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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 >> Brewster & Anor v R. [2010] EWCA Crim 1194 (27 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2010/1194.html Cite as: [2011] Crim LR 58, [2010] EWCA Crim 1194, [2010] 2 Cr App Rep 20, [2011] 1 WLR 601, [2010] 2 Cr App R 20, (2010) 174 JP 353, [2011] WLR 601 |
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ON APPEAL FROM Coventry Crown Court before HHJ Coates
On 30th July 2009
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE PITCHFORD
MR JUSTICE MADDISON
and
MR JUSTICE MACDUFF
____________________
Neil Brewster Dayo Cromwell |
1st Appellant 2nd Appellant |
|
- and - |
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Regina |
Respondent |
____________________
Richard Davenport (instructed by Newton Law Practice - Solicitors) for the 2nd Appellant
Glyn Ross Samuel (instructed by CPS Coventry) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6th May 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pitchford :
Evidence at Trial
The application to admit bad character evidence
Coventry District Juvenile Court – 3rd May 2000: Burglary and theft from a dwelling on 28 the March 2000 (Plea: Guilty).
Warwick Crown Court – 30th January 2004: Manslaughter on 1st August 2003 (Plea: Guilty).
Birmingham Crown Court – 1st February 2007: Possessing controlled drug, Class A cocaine, with intent to supply on 26th March 2006 (Plea: Guilty); possessing controlled drug, Class A heroin, with intent to supply, on 26th March 2006 (Plea: Guilty).
Birmingham Crown Court – 30th November 2007: theft by shoplifting on 14th September 2007 (Plea: Guilty); theft by shoplifting on 8th September 2007 (Plea: Guilty).
The Judge's Ruling
"...The test has been helpfully pointed out to me by Mr Williams, summarised precisely in Archbold 2009 at paragraph 13.16 and that I first of all have to decide whether the credit worthiness of this witness is to be regarded as a matter in issue in the proceedings and there is no doubt that that is the case under Section 100 (1) (b). I do not have to conclude that it is of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole that this bad character goes before the jury and that the bad character evidence has substantial probative value [the judge appears inadvertently to have included a negative.] Looking at the witness' previous convictions, there are four matters. When she was 17 she pleaded guilty to an offence of burglary of a dwelling house and was placed on probation for 12 months. Because counsel in this case for the defence want to go beyond simply putting the conviction to the witness, but to investigate the facts as well, I have been told that that was a case where she throw a brick through a window and took some items. There was a guilty plea. In 2004 she was convicted in Warwick Crown Court of manslaughter.
I have not had an agreed version of facts for that case, but clearly, on what I have been told, it relates to her treatment of a customer while she was working as a prostitute, who was killed while she was driving away in a motorcar. Counsel do not really push the point of the convictions for possessing controlled drugs in 2007. Again there were pleas of guilty and they could not possibly go to the question of honesty or otherwise. There is clearly a drugs background to this case that is already clear to the jury. Then, in November 2007, she has two convictions for shoplifting. Again, she pleaded guilty and she was made the subject of an 18 month community order. Whether or not this lady is cross-examined on her previous convictions depends upon whether I am satisfied that the tests have been met and I, at the end of the day, have an overall discretion. I have a good flavour of this case because counsel, at my request, although they find it difficult not to answer questions [sic] but they very helpfully have indicated what the issues are here and there is not a lot of dispute between the facts. The only issue here is whether she was agreeable to them or disagreeable.
That is the issue in this case, as simple as that. I take the view that her convictions are not of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole, that they are not, in my view, of substantial probative value and I do not give leave for her to be cross-examined as to the fact of conviction or therefore, of course, the facts of the convictions."
Discussion
"100(1) In criminal proceedings evidence of the bad character of a person other than the defendant is admissible if, and only if
(a)....
(b) It has substantial probative value in relation to a matter which
i) Is a matter in issue in the proceedings, and
ii) is of substantial importance in the context of the case as a whole ..."
