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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Her Majesty's Advocate v. L. [2007] ScotHC HCJ_16 (28 November 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJ_16.html
Cite as: 2008 GWD 1-7, [2007] HCJ 16, 2008 SCCR 51, [2007] ScotHC HCJ_16

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HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJ16

 

OPINION BY LORD HODGE

 

in the cause

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

 

against

 

 

L

 

ญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญญ________________

 

 

AD: McConnachie, Q.C.

Counsel: Moir, Advocate

 

8 November 2007

 

Background

[1] This was a submission of no case to answer under section 97 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 in a case in which the accused faced a charge of rape. Unusually, the Crown, while submitting that there was corroboration of the complainer's lack of consent and the mens rea of the accused from a number of sources, invited the Court also to rule on whether the evidence of the complainer's distress alone was sufficient corroboration. I repelled the submission for the reasons set out below and at the request of the Crown explain my reasoning for doing so in this opinion. In the event the jury unanimously found the charge not proven.

 

The evidence

[2] The complainer's account was that she, her boyfriend and his cousin purchased alcoholic drink and visited the house of her boyfriend's uncle in the course of a Saturday evening in August 2006. During the late evening the complainer drank a bottle of Buckfast wine and later, after her boyfriend and his cousin had gone to a family home nearby to sleep leaving her in the company of the accused, she drank about four glasses of vodka. She said that she had been drunk and had fallen asleep on the sofa in the livingroom of the accused's house. Thereafter she woke to find that the accused had removed her belt and lower clothing and that he was having sexual intercourse with her on the sofa. She asked him what he was doing and sought to get up off the sofa. He desisted and withdrew from her. She left the house and returned to her boyfriend's family home nearby in great distress. She told her boyfriend what had happened. She gave evidence that before she fell asleep she had received a text message from her boyfriend telling her not to stay up too late. She discovered the next day that she had left her telephone in the house of the accused when she left. She also gave evidence that whenever she had sexual intercourse with her boyfriend, he took the precaution of using a condom.

[3] The accused admitted that sexual intercourse had occurred but asserted that it had been consensual and that the complainer had willingly participated in it. When she changed her mind, he had stopped immediately and allowed her to leave his house. He accepted that when having sex with the complainer he had not used any protection.

[4] The complainer's boyfriend gave evidence. He spoke of visiting his uncle with his girlfriend and his cousin some time after nine pm and of them drinking and listening to music for between four and five hours. He and his cousin left at about 3 am because they were tired. The complainer wanted to stay on for a while to party and he was under the impression that other people had been invited to the house and were visit shortly. On reaching home, he sent he complainer a text message to come home soon. Then he fell asleep to be woken by the complainer who was crying and in a hysterical state. She told him that she had fallen asleep and had woken up to find his uncle having sex with her. The boyfriend was furious. He telephoned his mother and his aunt and on the following morning contacted the police. He confirmed that when he and his girlfriend had sexual intercourse he always took the precaution of wearing a condom.

[5] There was evidence that the complainer's boyfriend sent her the text message at 3.20 am on the Sunday morning and evidence from a police officer of the distressed state of the complainer when she visited the boyfriend's mother's house at about 12.30 pm on that day.

 

The Crown's submission

[6] The Advocate Depute submitted that, the fact of sexual intercourse not being in dispute, there was sufficient corroboration of the complainer's account from which the jury could infer both that the complainer did not consent because she was asleep and that the accused had the necessary mens rea for rape. In what he presented as a fall-back to his primary position that the complainer's distress alone was sufficient corroboration he founded on the following evidence:

(i) the quantity of alcohol consumed by the complainer before the sexual incident;

(ii) the timing of the incident, at some time after 3.20 am on the Sunday morning;

(iii) more generally the extent of the drinking which had occurred late at night causing the parties involved to fall asleep: the accused in his police interview said that he had fallen asleep on the sofa before the sexual incident and the complainer's boyfriend had fallen asleep as soon as he got to his mother's house;

(iv) the complainer's distress shortly after the incident and the next morning;

(v) the complainer had left behind her mobile phone, which suggested that she left in a hurry;

(vi) the evidence, which the Advocate Depute submitted was particularly significant, that the complainer and her boyfriend always engaged in "safe sex" while on this occasion the sexual intercourse was unprotected;

(vii) the age gap between the complainer and the accused;

(viii) the fact that the accused was the uncle of the complainer's boyfriend; and

(ix) the evidence that, while the accused had flirted with the complainer in the past, there had been no prior history of sexual intercourse between them.

These, he submitted, supported or confirmed the complainer's evidence that she did not consent because she was asleep. If she had been asleep, that would have been apparent to the accused who would either have known that he did not have her consent or have been uncaring whether or not he had that consent when he had sexual intercourse with her.

