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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> R v Powell [1997] UKHL 57 (30 October 1997) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1997/57.html Cite as: [1997] 4 All ER 545, [1997] 3 WLR 959, [1998] Crim LR 48, [1999] AC 1, (1998) 162 JP 1, [1998] 1 Cr App Rep 261, [1998] 1 Cr App R 261, [1997] UKHL 57, [1999] 1 AC 1 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/257
Regina v. Powell and another (Appellants)
(On appeal from the Court of Appeal
(Criminal Division))
JUDGMENT
Die Jovis 17° Julii 1997
Upon Report from the Appellate
Committee of the late Parliament to whom was
referred the Cause
Regina against Powell and another, That the Committee had
heard
Counsel as well on Monday the 17th as on Tuesday the 18th
and Wednesday the 19th days
of February last upon the Petition and
Appeal of Anthony Glasford Powell currently
detained at Her
Majesty's Prison, Wormwood Scrubs and Antonio Daniels,
currently
detained at Her Majesty's Prison, Whitemoor, praying
that the matter of the Order set forth
in the Schedule thereto,
namely an Order of Her Majesty's Court of Appeal (Criminal
Division)
of the 25th day of May 1995, might be reviewed before Her Majesty the
Queen
in Her Court of Parliament and that the said Order might be
reversed, varied or altered or
that the Petitioners might have
such other relief in the premises as to Her Majesty the
Queen in
Her Court of Parliament might seem meet; as upon the case of the
Director of
Public Prosecutions (on behalf of Her Majesty) lodged
in answer to the said Appeal; and
due consideration had this day
of what was offered on either side in this Cause:
It is Ordered and Adjudged,
by the Lords Spiritual and Temporal in the Court of
Parliament
of Her Majesty the Queen assembled, That the said Order of Her
Majesty's
Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) of the 25th day of
May 1995 complained of in the said
Appeal be, and the same is
hereby, Affirmed and that the said Petition and Appeal be,
and
the same is hereby, dismissed this House.
Cler: Parliamentor:
HOUSE OF LORDS
OPINIONS OF THE LORDS OF APPEAL FOR JUDGMENT
IN THE CAUSE
REGINA
v.
POWELL AND ANOTHER
(APPELLANTS)
(ON
APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL
(CRIMINAL DIVISION))
REGINA
v.
ENGLISH
(APPELLANT)
(ON
APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL
(CRIMINAL DIVISION))
Oral Judgment: 17 July 1997
Reasons: 30 October 1997
Lord
Goffof Chieveley
Lord Jauncey of
Tullichettle
Lord Mustill
Lord Steyn
Lord Hutton
LORD GOFF OF CHIEVELEY
My Lords,
I
have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech prepared by
my
noble and learned friend, Lord Hutton. And for the reasons he
has given I
too would also make the orders he proposes.
LORD JAUNCEY OF TULLICHETTLE
My Lords,
I
have had the advantage of reading in draft the speech to be
delivered
by my noble and learned friend, Lord Hutton and for the
reasons which he
gives I would also make the orders he proposes.
- 1 -
LORD MUSTILL
My Lords,
I
concurred without hesitation in the orders made by the House on
17
July 1997. Even as regards the case of English, which is much
the more
difficult of the appeals. I felt and continue to feel
that neither or the
authorities nor in plain justice could it be
right to sustain the conviction once
it was very properly conceded
on behalf of the respondent that the appellant
might have been
unaware that the knife ultimately used by Wedale was even
in the
latter's possession. So much is to my mind clear. Much less clear
is
the proper analysis of the law in a situation where the
secondary party
foresees that the principal offender may commit a
more serious crime than the
one which the two set out to commit,
and nevertheless decides to go ahead
with the plan.
My own reasoning was. in summary, as follows:
Throughout
the modern history of the law on secondary criminal
liability (at
least of the type with which this appeal is concerned)
the
responsibility of the secondary defendant has been founded on
his participation
in a joint enterprise of which the commission of
the crime by the principal
offender formed part. Any doubts on
this score were set at rest by Reg. v.
Anderson; Reg. v. Morris
[1966] 2 Q.B. 110 by reference to which countless
juries have
been directed over the years. As it seemed to me the House
should
not depart from this long-established principle without the strongest
of
reasons. The problem is to accommodate in the principle the
foresight of the
secondary party about what the main offender
might do. Two aspects of this
problem are simple. If S did not
foresee what was actually done by P he is
not liable for it, since
it could not have been part of any joint enterprise. This
is what
the court decided in Reg. v. Anderson; Reg. v. Morris.
Conversely,
if S did foresee P's act this would always, as a
matter of common sense, be
relevant to the jury's decision on
whether it formed part of a course of action
to which both S and P
agreed, albeit often on the basis that the action would
be taken
if particular circumstances should arise.
Intellectually,
there are problems with the concept of a joint venture,
but they
do not detract from its general practical worth, which has
proved
itself over many years. In one particular situation there
is, however, a
problem which this time-honoured solution cannot
solve. Namely, where S
foresees that P may go too far; sincerely
wishes that he will not, and makes
this plain to P; and yet goes
ahead, either because he hopes for the best, or
because P is an
overbearing character, or for some other reason. Many would
say,
and I agree, that the conduct of S is culpable, although usually at a
lower
level than the culpability of the principal who actually
does the deed. Yet try
as I may, I cannot accommodate this
culpability within a concept of joint
enterprise. How can a jury
be directed at the same time that S is guilty only
if he was party
to an express or tacit agreement to do the act in question, and
-2 -
that
he is guilty if he not only disagreed with it, but made his
disagreement
perfectly clear to P? Are not the two assertions
incompatible?
At
the same time the culpability of S ought to be reflected in some
form
of criminal liability, attracting some degree of punishment. If
one
rejects, for the reason just given, the idea of forcing it
within the existing
notion of a joint venture there remain only
two alternatives. The first is to
abandon that notion altogether,
and employ in all cases a test of foreseeability
as the direct
route to a verdict. The second is to retain the concept of a
joint
venture in all those cases, forming the great majority,
where on the facts it
provides a complete test for whether S is or
is not guilty of the crime which
P actually committed. In the
minority of cases where S ought to be guilty and
yet cannot
rationally be treated as party to an express or tacit agreement
to
commit the offence in question his culpability can be
established by a different
route, proposed by Sir Robin Cooke,
delivering the opinion of the Privy
Council in Chan Wing-Siu v.
The Queen [1985] AC 168, 175. Namely, that
the culpability
of S lies in his participation in the venture with foresight of the
crime as a possible incident of the common unlawful enterprise.
My
Lords, I had for my part preferred the second of these
alternatives;
for I did not favour the abandonment of a doctrine
which has for years worked
adequately in practice and its
replacement by something which I conceived to
be new, unless this
step was strictly necessary; and I did not think it
necessary,
since the existing principles could be retained, in combination
(for
the exceptional cases) with the concept of wrongful
participation in face of a
known risk. This was indeed what I
understood the law to be, after Chan
Wing-Siu v. The Queen
[1985] 1 A.C. 168; Hui Chi-Ming v. The Queen
[1992] 1 AC 34 and McAuliffe v. The Queen (1995) 69 A.L.J.R. 621.
My
Lords, given the importance of the topic I had originally
prepared
the draft of a speech containing a detailed historical
analysis and a statement
of the reasons which led me to prefer the
second version of the law.
Recognising, however, that the
remainder of your Lordships see the matter
differently I prefer
that the draft should be withdrawn. There are some
instances where
the delivery of a minority opinion is a duty, the performance
of
which is not simply a matter of record, but also makes an
important
contribution to the future understanding and development
of the law. This is
not such a case. Doctrinally the differences
may be considerable, but their
practical significance is likely to
be small, or perhaps even non-existent.
