Trial and Hearsay Flashcards
Pre-trial matters in the Crown Court
There are no more hearings in the magistrates’ court for:
- indictable only matters; or
- triable either way matters where:
- the defendant is sent for trial by the magistrates’ court; or
- the defendant elects Crown Court trial.
There will be a Plea and Trial Preparation Hearing (PTPH) and there may be other hearings. The possible further applications and hearings are the focus of this element.
· PTPH (must happen in all cases)
· Further applications (possible further hearings)
· Trial
Further applications
Some cases require no further hearings post PTPH. That’s either because there is nothing to determine or because the PTPH judge decided that the trial judge could deal with any outstanding matters on the day of trial, usually before the trial begins.
What follows is an examination of some of these further applications. As you read them, please bear in mind that they could be made:
- in either the magistrates’ court or Crown Court;
- at the PTPH, or another pre-trial hearing (with the exception of a change of plea); or
- on the day of trial, before the trial starts or at some convenient point during the trial.
Applications to exclude evidence or introduce otherwise inadmissible evidence
The defence may wish to exclude evidence that the prosecution proposes to adduce using s.78 of the Police and Criminal Evidence (PACE) Act 1984; either party may want to introduce otherwise inadmissible evidence such as bad character or hearsay (which are covered in separate elements).
This can be dealt with at:
- the PTPH (rare as the judge would not usually have time)
- at a hearing on a day at some point between PTPH and trial (less common); or
- on the day of trial before the trial starts (most common).
Special measures
Special measures are the arrangements put in place to assist witnesses in giving evidence before a court. The purpose behind them is to allow children, the vulnerable and those in fear or distress about testifying, to testify in an environment that best enables them to give their evidence. The court must consider which measures will maximise the quality of the evidence.
A screen, for example, is not a slight on the defendant or a presumption of their guilt (and a jury must be told this if one is used) but a measure to enable the witness to give their best evidence.
Special measures- types
In order to assist witnesses to give evidence in the criminal courts a number of ‘special measures’ are available. The Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act (YJCEA) 1999 sets out the range of special measures available. These are as follows:
- The use of screens (the witness will be screened from the defendant and the public gallery) (s.23 YJCEA)
- Live TV link (where the witness sits in a room away from the courtroom) (s.24)
- Giving evidence in private (public gallery cleared) (s.25)
- Removing wigs and gowns by barristers and judges (s.26)
- Video recording of evidence in chief (s.27)
- Pre-recording cross-examination and re-examination (s.28 – partially in force)
- Questioning of a witness through an intermediary (s.29)
- Aids to communication (s.30)
Please note that testifying through an intermediary and aids to communication are not available for witnesses who are eligible for special measures due to being in fear but the other special measures will be available for such witnesses.
Special measures- eligibility
Eligibility for special measures is dealt with by s.16 to s.18 of the YJCEA. The following categories of witness are eligible for special measures:
- All witnesses aged under 18 at the time of trial (or video recording) are automatically eligible (s.16 YJCEA).
- Witnesses who have a mental disorder, or a significant impairment of intelligence and social functioning, or a physical disability/disorder are eligible where the court considers that due to any such matter the quality of their evidence is likely to be diminished (s.16 YJCEA).
- Witnesses who are in fear or distress about giving evidence and the court is satisfied that the quality of their evidence will be diminished because of this (s.17 YJCEA).
- All adult complainants of sexual offences (s.17 YJCEA).
- All adult complainants in certain offences under the Modern Slavery Act 2015 (including forced labour and human trafficking).
- All witnesses in a case involving a ‘relevant offence’, namely serious offences, including offences of homicide or involving firearms or knives (s.17 and Sch 1A YJCEA).
Special measures- additional types
In addition to the special measures available to witnesses mentioned already, other measures exist or can be put in place to protect witnesses. These include:
- Witness Anonymity Orders (Coroners and Justice Act 2009 Part 3 Chapter 2)
- Automatic anonymity of complainants in sex cases (Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 1992)
- Prohibition of cross-examination by defendants in person of complainants in sex cases and of child witnesses in certain cases involving violent and sexual offences (YJCEA ss.34 to 38)
- Restricting the reporting of witnesses’ identity (YJCEA s.46)
Vulnerable defendants
In certain circumstances the defence can apply for measures to assist particularly vulnerable defendants in order to facilitate their effective participation in the trial process.
