Supreme Court of Canada
Kelsey v. R., 1953 1 S.C.R. 220
Date: 1953-03-16
James Alfred Kelsey
(Plaintiff) Appellant;
and
Her Majesty The
Queen (Defendant) Respondent.
1953: February 18, 19; 1953: March 16.
ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL FOR
ONTARIO.
Criminal law—Murder—Extra-judicial
admissions—Whether jury need be warned of danger of convicting solely on
confession—Sufficiency of charge—Whether defence theory adequately put to the
jury.
On the strength of his three self
incriminating declarations, the appellant was charged with a murder which had
remained unsolved for more than two years. Two of his admissions were made
verbally to friends of his and the third was contained in a statement to the
police in his own handwriting and accepted by the Courts as having been given
freely and voluntarily. The appellant did not give evidence before the jury and
the theory of the defence was that although he had in fact made the statements
they were untrue. His conviction was affirmed by the Court of Appeal for Ontario.
Two questions of law were submitted on appeal to this Court, namely, whether
the jury had been adequately instructed as to the theory of the defence and
whether they should have been warned as to the danger of convicting when the
only evidence connecting the accused with the crime was his unsworn
extra-judicial admissions.
Held (Cartwright
J. dissenting), that the appeal should be dismissed.
Per Rinfret
C.J., Rand, Kellock, Estey, Locke and Fauteux JJ.: There was no legal duty for
the trial judge to warn the jury of the danger of convicting the appellant of
murder even if, in their view, the only evidence to connect him with the crime
consisted of his unsworn extrajudicial admissions.
There was in fact independent evidence
tending to support the accused’s admissions of having participated in the
commission of the murder; the jury were adequately instructed as to the theory
of the defence, namely, that the admissions were untrue, and of the numerous
points which, in the appellant’s submission, should have been brought to their
attention, some were actually submitted to them by the trial judge and those
which were not had either no foundation on the
[Page 221]
evidence or if they had, were denuded of any
real significance in the test of the truthfulness of the material admission.
The allotment of any substance to an argument or of any value to a grievance
resting on the omission of the trial judge from mentioning such argument must
be conditioned on the existence in the record of some evidence or matter apt to
convey a sense of reality in the argument and in the grievance.
Per Cartwright
J. (dissenting): The authorities cited by the appellant do not formulate a rule
of law that, in cases in which the only evidence to connect one accused of
murder with the crime consists of his unsworn extra-judicial admissions, the
trial judge must warn the jury that it is dangerous to convict.
It was however the duty of the trial judge to
impress upon the jury the necessity of testing the truth of the admissions made
by the accused by an examination of the other facts proved, and to call their
attention to the circumstances mainly relied upon by the defence as tending to
cast doubt upon the truth of the admissions, and this duty he failed to
perform.
APPEAL from the oral judgment delivered by
the Court of Appeal for Ontario, affirming the appellant’s conviction for
murder.
A.E. Maloney for the appellant.
W.B. Common Q.C. for the respondent.
The judgment of the Chief Justice, Rand,
Kellock, Estey, Locke and Fauteux, JJ. was delivered by:—
FAUTEUX J.—On the 18th of September 1952, a jury
of the Supreme Court of Ontario found that the appellant, “on or about the 9th
day of December 1949, at the Township of Thorold, in the County of Welland, did
unlawfully murder Sam Delibasich”.
An appeal against this verdict was unanimously
dismissed; the oral reasons delivered by the Chief Justice of the Province, at
the conclusion of the argument, being:—
We see no reason for disturbing the verdict
of the jury in this case. We think that statements of the accused admitted in
evidence were voluntary statements and properly admitted. We consider the
charge of the learned trial judge to the jury was adequate. The appeal must be
dismissed.
The appellant then obtained leave to appeal to
this Court on two questions of law, namely:—
(a) Did the learned judge err
in failing to instruct the jury adequately as to the theory of the defence?
(b) Did the learned trial judge err
in failing to instruct the jury as to the danger of convicting the accused of
murder where the only evidence to connect him with the crime consists of his
unsworn extra-judicial admissions?
[Page 222]
For a proper consideration of these questions,
the main features of the case may, at first, be related.