What the trial judge needs
is a clear and comprehensible statement of a
workable principle,
which he or she will find in the speech of my noble and
learned
friend, Lord Hutton; and the judge's task will not be helped in
any
way by a long exposition of a theory which might have
prevailed, but in the
event has not. This being so I am entirely
willing to concur in the reasoning
to which the remainder of your
Lordships subscribe. This will, I suspect,
require some judges to
look again at the terms in which they have customarily
directed
juries, but the task should not be at all difficult to perform.
- 3 -
In
conclusion I wish to express my wholehearted support for
the
observations of my noble and learned friend. Lord Steyn, in
the latter part of
his speech. Once again, an appeal to this House
has shown how badly our
country needs a new law of homicide, or a
new law of punishment for
homicide, or preferably both. The judges
can do nothing about this, being
held fast by binding authorities
on the one hand and a mandatory statute on
the other. Only
Parliament has the powers, if it will choose to exercise them.
It
may not be a popular choice, but surely it is justice that counts.
LORD STEYN
My Lords,
My
Lords, for the reasons contained in the speech to be delivered by
my
noble and learned friend, Lord Hutton, which I have read in draft,
I
supported the orders made by the House in the appeals under
consideration on
17 July 1997. Given the importance and difficulty
of the legal issues at stake
I make a few additional observations.
There
are two separate but complementary legal concepts at stake.
The
first is the mental element sufficient for murder, i.e. an intention
to kill
or to cause really serious bodily injury. Only if this
element is proved in
respect of the primary offender, and if the
other ingredients of murder are
proved, does the second concept
arise for consideration, viz. the criminal
liability of
accessories to a joint criminal enterprise. Under the
accessory
principle criminal liability is dependent on proof of
subjective foresight on the
part of a participant in the criminal
enterprise that the primary offender might
commit a greater
offence, that being in these cases foresight that the
primary
offender might commit murder as defined in law.
The
thrust of both appeals was to challenge the existing law and
practice
regarding the second concept. The appeals under consideration
relate
to charges of murder. But there is no special rule
regarding the criminal
liability of accessories in cases of
murder. The principle governing the
criminal liability of
accessories applies across the spectrum of most criminal
offences.
Any alteration in the accessory principle, as presently
understood,
would have to apply to most criminal offences. That
does not mean that the
arguments advanced on behalf of the
appellants are unsound. But it underlines
the sweeping impact of
the changes to the existing law and practice necessarily
involved
in an acceptance of the submissions made on behalf of the
appellants
in these appeals.
The
established principle is that a secondary party to a
criminal
enterprise may be criminally liable for a greater
criminal offence committed
by the primary offender of a type which
the former foresaw but did not
necessarily intend. The criminal
culpability lies in participating in the
- 4 -
criminal
enterprise with that foresight. Foresight and intention are
not
synonymous terms. But foresight is a necessary and sufficient
ground of the
liability of accessories. That is how the law has
been stated in two carefully
reasoned decisions of the Privy
Council: see Chan Wing-Sui v. The Queen
[1985] AC 168 and Hui Chi-ming v. The Queen [1992] 1 AC 34. In
a
valuable article Professor Sir John Smith has recently concluded
that there is
no doubt that this represents English law: "Criminal
Liability of Accessories:
Law and Law Reform" (1997) 113
L.Q.R. 453, 455. And Lord Hutton has
demonstrated in his
comprehensive review of the case law that the law is as
stated in
the two Privy Council decisions. That does not mean that
the
established principle cannot be re-examined and, if found to
be flawed, re-
formulated. But the existing law and practice forms
the starting point.
Counsel
for the appellants argued that the secondary party to a
criminal
enterprise should only be guilty of a murder committed by
the primary
offender if the secondary party has the full mens rea
sufficient for murder, i.e.
an intent to kill or to cause really
bodily harm. Their arguments fell into
three pans, namely (1) that
there is a disharmony between two streams of
authority; (2) that
the accessory principle involves a form of constructive
criminal
liability; and (3) that it is anomalous that a lesser form of
culpability
is sufficient for a secondary party than for the
primary offender. The first
part of the argument centred on the
scope of decisions of the House of Lords
in Reg. v. Moloney
[1985] AC 905 and Reg. v. Hancock [1986] AC 455.
Those
decisions distinguish between foresight and intention and require in
the
case of murder proof of intention to kill or cause serious
bodily injury. But
those decisions were intended to apply to a
primary offender only. The
liability of accessories was not in
issue. Plainly the House did not intend in
those decisions to
examine or pronounce on the accessory principle. The
resort to
authority must therefore fail.
That
brings me to the second argument. If the application of the
accessory
principle results in a form of constructive liability that would
be
contrary to principle and it would be a defect in our criminal
law. But subject
to a qualification about the definition of the
mens rea required for murder to
which I will turn later, I would
reject the argument that the accessory
principle as such
imposes a form of constructive liability. The accessory
principle
requires proof of a subjective state of mind on the party of
a
participant in a criminal enterprise, viz. foresight that the
primary offender
might commit a different and more serious
offence. Professor Sir John Smith,
"Criminal Liability of
Accessories: Law and Law Reform" (1997) 113 L.Q.R.
464,
explained how the principle applies in the case of murder:
"Nevertheless,
as the critics point out it is enough that the
accessory is
reckless, whereas, in the case of the principal,
intention must be
proved. Recklessness whether death be
caused is a sufficient mens
rea for a principal offender in
manslaughter, but not murder. The
accessory to murder,
however, must be proved to have been
reckless, not merely
- 5 -
whether
death might be caused, but whether murder might be
committed: he
must have been aware, not merely that death or
grievous bodily
harm might be caused, but that it might be
caused intentionally,
by a person whom he was assisting or
encouraging to commit a
crime. Recklessness whether murder
be committed is different
from, and more serious than,
recklessness whether death be caused
by an accident." (My
emphasis.)
The
foresight of the secondary party must be directed to a real
possibility of
the commission by the primary offender in the
course of the criminal
enterprise of the greater offence. The
liability is imposed because the
secondary party is assisting in
and encouraging a criminal enterprise which he
is aware might
result in the commission of a greater offence. The liability of
an
accessory is predicated on his culpability in respect of the greater
offence
as defined in law. It is undoubtedly a lesser form of mens
rea. But it is
unrealistic to say that the accessory principle as
such imposes constructive
criminal liability.
At
first glance there is substance in the third argument that it
is
anomalous that a lesser form of culpability is required in the
case of a
secondary party, viz. foresight of the possible
commission of the greater
offence, whereas in the case of the
primary offender the law insists on proof
of the specific
intention which is an ingredient of the offence. This
general
argument leads, in the present case, to the particular
argument that it is
anomalous that the secondary party can be
guilty of murder if he foresees the
possibility of such a crime
being committed while the primary can only be
guilty if he has an
intent to kill or cause really serious injury. Recklessness
may
suffice in the case of the secondary party but it does not in the
case of
the primary offender. The answer to this supposed anomaly,
and other similar
cases across the spectrum of criminal law, is to
be found in practical and
policy considerations. If the law
required proof of the specific intention on
the part of a
secondary party, the utility of the accessory principle would
be
gravely undermined. It is just that a secondary party who
foresees that the
primary offender might kill with the intent
sufficient for murder, and assists
and encourages the primary
offender in the criminal enterprise on this basis,
should be
guilty of murder. He ought to be criminally liable for harm which
he
foresaw and which in fact resulted from the crime he assisted
and
encouraged. But it would in practice almost invariably be
impossible for a
jury to say that the secondary party wanted death
to be caused or that he
regarded it as virtually certain. In the
real world proof of an intention
sufficient for murder would be
well nigh impossible in the vast majority of
joint enterprise
cases. Moreover, the proposed change in the law must be put
in
context. The criminal justice system exists to control crime. A
prime
function of that system must be to deal justly but
effectively with those who
join with others in criminal
enterprises. Experience has shown that joint
criminal enterprises
only too readily escalate into the commission of greater
offences.
