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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Thompson v. The Queen (Saint Vincent and The Grenadines) [1998] UKPC 6 (16th February, 1998) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1998/6.html Cite as: [1998] UKPC 6, [1998] AC 811 |
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Privy
Council Appeal No. 37 of 1997
Eversley
Thompson Appellant
v.
The
Queen Respondent
FROM
THE
COURT OF APPEAL OF THE EASTERN
CARIBBEAN
SUPREME COURT
(SAINT
VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES)
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS
OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY
COUNCIL,
Delivered the 16th
February 1998
------------------
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Goff of Chieveley
Lord
Jauncey of Tullichettle
Lord
Lloyd of Berwick
Lord
Hutton
Mr.
Justice Gault
·[Delivered by Lord Hutton]
-------------------------
1. On the
evening of 18th December 1993 a little girl, D'Andra Ollivierre, aged four
years and ten months, disappeared from her home near the sea at La Pompe,
Bequia, where she lived with her family.
She was never seen alive again and her body was never discovered. The appellant, Eversley Thompson, was
charged with her murder. The Crown case
against him was that on the evening of 18th December, after sexually assaulting
the little girl near her home, he caused her death by throwing her into the
sea.
2. The
appellant was tried by Mrs. Justice Joseph and a jury in the High Court
(Criminal Division) Saint Vincent and the Grenadines in June 1995. At the trial the evidence adduced against
the appellant consisted principally of evidence that he was seen hiding under a
tree close to D'Andra's home on the evening of 18th December 1993 after she had
disappeared, and oral admissions and a written statement by the appellant that
he had thrown D'Andra into the sea on that evening. The admissibility of the oral admissions and the written
statement was challenged by the defence, and after a voir dire the
learned trial judge, applying the Judges' Rules and the common law test of
voluntariness, ruled that they were admissible. At the conclusion of the trial the jury convicted the appellant
of the murder and he was sentenced to death.
His appeal against conviction to the Court of Appeal of the Eastern
Caribbean Supreme Court (Saint Vincent and the Grenadines) was dismissed on
15th January 1996.
3. The
appellant's petition for leave to appeal to the Privy Council against the
judgment of the Court of Appeal was heard by their Lordships' Board on 6th
February 1997. In the course of the
submissions on the application for leave to appeal a new point was raised on
behalf of the appellant which had not been advanced at the trial or before the
Court of Appeal. This point was that in
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines at the date of the trial the admissibility of
the confessions of the appellant was governed, not by the Judges' Rules and the
common law test of voluntariness, but by an English Act, the Police and
Criminal Evidence Act 1984 ("PACE").
As this point had not been considered by the Court of Appeal their
Lordships thought it right that before hearing detailed submissions on the
point they should have the benefit of the opinion of the Court of Appeal in
relation to it. Accordingly, in
addition to agreeing humbly to advise Her Majesty that the appellant ought to
be granted special leave to appeal as a poor person, their Lordships, pursuant
to their powers under section 8 of the Judicial Committee Act 1833, remitted
the case to the Court of Appeal in order for that court to state its opinion on
the following questions:-
"1.Whether and if
so to what extent:
(i)section
3 of the Evidence Act 1988 (Cap 158 of the Laws of St. Vincent and The
Grenadines) and/or
(ii)sections
5 and 6 of the Application of English Law Act 1989 (Cap 8 of the Laws of St.
Vincent and The Grenadines) and/or
(iii)any
other law of St. Vincent and The Grenadines
import into (or
exclude from) the
law of
St. Vincent and The Grenadines the provisions or any of the provisions of the
Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 applicable in England both generally and
as they relate to the admissibility of evidence in criminal proceedings.
2.If
and in so far as such provisions apply in St. Vincent and The Grenadines what
is their effect in the present case."
4. The
Court of Appeal, with commendable expedition, heard further argument on these
questions in May 1997 and delivered judgment on 21st July 1997, and their
Lordships therefore had the advantage of having the judgment before them on the
hearing of the appeal.
The
prosecution case at the trial.
Three members of
D'Andra's family gave evidence that after her absence from her home was noticed
a search of the surrounding area for her began shortly after 9.00 p.m. During the search they saw the appellant
hiding under a tree nearby, and when he was seen he left where he was hiding
and ran down the beach. The brother of
D'Andra ran after him, but fell on the beach and failed to catch him. Members of the search party found blood and
faeces on a rock on the beach and D'Andra's pants were also found nearby.
5. Evidence
was given by police officers of going to the appellant's home, which was not
far from D'Andra's home, in the early morning of 19th December 1993 and
bringing him from his home to Port Elizabeth police station. It will be necessary to describe the
evidence of the police officers in greater detail at a later stage in this
judgment, but at this point their evidence can be summarised as follows. In the police station at 9.00 a.m. the
appellant told Detective Sergeant Warrican that he had "thrown body of
D'Andra into sea at La Pompe". The
appellant then made further similar oral admissions to the police and between
11.45 a.m. and 12.30 p.m., after caution, he made a written statement which he
dictated to Detective Sergeant Warrican and then signed. The police evidence was that no police
officer had assaulted the appellant and no police officer had made any promise
to him or offered any inducement to him to make a confession.
The
defence case at the trial.
The appellant went into
the witness box before the jury to give evidence in his own defence. He said he had nothing to do with the
disappearance of D'Andra, he had not sexually assaulted her, he had not thrown
her into the sea, and he had nothing to do with her death. He said that he was very seriously
ill-treated by police officers from the time they arrived at his home in the
early hours of 19th December and he described very grave assaults, which
included blows with a shovel, assault on his genitals, and the administration
of electric shocks by a black instrument.
He also gave evidence of these assaults in the voir dire. He denied that he made any oral admissions
or any written statements to the police, and he said that the signature on the
written statement put in evidence by the police was not his handwriting.
6. In the
main trial the appellant's father said that he visited him in the police
station on the morning of 20th December 1993, and he saw that his hands and
face were swollen and his eyes were red like blood. In the voir dire the appellant's mother gave similar
evidence as to his appearance on 20th December 1993.
The
first hearing before the Court of Appeal.
On the first hearing
before the Court of Appeal two main grounds of appeal were advanced. These grounds were as follows:-
1.There
was no proper identification of the appellant.
2.The
case for the defence was not properly put to the jury.
7. The
third ground of appeal was that the verdict was unsafe and unsatisfactory, but
this ground was simply a combined restatement of the first two grounds.
8. In a
careful judgment the Court of Appeal rejected these grounds of appeal. On the hearing of the appeal before their
Lordships the appellant did not attack this judgment of the Court of Appeal,
but advanced a number of new points, including the point which had not
previously been raised relating to the application of PACE to Saint Vincent and
the Grenadines. Accordingly their
Lordships need not give further consideration to the first judgment of the
Court of Appeal.
The
second judgment of the Court of Appeal.
In its judgment in
relation to the two questions remitted to it for its consideration the Court of
Appeal in a carefully reasoned judgment delivered by the learned Acting Chief
Justice answered the questions as follows:-
"Question 1:
9. PACE
has been specifically imported into the Laws of St. Vincent and the Grenadines
to the extent that, whenever any question arise in any criminal proceedings
before any Court, touching the admissibility of any evidence, and there are no
provisions in the Laws of St. Vincent and the Grenadines which regulate the
determination of such questions, the provisions of PACE, subject to such
modifications as are applicable and necessary, are to determine those
questions, and by necessary implication to guide the conduct of the police in
their investigation to the extent that it is relevant to the issue of
admissibility."
10. It is
clear from earlier parts of the judgment that in stating that PACE had been
specifically imported into the laws of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines the
Court of Appeal was referring not only to PACE but to the Codes made under it
which are relevant to the admissibility of evidence.
"Question 2:
11. On the
evidence adduced, it was open to a judge applying the law and practice
administered in England to reach the conclusion that the admissions and
confessions should have been admitted into evidence.
12. Once
the learned trial Judge came to the conclusion that there was no truth in the
allegations of oppressive conduct by the police made by the appellant and in my
opinion there were objective reasons to reject those allegations, no unfairness
could have resulted from the admission into evidence of his clear and complete
confession to this heinous crime.
13. I
would conclude therefore that if the provisions of PACE were applied, it is
likely that the outcome would have been the same."