An application can be made for the defendant to give their evidence via a ‘live link’.
The court must be satisfied that it would be in the interests of justice and the ‘live link’ would improve the quality of accused’s evidence because either:
- the accused is under 18 and the accused’s ability to participate effectively as a witness giving oral evidence is compromised by their ‘level of intellectual ability or social functioning’ (s.33A(4) YJCEA 1999), or
- the accused is 18 or over and the accused is unable to participate effectively as a witness giving oral evidence because the accused has a mental disorder or a ‘significant impairment of intelligence and social function’ (s.33A(5) YJCEA 1999).
The court also has the power to direct that a vulnerable defendant be assisted by an intermediary to help the defendant understand what is going on. But only those defendant’s most in need, such as those with comprehension or communication difficulties, will be entitled to one.
The role of an intermediary is to assist communication of evidence. They are independent and owe their duty to the court. An intermediary might be used to assist a disabled defendant with communication difficulties, for example.
Intermediaries can also be used to assist witnesses, such as very young witnesses or those with learning difficulties, for example. Before questioning of the witness begins, the intermediary can assist the judge and counsel to understand what types of questions are likely to confuse so that the advocates can carefully prepare their questioning. When the witness or defendant is being questioned by counsel, the intermediary will usually stand near to the witness and can help by explaining the questions and answers. In practice, advocates will usually question the witness directly and the intermediary will only step in if there is some kind of miscommunication.
Witness summons and warrants
In the majority of cases, the police are responsible for securing the attendance of prosecution witnesses and defence solicitors are responsible for ensuring that defence witnesses attend court when required to do so.
However some witnesses are not keen to be witnesses and try to avoid attending court. They may be giving evidence against a notorious and dangerous criminal, or a friend or relative of theirs, or they might hold information that they think should be confidential. In those cases, either the prosecution or defence can ask the court to issue a witness summons.
The summons can either be for the person to attend on the day of trial to give live evidence, or for the witness to produce a document. Both the Crown Court and magistrates’ court has the power to issue a witness summons.
The test for the party seeking the summons is that:
- the witness is likely to be able to give evidence that is likely to be material evidence (or to produce a material document); and
- it is in the interests of justice to issue a summons.
If a witness disobeys a witness summons and does not attend without a ‘just excuse’ then the courts can issue a warrant for the arrest of the witness. Failure to act as required to do so by the summons can be punishable as a contempt of court.
Applications to change plea
From not guilty to guilty
Defendants can change their mind and choose to change their plea from not guilty to guilty.
A defendant who has pleaded not guilty can, at any time before the jury return their verdict, ask through their Counsel that the ‘indictment be put again’ (or charge sheet in the magistrates’ court). The clerk will read the indictment and the defendant can plead guilty. This usually happens before trial but from time to time a defendant might decide midway through a trial that they want to end the process by pleading guilty. It is rare, but it can and does (occasionally) happen. Usually though, defendants change their minds on the day of trial either for tactical reasons or because they were hoping that prosecution witnesses would not attend to give evidence, but realise they now have. Strictly speaking, you need the leave of the judge/magistrates to have the indictment/charge sheet put again, but asking that it be put again is sufficient. If the trial is taking place in the Crown Court and the jury have already been put in charge of the case, they should be directed to return a formal verdict of guilty.
From guilty to not guilty
This is significantly more difficult! Defendants who plead guilty can, at any time before they are sentenced, apply to the court for leave to change their plea from guilty to not guilty, but judges should exercise their discretion judicially and sparingly, although even where the plea was unequivocal the discretion to allow it to be changed still exists.
Where a defendant has been represented properly a court would invariably reject the application to vacate their guilty plea and allow them to enter a fresh not guilty plea.
