BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Boodram v. The State (Trinidad and Tobago) [2001] UKPC 20 (10 April 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2001/20.html Cite as: [2002] 1 Cr App Rep 12, [2002] 1 Cr App R 12, [2001] UKPC 20 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Privy Council Appeal No. 65 of 2000
Ann Marie Boodram Appellant
v.
The State Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL
DELIVERED the 10th April 2001
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Present at the hearing:-
Lord Steyn
Lord Cooke of Thorndon
Lord Clyde
Lord Hutton
Lord Millett
[Delivered by Lord Steyn]
I. The question
II. The background
III. A bird's eye view of the evidence at the first trial
"Tony told me on several occasions that my husband better off dead, that it just got into my head. I got the impression that Tony was telling me to kill my husband and he would support me, so on Thursday 12th January, 1989 I got up around 6.00am and cooked curried chicken, potato and rice for my husband to carry for his lunch. After putting the rice, curry chicken and potato in my husband's lunch kit, I went downstairs and took a plastic bottle containing either weedicide or pesticide and emptied the bluish liquid from it on my husband's food. I covered my husband's lunch kit and put it in a brown paper bag. I then returned the empty bottle downstairs from where I had taken it below the house."
She said she gave the remainder of the lunch to the dog and the cat and they died after 3 days. She added that she told her son Simon to dispose of the empty bottles. The defendant confirmed this statement before Mr Ali Hosein, a justice of the peace, at 5.30pm on the same day when she identified "the bottle which contained the paraquat . . . which I placed on my husband's food".
IV. The first Court of Appeal decision
V. Legal representation at the retrial.
"21 Now that I have seen these instructions I recollect having spoken to Mr Sawh in the cell at San Fernando downstairs of the Court. . . .
"22 I expected that as Mr Mohammed and Mr Ramlal had done, Mr Sawh would have come to Golden Grove to have a proper interview with me. After my trial started on the 13th February 1998 before Madam Justice Weekes I did not get an opportunity to speak to Mr Sawh until the trial was into the 3rd day by which time the alleged oral confession was admitted into evidence.
"23 I had expected that Mr Sawh would have visited me at Marabella Police Station where I was kept over the weekend of the 14th and 15th February 1998 when I would have had a full opportunity to relate to him how I had been raped by Inspector Douglas prior to signing the statement of the 2nd February 1998.
"24 By the time I next got an opportunity to speak to Mr Sawh the alleged confession had been admitted into evidence and when I tried to tell him what had taken place at the first trial and that he should get the Notes of Evidence he told me that he "did not need to go through the foolishness which other lawyers do". When Mr Sawh told me that I was totally confused and felt helpless. From that time I lost confidence in him and told him that I did not wish him to continue to represent me.
"25 Notwithstanding my communication to Mr Sawh he continued to represent me against my wishes. I was afraid to bring this to the attention of the trial Judge."
Mr Sawh swore an affidavit on 9th November 1998 in which he said that he took instructions from the defendant in or outside her cell on at least 9 occasions, one interview lasting two hours. He said that the defendant never instructed him that Inspector Douglas had raped her before she signed the statement of 2nd February 1989. He accepted that he only became aware of the first trial on the afternoon of 17th February 1998, i.e. after the end of the prosecution case. His affidavit is silent as to his reaction to this information. And he does not say that he did anything in response.
VI. The course of the retrial
"The night before, all night, and during the day and my foot, all my feet was swollen. It started to cramp and I spoke to Ms Tom and I told her I was not feeling well and during the course of that night, something transpired between Inspector Douglas and myself. He was with me all along that night up to two o'clock the morning. And I couldn't do anything else but I signed the document."
Mr Sawh did not ask the defendant what had transpired between her and Inspector Douglas or why he had stayed with her until 2 o'clock. Mr Sawh also failed to appreciate that the defendant had tried to complain about the alleged rape at the CID office and at the Police station. Moreover, on this occasion, her evidence and challenge was generally much weaker since it did not contain the same circumstantial details as before.
VII. The Court of Appeal's decision after the retrial
"We have no doubt at all that if the appellant's previous counsel had not fallen short in his duty to the appellant he would have before the re-trial commenced, been aware that there had been a previous trial and been armed with a copy of the transcript of evidence given at that first trial. The lapse of time alone between the offence and the second trial ought to have at least alerted him to the possibility that this was not the first trial. In any event, he could hardly have failed to discover this fact if he had taken proper and timely instructions from the appellant. But on his own admission, when the trial began counsel had no knowledge of the previous trial, and only became aware of it in the course of the re-trial. It is clear that this was after the appellant's confessional statement had been admitted and towards the end of the trial. He also appears to have remained throughout unaware of any allegation of rape made by the appellant or of the allegation of subornation made by Simon against the police in the course of his evidence at the first trial. We are satisfied that counsel's ignorance of these matters was the result of a failure on his part to bring to his client's defence the degree of competence and diligence which she was entitled to expect."
Sharma JA then turned to the impact of counsel's failures which he said were the critical and only issue. About the allegation of rape he observed:
"In our view the only inference that can reasonably be drawn is that either the rape did not occur or if it did, it was not linked in any significant way with her signing the second statement later that day." [Emphasis supplied]
Their Lordships point out that the Court of Appeal were not prepared to say that a rape could not have occurred. The Court of Appeal may have had in mind that the judge in the first trial was satisfied (according to his note) that "the statement was involuntarily made". The Court of Appeal was only prepared to rule out a causal connection between the rape (if it took place) and the second statement. Secondly, the Court of Appeal said about the evidence of Simon Boodram that it "might have done more harm than good". In these circumstances, Sharma JA concluded that "counsel's failure to discover that there was an earlier trial and to inform himself of what evidence had been given at it by obtaining a copy of the transcript of the evidence, however regrettable, did not result in a miscarriage of justice".
VIII. Bethel v The State
"There is, however, one important proviso which we would attach to this approach. It is conceivable that counsel's misconduct may have become so extreme as to result in a denial of due process to his client. In such a case, the question of the impact of counsel's conduct on the result of the case is no longer of any relevance, for whenever a person is convicted without having enjoyed the benefit of due process, there is a miscarriage of justice regardless of his guilt or innocence. In such circumstances the conviction must be quashed. It is not difficult to give hypothetical examples of how such a situation might occur. An obvious example would be if the accused had the misfortune to be represented by counsel whose judgment was proved to have been impaired by senility, drugs or some mental disease. Another example closer to the facts of this case is if counsel conducted the defence without having taken his client's instructions. This is simply another application of the basic principle that if there is a fundamental flaw in the conduct of a trial, the conviction which results from it cannot be allowed in any circumstances to stand."
On the appeal to the Privy Council counsel for the State did not challenge the correctness of this qualification. It will, however, be necessary to return to it.
IX. Order for retrial was wrong in principle
X. The failure to appeal against the order for a retrial
XI. The fairness of the proceedings
XII. The decision in Bethel
"In such a case, the question of the impact of counsel's conduct on the result of the case is no longer of any relevance, for whenever a person is convicted, without having enjoyed the benefit of due process, there is a miscarriage of justice regardless of his guilt or innocence. In such circumstances the conviction must be quashed. It is not difficult to give hypothetical examples of how such a situation might occur."
Such cases are bound to be rare. But when exceptionally they do occur the conclusion must be that there has not been a fair trial or the appearance of a fair trial. Their Lordships would respectfully endorse the formulation of the Chief Justice.
XIII. Other grounds of appeal
XIV. Disposal