14. The
submissions advanced to their Lordships on behalf of the appellant were that
the answer of the Court of Appeal to the first question was correct, but that
its answer to the second question was erroneous, with the consequence that the
conviction could not stand and the appeal should be allowed. The submissions advanced on behalf of the
Crown were that none of the provisions of PACE and of its Codes had been
incorporated into the law of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines and that the
answer of the Court of Appeal to the first question was erroneous. In the alternative it was submitted that if
the sections of PACE had been incorporated into the law of Saint Vincent and
the Grenadines no relevant provisions of the PACE Codes had been
incorporated. It was further submitted
that if the admissibility at the trial of the appellant's oral admissions and
written statement was governed by PACE and its Codes, or by PACE alone, then,
for the reasons given by the Court of Appeal, the trial judge would still have
admitted them in evidence, so that there had been no miscarriage of justice.
The
relevant statutory provisions.
Before considering the
answers of the Court of Appeal to the two questions remitted to it for its
opinion it will be convenient to set out certain statutory provisions. Section 2 of the Evidence Ordinance 1926 of
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines provided:-
"Whenever any
questions shall arise in any civil or criminal cause or matter or other
proceeding whatsoever in or before any Court of Justice or Justice of the
Peace, or before any person having by law, or by consent of parties authority
to hear, receive and examine evidence, touching the admissibility or the
sufficiency of any evidence, ... or the swearing of any witness, or the form of
oath or of affirmation ... or the admissibility or sufficiency of any document,
writing, matter or thing tendered in evidence, every such question shall,
except as provided for in this Ordinance or by any other law in force in the
Colony, be decided according to the Law of England with such modifications as
may be applicable in this Colony."
15. This
order was repealed by the Evidence Act 1988 of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
(save in respect of several matters specified by section 63 of the 1988
Act). Section 3 of the Evidence Act
1988 provides:-
"Whenever
any question shall arise in any criminal or civil proceedings whatsoever in or
before any court, court martial or tribunal, or before any person having by
law, or consent of parties, authority to hear, receive and examine evidence,
touching the admissibility or sufficiency of any evidence, the competency or
obligation of any witness to give evidence, the swearing of any witness, the
form of oath or affirmation to be used by any witness, the admissibility of any
question put to any witness, the admissibility or sufficiency of any document,
writing, matter or thing tendered in evidence, such question shall, except as
provided in this Act, be decided according to the law and practice administered
for the time being in England with such modifications as may be applicable and
necessary in St. Vincent and the Grenadines."
16. Section
5 of the Application of English Law Act 1989 provides:-
"5.(1) Subject to
the provisions of this section, only the following Acts of Parliament of the
United Kingdom shall apply in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, that is to say
-
(a)all
such Acts as are specified in the Schedule, to the extent specified therein;
and
(b)any
such Act which applies, either specifically or by general description, by
virtue of any Act of the Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines other
than this Act.
...
(6) The Acts of the Parliament of the United
Kingdom which apply by virtue of the provisions of subsection (1)(b) shall
apply as they applied in England immediately before the 27th December, 1989,
unless other provision as to the date of application has been made.
(7) Subject to the provisions of subsection
(8), notwithstanding that any Act of the Parliament of Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines which is in force on the 27th December, 1989, provides that an Act
of the Parliament of the United Kingdom (whether by use of the expression `the law and practice' or
otherwise) shall apply as in force in England for the time being, the
provisions of subsection (6) shall apply to such Act of the Parliament of the
United Kingdom and not the provisions of such other Act and, without prejudice
to the generality of the foregoing, section II of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme
Court (Saint Vincent and the Grenadines) Act, shall be construed
accordingly."
"6.(1) Any Act of
the Parliament of the United Kingdom which applies in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines by virtue of the provisions of section 5 shall -
(a)be
read and construed with such formal alterations and modifications as to names, localities,
courts, officers, persons and otherwise as may be necessary to make the Act
appropriate to the circumstances;
(b)be
subject to such amendment as may have been made, or may hereafter be made, by
an Act of the Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
(2) Where any conflict arises between the
provisions of an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which applies by
virtue of the provisions of section 5 and the provisions of an Act of the
Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, the provisions of the latter
shall prevail.
(3) Where an Act of the Parliament of the
United Kingdom applies in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines by virtue of the
provisions of section 5 repealed and replaced an earlier Act of that Parliament
but subsidiary legislation made under such earlier Act continues in force, such
subsidiary legislation shall, if otherwise applicable, for the purposes of that
section, be deemed to have been made under the latter Act."
18. The
provisions of the Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 to which it is relevant
to refer are the following:-
"58.-(1) A person
arrested and held in custody in a police station or other premises shall be
entitled, if he so requests, to consult a solicitor privately at any
time."
"66.
The Secretary of State shall issue codes of practice in connection with -
(a)the exercise by
police officers of statutory powers -
(i)to search a person
without first arresting him; or
(ii)to search a vehicle
without making an arrest;
(b)the detention,
treatment, questioning and identification of persons by police officers;
(c)searches of premises
by police officers; and
(d)the seizure of
property found by police officers on persons or premises."
"67.-(1)
When the Secretary of State proposes to issue a code of practice to which this
section applies, he shall prepare and publish a draft of that code, shall
consider any representations made to him about the draft and may modify the
draft accordingly.
(2) This section applies to a code of
practice under Section 60 or 66 above.
(3) The Secretary of State shall lay before
both Houses of Parliament a draft of any code of practice prepared by him under
this section.
(4) When the Secretary of State has laid the
draft of a code before Parliament, he may bring the code into operation by
order made by statutory instrument.
(5) No order under subsection (4) above
shall have effect until approved by a resolution of each House of Parliament.
(6) An order bringing a code of practice
into operation may contain such transitional provisions or savings as appear to
the Secretary of State to be necessary or expedient in connection with the code
of practice thereby brought into operation.
(7) The Secretary of State may from time to
time revise the whole
or any part of a code of
practice to
which
this section applies and issue that revised code; and the foregoing provisions
of this section shall apply (with appropriate modifications) to such a revised
code as they apply to the first issue of a code.
...
(11) In all criminal and civil proceedings
any such code shall be admissible in evidence, and if any provision of such a
code appears to the court or tribunal conducting the proceedings to be relevant
to any question arising in the proceedings it shall be taken into account in
determining that question."
"76.-(1)
In any proceedings a confession made by an accused person may be given in
evidence against him in so far as it is relevant to any matter in issue in the
proceedings and is not excluded by the court in pursuance of this section.
(2) If, in any proceedings where the
prosecution proposes to give in evidence a confession made by an accused
person, it is represented to the court that the confession was or may have been
obtained -
(a)by oppression of the
person who made it; or
(b)in consequence of
anything said or done which was likely, in the circumstances existing at the
time, to render unreliable any confession which might be made by him in
consequence thereof,
the court shall not
allow the confession to be given in evidence against him except in so far as
the prosecution proves to the court beyond reasonable doubt that the confession
(notwithstanding that it may be true) was not obtained as aforesaid."
"78.-(1)
In any proceedings the court may refuse to allow evidence on which the
prosecution proposes to rely to be given if it appears to the court that,
having regard to all the circumstances, including the circumstances in which
the evidence was obtained, the admission of the evidence would have such an
adverse effect on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought not to
admit it.
(2) Nothing in this section shall prejudice
any rule of law requiring a court to exclude evidence."
"82.-(3)
Nothing in this Part of this Act shall prejudice any power of a court to
exclude evidence (whether by preventing questions from being put or otherwise)
at its discretion."
19. Before
considering the answer of the Court of Appeal to the first question, their
Lordships observe that the first question is worded in wide terms and asks
whether "the provisions or any of the provisions of the Police and
Criminal Evidence Act 1984" apply to Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines. The answer of the Court of
Appeal is that in respect of any question arising in any criminal proceedings
touching the admissibility of any evidence "PACE has been specifically
imported into the Laws of St. Vincent and the Grenadines". The answer also states the qualification
that PACE applies where "there are no provisions in the Laws of St.
Vincent and the Grenadines which regulate the determination of such
questions". Their Lordships
consider that questions of considerable difficulty and of varying degrees of
complexity could arise as to whether, in respect of a particular question,
there are provisions in the local law regulating the determination of that
question. In the present case the
issues raised on behalf of the appellant related to sections 76 and 78 of PACE
and to Code C of PACE which sets out the code of practice for the detention,
treatment and questioning of persons by police officers. Therefore their Lordships propose to confine
their decision on this appeal to the issue whether sections 76 and 78 of PACE
and Code C have been applied to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
The
first question remitted to the Court of Appeal.
Their Lordships
consider that the first question remitted to the Court of Appeal gives rise to
two separate issues. The first issue is
whether sections 76 and 78 of PACE apply to Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines. If they do, the second
issue is whether Code C of PACE, issued by the Home Secretary under section 66
of PACE, applies to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
20. In
relation to the first issue, their Lordships think it unnecessary to decide
whether, when sections 76 and 78 of PACE became law in England on 1st January
1986, these sections were applied to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines by
section 2 of the Evidence Ordinance 1926, and their Lordships consider only the
effect of section 3 of the Evidence
Act 1988. When the defence at a trial objects to the
admissibility in evidence of a confession made by the defendant and the trial
judge embarks on a voir dire, the judge is considering a question
"touching the admissibility ... of any evidence" within the meaning
of section 3 of the Evidence Act 1988.
