S2 McNulty -v- Ireland & anor [2015] IESC 2 (21 January 2015)


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!



BAILII [Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback]

Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> McNulty -v- Ireland & anor [2015] IESC 2 (21 January 2015)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2015/S2.html
Cite as: [2015] 2 ILRM 269, [2015] IESC 2

[New search] [Help]



Judgment

Title:
McNulty -v- Ireland & anor
Neutral Citation:
[2015] IESC 2
Supreme Court Record Number:
268/2013
High Court Record Number:
2012 5193 P
Date of Delivery:
21/01/2015
Court:
Supreme Court
Composition of Court:
Denham C.J., Murray J., Hardiman J., O'Donnell Donal J., MacMenamin J.
Judgment by:
Murray J.
Status:
Approved
Judgments by
Link to Judgment
Result
Concurring
Denham C.J.
Appeal dismissed - affirm High Court Order
Murray J., Hardiman J., O'Donnell Donal J., MacMenamin J.
Murray J.
Appeal dismissed - affirm High Court Order
Hardiman J., O'Donnell Donal J., MacMenamin J.

Outcome:
Dismiss
___________________________________________________________________________




THE SUPREME COURT


[Appeal No. 268/13]

Denham C.J.
Murray J.
Hardiman J.
O’Donnell J.
MacMenamin J.

      Between/

SAM McNULTY
Appellant


and


IRELAND AND THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
Respondents


and


THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS AND THE IRISH HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
Notice Parties


Judgment delivered on the 21st January, 2015 by Denham C.J.

1. This appeal raises an issue of statutory interpretation.

2. At issue is the meaning of s. 41(3) of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999, as amended, which Act is referred to as “the Act of 1999”.

3. Section 41 of the Act of 1999, provides:-

        “(1) Without prejudice to any provision made by any other enactment or rule of law, a person—
            (a) who (whether inside or outside the State) harms or threatens, menaces or in any other way intimidates or puts in fear another person who is assisting in the investigation by the Garda Síochána of an offence or is a witness or potential witness or a juror or potential juror in proceedings for an offence, or a member of his or her family, or his or her civil partner within the meaning of the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights and Obligations of Cohabitants Act 2010,

            (b) with the intention thereby of causing the investigation or the course of justice to be obstructed, perverted or interfered with, a member of his or her family,

            shall be guilty of an offence.

        (3) In proceedings for an offence under this section, proof to the satisfaction of the court or jury, as the case may be, that the accused did an act referred to in subsection (1)(a) shall be evidence that the act was done with the intention required by subsection (1)(b).”

        (5) A person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable –

            (a) on summary conviction, to a fine not exceeding €2,500 or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or both, and

            (b) on conviction on indictment, to a fine or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 15 years or both.”

4. Persons identified in s. 41(1), i.e. a person assisting in the investigation by the Garda Síochána of an offence, or a witness or potential witness or a juror or potential juror, or a member of his or her family, or his or her civil partner within the meaning of the Civil Partnership and Certain Rights and Obligations of Cohabitants Act, 2010, are referred to in this judgment as a “classified person”.

5. This is an appeal by Mr. McNulty, the plaintiff/appellant, referred to as “the appellant”, from the judgment of the High Court (Gilligan J.) delivered on the 31st May, 2013, [2013] IEHC 357, which rejected the claim that s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999 is repugnant to the provisions of the Constitution or incompatible with the provisions of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Background
6. The appellant is charged that on the 20th November, 2011, in Tallaght, in the District Court area Dublin Metropolitan District, he threatened, menaced, intimidated, put in fear, Edward Jones, a witness in proceedings for an offence with the intention of causing the course of justice to be obstructed, perverted or interfered with, contrary to s. 41(1) and s. 41(5) of the Act of 1999.

7. Edward Jones has been in a relationship with Michelle McNulty, who was married to the appellant for five years from 2004 to 2009.

8. At the time of the alleged offence there was a prosecution pending against the appellant arising out of an assault allegedly perpetrated on Edward Jones on the 17th October, 2010, about which Edward Jones made a complaint to the Garda Síochána. The first charge in respect of this offence was struck out on the 6th November, 2011, and the appellant was re-charged with the offence on the 23rd November, 2011.

9. The appellant brought plenary proceedings seeking a declaration that s. 41 of the Act of 1999 was invalid having regard to Article 38 of the Constitution of Ireland, or that s. 41(3) was invalid having regard to Article 38 of the Constitution. In the alternative, he seeks a declaration pursuant to s. 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights Act, 2003, that s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999 is incompatible with Article 6 of the European Convention on human rights. The appellant also sought a number of ancillary orders.

