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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 >> Watson v R [2015] EWCA Crim 559 (27 March 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2015/559.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Crim 559 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
THE CROWN COURT AT PRESTON
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE GILBART
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE GRIFFITH-JONES
(SITTING AS A JUDGE OF THE CACD)
____________________
NICHOLAS WATSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE QUEEN |
Respondent |
____________________
MR R HAWORTH (instructed by CPS) for the CROWN
Hearing date: 27 February 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE BURNETT:
i) Count one alleged rape (anal) of the complainant (whom we shall call A) on 29 May 2010;ii) Counts two and three alleged rape (vaginal and anal) of A on 13 June 2010;
iii) Counts four and five alleged assault by penetration using a sex toy (vagina and anus) on 2 June 2010;
iv) Counts six, seven and eight alleged sex with an adult relative. Count six covered a period of three weeks to 12 June 2010 and related to oral sex. Count seven covered the period 23 May to 28 May 2010 and related to vaginal sex. Count eight concerned vaginal sex on 29 May 2010.
The Grounds of Appeal
i) The judge should have stopped the trial at the close of the prosecution case;ii) The consent direction given by the judge was inadequate;
iii) The review of evidence in the summing up was deficient because it did not go into the detail of the text messages sent by A to the defendant. It was fundamental to his case that they were inconsistent with any suggestion of non-consensual sexual activity. More generally there was insufficient emphasis upon the unreliability of A.
iv) This case called for a discretionary corroboration warning of the sort discussed in Makanjuola [1995] 2 Cr. App. R 469.
"1. The learned judge failed adequately to bring together the applicant's case concerning the inherent weakness in the evidence given by the complainant by identifying, at least,
(i) That her account given in interview, especially as regards her acquiescence in a sexual relationship with the applicant, failed to mention the substance of the extensive text exchanges between them and painted a picture inconsistent with the text messages exchanged up to 8 June 2010;
(ii) That the text messages either side of the incidents which occurred on 29 May and 2 June were inconsistent with the suggestion of non-consensual sexual activity;
(iii) That the complainant may have been motivated to lie by a revulsion at her having engaged in an incestuous liaison, or at least realisation that it was wrong, and thus sought to minimise her responsibility;
(iv) That the complainant may have been motivated to lie by a desire to save her marriage and because of concerns relating to her own children,
together with a suitable warning about the quality of her evidence.
2. The learned judge failed to summarise for the jury the evidence which might support the proposition that even if the complainant did not consent to the acts in question, he might have had a reasonable belief that she had.
3. The direction on consent contained the sentence:
'Was the complainant freely consenting to sexual intercourse or was she submitting to a demand that she felt unable to resist.'
The complainant's case in the DVD interview was that she was a reluctant participant in all sexual activity, albeit in the light of the text exchanges the Crown accepted that most of the sexual activity was consensual. It is unclear how the complainant dealt with the texts in cross-examination. On the facts of this case the direction undermined the explanation elsewhere that reluctant acquiescence is nonetheless consent."
The Text Messages and the Factual Summing Up
"The Judge should remind the jury of the salient issues in the case and (save in the simplest of cases) the nature of the evidence relevant to each issue. This need be only in summary form to bring the detail back to the minds of the jury, including a balanced account of the issues raised by the defence. It is not necessary to recount all relevant evidence."
"Morning! :) I just wanted to tell you that last night was so beautiful to me, it wasn't dirty or wrong. We're just loving and enjoying each other totally. You're my everything, my world, soul mate and dad. Nothing will never come between us, i'd never let it. Sleep well daddy knowing that nothing is damaged or dirty or wrong. It's just that i totally love in loves every form xxx"
The texts that day continue in similar vein with A and the appellant exchanging sexualised suggestions. There was further sexual activity that night. The first text on the morning of 25 May was from the appellant waxing lyrically about the quality of the sex. A responded in terms suggesting that she enjoyed it and wanted more. The whole day was spent sending sexually charged texts to each other. So too was 26 May. The exchanges that day included one in which A said that the appellant was her "perfect daddy, lover and friend" whom she was looking forward to spending the rest of her life with. On the 28 May they exchanged texts which were discussing where they would set up home. They were not together that night. A text from A that evening said she wished they were together "tonight and every night" and another that her body "craved him". A's texts the next morning (29 May) opened with her saying "I want my daddy, in everyway xxx".