Therefore their Lordships consider that after section 3 became law on
24th April 1989 and pursuant to it, a question as to the admissibility of a
confession was governed in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines by sections 76 and
78 of PACE. In consequence, after
section 3 of the 1988 Act became law, the common law test of voluntariness
stated in Ibrahim v. The King [1914] AC 599, 609 was replaced in Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines by the law set out in sections 76 and 78 of PACE
(although it will be necessary for their Lordships to consider in a later part
of this judgment the differences, if any, brought about by this change).
21. Sections
76 and 78 would have applied in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines at the time of
the trial if section 3 of the Evidence Act 1988 had stood alone. But, in addition, their Lordships consider
that the application of those sections to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines was
confirmed by section 5(1) of the Application of English Law Act 1989,
(particularly having regard to the reference in section 5(7) to the
"expression `the law and practice'"). Therefore their Lordships are of opinion that sections 76 and 78
applied in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines at the time of the trial of the
appellant.
22. The
Court of Appeal was also of opinion that the PACE Codes applied in Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines, and the Chief Justice stated at page 4:-
"In 1926, the
Evidence Ordinance was passed. Section
2, which incorporated the English law of evidence on various matters, was
clearly the precursor and precedent for section 3 of the 1988 Act.
One of the important regimes which affected
the admissibility of evidence in Criminal Proceedings was the `Judges Rules'
which did not have the force of rules of law but were prepared as
administrative rules for the guidance of the police officers in conducting
their investigations in England.
These rules have not been specifically
adopted in relation to St. Vincent and the Grenadines but have been applied
under section 2 of
the Evidence Ordinance 1926 as being part of the Law administered in
England. Then came the Evidence Act
1988. It is a fairly comprehensive
treatment of the law of evidence, but the matter of relevance to these
proceedings, being the admissibility in Criminal Proceedings of extra judicial
confessions and admissions, is a notable omission. This is not surprising because in St. Vincent and the Grenadines
there has never been any legislative regulation of these issues except by the
provisions which required questions touching their admissibility to be
determined according to the law or the law and practice administered by Courts
in England. Prima Facie, therefore,
section 3 of the 1988 Act accords with that tradition."
And at
page 8:-
"The respondent
contended that even if PACE itself was applied in St. Vincent and the
Grenadines the Codes of Practice which were designed to regulate the conduct of
persons charged with the duty of investigating offences in the United Kingdom
should be excluded.
In St. Vincent and the Grenadines the Judges
Rules were applied on the ground that they were the law and practice
administered for the time being in England.
That is no longer the case. They
have been replaced by the Codes.
Like the Judges Rules the codes are not
rules of law. They provide guidance to
police officers in the investigation process and they establish the standard of
conduct by which the investigative process will be assessed. Section 67(11) of PACE prescribes that codes
are admissible in evidence and those which appear to be relevant can be taken into
account in determining any question before the courts. This requires the Judges to take the codes
into account but it is a matter for their discretion whether a breach of the
codes will result in the exclusion of evidence.
On my reading of the Codes I find that they
could be applied in St. Vincent and the Grenadines with modifications which are
applicable and necessary. The
modifications are easily identifiable and determinable by a trial Judge. I do not think that it is necessary to
make any pronouncement of how the codes are to be modified, this process
should be undertaken at the time the law and practice in England is being
applied. In time case law will build
up. I do not think that approach will
lead to uncertainty about the law, and it would be a fairly simple
administrative exercise to send copies of the codes of practice to each police
station, just as was done in respect of the Judges Rules.
There is no doubt, however, that the law and
practice administered in England with regard to the admissibility of
confessions and admissions include the codes of practice.
A Judge in St. Vincent and the Grenadines
must, therefore, in order to comply with the legislation be prepared to
approach the task of determining such questions on the basis of considering the
relevant provisions of PACE and the codes, with applicable and necessary
modifications."
In Reg.
v. May (1952) 36 Cr.App.R. 91, 93 Lord Goddard C.J. stated:-
"There are certain
rules known as the Judges' Rules which are not rules of law but rules of
practice drawn up for the guidance of police officers; and if a statement has
been made in circumstances not in accordance with the Rules, in law that
statement is not made inadmissible if it is a voluntary statement, although in
its discretion the court can always refuse to admit it if the court thinks
there has been a breach of the Rules."
23. The
PACE Codes are not rules of law, but are codes issued by the Home Secretary
pursuant to section 66 of PACE (save that, pursuant to section 60 of PACE, Code
E relating to the tape-recording of interviews was made by statutory
instrument). In England the Codes and
the Act are closely linked. When a
judge is considering the admissibility of a confession under section 76 or
section 78 he must take into account, pursuant to section 67(11), any breach of
a provision of a Code, and in his valuable book on PACE 3rd Edition (1995)
Professor Michael Zander states at page 238:-
"By far the most
common basis for the Court of Appeal to apply section 78 has been `significant
and substantial' breaches of the PACE rules."
24. Mr.
Strachan Q.C., for the Crown, advanced the argument that, even if sections 76
and 78 of PACE applied in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, the provisions of
the Codes, designed for the very different and much larger police forces of
England, are so detailed and complex that it could never have been the
intention of the Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines that the Codes,
even "with such modifications as may be applicable and necessary in St.
Vincent and the Grenadines", should apply in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines. Mr. Strachan developed this
argument by pointing to the numerous provisions of the Codes which he submitted
were clearly inappropriate to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. These included (to refer only to some of the
provisions) the following provisions in Code C. Paragraph 1.1A requires that in each police station to which a
person is brought under arrest to be questioned there must be a police officer
designated as "a custody officer", or, under paragraph 1.9, a police
officer to perform the functions of a custody officer. Under paragraph 1.2 the Code must be readily
available at all police stations for consultation by police officers, detained
persons and members of the public.
Under paragraph 3.1 where a person is brought to a police station under
arrest the custody officer must tell him clearly of specified rights, including
the right to consult privately with a solicitor and, under paragraph 3.2, the
custody officer must give the person a written notice setting out his specified
rights. Under paragraph 6.6 the right
of access to legal advice may only be delayed if an officer of the rank of
superintendent or above has reasonable grounds for believing that delay in
interviewing will lead to certain consequences, such as immediate risk of harm
to others.
25. Mr.
Strachan submitted that a breach of such provisions of Code C could give rise
to an argument under section 78 that a confession had been obtained unfairly,
and further submitted that it could not have been the intention of the
Parliament of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines to impose upon the small police
force of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines the very complex and detailed
provisions of Code C which were designed to regulate the conduct of the much
larger and more extensively equipped police forces of England.
26. Mr.
Strachan also relied on the point that there had been a great deal of debate and discussion in
England prior to the
issuing
of the Codes by the Home Secretary. In
his book on PACE Professor Zander states at page 168:-
"Each version of
the Codes went through successive drafts as a result of comments from a wide
range or organisations and individuals.
By the time that Parliament considered them they had already been
extensively amended and re-amended. The
preliminary stage of publishing drafts therefore proved very important in
practice."
27. Mr.
Strachan also pointed to the Police Regulations 1948 made by the Commissioner
of Police pursuant to section 74(1) of the Police Act 1947 relating to the
questioning of suspects and submitted, in reliance on the judgment of this
Board in Melville v. The King [1946] AC 101, that section 3 of the
Evidence Act 1988 did not operate to replace the rules laid down in Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines by the Police Regulations with Code C of PACE made for
the larger police forces in England.
28. In
reply to this submission Mr. Guthrie Q.C., for the appellant, accepted that
where a provision of the Police Regulations of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
was inconsistent with a provision of a PACE code, the former should be applied
and the PACE provision would not nullify it.
But he submitted that if the local provision was less extensive than the
provision of the PACE code, the latter could be used to supplement it, and that
a requirement of the PACE code should be applied if it made provision for the
discharge of a duty not required by a local provision.
