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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 >> Kennedy v R. [2005] EWCA Crim 685 (17 March 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2005/685.html Cite as: [2005] WLR 2159, [2005] 2 Cr App Rep 23, [2005] 2 Cr App R 23, [2005] EWCA Crim 685, [2005] 1 WLR 2159 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE DAVIS
and
MR JUSTICE FIELD
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Simon Kennedy |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
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Miss Sallie Bennett-Jenkins (instructed by Crown Prosecution Service) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
The Lord Chief Justice:
The Facts
i) Recent decisions of this court had cast doubt upon the correctness of the reasoning of Lord Justice Waller in the first appeal in July 1998.
ii) The trial judge failed to explain novus actus interveniens in terms that a free, deliberate and informed act of a third party deciding to inject himself with the drug would break the chain of causation between the supply of the heroin and the death of the deceased.
"Count 2 Are we sure the Defendant on the 10th September 1996 deliberately supplied what he knew to be heroin to Marco Bosque?
If No-not guilty to Counts 1 and 2.
If Yes-guilty Count 2.
Count 1
1. Are we sure the Defendant prepared what he knew to be a heroin mixture for Bosque?
If No-not guilty.
If Yes-Consider.
2. Are we sure the Defendant handed the heroin to Bosque for immediate injection?
If No-not guilty.
If Yes-Consider.
3. Are we sure the Defendant's act was one which all sober and reasonable people would inevitably realise was bound to subject Bosque to the risk of harm, albeit, not serious harm?
If No-not guilty.
If Yes-Consider.
4. Are we sure that the Defendant's act was a significant cause of death?
If No-not guilty.
If Yes-guilty of manslaughter."
"Members of the jury, you will start by considering count 2 and you will ask yourselves: are we sure the defendant on 10th September 1996 deliberately supplied what he knew to be heroin to Marco Bosque? This means, in the circumstances of this case, that before convicting the defendant, you must feel sure that the defendant brought the heroin into Bosque's room, knew it was heroin and supplied it to Bosque. If the answer to the question on count 2 is 'no', then you find the defendant not guilty to counts 1 and 2. (So you will see why you must consider count 2 first.) If the answer is 'yes', then he is guilty on count 2. Then you go on to consider count 1, the manslaughter count, and there are [sic] a series of questions that you need to ask yourselves: firstly, are we sure the defendant prepared what he knew to be a heroin mixture for Bosque? If 'no', not guilty. If 'yes', you go on to question two. As far as that question is concerned, question one, if the defendant's account of bringing the syringe and the citric acid into Bosque's room and simply getting water for him and holding the lighter under the spoon may be true, the defendant should be acquitted. Having considered question one, as I say, if the answer is 'no', not guilty. If 'yes', you consider question two: are we sure the defendant handed the heroin to Bosque for immediate injection? If the answer is 'no', not guilty. If 'yes', then you go on to consider the next question: are we sure that the defendant's act was one which all sober and reasonable people would inevitably realise was bound to subject Bosque to the risk of harm – albeit not serious harm? If the answer is 'no', you say not guilty, and if 'yes', you consider the fourth question: are we sure that the defendant's act was a significant cause of death? The defendant's act does not have to be the sole or even the main cause of death. But you must be sure that the defendant's act was a significant cause of death. Preparing the heroin mixture that he brought into the room and handing the heroin mixture in a syringe to Bosque for immediate injection is capable of amounting to a significant cause of death."
The Case of Dalby
i) The unlawful act must be one directed at the victim and the supply of the drugs was not such a direct act;
ii) The supply of drugs can be harmless or extremely harmful depending on the manner in which the victim deals with them; and
iii) The drugs in this case were taken voluntarily by the victim. The chain of causation between the unlawful act of supplying the drugs, and O'Such's death resulting from the intravenous injection of too great a quantity of them, was therefore broken.
"In the circumstances in which the intravenous consumption of a dangerous drug is a substantial cause of the death of the deceased, does the unlawful act of supply of the dangerous drug by the defendant to the deceased, per se, constitute the actus reus of the offence of manslaughter?"
"There are several reported cases of manslaughter where the conduct which led to the death of the victim was not a direct act but these have been cases of manslaughter by negligence…But in all the reported cases of manslaughter by an unlawful and dangerous act, the researches of counsel have failed to find any case where the act was not a direct act.
The difficulty in the present case is that the act of supplying a scheduled drug was not an act which caused direct harm. It was an act which made it possible, or even likely, that harm would occur subsequently, particularly if the drug was supplied to somebody who was on drugs. In all the reported cases, the physical act has been one which inevitably would subject the other person to the risk of some harm from the act itself. In this case, the supply of drugs would itself have caused no harm unless the deceased had subsequently used the drugs in a form and quantity which was dangerous. It is interesting to note that in Smith and Hogan's Criminal Law (4th ed.), p. 274, when discussing intervening causes, a number of examples are cited, but the whole discussion is based on an original injury followed by some other act or event.
