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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Defour v. The State (Trinidad and Tobago) [1999] UKPC 34 (21st July, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1999/34.html Cite as: [1999] UKPC 34, [1999] WLR 1731, [1999] 1 WLR 1731 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 32 of 1998
Lincoln Defour Appellant
v. The State RespondentFROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TRINIDAD ANDTOBAGO
---------------
REASONS FOR DECISION OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCILOF THE 27th April 1999,
Delivered the 21st July 1999 ------------------Present at the hearing:-
Lord Browne-WilkinsonLord Hutton
Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough
Lord Millett
Sir Patrick Russell
[Delivered by Sir Patrick Russell] ------------------
1. The appellant, Lincoln Defour, was
convicted of murder before John J. and a jury at the Third Criminal Court, Port
of Spain Assizes, on 14th October 1996, and sentenced to death. On 17th July
1997 the Court of Appeal of Trinidad and Tobago dismissed the appellants
appeal. On 23rd April 1998 the appellant was granted special leave to appeal to
their Lordships Board. On 27th April 1999, at the conclusion of the hearing
of the appeal, their Lordships announced their decision that the appeal ought to
be allowed, the verdict of murder quashed and the sentence of death set aside.
Their Lordships indicated that, of seven grounds of appeal advanced, only the
seventh and last ground of appeal succeeded. They now give their reasons for
their decision.
The facts
2. The victim was a woman called Geraldine
Pinto. The appellant was the caretaker of a beach house on Paria Main Road,
Blanchisseuse. The victim had a history of mental ill health in the sense that
she had been a patient in a local psychiatric hospital, but her brother
testified that so far as he knew on the day of her death she was in good health.
3. On 29th September 1993, in the
immediate vicinity of the beach house, the victim was observed by various
witnesses. The principal witness was David Gibson who was staying in premises
opposite the house where the appellant was caretaker. He said that at 8.00 a.m.
he saw the deceased crying in the road. A little later she was in the company of
the appellant whom Gibson had known for about ten years. According to David
Gibson the appellant assaulted the deceased. He pulled off her jersey, and then
dragged her across the road. He hit and kicked the deceased and finally dragged
her toward a track across the road before the two went out of sight. David
Gibson alleged that he heard screams coming from the direction of the track
about five minutes later. Other witnesses, driving along the road, had seen the
deceased and the appellant who were quarrelling, but only David Gibson alleged
that he had seen the appellant drag the deceased into the bushes. About two
hours later, according to Gibson, the appellant was running from the area where
he had dragged the deceased and had in his possession a shovel or some other
tool.
4. At about 3.00 p.m. the body of the
deceased was discovered. She had been buried in a shallow grave in the area
close by where the appellant had been seen dragging the deceased across the road
and into the bushes. She had been stabbed to death.
5. A police officer, P.C. Alexander,
having seen the grave went to see the appellant at the beach house across the
road. The officer told the appellant that he had had a report implicating the
appellant in beating and dragging a woman whereupon, according to P.C. Alexander
(denied by the appellant) he had replied "Boss, this look like a big
one". The appellant was arrested At the police station he denied any
knowledge of the killing. He took the police officers to the beach house and
there produced a garden fork and shovel, together with a knife, denying that any
of these implements had anything to do with the death of the victim or her
burial.
6. On 3rd October 1993 the appellant made
a written statement to the police. He was to contend at the trial that he made
the statement only because he had been promised that he would be released if he
did make a statement. The statement was false. It contended that the appellant
had not seen the victim on the day of the killing. At trial the appellant
asserted that the deceased had been to the area of the beach house on the
morning that she was killed. He had had an altercation with her because of her
behaviour in throwing rubbish from a dustbin into the area where the appellant
was working, but he had not attacked her and had not dragged her into the
bushes. Gibson had not seen him leaving the area where the body was found. The
deceased had run into the bushes but he had not followed.
7. The knife produced by the appellant had
traces of blood upon it that were of the same group as the deceased, though the
group was a common one. No incriminating evidence was found on the fork or
shovel in the sense that soil on the tools did not coincide with soil in the
vicinity of the grave.
8. The appellant gave evidence to the
effect that he was not in any way responsible for the death of the victim.