29. Whilst,
as they have stated, their Lordships are of opinion that sections 76 and 78 of
PACE applied at the time of the trial of the appellant, their Lordships
consider, notwithstanding the close connection in England between PACE and the
Codes made under it, that Mr. Strachan's submission is correct in relation to
Code C and that that Code does not apply in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. In Melville v. The King the Board
held (reversing the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeal of Trinidad and
Tobago on the point) that section 19 of the Children Ordinance of Trinidad and
Tobago did not permit the reception of the unsworn evidence of young children
on the trial of an accused on a charge of murder. In England section 38 of the Children and Young Persons Act 1933
permitted such evidence to be given if
there was corroboration. Section 2 of
the Evidence Ordinance of
Trinidad and Tobago provided, in terms very similar to section 3 of the
Evidence Act 1988 of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, that whenever any
question arose touching the admissibility of any evidence or the competency of
any witness to give evidence, such question should be decided according to the
law of England for the time being in force.
It is to be noted that it appears that in Trinidad and Tobago there was
no statutory provision equivalent to section 6(2) of the Application of English
Law Act 1989 of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines.
30. The
Board rejected the argument that, by virtue of section 2 of the Evidence
Ordinance, section 38 of the English Act of 1933 nullified section 19 of the
Children Ordinance and stated at page 106:-
"The argument then
is that s.38 of the English Children and Young Persons Act, 1933 (23 Geo. 5, c.
12), generalizes the admission of unsworn testimony by a child of tender years
who is considered by the court to have the qualities of mind and morals
before-mentioned, but subject to a proviso requiring corroboration, and that
consequently the same latitude of admissibility of such evidence must now
prevail in Trinidad. Their Lordships
agree with the Court of Criminal Appeal in Trinidad that this argument is
unsound. Section 2 of the Evidence
Ordinance applies only in cases where there is no specific provision to the
contrary in Trinidad law. It refers
mainly to rules about hearsay, corroboration, and the like, and does not
purport to make the provisions of an English statute a master code which
automatically nullifies the express law enacted for Trinidad and Tobago."
31. Regulation
86 of the Police Regulations 1948 made pursuant to the Police Act 1947 of Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines provides:-
"86. Questioning
prisoners. (1) When a member of the Force is endeavouring to discover the
author of a crime, there is no objection to his putting questions in respect
thereof to any person or persons, whether suspected or not, from whom he thinks
useful information may be obtained.
(2) When a member of the Force has made up
his mind to charge a person with a crime, he shall first caution
such person before asking any questions or any further questions as the case
may be.
(3) Persons in custody shall not be
questioned without the usual caution being first administered.
(4) If a prisoner wishes to volunteer any
statement the usual caution shall be administered.
(5) The caution to be administered to a
prisoner when he is formally charged, shall be in the following words: `Do you
wish to say anything in answer to the charge?
You are not obliged to say anything unless you wish to do so, but
whatever you say will be taken down in writing and may be given in evidence'.
(6) When two or more persons are charged
with the same offence and statements are taken separately from the persons
charged, such statements shall not be read to the other person or persons
charged, but each of such person shall be furnished with a copy of the
statements made by the other person or persons, and nothing shall be said or
done or invite a reply thereto. If the
person charged desire to make a statement in reply, the usual caution shall
thereupon be again administered.
(7) Any statement made in accordance with
the above rules shall, whenever possible, be taken down in writing and signed
by the person making it after it has been read to him and he has been invited
to make any corrections he may wish.
The statement shall also be certified and signed by the person by whom
it was taken down."
"155. Legal
adviser of prisoner. A legal
practitioner, or his clerk if duly authorised in writing to act for him, shall
be allowed to communicate with a prisoner in custody at a station. Such communication shall take place within
sight of but out of hearing of a member of the Force."
33. Therefore
prior to PACE being enacted in England and Code C being made pursuant to it, there
was what was, in effect, a code made under statutory authority relating to the
questioning of suspects
and their right to receive legal advice which existed in Saint Vincent
and the Grenadines. This code, set out
in regulations 86 and 155 of the Police Regulations, laid down rules broadly
similar to the Judges' Rules in England.
Having regard to the
existence of the code laid down in regulations 86 and 155, to the words of
section 6(2) of the Application of English Law Act 1989, and following the
decision in Melville v. The King, their Lordships consider that section
3 of the Evidence Act 1988 did not operate to make the provisions of Code C a
master code which took the place of the express provisions contained in
regulations 86 and 155 of the Police Regulations made under the provisions of
the Police Act 1947.
34. Where
there is a statute or statutory regulation of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
relating to a particular subject matter and there is an English statute or
statutory regulation or code made pursuant to statute relating to the same
subject matter, their Lordships recognise that a difficult question can arise
as to whether there is a conflict between the law in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines and the law and practice in England, so that the English provision
does not apply, or whether the English provision can be regarded as
supplementing, but not conflicting with, the local provision so that the
English provision applies in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. In this case their Lordships are of opinion,
as they have stated, that where the Police Regulations lay down a code for the
questioning of prisoners, it is not permissible to regard the more detailed
provisions of Code C as merely supplementing the local code, and their
Lordships are fortified in this conclusion by the consideration that, in
practice, an obligation on the police to observe regulation 86 of the Police
Regulations and whatever provisions of Code C as could be regarded as supplementing
regulation 86, would inevitably give rise to uncertainty and confusion.
35. However
there is no provision of a statute of the Parliament of Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines or of a local statutory regulation relating to the admissibility of
a confession obtained by oppression or unfairness - these matters were dealt
with by the common law rule of voluntariness.
Therefore, because of this absence of a local statutory provision,
sections 76 and 78 of PACE did apply to the admissibility of confessions in Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines for the reasons which their Lordships have stated. The fact that regulations 86 and 155 of the
Police Regulations 1948 laid down a code for the questioning of suspects in
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines was not adverted to by the Court of Appeal in
its judgment. The Court of Appeal
stated that the Judges' Rules were applied in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
on the ground that they were the law and practice administered for the time
being in England. It does appear that,
in practice, the Judges' Rules were applied in trials in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, and their Lordships assume they may have been adopted and applied by
the judges prior to 1948; and in the trial of the appellant the trial judge
treated them as being applicable. But
their Lordships consider that, when the Police Regulations came into force in
1948, the Judges' Rules, for the reasons stated in Melville v. The King,
were not applicable under section 2 of the Evidence Ordinance 1926 and
subsequently under section 3 of the Evidence Act 1988, even though in practice
it appears that they were applied.
36. Therefore
their Lordships consider that in the context of this appeal the answer to the
first question which was remitted to the Court of Appeal should be that
sections 76 and 78 of PACE apply to Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, but that
Code C does not. Accordingly the issue
which has to be considered in relation to the second question which was
remitted to the Court of Appeal is whether, if the tests of absence of
oppression, unreliability and unfairness contained in sections 76 and 78 of
PACE had been applied at the trial, the trial judge would have been entitled to
admit the confessions in evidence.
The
second question remitted to the Court of Appeal.
In order to consider
this question it is necessary to refer in a little more detail to what occurred
after the police took the appellant from his home to the police station on the
morning of 19th December 1993. The
evidence of Detective Sergeant Warrican was that his first contact with the
appellant was in the police station at 9.00 a.m. He saw the appellant in a cell.
He opened the door of the cell and told him about the report (presumably
about D'Andra's disappearance) and told him that he was making enquiries into
the same. The appellant then told him
that "he had thrown body of D'Andra into the sea at La Pompe". Although the transcript is not entirely
clear and may in error repeat an answer by the officer, it appears that
Detective Sergeant Warrican told him again that he was making enquiries
into the disappearance of D'Andra Ollivierre and that he would like him
to assist him into investigations into the matter. The appellant then repeated that he had thrown the body into the
sea and said he would point out the area where he had thrown the body. Detective Sergeant Warrican then cautioned
the appellant, and decided to take him to show the area where he had thrown the
body.
37. Detective
Sergeant Warrican and other officers then took the appellant on board a
coastguard vessel which went to the area of La Pompe. As the vessel approached La Pompe the appellant pointed to the
area just below the Ollivierres' home and said he had thrown the body of
D'Andra in that area. After a search of
the sea Detective Sergeant Warrican asked the appellant to point out from the
land where he had thrown D'Andra's body and the appellant agreed to do so. Detective Sergeant Warrican and the appellant
then went onto the land and the appellant went down to the beach below the
Ollivierres' home, and as they got on the beach the appellant said that he had
held D'Andra by one hand and he had put his other hand on her back and had
thrown her into the sea. He pointed out
an area and said she had dropped in that area.
38. The
appellant was then taken back to the police station and at 11.45 a.m. Detective
Sergeant Warrican cautioned the appellant formally in the presence of Sergeant
Adams and told him that he was not obliged to say anything unless he wished to
do so and whatever he said would be put in writing and given in evidence. The appellant replied that he would like to give
a statement as to what had happened.
Detective Sergeant Warrican told him that he (the appellant) could write
the statement or he (Detective Sergeant Warrican) could write the statement for
him. The appellant told him that he
wanted him to write the statement for him.