Sam Delibasich, a taxi operator of the city of
Welland, was last seen alive in that city at 6.30 p.m. on Friday, the 9th of
December 1949. In the late afternoon of the following day, Saturday the 10th,
his cab was observed in the west-end of the city of Toronto, in a parked
position in front of a building, number 2111 Bloor Street West, by a resident
of these premises, one Mrs. Bell who, a few days after, reported to the
police the fact of its continued presence. A week later, on Saturday the 17th,
the body of Delibasich was discovered, by a hunter, in the middle of a ploughed
field off of the Hurricane East Road, at some 4 or 5 miles from the city of
Welland. The Provincial Police were immediately alerted; a call went out for
the cab which the Toronto police—already apprised of its presence on Bloor
Street—towed into custody.
From the investigation, particularly of the
body, of the place and surroundings where it was found and of the cab itself,
no clues connecting any one with the murder could be found. However, and as the
evidence before the jury indicates, the following facts were then ascertained.
The body of the victim was lying some 300 feet from the road, face down, with
the arms extended and frozen stiff. The clothing was intact and mud-stained. No
footprints and no indication of a scuffle were found in the field. The autopsy
revealed on the front of the body depressions leading to the opinion that,
while warm, it had lain on an irregular surface, the imprint of which was left
during the freezing process. There were several wounds, the fatal ones having
been inflicted on the head by a blunt instrument and six others—three before
and three after death—caused by a rigid, round and pointed instrument. Death
was attributed to fracture of the skull and injury of the brain.
The victim was known to usually carry on his
person, in a wallet, substantial sums of money, but an amount of $13 only,
mostly in silver, and loose in his pocket, was found. The operator’s badge and
operating permits usually attached to the sun-visor of the cab, and any other
identification papers were missing. Whether there was in the cab any indication
of a struggle or any blood is not shown in the evidence.
[Page 223]
This crime had remained unsolved for more than
two years when the Crown acquired direct evidence, in the form of three
self-incriminating declarations made by the appellant—each of them at different
times and to different persons—on the strength of which the latter was
prosecuted for murder. Two of these admissions were made verbally by the
appellant to friends of his, the first, in September, 1951, to one Aubrey
Leslie Merritt, whom he had known since childhood, and who, after long
hesitation, i.e., in January, 1952, apprised the police of the same; the
second, to Blanche Lucy Benner, of the city of Welland, with whom he had
intimate relations and who reluctantly related these admissions to the police
after his arrest. The third appears in a statement to the police made by the
appellant in his own handwriting and accepted by the two Courts below as having
been given freely and voluntarily.
The substance of the facts related by the
appellant on these three occasions is:—On the night of the disappearance of Sam
Delibasich, the appellant and his brother Lloyd met at the Reeta Hotel in
Welland where they consumed a small quantity of beer. They there and then
agreed “to make some quick money” and to hire Delibasich’s cab, drive out of
town, “knock him out” and take his cab to Toronto to sell it.—Incidentally, it
may be noted that the appellant, his brother and their mother were also of the
city of Welland, and knew the taxi operator very well.—In furtherance of this
plot, they called Delibasich, hired his cab and drove with him to
St. Catharines when, nearing Port Robinson Road, they required him to
stop. Their victim was then struck, at first with a hammer and then with an
ice-pick, the latter instrument being used “to finish him”, according to what
the appellant said to Merritt, or “to make sure”, according to what he wrote
himself in his statement to the police. Having abandoned the body in a field,
they proceeded to Toronto, stopping, en route, at Toronto Bay to throw into
Lake Ontario the hammer, the ice-pick and some of the belongings of the victim.
Attempts to sell the cab at used car lots in Toronto being vain, it was left on
the street. They spent the night in the city and then returned to Welland.
The evidence also shows that a few days after
having confessed to police officers, the appellant freely consented to
accompany them to Toronto inorder to indicate, in the
[Page 224]
course of the journey, the various points having
any bearing on the case. He thus pointed out the road leading to the field
where the body had been found, the route followed to reach the point of the Bay
from where he and his brother threw the hammer, the ice-pick, the operator’s
badge and the various papers of the victim into the lake. Though definitely
unfamiliar with the city of Toronto, he also indicated one of the used car lots
at which they vainly attempted to sell the cab and also the place where the
latter had been abandoned on Bloor Street. The latter point was not more than
200 feet away from the place where the cab had, more than two years before,
been observed by Mrs. Bell the day after the murder. The appellant was
unable to locate, in the same district, the hotel where they were alleged by
him to have registered under fictitious names, nor did the police subsequently
succeed in doing so: it appears however from the evidence that hotel
registration records were rather poorly kept if at all in the hotels of this
particular district of the city.
This, in substance, was the evidence in the
record at the close of the case for the prosecution.