In the judgment of this Court, the unlawful act of supplying drugs was not an act directed against the person of O'Such and the supply did not cause any direct injury to him. The kind of harm envisaged in all the reported cases of involuntary manslaughter was physical injury of some kind as an immediate and inevitable result of the unlawful act, e.g. a blow on the chin which knocks the victim against a wall causing a fractured skull and death, or threatening with a loaded gun which accidentally fires, or dropping a large stone on a train….or threatening another with an open razor and stumbling with death resulting…"
The First Appeal
"It follows that the appellant's unlawful conduct would not be limited to supply but would also be unlawful insofar as he assisted or encouraged Bosque to inject himself with the mixture of heroin and water. What we have in mind is what was said in R v Cato 62 Cr. App. R.41 particularly at p.47. In that case Cato had injected another person with morphine which Cato had unlawfully taken into his possession. According to the judgment of the Lord Chief Justice in that case, first, by virtue of section 23 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861, which provides "whosoever shall unlawfully and maliciously administer to, or cause to be administered to or taken by any other person any poison, or other destructive or noxious thing, so as thereby to endanger the life of such person, …shall be guilty of an offence", the act of injection was unlawful. But secondly, and in addition, even without the assistance of that section, it was held "…that had it not been possible to rely on the charge under section 23…, there would have been an unlawful act here, and … the unlawful act would be described as injecting the deceased Farmer with a mixture of heroin and water which at the time of the injection and for the purposes of the injection the accused had unlawfully taken into his possession." (See p. 47) We can see no reason, why, on the facts as alleged by the Crown, the appellant in the instant case might not have been guilty of an offence under section 23 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861. Perhaps more relevantly, the injection of the heroin into himself by Bosque was itself an unlawful act, and if the appellant assisted in and wilfully encouraged that unlawful conduct, he would himself be acting unlawfully."
"[T]he passage which is of most immediate relevance is to be found in Chapter XII, in which the learned authors consider the circumstances in which the intervention of a third person, not acting in concert with the accused, may have the effect of relieving the accused of criminal responsibility. The criterion which they suggest should be applied in such circumstances is whether the intervention is voluntary, i.e. whether it is "free, deliberate and informed." We resist the temptation of expressing the judicial opinion whether we find ourselves in complete agreement with that definition; though we certainly consider it to be broadly correct and supported by authority. "
Waller LJ added:
"Whether one talks of novus actus interveniens or simply in terms of causation, that passage reveals, as it seems to us, that the critical question to which the jury must direct its mind, where (as in the instant case) there is an act causative of death performed by in this case the deceased himself, is whether the appellant can be said to be jointly responsible for the carrying out of that act."
"We think that the questions and the direction do in fact come very close to leaving the matter accurately to the jury. By question two to count 1 the judge identified the act not simply as the supply of heroin but the handing to Bosque for immediate injection. That, as it seems to us, connotes the element of encouragement that Bosque should immediately inject himself with the heroin mixture in the syringe handed to him, albeit it might have been better to use the phrase "wilfully encouraged". That it was the actions of not simply supplying the heroin on which the jury were to concentrate is further emphasised by the passage at p.9C where the judge said "preparing the heroin mixture that he brought into the room and handing the heroin mixture in a syringe to Bosque for immediate injection is capable of amounting to a significant cause of death."
However, what we are also concerned about is that albeit the direction is very close to leaving the matter accurately to the jury, there is no explanation by the judge of the alternative submission which Mr Montrose suggests he was prevented from making. For example, the judge could have said and made clear that if the jury formed the view that the defendant had prepared the syringe but attempted to discourage the use of it by his words or conduct, then it was open to the jury to take the view that Bosque's self-injection was one for which the appellant could not be held to be responsible.
Accordingly, as is apparent, we take the view that this matter could have been put more clearly to the jury and we also take the view that it was unfortunate that Mr Montrose was not allowed to address the jury on the causation aspect if he thought it right to do so. But, that said, we take the view that, if the jury accepted Cody's evidence, which they must have done in relation to the supply alleged in this case, a contention that the appellant was not encouraging the injection was a totally hopeless one. This was a case about the supply of heroin in a made up syringe for immediate injection. That was the case which the appellant fought, but, if it was rejected, the jury were bound to be sure of the supply in that form. Once sure that the supply was in that form, then they could not but have formed the view that the appellant was encouraging injection. Even his words were not to discourage some injection but were indeed to encourage some injection. It must be remembered that all it is necessary for a sober and reasonable person to realise was that some risk of harm, albeit not serious harm, would result from the appellant's act. In this instance, an encouragement to inject carried with it the risk of some harm, even from the prick of the needle, never mind an injection of a lesser quantity of heroin than that which actually caused the death of Bosque."