Represented properly means:
- proper advice has been given to the defendant;
- no undue pressure has been exerted on the defendant; and
- the defendant’s plea was clearly unequivocal.
An application of this nature will frequently feature a defendant waiving privilege (considered in another element) to establish matters such as the nature of the advice they acted upon.
In practice, then, although it is always a matter for the court, the two most common scenarios in which the rarely exercised discretion will properly be applied are where either:
- The defence can show that the prosecution has no evidence of an essential ingredient of the offence; or
- The defendant was improperly placed under undue pressure to plead guilty or was materially misadvised by D’s legal team.
Both of those scenarios are likely to result in criticism of Counsel who appeared when the defendant pleaded guilty and perhaps the solicitor too. It is therefore usual practice that Counsel or both Counsel and the solicitor withdraw from the case and the defendant seeks fresh representation. Where that happens, defendants may want to give evidence of their conference with Counsel or seek that Counsel explain how and why they advised the defendant to plead guilty. Both require the defendant to waive legal privilege.
Hearsay
Relevance
Subject to the exclusionary rules, all evidence, which is sufficiently relevant to the facts in issue, is admissible. All evidence which is irrelevant to the facts in issue should be excluded.
Excluding evidence
It does not follow that all relevant evidence is admissible. If an exclusionary rule applies it does not matter how relevant the evidence in question may be, it will be inadmissible.
Hearsay
The rule against hearsay states that a statement made out of court may not be presented in evidence as proof of its contents.
The general rule is that hearsay is inadmissible which is an example of an exclusionary rule.
Tackling potential hearsay
The exclusionary rule as it relates to hearsay evidence is one that causes problems for many practitioners of criminal law, even those who are very experienced.
It is important to address possible hearsay evidence in a structured manner.
There are two questions to be asked and they must be kept separate. Any attempt to tackle both questions at once will lead to confusion.
Does the evidence fall within the definition of hearsay evidence? If the answer to this question is ‘yes’, then it is prima facie inadmissible.
Does it fall within one of the exceptions to the general exclusionary rule?
Fair trial
The UK Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights have considered the effect of hearsay evidence on the fairness of trials. The principles that emerge from the decided cases are:
- The UK statutory framework for the admission of the evidence of absent witnesses is sufficient, properly applied, to provide for a fair trial.
- The court must always be satisfied that there is a sufficient basis for the absence of the witness and that a fair trial will be possible.
- It will be harder for the court to be satisfied that a fair trial will be possible if the evidence of the absent witness is the sole or decisive evidence against the accused.
- Where the hearsay evidence is critical to the case, the question of whether there can be a fair trial depends on three principal factors:
- Whether there is a good reason to admit the evidence pursuant to the CJA 2003;
- Whether the evidence can be shown to be reliable; and
- The extent to which counterbalancing measures have been properly applied, eg exclusionary discretion, proper directions to the jury in summing up.
The Criminal Justice Act (CJA) 2003
There is a general rule that hearsay evidence is inadmissible.
Section 114 CJA 2003 provides that hearsay is admissible if, but only if, it falls within one of the exceptions in s.114(1).
Section 114(1) CJA 2003 reads:
‘114 Admissibility of hearsay evidence
(1) In criminal proceedings a statement not made in oral evidence in the proceedings is admissible as evidence of any matter stated if, but only if–
(a) any provision of this Chapter or any other statutory provision makes it admissible,
(b) any rule of law preserved by section 118 makes it admissible,
(c) all parties to the proceedings agree to it being admissible, or
(d) the court is satisfied that it is in the interests of justice for it to be admissible.’
Statements and matters stated
Section 115 CJA 2003 reads:
‘115 Statements and matters stated
(1) In this Chapter references to a statement or to a matter stated are to be read as follows.
(2) A statement is any representation of fact or opinion made by a person by whatever means; and it includes a representation made in a sketch, photofit or other pictorial form.
(3) A matter stated is one to which this Chapter applies if (and only if) the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the person making the statement appears to the court to have been–
(a) to cause another person to believe the matter, or
(b) to cause another person to act or a machine to operate on the basis that the matter is as stated.’