In order to deal with this important social problem the accessory
- 6 -
principle
is needed and cannot be abolished or relaxed. For these reasons
I
would reject the arguments advanced in favour of the revision of
the accessory
principle.
That
brings me to the qualification which I have foreshadowed. In
English
law a defendant may be convicted of murder who is in no
ordinary
sense a murderer. It is sufficient if it is established
that the defendant had an
intent to cause really serious bodily
injury. This rule turns murder into a
constructive crime. The
fault element does not correspond to the conduct
leading to the
charge, i.e. the causing of death. A person is liable to
conviction
for a more serious crime than he foresaw or contemplated:
see
Glanville Williams, Textbook of Criminal Law, 2nd ed.
(1983), pp. 250-251;
Ashworth, Principles of Criminal Law, 2nd
ed. pp. 85 and 261; Card, Cross
and Jones, Criminal Law, 12th
ed. (1992), pp. 203-204. This is a point of
considerable
importance. The Home Office records show that in the last three
years
for which statistics are available mandatory life sentences for
murder
were imposed in 192 cases in 1994; in 214 cases in 1995;
and in 257 cases in
1996. Lord Windlesham. writing with great Home
Office experience, has
said that a minority of defendants
convicted of murder have been convicted
on the basis that they had
an intent to kill: "Responses to Crime," vol. 3
(1996),
at 342, n. 29. That assessment does not surprise me. What is
the
justification for this position? There is an argument that,
given the
unpredictability whether a serious injury will result in
death, an offender who
intended to cause serious bodily injury
cannot complain of a conviction of
murder in the event of a death.
But this argument is outweighed by the
practical consideration
that immediately below murder there is the crime of
manslaughter
for which the court may impose a discretionary life sentence or
a
very long period of imprisonment. Accepting the need for a mandatory
life
sentence for murder, the problem is one of classification.
The present
definition of the mental element of murder results in
defendants being
classified as murderers who are not in truth
murderers. It happens both in
cases where only one offender is
involved and in cases resulting from joint
criminal enterprises.
It results in the imposition of mandatory life sentences
when
neither justice nor the needs of society require the classification
of the
case as murder and the imposition of a mandatory life
sentence.
The
observations which I have made about the mental element required
for
murder were not directly in issue in the appeals under consideration.
But
in the context of murder the application of the accessory
principle, and the
definition of murder, are inextricably linked.
For that reason I have felt at
liberty to mention a problem which
was not addressed in argument. That
counsel did not embark on such
an argument is not altogether surprising.
After all, in Reg. v.
Cunningham [1982] AC 566 the House of Lords
declined to
rationalise and modernise the law on this point. Only
Lord
Edmund-Davies expressed the hope that the legislature would
undertake
reform: see p. 583B-C. In my view the problem ought to
be addressed. There
is available a precise and sensible solution,
namely, that a killing should be
classified as murder if there is
an intention to kill or an intention to cause
- 7 -
really
serious bodily harm coupled with awareness of the risk of death:
14th
Report of the Law Revision Committee, (1980), para. 31,
adopted in the
Criminal Code, for England and Wales, (Law Com. No.
177), (1986), clause
54(1). This solution was supported by the
House of Lords Select Committee
on Murder and Life Imprisonment.
HL Paper 78-1, 1989, par 68.
Having
made these observations I make clear that I am in full
agreement
with the judgment of Lord Hutton which in my view accurately
states
the applicable law.
LORD HUTTON
My Lords,
The
appeals before your Lordships' House relate to the liability of
a
participant in a joint criminal enterprise when another
participant in that
enterprise is guilty of a crime, the
commission of which was not the purpose
of the enterprise.
In
the case of Powell and Daniels the purpose of the joint
enterprise
was to purchase drugs from a drug dealer. Three men,
including the two
appellants, Powell and Daniels, went to purchase
drugs from a drug dealer,
but having gone to his house for that
purpose, the drug dealer was shot dead
when he came to the door.
The Crown was unable to prove which of the
three men fired the gun
which killed the drug dealer, but it was the Crown
case that if
the third man fired the gun, the two appellants were guilty of
murder
because they knew that the third man was armed with a gun
and
realised that he might use it to kill or cause really serious
injury to the drug
dealer.
In
the course of summing up to the jury at the trial the Recorder
of
London said:
"If
B or C realised, without agreeing to such conduct being
used, that
A may kill or intentionally inflict serious injury and
they
nevertheless continue to participate with A in the venture,
that
will amount to a sufficient mental element for B or C to be
guilty
of murder if A with the requisite intent kills in the
course of
the venture. In those circumstances B and C have
lent themselves
to the enterprise and by so doing have given
assistance and
encouragement to A in carrying out an enterprise
which they
realised may involve murder. These are general
principles which
must be applied to the facts of this case."
- 8 -
Powell
and Daniels were convicted of murder and their appeals were
rejected
by the Court of Appeal, and the question certified for
the opinion of your
Lordships' House is:
"Is
it sufficient to found a conviction for murder for a
secondary
party to a killing to have realised that the primary
party might
kill with intent to do so or must the secondary
party have held
such intention himself?"
In
the case of English the purpose of the joint enterprise in which he
and
another young man, Weddle. took part was to attack and cause
injury with
wooden posts to a police officer, Sergeant Forth, and
in the course of the
attack Weddle used a knife with which he
stabbed Sergeant Forth to death.
It
was a reasonable possibility that English had no knowledge
that
Weddle was carrying a knife, and on this basis the learned
trial judge,
Owen J., stated in his summing up to the jury:
"If
he did not know of the knife then you have to consider
whether
nevertheless he knew that there was a substantial risk
that Weddle
might cause some really serious injury with the
wooden post which
was used in the manner which you find it
to have been used. So
there is the question; 'Has the
Prosecution proved' - and this is
an alternative, of course -
'that English joined in an unlawful
attack on the sergeant
realising at that time that there was a
substantial risk that in
that attack Weddle might kill or at least
cause some really
serious injury to the sergeant. If no, not
guilty,"
The
judge then, in effect, directed the jury that if they answered
that
question in the affirmative they should find English guilty
of murder.
Weddle
and English were convicted of murder and their appeals were
rejected
by the Court of Appeal. English now appeals to your Lordships'
House
and the two questions certified for the opinion of the House are
as
follows:
"(i)
Is it sufficient to found a conviction for murder for a
secondary
party to a killing to have realised that the
primary party might
kill with intent to do so or with
intent to cause grievous bodily
harm or must the
secondary party have held such an intention
himself?
(ii)
Is it sufficient for murder that the secondary party
intends or
foresees that the primary party would or may
act with intent to
cause grievous bodily harm, if the
lethal act carried out by the
primary party is
-9-
fundamentally different from the acts foreseen or
intended by the secondary party?"
The
question certified in the appeals of Powell and Daniels and the
first
question certified in the appeal of English raise the issue
whether foresight of
a criminal act which was not the purpose of
the joint enterprise (in the case
of Powell and Daniels the use of
a gun. and in the case of English the use of
a knife) is
sufficient to impose criminal liability for murder on the
secondary
party in the event that the jury find that the primary
party used the weapon
with intent to kill or cause really serious
harm.
In
the case of Powell and Daniels the Crown case was that the
two
appellants knew that the third man was armed with a gun, and
the Crown
accepted that if the jury did not find this knowledge
the appellants would not
be guilty of murder. But in the case of
English the Crown case was that,
even if he did not know that
Weddle had a knife, English foresaw that Weddle
would cause really
serious injury to the police officer, and that this foresight
was
sufficient to impose criminal liability upon him for the
murder.
Accordingly the second question arises in the case of
English and that question
is. in essence, whether the secondary
party is guilty of murder if he foresaw
that the other person
taking part in the enterprise would use violence that
would cause
really serious injury, but did not foresee the use of the weapon
that
was used to carry out the killing.
