to the jury, effectively amounting to a cum nota warning is required. We consider that the proper course in this type of situation is to do exactly what the sheriff did in this case, make no mention of the matter and leave it to the jury, provided the issue has been properly focused before the jury by counsel.

[12] In this case there is no doubt the issue was focused because Boyle was cross-examined vigorously, to the effect that he was in fact making up all the evidence that he gave involving the appellant.

[13] In these circumstances, while it might have been preferable for the sheriff at least to remind the jury of the apparent conflict between the contents of the plea and Boyle's evidence, we do not consider he was under any obligation to do so, nor do we consider that he in any way failed in his duty with regard to the instructions he gave to the jury as to the assessment of witnesses, particularly under reference to credibility and reliability.

[14] In our opinion this ground of appeal is without substance.

 

Ground 2

[15] It is to be observed that this is concerned with the Vauxhall Vectra, to which previous reference has been made. It was found abandoned and it contained both fingerprints and clothing attributable to the appellant and also part of the haul from the housebreaking in its boot. There was also found a document relating to the accused.

[16] In this respect Mr. Shead criticised the trial judge for not directing them that the evidence of Boyle and Dickson had to be accepted by them to establish there was sufficient evidence to convict, the evidence relating to the car not being sufficient in itself.

[17] This position was vigorously challenged by the advocate depute who referred us to two cases Maguire v H.M. Advocate 2003 S.C.C.R. 758 and Curley v H.M. Advocate 1999 S.C.C.R. 467. He submitted that the case of Maguire was particularly significant since the only evidence there, which convicted the accused, was a mask which was identified as similar to one used in the robbery in question and which was connected with the accused by DNA. So long as spoken to from two sources the court in Maguire were satisfied that that was sufficient evidence in itself to justify a conviction in respect of the accused having taken part in the robbery.

[18] We are entirely satisfied in this case that the evidence relating to the Vauxhall Vectra and the surrounding circumstances to which we have made reference would have been sufficient in themselves to warrant a conviction, particularly having regard to Maguire. We do not consider that case is distinguishable. That being our view it was unnecessary for the sheriff to direct the jury that they must accept both Boyle and Dickson before they could convict. In these circumstances we consider this ground of appeal is misconceived and without substance.

 

Ground 3

[19] It is to be observed that this ground of appeal is entirely related to the references made by the sheriff in his charge to the jury on pages 18 and 19 of the transcript in relation to the doctrine of recent possession. Mr. Shead's position was that recent possession was really nothing to the point as far as his client was concerned, it not being established when, as a matter of time, he, the appellant, had attempted to sell the items in question to Miss Dickson. He was also critical of the sheriff's consideration of the question of value of the watch in question which was not the subject of evidence and was mere speculation on his behalf. This, therefore, amounted to a material misdirection which it was said amounted in itself to a miscarriage of justice.

[20] We have to say at once that if we thought that this was a misdirection, and certainly the sheriff was perhaps unwise to venture into the notion of value, in the absence of evidence in the context of criminative circumstances, we certainly would not hold that it amounted to a miscarriage of justice looking at the overall evidence in this case. That being so, as encouraged by the advocate depute so to do, we do not really need to consider whether the sheriff misdirected the jury in this matter at all. As we have said, it was perhaps unwise of him to go into the question of value, but what is much more important is the evidence that the appellant was in possession of goods which were either actually proved to be part of the proceeds of the housebreaking or, in any event, very similar to them. That adminicle to our mind was not so much an invitation to consider the doctrine of recent possession but rather was evidence of having been involved in the theft, not conclusive in itself but another factor. This ground of appeal therefore, in our opinion, also fails.

[21] In these circumstances, for these reasons, we do not consider there is any substance in any of the grounds of appeal. That being so, this appeal will be refused.

[22] The appeal against sentence did not pass the sift and there is therefore no further live issue in this case before this court.

 


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