In defence, the subject matter of the evidence
adduced was limited to the character of the appellant. In this respect, the
record shows the absence of any previous convictions, that his past conduct
rendered unlikely his connection with the crime of murder and established the
particular frankness of the appellant. Though testifying on the voir dire, in
an unsuccessful attempt to prevent the production of his statement to the
police, the appellant did not however give any evidence before the jury,
leaving thus unchallenged by him the fact and the truth of his various
declarations. With the addition that nothing could be shown or found in the
record which would indicate or suggest any reason or motive prompting the
appellant to falsely charge himself and his own brother with the murder of a
person they both very well knew, this summary relates the main features of the
case.
Turning now to the points of law raised in this
appeal and dealing with the first one, i.e. whether the trial Judge erred in
failing to instruct the jury adequately as to the theory of the defence.
[Page 225]
The defence did not deny the fact but only the
truthfulness of the appellant’s admissions. This was the theory of the defence
at trial and the sole one suggested at the hearing before this Court. More than
once it was stated to the jury by the trial Judge in his charge. It is contended
however that this was not done adequately because the trial Judge failed to
direct the attention of the jury to some 19 or 20 alleged arguments purported
to be related to the theory of the defence. Whether all these arguments, which
a subsequent and minute examination of the record suggested to counsel for the
appellant, were actually formulated or even thought of before the jury by
counsel then acting for the accused, could not be asserted to us and is very
doubtful if one is to rely on the less numerous objections made at trial
immediately after the address of the judge. Be that as it may and as to the
merits of the contention itself, I must say that, after having carefully
considered each of the points on which it rests, I fail, in the light of the particular
features of this case, to see any real substance in it. In brief, some of these
points were actually submitted to the jury by the trial Judge and those which
were not are either without foundation on the evidence or, if they have, are
denuded of any real significance in the test of the truthfulness of the
material admission. This is all, I think, it is necessary to say on the matter
except as to two of these twenty points, which themselves illustrate the nature
of the others. Some comments may be found expedient in view of the importance
given to them by counsel for the appellant.
It is suggested that the trial Judge should have
commented on:—
(e) The failure of the police and
the appellant to locate the hotel at which he and his brother were supposed to
have registered and the inability of the police to find any such hotel
notwithstanding their intensive efforts to do so.
(h) The lack of any evidence of
blood or signs of a struggle in the victim’s taxi which serves strongly to
contradict the appellant’s statement to the police.
On (e):—As already indicated, the
evidence shows that registration records in hotels located in that particular
district were very poorly if at all kept. Moreover, at least two years had
elapsed since such registration was alleged to have been made and the moment
that verification of
[Page 226]
the fact was attempted. Under such
circumstances, I fail to see what real significance such evidence could have on
the question of the truthfulness of the appellant’s admissions.
As to (h):—It was conceded that the
presence or absence of blood in the cab was not even dealt with in the evidence
nor was either the absence or presence of signs of a struggle in the victim’s
taxi.
The allotment of any substance to an argument or
of any value to a grievance resting on the omission of the trial Judge from
mentioning such argument must be conditioned on the existence in the record of
some evidence or matter apt to convey a sense of reality in the argument and in
the grievance. Had the autopsy, for instance, revealed poisoning instead of
fracture of the skull as the cause of death, this undoubtedly would have, in
this case, been a point of substance relevant to the theory of the defence. Far
from conflicting with the appellant’s admissions, independent proof of certain
facts in the case tends to support his material admission, i.e. his
participation in the commission of the murder. These facts are:—The indication
by the appellant of the place he and his brother abandoned the cab
corresponding to the one at which it was found; the statement of the appellant
that the ice-pick was used once the victim had been struck with the hammer “to
finish him” or “to make sure” tallying with the opinion of the medicolegal
expert that six wounds had been made by a rigid, round and pointed instrument,
three before and three after death; the fact of the immediate disappearance of
his brother from Welland after the murder; the fact that nothing can be found
or was shown on the evidence in the nature of a reason or a motive moving the
appellant to make false admissions charging himself and his own brother with
the murder of a person they both knew very well.