The appellant then dictated a statement and Detective Sergeant Warrican
wrote it down. The appellant then
signed the statement and his signature was witnessed by Sergeant Adams. Before the statement was dictated by the
appellant he (Detective Sergeant Warrican) did not mention to him that maybe he
ought to see counsel.
"Ah been by
Kenneth Allick drinking about 8 o'clock last night Saturday 18th December 1993,
ah been drinking strong rum
and Guinness, about 9.30 in the night
ah come out ah Kenneth Allick shop, me see a little girl way dem does call
Penny on she mother Kitsy Ollivierre steps, that is in La Pompe, Penny did just
come out ah the house, she had on a panty but me nah know the colour and she
been bare back, so me go in ah Penny them yard lift she up and run go down pan
e bay side wid she, me run down to the back of Kitsy Ollivierre house they ah
way Penny live, when me been running wid Penny she been crying calling Amron,
when me reach down on the bay side, me put Penny to sit down on a rock, then ah
tek off she panty and throw it on the rock, then ah use me centre finger and
start to push it up in ah she vagina ah push it up in ah she vagina (2) two
times, all that time Penny been screaming out and calling her brother Amron
then me pull out me finger and me get frighten because ah how she been ah bawl
out and me lift she up and hold she by one hand and me rest me other hand pan
she back and throw she in the sea and she drop about (5) five feet away from
me. I was wearing a pair of red
gunslingers and they drop off my feet into the sea the same place. While I was running I get a fall and I get a
bruise on right knee and the side of right foot, I run back towards the same
house for Kitsy Ollivierre, after me throw Penny in the sea I did not hear her
voice again when ah reach by the side of the house next to a milk wood tree, ah
see some people and ah recognise Geana Ollivierre as one of them and they spot
a light on me and ah run down back to the bay side, while I was running to the
bay side ah hear Geanna Ollivierre asking way Penny dey. Ah been wearing a blue overall and a brown
jersey. Today Sunday 19th December 1993
sometime in the morning I was at home and the police come home dey and ask me
what kind of clothes I was wearing last night and I tell them I was wearing a
blue overall and a jersey and I show the police and they tek them and then ah
tek the police and show them where ah tek Penny and push my finger in she
vagina and way ah throw she. When we
get to the station the police show me ah left foot of a gunslinger and that is
mine and is one foot of the gunslinger I was wearing last night."
40. As
their Lordships have stated, the admissibility of the oral admissions and the
written statement were challenged at the trial. The judge heard evidence from the police officers and from the
appellant and his
mother in the voir dire and ruled that the oral admissions and
the written statement were admissible.
The transcript note of her ruling is as follows:-
"A caution should
be administered when a police officer not merely suspect an Accused of having
committed an offence but what police officers has evidence to put before a
Court.
41. However
even where caution is not administered.
(The) judge has a discretion to admit a statement unless statement was
not made voluntary. So that the test to
be applied is `was the statement made voluntarily'.
42. I hold
that oral (and) written statement(s) are voluntary statements.
43. Accused
denies making oral (and) written statement(s).
That is a question of fact for jury to decide."
44. The
submissions advanced on behalf of the appellant on the second hearing before
the Court of Appeal on the basis that PACE and its Codes applied were
summarised in his judgment by the Chief Justice as follows:-
"(1)The confession
was obtained by the oppression of the police.
(2)The
appellant was not offered and did not receive any legal advice whilst in police
custody. DS Warrican said he was not
told he ought to see counsel.
(3)No
written notes were made of the verbal admissions attributed to the appellant.
(4)PS
Adams and DS Warrican suspected the appellant of murder from the moment of his
initial detention at 6.45 a.m. on 19th December, [1993] but he was not
cautioned until both officers had asked him questions about D'Andra's
disappearance."
45. The
rulings of the Court of Appeal on these four issues were as follows:-
(1)Oppression.
The Court of Appeal
held:-
"The allegations
of misconduct by the police were so extreme in this case that it is clear that
the judge did not believe the appellant at all because if she had entertained
any doubt the statements would surely have been rejected on the test she
applied.
It is reasonable to conclude, therefore
that, the evidence given by the appellant of the use of force and threats
against him must have been totally rejected by the learned trial judge. If there was any doubt about the truth of
these allegations it would have been the duty of the learned trial Judge to
refuse to admit the statement on the ground of lack of voluntariness.
A trial Judge applying the test under
section 76(2)(a) who disbelieved the appellant would have been entitled to
reject the submission that the confession was obtained by oppression. In my view, there were objective reasons to
support the Judge's conclusion that the appellant's story was incredible, and
untrue. In addition the judge had the
advantage of seeing the appellant and the other witnesses who testified on this
issue, and I would not under estimate the value of that advantage in determining
the credibility of the appellant's story."
(2)Right
to legal advice.
The Court of Appeal
held that there was no breach of section 58 of PACE because there was no
evidence that the appellant had made a request to consult a legal adviser
before or during his confessions to the police.
46. The
Court of Appeal referred to the provisions of Code C which require that before
commencing an interview the interviewing officer must remind the suspect of his
entitlement to free legal advice.
Paragraph 6.1 of Code C provides:-
"Subject to the
provisos in Annex B all people in police detention must be informed that they
may at any time consult and communicate privately, whether in person, in
writing or by telephone with a solicitor, and that independent legal advice is
available free of charge from the duty solicitor."
47. The
Court of Appeal observed that these provisions are supported by legal aid
schemes in England, but that these provisions could not be applicable in Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines because there is no law or practice, or available
system, under which a suspect can avail himself of free legal aid as a matter
of right during an investigation process, section 8(2)(d) of the Constitution
providing that every person who is charged with a criminal offence:-
"shall be
permitted to defend himself before the court in person or, at his own expense,
by a legal practitioner of his own choice."
48. The
Court further observed that the prevailing standards of police conduct that
have in practice been applied are those set out in the Judges' Rules, which
require that persons in custody be informed orally and by the existence of
notices displayed at convenient and conspicuous places at police stations of
the rights and facilities available to them which must include the right to be
represented by a solicitor of their choice at their expense. The Court of Appeal then stated:-
"Against this
background I think that the codes require modification to the extent that the
absence of legal aid facilities and the absence of free legal advice makes it
pointless for the police to tell a suspect of his right to free legal
advice. However the suspect should be
informed of his right to be represented by a lawyer of his own choice. Under the law which the learned Trial Judge
applied the police would have been in breach of the provisions requiring that
the appellant be informed of his right to be represented by a solicitor of his
choice at his expense. The effect of
the omission to do so on the confessions must depend on the circumstances of
the case.
The learned trial Judge would be entitled to
consider the manner in which the investigations had been proceeding and other
factors affecting the suspect and the surrounding circumstances in determining
the legal effect on the admissibility of the confessions of the police
investigator's failure to have taken special steps to assist the appellant to
obtain legal advice.
This has been the law and practice that a
trial Judge was required to
apply under the
laws of St. Vincent and the Grenadines prior to the 1988 Evidence Act
and also under PACE. I would conclude
that it is probable that in accordance with her duty she considered the
omission of the police to advise the appellant of his right to consult a lawyer
of his choice in the exercise of her discretion.
I would, therefore conclude, that the
failure of the police investigators to advise the appellant to consult a lawyer
is not an omission which would necessarily lead to the conclusion of
oppression, unreliability or unfairness, and that the learned trial Judge was
entitled to exercise a discretion to reject this omission as a basis for
excluding the confessions."
(3)No
written notes of the oral admissions.
The police made no
notes of the verbal admissions alleged to have been made by the appellant
before his written statement. The Court
of Appeal held:-
"Under the codes
the police are required to make a written record of any interview, and this
could be made either contemporaneously or as soon as practicable afterwards. The record should be available to the person
who made it and he should be asked to sign it.
49. Under
the Judges Rules statements made after caution were required to be
recorded. There is no reason why the
provisions of the codes with regard to the making of a written record should
not be observed. In my view the codes
do not need to be modified in that regard.
The requirement is not novel or new and ought to have been considered by
the learned trial Judge even when applying the standards laid down in the
Judges Rules. However it would still be
a question for her judicial discretion whether to allow evidence of the oral
confessions to be adduced in the absence of a written record, signed by the
suspect, and it is reasonable to conclude that the learned trial Judge did take
this into account."
(4)Failure
to give caution before questions.
The Court of Appeal
stated:-
"Under the codes a
person whom there are grounds to suspect
of an offence must be cautioned before any
questions
about it are put to him for the purpose of obtaining evidence which may be
given to a court in prosecution.