"If upon a witness being lawfully questioned as to whether he has been convicted of any felony or misdemeanour .... he either denies or does not admit the fact, or refuses to answer, it shall be lawful for the cross-examining party to prove such conviction." [emphasis added]
"27 ... "in Hanson [2005] EWCA Crim 824, this court considered an application made by the Crown to admit evidence of bad character of the defendant on trial. In such a case, as this court held as recently as yesterday, when the point was fully argued, particular caution must be adopted, but it does not follow, as we have held, that previous convictions which do not involve either the making of false statements or the giving of false evidence, are incapable of having substantial probative value in relation to the credibility of a non-defendant under Section 100, or for that matter of a co-accused where the application is made by him under Section 101(1)(e). It is, as we then explained, wholly rational that the same degree of caution which is applied to a Crown application when considering relevance and discretion, does not fall to be applied when what is at stake is a defendant's right to deploy relevant material to defend himself against a criminal charge. Accordingly (though he cannot be blamed for it), the trial judge misdirected himself in directly applying paragraph 13 of Hanson to the situation which was before him. It may be, therefore, that had he addressed the question without believing himself fettered in that way, he might have come to the conclusion that these three incidents were capable of having substantial probative value in relation to the truthfulness of the complaint, which was an important matter in issue in this case. Whether he would or not would have been a matter for the feel of the case and for him at the time. Whether he would or not, we are satisfied that, had those matters been known to the jury, they could not in this case have made any significant difference ...."
Similar observations as to the trial judge's exercise of judgement have been made in cases decided under section 101(1)(e) including, Lawson [2006] EWCA Crim 2572, [2007] 1 WLR 1191, [2007] 1 Cr App R 11; Rosato [2008] EWCA Crim 1243; Singh [2007] EWCA Crim 2140; Hestor and McKray [2007] EWCA Crim 2127; and Jarvis [2008] EWCA Crim 488.
"11. The only species of credibility (or rather the absence of it) on the part of the complainant which is sought to be advanced by Mr George was, and is, an alleged deliberate untruthfulness. There is no question of mistake or error or anything of that kind. Thus, the question raised in Mr George's grounds is: Should the judge have held that these convictions possess substantial probative value in relation to the question whether the complainant gave a truthful or deliberately untruthful account of what had happened?
12. It should first be noted that propensity to untruthfulness is not the same thing as a propensity to dishonesty: see Hanson [2005] 2 Cr App R 21 (page 299), paragraph 13, where it was said that previous convictions for offences of dishonesty are only likely to demonstrate a propensity for untruthfulness where the convicted person is shown in relation to the earlier offences to have told lies either in pleading not guilty and giving an account which must have been disbelieved by the trial court, or because of the nature of the offence (for example, if it involved making false representations). No such considerations apply here. The complainant pleaded guilty to each of the previous offences sought to be relied on. None of them involved making false representations. In addition, as the judge was at pains to note, the offences are of some antiquity. The fact urged by counsel for the appellant that the jury knew about the appellant's good character, cannot as a matter of logic increase the probative value of the complainant's previous offences in relation to her credibility. In our judgment, the judge was quite right to refuse the application on the distinct basis on which it was put to him."
On the other hand, the court noted that the behaviour which constituted some of the offences to which the complainant had pleaded guilty bore a sufficient resemblance to the assertions made by the defendant of her behaviour towards him that the evidence was of substantial probative value towards proof that his account of the event was true and that the complainant's was false. The appeal was allowed on that ground.
"3.14 Some convictions bear on the credibility of the witness directly, because they provide a reason for doubting the truth of the particular evidence the witness has given in this particular case. If the alleged victim of an assault claims that the defendant was the aggressor, we are less inclined to believe him when we discover that he has (say) five previous convictions for acts of violence himself. [Professor Spencer inserts a note placing the case of S (Andrew) in this category] But other convictions bear on credibility only indirectly, by inviting us to reason "a person who would do something like that is not a person whose word can be trusted". As the Court of Appeal once put it when rejecting an application to call a new witness whose evidence would allegedly establish the appellant's innocence:
"Mr Washington .... is a man with numerous convictions including no less than 32 for theft, burglary, handling or obtaining by deception and a further 4 for fraud or forgery. None of that of course means that he is not telling the truth today, but it does indicate that his honesty cannot be taken for granted". [Devon [2006] EWCA Crim 388 ]
Under the new law, there will be little difficulty about the admissibility of a witness' convictions in the first type of case, where they bear on his credibility directly. However, difficulties will arise in cases where, if at all, the witness's criminal record only undermines his credit indirectly."
Conclusion