"Watson: Has if met you :...
A: yeah x thank you for a wonderful night x i love you with all my heart
Watson: Thank you too baby it was very special! Daddy loves his little girl with all his heart. …"
The appellant's first text is a reference to whether A had been met by her husband. That evening A texted to say she hoped to wear the appellant's wedding ring. She said that her feelings were getting stronger for him and that she adored him. Then she wrote:
"I think our love is so great, so deep and so strong, it's not shallow, everyone is bothered about the sex, the sex is just a way to express our love and desire for each other, not the main thing like everyone worries about. I in no way feel abused or taken advantage of. I feel totally loved when I'm with you, holding your hand, cuddling, making love. I will not wake up and regret anything, anytime. I love you. I love your mind, body, soul, touch, humour so much more that just sex."
On 31 May, A shared many sexual fantasies with the appellant and he with her. It was Bank Holiday Monday. They were planning to meet the next Wednesday and were candidly discussing sexual role playing. A introduced the possibility of using a whip. At one point in the extended exchange she said that she enjoyed spanking and whipping and would like to be tied up. They wondered about wearing masks and filming their next encounter. A suggested that they "work their way down the list of erotica. It's a tough job but together we'll do it." Both expressed frustration at not being together.
"I just wanted to tell you that I love you and need you, i've never needed anyone before but i do you. I want us to be as normal a couple as possible…"
There were others to like effect and an explicit reference to her urgently wanting sex with him and exchanging fantasies. A referred to their sexual encounter the previous night in approving and enthusiastic terms. The texts continued until both were in their respective beds that night. The text exchanges, which show that other media were being used for communication, were less frequent over the final days for which they were recovered, that is up to 8 June. They remained affectionate, spoke of a future together and contained no hint of a complaint about what had occurred on 2 June. It is apparent that A's husband was becoming increasingly uncomfortable with the situation, although it is unclear how much he knew at that stage.
"In about 2008 [A] contacted [her mother] … and subsequently … the defendant, her natural father. The contact was initially by email and telephone calls and text message. And of course you see the text messages in Exhibit 5, the mobile phone records of which you have become very familiar over the course of this trial.
I'm not going to dwell on those with you and it's for you to decide the extent to which their content, their timing, their frequency and the explanations offered by both the defendant and [A] in their evidence to you assist you in assessing the issues of credibility and as to who was, as it were, making the running at any particular time, and in answering the questions necessary for determining whether the defendant is guilty or not guilty on the charges on which you are trying him (20B-F).
Whilst the text messages at exhibit 5 do not give the whole picture, remember in the admissions that you're told that there were telephone calls and other communications, such as MSN messaging and video calls, throughout the period of contact between them, and you do have a good picture of what they were saying to each other both before they met in mid-May …and right through the whole of this relationship and activity (21 E-G).
And, again, those text messages, of which you are very familiar, at exhibit 5 show the continuing contact between [A] and the defendant … during that period [i.e. before 29 May] (22G).
And again, you see the nature of the dialogue between them before and after [29 May], and it is the case that nowhere in the texts does [A] make any complaint or protest about any sexual activity or protest about any sexual activity which has occurred between them (23F).
She returned to [her home], and again you, I'm sure, will remind yourselves from the text records of the dialogue between them following the last meeting in London, and it is the case that there was no protest about what had occurred [in the period encompassing 2 June] (24C).
And she agreed that there were more explicit text messages in both directions after those events [i.e. after 13 June] (56G)."
Grounds 2 and 3: Reasonable Belief in Consent and the Direction on Consent
"Was the complainant freely consenting to sexual intercourse or was she submitting to a demand that she felt unable to resist."
Earlier in the Summing Up the judge had said to the jury that consent "can take many forms from willing enthusiasm to reluctant acquiescence". He had summarised the statutory definition of consent to the jury, as follows:
"A complainant consented if and only if she had the freedom and capacity to make the choice and she exercised that choice to agree to sexual intercourse."
These parts of the judge's direction followed closely upon the formula found in The Crown Court Bench Book at page 373. He then repeated that agreement could be reluctant.
Sentence