50. Under
the Judges Rules the test was that as soon as a police officer has evidence
which would afford reasonable grounds for suspicion that a person has committed
an offence he shall caution that person before putting to him any questions
relating to that offence.
On the evidence, the issue the learned trial
Judge would have had to consider whether applying the Judges Rules or the codes
of practice, was the amount of information the police had when they first
picked up the appellant on 19th December.
A main factor to be considered is at what stage could knowledge, that
D'Andra's disappearance was the result of some criminal misconduct be imputed
to the police.
At their outset, the investigations were
into D'Andra's disappearance. The
failure to find her, and the findings of blood and faeces on the beach were
clues pointing to her death, which however required further investigation
because the body was not located. It is
reasonable to conclude that the police would delay reaching a conclusion that
her disappearance resulted from criminal misconduct until further searches and
further lapse of time had eliminated or at least reduced the possibility of
other explanations for her disappearance being revealed.
In my view therefore, there are rational
grounds for hesitating to conclude that the police were conducting
investigations into the crime of murder until the appellant had made the oral
statement that he had thrown D'Andra into the sea. Sgt. Warrican's evidence was that he gave him the caution at that
time.
In my view, a trial Judge determining the
question according to the law and practice administered in England could have
decided to admit the confessions into evidence."
"On the evidence
adduced, it was open to a judge applying the law and practice administered in
England to reach the conclusion that the admissions and confessions should have
been admitted into evidence.
52. Once
the learned trial Judge came to the conclusion that there was no truth in the
allegations of oppressive conduct by the police made by the appellant and in my
opinion there were objective reasons to reject those allegations, no unfairness
could have resulted from the admission into evidence of his clear and complete
confession to this heinous crime.
53. I
would conclude therefore that if the provisions of PACE were applied, it is
likely that the outcome would have been the same."
54. Mr.
Guthrie submitted that the judgment of the Court of Appeal was erroneous in a
number of respects. He submitted that
in ruling on the four issues specified by the Chief Justice the Court of Appeal
went beyond the scope of the second question remitted to it by their Lordships'
Board, and that the Court of Appeal ought to have limited its consideration to
the question whether there had been breaches of the provisions of PACE at the
trial, and whether the conduct of the trial (including the voir dire)
would have been different if the trial judge had appreciated that PACE
applied. Mr. Guthrie submitted that the
Court of Appeal should not have embarked on considering what the judge's ruling
would have been if she had realised that PACE did apply and that the
consideration of this aspect of the case should have remained exclusively part
of the subject matter of the appeal to their Lordships' Board. Their Lordships do not accept that
submission, and consider that it was appropriate and helpful for the Board to
have the benefit of the Court of Appeal's opinion on those issues.
Oppression.
The issue before the
trial judge was whether she should exclude the confessions. The most important question arising on this
issue was whether the confessions of the appellant had been obtained by the
grave physical ill-treatment alleged by him.
It is clear that both the judge and the jury rejected these allegations
and were of the opinion that the appellant had not been physically
ill-treated. It is also clear that the
jury were satisfied that the appellant had made and signed the written
statement. The findings by the judge
and jury that the appellant had not been physically ill-treated were not
dependent upon whether the issue of admissibility was governed by the Judges'
Rules and the common law test of voluntariness or by the provisions of
PACE. Therefore the Court of Appeal was
right to hold that the trial judge would have been entitled to reject a
submission under section 76(2)(a) of PACE that the confessions had been
obtained by oppression constituted by physical ill-treatment. Mr. Guthrie criticised this part of the judgment
of the Court of Appeal on the ground that before that court the appellant had
not relied on oppression as constituted by physical ill-treatment but on oppression as constituted by breaches of
Code C of PACE. Their Lordships do not
accept that criticism as being valid and consider that the allegations of grave
physical ill-treatment lay at the heart of the issue of admissibility at the
trial and that, in the particular circumstances of this case, once that
allegation was rejected the risk of injustice to the appellant by the admission
in evidence of the confessions was eliminated, unless the appellant can point
to unfairness which would be a ground for exclusion of the confessions under
section 78 of PACE.
55. There
are a number of further considerations which are relevant to the present appeal
before the Board. One consideration is
that, whilst there can be debate as to the principles which underlay the common
law test of voluntariness, it appears that one reason for the test was to guard
against the risk that a confession might be unreliable: in Wong Kam-ming v.
The Queen [1980] AC 247, 261 Lord Hailsham of St. Marylebone, referring
to the common law test of voluntariness, stated:-
"... any civilised
system of criminal jurisprudence must accord to the judiciary some means of
excluding confessions or admissions obtained by improper methods. This is not only because of the potential
unreliability of such statements, but also, and perhaps mainly, because in a
civilised society it is vital that persons in custody or charged with offences
should not be subjected to ill treatment or improper pressure in order to
extract confessions."
56. Therefore,
in ruling that the appellant had not been physically ill-treated and that
the confessions were voluntary, the judge was ruling on the
issues which she would have had to consider if she had appreciated that the
issue of admissibility was governed by section 76(2)(a) and (b) of PACE. In Daley v. The Queen [1994] 1 A.C.
117, 129B Lord Mustill referred to:-
"... the
long-standing duty of the judge, now embodied in section 76(2) of the Police
and Criminal Evidence Act 1984, to rule on whether a confession by the accused
has been, or may have been, obtained by oppression, or in consequence of
anything said or done which was likely to render it unreliable."
Fairness.
In relation to the
issue of fairness under section 78 it is also relevant to note that under the
rules of the common law before PACE the trial judge had a discretion to exclude
a confession unfairly obtained (see Reg. v. Sang [1980] AC 402, 435G),
and in her ruling Mrs. Justice Joseph referred to this discretion of the trial
judge and stated: "However even where caution is not administered. The judge has a (discretion) to admit a statement
unless statement was not made voluntary".
In Reg. v. Christou [1992] Q.B. 979, 988E Lord Taylor of Gosforth
C.J. stated:-
"The judge held
that the discretion under section 78 may be wider than the common law
discretion identified in Reg. v. Sang [1980] AC 402, the latter
relating solely to evidence obtained from the defendant after the offence is
complete, the statutory discretion not being so restricted. However, he held that the criteria of
unfairness are the same whether the trial judge is exercising his discretion at
common law or under the statute. We
agree. What is unfair cannot sensibly
be subject to different standards depending on the source of the discretion to
exclude it."
57. Therefore
it appears that in the present case the trial judge was directing her mind to
the issue of fairness and decided in the exercise of her discretion not to
exclude the confessions on that ground.
The
exercise of the discretion under section 78 and the function of the Court of
Appeal.
It is also relevant to
note a further consideration in relation to
the exercise by the trial judge
of the discretion to exclude
a
confession under section 78 of PACE and the function of the Court of Appeal in
respect of the exercise of that discretion.
The Court of Appeal does not set aside the exercise of the trial judge's
discretion under section 78 unless it concludes that the decision to admit the
confession was unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense. In Christou (supra) at page 989F Lord
Taylor of Gosforth C.J. stated:-
"The judge's
exercise of his discretion could only be impugned if it was unreasonable
according to Wednesbury principles."
See
also Reg. v. O'Leary (1988) 87 Cr.App.R. 387, 391.
58. The
more recent judgment of the Court of Appeal in Reg. v. Middlebrook and
Caygill (unreported, 18th February 1994), Court of Appeal (Criminal
Division) transcript No. 92/6701/Z2 cited by Mr. Guthrie, does not constitute a
change in the law stated in Christou and O'Leary. The judgment in that case points out that the
discretion operates at the stage where the trial judge decides whether the
admission of the evidence would so affect the fairness of the proceedings that
it should not be admitted:-
"This is the
judicial exercise that has been referred to as a discretion in the cases. It may involve the finding of facts on a
voir dire, but once the facts are found it is an exercise of judgment carried
out by the Judge in the light of all the circumstances known to him in the
immediacy of the trial. Since that is
its nature, it is a task or function whose discharge by the trial Judge will
not readily be interfered with in this court.
If, of course, the material in the case discloses a state of affairs in
which a reasonable Judge must have concluded that the admission of the evidence
would produce unfairness, this Court will set aside a ruling which goes the
other way. We think that this is what
is meant by the references to Wednesbury in the cases."
59. In
that case the Court of Appeal held that the trial judge was entitled to admit
evidence notwithstanding that there had been breaches of paragraphs 2.3 and
2.13 of Code D of PACE.
60. In the
light of the considerations which they have stated above their Lordships turn
to consider the specific criticisms which
Mr. Guthrie made of the judgment of the Court of Appeal. Their Lordships also observe that Mr.
