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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> McKenna v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_33 (18 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2008/HCJAC_33.html Cite as: 2008 GWD 22-359, 2008 SCL 985, [2008] HCJAC 33, [2008] ScotHC HCJAC_33, 2008 SCCR 702 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
|
Lord OsborneLady Paton Lord Mackay of
Drumadoon |
[2008] HCJAC 33Appeal No: XC873/03OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LADY PATON in NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION AND SENTENCE by CHARLES McKENNA Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent; _______ |
Act: Brown; Wilson;
Balfour & Manson LLP
Alt: Prentice ,Q.C. Advocate Depute; Crown Agent
18 June 2008
[1] On
"(21) On various occasions between 2 February 1976 and 8 December
1977, both dates inclusive, at Gartmore House (then known as St Ninian's List
'D' School) ... you ... did assault AB, born 7 August 1966 ... and then a boy under
your charge and under the age of 14 years, sit him on your knees, seize hold of
his trousers and pull the waistband and material thereof so that his private
member and private parts were compressed and did on one occasion insert your
finger or fingers into his hinder parts, all to his injury;
(24) On
various occasions between 15 March 1977 and 23 March 1979, both dates
inclusive, at Gartmore House ... you ... did assault CD, born 20 February 1967 ...
and then a boy under your charge and under the age of 14 years, and did sit him
upon your knees and press your clothed erect private member against his body, rub
your erect private member against his clothed hinder parts, ... remove his
trousers and underpants and did attempt to penetrate his hinder parts with your
private member and thereafter did simulate sexual intercourse by pressing your
private member between said CD's legs;
(25) On
various occasions between 12 December 1979 and 23 December 1981, both dates
inclusive, at Gartmore House ... you ... did use lewd, indecent and libidinous
practices and behaviour towards EF, born 8 October 1969 ... and then a boy under
your charge and under the age of 14 years, and did sit him on your knees, press
your clothed private member against his body, place your hand beneath his
clothing and handle his hinder parts;"
[2] On
[3] The appellant
lodged a Note of Appeal in the following terms:
"The above named convicted person
appeals against conviction in respect that his conviction on said charge
amounted to a miscarriage of justice on the following grounds:-
1. There was insufficient evidence to
find the crime of attempted sodomy in charge 24 proved. The Crown relied upon the doctrine of mutual
corroboration in respect of the evidence in charges 21 and 25 concerning lewd and
libidinous behaviour. This conduct
consisted of placing the complainer on his knee and of digital penetration in
charge 21 and of pressing against the complainer in charge 25.
2. The learned trial judge erred in
directing the jury that they were entitled to find the attempted sodomy part of
the same course of conduct. "Now, if you
regard this further conduct - the pulling the trousers down and attempt[ing] to
insert the penis - simply as a development or progression of the knee sitting
type of behaviour, then you may be entitled to regard it as the same ... as of
the same character - in other words as still being part of the same course of
conduct." (Charge p.75). The difference
in character was such that it was a matter for the judge to remove the application
of mutual corroboration from consideration by the jury."
[4] In January
2004 the appellant was granted interim liberation pending the resolution of his
appeal.
The judge's charge
[5] At
pages 75 to 76 of his charge, the judge directed the jury in the following
terms:
"Now, if you regard this further
conduct - the pulling the trousers down and attempt[ing] to insert the penis -
simply as a development or progression of the knee sitting type of behaviour,
then you may be entitled to regard it as the same ... as of the same character -
in other words as still being part of the same course of conduct - but if you
view it as some form of separate or isolated conduct which is different in
character from the sitting on the knee type of behaviour, then the short point
there is that it cannot be corroborated because there is nothing else of that
nature with which to compare it.
Now, in that regard, ladies and
gentlemen, I direct you that an act of digital penetration is not of the same
character as an act of attempted penetration with a penis. If that is all you are looking for - if
you're looking at these two acts in isolation - these are not of the same
character, but if you look at the other surrounding facts and circumstances,
they may be, if the one is a progression of the other - if they're all really
type ... all part of the same type of general sitting on the knee, fondling, type
behaviour ..."
