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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 >> O'Flaherty & Ors, R v [2004] EWCA Crim 526 (10 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2004/526.html Cite as: [2004] 2 Cr App Rep 20, [2004] Crim LR 751, [2004] EWCA Crim 526, [2004] 2 Cr App R 20 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE CENTRAL CRIMINAL COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BARKER QC
T20018368
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE BEATSON
and
THE RECORDER OF NEWCASTLE
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REGINA |
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ERROL CARLTON O'FLAHERTY PHILLIP JUNIOR RYAN MITCHELL PARIS TOUSSAINT |
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Mr H Grunwald QC & Mr F Caramazza (instructed by Ashok Patel & Co) for O’Flaherty
Mr T Spencer QC & Mr M Jowitt (instructed by Borneo Linells) for Ryan
Mr J Coffey QC & Miss D Connolly (instructed by Galbraith Branley & Co) for Toussaint
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Crown Copyright ©
Events of 21 March 2001.
Arrests and interviews.
Cause of death.
i. Blunt impact injuries to the face which could have come from a foot or impact with the ground.
ii. A cut on the left cheek as far as the ear probably caused by a light sweeping action with a single object.
iii. An injury to the left ring finger which was probably a defensive injury.
iv. A group of nine stab wounds to the body the deepest of which was 6cms and travelled in a downwards direction. Two of these wounds had caused the lungs to collapse.
v. A horizontal fracture of the skull at the back of the head. This was a star shaped split to the skull caused by significant impact from blunt force either from an object or contact with the ground. Dr Carey said that such injury was commonly encountered as a result of a fall.
vi. There was no tramline bruising on any part of the body which could have been caused by, for example, a cricket bat.
i. the head injury alone was unlikely to have caused death. It could, however, have contributed to the death by inducing or contributing to unconsciousness which then would have made the deceased more vulnerable to airway obstruction and lack of oxygen. The totality of the impact to the head had caused injury and that injury had contributed to the deceased's state of collapse. It was not surprising that the deceased had been able to continue running until he collapsed.
ii. The effect of the stab injuries was progressive but they had not killed him by the time he arrived at hospital. The deceased's state in the street was consistent with the combination of the stabbing and the repeated blows to the head. The cluster of stab wounds was consistent with the deceased being upright or nearly upright when they were inflicted. They could possibly have been delivered in rapid succession. They were not consistent with being caused whilst the deceased was on his back on the ground unless he had been on the ground at an earlier stage. Dr Carey did not consider that the cause of death could be limited to the stab wounds alone. He conceded that he might have been stabbed in more than one place. The subarachnoid haemorrhage was due to trauma from either a fall or blunt impact damage and was likely to have derived from whatever it was that caused the injuries to the side and back of the head. He could not therefore rule out head injuries as the cause of the unconsciousness.
The Trial.
The grounds of appeal.
The Directions.
"4. Where a criminal offence is committed by 2 or more persons, each of them may play a different part, but if they are in it together as part of a joint plan or a common purpose to commit it, they are each guilty. 5. The prosecution say that some used weapons and some did not. Those in the common purpose who wielded weapons intended that their joint actions would cause really serious bodily harm, and those who did not use weapons are equally guilty because by joining in the attack they either intended themselves to cause really serious bodily harm or they knew or foresaw that others who were in possession of weapons intended to cause really serious bodily harm.
6. The words "plan" and "agreement" do not mean that there has to be any formality about it. An agreement to commit an offence may arise on the spur of the moment and be understood in a very short time. Nothing need be said at all. It can be made with a nod and a wink, or a knowing look. An agreement can be inferred from the behaviour of the parties.
It is open to you to conclude that there was an agreement simply by looking at what the relevant person did or did not do.
7. The essence of joint responsibility in this allegation is that each defendant shared the intention to commit the offence i.e. to kill or cause really serious bodily harm, and took some part in it, however great or small, so as to achieve that aim.8. Your approach to the case should therefore be as follows: if, looking at the case of any one defendant, you are sure that with the intention I have mentioned, he with others took some part in the attack, then he too is guilty.
9. If, however, the wielders of the weapons or those using their feet went beyond anything that the defendant you are considering had agreed or realised might be done then only the weapon wielder or the user of feet would be responsible and guilty of murder. The others would not be guilty as he has gone beyond the scope of the joint venture.
