BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Lynch v. D.P.P. [1999] IESC 48 (10th June, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1999/48.html Cite as: [1999] IESC 48 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
1. This
is an appeal from an Order of the High Court (Morris, J. as he then was) made
on the 16th December, 1997, refusing an application by the Appellant for an
Order restraining the Respondent (hereafter the DPP) from further prosecuting
the Appellant in respect of:
2. There
is no doubt but that a ruthless armed robbery of Cartron Hill Filling Station,
Sligo, took place on the 18th December, 1992. Two young employees of the
Filling Station, Colin Martin and Declan McSharry, were about to lock up the
premises at about 11 o’clock that night when they heard the shutters of
the entrance door which they had pulled down but had not locked being pulled
up. Two men wearing balaclavas entered the shop premises, one armed with a
sawn-off double barrelled shotgun. They ordered the two shop assistants to lie
face down on the floor, the man with the shotgun standing guard over them with
the gun pointing at their heads. The other man robbed the tills and the two
shop assistants were then ordered to crawl on their hands and knees into a back
room where they were locked. Having waited some ten minutes or so in silence
the two young men then broke through the door of the back room and telephoned
the Gardaí who came promptly to their assistance.
3. The
two young men were unable to assist the Gardaí in describing the
culprits. Video camera evidence was also of no help in view of the balaclavas
worn by the culprits. Nor was there any fingerprint or footprint evidence nor
any trace of the sawn off shotgun. The Gardaí were unable to obtain any
evidence as to the identity of the culprits around the time of the commission
of the armed robbery nor, indeed, throughout the year 1993.
4. In
March of 1994, the Gardaí in Sligo had occasion to interview another man
named Owen Branley in connection with another offence. In the course of that
interview Mr. Branley admitted that he was one of the two men responsible for
the Filling Station robbery and further stated that his companion on that
occasion and the person in possession of the double barrelled sawn off shotgun
was the Appellant.
5. This
was the first time that any evidence came into the possession of the
Gardaí to establish that the Appellant was involved in the Filling
Station robbery. That evidence was in itself rather tenuous in that it was the
evidence on his own admission of an accomplice. It was decided by the DPP and
the investigating Gardaí to proceed with the prosecution of Mr. Branley
first and thus see how reliable or otherwise he was before proceeding with the
prosecution against the Appellant. After several queries between the
Gardaí and the DPP, Mr. Branley was ultimately charged with the Filling
Station offence on the 3rd February, 1995. He pleaded guilty to that offence on
the 20th June, 1995 in Sligo Circuit Criminal Court and was sentenced to four
years imprisonment which was suspended and he was ordered to pay a sum of
£500.00 compensation within six months. Again it was decided by the DPP,
in consultation with the Gardaí, to wait until Mr. Branley had fulfilled
the immediate requirements of his sentence by paying the £500.00
compensation
6. The
Appellant declined, as was his right, to be interviewed by the Gardaí
during the first half of 1996, at a time when he was in prison in connection
with other offences. He was charged with the three offences the subject matter
of these proceedings on the 14th June, 1996. A Book of Evidence was served on
him on the 21st June, 1996, and he obtained an Order from the High Court
(Kelly, J.) giving him leave to bring these proceedings by way of judicial
review on the 22nd July, 1996, since when any further steps in the criminal
prosecution have been stayed. The Appellant complains of the delay of 3 1/2
years between the date of the alleged offence on the 18th December, 1992, and
his first being accused of it on the 14th June, 1996, and he says that his
memory of events so long before is gravely diminished. He concedes however that
he cannot complain in respect of the first 1¼ year of that period, that is
to say up to March, 1994, having regard to the fact that the Gardaí and
the DPP had no evidence to connect with him with the offences.
7. In
his Statement, required to ground his application for judicial review, which is
dated 11th July, 1996, the first ground relied upon by the Appellant is as
follows:-
8. This
ground was rejected by the learned High Court Judge and the rejection was
appealed to this Court. Counsel for the Appellant at the outset of his
submissions specifically withdrew that particular ground of appeal. As Counsel
for the DPP pointed out, that particular ground or plea created a
9. Counsel
in the course of their respective submissions relied on the many recent cases
of attempts to prohibit criminal prosecutions on grounds of delay such as:-
10. The
one thing that is clear from all the authorities however is that each case
depends on its own particular facts. In this case the learned High Court Judge
quoted extensively from both the High Court and the Supreme Court Judgments in
O’Flynn
v. District Justice Clifford
[1989] IR 524 and he then continued as follows:-
12. I
agree with both of the foregoing extracts which I have quoted from the Judgment
of the learned High Court Judge and I would accordingly dismiss this appeal.
13. There
is, however, one other matter which was barely mentioned on the hearing of this
appeal in this Court but to which I wish to refer: that it is an alleged
retraction by Mr. Branley of his statements implicating the Applicant.
14. There
is something of a mystery about this retraction which purports to have been
sworn or signed on the 16th December, 1996, at Cranmore Co. Sligo before a
Peace Commissioner. The retraction is exhibited in an Affidavit sworn by the
Appellant on the 15th January, 1997. The learned High Court Judge delivered his
Judgment on the 16th December, 1997, exactly one year after the alleged
retraction and eleven months after the Affidavit exhibiting it but there is no
reference to the retraction in the Judgment of the High Court. The Affidavit of
the Appellant sworn on the 15th January, 1997, does not appear to have been
opened in the High Court because the formal High Court Order of the 16th
December, 1997, makes no reference to it and refers only to an Affidavit of the
Appellant filed on the 7th January, 1997, which is an Affidavit that was sworn
on the 27th December, 1996. Nevertheless the
15. Affidavit
of the 15th January, 1997, is stamped as having been received by the Central
Office of the High Court on the 21st January, 1997, some ten or eleven months
before the High Court hearing. Paragraph 7 of this Affidavit sworn by the
Appellant on the 15th January, 1997, reads as follows:-
16. I
take the view that the Appellant puts himself out of Court insofar as he
complains of delay by the DPP in commencing a prosecution against him based
solely on the statements obtained from Mr. Branley in March 1994 while at the
same time exhibiting an alleged retraction of those statements insofar as they
implicate the Appellant. This emphasises how right the DPP was to take plenty
of time to consider carefully and weigh up the reliability of Mr. Branley who
on his own statements was an accomplice before launching a very serious
criminal prosecution against the Appellant. Moreover, if Mr. Branley gives
evidence in accordance with his retraction then the Appellant will be acquitted
in the absence of any other evidence against him so that the Appellant should
have nothing to fear if he is indeed innocent as he is presumed to be.
17. However
a replying Affidavit of Sergeant Gerard Connolly was sworn on the 12th May,
1997 and filed in the Central Office of the High Court on the 19th May, 1997
but again this does not appear to have been opened to the High Court as no
reference is made to it in the formal Order of the 16th December, 1997. That
Affidavit exhibits a lengthy Statement dated the 22nd January, 1997 signed by
Mr. Branley in which he describes the circumstances in which the retraction
came to be sworn and/or signed by him on the 16th December, 1996. While the
Statement makes extremely interesting but also extremely disturbing reading no
doubt that will be for another day in another Court.