In law, the general rule as again stated
recently in Azoulay v. The Queen,
is that the trial Judge in the course of his charge should review the substantial
part of the evidence and give the jury the theory of the defence so that
they may appreciate the value and effect of that evidence and how the law is to
be applied to the facts as
[Page 227]
they find them. It is, of course, unnecessary
that the jury’s attention be directed to all of the evidence, and how far a
trial Judge should go in discussing it must depend in each case upon the nature
and character of the evidence in relation to the charge, the issues raised and
the conduct of the trial. In the words of Goddard, L.C.J. in Derek
Clayton-Wright:
The duty of the Judge … is adequately and
properly performed ... if he puts before the jury clearly and fairly the
contentions on either side, omitting nothing from his charge, so far as the
defence is concerned, of the real matters upon which the defence is
based. He must give … a fair picture of the defence, but that does not mean to
say that he is to paint in the details or to comment on every argument which
has been used or to remind them of the whole of the evidence which has been
given by experts or anyone else.
The rule is simple and implements the
fundamental principle that an accused is entitled to a fair trial, to make a
full answer and defence to the charge, and to these ends, the jury must be
adequately instructed as to what his defence is by the trial Judge. Whether the
rule has in any given case been complied with may at times be difficult to
determine. In the present matter and for the reasons above given, I agree with
the members of the Court of Appeal for Ontario that the charge was sufficient.
The second ground of appeal is that the trial
judge erred “in failing to instruct the jury as to the danger of convicting the
accused of murder where the only evidence to connect him with the crime
consists of his extra-judicial admissions.”
This ground rests on the assumption of the fact
that the record discloses a complete lack of independent evidence tending to
support the truthfulness of the material admission made by the appellant. That
such an assumption does not flow from a consideration of the evidence and of
all the circumstances of this case I have endeavoured already to demonstrate.
However, and on the basis of a different view being held in the matter, the question
of law must be considered.
That the appellant could be legally convicted of
murder by a jury solely on his extra-judicial admissions, i.e. without any
corroborating evidence, is not disputed. What is suggested and what for the
success of the appeal on this
[Page 228]
point must be accepted, is that there was in
this case a legal duty for the trial judge to warn the jury of the danger of
doing so. No authorities or precedents in point were quoted on behalf of the
appellant, nor was it possible to find anyone to support this contention.
The only two cases to which our attention was
directed did not state or recognize such a rule of law. The first one is Rex
v. Sykes. The
question there considered by the Court of Appeal was “how far the jury can rely
on these confessions,” i.e. the confessions made in that particular case.
Nothing in what was then stated by Ridley J., on behalf of the Court, purported
to be tantamount to a statement of a rule of law such as the one here contended
for, but was indeed only an approval of the impeached instructions given to the
jury by the Commissioner in that particular case. The question of warning was
not dealt with. In the second case, Rex v. Rubletz, the ratio decidendi is that the
trial judge, having determined that the confession made by the accused was free
and voluntary, so instructed the jury, but in a manner confusing the two
issues, i.e. the one related to the free and voluntary character of the
confession and the other in respect to its veracity. On the latter point
Turgeon C.J., speaking for the Court, stated at page 252:—
If this confession was not free and
voluntary, it would not be before the jury at all. Being there, it is the
jury’s duty to find whether or not it is true. This issue is different from the
issue of admissibility which was before the Judge, and necessitates an inquiry
going much further afield. Unfortunately, the instruction given to the jury on
this all-important subject seems to me to have fallen short of what was
required and to have tended to make the jury think that, if the statement was
free and voluntary, it was true.
Nowhere in the case does the Court suggest that
a warning should have been given to the jury. Reference may be made to what the
Chief Justice said at page 251:—
It does not follow, because a person comes
forward freely and voluntarily and declares that he has committed a crime,
declares, for instance, that another person supposed to have died a natural
death, was in reality murdered by him, that his declaration must be accepted as
true and that he must be convicted of murder. A jury may convict him: Rex v.
Falkner & Bond 168 E.R. 908; R. v. Tippet 168 E.R. 923;
but before doing so they ought to be instructed by the Judge in such a manner
as to call their attention to all the circumstances surrounding the case and
which may affect the truth or falsity of the confession.
[Page 229]
In my opinion, the learned trial judge in the
present case having complied with the rule above considered in relation to the
first ground of appeal, nothing more, on the matter, was required in his
address to the jury.
The appeal should be dismissed.
CARTWRIGHT J. (dissenting):—The facts out of
which this appeal arises are stated in the reasons of my brother Fauteux. I
shall not repeat them but wish to mention the following additional details
which appear to me to be of some importance. The witnesses, Merritt and
Mrs. Benner, each of whom testified that the accused had confessed to
taking part in killing Delibasich also testified that they did not believe his
confession. After the accused had been arrested on a charge of murder his first
statement to the police amounted to an assertion of his innocence. Shortly
afterwards, following a question and an admonition, the accused, in the
presence of the police officers, wrote out the confession which was admitted as
Exhibit 8 at the trial.