The grounds of appeal
1. The mental condition of the victim
9. The brother of the deceased gave
evidence, having identified the body. In cross-examination he was asked about
his sister having been a patient in St. Annes Hospital. He agreed that she
had been, but said that on the day of her death she had appeared to be in good
health and in her right senses. Counsel for the defence sought to pursue the
question of the deceaseds mental condition, but the judge refused to permit
it. Before their Lordships it was contended that the judge was wrong. The
behaviour of the deceased, according to the appellant, was bizarre in the
extreme and any evidence of mental instability on the part of the deceased
tended to support or confirm the evidence of the appellant in a case where his
credibility was of vital importance.
10. Their Lordships consider that the trial
judge was right to exclude any further evidence - or indeed any evidence - of
the mental state of the deceased. It was not a material issue in the trial. For
example, the appellant was not contending that he had been provoked or had acted
in self-defence where the mental state of the victim might have become a
material issue. The evidence of the appellant as to the deceaseds behaviour
was not challenged by the prosecution and there was nothing to dispute the
allegation by the appellant that she had thrown rubbish from a dustbin. Her
motive for so doing or the absence of any rational explanation could have had no
bearing upon what the jury had to decide. It was irrelevant, or at best went to
a very peripheral part of the background. This ground of appeal, therefore,
fails.
2. The voire dire
11. The appellant challenged the
admissibility of his written statement to the police and at the trial the judge
held a voire dire. Their Lordships have reservations about whether a voire dire
was an appropriate procedure in the circumstances. The statement was
exculpatory. It was not a confession where the voluntary nature of the statement
is normally the subject matter of the voire dire. The evidence of the taking of
the statement was led by the prosecution to demonstrate that the appellant had
been inconsistent in his versions of events, and had initially lied to the
police.
12. All this being acknowledged their
Lordships do recognise, however, that the judge was at fault at the conclusion
of the voire dire where upon the re-assembly of the jury he said:-
"Mr. Foreman, Members of the Jury, in your absence the Court heard arguments or evidence as to whether a statement recorded by the witness, ex-Inspector Thompson, from the Accused was voluntary or not, and therefore, whether it would be admissible in evidence. The ruling of the Court is that the statement is admissible."
13. These observations should not have been
made. In Mitchell v. The Queen [1998] 2 W.L.R. 695 Lord Steyn, applying Crosdale
v. The Queen [1995] 1 W.L.R. 864, said at p.701-702:-
"There is no logical reason why the jury should know about the decision of the judge This is underlined by the fact that in modern English practice the judges decision after a voire dire is never revealed to the jury. The reason why it is wrong for a judge to reveal his decision to a jury is not because it would amount to a withdrawal of an issue from the jury and it does not amount to a misdirection. The vice is that the knowledge by the jury that the judge has believed the police and disbelieved the defendant creates the potentiality of prejudice."
14. Was prejudice against the appellant
created in the instant case? Potentially it was, but it is important to observe
what the judge said in the summing up. When dealing with the statement he had
found to be admissible he said:-
"However, notwithstanding the fact that the statement has been admitted into evidence, it is still a matter for you to determine what weight, if any, you will attach to that statement having regard to what the Accused has told you. It is admissible in evidence, but it is still your function as judges of the facts to determine what, if any, weight you will attach to that statement."
15. Their Lordships, whilst recognising
that the judges comments in the instant case amounted to an irregularity, are
satisfied that the irregularity in itself came nowhere near rendering the
verdict unsafe. This ground of appeal fails.
3. The submission of no case to answer
16. Surprisingly, at the conclusion of the
evidence for the prosecution counsel for the defence, in the presence of the
jury said:-
"My Lord, I would like to submit to the Court, based on the evidence that has been adduced before this Court, there isnt any case to answer."
17. Upon the direction of the judge the
jury withdrew. In due course, in the absence of the jury the judge ruled that
there was a case to answer. He made no comment to the jury, but no doubt they
assumed, accurately, that the judge must have ruled against the defence.
18. In this context, as with the voire
dire, it was unfortunate that the jury should have been able to assume that the
judges reaction at that stage of the case was adverse to the appellant, but,
unlike the voire dire, the judge had played no part in conveying that impression
to the jury. The fault lay with the defending counsel. In the presence of the
jury he indicated the nature of the submission he wished to make, instead of
simply requesting that the jury should withdraw. Once counsel took that course
it was inevitable that the jury would know the submission had been rejected if
the case thereafter proceeded. In the judgment of their Lordships there are no
legitimate grounds of complaint under this heading.