10. In paragraph 10 of the Statement of Claim the alleged facts are described as follows:-

      “The [appellant] was prosecuted for an alleged assault against his former partner’s current partner, Mr. Edward Jones. This charge was struck out on the 6th November, 2011. The allegation against the [appellant] said to Mr. Jones ‘Come out here and I’ll give you a proper hiding. I didn’t give you enough the last time’. There is no allegation of any intention to pervert the course of justice by such comments. The [appellant] was subsequently recharged and ultimately convicted of the alleged assault, which case is currently under appeal before Dublin Circuit Court.”
11. The respondents, Ireland and the Attorney General, and the first named Notice Party, the Director of Public Prosecutions, in written submissions to this Court, stated that they do not accept that the appellant did not intend to interfere with the course of justice or that threat, menace or words of intimidation are not capable of evidencing such an intention.

The High Court
12. The High Court (Gilligan J.) upheld the constitutionality of the provisions, stating at paras. 38 – 45 that:-

      “38. Section 41(3) of the 1999 Act does not provide, as submitted by the [appellant], that the evidence is conclusive; all it does is provide that the act of harming, threatening, menacing or putting in fear ‘shall be evidence’ that the act was done with the intention required. There is no onus on any court to accept that evidence. There is no reference in the section to the burden of proof altering or the presumption of innocence being set aside. There is nothing in the section that provides for a conclusive situation or that it is incumbent on the judge or jury to accept the evidence.

      39. Further s. 41(3) does not oblige the court to draw any inferences but the court has discretion to do so. As the section stands, it provides for the court to evaluate and assess the significance of the evidence before it. It does not infringe on the accused’s right to the presumption of innocence.

      40. Similarly the Supreme Court in Hardy in dismissing the appeal held:-

      ‘…in the course of a trial for an offence under s. 4, sub-s. 1 of the Explosive Substances Act, 1883, the prosecution remained under an obligation to prove all the elements of the offence beyond a reasonable doubt; the principle that an accused must be tried in due course of law was not infringed by a statutory provision which permitted the drawing of inferences from facts proved beyond a reasonable doubt by the prosecution’.

      41. I accept the submission of Mr. Callanan that the burden of proving, beyond reasonable doubt, remains on the prosecution throughout any action taken under the legislation and s. 41(3) of the 1999 Act merely provides that an accused may have an evidentiary burden to displace where prima facie there is evidence pointing to his guilt.

      42. Section 41(3) of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999 does not discharge the prosecution of the onus to prove the act alleged beyond reasonable doubt. Further, nothing in the section invalidates the right to a trial in due course of law. Hederman J. in Hardy stated:-

      ‘…this analysis complies with our well-established criminal law jurisprudence in regard to having trials in due course of law. That constitutional requirement applies whether the offence is made an offence under a pre or post constitutional enactment. It protects the presumption of innocence; it requires that the prosecution should prove its case beyond all reasonable doubt; but it does not prohibit that, in the course of the case, once certain facts are established, inferences may not be drawn from those facts and I include in that the entitlement to do this by way of documentary evidence. What is kept in place, however, is the essential requirement that at the end of the trial and before a verdict can be entered the prosecution must show that it has proved its case beyond all reasonable doubt.’

      43. It is clear from the decision in Rock that the provisions under s. 41(3) of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999 do not oblige a court to draw inferences – the court retains discretion to do so. The court has an obligation to ensure that no improper or unfair inferences are drawn. I am of the view that there is nothing contained in s. 41(3) of the 1999 Act that would limit this obligation.

      44. Further the court has an inherent obligation to conduct a trial in a manner consistent with the plaintiff’s constitutional rights, which would include allowing him to rebut any evidence offered against him.

      45. On the basis of the contentions submitted on the plaintiff’s behalf, I am not ‘satisfied that s. 41 of the Criminal Justice Act 1999 is incompatible with Article 38 of the Constitution.’”


Notice of Appeal
13. The appellant has brought an appeal against the order and judgment of the High Court, filing eight grounds of appeal, as follows:-
        (i) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in determining that s. 41(3) of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999, is not unconstitutional and/or incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights.

        (ii) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in failing to address the central issue raised by the appellant, namely that the effect of s. 41(3) is to permit the prosecution and conviction of a person for a serious criminal offence without the need for the prosecution to adduce any actual evidence of mens rea.

        (iii) The learned trial judge erred in fact and law in determining that s.41(3) is not mandatory in providing that proof of the matters set out in s.41(1)(a) shall be evidence of the matters set out in s. 41(1)(b) and/or that there is no requirement to treat the same as evidence.

        (iv) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in determining that s. 41(3) does not oblige a court to draw any inferences but the court has discretion to do so. As a matter of law, a trial judge is entitled to draw such inferences as appear reasonable from the evidence, so to read s.41 (3) as merely re-stating this renders the section otiose.

        (v) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in determining that s. 41(3) merely provides that an accused person may have an evidentiary burden to displace where prima facie there is evidence pointing to his guilty in circumstances where the issue raised by the appellant is that the prosecution do have to raise a prima facie case of mens rea in order to secure a conviction. In interpreting this section as merely creating an evidential burden based on a prima facie case, the learned trial judge conflated the actus reus and the mens rea of the offence which is created by statute.