The Subsequent Decisions
Dias
Richards
Rogers
"The two may have been jointly 'responsible' and, if the act done by the deceased had been a crime, they would both have been guilty of that crime. The trouble is that the act done by the deceased was not a crime, certainly not the crime of manslaughter. Causation and responsibility are distinct questions. Accessories are held to be 'responsible' for the actus reus, but they do not (in law) cause it, for if they did, they would be principals. They are not."
"It is artificial and unreal to separate the tourniquet from the injection. The purpose and effect of the tourniquet, plainly, was to raise a vein in which the deceased could insert the syringe. Accordingly, by applying and holding the tourniquet, the defendant was playing a part in the mechanics of the injection which caused death. It is therefore, as it seems to us, immaterial whether the deceased was committing a criminal offence.
…A fortiori, as it seems to us, a person who actively participates in the injection process commits the actus reus and can have no answer to an offence under section 23 or a charge of manslaughter if death results. Once the [defendant] is categorised as such a participant, it being common ground that death resulted from the injection, no question arises in relation to causation." (Paragraphs 7 and 8)
Rose VP regarded his approach as not being in conflict with that of Keene LJ in Dias (paragraph 8).
i) That a person who kills himself is not committing a crime.
ii) Contrary to part of the judgment of Waller LJ (Junior) on the first appeal, even though a person may encourage another to take his own life, he is not an accessory to manslaughter on this ground alone as there is no principal of whom he is the accessory.
iii) If, however, the role played by the defendant, in concert with the deceased, amounts to administering or causing the drug to be administered, then that person will have committed an offence under s.23 of the 1861 Act and he will be guilty of an unlawful act. The fact that the deceased may die does not affect that situation. Furthermore, if the defendant participates in an offence involving the administration of the drug, there could be no question of difficulties in relation to causation.
iv) On the first appeal, Waller LJ (Junior) was right when he regarded "the critical question to which the jury must direct its mind, where (as in the instance case) there is an act causative of death performed by, in this case the deceased himself, is whether the appellant can be said to be jointly responsible for the carrying out of that act." (emphasis added)
v) The critical comments in relation to the judgment on the first appeal are directed to other parts of Waller LJ's judgment, when he indicates that it would be sufficient if the appellant was an accessory. Waller LJ, for example, stated "if the appellant assisted in and wilfully encouraged that unlawful conduct [i.e. the self-injection] he would himself be acting unlawfully." (emphasis added) If the encouragement is isolated from the assisting, then there would be a basis for the criticism.
"In the offence of incitement it is a requirement that that which is incited be a crime. Self-injection not being unlawful, encouragement to self-inject cannot amount to the offence of incitement. If the relevant act was Mr Kennedy's encouragement, that encouragement was not unlawful and there was no unlawful act upon which a manslaughter conviction could be founded." (Paragraph 50 p 23 of the Statement of Reasons)."
Finlay
"Effectively, the only matter in issue was whether it was open to the judge to leave to the jury the possibility that there was a version of events that caused Mr Finlay to be guilty of an offence under Section 23 of the 1861 Act even though he had not himself held the syringe."
"So it seems to me that subject to one further point, to which I will turn almost immediately, cooking up heroin, loading it into a syringe, and then giving the syringe to someone who is clearly going to inject themselves almost immediately, is capable of coming within the terms of section 23. Whether or not it does so in any given case is a question of fact which falls for the jury and not the court to decide.
The last remaining point in relation to section 23 is this. In order to establish limb two of their case, the prosecution would have to prove that the defendant caused the heroin to be administered to, or be taken by, the deceased. In my view it is not necessary for the Crown to prove that the defendant's actions were the sole cause of the deceased injecting heroin. Here, by cooking up, loading the syringe, and handing it to the deceased, the defendant produced a situation in which the deceased could inject and in which an injection by her into herself was entirely foreseeable. It was not a situation in which injection could be regarded as something extraordinary. That being the case, it seems to me that on the authority of Environment Agency v Empress Car Company Limited [1999] 2 AC 22, that it would be open to the jury to conclude that the defendant's action caused heroin to be administered to, or to be taken by, the deceased.
At the end of the day this is a question of fact for the jury to decide."
"That clearly sets out the law as it was understood by this court in the case of R v Rogers. The test is one of causation. In this case, could it be said that the act of the deceased in taking up the syringe and using it on herself, which are to be assumed to be the facts, prevented Mr Finlay's previous acts being causative of the injection. The judge rightly referred to Environment Agency v Empress Car Company [1999] 2 AC 22. In that case Lord Hoffmann said that the prosecution need not prove that the defendant did something which was the immediate cause of death. When the prosecution had identified an act done by the defendant, the court had to decide, particularly when a necessary condition of the event complained of was the act of a third party, whether that act should be regarded as a matter of ordinary occurrence which would not negative the effect of the defendant's act; or something extraordinary, on the other hand which would leave open a finding that the defendant did not cause the criminal act or event. That, said Lord Hoffmann, with the agreement of the rest of the House of Lords, was a question of fact and degree to which, in the case before him, the justices had to apply their common sense, as in a jury trial the jury has to apply its common sense. That was exactly the way in which the judge directed himself in his observations on the application that count 2 should be removed from the jury….