Likewise, if there was a joint agreement to cause really serious bodily harm by the use of non-deadly weapons and there is then the unexpected production of a deadly weapon such as a knife which results as in fatal injury or injuries, this act would take the wielder of the knife outside the scope of the joint agreement and the others would not be liable specifically for either murder or manslaughter.
It is for you to decide if there was an agreement to use any weapons, and if there was whether they were deadly weapons. Then, was the production and use of a deadly weapon or weapons so different to the common purpose in the case of the defendant that you are considering so as to go beyond the scope of any pre-existing common purpose.
10. Nevertheless, if you are sure that the defendant you are considering did realise that a wielder of a weapon or one using his feet might inflict injury on [Marcus Hall] with the intention of killing him or causing him really serious bodily harm; then with that knowledge, by encouraging that conduct, he has accepted the risk that the weapon wielder or user of feet might act in that way and adopts those acts and is responsible for them.
Of course if the wielders or users of feet did not have the requisite intention for murder, then any other would not be guilty either.
11. The prosecution do not have to prove who the actual perpetrator or perpetrators are. So long as they make you sure that the use of weapons or feet with the necessary intent was foreseen by other participants in the attack, then each identified participant would be guilty of murder."
"The facts are entirely for you. The first factual decision should be whether the prosecution have satisfied you that what you are dealing with is one continuing event. If you are satisfied, then depending on the facts you find proved in relation to the defendant whose case you are considering, you would decide whether any of the propositions above were fulfilled and appropriate.If, however, it was, or may have been, 2 separated events, then you should decide the following issues:
(a) whether there was one or two causes of death(b) when and where that, or those, injuries were caused
(c) what part the defendant whose case you are considering actually played
and depending what decision you come to on the cause of death and where those injuries were inflicted, you would then have a context into which to consider the actions and intentions of each defendant.
Thus if you were not satisfied that the head injury was an additional cause of death, then your decision as to where you find the knife wounds to have been inflicted would affect the potential liability of those who were not present, or may not have been present, at that particular scene.
It is essential to bear in mind that a defendant cannot be jointly responsible if you conclude in his particular case that:
(a) his acts did, or may, have occurred, before [Marcus Hall] received any of this fatal injuries and there had been a clear disengagement and withdrawal; or(b) his acts did, or may have occurred, after [Marcus Hall] received all his fatal injuries and the acts did nothing to hasten death.
Thus, if you conclude that there were 2 separate events then cause of death and place of injuries that resulted in death are of vital importance. To start on the steps to verdict in the case of any defendant you have to be satisfied on the facts as you find them that wherever the event occurred, he was there and part of a joint enterprise to inflict the injuries that actually caused death."
"[I]n truth, each in committing their individual offence assists and encourages the others in committing their individual offences. They are at the same time principals and secondary parties. Because it is often a matter of chance whether one or other of them inflicts a fatal injury, the law attributes responsibility for the acts done by one to all of them, unless one of the attackers completely departs from the concerted actions of the others and in so doing causes the victim's death."
"True, it will be easier for the Crown to prove that B participated in the venture realising that A might wound with murderous intent if weapons are carried…..But that is a purely evidential difference, not a difference in principle."
"….attributes undue significance to the use of the weapon":
ibid at page 51. Similarly Professor Clarkson comments that it is
"difficult to understand why the method of killing, or the instrument used, should make such a fundamental difference": [1998] Crim. L. Rev. 556, 558.
"[I]n the absence of exceptional circumstances, something more than a mere mental change of intention and physical change of location by those associated who wish to disassociate themselves from the consequences attendant upon their willing assistance up to the moment of the actual commission of that crime. I would not attempt to define too closely what must be done in criminal matters involving participation in a common unlawful purpose to break the chain of causation and responsibility. That must depend upon the circumstances of each case but it seems to me that one essential element ought to be established in a case of this kind: Where practicable and reasonable there must be timely communication of the intention to abandon the common purpose from those who wish to dissociate themselves from the contemplated crime to those who desire to continue in it. What is "timely communication" must be determined by the facts of each case but where practicable and reasonable it ought to be such communication, verbal or otherwise, that will serve unequivocal notice upon the other party to the common unlawful cause that if he proceeds upon it he does so without the further aid and assistance of those who withdraw."