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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Quinn, R v [2004] EWCA Crim 3026 (12 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/3026.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Crim 3026 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
Strand London, WC2 Friday, 12 November 2004 |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DOUGLAS BROWN
MR JUSTICE GIBBS
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R E G I N A | ||
-v- | ||
JOHN QUINN |
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Computer Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
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MISS M SMULLEN appeared on behalf of the APPELLANT
MR M DUTCHMAN-SMITH appeared on behalf of the CROWN
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Crown Copyright ©
"(1) For purposes of this Part of this Act the Court of Appeal may, if they think it necessary or expedient in the interests of justice-
...
(c) receive any evidence which was not adduced in the proceedings from which the appeal lies.
(2) The Court of Appeal shall, in considering whether to receive any evidence, have regard in particular to-
(a) whether the evidence appears to the court to be capable of belief;
(b) whether it appears to the Court that the evidence may afford any ground for allowing the appeal;
(c) whether the evidence would have been admissible in the proceedings from which the appeal lies on an issue which is subject of the appeal; and
(d) whether there is a reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce the evidence in those proceedings."
It is important to note that section 23(2) does not lay down conditions which must be satisfied before the evidence is received by the court. It simply provides that the court must have particular regard to the factors identified in paragraphs (a) (b) (c) and (d) of section 23(2).
(a) that Mr Jamieson's evidence is capable of belief;(b) that his evidence may afford a ground for allowing the appeal; and
(c) that the evidence would have been admissible at the original trial.
1. The appellant was aware of the potential significance of this evidence prior to his trial. He submitted a petition to the Home Secretary dated 18th February 1957 that he [that is the appellant] be produced at the hearing of Mr Jamieson's trial in the Magistrates Court, and in his statement to the CCRC dated 14th July 2003 the appellant concedes that: "I knew that Mr Jamieson was important to my case" and that "I knew that Mr Jamieson would be able to say that I was not with Dixon when he sold him the lead."2. It is inconceivable that at trial the appellant did not acquaint his solicitor and counsel of this information. There is information to suggest that the appellant's solicitor was already aware of the proceedings against Mr Jamieson and that counsel was also aware of them.
3. At the date of the appellant's trial, namely 26th March 1957, the trial of Mr Jamieson in the Magistrates Court had been concluded and he had been sentenced. At the date of the appellant's trial Mr Jamieson was a compellable witness for the defence and there is no reason to believe he was unavailable.
4. In these circumstances the test in Beresford 56 Cr.App.R 146 is not satisfied as "the evidence could with reasonable diligence have been obtained and used at the trial."
5. Similarly, as the evidence related to facts of which the appellant was aware at the time of the trial, it cannot constitute fresh or new evidence.
6. The application of that test in the particular circumstances of this case is appropriate bearing in mind the reality of the situation that it is not practicable to test this evidence so long after the events.
1. The events with which the identification or non- identification are concerned occurred more than 40 years ago. 2. The witness is now a man aged 75 years. Apart from his conviction in this matter in 1957, he was a man of good character, at any rate for very many years, although we have been informed of a recent conviction in April 2002 relating to the fraudulent use of a vehicle excise licence and the like. It is not however suggested that that is significant in the context of this appeal.3. The new evidence is not inconsistent with the statement Mr Jamieson made under caution to the police on 10th January 1957. It is not now possible to establish why the matter was not dealt with, at least in terms of a description, in that police statement.
4. It is clear from the papers considered by the CCRC that Mr Jamieson has been asserting since approximately the 1970s that the person concerned was not the appellant.
5. His description of the height and build of the person does not conform to the height and build of the appellant at the relevant time.
"Whilst the experienced criminal lawyer may find it surprising that the appellant and his co-accused were convicted there was evidence from which the jury could quite properly convict them. The jury had the advantage of seeing and hearing the various witnesses as they then were. The fact that Dixon was dishonestly involved in the matter and may have lied to minimise his own involvement or been mistaken about certain aspects does not lead inevitably to the total rejection of all of his evidence. The jury clearly came to the conclusion that he was telling the truth with regard to the fact that the appellant was involved in the dishonest receiving of the property and the verdict is one which they were entitled to reach and is not one which cannot be supported by a logical chain of reasoning."
It was no doubt for those reasons that the Court of Appeal refused leave to appeal. We would certainly not be willing to allow this appeal on the basis of material before the court at the time of the trial.