        (vi) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in determining that s. 41 (3) does not discharge the prosecution of proving the act beyond reasonable doubt in circumstances where a conviction is possible in the absence of any prima facie evidence pointing to the intention as specified in s. 41(1)(b), other than that evidence which is created by reason of s. 41(3).

        (vii) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in determining that s. 41(3) does not oblige a court to draw inferences, notwithstanding the mandatory nature of the wording of the section. Further, the learned trial judge erred in holding that the appellant submitted the evidence raised by s. 41(3) was conclusive- the appellant’s submission was that s. 41(3) requires proof of the matters at s. 41(1)(a) to amount to evidence of s. 41(1)(b) thus there is automatically evidence of mens rea once proof of actus reus had been established.

        (viii) The learned trial judge erred in fact and in law in determining that the effect of s.41(3) is rational and/or reasonable and/or proportionate having regard to the appellant’s right to a fair trial.

Submissions on behalf of the appellant
14. The gravamen of the appellant’s case is that s. 41 of the Act of 1999, and in particular subsection (3), discharges the prosecution of its duty to prove the case beyond reasonable doubt. Specifically it was submitted that the prosecution is relieved of the requirement to provide any actual evidence of an intention to pervert or interfere with the course of justice, and that they need only prove that a threat was made to a classified person under s. 41(1) and, without more, they can secure a conviction.

15. It was submitted by the appellant that pursuant to s. 40(3) of the Act of 1999, proof of the actus reus of the threat is by reason thereof evidence of the specific mens rea and, of itself, is capable of amounting to sufficient evidence for a conviction.

16. The appellant submitted that at issue in this case was not a mere evidential burden being placed on the appellant, but the omission of the requirement to prove an essential element of the offence, in this case the mens rea of intention to pervert the course of justice. It was submitted that the section goes far beyond a mere evidential presumption that can be rebutted and in fact discharges the onus to prove half of the offence.

17. The appellant submitted that should the Court not accept the foregoing, and finds that the section creates no more than an evidential presumption, the decisions of O’Leary v. Attorney General [1993] 1 I.R. 254 and Hardy v. Ireland [1994] 2 I.R. 550 are distinguishable from the present case.

18. It was submitted that s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999 amounts to a constitutional interference with the appellant’s right to the presumption of innocence.

Submissions on behalf of the respondents
19. It was submitted by the respondents that s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999, as amended, enjoys a presumption of constitutionality.

20. It was submitted further that s. 41(3) does not discharge the burden of proof placed on the prosecution. The respondents submitted that the impugned provision merely gives a statutory underpinning to the drawing of an inference of an intention to obstruct the course of justice. The respondents submitted that s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999, as amended, provides that proof of the doing by an accused of the act referred to in subsection (1)(a) “shall be evidence” that the act was done with the intention required by subsection (1)(b). It does not, it was submitted, alter or shift the burden of proof required for a successful prosecution.

21. The respondents’ position was that the provision does not remove the need to prove mens rea or the required factual constituents of an offence. It was submitted that where a person knows that a person is a witness or juror or a potential witness or potential juror, and threatens, harms or menaces that person, the fact of the act may be regarded as evidence of an intention to obstruct the course of justice.

22. It was submitted by the respondents that the section does not render a conviction mandatory. It would be sufficient for an accused to raise a reasonable doubt in relation to the required intention to defeat section 41(3).


Decision


The Presumption of Innocence
23. In a criminal trial the burden of proof is on the prosecution to prove all elements of the offence beyond all reasonable doubt. This principle is part of the constitutional protection of the presumption of innocence which is implicit in Article 38.1 of the Constitution, requiring as it does, that no person shall be tried on any criminal charge save in due course of law. As Costello J. stated in O’Leary v. The Attorney General [1993] 1 I.R. 102 at p.107:-
      “…[I]t has been for so long a fundamental postulate of every criminal trial in this country that the accused was presumed to be innocent of the offence with which he was charged that a criminal trial held otherwise than in accordance with this presumption would, prima facie, be one which was not held in due course of law.”
24. Some statutory provisions permit adverse inferences to be drawn from a failure to account for certain matters: Hardy v. Ireland [1994] 2 I.R. 550; O’Leary v. The Attorney General [1995] 1 I.R. 254 and Rock v. Ireland [1997] 3 I.R. 484.

25. The plaintiff in O’Leary v. The Attorney General was convicted of membership of an unlawful organisation pursuant to s. 3(2) of the Offences Against the State (Amendment) Act, 1972, and s. 24 of the Offences Against the State Act, 1939, which provide for the drawing of certain inferences on the basis of particular evidence. The constitutionality of those provisions was unsuccessfully challenged both in the High Court and, on appeal, in this Court. Costello J. in the High Court distinguished a legal burden of proof from an evidential burden of proof. The evidential burden of proof is defined in O’Leary as the burden in a criminal trial placed on the prosecution of “adducing evidence to establish a case against an accused.” Costello J. continued to state at p. 109:-

      “In criminal cases the prosecution discharges this evidential burden by adducing sufficient evidence to raise a ‘prima facie’ case against an accused. It can then be said than an evidential burden has been cast on the accused. But the shifting of the evidential burden does not discharge the legal burden of proof which at all time rests on the prosecution. The accused may elect not to call any evidence and will be entitled to an acquittal if the evidence adduced does not establish his or her guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore if a statute is to be construed as merely shifting the evidential burden no constitutional infringement occurs.