My
Lords, the first question gives rise, in my opinion, to two
issues.
The first issue is whether there is a principle
established in the authorities that
where there is a joint
enterprise to commit a crime, foresight or contemplation
by one
party to the enterprise that another party to the enterprise may in
the
course of it commit another crime, is sufficient to impose
criminal liability for
that crime if committed by the other party
even if the first party did not intend
that criminal act to be
carried out. (I shall consider in a later part of this
judgment
whether the foresight is of a possibility or of a probability.)
The
second issue is whether, if there be such an established
principle, it can stand
as good law in the light of the decisions
of this House that foresight is not
sufficient to constitute the
mens rea for murder in the case of the person who
actually causes
the death and that guilt only arises if that person intends to
kill
or cause really serious injury.
My
Lords, I consider that there is a strong line of authority that
where
two parties embark on a joint enterprise to commit a crime,
and one party
foresees that in the course of the enterprise the
other party may carry out,
with the requisite mens rea, an act
constituting another crime, the former is
liable for that crime if
committed by the latter in the course of the enterprise.
This was
decided by the Court of Appeal, constituted by five judges, in
Reg.
v. Smith (Wesley) [1963] 1 W.L.R. 1200. In that case after an
argument
in a public-house, where the appellant and three other
men had been causing
a disturbance, the appellant and one of the
other men went outside where they
collected and threw bricks
through the glass door of the premises, in order to
- 10 -
"tear
up the joint." While they were so doing, one of the remaining
two men,
who were still inside, continued the argument which
developed into a fight in
the course of which one of them. A.,
stabbed the barman with a knife, killing
him. At the time of the
stabbing the appellant was outside the premises, but
he knew that
the man who stabbed the barman was carrying the knife on his
person.
All four men were charged with murder. The trial judge directed
the
jury:
"Assuming
that one of the four knifed the barman, assuming
you are satisfied
that it was done unlawfully in the course of an
assault upon him,
was [the appellant] taking part in a general
attack on the bar
directed in part at the barman, so as to make
him a party to the
general assault in some way upon [the
deceased barman]? . . .
Manslaughter is unlawful killing
without intent to kill or do
grievous bodily harm. Anybody
who is a party to an attack which
results in an unlawful killing
... is a party to the killing."
The appellant was convicted of manslaughter.
In
delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeal Slade J. referred
to
the direction of the trial judge that: "Anybody who is a
party to an attack
which results in an unlawful killing ... is a
party to the killing." Slade J.
then stated, at p. 1205:
"In
the view of this court, that is a wholly unexceptionable
direction
upon the law except, of course, where the act can be
said to be
wholly outside the subject-matter of the concerted
agreement. The
term 'agreement,' 'confederacy,' 'acting in
concert,' and
'conspiracy,' all pre-suppose an agreement
express or by
implication to achieve a common purpose, and so
long as the act
done is within the ambit of that common
purpose anyone who takes
part in it, if it is an unlawful killing,
is guilty of
manslaughter. That does not mean that one cannot
hypothesise a
case in which there is an act which is wholly
outside the scope of
the agreement, in which case no doubt
different considerations
might apply; but the judge was not
dealing with that case at all."
And, at p. 1206:
"The
grounds of appeal in this case although worded in
different ways
really, as I understand them, amount to the same
thing; that is,
that the use of a knife by Atkinson in this case
was a departure,
that is to say, assuming against Smith, as
must be assumed in the
light of the jury's verdict, that he was
a party to some concerted
action being taken against the
barman, he certainly was not a
party to the use upon the
- 11 -
barman
of a knife which resulted in the barman's death. It is
significant,
as I have shown by reading Smith's own statement,
that he knew
that Atkinson carried a knife. Indeed, I think he
knew that one of
the other man carried a cut-throat razor. It
must have been
clearly within the contemplation of a man like
Smith who,
to use one expression, had almost gone berserk
himself to have
left the public-house only to get bricks to tear
up the joint,
that if the bar tender did his duty to quell the
disturbance and
picked up the night stick, anyone whom he
knew had a knife in his
possession, like Atkinson, might use it
on the barman, as Atkinson
did. By no stretch of imagination,
in the opinion of this
court, can that be said to be outside the
scope of the concerted
action in this case. In a case of this
kind it is difficult to
imagine what would have been outside the
scope of the concerted
action, possibly the use of a loaded
revolver, the presence of
which was unknown to the other
parties; but that is not this case,
and I am expressing no
opinion about that. The court is satisfied
that anything which
is within the ambit of the concerted
arrangement is the
responsibility of each party who chooses to
enter into the
criminal purpose." (emphasis added)
Therefore
I consider that in Reg. v. Smith the Court of
Appeal
recognised that the secondary party will be guilty of
unlawful killing
committed by the primary party with a knife if he
contemplates that the
primary party may use such a weapon.
In
Reg. v. Anderson; Reg. v. Morris [1966] 2 Q.B. 110 the
primary
party (Anderson) killed the victim with a knife. The
defence of the secondary
party (Morris) was that even though he
may have taken part in a joint attack
with Anderson to beat up the
victim, he did not know that Anderson was
armed with a knife. In
his summing up the trial judge told the jury that they
could
convict Morris of manslaughter even though he had no idea
that
Anderson had armed himself with a knife. The Court of Appeal
held that this
was a misdirection in respect of Morris and quashed
his conviction for
manslaughter.
In
delivering the judgment of the Court of Appeal Lord Parker
C.J.
accepted, at p. 118, the principle formulated by Mr. Geoffrey
Lane Q.C. (as
he then was) on behalf of Morris:
"where
two persons embark on a joint enterprise, each is liable
for the
acts done in pursuance of that joint enterprise, that that
includes
liability for unusual consequences if they arise from
the
execution of the agreed joint enterprise but (and this is the
crux
of the matter) that, if one of the adventurers goes beyond
what
had been tacitly agreed as part of the common enterprise,
his
co-adventurer is not liable for the consequences of that
- 12 -
unauthorised
act. Finally, he says it is for the jury in every
case to decide
whether what was done was part of the joint
enterprise, or went
beyond it and was in fact an act
unauthorised by that joint
enterprise."
As
a matter of strict analysis there is. as Professor J.C. Smith
pointed
out in his commentary on Reg. v. Wakely [1990]
Crim. L.R. 119, 120, a
distinction between a party to a common
enterprise contemplating that in the
course of the enterprise
another party may use a gun or knife and a parry
tacitly agreeing
that in the course of the enterprise another party may use such
a
weapon. In many cases the distinction will in practice be of
little
importance because as Lord Lane C.J. observed in Reg. v.
Wakely, at p. 120,
with reference to the use of a pick axe
handle in a burglary, "Foreseeability
that the pick axe
handle might be used as a weapon of violence was
practically
indistinguishable from tacit agreement that the weapon
should be used for that
purpose." Nevertheless it is possible
that a case might arise where a party
knows that another party to
the common enterprise is carrying a deadly
weapon and contemplates
that he may use it in the course of the enterprise,
but, whilst
making it clear to the other party that he is opposed to the
weapon
being used, nevertheless continues with the plan. In such a
case it would be
unrealistic to say that, if used, the weapon
would be used with his tacit
agreement. However it is clear from a
number of decisions, in addition to the
judgment of the Court of
Appeal in Reg. v. Smith [1963] 1 W.L.R. 1200, that
as
stated by the High Court of Australia in McAuliffe v. The Queen
(1995)
69 A.L.J.R. 621, 624 (in a judgment to which I will
refer later in more detail)
"The scope of the common purpose
is to be determined by what was
contemplated by the parties
sharing that purpose." Therefore when two
parties embark on a
joint criminal enterprise one party will be liable for an act
which
he contemplates may be carried out by the other party in the course
of
the enterprise even if he has not tacitly agreed to that act.
