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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> McKenzie v The Queen (Jamaica) [2011] UKPC 41 (16 November 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/2011/41.html Cite as: [2011] UKPC 41 |
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[2011] UKPC 41
Privy Council Appeal No 0030 of 2010
JUDGMENT
Phillip McKenzie (Appellant) v The Queen (Respondent)
From the Court of Appeal of Jamaica
before
JUDGMENT DELIVERED BY
LORD BROWN
ON
16 November 2011
Heard on 5 October 2011
Appellant Ian Lawrie QC Adam Hiddleston (Instructed by Slaughter & May) |
Respondent Thomas Roe (Instructed by Charles Russell) |
LORD BROWN:
(1) The appellant made an unsworn statement from the dock instead of giving sworn evidence.
(2) The jury were not given a good character direction. As will shortly appear, however, this complaint changed radically during the argument to a criticism of counsel for not having led evidence of what was in fact the appellant's bad character.
(3) No evidence was adduced of the contents of the appellant's police interview shortly after his arrest (two weeks after the murder) on 8 May 2002.
(4) Counsel failed to object to Rohan's unsworn evidence being given in violation of the Juveniles Act.
Before turning to consider each of these four matters, it is convenient to sketch in something of the evidence in fact given at trial, albeit unnecessary to do so in any great detail.
The appellant's unsworn dock statement
(1) In various responses to his new solicitors' investigations into this case between 2009 and 2011 the appellant said that his counsel, Mr Thomas, came to see him before trial and, despite the appellant saying that he wanted to give evidence, Mr Thomas told him he must not do so. "The lawyer told him that the prosecution would mix him up so he got coward." (10 July 2009) "He said I must not take the stand and give evidence. I asked him why, he said the prosecution will cross-question you and tie you up." (7 March 2011).
By phone on 10 November 2010, Mr Thomas told the appellant's solicitors that "he adopts an open approach with his clients. He further stated that before trial he will always discuss with his clients the options available to them. He stated that he will always ask them whether they would like to give a witness statement at trial, provide a written unsworn statement that will be read out of trial or say nothing at all. After he has laid out the options available to his clients, he stated that he would then discuss the pros and cons of each option, explaining to his client the potential implications and consequences (if any) of each option. After discussing the ramifications of each option, he then said that he would leave it up to his clients to decide which option they would like to take."
By letter dated 24 November 2010 Mr Thomas said:
"Mr McKenzie was fully advised of the consequences of giving sworn evidence as against making an unsworn statement. He was told that if he gave sworn evidence he would be liable to be cross-examined on his evidence, whereas if he gave an unsworn statement no question could be asked of him. Mr McKenzie elected to make an unsworn statement."
This, he later said, was "based on my recollection". Given, however, that the appellant had earlier told his solicitors (on 10 July 2009) that: "There was endorsement to his knowledge to this effect [ie that he would make an unsworn statement]", and given too that some seven years had elapsed between the appellant's trial and the time when Mr Thomas was being asked for his recollection, there is no good reason to doubt that Mr Thomas followed his usual practice and, indeed, consistently with the judgment of the Privy Council in Bethel v The State (1998) 55 WIR 394, had made at the time a written record of his instructions.
This does not, however, entirely exhaust the appellant's complaint under this head. Mr Lawrie further submits that in any event the only way that Mr Thomas could properly have discharged his duty to his client was to have advised him to give sworn evidence. Since ultimately everything turned on whether the jury believed Tiny Chambers' evidence, it was imperative that the appellant gave sworn evidence to the contrary. The Board, however, utterly rejects this argument. Had the appellant been subjected to cross-examination his defence could well have been exposed as yet more unconvincing than it appears to have struck the jury. As it was, the appellant gave a very full account of his defence (stretching over ten pages of transcript) and then had the benefit of the judge's direction to the jury that, although "an unsworn statement is not evidence", "you give it what weight you think it deserves, what he has told you, but you have to consider what he has told you".
(2) Good character direction
Although at the time of trial and sentence the appellant was understood to be a man of good character, in March 2009 he told his solicitors that he in fact had a previous conviction for "wounding Aston Shae", there having been "a fight" between them. He had got "a nine months [sentence], suspended for one year". Clearly precluded by this information from persisting in his complaint that Mr Thomas did not obtain for the appellant a good character direction, Mr Lawrie now argues that it would have been helpful to the defence to have had the fact of this conviction elicited before the jury. It would, submits counsel, have lent weight to the appellant's case that Tiny Chambers had falsely accused him of the murder because of bad blood between her family and his. The Board is satisfied that there is nothing in this point. Adducing this evidence would likely have occasioned the appellant more harm than good.
(3) The Police interview
The appellant submits that his defence would have been assisted by adducing evidence of his police interview following his arrest on 8 May 2002. Whilst, however, it is true that during the interview the appellant said that, besides seeing the deceased and Tiny Chambers down at the river at the time of the killing, he had "pass[ed] two youth[s]", he said nothing to hint or suggest in any way (as he was later to do in his unsworn statement at trial) that these two youths might have had something to do with the killing. Furthermore, having admitted at interview that he knew the police were looking for him, when asked why then he had "run away to Portland", he answered: "Me leave because me sister say me must leave" – an answer wholly contrary to his unsworn statement at trial that his sister had told him to go to the police and that the reason he didn't was because he was afraid to tell the police the names of the two youths he had seen at the river. Here again the Board is of the clear view that adducing evidence of the interview would have done the appellant altogether more harm than good.
(4) Rohan's unsworn evidence
It is a matter of some surprise to the Board that no one, neither Mr Thomas nor prosecuting counsel nor, indeed, the judge himself, appears to have realised the need to ask certain preliminary questions of Rohan before eliciting material evidence from him. That said, however, it is difficult to see how the appellant's position would have been improved over what it is now had the matter been properly dealt with at trial. Rohan may well have been regarded as qualified to give evidence so that the appellant would not now have the benefit of the Court of Appeal's (obviously correct) ruling that Rohan's support for Tiny Chambers' evidence must in fact be disregarded. But in any event, given, as Mr Lawrie accepts, that the Court of Appeal cannot be criticised for applying the proviso notwithstanding their ruling that Rohan's evidence was inadmissible, this argument anyway runs into the sand.