      […]

      [I]f the effect of the statute is that the court must convict an accused should he or she fail to adduce exculpatory evidence then its effect is to shift the legal burden of proof (thus involving a possible breach of the accused’s constitutional rights) whereas if its effect is that notwithstanding its terms the accused may be acquitted even though he calls no evidence because the statute has not discharged the prosecution from establishing the accused’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt then constitutional invalidity could arise.”

26. The finding of the High Court in that case, as to the constitutionality of s. 24 of the Offences Against the State Act, 1939, was unsuccessfully appealed to this Court.

This Court held that the presumption of innocence in a criminal trial was implicit in the requirements of Article 38 of the Constitution. Examining whether the terms of s. 24 of the Act of 1939 breached the principle of the presumption of innocence, the Court first applied the principles as laid down in East Donegal Co-Operative Livestock Marts Ltd. v. The Attorney General [1970] I.R. 317, i.e. the presumption of constitutionality in relation to the statute and that a statute shall not be invalid where it is possible to construe it in accordance with the Constitution. Construing the section accordingly, the Court in O’Leary held that possession of an incriminating document amounted to evidence, rather than proof, of membership of an unlawful organisation, and that the probative value of such possession may be undermined in a number of ways, including cross-examination. Thus, while the evidentiary burden shifted to the accused, the legal burden did not, and the presumption of innocence was not displaced.

27. O’Flaherty J. in O’Leary v. The Attorney General [1995] 1 I.R. 254 at p. 266 stated:-

      Courts, whether comprising a judge sitting with a jury or a judge or judges only, will not act as automatons in the assessment of evidence… [T]he court must always approach its task in a responsible manner and have proper regard to the paramount place that the presumption of innocence occupies in any criminal trial.” (emphasis added)
28. The constitutionality of provisions which engage the presumption of innocence was also considered by this Court in Hardy v. Ireland [1994] 2 I.R. 550. At issue in Hardy was whether s.4 of the Explosive Substances Act, 1883, which provided that an accused person may be convicted on proof of certain facts “unless he can show that he made it or had it in his possession, or under his control for a lawful object” was valid having regard the provisions of the Constitution.

29. The Court held that the prosecution still had to prove the case against the accused beyond reasonable doubt. It was held that under the section the accused had to have the substance in his possession knowingly; and in such circumstances as to give rise to a reasonable suspicion that he did not have it in his possession for a lawful object which meant that there is an onus on the prosecution to then prove that the accused could not show that the substance was in the accused’s possession for a lawful object.

30. The Court held at pp. 564-565 that:-

      “Once those ingredients are in place, it is still open to the accused to demonstrate in any one of a number of ways, such as by cross- examination, submissions or by giving evidence, that a prima facie situation pointing to his guilt should not be allowed to prevail.

      […]

      [T]his analysis complies with our well-established criminal law jurisprudence in regard to having trials in due course of law… [That constitutional requirement] protects the presumption of innocence; it requires that the prosecution should prove its case beyond all reasonable doubt; but it does not prohibit that, in the course of the case, once certain facts are established, inferences may not be drawn from those facts… What is kept in place, however, is the essential requirement that at the end of the trial and before a verdict can be entered the prosecution must show that it has proved its case beyond all reasonable doubt.”

31. In Hardy the High Court and Supreme Court, on appeal, rejected the contention that the section was unconstitutional, and found that the section merely placed an evidential burden on the accused and the legal burden remained, at all times, on the State to prove matters beyond reasonable doubt.

32. This Court has regard also to its earlier decision in Rock v. Ireland [1997] 3 I.R. 484 where the constitutionality of ss.18 and 19 of the Criminal Justice Act, 1984, was upheld. Those sections permitted a court to draw inferences from the failure or refusal of an accused to account for the presence of certain objects, substances or marks which a member of An Garda Síochána believed may be attributable to participation in the commission of the offence for which he was arrested. The plaintiff in Rock contended that ss.18 and 19 of the Act of 1984 infringed on his constitutional rights to silence and the presumption of innocence.

33. The Court noted that the wording of the sections were such that it was not mandatory that a court draw inferences from a failure or refusal to account, rather it was discretionary. The Court continued, at p. 497, to state:-

      “In deciding what inferences may properly be drawn from the accused person’s failure or refusal, the court is obliged to act in accordance with the principles of constitutional justice and having regard to an accused person’s entitlement to a fair trial must be regarded as being under a constitutional obligation to ensure that no improper or unfair inferences are drawn or permitted to be drawn from such failure or refusal.”
The Court was satisfied that the sections did not interfere with an accused person’s right to the presumption of innocence or the obligation on the prosecution to establish guilt beyond all reasonable doubt. It held that the burden of proof remained on the prosecution and was not affected by the provisions of the sections in issue, rather the sections “merely provide a factor which may be adduced as evidence in the course of a trial.”

