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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> De Boucherville v The State (Mauritius) [1994] UKPC 5 (18 April 1994) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1994/5.html Cite as: [1994] UKPC 5, [1994] 2 AC 324 |
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[1994] UKPC 5
Roger France Pardayan De Boucherville | Appellant | |
v. | ||
The State | Respondent |
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Templeman
Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle
Lord Slynn of Hadley
Lord Woolf
Lord Lloyd of Berwick
[Delivered by Lord Woolf]
1. His fingerprints were found on the victim's car.
2. During his interviews with the police the appellant stated that he had never travelled in a car belonging to the victim and admitted that there was "bad blood" between himself and the victim because he thought the victim had had an affair with his sister-in-law.
3. The evidence of a witness Jocelyn Marmite ("Marmite") that from 3rd January to 17th January 1984 he was staying with the appellant and Lourdes at the appellant's house. That the appellant and Lourdes had left the house on 5th January 1984 and returned in the early hours of the following morning. That the appellant's arm was then bleeding and he took two blood stained knives from a bag and wiped them clean before burning the cloth which he used for this purpose. (Marmite had a number of previous convictions and during December 1983 and January 1984 was on the run from a prison from which he had escaped).
4. The appellant's statement to the police that while he knew Marmite well he had not seen him during the relevant period.
1. A confessed accomplice (which is an appropriate description of Lourdes) who remains in jeopardy of being charged or convicted cannot be called to give evidence for the prosecution at committal proceedings against a defendant implicated in his confession.
2. It is an abuse of process for the prosecution to join a defendant in a trial with a confessed accomplice with the oblique motive of:
(i) getting the evidence of the accomplice, inadmissible against the defendant, before the jury; or
(ii) rendering the accomplice non-compellable as a witness for his co-defendant.
3. Such an oblique motive will be presumed to exist, at least where the confessed accomplice has been joined as a defendant (i.e. has been prosecuted) , where the evidence which he gave at the committal proceedings was not only in breach of the first submission but also unhelpful to the prosecution.
"Where an accomplice has been called as a prosecution witness at proceedings which result in a defendant being committed for trial, it amounts to an abuse of the court's process (at least, in the absence of fresh evidence) for the Crown subsequently to join that accomplice as a co-defendant in the trial. In this event it becomes the duty of the court to rectify the abuse and to avoid the injustice consequent upon it by ordering a separate trial."
"(1) Where any person is charged with a criminal offence, then, unless the charge is withdrawn, the case shall be afforded a fair hearing within a reasonable time by an independent and impartial court established by law.
(2) Every person who is charged with a criminal offence .. .
(e) shall be afforded facilities to examine, in person or by his legal representative, the witnesses called by the prosecution before any court, and to obtain the attendance and carry out the examination of witnesses to testify on his behalf before that court on the same conditions as those applying to witnesses called by the prosecution.
(7) No person who is tried for a criminal offence shall be compelled to give evidence at the trial."
"a jail-bird of great experience, who has lied on many occasions on which he was called upon to tell the truth. He has more than 25 previous convictions. I don't need to talk very much about Mr. Marmite. You have seen him. You have heard Counsel. It is for you to decide whether, with regard to the night in question, he is speaking the truth."