Guthrie's submissions now have to be considered on the basis of the Board's
ruling that sections 76 and 78 of PACE apply in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines but that Code C does not. As
the trial judge, in accordance with the practice in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines, applied the Judges' Rules, their Lordships will also consider the
points made by Mr. Guthrie on the basis that the Judges' Rules, as well as the
Police Regulations 1948, applied in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines at the
time of the appellant's trial, even though the legal basis for their
application appears uncertain.
Right
to legal advice.
Mr. Guthrie submitted
that the Court of Appeal erred in holding that the failure of the police to
advise the appellant that he had a right to consult a lawyer did not lead to a
conclusion of oppression, unreliability or unfairness and that the trial judge
was entitled to exercise her discretion to admit the confession notwithstanding
this omission. Their Lordships do not
accept this submission. Where in
England there has been a breach of PACE in respect of the provision of legal
advice the trial judge has a discretion whether or not to admit a confession:
see Reg. v. Alladice (1988) 87 Cr.App.R. 380. In this case, where the appellant told Detective Sergeant
Warrican that he had thrown the body of D'Andra into the sea as soon as the
Detective Sergeant told him that he was making enquiries into D'Andra's
disappearance, and then went with the police and pointed out the place where he
had thrown her into the sea, their Lordships consider that the trial judge was
entitled to decide that it was not oppressive or unfair to admit the
confessions notwithstanding that the police had not advised the appellant of
his right to consult a lawyer.
No
written note of the oral admissions.
Mr. Guthrie submitted
that the trial judge should not have admitted the oral admissions of which no
note had been made. However the judge
(and also the jury in the main trial) accepted that the appellant had voluntarily
made the very detailed written statement which repeated the oral admissions at
greater length, and therefore their Lordships consider that it was not unfair
for the trial judge to admit those admissions, and their Lordships do not
accept Mr. Guthrie's submission that if the oral admissions had been excluded
from evidence the jury might not have found that the appellant had voluntarily
made the written statements. Failure to give a caution before questions.
Detective Sergeant
Warrican did not caution the appellant when he first spoke to him in the cell
of the police station and told him that he was making enquiries into D'Andra's
disappearance and the appellant replied that he had thrown her body into the sea
and then repeated that admission. It
was after these two admissions that Detective Sergeant Warrican first cautioned
him. The Court of Appeal held that
there had not been a breach of the relevant PACE Code (which was paragraph 10.1
of Code C) because it was reasonable to conclude that until the appellant made
his oral admission, the police were conducting an investigation into D'Andra's
disappearance and did not have grounds for suspecting the appellant of
D'Andra's murder.
61. It is
implicit in the ruling that the Court of Appeal also considered that there had
not been a breach of Rule 2 of the Judges' Rules which requires a caution where
a police officer "has evidence which would afford reasonable grounds for
suspecting that a person has committed an offence". Mr. Guthrie submitted that this ruling was
erroneous and that the evidence established that before the police went to the
appellant's home early on the morning of 19th December they had received a
report from D'Andra's family that she had disappeared, that the appellant had
been in the vicinity where D'Andra disappeared, that he had hidden and run away
when seen by them, that blood and D'Andra's pants had been found on the beach,
and that a red slipper (a gunslinger) had been found on the beach which the
appellant had said was his before he was seen by Detective Sergeant
Warrican. Although he was directing his
submissions primarily to paragraph 10.1 of Code C, Mr. Guthrie also submitted,
with reference to Rule 2 of the Judges' Rules, that these matters established
that the police had evidence which afforded reasonable grounds for suspecting
that the appellant had committed an offence in respect of D'Andra, and that the
appellant had been taken under arrest from his home to the police station where
he was placed in a cell in custody. Mr.
Guthrie further relied on express statements in evidence by Detective Sergeant
Warrican and Sergeant Adams that when the appellant was brought to the police
station he was a "suspect".
62. Their
Lordships consider that the question whether, at the stage when Detective
Sergeant Warrican first spoke to the
appellant in the cell and when
D'Andra's body had not been discovered, the police had evidence which would
afford reasonable grounds for suspecting the appellant of an offence in
relation to her is open to debate.
However in Reg. v. Osbourne [1973] Q.B. 678, 688, referring to
Rule 2 of the Judges' Rules, Lawton L.J. stated:-
"But a police
officer when carrying out an investigation meets a stage in between the mere
gathering of information and the getting of enough evidence to prefer the
charge. He reaches a stage where he has
got the beginnings of evidence. It is
at that stage that he must caution."
63. Therefore
on this point their Lordships differ from the view of the Court of Appeal and
would conclude that the police did have evidence which would afford reasonable
grounds for suspecting the appellant, so that there was a breach of Rule 2 of
the Judges' Rules when Detective Sergeant Warrican spoke to the appellant in
the cell and, by clear implication, asked him a question about D'Andra's
disappearance. As their Lordships
consider that the appellant was then in custody it also appears that there was
a breach of Regulation 86(3) of the Police Regulations.
64. However
in deciding whether to exclude a confession pursuant to section 78 a trial
judge, in the exercise of the discretion under that section, may admit a
detailed confession made after caution notwithstanding that at an earlier stage
in the police investigation the suspect had made an oral admission to a
question from a police officer who, in breach of paragraph 10.1 of Code C, had
failed to caution him before putting the question to him: see R. v. Hoyte
[1994] Crim.L.R. 215. In the present
case, where the appellant made the admission as soon as Detective Sergeant
Warrican told him he was investigating D'Andra's disappearance, and
subsequently, after caution, pointed out to the police the place where he had
thrown D'Andra's body into the sea, and subsequently after further caution made
a detailed written statement, their Lordships are of opinion that the trial
judge would have been entitled to rule that the failure to caution when
Detective Sergeant Warrican first spoke to the appellant and told him that he
was investigating D'Andra's disappearance did not have such an adverse effect
on the fairness of the proceedings that the court ought to exclude the
subsequent confessions made after caution.
65. Therefore
having regard to the approach stated in Christou and O'Leary (supra)
their Lordships consider that the Court of Appeal was entitled in the present
case to hold that if the trial judge had appreciated that the issue of
admissibility was governed by sections 76 and 78 of PACE she would have been
entitled to admit the oral and written confessions.
The
test applied by the Court of Appeal.
A further criticism of
the judgment of the Court of Appeal advanced by Mr. Guthrie was that, in
considering what the trial judge would have done if she had appreciated that
the issue of admissibility was governed by PACE, the Court in referring to the
failure of the police to give advice about obtaining legal advice used the
phrase that this would not "necessarily lead to the conclusion of oppression,
unreliability or unfairness", and later stated that "it is reasonable
to conclude" that the trial judge took into account the failure of the
police to make notes of the oral admissions.
And at the conclusion of its judgment the Court stated that "it was
open to a judge applying the law and practice administered in England to reach
the conclusion that the admissions and confessions should have been admitted
into evidence", and that "if the provisions of PACE were applied, it
is likely that the outcome would have been the same".
66. Mr.
Guthrie submitted that this was not the appropriate test for the Court of
Appeal to apply, and that the court would only have been entitled to rule that
the confessions would have been admitted into evidence if it had been satisfied
that it was inevitable that the trial judge would have admitted them if she had
realised that PACE applied. Their
Lordships do not accept this submission.
The Court of Appeal was not considering the application of the proviso
where the trial judge had materially misdirected the jury on an issue of law or
fact. The Court of Appeal was
considering a different question, namely, whether the trial judge had erred in
the exercise of her discretion to exclude or admit confessions, and in deciding
such a question, as was stated in Christou, the Court of Appeal does not
interfere with the exercise of the discretion unless it considers that the
trial judge acted unreasonably in a Wednesbury sense in admitting the
confessions.
The
judge's statement to the jury that she had ruled that the confessions were
admissible.
A voir dire to
determine the admissibility of the confessions was conducted by the trial judge
in the absence of the jury. However
before the jury retired they had already heard evidence from Sergeant Adams
that on 19th December at 11.45 a.m. the appellant had made a written statement
after caution (although at this stage the contents of the statement were not
read to the jury), and the jury had also heard the commencement of the evidence
of Detective Sergeant Warrican in which he said that he saw the appellant on
19th December in Port Elizabeth Police Station, and his evidence continued:
"I informed him that I was making enquiries into report of disappearance
of D'Andra Ollivierre of La Pompe.
Accused told me that he had ...".
Defence counsel, Mr. Glasgow, then objected to the statements on the
grounds that they were "not made voluntarily and circumstances under which
they were made were (oppressive)".
