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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> R v T [2008] EWCA Crim 815 (16 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/815.html Cite as: [2008] 2 Cr App Rep 17, [2008] 2 Cr App R 17, [2008] EWCA Crim 815, [2008] Crim LR 721, [2008] 3 WLR 923, (2008) 172 JP 335 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM WORCESTER CROWN COURT
HHJ MacCREATH
T20070185
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL CRIMINAL DIVISION
MR JUSTICE FORBES
and
SIR RICHARD CURTIS
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R |
Appellant |
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- v - |
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T |
Respondent |
____________________
Peter Blair, QC & Kerry Barker for the Defence
Hearing dates: 3rd March 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Latham :
2. Section 34 provides as follows:
"The rebuttable presumption of criminal law that a child aged 10 or over is incapable of committing an offence is hereby abolished."
"To turn to doli incapax, the noble Lord Henley asked rather optimistically whether it was causing any problem at the moment. The position in relation to doli incapax was very well described by the noble and learned Lord Ackner during the course of his remarks. The position is that at the moment it has to be proved that the defendant knows that what he or she is doing is wrong. That process is being used in a manipulative way in many courts by defendants, who say, "You have to bring a teacher social worker or some mature adult in order to prove this. It leads to difficulty with the calling of witnesses; it is hoped on the part of many defendants that this will make the Crown Prosecution Service bring its proceedings to a halt; it clogs up the youth court; and it is simply designed to make the proceedings more difficult. So the answer to question is: yes it is causing real difficulties. It offends against common sense that you have to prove it. The possibility is not ruled out, where there is a child who has genuine learning difficulties and is genuinely at sea on the question of on right or wrong, of seeking to run that as specific defence. All the provision does is remove the presumption that the child is incapable of committing wrong."
"ARTICLE 25
CHILDREN UNDER 7
No act done by any person under 7 years of age is a crime.
ARTICLE 26
CHILDREN BETWEEN 7 AND 14
No act done by any person over 7 and under 14 years of age is a crime, unless it was shown affirmatively that such person sufficient capacity to know that the act was wrong."
"During the first stage of infancy and the next half stage of childhood, infantiae proxima, they were not punishable for any crime. During the other half stage of childhood, approaching to puberty from 10˝ to 14, they were indeed punishable, if found to be doli capaces, or capable of mischief; but with many mitigations and not with the utmost rigour of the law. During the last stage (or the age of puberty, and afterwards) minors were liable to be punished, as well capitally, as otherwise."
"The presumption is so old that firm evidence is not easily to find. Bracton's 13th century treatise talks of children as being protected by "harmlessness of intention" (innocentia consilii), but does not specify an age limit (the protection in his day was the practice of pardoning convicted children rather than exempting them from trial and this expedient persisted until at least the 15th century).
As with "insanity" it is not easy to be sure when inability to tell right from wrong became an excuse, because the institutional writers tended to use the ambiguous word "discretion". But the 1338 Year Book says that Edward III's Judge Spigurnel decided that a child could be hanged for killing his friend, because by hiding, he had shown that "he could discern between good and evil". By the time of Lambard's Erienarcha, designed as a handbook for Justices of the Peace and published in 1581, there could be no conviction of an infant under the age of 12 years, "unless it may by some evident token appeare that he had understanding of good and evill…" Spigurnel's principle (if it was his), had become a rebuttable presumption; and by Hale's time (the late 17th century) its age limit had been raised to 14. Almost certainly it was not confined to homicide, for not many years after publication of Eirenarcha, Pulton is cited as applying it to theft."
"… in these days of universal education from the age of 5 it seems ridiculous that evidence of some mischievous discretion should be required if a case of malicious damage is committed as it was in this case."
In A v Director of Public Prosecutions.[1992] Crim. LR 34, Bingham LJ in concluding that the facts of the case were not in themselves sufficient to displace the presumption, said:
"… children have the benefit of the presumption which in this case and some others seems to me to lead to results inconsistent with common sense"
"The presumption relied upon by the appellant is no longer part of the law of England"
It is quite plain from the judgment that Laws J was intending, by the use of that phrase, to consign the concept of doli incapax to history. At page 118 he said:
"It is no part of the general law that a defendant should be proved to appreciate that his act is "seriously wrong"".
"No such presumption operates in Scotland where normal criminal responsibility attaches to a child over 8 and I do not understand that injustice is considered to have resulted from this situation."
It would seem, accordingly that he was contrasting the presumption on the one hand with full criminal responsibility on the other.
"Mr Henriques QC, presenting the respondent's case, frankly conceded that the Divisional Court was bound by authority to recognise and apply the presumption, but he submitted that the presumption was illogical in conception and bizarre in its effect. His written case submissions based on the current educational standards of children and on the ever earlier onset of their physical and psychological maturity, as witness by the recent statutory abolition of the irrebuttable common law presumption that boys under 14 are incapable of offences involving sexual intercourse on their own part (Sexual Offences Act 1993). The written case also listed examples of legislative and judicial changes of attitude towards young children called as witnesses. Against this background counsel submitted, not that the presumption should be swept away but (echoing the 1954 proposal of Professor Glanville Williams) that in recognition of its frailties your lordships should by judicial intervention effect a change by laying it down that the prosecution's initial burden of showing a prima facie case against a child should be the same as if the accused were an adult but that the child should then be able by evidence to raise as a defence the issue that he was doli incapax; it would then be for the prosecution to prove to the criminal standard that the child was doli capax. That your Lordships in a judicial capacity could make this change which counsel categorised as merely procedural, was an express and necessary part of his argument.
Of course no one could possibly contend (nor did Mr Henriques try to do so) that this proposal represents what has always been the common law; it would be a change or "development". It is quite clear that as the law stands, the Crown must, as part of the prosecution's case show that a child defendant is doli capax before that child can have a case to meet. To call the proposed innovation a merely procedural change greatly understates, in my view, its radical nature, which would not be disguised by continuing to impose the persuasive burden of proof upon the prosecution. The change would not merely alter the trial procedure but would in effect get rid of the presumption of doli incapax which must now be rebutted before a child defendant can be called for his defence and the existence of which will in practice often prevent a charge from even being brought. This reflection must be enough to discourage any thoughts of "judicial legislation" on the lines proposed.
Finally, at page 189 A he said:
"One solution which has been suggested is to abolish the presumption with or without an increase in the minimum age of criminal responsibility. This, as Mr Robertson pointed out, could expose children to the full criminal process at an earlier age than most countries of Western Europe."
18. Nowhere in any of these passages, or indeed in any other part of his speech, did Lord Lowry suggest that the concept of doli incapax had any existence separate from the presumption. If he had considered that it had, that must surely have been part of the reasoning and argument in the part of his speech to which we have referred which starts at page 185G. Accordingly, it seems to us, Lord Lowry must have considered that the abolition of the presumption would indeed have had the effect of lowering the age of criminal responsibility to 10, as he intimates in the passage at page 189A.