4. Lies told by the appellant
19. As earlier indicated the appellant lied
to the police when, in a written statement, he said that he could not remember
the last time he had spoken to the victim whereas later he was to admit having
seen the deceased on the morning of the murder. The appellants explanation
for lying as given by him in the witness box is not entirely clear, but the
prosecution plainly relied upon the lies as probative of guilt.
20. On more than one occasion in speeches
by counsel the jury were reminded that the telling of lies did not of itself
prove guilt, and when the judge summed up he made this abundantly plain.
21. Upon the principles laid down in Reg.
v. Lucas [1981] 1 Q.B. 720 the jury should also be directed that "the
motive for the lie must be a realisation of guilt and a fear of the truth"
(per Lord Lane C.J. at p. 724). John J. said, in summing up:-
"Why was it that he distanced himself from the deceased in that statement? Why was it he could not remember when was the last time he had seen her? Why was his recollection of Wazzie, as she was also called, so poor to him? You may very well come to the conclusion that maybe he was lying because he knew he was involved; he knew he had something to do with it."
22. Counsel for the appellant, Mr. Adrian
Fulford Q.C., submitted that the use of the word "maybe" flawed this
part of the summing up because the jury might take the view that for the lies to
be probative of guilt it was sufficient if they raised an inference of guilt
simply as a possibility. Their Lordships do not agree that what was no more than
a slip of the tongue could have had the impact on the jury suggested, and in the
context of the summing up read as a whole the Board is satisfied that there was
no material misdirection in relation to lies.
5. The knife
23. Their Lordships can deal with this
ground of appeal very shortly.
24. Inspector Thompson, with the
co-operation of the appellant, recovered from the beach house some gardening
implements and a knife. Traces of blood were subsequently found on the knife
and, as earlier indicated, part of the grouping coincided with blood taken from
the victim. That was far from conclusive that the knife was the murder weapon as
the judge recognised and told the jury, but clearly, in the judgment of their
Lordships, the forensic evidence was admissible and relevant.
25. At one stage it was thought that before
the trial and after the knife had been taken by the police the appellant had
alleged that he had cut himself upon the knife when carving pork. Had this been
so there would obviously have been a duty upon the prosecution to obtain a
sample of the appellants blood and compare that with blood recovered from the
knife. Had the appellants blood been of the same group as the deceased a
great deal of the force of the forensic evidence would have been eliminated.
But, as it transpired during the course of the hearing before the Board, the
reality was that the appellant made no complaint of having cut himself until he
was giving evidence. There was no reason, therefore, why the prosecution should
have taken a sample of the appellants blood. The authorities were not put on
notice by the appellant. There was no irregularity at the trial relating to the
evidence adduced about the knife.
6. The shovel and garden fork
26. Just as with the knife the police
recovered a shovel and garden fork from the beach house. It was contended that
because there was no forensic evidence connecting the implements with the burial
of the victim the fork and shovel should not have been exhibited at the trial.
The evidence was that the appellant was seen by David Gibson in possession of
garden implements and walking from the direction of the grave. The subsequent
finding of the fork and shovel at the beach house was, therefore, part of the
narrative and could not be regarded as irrelevant and inadmissible. No objection
was taken at trial. Their Lordships are satisfied that the implements were
properly admitted as part of the evidence, the weight and significance of which
remained a matter for the jury.
7. The verdict and the time element
27. The trial of the appellant occupied the
court for four working days and the evidence for three days. So soon as the
summing up came to an end there was an unfortunate intervention by the Clerk of
the court. He said:-
"Mr. Foreman, have you and the other Members of the Jury arrived at a verdict upon which you all agree in respect of the Accused or do you wish to retire to consider your verdict?"
28. In the previous year, 1995, the Board
had had occasion to consider the procedure in Crosdale v. The Queen
[1995] 1 W.L.R. 864, an appeal from Jamaica. In that case the judge had asked
the jury to consult amongst themselves to see if they wanted to go to the jury
room to consider their verdict.