Whether or not the defendant caused heroin to be administered to or taken by the deceased is a question of fact and degree which you have to decide, and you should decide it by applying your common sense and knowledge of the world to the facts that you find to be proved by the evidence. The prosecution do not have to show that what the defendant did or said was a sole cause of the injection of heroin into the deceased. Where the defendant has produced the situation in which there is the possibility for heroin to be administered to or taken by Jasmine Grosvenor, but the actual injection of heroin involves an act on part of another – in this case Jasmine herself – then if the injection of heroin is to be regarded in your view as a normal fact of life, in the situation proved by the evidence, then the act of the other person will not prevent the defendant's deeds or words being a cause, or one of the causes, of that injection. On the other hand, if in the situation proved by the evidence, injection is to be regarded as an extraordinary event, then it would be open to you to conclude that the defendant did not cause heroin to be administered to or taken by the deceased….
Mr Gibson-Lee really advances two reasons why the judge should not have taken that view, and why he should have considered that count 2 should not have gone to the jury. The first is that on the assumption that it was the deceased who injected herself, that act of itself breaks the chain of causation between whatever it was that the accused did and the actual event of injection. That is a view that is also taken in a critical commentary on the decision in Rogers in the Criminal Law Review. We have to say that that approach is not correct. It seeks to make the existence of what used to be called a novus actus interveniens, and can now more simply be regarded as an act of another person, as something that as a matter of law [emphasis added] breaks the chain of causation. It was that view or assumption that was rejected by the House of Lords in the Empress Car case. Intervening acts are only a factor to be taken into account by the jury in looking at all the circumstances, as the judge told them to do.
Secondly, Mr Gibson-Lee says that in any event the facts of this case were such that it simply was not open to the jury to conclude that Mr Finlay had caused the injection. He had done no more than form part of the background, or provide the opportunity of which the deceased availed herself: - in other words, that the case was so extreme or so clear that it was not appropriate for the jury to look at it as a case of causation at all. The judge did not take that view, nor do we. The unhappy circumstances of this case, and in particular the unhappy circumstances of this lady's life and condition, in our view indicate that it was certainly open to a jury to conclude in Empress Car terms that in those circumstances, and we emphasise that, it was what Lord Hoffmann described as an "ordinary" occurrence for the purpose of the law of causation that she should have taken advantage of whatever it was that Mr Finlay did towards her or with her. It is not necessary for that conclusion to decide, as Mr Gibson-Lee suggested it was that she was incapable of knowing what she was doing or had ceased entirely to be a rational being. All that is necessary, in our judgment, is that the circumstances should be such that it could properly be said to fall within the ambit of possible and ordinary events that she will take the opportunity given her. We quite accept that, on facts different from these, there might be more difficulty in coming to that conclusion."
"It is, however, very important to notice that this requirement is not because of anything inherent in the notion of "causing". It is because of the structure of the sub-section which imposes liability under two separate heads: the first limb simply for doing something which causes the pollution and the second for knowingly failing to prevent the pollution."
"Not only may there be different answers to questions about causation when attributing responsibility to different people under different rules (in the above example, criminal responsibility of the thief, common sense responsibility of the owner) but there may be different answers when attributing responsibility to different people under the same rule"
"What, therefore, is the nature of the duty imposed by section 85(1)? Does it include responsibility for acts of third parties or natural events and, if so, for any such acts or only some of them? This is a question of statutory construction, having regard to the policy of the Act. It is immediately clear that the liability imposed by the sub-section is strict: it does not require mens rea in the sense of intention or negligence. Strict liability is imposed in the interests of protecting controlled waters from pollution. …Clearly, therefore, the fact that a deliberate act of a third party, caused the pollution does not in itself mean that the defendants creation of a situation in which the third party could so act did not also cause the pollution for the purposes of section 85(1)."
"The true common sense distinction is, in my view, between acts and events which, although not necessarily foreseeable in the particular case, are in the generality a normal and familiar fact of life, and acts or events which are abnormal and extraordinary."
Lord Hoffmann then makes clear that a defendant would not be liable under the section of the Act for "abnormal and extraordinary" events.
"The free, deliberate and informed intervention of a second person, who intends to exploit the situation created by the first, but is not acting in concert with him is held to relieve the first actor of criminal responsibility." (Emphasis added)
Conclusions