The accused did not give evidence before the
jury, but it is not, I think, open to question that both the fact of the three
statements having been made and their truthfulness, if made, were put in issue
by the plea of “not guilty.” The theory of the defence was that although the
accused had in fact made the statements they were untrue and he had had nothing
to do with the killing of Delibasich.
Leave was granted to appeal to this Court on the
following points:—
(a) Did the learned trial judge err
in failing to instruct the jury adequately as to the theory of the defence?
(b) Did the learned trial judge err
in failing to instruct the jury as to the danger of convicting the accused of
murder where the only evidence to connect him with the crime consists of his
unsworn extra-judicial admissions?
As to the second of these points counsel for the
appellant relied on certain observations in the unanimous judgment of the Court
of Criminal Appeal in R. v. Walter Sykes.
In that case there was ample evidence, as in the case at bar, that a murder had
been committed. The accused had made statements to two witnesses, one of whom
was a police inspector, to the effect that he was the murderer. Later he had
retracted these statements.
[Page 230]
The following passages in the judgment at pages
236 and 237 are relevant:—
It would have been unsatisfactory to
convict on the evidence had it not been assisted by the confession, and
probably it would have been unsatisfactory if the conviction rested on the
confessions only, without the circumstances which make it probable that the
confessions were true.
The main point, however, is one independent
of all these details, the question how far the jury could rely on these
confessions. I think the Commissioner put it correctly; he said:
A man may be convicted on his own
confession alone; there is no law against it. The law is that if a man makes a
free and voluntary confession which is direct and positive, and is properly
proved, a jury may, if they think fit, convict him of any crime upon it. But
seldom, if ever, the necessity arises, because confessions can always be tested
and examined, first by the police, and then by you and us in Court, and the
first question you ask when you are examining the confession of a man is, is
there anything outside it to show that it was true? is it corroborated? are the
statements made in it of fact so far as we can test them true? was the prisoner
a man who had the opportunity of committing the murder? is his confession
possible? is it consistent with other facts which have been ascertained and
which have been, as in this case, proved before us?
It was said that the murder was the talk of
the countryside, and it might well be that a man under the influence of
insanity or a morbid desire for notoriety would accuse himself of such a crime.
I agree that this is so, but it was a question for the jury, and they ought to
see whether it was properly corroborated by facts, and so they were directed.
We think that this part of the case was quite sufficiently left to the jury,
and the Court thinks that there is no reason for giving leave to appeal.
This case was cited with approval by Turgeon
C.J.S. giving the unanimous judgment of the Court of Appeal for Saskatchewan in
Rex v. Rubletz, also
relied upon by counsel for the appellant. The learned Chief Justice said in
part:—
It does not follow, because a person comes
forward freely and voluntarily and declares that he has committed a crime, declares,
for instance, that another person supposed to have died a natural death, was in
reality murdered by him, that his declaration must be accepted as true and that
he must be convicted of murder. A jury may convict him: R. v. Falkner &
Bond, 168 E.R. 908; R. v. Tippet, 168 E.R. 923; but before doing so
they ought to be instructed by the Judge in such a manner as to call their
attention to all the circumstances surrounding the case and which may affect
the truth or the falsity of the confession.
The learned judge decided that the
statement was nevertheless a free and voluntary one, and I think he was right
in so deciding. But a free and voluntary statement may, nevertheless, be false.
Men have been known to accuse themselves falsely of the most heinous offences,
fully conscious, sometimes, of the falsity of their avowal, and imagining at
other times, that their souls were in fact charged with crime. If this
confession was not free and voluntary, it would not be before the jury
[Page 231]
at all. Being there, it is the jury’s duty
to find whether or not it is true. This issue is different from the issue of
admissibility which was before the judge, and necessitates an inquiry going
much further afield.
I do not read these judgments as formulating a
rule of law that, in cases in which the only evidence to connect one accused of
murder with the crime consists of his unsworn extra‑judicial admissions,
the trial judge must warn the jury that it is dangerous to convict; but I think
that they furnish a guide as to the way in which, in such cases, the judge
should perform the duty which always rests upon him of laying the theory of the
defence adequately and fairly before the jury.