29. The jury did retire, as they did in
response to the Clerks enquiry in the instant case, but Lord Steyn, giving
the judgment of the Board in Crosdale said at page 875:-
"The judge should not have asked the jury whether they wished to retire. It is a cardinal rule of criminal procedure that a trial judge must avoid any hint of pressure on a jury to reach a verdict: Reg v. Watson [1988] Q.B. 690, 700B their Lordships cannot exclude the possibility that one or more jurors understood the judge to be conveying to them that there was really nothing to discuss. In these circumstances the conclusion cannot be avoided that the judges question whether the jury wished to retire was a material irregularity."
30. Their Lordships recognise, of course,
that the offending question did not come from the judge in the instant case, but
in coming as it did from an official of the court it created at least the seeds
of pressure upon the jury to reach a verdict "because there was really
nothing to discuss".
31. The irregularity, in their Lordships
judgment, did not end with the Clerks intervention. The jury, having retired,
deliberated from 11.45 a.m. to 2.45 p.m., a period of three hours. They were
then brought back into court. The foreman indicated that they had not reached a
verdict. The transcript discloses that some of the jury were troubled by the
sufficiency of the evidence, the credibility of David Gibson and the possibility
of a "site visit".
32. The judge felt that he could not assist
the jury further and he went on:-
"Mr. Foreman a question of a site visit at this stage does not arise. I am now going to give you an additional thirty minutes to return to the Jury room and consider your verdict."
33. A short discussion with the Bar took
place whereupon the judge said:-
"Mr. Foreman, please stand. I asked you when you indicated to the clerk that you did not arrive at a verdict upon which you all agreed whether given additional time, you would be likely to come to a verdict. You answered in the affirmative. If given additional time, is it likely you would arrive at a verdict?"
"Thank you. I am giving you an additional thirty minutes."
35. In their Lordships judgment the
imposition of a time limit of thirty minutes was a material irregularity. No one
can say for certain what effect it had upon the minds of individual jurors but
within 20 minutes a verdict of guilty was returned.
36. The researches of counsel unearthed
only one authority where it was recorded that the judge had fixed a time limit
for further deliberation by the jury and it came from the Court of Appeal of
Trinidad and Tobago: Reg. v. David Michael (1975) 27 W.I.R. 307. In that
case, too, the jury were given thirty minutes. Phillips J.A. considered that the
course taken appeared to be unprecedented and the conviction was quashed.
37. In the opinion of the Board there is an
appreciable risk that the imposition of a time limit of thirty minutes placed
the jurors under pressure to reach a verdict, although this would not have been
the intention of the judge, and influenced some jurors to agree to a verdict to
which they would not have subscribed if more time for deliberation has been
allowed to them. Moreover after the jury were brought back to court and the
foreman referred to some matters which troubled them, the jury were not reminded
that in the event of an irreconcilable disagreement it was their duty to say so.
Accordingly their Lordships consider that the conviction was unsafe and should
be quashed.
38. The question then arises whether the
case should be remitted to the Court of Appeal to consider whether there should
be a retrial. It is submitted on behalf of the appellant that the death of the
deceased took place 5 years and 9 months ago and the prosecution case relied
very largely on the evidence of various civilian witnesses whose recollection of
the events will have faded. Since his conviction and sentence in October 1996
the appellant has been facing the agony of execution and would still face the
risk of execution if a retrial were ordered. In addition if the appellant were
to be retried the fact that the State had withdrawn from membership of the
United Nations Human Rights Committee and Inter-American Commission on Human
Rights would mean that the appellant would no longer be able to petition those
bodies in relation to a conviction and sentence of death for murder. For these
reasons it is submitted that the case should not be remitted to the Court of
Appeal to consider whether a retrial should be ordered.
39. It is submitted on behalf of the
respondent that the case against the appellant was a very strong one and that it
was in the interests of justice that the appellant should not escape justice
because the judge made an error at the end of the trial in the words he
addressed to the jury. In relation to the withdrawal of the State from the human
rights bodies it is submitted that the State was entitled to take this course
and that there could be no valid objection to a retrial taking place in
accordance with the law then applicable.
40. On balance their Lordships consider
that in the circumstances of this case the appropriate course is to remit the
case to the Court of Appeal for that court to consider, in the light of the
guidance given by the Board in its judgment in Reid v. The Queen [1980] AC 343, whether there should be a retrial. Accordingly their Lordships allow
the appeal and quash the conviction and sentence, and remit the case to the
Court of Appeal to consider whether a retrial should be ordered.
[34]