34. Hamilton C.J. stated, at p. 498, that:-

      “If inferences are properly drawn, such inferences amount to evidence only; they are not to be taken as proof. A person may not be convicted of the offence solely on the basis of inferences that may be properly drawn from his failure to account; such inferences may only be used as corroboration of any other evidence in relation to which the failure or refusal is material. The inferences drawn may be shaken in many ways, by cross-examination, by submission, by evidence or by the circumstances of the case.”
35. In this appeal the appellant seeks to rely on the decision in C.C. v. Ireland [2006] 4 IR 1, where this Court struck down as unconstitutional a statutory rape offence, s. 1(1) of the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act, 1935, on the basis of the absence of mens rea and the unavailability of a defence of mistake as to the victim’s age. The applicant in C.C. submitted that the statutory provision was inconsistent with his right to a trial in due course of law as enshrined in Article 38 of the Constitution in that it deprived him of the defence of mistake, or of mistake on reasonable grounds. The section, it was contended, legislated for a situation where no “guilty mind” or mental guilt was required and thus no defence could be proffered.

36. Hardiman J., delivering the judgment of the Court, held that the section contained “no balance” in so far as it wholly removed the mental element, and expressly criminalised those who were mentally innocent. He stated, at pp.78 – 79, that:-

      “[…] To criminalise in a serious way a person who is mentally innocent is indeed ‘to inflict a grave injury on that person’s dignity and sense of worth’ and to treat him as ‘little more than a means to an end’… It appears to us that this, in turn, constitutes a failure by the State in its laws to respect, defend and vindicate the rights to liberty and to good name of the person so treated, contrary to the State’s obligations under Article 40 of the Constitution.”
It was held by the Court that a statutory provision which provides for absolute liability, such as provided for in s. 1(1) of the Act of 1935, which criminalised and exposed a maximum sentence of life imprisonment without mental guilt, is inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution.

37. The appellant submitted that this case falls to be considered in light of the decision of this Court in C.C. as discussed above, and that s. 41 of the Act of 1999, which provides for the conviction of a person for the offence of intimidation of a witness where there is evidence of a threat being made to a witness, is similar.

38. However, the decision in C.C. can be distinguished from this appeal. The statutory provision considered in C.C., provided for the offence of statutory rape in s. 1(1) of the Act of 1935. First, the unusual nature of the offence in C.C. was emphasised by the Court, where it quoted, at p. 76, Professor Thomas O’Malley in his observance of the discriminatory effect of that particular provision against males, in that a male was guilty even if a female clearly consented and there was a genuine mistake as to age. Second, in C.C. the offence in question was absolute in its nature, providing no defence to an accused person once the actus reus was established. The Court in C.C. was satisfied that absolute liability, convicting an accused person in the absence of mens rea, as was provided for in s. 1(1) of the Act of 1935, was inconsistent with the provisions of the Constitution. Finally, the Court found that there was no balance in the provision in issue which removed the mental element.

39. However, the effect of the section in this case is different, and is that, once an act as provided for in s. 41(1)(a) of the Act of 1999 is proven, it shall, in accordance with s. 41(3), be evidence of the intention required under s. 41(1) of the Act of 1999.

40. As stated by the Earl of Halsbury in The Laws of England by the (Butterworth & Co., 1910) at p. 419:-

      “…..Evidence is the foundation of proof, with which it must not be confounded. Proof is that which leads to a conclusion as to the truth or falsity of alleged facts which are the subject of inquiry. Evidence, if accepted and believed, results in proof, but it is not necessarily proof of itself…”

Presumption of Constitutionality
41. Section 41 of the Act of 1999, enjoys a presumption of constitutionality. That is the first principle to apply in construing the section.

Double Construction Rule
42. The second principle to apply is the double construction rule. In the case of McDonald v. Bord na gCon [1965] I.R. 217, Walsh J. outlined the rule of double construction, and at p. 230 stated:-

      “[…][B]eing an act of the Oireachtas, is presumed to be constitutional until the contrary is clearly established. One practical effect of this presumption is that if in respect of any provision or provisions of the Act two or more constructions are reasonably open, one of which is constitutional and the other or others are unconstitutional, it must be presumed that the Oireachtas intended only the constitutional construction and a Court called upon to adjudicate upon the constitutionality of the statutory provision should uphold the constitutional construction. It is only when there is no construction reasonably open which is not repugnant to the Constitution that the provision should be held to be repugnant.”
Thus, under the rule of double construction, where two or more interpretations of a legislative provision are reasonably open, the courts will favour a construction which is in accordance with the Constitution.

Knowledge
43. In construing s. 41, the knowledge of an accused is a key factor. The appellant submitted that the effect of s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999 is that proof of the actus reus alone is sufficient to establish the required intention for the purposes of a conviction pursuant to section 41(1). It was submitted that the effect of the provision therefore is that the prosecution need not establish the necessary mens rea which, in turn, criminalises the mentally innocent.