"... Whilst it is conceded that the proceedings involving the appellant, his co-accused, Mr Jamieson and Mr Miller could properly have been joined on the same indictment and tried together. This might have been to the marked prejudice of the appellant had Mr Jamieson exercised his right not to give evidence. The procedure adopted whereby lesser involved defendants are dealt with separately in the magistrates court is still, on occasions, followed today. It is a legitimate practice and it is submitted did not, in the circumstances of this case lead to unfairness, as Mr Jamieson's case had been dealt with so that he was a compellable witness by the time of the appellant's trial."
We agree that this does not afford the appellant a good ground of appeal. However, although we cannot be sure what would have happened if all potential defendants had been tried together, the fact that they were tried separately undoubtedly put the appellant in some difficulty.
"Sir it has come to my notice, that two men named Jamieson and Miller are appearing on the 21st of this month and are pleading guilty to the receiving of the lead and brass in the case as mentioned against me, and that these men made a transaction through a deal with a man called Dixon, these men Jamieson and Miller are supposed to pay Dixon £14 for brass and £20 for lead, the money being paid personally to Dixon by these man, there is no mention in the case on depositions that these men paid me money or were in fact contacted by me to sell them the stolen property? It is the verbal evidence of Dixon that has connected me in this matter of which I am ignorant, I am pleading not guilty. Sir in your own judgment do you think I could receive the property and yet two men are about to plead guilty to receiving the stolen lead or brass off the man Dixon. On the whole, Sir, if I'm found guilty of breaking and entering I would be stealing 'not receiving' and yet these men are pleading 'Guilty' through a contact by Dixon and they actually paid Dixon for the stolen property.
Sir as mentioned in the statement of proof I ask you humbly to have permission to be able to attend this hearing of Jamieson and Miller on 21st March 1957..."
The petition was refused by the Home Office on 20th February 1957. It was said that the Secretary of State had considered the petition but was not prepared to authorise the appellant's production at the proceedings and that he had no authority to grant bail. The refusal added that if Mr Quinn considered that the proceedings to be held on 21st February had a bearing on his case it would be open to him to bring the matter to the notice of the court at his trial.
"The Commission has considered a number of reasons for the failure to pursue Mr Jamieson as a potential witness including the following
• Mr Jamieson's statement (if disclosed) provided no indication that he could assist with the identification of the driver.
• While the prosecution had no property in Mr Jamieson as a witness, if he were pending (or thought to be pending) trial for his own role in the handling of the lead he would have had the privilege against self-incrimination and might have been perceived as an unhelpful witness.
• It is possible that difficulties of communication between solicitors and client (especially if compounded by uncertainty about the sequence of trials) affected the solicitors' preparations for trial. Mr Quinn's unorthodox attempts to short circuit the channels of communication by petitioning to attend Mr Jamieson's trial may possibly provide support for that conclusion."
"Jamieson and Miller were dealt with by the Cumberland Ward Magistrates' Court on charges of receiving and both were found guilty and fined. In view of the fact that proceedings were pending against them, on 26th March, 1957, when Smith was dealt with, neither of these two men were called to give evidence for the prosecution."
So there appears to have been some confusion as to the position at the time. In the result, on this point the Commission concluded as follows in paragraph 44:
"The Commission recognises that these are matters of speculation. Nevertheless, it considers that these matters, taken together, provide potentially reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce Mr Jamieson's evidence at Mr Quinn's trial."
"... in the ordinary course of events this Court will be very careful before it will admit a confession of guilty by one of two people who have been convicted by a jury of a joint offence. It will be too easy for criminals to seek to share out responsibility so as to get one of them off. On the other hand, there is nothing in the decided cases which in any way affects this Court in receiving such evidence in a proper case."
In the event the court in Ditch, which is a very different case on the facts, admitted the evidence of the co-accused and allowed the appeal. Thus each case depends upon its own facts.
"The Commission is mindful of its duty carefully to examine the exercise of its discretion in historic cases. The Commission considers that it should not exercise its discretion against referral in this case having regard to the fact that Mr Quinn is still alive and has a real interest in the outcome of an appeal. Further the issue of Mr Jamieson's evidence is a matter that Mr Quinn has been pursuing since his Petition to the Home Office when he was on remand before the trial."
Having considered all the circumstances of the case, for the reasons we have given we allow this appeal and quash this now somewhat historic conviction.