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Supreme Court of Tonga |
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TONGA
CRIMINAL JURISDICTION
NUKU’ALOFA REGISTRY
NO CR 239-240/04
R
V
AMANONI & VETE
EDITED TRANSCRIPT OF RULING BY HON CHIEF JUSTICE
DISCHARGING THE JURY
This brief ruling arises from what the witness said in her last answer. The key points of what the witness said were that:
- the 2nd Accused has committed offences before;
- he uses this substance (and whether or not she pointed to the exhibits, by inference she was meaning cannabis/marijuana/Indian Hemp).
To start at the beginning, there must be a fair trial, which means that an accused is to be judged on the evidence brought before the Court, not on his record or bad character, and not on someone’s say-so evidence. That is what the Jury is told at start of the trial.
If there is a reference to either of these aspects, it may be prejudicial to the accused. By prejudicial I mean evidence to which the Jury may attach undue weight and regard it as probative of the crime with which the accused is charged: Scott v R [1989] 2 All ER 305,311 (PC). If that occurs, the trial is likely to become unfair.
Unfortunately these matters have come out in this case. Archbold 2005 para 8-203 says what the Judge has to do in such circumstances. He has to use his discretion to consider discharging the Jury. See also Halsbury’s Laws (4th Ed Reissue) Vol 11(2) Para 1022. The discretion has to be exercised on the particular facts of the case: R v Weaver & Weaver [1967] 1 All ER 277, 51 Cr App R 77,83 (CA); R v Palin [1969] 3 All ER 689, 53 Cr App R 535 (CA).
In Weaver it was made clear that that depends on nature of what has been admitted into evidence, the circumstances in which it has been admitted and what, in the light of the circumstances of the case as a whole, is the correct course. Nowadays it is very far from being the rule that in every case where something of this nature gets into evidence through inadvertence the Jury must be discharged.
Turning to this case, in which I have now heard submissions from Counsel on this matter:
1. The nature of what has been admitted into evidence.
There were not 1, but 2 serious matters, ie previous offences and the use of cannabis. It is clear from cases such as R v Blackford [1989] 89 Cr App R 239 (CA) (also a case involving cannabis) that admission of evidence such as this is regarded seriously. In that case the judge did not discharge the jury, but on appeal was criticised for not doing so.
2. The circumstances in which the evidence was admitted.
This evidence did not slip out in answer to a question from the defence, it arose from a question from the prosecution in re-examination. The question was not about the witness’ fear, the question was a direct question “What do you mean Semi Vete Jr does not have a good record in Tonga?”
The case referred to by Crown Counsel from Archbold 8-204, R v Coughlan & Young 63 Cr App R 33 (CA), was one where the evidence was passed over without mention until the matter was raised in the absence of the jury. It was quite different in this case, where the whole case effectively stopped and the matter obviously came to the attention of the Jury. It cannot just be passed over.
3. The whole circumstances of the case.
So far the trial has lasted 3 weeks and it will be a great pity if the Jury has to be discharged. But the genie is out of the bottle, as it were, and cannot be put back. I am not satisfied that even a strong direction to the Jury could restore the position.
Overall I therefore regret that my view is that there has been serious prejudice to both accused and so this trial has been rendered unfair.
It is therefore my duty to discharge the Jury and order a re-trial.
R M Webster MBE
Chief Justice
22 February 2006
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/to/cases/TOSC/2006/7.html