The judge's report
[6] The
judge gave the following details in his report:
"CHARGE (21)
The complainer AB was then one of
twins and known as C. He was born on
According to AB, whose evidence was
in very short compass, the appellant sat him on his knee during the class,
whilst he smoked cigars, and offered him Tunes sweets. On one occasion, he put his hand down the
back of AB's shorts and inserted his finger into his bottom. This had been painful. On two other occasions, he pulled his shorts
up tight into his bottom, again while smoking a cigar. These incidents all happened during class;
that is to say with other pupils present.
CHARGE (24)
CD, a friend of the...twins during
their time at the school, was born on
CHARGE (25)
EF was born on
Submissions for the
appellant
[7] Mr
Brown submitted that the judge had erred in directing the jury that the alleged
attempted sodomy could be regarded as part of the same course of conduct
outlined in Charges 21, 24 and 25. The
attempted sodomy was of a sufficiently different character and sufficiently
different in gravity (i.e. a more serious offence) as not to amount to a progression
of the other conduct. The judge had
erred in refusing to remove the last few lines of Charge 24 (namely, from the
words "remove his trousers" to and including "between CD's legs") following
upon a common law submission made by the appellant's counsel at the end of all
the evidence. Moreover the judge had erred
in directing the jury that they could find corroboration of the attempted
sodomy by the application of the Moorov
doctrine. The conviction on
Charge 24 should be restricted accordingly.
[11] Furthermore, there
was a need for caution when applying the Moorov
doctrine: O'Neill v HM Advocate, 1995
S.C.C.R. 816 (citing the dicta of
Lord Justice Clerk Aitchison in Ogg v HM
Advocate, 1938 J.C. 152 at page 158).
The necessary interrelation could not be found in the present case. For example, unlike the other behaviour
complained of, there were no other pupils present when the alleged attempted
sodomy occurred. There had been no
lead-up by sitting the pupil on the appellant's knee. Reference was made to Sinder v HM Advocate, 2003
S.C.C.R. 271; Dodds v HM Advocate, 2002 SCCR 838; and JAB v HM Advocate, 2004
S.C.C.R. 127, in particular paragraph [4].
It followed that the trial judge in the present case had misdirected the
jury at pages 75 to 76 of the transcript.
Submissions for the
Crown
[12] The
Advocate Depute referred to the evidence led in support of Charges 21, 24 and
25, as set out in the trial judge's report.
The trial judge was entitled to advise the jury that they could form the
view that there had been a course of criminal conduct, despite the labels which
the criminal law might use: McMahon v HM Advocate, 1996 S.L.T. 1139.
The test was whether, on no possible view, could it be said that there
was any connection between the offences spoken about by the complainers: FJK v HM Advocate,
Discussion
Ground of Appeal 1
[14] Whether
separate incidents of behaviour can be regarded as so connected in time,
character and circumstances as to justify an inference that they are parts of a
course of criminal conduct systematically being pursued by an accused such as
to qualify for the application of the Moorov
doctrine must always be a question of fact and degree: McMahon
v HM Advocate, 1996 S.L.T.
1139. Circumstances such as the place,
the time, the relationship between the persons involved, the nature of the
approach leading up to the criminal conduct, and character of the criminal
conduct itself, are all matters which may be taken into account: Moorov v HM Advocate, 1930 JC 68. Provided that there is in law a sufficiency
of evidence, decisions about what evidence to accept, and whether there is
discernible in that evidence an underlying unity of purpose such that the
doctrine of mutual corroboration may be applied, are matters entirely for the
jury, properly directed: JAB v
HM Advocate, 2004 S.C.C.R. 127.
Further, it is well established that the nomen juris of the criminal behaviour is not the decisive
factor: McMahon v HM Advocate, cit.
sup. Rather it is the nature of the
offending behaviour which should be examined.
[19] We therefore
reject the second ground of appeal.
Decision