The
principle stated in Reg. v. Smith was applied by the Privy
Council
in Chan Wing-Siu v. The Queen [1985] AC 168 in
the judgment delivered
by Sir Robin Cooke who stated, at p.175G:
"The
case must depend rather on the wider principle whereby
a secondary
party is criminally liable for acts by the primary
offender of a
type which the former foresees but does not
necessarily intend.
"That
there is such a principle is not in doubt. It turns on
contemplation
or, putting the same idea in other words,
authorization, which may
be express or is more usually
implied. It meets the case of a
crime foreseen as a possible
incident of the common unlawful
enterprise. The criminal
culpability lies in participating in the
venture with that
foresight."
- 13 -
The
principle stated by Sir Robin Cooke in Chan Wing-Siu's case
was
followed and applied in the judgment of the Court of Appeal in
Reg. v. Hyde
[1991] 1 Q.B. 134, where Lord Lane C.J. took
account of Professor Smith's
comment in Reg. v. Wakeley
that there is a distinction between tacit agreement
and foresight and made it clear that the latter is the proper test.
In
Hui Chi-ming v. The Queen [1992] 1 AC 34 the Privy
Council
again applied the principle stated by Sir Robin Cooke in
Chan Wing-Siu v.
The Queen and in delivering the judgment
of the Board Lord Lowry stated,
at p.53B:
"The
defendant's second point relies on Sir Robin Cooke's use
of the
word 'authorisation' as a synonym for contemplation in
the passage
already cited from his judgment in Chan Wing-Siu
v. The Queen
[1985] AC 168, 175. Their Lordships consider
that Sir Robin
used this word—and in that regard they do not
differ from
counsel—to emphasise the fact that mere foresight
is not
enough: the accessory, in order to be guilty, must have
foreseen
the relevant offence which the principal may commit
as a
possible incident of the common unlawful enterprise and
must,
with such foresight, still have participated in the
enterprise.
The word 'authorisation' explains what is meant by
contemplation,
but does not add a new ingredient. That this is
so is manifest
from Sir Robin's pithy conclusion to the passage
cited: 'The
criminal culpability lies in participating in the
venture with
that foresight."
In
McAuliffe v. The Queen (1995) 69 A.L.J.R. 621 the High Court
of
Australia has recently stated that the test for determining
whether a crime falls
within the scope of a joint enterprise is
now the subjective test of
contemplation and the Court stated, at
p.624:
"Each
of the parties to the arrangement or understanding is
guilty of
any other crime falling within the scope of the
common purpose
which is committed in carrying out that
purpose. Initially the
test of what fell within the scope of the
common purpose was
determined objectively so that liability
was imposed for other
crimes committed as a consequence of
the commission of the crime
which was the primary object of
the criminal venture, whether or
not those other crimes were
contemplated by the parties to that
venture. However, in
accordance with the emphasis which the law
now places upon
the actual state of mind of an accused person, the
test has
become a subjective one and the scope of the common
purpose
is to be determined by what was contemplated by the
parties
sharing that purpose."
- 14 -
There
is therefore a strong line of authority that participation in a
joint
criminal enterprise with foresight or contemplation of an
act as a possible
incident of that enterprise is sufficient to
impose criminal liability for that act
carried out by another
participant in the enterprise.
I
would add that, in my opinion, Lord Parker in Reg. v.
Anderson;
Reg. v. Morris [1966] 2 Q.B. 110, having accepted
the principle formulated
by Mr. Lane, made it clear in other parts
of the judgment that he was not
intending to depart from the
principle in Reg. v. Smith, because immediately
after
stating Mr. Lane's formulation Lord Parker said at p. 119:
"In
support of that, he refers to a number of authorities
to which
this court finds it unnecessary to refer in detail, which
in the
opinion of this court shows that at any rate for the last
130 or
140 years that has been the true position. This matter
was in fact
considered in some detail in Reg. v. Smith (Wesley),
heard
by a court of five judges presided over by Hilbery J., in
which
Slade J. gave the judgment of the court. Reg. v. Smith
(Wesley)
was referred to at some length in the later decision in
this
court in Reg. v. Betty; it is unnecessary to go into that
case
in any detail. It followed the judgment of Slade J. in Reg.
v.
Smith (Wesley), and it did show the limits of the
general
principle which Mr. Lane invokes in the present case. In
Reg.
v. Smith (Wesley) the co-adventurer who in fact killed
was
known by the defendant to have a knife, and it was clear on
the
facts of that case that the common design involved an attack
on
a man, in that case a barman, in which the use of a knife
would
not be outside the scope of the concerted action.
Reference was
there made to the fact that the case might have
been different if
in fact the man using the knife had used a
revolver, a weapon
which he had, unknown to Smith.
"The
court in Reg. v. Betty approved entirely of what had been
said
in Reg. v. Smith (Wesley), and in fact added to it."
Later
at p. 120B I consider that Lord Parker applied the test of foresight
when
he stated:
"It seems to this court that
to say that adventurers are guilty of
manslaughter when one of
them has departed completely from
the concerted action of the
common design and has suddenly
formed an intent to kill and has
used a weapon and acted in a
way which no party to that common
design could suspect is
something which would revolt the
conscience of people today."
Therefore
I consider that the judgment in Reg. v. Anderson was
not
intended to constitute a departure from the principle stated
in Reg. v. Smith,
- 15 -
and
that the acceptance of Mr. Lane's test was regarded by the Court
of
Appeal as an alternative way of formulating the principle
stated in Reg. v.
Smith, although as Professor Smith has
pointed out, as a matter of strict
analysis, a distinction can be
drawn between the two tests.
The
second issue which arises on these appeals is whether the line
of
authority exemplified by Reg. v. Smith and Chan
Wing-Siu is good law in the
light of the decisions of this
House in Reg. v. Moloney [1985] AC 905 and
Reg. v.
Hancock [1986] AC 455. In the latter case Lord Scarman,
referring
to Moloney, stated, at p. 471:
"First,
the House cleared away the confusions which had
obscured the law
during the last 25 years laying down
authoritatively that the
mental element in murder is a specific
intent, the intent to kill
or to inflict serious bodily harm.
Nothing less suffices: and the
jury must be sure that the intent
existed when the act was done
which resulted in death before
they can return a verdict of
murder.
"Secondly,
the House made it absolutely clear that foresight of
consequences
is no more than evidence of the existence of the
intent: it must
be considered, and its weight assessed, together
with all the
evidence in the case. Foresight does not
necessarily imply the
existence of intention, though it may be
a fact from which, when
considered with all the other evidence,
a jury may think it right
to infer the necessary intent. Lord
Hailsham of St. Marylebone
L.C. put the point succinctly and
powerfully in his speech in Reg.
v. Moloney [1985] AC 905,
913: 'I conclude with the pious
hope that your Lordships will
not again have to decide that
foresight and foreseeability are
not the same thing as intention
although either may give rise to
an irresistible inference of
such, and that matters which are
essentially to be treated as
matters of inference for a jury as to
a subjective state of mind
will not once again be erected into a
legal presumption. They
should remain, what they always
should have been, part of the law
of evidence and inference to
be left to the jury after a proper
direction as to their weight,
and not part of the substantive
law.'
"Thirdly,
the House emphasised that the probability of the
result of an act
is an important matter for the jury to consider
and can be
critical in their determining whether the result was
intended."
In
reliance upon Reg. v. Moloney and Reg. v. Hancock
Mr. Feinberg,
on behalf of the appellants Powell and Daniels,
submitted to this House, as he
submitted to the Court of Appeal,
that as a matter of principle there is an
- 16-
anomaly
in requiring proof against a secondary party of a lesser mens rea
than
needs to be proved against the principal who commits the
actus reus of
murder. If foreseeability of risk is insufficient to
found the mens rea of
murder for a principal then the same test of
liability should apply in the case
of a secondary party to the
joint enterprise. Mr. Feinberg further submitted
that it is wrong
for the present distinction in mental culpability to operate to
the
disadvantage of a party who does not commit the actus reus and that
there
is a manifest anomaly where there is one test for a
principal and a lesser test
for a secondary party.