Is it hearsay?
The effect of s.114(1) and s.115 taken together was considered in R v Twist [2011] EWCA Crim 1143.
The Court of Appeal reformulated the sections as a test that determines whether or not a communication is hearsay. It is in three parts:
Identify what relevant fact (matter) it is sought to prove.
Ask whether there is a statement of that matter in the communication.
· If no, then no question of hearsay arises (whatever other matters may be contained in the communication).
If yes, ask whether it was one of the purposes (not necessarily the only or dominant purpose) of the maker of the communication that the recipient, or any other person, should believe that matter or act upon it as true.
· If yes, it is hearsay.
· If no, it is not.
Not hearsay
- Private diary- It follows from the definition of hearsay that anything written in a private diary where the writer did not intend that anyone else should ever read it cannot be hearsay. This is because there is no intention on the part of the maker of the statement that any other person should believe anything.
- CCTV- section 115(2) contains the words ‘… made by a person …’, so no issue of hearsay arises where the piece of evidence in question was created entirely by a device such as a CCTV system without any human input.
- Questions- Where there is no statement of a matter, eg where the communication consists only of the asking of a question, the court in Twist thought that no issue of hearsay could arise.
In Twist the communications in question were text messages received by the defendant asking for drugs. There was no statement that he was a drug dealer (which was the matter that the prosecution sought to prove), so the messages were not hearsay and were admissible. The court went on to say that even if on these facts there was an implied statement that the recipient of the messages was a drug dealer, it was certainly not the intention of the sender of the message to make the recipient believe that fact. Applying s.115(3) means that on that interpretation the messages are still not hearsay.
Hearsay and original evidence
Very often evidence of words spoken out of court will be admissible as original evidence. In many cases the purpose of the party adducing the evidence will be to show that the words were spoken, rather than that they were true. If that is the case, the evidence is not hearsay because it is not being admitted as ‘evidence of any matter stated’.
Examples of original evidence include evidence of threats made to a person. Where the threat is along the lines of, ‘if you don’t do what I say, I shall harm you’, the evidence is usually being adduced to show that the threat was made, not that the maker of the threat would indeed cause harm to the person addressed.
Original evidence can also be adduced to show the state of mind of the maker of the statement.
In Ratten v R [1972] AC 378 the defence to an allegation that D murdered his wife was that the gun had gone off by accident. Evidence of a 999 call made by the deceased shortly before the killing was admitted to show that she was in a distressed state at that time.
Not hearsay
- To show the effect of words - In general, if the purpose of adducing evidence of words spoken out of court is to show the effect that the words had on the person to whom they were said, rather than to show the truth of what was said, the evidence is not hearsay. Therefore, where a defendant wants to reveal solicitor’s advice to show why a “no comment” interview was given, that evidence is not hearsay.
- Legally significant words - Where the words spoken have significance as a matter of law, they are not hearsay. Therefore, an offer of sexual services in exchange for money is admissible to show that the premises on which the words were spoken is a brothel. In this example the making of the offer is itself part of the definition of “brothel”.
- Falsehoods - It follows from the definition of hearsay in s.114 that there can be no hearsay where a party adduces evidence of what was said out of court while asserting that it is not true. Therefore, the prosecution can give evidence of the defendant giving a false alibi to show that the defendant was trying to avoid being convicted of the offence.
Exceptions to the exclusionary rule
A statement is hearsay if:
- it is made out of court; and
- the person that made it intended another person to believe it; and
- it is adduced as evidence of the matter stated (s.114(1) and s.115 Criminal Justice Act 2003).
Section 114(1) provides that hearsay is not admissible unless it falls into one of the four exceptions to the general exclusionary rule:
- any of the statutory exceptions in the CJA 2003 apply;
- any of the common law exceptions preserved under the CJA 2003 apply (s.118 will be covering in detail in a separate element);
- all the parties agree; or
- the court uses its statutory discretion to admit the hearsay, in the interests of justice.