The trial judge then asked Detective Sergeant Warrican to deal with the
rest of the evidence, and he continued with his evidence describing how,
accompanied by the appellant, he went to the area of La Pompe, on a coastguard
boat, and that the appellant pointed out an area, and the divers dived for a
considerable length of time but were unsuccessful in locating the body of
D'Andra Ollivierre. He then described
returning to the police station, and that he there cautioned the appellant and
that the appellant told him that he wanted him to write a statement for him,
and that he took a statement from the appellant between 11.45 a.m. and 12.30
p.m., that the appellant then signed the statement, and that the appellant was
not beaten or threatened or promised anything.
Detective Sergeant Warrican was then about to read the statement when
defence counsel objected on the same grounds as he had previously stated,
whereupon the jury retired and the voir dire commenced. At the conclusion of the voir dire
after the trial judge had ruled that the confessions were admissible in
evidence, the jury returned to court and Detective Sergeant Warrican continued
his evidence in which he recounted the oral admission to him by the appellant
and the appellant's written statement was read to the jury.
67. In the
course of her summing up to the jury the trial judge stated:-
"Now, Sgt.
Warrican was the investigating officer and he said to you that
he made inquiries
and during the enquiries he
spoke to the Accused. And the Accused
made an oral statement to him and also a written statement.
Now, defence counsel objected to the receipt
of those two statements in evidence. I
held that they were voluntary statements but it is for you to look into all the
circumstances in which the statement was taken and the defence is saying that
there was a beating and there was threatening and also that the Accused was not
given anything to eat and that he did not have a meal until late the afternoon. It is for you to assess and to put what
weight and value on both statements -the oral and the written statements and to
attach such weight as you deem fit to the statements that had been put in
evidence."
68. The
trial judge also reminded the jury in detail of the allegations made by the
appellant of very serious ill-treatment of him by the police, and of his
father's evidence supporting these allegations.
69. Mr.
Guthrie submitted that it was a serious and fundamental misdirection on the
part of the trial judge to tell the jury that she had held that the confessions
were voluntary statements, because such an observation by the judge meant that
she had disbelieved the appellant and was likely to influence the jury in a
very prejudicial way in deciding whether the appellant had made any of the
confessions and whether, if he had, the confessions could be regarded as
truthful and reliable having regard to his allegations that he had been very
seriously assaulted and ill treated by the police.
70. It
appears that it has been a common practice in the courts in the Caribbean for a
trial judge to tell a jury that he or she has held that confessions are
voluntary statements. However in
England it is recognised that this practice should not be followed and that it
constitutes an irregularity for the judge to inform the jury, which has been
absent during the voir dire, that he or she has ruled that a confession
is admissible. The reason why such a
statement by the judge to the jury should not be made is because of the danger
that the jury might be influenced by the judge's view on admissibility in
deciding the questions which are for them
alone, namely, whether
the confession had been made and,
if so, whether it was truthful and reliable.
Therefore their Lordships are of opinion that the practice should also
cease in the Caribbean: see the judgment of the Board in Mitchell v. The
Queen (Privy Council Appeal No. 18 of 1997; Judgment delivered 21st January
1998).
71. However
in the present case the judge's statement that she had ruled that the
confessions were voluntary statements was a brief observation in a lengthy
summing up, and the judge did not elaborate on the statement or say that she
believed that the appellant had not been ill treated by the police and
disbelieved the appellant. Furthermore,
after the statement that she had held that the confessions were voluntary
statements, the judge immediately went on to emphasise that "it is for you
to look into all the circumstances in which the statement was taken" and
that "it is for you to assess and to put what weight and value on both
statements - the oral and the written statements and to attach such weight as
you deem fit to the statements that had been put in evidence". In addition the judge very fairly and in
detail reminded the jury of the appellant's evidence that he had not made the
confessions and of how he had been very seriously ill treated by the
police. Therefore their Lordships are
satisfied that, when viewed in the context of the whole summing up, the judge's
statement did not in the event constitute a material irregularity.
The
appellant's previous good character.
In the course of the
trial the defence led no evidence in relation to the good character of the
appellant. The appellant's written case
on the appeal to their Lordships' Board advanced the submission that the appellant
had no previous convictions and, notwithstanding that no evidence was led on
this matter by the defence, the trial judge should (in the absence of the jury)
have enquired whether or not the appellant had a good character, and on
learning that he had, should (in accordance with the decisions of Reg. v.
Vye [1993] 1 W.L.R. 471 and Reg. v. Aziz [1996] A.C. 41) have
directed the jury that they should take the appellant's good character into
consideration in assessing both the truthfulness of his account to them and
whether he was likely to have committed the offence.
72. It was
submitted that this duty, which it was suggested lay on the judge, was
analogous to the duty of the judge to direct the jury to consider
a possible defence arising on the evidence upon which defence counsel
had not relied, and it was further submitted that the duty was particularly
incumbent on the judge where the accused faced a charge of murder carrying the
death penalty.
73. In
fact, unknown to counsel who had prepared the appellant's written case, the
appellant had one previous conviction for larceny of $112 (which had a value of
about ,20 sterling) committed in August 1980.
For this offence the Magistrate's Court reprimanded and discharged the
appellant. However, because this
offence was of such a minor and non-violent nature, their Lordships consider
that if, at the trial, the defence had sought to adduce evidence of the good
character of the appellant, the trial judge would have held that the previous
conviction was immaterial and that the appellant should be regarded as a man of
good character. However, if it is
intended to rely on the good character of the accused, that issue must be
raised by calling evidence or putting questions on that issue to witnesses for
the prosecution: see per Lord Goddard C.J. in Rex v. Butterwasser [1948]
1 K.B. 4, 6. Their Lordships are of
opinion that where the issue of good character is not raised by the defence in
evidence, the judge is under no duty to raise the issue himself: this is a duty
to be discharged by the defence and not by the judge. The duty of a judge to bring to the attention of the jury a
possible defence not relied on by defence counsel is not analogous, because
that duty only arises where evidence which gives rise to that defence has been
given in the trial and is before the jury.
The Saint Vincent
and the Grenadines United Nations Declaration on the Prevention of Crime and
the Treatment of Offenders Act 1984.
A further ground of
appeal set out in the appellant's written case related to this Act which was
intended to incorporate the United Nations Declaration into the laws of Saint
Vincent and the Grenadines. Section 4
provides that the provisions contained in the Articles of the Declaration shall
have the force of law in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. Article 8 provides:-
"Any person who
alleges he had been subjected to torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment or punishment by, or at the instigation of, a public official shall
have the right to complain to, and have his case impartially examined by, the
competent authorities of the State concerned."
74. The
written case submitted that the allegations of ill-treatment made by the
appellant whilst in police custody on 19th December clearly constituted torture
or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment, and the
provisions of article 8 were applicable.
Mr. Guthrie did not advance further submissions in support of this
ground before their Lordships, and their Lordships are of opinion that there is
no substance in the point. Their
Lordships consider that there is nothing in section 4 of the 1984 Act which
required the appellant's allegations of grave physical ill treatment to be
examined before his trial. Moreover it
appears that there is no evidence that the appellant made a complaint of
torture or other ill treatment to the competent authorities of the State before
his trial. Furthermore, whilst it is
unnecessary for their Lordships to express a concluded opinion on the
point, it would appear that the voir dire conducted by the trial
judge constituted an impartial examination of the appellant's complaint by a
competent authority of the State.
75. For
the reasons given their Lordships will humbly advise Her Majesty that the
appeal should be dismissed.
The
completion of the incorporation of the PACE provisions in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines.
In conclusion there is
one further observation which their Lordships desire to make. It is widely accepted that the PACE Codes
have made an important and beneficial contribution to the proper administration
of criminal justice in England. In
England sections 76 and 78 and the PACE Codes are closely linked and operate
together. Their Lordships have held
that sections 76 and 78, but not Code C, apply to Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines. Their Lordships also note
that in its ruling that the PACE Codes applied in Saint Vincent and the
Grenadines the Court of Appeal stated that the Codes would require to be
modified to take account of the circumstances in that jurisdiction. In addition their Lordships have observed
earlier in this judgment that questions of difficulty and complexity could
arise as to whether there is a provision in the local law governing an
evidential issue which appears to be in conflict with a provision of PACE or a
PACE Code so that the latter would not apply, or whether an English provision
would be applicable as supplementing a local provision. Therefore, whilst it is, of course, a matter
for the appropriate authorities in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines to decide,
their Lordships consider that
it would be of great benefit to
the administration of criminal justice in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, and
for the avoidance of uncertainty, if specific statutory regulations were to be
made there based on the PACE Codes in England but suitably modified and adapted
to take account of the different circumstances prevailing in that jurisdiction.
© CROWN COPYRIGHT as at the date of
judgment.