A
similar argument had previously been rejected by the Court of
Appeal
in Reg. v. Ward (1986) 85 Cr.App.R. 71 and in Reg. v. Slack
[1989]
Q.B. 775. In Reg. v. Ward, Lord Lane C.J.
stated, at pp. 76-77:
"It
is submitted by Mr. Steer in regard to that ground of appeal
that
the decisions of the House of Lords in Reg. v. Moloney
and
Reg. v. Hancock have had the effect of completely altering
the
law relating to joint enterprise. The way in which he put
it was
this. We asked him to dictate the submission so we
could write it
down. No man, he submits, can be convicted of
murder unless it is
specifically decided against him that he had
a murderous intent
and that could only be decided against him
if the judge directed
the jury that that was what they had to
find.
"Each
member of this Court is bound to confess that he was
unable to
understand the submission. It is enough to say that
we do not
consider that the cases of Reg. v. Moloney and Reg.
v.
Hancock have had any effect at all upon the well-known
and
well-established principles of joint enterprise: in short,
the
principle set out in Reg. v. Anderson; Reg. v. Morris
(1966) 50
Cr. App. R. 216, [1966] 2 Q.B. 110 still holds good
. . .
"We
are told that the learned judge may have been equipped
with the
opinion of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council
in a case
called Chan Wing-Siu v. The Queen [1985] AC 168.
If that
is so, the learned judge accurately reflected the view of
their
Lordships in that case in the passage which I have read.
"It
was suggested by Mr. Steer that the decision in that case,
which
came from Hong Kong, is not in accordance with the
decisions of
the House of Lords in Reg. v. Moloney and Reg.
v.
Hancock. We disagree. We think that what appears in that
case,
if we may say so respectfully, is good law.
In Reg. v. Slack [1989] Q.B. 775, Lord Lane C.J. stated, at p.780:
- 17 -
"Chan
Wing-Siu v. The Queen [1985] AC 168 was
considered and
approved by this court in Reg. v. Ward (1986)
85 Cr. App.
R. 71. The appellant's submission in that case
was that the
decisions of the House of Lords in Reg. v.
Moloney [1985] AC 905 and Reg. v. Hancock [1986] A.C.
455 had the effect
of completely altering the law relating to
joint enterprise: that
no man can be convicted of murder unless
it is specifically
decided against him that he had a murderous
intent; since intent
had to be read against the decisions in Reg.
v. Moloney
[1985] AC 905 and Reg. v. Hancock [1986A.C.
455 the
jury ought to be directed on the basis of those cases.
"This
court in Reg. v. Ward (1986) 85 Cr.App.R. 71 reiterated
the
passage from Reg. v. Anderson; Reg. v. Morris [1966] 2
Q.B.
110, 118-119, cited above and went on to hold that Reg.
v.
Moloney [1985] AC 905 and Reg. v. Hancock [1986]
A.C.
455 had had no effect on the well known and well
established
principles of joint enterprise."
As
Lord Lane observed in Reg. v. Slack, p. 780H, difficulties
had
arisen from the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Reg. v.
Barr (1986) 88
Cr.App.R. 362. It appears from the facts
that violent acts by all three
defendants, who were burglars,
caused the death of the householder. The trial
judge directed the
jury as though it was not necessary for a defendant charged
with
murder to possess himself the necessary intent either to kill or do
serious
bodily harm to the victim: it was enough to convict him of
murder if he
contemplated that one of his co-defendants had one of
these intents and that
he foresaw the possibility of that intent
being carried into effect by that
person.
The
Court of Appeal held that this was a misdirection and quashed
the
convictions, Watkins L.J. stating, at p.369:
"where
it is appropriate to direct a jury upon foreseeability
of
consequence, the jury must be told that evidence of
such
foreseeability does no more than assist the jury to
determine
whether a defendant had at the requisite time an
intention either
to kill or to do serious harm to the victim.
"Unwittingly,
the judge with regard to a time prior to the
burglary, unaided by
those authorities, because they were
decided after he had directed
the jury in the present case,
seems to have directed them as
though it was not necessary for
a defendant charged with murder
himself to possess one of the
necessary intents: it was enough to
convict him if he
contemplated that one of his co-accused had one
of those
- 18 -
intents
and that he no more than foresaw the possibility of that
intent
being carried into effect by that person."
I
consider that the judge's summing up contained a misdirection to
the
extent that it could be read to suggest that participants in a
joint venture which
led to a killing would all be guilty of murder
even if none of them possessed
the intent to kill or do serious
bodily harm. But I further consider, with
respect, that the
judgment of the Court of Appeal was erroneous to the extent
that
it suggests that if A kills with the requisite intent to kill or
cause serious
bodily harm, B a participant in the joint venture
cannot be guilty of murder
unless he also intends death or serious
bodily harm to the victim.
Therefore
the decision in Reg. v. Barr should not be followed in so far
as it
relates to the liability of a secondary party who is a
participant in a joint
enterprise.
In
Reg. v. Smith [1988] Crim.L.R. 616 it appears that Reg. v.
Ward
85 Cr.App.R. 71 was not cited to the Court of Appeal and
its decision in that
case, that specific intent to cause grievous
bodily harm must be proved against
a secondary party to convict
him of that offence where the grievous bodily
harm has been caused
by another party to the joint enterprise to attack the
victim, is
also erroneous and should not be followed.
Before
setting out the terms in which the Court of Appeal rejected
the
argument on behalf of the appellants Powell and Daniels based
on Reg. v.
Moloney [1985] AC 905 and Reg. v. Hancock
[1986] AC 455 I would
first refer to the rejection of
another argument advanced on behalf of the
appellants in reliance
on the judgments of Woolf J. at first instance and Lord
Scarman in
this House in Gillick v. West Norfolk and Wisbech Area
Health
Authority [1984] Q.B. 581; [1986] AC 112, 190E to the
effect that whether
or not a doctor who gives contraceptive advice
or treatment to a girl under the
age of 16 years could be guilty
of aiding and abetting the commission of
unlawful sexual
intercourse would depend on his intention. The Court of
Appeal
rejected this argument in this case on the grounds that Gillick
was a
case where there was a civil claim for a declaration and
the situations
considered were remote from a common enterprise
culminating in murder.
My Lords, I agree, and I consider that a
doctor exercising bona fide his
clinical judgment cannot be
regarded as engaging in a joint criminal enterprise
with the girl.
Returning
to the rejection in the Court of Appeal of the appellants'
argument
in reliance on Reg. v. Moloney and Reg. v. Hancock,
Lord Taylor
of Gosforth C.J. stated, at p.22a:
"we
feel bound to follow and apply the Hyde formulation
having
regard to the approval which it has received in a
number of
decisions in this court and to the fact that it is in
- 19 -
accordance
with the House of Lords' decision in Maxwell. If
the result
is an unacceptable anomaly, it must now be for the
House of Lords
or the legislature to say so."
My
Lords, I recognise that as a matter of logic there is force in
the
argument advanced on behalf of the appellants, and that on one
view it is
anomalous that if foreseeability of death or really
serious harm is not
sufficient to constitute mens rea for murder
in the party who actually carries
out the killing, it is
sufficient to constitute mens rea in a secondary party. But
the
rules of the common law are not based solely on logic but relate
to
practical concerns and, in relation to crimes committed in the
course of joint
enterprises, to the need to give effective
protection to the public against
criminals operating in gangs. As
Lord Salmon stated in Reg. v. Majewski
[1977] AC 443,482E, in rejecting criticism based on strict logic of a rule
of
the common law, ''this is the view that has been adopted by the
common law
of England, which is founded on common sense and
experience rather than
strict logic."