In such cases, and especially when the accused
has not given evidence, I think it incumbent upon the trial judge, (i) to
impress upon the jury the necessity of testing the truthfulness of the
admissions by an examination of the other facts and circumstances proved, and
(ii) to call their attention, not necessarily to all the circumstances, but to
those mainly relied upon by the defence as tending to cast doubt upon the
truthfulness of the confession. In the case at bar I have reached the
conclusion that neither of these duties was adequately performed.
In the argument before us and in his factum,
counsel for the appellant referred to nineteen matters which, in his
submission, might well cause the jury to doubt the truth of the confession, of
which only two were specifically mentioned by the learned trial judge in his
charge. I do not propose to examine each of the items in this list. Several of
them appear to me to be unimportant but I wish to refer to three of them. (i)
It is apparent from the evidence of Inspector Wood that the accused had told
him that after abandoning Delibasich’s taxi-cab in Toronto, he and his brother
walked to a hotel at which they registered and spent the night of December 9,
1949; but a most careful and extensive search by the police had failed to
locate any record of registration or other evidence to substantiate this. (ii)
If the confession was true, the motive for the murder was robbery but some $13
was found on the person of the deceased. (iii) If the confession was true, it
would seem probable that there would have been some bloodstains in the taxi-cab
but there was no evidence as to whether any such stains were found by the
police. None
[Page 232]
of these three matters was referred to by the
learned trial judge in his charge. Counsel for the accused specifically
requested that the attention of the jury be called to the item thirdly
mentioned. I am respectfully of the opinion that they should have been put
before the jury and further, since the theory of the defence was that the
accused had fabricated the confession, the learned trial judge should have
pointed out that there was no detail in the confession verified by any evidence
extraneous to it which might not have come to the accused’s knowledge through
reading of the crime in the press. The learned trial judge in another
connection mentioned to the jury that he remembered reading about the
occurrence in the newspapers. No doubt, as in the Sykes case, “the murder was
the talk of the countryside.” I do not intend to suggest that had any or all of
these matters been mentioned to the jury their verdict would necessarily, or
probably, have been different, but I can not satisfy myself it might not have
been.
How then did the learned trial judge present the
theory of the defence to the jury? The following passages in the charge appear
to me to be the only ones which deal with it:—
While I am on this subject, I want to say
to you that that is the way you may interpret the evidence of the statement,
this very important statement which has been put in and which was given by the
accused. It will be before you in evidence. It is true that this is not sworn
evidence but, gentlemen, it is evidence in the case. You may interpret that
statement like any other evidence. You may believe all of it; you may think
that statement is true. There may be parts that you may think are not true, or
you may think as the defence asks you to, that it is not true at all.
. .
.
But in this case most of the evidence is
direct. It is direct evidence of the accused himself if you believe it. He has
signed a statement telling what happened. There is the evidence of two
witnesses who say he told them what happened. That, gentlemen, is direct
evidence, and it is a question of whether you believe it or not.
Gentlemen, in this case I have concluded
that I do not need to charge you upon the question of manslaughter, and for
this reason. I have not heard any evidence upon which a jury could find a
verdict of manslaughter. Believe me, if there was any such evidence it would be
my duty to draw it to your attention, and I would be most happy to do so, but I
cannot on this evidence, on the evidence I have heard, find any evidence that
would justiny a verdict of manslaughter. Indeed, and I ask Mr. Martin, who
has so ably defended this young man, to see if I state it correctly, the whole
theory of the defence is that this accused had nothing to do with this crime;
that these stories were not true, and if that theory is accepted by you, or if
you have an honest doubt whether that is the correct theory or not, the verdict
will be a complete acquittal.
. .
.
[Page 233]
The theory of the defence, and you must
consider it, gentlemen, because it is always important, is that that statement
which was signed by the accused is not true at all; that having told the story
once, he went right along with the thing. You must give consideration and
thought as to that, gentlemen. But I suggest to you that you must also
consider, and it is entirely for you to say, would a person sign a statement
like that after being warned that he was charged with murder and was not
required to say anything; would he do that if it were not true? You may think
so. You are the judges of the facts, and it is entirely for you to say.
With the deepest respect for the learned trial
judge, I find myself in agreement with the submission of counsel for the
appellant that the theory of the defence was mentioned only to be brushed
aside. Conceding that the theory was not a strong one, it was nonetheless
necessary that it be adequately presented to the jury and for the reasons I
have set out above I think this was not done.
I would allow the appeal, quash the conviction
and direct a new trial.
Appeal dismissed.
Solicitors for the Appellant: Edmonds
& Maloney.
Solicitor for the Respondent: C.P. Hope.