[7] The Advocate Depute also advanced as his primary submission the more ambitious proposition that I should extend the existing law by holding that the evidence of the complainer's distress alone was sufficient to corroborate her evidence that she was asleep when the sexual encounter occurred. Her being asleep, he submitted, established both that she did not consent and that the accused had the necessary mens rea. He referred me to McKearney v H M Advocate 2004 SLT 739, Cinci v H M Advocate 2004 SLT 748, Fox v H M Advocate 1998 SLT 335, Yates v H M Advocate 1977 SLT (Notes) 42, Gracey v H M Advocate 1987 SCCR 260, Smith v Lees 1997 SCCR 139, Lord Advocate's Reference (No 1 of 2001) 2002 SLT 466, Spendiff v H M Advocate 2005 SCCR 522, Wright v H M Advocate 2005 SCCR 780, Gordon v H M Advocate 2004 SCCR 641 and RWP v H M Advocate 2005 SCCR 764.

[8] In summary, the Advocate Depute observed that the definition of the crime of rape had been altered by the Court in Lord Advocate's Reference (No 1 of 2001) by removing the need for the Crown to establish the use of force to overcome the will of a complainer but that the Court had upheld the rule that evidence from third parties of a complainer's distress shortly after the event could corroborate her lack of consent and the use of force to overcome her will: Yates v H M Advocate, Gracey v H M Advocate and Smith v Lees. That being the case, there was no logical reason why evidence of such distress could not corroborate a complainer's account that she did not consent because she was asleep and thus also establish the mens rea of the accused. He referred to the Scottish Law Commission's Discussion Paper, "Rape and Other Sexual Offences" (DP No. 131) in which the Commission discussed corroboration by distress ( in Part 7) and stated (at paragraph 7.32):

"If de recenti distress can corroborate allegations of force and therefore absence of consent and the inference of the accused's mens rea, it is difficult to see how it cannot corroborate the complainer's evidence that she was incapable of consenting (because she was asleep or insensible through drink or drugs) or had expressly refused consent and the consequent inference that the accused knew that she was not consenting when he had sexual intercourse with her".

The Advocate Depute did not seek a determination that distress corroborated an express refusal of consent; he invited me to extend the law by holding that distress by itself was capable of corroborating a complainer's account that she was asleep and thereby incapable of consent.

 

The defence submission

[9] Mr Moir submitted that while there was evidence which a jury could interpret in a way which would corroborate the lack of consent of the complainer, there was not sufficient evidence of the accused's mens rea. Evidence of distress, the use of prophylactics in the complainer's relationship with her boyfriend but not on this occasion, and the absence of any prior sexual relationship between the complainer and the accused might support the absence of consent but did not tell anything about the state of mind of the accused. He analysed each of the other circumstances upon which the Crown relied as corroboration and submitted that individually and together they lacked the cogency of the evidence in cases such as Spendiff and Wright to allow the jury to treat them as confirming or supporting the complainer's contention that she was asleep.

[10] Mr Moir invited me to reject the Crown's primary position. He submitted that it was wrong to assume that the law was based entirely on logic so that if the co-existence of two rules was illogical, they could not both be the law. He accepted that the law as it stands is that, where a woman alleges a rape involving the use of force and there is separate corroborated evidence that sexual intercourse has occurred, evidence of her distress can corroborate both the absence of consent and the use of force: Yates and Smith v Lees. But he submitted that as a matter of policy the law had drawn the line there and that there were a number of dicta to demonstrate that: McKearney, Cinci and Spendiff. The Crown were seeking to extend the law beyond the existing rule that evidence of distress could corroborate a complainer's account of a distressing event (Smith v Lees) to use such evidence to establish the mens rea of the accused by corroborating the complainer's account that she was asleep. While that may be logical, it was not the law.

 

Discussion

[11] I was satisfied that there was a case to answer having regard to the evidence summarised in the Crown's fall-back position. When considering a section 97 submission the court has to decide whether the Crown evidence taken at its highest is legally sufficient to allow a properly directed jury to convict the accused: Renton & Brown para 18.75.1. In other words, the question at this stage is not whether the evidence is to be accepted, but whether there is no evidence which if accepted would entitle the jury to convict: Williamson v Wither 1981 SCCR 214.

[12] In Fox v H M Advocate the Court made it clear that for circumstantial evidence to be available as corroboration it had to be capable of supporting or confirming direct evidence of an essential fact or essential facts. It was the task of the jury to decide whether they accepted the direct evidence and whether they interpreted the potentially corroborative evidence as supporting or confirming that direct evidence. In that case both Lord Kirkwood and Lord Gill drew a distinction between evidence which was capable of supporting and confirming the direct evidence and evidence which was merely consistent with the direct evidence (p.137 E-F and p.147 C-D respectively). They both referred to Lord McCluskey's opinion in Smith v Lees (at p.174 C-D) where he stated that evidence which was merely consistent with the victim's story but shed no light on the criminal event could not amount to corroboration. Lord Coulsfield in Fox, while demurring to the idea that each source of circumstantial evidence required to be incriminating in itself, stated that the proper approach, set out in Hume's Commentaries (pp.382-383), was to look for a concurrence of testimonies (p.183F). It appears from those opinions in Fox that while circumstantial evidence can be corroborative where it is not more consistent with the direct evidence led by the Crown than with a competing account by the accused, there must be more than mere consistency. The potentially corroborative circumstantial evidence must be capable of pointing to the essential fact or facts and thus of supporting or confirming the direct evidence on those facts.