In
my opinion there are practical considerations of weight
and
importance related to considerations of public policy which
justify the
principle stated in Chan Wing-Siu and which
prevail over considerations of
strict logic. One consideration is
that referred to by Lord Lane C.J. in
Reg. v. Hyde [1991] 1
Q.B. 134, 139c, where he cited with approval the
observation of
Professor Smith in his comment on Reg. v. Wakeley:
"If
B realises (without agreeing to such conduct being used)
that A
may kill or intentionally inflict serious injury, but
nevertheless
continues to participate with A in the venture, that
will amount
to a sufficient mental element for B to be guilty of
murder if A,
with the requisite intent, kills in the course of the
venture. As
Professor Smith points out, B has in those
circumstances lent
himself to the enterprise and by so doing he
has given assistance
and encouragement to A in carrying out an
enterprise which B
realises may involve murder."
A
further consideration is that, unlike the principal party who carries
out the
killing with a deadly weapon, the secondary party will not
be placed in the
situation in which he suddenly has to decide
whether to shoot or stab the third
person with intent to kill or
cause really serious harm. There is, in my
opinion, an argument of
considerable force that the secondary party who takes
part in a
criminal enterprise (for example, the robbery of a bank)
with
foresight that a deadly weapon may be used, should not escape
liability for
murder because he, unlike the principal party, is
not suddenly confronted by
the security officer so that he has to
decide whether to use the gun or knife or
have the enterprise
thwarted and face arrest. This point has been referred to
in cases
where the question has been discussed whether in order for
criminal
liability to attach the secondary party must foresee an
act as more likely than
- 20 -
not
or whether it suffices if the secondary party foresees the act only
as a
possibility.
In
Chan Wing-Sui v. The Queen [1985] AC 168 counsel for
the
Crown submitted, at p. 172:
"Regard
must be had to public policy considerations.
Public policy
requires that when a man lends himself to a
criminal enterprise
knowing it involves the possession of
potentially murderous
weapons which in fact are used by his
partners with murderous
intent, he should not escape the
consequences to him of their
conduct by reliance upon the
nuances of prior assessment of the
likelihood that such conduct
will take place. In these
circumstances an accomplice who
knowingly takes the risk that such
conduct might, or might
well, take place in the course of that
joint enterprise should
bear the same responsibility for that
conduct as those who use
the weapons with the murderous intent."
Sir Robin Cooke stated, at p.177D:
"What
public policy requires was rightly identified in the
submissions
for the Crown. Where a man lends himself to a
criminal enterprise
knowing that potentially murderous weapons
are to be carried, and
in the event they are in fact used by his
partner with an intent
sufficient for murder, he should not
escape the consequences by
reliance upon a nuance of prior
assessment, only too likely to
have been optimistic."
A
somewhat similar viewpoint was stated by Professor Glanville
Williams
in Criminal Law, The General Part, 2nd ed. p. 397 (cited
by
Stephen J. in his judgment in the High Court of Australia in
Johns v. The
Queen (1980) 143 C.L.R. 108, 119): "It
seems that a common intent to
threaten violence is equivalent to a
common intent to use violence, for the one
so easily leads to the
other."
In
McAuliffe v. The Queen (1995) 69 A.L.J.R. 621 the High Court
of
Australia referred to the decision in Johns and stated,
at p.626:
"There
was no occasion for the Court to turn its attention to
the
situation where one party foresees, but does not agree to,
a crime
other than that which is planned, and continues to
participate in
the venture. However, the secondary offender in
that situation is
as much a party to the crime which is an
incident of the agreed
venture as he is when the incidental
crime falls within the common
purpose. Of course, in that
situation the prosecution must prove
that the individual
concerned foresaw that the incidental crime
might be
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committed
and cannot rely upon the existence of the common
purpose as
establishing that state of mind. But there is no
other relevant
distinction. As Sir Robin Cooke observed, the
criminal culpability
lies in the participation in the joint criminal
enterprise with
the necessary foresight and that is so whether
the foresight is
that of an individual party or is shared by all
parties. That is
in accordance with the general principle of the
criminal law that
a person who intentionally assists in the
commission of a crime or
encourages its commission may be
convicted as a party to it."
Therefore
for the reasons which I have given I would answer the
certified
question of law in the appeals of Powell and Daniels and the
first
certified question in the appeal of English by stating that
(subject to the
observations which I make in relation to the
second certified question in the
case of English) it is sufficient
to found a conviction for murder for a
secondary party to have
realised that in the course of the joint enterprise the
primary
party might kill with intent to do so or with intent to cause
grievous
bodily harm. Accordingly I would dismiss the appeals of
Powell and Daniels.
The
second certified question in the appeal of English arises because
of
the last sentence in the following passage in the trial judge's
summing up
to the jury to which I have previously referred:
"If
he had the knife and English knew that Weddle had the
knife, what
would have been — must have been — in the mind
of
English, bearing in mind whatever condition you find that he
was
in as a result of drink? So you have to ask that question.
If he
did not know of the knife then you have to consider
whether
nevertheless he knew that there was a substantial risk
that Weddle
might cause some really serious injury with the
wooden post which
was used in the manner which you find it
to have been used."
In
Reg. v. Hyde [1991] 1 Q.B. 134, as already set out, Lord Lane
stated, at
p.139c:
"If
B realises (without agreeing to such conduct being used)
that A
may kill or intentionally inflict serious injury, but
nevertheless
continues to participate with A in the venture, that
will amount
to a sufficient mental element for B to be guilty of
murder if A,
with the requisite intent, kills in the course of the
venture."
However
in Hyde the attack on the victim took place without
weapons
and the Crown case was that the fatal blow to the victim's
head was a heavy
kick. The problem raised by the second certified
question is that, if a jury is
directed in the terms stated in
Hyde, without any qualification (as was the jury
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in
English), there will be liability for murder on the part of
the secondary
party if he foresees the possibility that the other
party in the criminal venture
will cause really serious harm by
kicking or striking a blow with a wooden
post, but the other party
suddenly produces a knife or a gun, which the
secondary party did
not know he was carrying, and kills the victim with it.
Mr.
Sallon, for the appellant, advanced to your Lordships' House
the
submission (which does not appear to have been advanced in the
Court of
Appeal) that in a case such as the present one where the
primary party kills
with a deadly weapon, which the secondary
party did not know that he had
and therefore did not foresee his
use of it, the secondary party should not be
guilty of murder. He
submitted that to be guilty under the principle stated in
Chan
Wing-Siu the secondary party must foresee an act of the type
which the
principal party committed, and that in the present case
the use of a knife was
fundamentally different to the use of a wooden post.
My
Lords, I consider that this submission is correct. It finds
strong
support in the passage of the judgment of Lord Parker in
Reg. v. Anderson;
Reg. v. Morris [1966] 2 Q.B. 110, 120B
which I have set out earlier, but
which it is convenient to set
out again in this portion of the judgment:
"It
seems to this court that to say that adventurers are guilty
of
manslaughter when one of them has departed completely from
the
concerted action of the common design and has suddenly
formed an
intent to kill and has used a weapon and acted in a
way which no
party to that common design could suspect is
something which would
revolt the conscience of people today."
The
judgment in Chan Wing-Siu's case [1985] AC 168 also
supports
the argument advanced on behalf of the appellant because
Sir Robin Cooke
stated, at p.175F:
"The
case must depend rather on the wider principle whereby
a secondary
party is criminally liable for acts by the primary
offender of
a type which the former foresees but does not
necessarily
intend." (emphasis added).