44. However, the respondents conceded at the oral hearing that the prosecution would have to prove that an accused had knowledge that an alleged victim was a witness or potential witness or was assisting in the investigation of the crime, in order for the proof of actus reus to constitute evidence of the necessary mens rea under section 41(3).

45. In this analysis The People v. Murray [1977] I.R. 360 is relevant. In Murray the Court considered the statutory offence of capital murder, and analysed whether the section required knowledge or recklessness on the part of the accused before such a person could be guilty of the offence of capital murder. At p. 421 Kenny J. stated:-

      “….[T]he prosecution had to prove, in order to justify a verdict of capital murder, that the appellant Marie Murray knew or suspected that Garda Reynolds was a member of the Garda Síochána who was acting in the course of his duty, or that she was recklessly indifferent as to whether he was or was not. It is a general rule of our law that the act itself is not criminal unless it is accompanied by a guilty mind. The Oireachtas may make acts crimes although the accused was not aware that he was committing an offence: these are usually called crimes of strict liability. But, to effect this, clear language must be used. In the absence of such an indication, the general rule is that the guilty mind of or criminal intent must be established in relation to each ingredient of the offence. In this case the necessary intent involved proof that the appellant Marie Murray knew that Garda Reynolds was a member of the Garda Síochána acting in the course of his duty, or that she knew facts from which she could infer or advert to this or that she was recklessly indifferent as to whether he was a member of the Garda Síochána or not…” (emphasis added)
46. It was found that there was no evidence that the appellant, Marie Murray, knew that the victim was a member of An Garda Síochána, or that the appellant knew anything from which she could infer that he was. Further, in the circumstances of the case, the appellant could not be held to have been recklessly indifferent as to whether the deceased was a member of An Garda Síochána.

47. As in Murray, the necessary intent required by s. 41(1) of the Act of 1999, involves proof that the accused had knowledge that the alleged victim was a classified person as identified in s. 41(1) of the Act of 1999. If an accused person did not know that an alleged victim was a classified person, then it follows that an act harming or threatening, menacing or in any other way intimidating a person, or putting in fear another person, can not be taken as evidence of the mens rea as provided for under s. 41(3) for the purposes of establishing an offence under section 41(1).

48. It is for the prosecution to establish that an accused had knowledge, that the person who they harmed, threatened, menaced or in any way intimidated, was a classified person, in proceedings for an offence, before the act under s. 41(1)(a) can amount to evidence of an intention to obstruct the course of justice under s. 43(3), for the purposes of fulfilling the requirement of mens rea required under s. 41(1)(b).

49. Thus, the prosecution in this case would have to prove that the appellant knew that Edward Jones was assisting the Garda Síochána in the investigation of the assault charged at the time of the alleged intimidation offence, or that he knew facts from which he could infer or advert to this, or was reckless. This would be part of the prosecution’s case as to mens rea under section 41(1)(b). It follows that, if knowledge of an accused cannot be established by the prosecution, then proof of the act of intimidation cannot amount to evidence of the required intention as provided for under section 41(3).

50. Consequently, on this construction, I am satisfied that s. 41 of the Act of 1999 is constitutional. The presumption of innocence remains, and the burden of proving the prosecution case beyond all reasonable doubt remains in the operation of s. 41 of the Act of 1999, including section 41(3).

The European Convention on Human Rights
51. The appellant sought, in the alternative, a declaration pursuant to s. 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights Act, 2003, that s. 41(3) is incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights. In particular, it was contended that section is incompatible with fair trial rights protected under Article 6. The appellant argued that the impugned provision is disproportionate and that it is unreasonable to infer an intention to intimidate a witness from the fact of a threat made to such person.

52. The appellant relied on case law from the European Court of Human Rights, (referred to as “the ECtHR”), including its decision in Salabiaku v. France (1991) 13 EHRR 379 in which case a presumption of criminal liability laid down in the French Customs Code for a person in possession of prohibited goods was held to be compatible with the Convention. The ECtHR held at para. 28 that:-

      Presumptions of fact or of law operate in every legal system. Clearly, the Convention does not prohibit such presumptions in principle. It does, however, require the Contracting States to remain within certain limits in this respect as regards criminal law. If, as the Commission would appear to consider, paragraph 2 of Article 6 merely laid down a guarantee to be respected by the courts in the conduct of legal proceedings, its requirements would in practice overlap with the duty of impartiality imposed in paragraph 1. Above all, the national legislature would be free to strip the trial court of any genuine power of assessment and deprive the presumption of innocence of its substance, if the words ‘according to law’ were construed exclusively with reference to domestic law. Such a situation could not be reconciled with the object and purpose of Article 6, which, by protecting the right to a fair trial and in particular the right to be presumed innocent, is intended to enshrine the fundamental principle of the rule of law.

