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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Boath v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_116 (08 September 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2005/HCJAC_116.html Cite as: [2005] HCJAC 116, [2005] ScotHC HCJAC_116 |
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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY |
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Lord Hamilton Lord Wheatley Lord Macphail
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[2005HCJAC116] Appeal No: XC227/04 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD WHEATLEY in APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION and SENTENCE by PAUL PHILLIP BOATH Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE Respondent: _______ |
Appellant: P. Wheatley, Q.C., Solicitor Advocate J.A. Brown, Solicitor Advocate; Paterson Bell, Kirkcaldy
Respondent:
J. Beckett, Q.C., A.D.; Crown Agent8 September 2005
[1] On 17 December 2003 at Dundee Sheriff Court the appellant was found guilty by a majority verdict of the jury of a charge of culpable and reckless fireraising. The appellant had originally been charged on an indictment which contained the alternative offences of wilful fireraising and culpable and reckless fireraising in the following terms:-"on 21 October 2002 you PAUL PHILLIP BOATH did, in the house then occupied by you, at 95b St. Fillans Road, Dundee set fire to a mattress and other flammable material and the fire took effect thereon and on said house and this you did wilfully and to the danger of the occupants of neighbouring houses;
- or alternatively -
on 21 October 2002 you PAUL PHILLIP BOATH did, in the house then occupied by you, at 95b St. Fillans Road, Dundee, culpably and recklessly set fire to a mattress and other flammable material whereby the fire took effect on said house, all to the danger of the occupants of neighbouring houses."
"THE SHERIFF: Good afternoon, Ladies and Gentlemen. All right, Ladies and Gentlemen, I understand that you have given an indication of having a difficulty. Can I ask your spokesperson to rise, please, until I hear what the difficulty is?
THE FOREMAN OF THE JURY: It was an example that if we have a majority of a decision.
THE SHERIFF: Right.
THE FOREMAN: Is it then that the majority within that - you know, a majority within the majority, if you like?
THE SHERIFF: Right, yes, I follow what you mean. Okay. When I addressed you this morning I suggested to you, I think, that there were really three alternative forms of verdict of guilty, as well as the possible verdicts of not guilty or not proven. The three alternative forms of verdict of guilty are guilty of the first alternative on the indictment as it is set out - and that involves you having to believe beyond a reasonable doubt that Mr Boath started the fire, and started the fire with the intention of setting fire to the flat.
There is a second form of the charge, which involves you having to believe beyond reasonable doubt that Mr Boath started the fire and showed a wilful - sorry, not wilful, showed a culpable and reckless disregard to the consequences of the fire spreading to the flat.
And the third alternative I suggested to you - and I should have said in this case that you would have to delete everything after the words 'flammable material' in the first part of the charge, was that he deliberately set fire to the mattress and the other flammable material, but there was neither the deliberate element of the flat catching fire, nor did you think that the consequences of his actions would necessarily lead, on a reckless basis, to the fire occurring.
Now, there are 15 of you, as you appreciate. Before you can return any particular verdict there must be eight of you in favour of returning that particular verdict, and what I suggested to you this morning was that you start with the most serious alternative, if you like, which is the first charge as it is laid out on the front page of the indictment, that is to say did he wilfully set fire to these items with the intention of setting fire to the flat. If either of you think that he did that, that is eight or more of you think that he did that, then the verdict would be guilty of that first alternative.
If, on the other hand, you cannot get to a situation where at least eight of you favour that decision, you then go on to look at the second alternative, and that is: 'did he deliberately set fire to the mattress and the other flammable material, but without the intention of burning the flat, but equally without having proper regard, sensible regard, to the consequences of setting the fire that he set, so that he could be said to have acted with reckless disregard to those consequences. If eight of you favour that verdict, which is the alternative, then that is what you would convict him of.
The final option, as I suggest to you, is that you find simply that he deliberately set fire to the mattress and other flammable material. If eight or more of you were of that view then you would delete the words in the first charge of the indictment 'and the fire took effect thereon and on said houses, and this you did wilfully, to the danger of the occupants ... (inaudible due to background coughing) ... houses', because you wouldn't be thinking that it took effect on the house.
And to get to that conclusion you would have to be of the view that he set fire to the mattress and the other flammable material deliberately, but he didn't intend that the flat should burn, and it wasn't obvious that setting fire to those items would have the effect of causing the flat to burn.
Now, what I also suggested to you was that if you got into a situation where eight or more of you were of the view that the verdict should be guilty, but there was a dispute amongst you as to exactly what he should be guilty of, then you should go - if you only have two alternatives, you should go for the lesser alternative, because that would involve him being convicted of the lesser charge, and that would take proper regard of the doubt that there must be about the greater charge, given the fact that not eight of you could come to the conclusion that he is guilty of the greater charge.
It is not straightforward, I am sorry. It is not an easy thing to try and set out for you, but I hope that is of some assistance. Okay would you like to retire and continue with your deliberations? And remember what I have said to you before, you can take as much time as you require".