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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 >> Fletcher, R v [2017] EWCA Crim 1778 (15 November 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2017/1778.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Crim 1778 |
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ON APPEAL FROM BRADFORD CROWN COURT
HIS HONOUR JUDGE THOMAS QC
T20150784
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE LAVENDER
and
SIR NICHOLAS BLAKE
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R |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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DAVID ERNEST FLETCHER |
Appellant |
____________________
Ian Howard for the Crown
Hearing date: 19 October 2017
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Davis:
Introduction
Background facts
The proceedings at trial
The summing-up
"If you are going to convict the defendant on any one count you would have to be sure that the conduct that he [G] generally describes, those various acts, not all of them but an act during that particular year, whichever count you are looking at, that it did happen on at least one occasion about which you are all agreed during that year of his childhood..."
The judge went on to give a full separate treatment direction. Amongst other things he said this (saying that he would come on to Count 8 separately):
"Counts 1 to 7 they are separate counts but this is not a situation where you can say to yourselves: well we are sure he has done it and therefore guilty across seven counts. Each count has to be looked at separately and individually... there [are] eight verdicts to return here, individual separate verdicts in relation to each count."
"So I go back to what I was saying, each count does need that separate and individual consideration in terms of did anything happen at all in that year, of course the defence case is nothing happened in any year, but did anything happen in a particular year, are you sure of it, and look at the particular year as well as the particular conduct, that is the task ahead of you."
The legal principles
"When an appellant seeks to persuade this court as his ground of appeal that the jury has returned a repugnant or inconsistent verdict, the burden is plainly on him. He must satisfy the court that the two verdicts cannot stand together, meaning thereby that no reasonable jury who had applied their mind properly to the facts in the case could have arrived at the conclusion, and once one assumes that they were an unreasonable jury, or that they could not have reasonably come to the conclusion, then the convictions cannot stand. But the burden is on the defence to establish that."
Edmund Davies LJ then formulated the position as this:
"...the burden is on the appellant to show that the verdicts on different counts are not merely inconsistent but are so inconsistent as to demand interference by an appellate court."
On the facts of that particular case, (where, as it happens, the trial judge had directed the jury that the two counts in question did not necessarily stand or fall together), it was held that the appellant had discharged the burden resting on him.
Disposal
Conclusion