      Article 6(2) does not therefore regard presumptions of fact or of law provided for in the criminal law with indifference. It requires States to confine them within reasonable limits which take into account the importance of what is at stake and maintain the rights of the defence.” (emphasis added)

53. Article 392(1) of the Customs Code provided that once the prosecuting authority had established possession of ‘smuggled goods’, a person in possession of same was ‘deemed liable for the offence.’ The Court held that possession was a finding of fact, and notwithstanding that a person in possession was presumed liable for an offence, an accused person was not “without means of defence.”

54. The domestic courts were held to “have exercised their power ‘on the basis of the evidence by parties before [them]’.” They inferred from the “fact of possession a presumption which was not subsequently rebutted by any evidence of an event responsibility for which could not be attributed to the perpetrator of the offence or which he would have been unable to avoid.” It was for these reasons, the ECtHR held that the domestic courts had not applied Article 392(1) of the French Customs Code in a manner which conflicted with the presumption of innocence.

55. I do not find that the ECtHR jurisprudence in Salabiaku to be of assistance in the circumstances of this case. Specifically, I do not consider that this case advances the appellant’s appeal.

56. The appellant also relied upon the more recent decision of the ECtHR in Telfner v. Austria (2002) 34 EHRR 207. In Telfner the ECtHR found that the requirement that, notwithstanding that the prosecution had not established a convincing prima facie case against the accused, that he provide an explanation for the alleged offence, violated the guarantee of the presumption of innocence under Article 6(2) of the ECHR. The ECtHR held at paras. 15 - 16 that:-

      “… [A]s a general rule, it is for the national courts to assess the evidence before them, while it is for the Court to ascertain the proceedings considered as a whole were fair, which in case of criminal proceedings includes the observance of the presumption of innocence. Article 6(2) requires, inter alia, that when carrying out their duties, the members of the court should not start with the preconceived idea that the accused has committed the offence charged; the burden of proof is on the prosecution, and any doubt should benefit the accused… Thus, the presumption of innocence will be infringed where the burden of proof is shifted from the prosecution to the defence

      It is true, as the Government pointed out, that legal presumptions are not in principle incompatible with Article 6; nor is the drawing of inferences from the accused’s silence.” (emphasis added)

The ECtHR was not satisfied, however, that the case before it concerned the application of a legal presumption of fact or of law, nor that the domestic courts could legitimately draw inferences from the applicant’s silence. It was held that the requirement that the applicant provide an explanation for the alleged offence, in the absence of the establishment of a convincing prima facie case by the prosecution, constituted a shift of the burden of proof from the prosecution to the defence.

57. Telfner, however, may be distinguished from the circumstances of the present case. In Telfner, Austria sought to uphold a conviction on the basis of an uncorroborated police report, which stated that the applicant was the main driver of a car involved in an accident and that he had not been home on the night of same. This can be distinguished however from the situation created under the s. 41(3), whereby proof of the act of intimidation etc., of a classified person is required before it will constitute evidence of intent under the provision. The establishment of the actus reus is clearly required under the provision. In this case, unlike in Telfner, the prosecution have to establish that an accused has committed the act in question. In Telfner the prima facie case against the applicant had not been established, and this constituted a shift of the burden of proof from the prosecution to the defence, which in turn was found to constitute a violation of Article 6(2) of the ECHR.

58. The High Court dismissed the appellant’s case brought in relation to the declaration sought under the European Convention on Human Rights Act, 2003. In relation to Telfner the learned High Court judge held:-

      “With regard to the submissions made in respect of Telfner, I am satisfied that case concerned the legitimacy of a court drawing inferences from an applicant’s silence. No such concern in raised in the present case. Section 41(3) of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999 does not provide that a court can draw inferences from silence. As I stated previously, the only inferences a court may make under s. 41(3) are those pertaining to certain facts which are proved beyond a reasonable doubt to the court.”
I would endorse this analysis.

Conclusion
59. In conclusion, I am satisfied that s. 41(3) of the Act of 1999, as amended, is not repugnant to the provisions of the Constitution. I am satisfied also that there should not be a declaration pursuant to s. 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights Act, 2003, as to any incompatibility of s. 41 of the Act of 1999 with Article 6 of the ECHR. Consequently, I would dismiss the appeal.


Judgment of Murray J. delivered on the 21st day of January, 2015

1. I concur with the judgment of the Chief Justice and agree that this appeal should be dismissed. There are some further observations which I wish to make in relation to the interpretative issue which arose in this case.

2. Any statutory provision which provides that proof of one fact in a criminal trial shall be evidence of another and distinct fact, which is also an ingredient of an offence which the prosecution must establish, warrants careful scrutiny by the courts.

3. The statutory provision in issue in this case is s.41 of the Criminal Justice Act, 1999, and provides:

“(1) Without prejudice to any provision made by any other enactment or rule of law, a person -

4. As can be seen, sub-section 3 of s.41 specifically provides that proof to the satisfaction of the court or jury that the accused did an act referred to in sub-section 1(a) shall be evidence that the act was done with the intention of thereby causing an investigation or the course of justice to be obstructed, perverted or interfered with.