[13] I considered that the nine pieces of evidence which I have listed in paragraph 6 above were in combination capable of corroborating the complainer's account that she did not consent to sexual intercourse because she was asleep and that the accused must have been aware that she did not consent or was at the very least uncaring as to whether he had her consent or not. In particular items (iv) and (vi) to (ix) could support her account that she did not consent and items (i) to (v) could support her evidence that she was asleep when the sexual encounter began and when the accused penetrated her. While some of the items listed, and in particular items (iii) and (v) might carry very little weight, the question of the weight to be attached to individual pieces of evidence was one for the jury, who were to be directed to consider all the evidence. On that basis I repelled the submission of no case to answer.

[14] I note that the Court has in several cases accepted evidence of distress as part of the circumstantial evidence in a case which was capable of corroborating a complainer's account that she was asleep when sexual intercourse occurred. In Fox the Court found potential corroboration of the complainer's account that she was asleep in circumstantial evidence other than distress (p.119 B-C). The Court in Spendiff also reached a similar conclusion (paragraph 22) but opined that evidence of distress could be an important element in the totality of circumstantial evidence in such cases from which the mens rea of rape could be inferred (paragraph 27). In Wright v H M Advocate the Court, in upholding a conviction of rape, held that there was sufficient circumstantial evidence that the complainer was asleep, that she therefore had not consented to sexual intercourse and by inevitable inference the accused must have known that. In that case the circumstantial evidence to support the complainer's account was that she retired to bed in the early evening feeling unwell and took medication and alcohol. Thereafter the blinds in her bedroom remained closed and the room was dark. The complainer was wearing a night gown and the incident occurred after 11 pm. After the incident the complainer, who was wearing her night gown and in considerable distress, went to a neighbour's house, where her husband was, and asked him to come home quickly. The Court treated the evidence of the complainer's distress as an important element of the whole picture.

[15] In many cases in which a complainer gives evidence that she was asleep when sexual intercourse occurred there will be circumstantial evidence such as the time of day when the event occurred and her prior behaviour, sometimes including the ingestion of drink or drugs, which together with distress may be capable of creating a picture from which a jury can properly infer that she was asleep and that the accused had the necessary mens rea. It is in my opinion unlikely that there will be many cases where the only independent evidence available to the Crown is evidence of distress.

[16] It is not necessary for me to decide whether distress alone is capable of supporting or confirming a complainer's account that she was asleep. While the Scottish Law Commission in their discussion of the issue relied on logic to reason from the legal rule in the context of forcible rape (in Yates and Smith v Lees) that if distress corroborates the broad proposition of force, it should also be available to corroborate sleep and express refusals of consent, logic may not hold the answer, as Mr Moir submitted. His submission put me in mind of the celebrated statement of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes (in his first lecture in "The Common Law") that "the life of the law has not been logic: it has been experience".

[17] The Crown, correctly, did not contend that distress could corroborate all of a complainer's account of a sexual incident. The law sets limits on what distress can corroborate and the Court has held that it could not support or confirm evidence that a particular form of sexual activity had taken place: Smith v Lees at p.155E. If logic were to take the law from the position in Yates that distress can corroborate the broad proposition of force to a position where distress on its own could corroborate evidence of sleep, it might also take it to the position that distress could corroborate a complainer's evidence of an express refusal of consent. But in some cases where a complainer alleges that she expressly refused consent there may be the danger of "a series of mixed messages", to which Lord Marnoch referred in his dissenting opinion in Lord Advocate's Reference (No 1 of 2001) at p.479 A-B, which may make it very difficult to infer the state of mind of the accused. Even in a case in which there is no evidence of mixed messages, I find it difficult to see how independent evidence of a complainer's distress, which is evidence that a distressing event has occurred, can on its own support or confirm a complainer's evidence so that a jury could be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that she had expressed her lack of consent in a way which would have given the accused the requisite knowledge for the mens rea of rape.

[18] I have noted in paragraph 12 above that several analyses of corroboration draw a distinction between evidence which is merely consistent with other evidence and evidence which can support or confirm the other evidence. That distinction enables the court to determine the boundaries of the corroborative potential of evidence in the light of experience and thus preserve the role of corroboration in our law as a protection of an accused person. Those boundaries should be determined in cases in which the particular issue arises for determination. I therefore leave the issue which the Crown has raised to be determined in a case where it is necessary to do so in order to do justice.

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJ_16.html