Admissible hearsay
Hearsay may be admissible if:
- the witness is unavailable (s.116);
- it is a business document (s.117)- however, the court has the discretion to exclude such a business document if it is satisfied that the statement’s reliability is doubtful (s.117(6) and (7)); or
- it is in the interests of justice to admit it (s.114(1)(d)).
Note the court has discretion to exclude unfair prosecution evidence (s.78 PACE).
Separate elements discuss s.78 PACE.
Unavailable witnesses
Section 116 reads:
‘116 Cases where a witness is unavailable
(1) In criminal proceedings a statement not made in oral evidence in the proceedings is admissible as evidence of any matter stated if–
(a) oral evidence given in the proceedings by the person who made the statement would be admissible as evidence of that matter,
(b) the person who made the statement (the relevant person) is identified to the court’s satisfaction, and
(c) any of the five conditions mentioned in subsection (2) is satisfied.
(2) The conditions are:
(a) that the relevant person is dead;
(b) that the relevant person is unfit to be a witness because of his bodily or mental condition;
(c) that the relevant person is outside the United Kingdom and it is not reasonably practicable to secure his attendance;
(d) that the relevant person cannot be found although such steps as it is reasonably practicable to take to find him have been taken;
(e) that through fear the relevant person does not give (or does not continue to give) oral evidence in the proceedings, either at all or in connection with the subject matter of the statement, and the court gives leave for the statement to be given in evidence.’
Section 116 requires that the maker of the statement is identified, so it cannot be used to introduce anonymous hearsay. It does not allow in evidence that would have been inadmissible in live evidence, such as evidence of bad character that is not admissible through one of the gateways in ss.100 or 101.
Unfitness to be a witness (s.116(2)(b))
Unfitness of a person to be a witness because of their bodily or mental condition refers not to their fitness to physically attend court, but to their ability to give evidence once there. There is no requirement that the condition that makes a person unfit should be a medical condition. The trauma of having been the victim of a sexual assault can qualify.
Unavailable witnesses
Witness outside the UK and it is not reasonably practicable to secure attendance (s.116(2)(c))
Witness cannot be found (s.116(2)(d))
In deciding whether it is reasonably practicable for the witness to attend or whether steps taken to find the witness were reasonably practicable, the court has to consider the normal steps taken to secure the attendance of a witness. Cost is a relevant factor and it has to be balanced against the importance of the evidence that the witness would give. Subsection 116(2)(c) should be read as referring to the impracticability of securing the attendance of the witness either in person or by videolink.
Fear
‘Section 116
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2)(e) “fear” is to be widely construed and (for example) includes fear of the death or injury of another person or of financial loss.
(4) Leave may be given under subsection (2)(e) only if the court considers that the statement ought to be admitted in the interests of justice, having regard:
(a) to the statement’s contents,
(b) to any risk that its admission or exclusion will result in unfairness to any party to the proceedings (and in particular to how difficult it will be to challenge the statement if the relevant person does not give oral evidence),
(c) in appropriate cases, to the fact that a direction under section 19 of the Youth Justice and Criminal Evidence Act 1999 (c 23) (special measures for the giving of evidence by fearful witnesses etc.) could be made in relation to the relevant person, and
(d) to any other relevant circumstances.’
There is no requirement that the fear that is felt by the witness should have been caused by the defendant.
Authorities differ as to how the court should approach an enquiry as to whether the reason for the absence of a witness is fear.
In Davies [2007] 2 All ER 1070 it was said that courts are ill-advised to seek to test the basis of fear by calling witnesses before them.
In later cases, especially Shabir [2012] EWCA Crim 2564 the Court of Appeal took the view that every effort should be made to get the witness to court to test the issue of ‘fear’.
It is very important that when police officers seek to persuade a witness to attend court to give evidence, they do not give the witness any assurance that their witness statement can be read to the court if they are afraid to attend. This would provide the witness with an obvious incentive to say that they are in fear.
The court has to be satisfied to the criminal standard that the witness does not give evidence through fear. A causative link between the fear and the failure to give evidence must be established.