5. For the purpose of respecting the constitutional guarantee of due process in a criminal trial, and in particular two of the underlying fundamental principles, namely, the presumption of innocence and the discharge of the onus of proof placed on the prosecution, there must be limits to which a statute can specify that proof of one fact is evidence of another fact.

6. Certainly, in criminal trials, it is not necessary for the prosecution to adduce direct evidence of every particular fact which it seeks to establish beyond reasonable doubt. A court or jury is entitled to infer from one established fact the existence of another fact which is essential to establishing the accused’s guilt, provided the inference is one which may properly and rationally be inferred in the circumstances of the case. In principle, the Oireachtas may provide, by statute, that a fact or certain facts proved in a criminal trial may be evidence of another fact or facts. However, it would never be permissible to have a rule of law, in a statute or otherwise, which arbitrarily deemed proof of a particular fact to be evidence of another fact, when there was no reasonable connection between the two. In other words, any statutory provision which declares that proof of one fact shall be evidence as to the existence of another fact, the former fact must be reasonably capable of giving rise to a conclusion that the latter fact may be inferred.

7. Notwithstanding the provisions of sub-section 3 of Section 41, the burden of proof placed on the prosecution remains unaffected. It is clear that a proper interpretation of s.41, as explained by the Chief Justice in her judgment, and indeed not disputed by the State, is that the prosecution must establish, in respect of an offence under the section, all the elements referred to in sub-section 1(a) which include that he or she intimidated or put in fear a particular person and, to the knowledge of the accused, such a person was assisting in the investigation of an offence by the gardai, or was a witness or a juror, or potentially so, in proceedings for an offence. In my view, once those facts are established, and in particular the knowledge of the accused in respect of those facts, it is neither irrational nor arbitrary to provide that proof of those facts be treated as evidence that an act was done with the intention of causing an investigation or the course of justice to be obstructed or interfered with. I am satisfied that this is a conclusion that can be made on a broad but objective consideration of the nexus between the facts proved and the fact to be inferred in this case. It is not necessary, for the purposes of this case, to consider whether there are more precise parameters which might be applied in order to determine, in a particular case, whether a sufficiently reasonable nexus exists between a fact proven and a fact to be inferred on foot of a statutory provision of this nature.

8. I arrive at this conclusion in the context of the manner in which the section in issue falls to be applied and I refer to the principal considerations in this respect. The section provides no more than that proof of a relevant act “shall be evidence that the act was done” with the intention to obstruct the course of justice, or as the case may be. It is always a matter for the court or a jury to decide what weight, if any, should be attached to any evidence which is tendered before it. It is no different as regards matters which are to be considered as evidence by virtue of a statutory provision such as s.41 of the Act of 1999. What weight is to be attached to such evidence will depend on the facts and circumstances established in a particular case.

9. Insofar as it was so contended on behalf of the appellant, sub-section 3 does not at all mean that an accused would invariably be placed in a position of having to give rebuttal evidence. In O’Leary v. The Attorney General [1995] 1 I.R. 254 this Court found that s.24 of the Offences Against the State Act, 1939 was compatible with the Constitution. That section provided, inter alia, that proof to the satisfaction of the court that an incriminating document relating to an unlawful organisation was found in the possession of a person “shall, without more, be evidence until the contrary is proved that such person was a member of the said organisation …”. Of course, the section in this case does not even go so far as to include the phrase “until the contrary is proved”. Certain dicta of O’Flaherty J. are pertinent to the issue in this case, and, in one of them, at page 265 of the Report, he stated:

      “It is clear that such possession is to amount to evidence only; it is not to be taken as proof and so the probative value of the possession of such a document might be shaken in many ways: by cross-examination; by pointing to the mental capacity of the accused or the circumstances by which he came to be in possession of the document, to give some examples. The important thing to note about the section is that there is no mention of the burden of proof changing, much less that the presumption of innocence is to be set to one side at any stage.”
10. The essence of this dictum can be applied to the interpretation and application of s.41 of the Act of 1999. For example, an accused might well establish by way of cross-examination that any threat, which had been made against a person who was a witness or a juror had been made in circumstances or for reasons which had nothing to do, or was unlikely to have anything to do, with the status of such a person as a witness or juror. Moreover, there is nothing in the section which would affect the discretion of a judge to direct a jury to find an accused not guilty at the conclusion of the prosecution case where satisfied that no reasonable jury could convict on the evidence tendered having regard to the circumstances of the case. Of course, if the prosecution do establish a prima facie case, it is, as always, solely a matter for an accused to decide whether he or she should give or call evidence by way of defence. That is a situation which arises in the ordinary course of a criminal trial and in accordance with due process.

11. Having regard to the foregoing considerations and the reasons set out in the judgment of the Chief Justice, I agree that the appeal should be dismissed.




BAILII: Copyright Policy | Disclaimers | Privacy Policy | Feedback | Donate to BAILII
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/2015/S2.html