There
is also strong support for the appellant's submission in the
decision
of Carswell J. (as he then was), sitting without a jury in the
Crown
Court in Northern Ireland, in Reg. v. Gamble [1989]
N.I. 268. In that case
the four accused were all members of a
terrorist organisation, the Ulster
Volunteer Force, who had a
grievance against a man named Patton. The four
accused entered
upon a joint venture to inflict punishment upon him, two of
them,
Douglas and McKee, contemplating that Patton would be subjected to
a
severe beating or to "kneecapping" (firing a bullet into
his kneecap). In the
course of the attack upon him Patton was
brutally murdered by the other two
accused. His throat was cut
with a knife with great force which rapidly
caused his death. In
addition he was shot with four bullets, and two of the
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bullet
wounds would have been fatal had his death not been caused by
the
cutting of his throat. Douglas and McKee had not foreseen
killing with a
knife or firing of bullets into a vital part of the
body. It was argued,
however, on behalf of the prosecution that
the joint enterprise of committing
grievous bodily harm, combined
with the rule that an intent to cause such
harm grounded a
conviction for murder in respect of a resulting death, was
sufficient
to make the two accused liable for murder notwithstanding that
they
had not foreseen the actions which actually caused death.
After citing the
relevant authorities Carswell J. rejected this
argument and stated, at p.283f:
"When
an assailant 'kneecaps' his victim, i.e. discharges a
weapon into
one of his limbs, most commonly into the knee
joint, there must
always be the risk that it will go wrong and
that an artery may be
severed or the limb may be so damaged
that gangrene sets in, both
potentially fatal complications. It
has to be said, however, that
such cases must be very rare
among victims of what is an abhorrent
and disturbingly
frequent crime. Persons who take a part in
inflicting injuries
of this nature no doubt do not generally
expect that they will
endanger life, and I should be willing to
believe that in most
cases they believe that they are engaged in a
lesser offence than
murder.
"The
infliction of grievous bodily harm came within the
contemplation
of Douglas and McKee, and they might therefore
be regarded as
having placed themselves within the ambit of
life-threatening
conduct. It may further be said that they must
be taken to have
had within their contemplation the possibility
that life might be
put at risk. The issue is whether it follows
as a consequence that
they cannot be heard to say that the
murder was a different crime
from the attack which they
contemplated, and so cannot escape
liability for the murder on
the ground that it was outside the
common design.
"To
accept this type of reasoning would be to fix an accessory
with
consequences of his acts which he did not foresee and did
not
desire or intend. The modern development of the criminal
law has
been away from such an approach and towards a
greater emphasis on
subjective tests of criminal guilt, as Sir
Robin Cooke pointed out
in Chan Wing-Sui. Although the rule
remains well entrenched
that an intention to inflict grievous
bodily harm qualifies as the
mens rea of murder, it is not in my
opinion necessary to apply it
in such a way as to fix an
accessory with liability for a
consequence which he did not
intend and which stems from an act
which he did not have
within his contemplation. I do not think
that the state of the
law compels me to reach such a conclusion,
and it would not
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in
my judgment accord with the public sense of what is just
and
fitting."
In
my opinion this decision was correct in that a secondary party
who
foresees grievous bodily harm caused by kneecapping with a gun
should not
be guilty of murder where, in an action unforeseen by
the secondary party,
another party to the criminal enterprise
kills the victim by cutting his throat
with a knife. The issue
(which is one of fact after the tribunal of fact has
directed
itself, or has been directed, in accordance with the statement of
Lord
Parker in Reg. v. Anderson; Reg. v. Morris
[1966] 2 Q.B. 110, 120B)
whether a secondary party who
foresees the use of a gun to kneecap, and
death is then caused by
the deliberate firing of the gun into the head or body
of the
victim, is guilty of murder is more debatable although, with respect,
I
agree with the decision of Carswell J. on the facts of that
case.
Accordingly,
in the appeal of English, I consider that the direction of
the
learned trial judge was defective (although this does not constitute
a
criticism of the judge, who charged the jury in conformity with
the principle
stated in Hyde) because in accordance with
the principle stated by Lord Parker
in Reg. v. Anderson, at
p.120b, he did not qualify his direction on foresight
of really
serious injury by stating that if the jury considered that the use of
the
knife by Weddle was the use of a weapon and an action on
Weddle's part
which English did not foresee as a possibility, then
English should not be
convicted of murder. As the unforeseen use
of the knife would take the
killing outside the scope of the joint
venture the jury should also have been
directed, as the Court of
Appeal held in Reg. v. Anderson, that English should
not be
found guilty of manslaughter.
On
the evidence the jury could have found that English did not know
that
Weddle had a knife. Therefore the judge's direction made the
conviction
of English unsafe and in my opinion his appeal should
be allowed and the
conviction for murder quashed.
English
was guilty of a very serious attack on Sergeant Forth, striking
him
a number of violent blows with a wooden post at the same time
as
Weddle attacked him with a wooden post. Therefore English was
fully
deserving of punishment for that attack, but it is
unnecessary for your
Lordships to give any further consideration
to this point as English has already
served a number of years in
detention pursuant to the sentence of the trial
judge.
I
have already stated that the issue raised by the second
certified
question in the appeal of English is to be resolved by
the application of the
principle stated by Lord Parker in Reg.
v. Anderson, at p. 120B. Having so
stated and having regard to
the differing circumstances in which the issue may
arise I think
it undesirable to seek to formulate a more precise answer to
the
question in case such an answer might appear to prescribe too
rigid a formula
for use by trial judges. However I would wish to
make this observation: if
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the
weapon used by the primary party is different to, but as dangerous
as, the
weapon which the secondary party contemplated he might
use, the secondary
party should not escape liability for murder
because of the difference in the
weapon, for example, if he
foresaw that the primary party might use a gun to
kill and the
latter used a knife to kill, or vice versa.
In
conclusion I would wish to refer to a number of other points
which
arise from the submissions in these appeals. The first issue
is what is the
degree of foresight required to impose liability
under the principle stated in
Chan Wing-Siu [1985] AC 168. On this issue I am in respectful agreement
with the judgment
of the Privy Council in that case that the secondary party
is
subject to criminal liability if he contemplated the act causing the
death as
a possible incident of the joint venture, unless the risk
was so remote that the
jury take the view that the secondary party
genuinely dismissed it as altogether
negligible.
Secondly,
as the Privy Council also stated in Chan Wing-Siu, in
directing
the jury the trial judge need not adopt a set of fixed formulae,
and
the form of the words used should be that best suited to the
facts of the
individual case. In this judgment I have cited two
passages from the judgment
of Lord Parker in Reg. v. Anderson;
Reg. v. Morris [1966] 2 Q.B. 110. One
passage commences at
p.118f, the second passage commences at p.120B.
Trial judges have
frequently based their directions to the jury in respect of
the
liability of a secondary party for an action carried out in a
joint venture on the
first passage. There is clearly no error in
doing so. However in many cases
there would be no difference in
result between applying the test stated in that
passage and the
test of foresight, and if there would be a difference the test
of
foresight is the proper one to apply. I consider that the test of
foresight is
a simpler and more practicable test for a jury to
apply than the test of whether
the act causing the death goes
beyond what had been tacitly agreed as part of
the joint
enterprise. Therefore, in cases where an issue arises as to
whether
an action was within the scope of the joint venture, I
would suggest that it
might be preferable for a trial judge in
charging a jury to base his direction
on the test of foresight
rather than on the test set out in the first passage in
Reg. v.
Anderson; Reg v. Morris. But in a case where, although
the
secondary party may have foreseen grievous bodily harm, he may
not have
foreseen the use of the weapon employed by the primary
party or the manner
in which the primary party acted, the trial
judge should qualify the test of
foresight stated in Reg. v.
Hyde [1991] 1 Q.B. 134 in the manner stated by
Lord Parker in
the second passage in Anderson v. Morris.
As
I have already observed in referring to the decision in Reg.
v.
Gamble [1989] N.I. 268, in applying the second passage in
Reg. v. Anderson
there will be cases giving rise to a fine
distinction as to whether or not the
unforeseen use of a
particular weapon or the manner in which a particular
weapon is
used will take a killing outside the scope of the joint venture,
but
this issue will be one of fact for the common sense of the
jury to decide.
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