APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
Lord Justice Clerk
Lord Osborne
Lord Johnston
[2005HCJAC137]
Appeal No: XC288/03
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by THE LORD JUSTICE CLERK in
THE REFERRAL BY THE SCOTTISH CRIMINAL CASES REVIEW COMMISSION
in the case of GEORGE McPHEE Appellant; against HER MAJESTY'S
ADVOCATE
Respondent: ______
For the Appellant: Scott, QC, Shead; BCKM
For the Crown: Beckett, QC; Crown Agent
6 December 2005
Introduction
[1] In November-December 1985 the appellant was tried at Inverness
High Court on 15 charges. Seven were charges of theft by housebreaking,
six were charges of theft, one was a charge of assault and one
was a charge of murder. We are concerned only with the murder
charge. As amended at the outset of the trial, the charge was
in the following terms:
"(6) on 24 September 1984 you did enter uninvited the house
known as 'Dunrobin,' Culbokie, District of Ross and Cromarty and
there assault Elizabeth Jessie MacKenzie or Sutherland, residing
there, place your arm or hand around her neck, strangle her and
did repeatedly cut and stab her on the neck and body with a knife
and you did murder her."
[2] The murder was committed in the afternoon of the date libelled.
The victim was a 36 years-old married woman. She had two children,
one of whom, her 10 year old daughter, found her body on her return
from school. This was a horrifying murder involving brutal violence.
[3] The police enquiry in this case was conducted by officers
of the Northern Constabulary. The officer in charge of the enquiry
was the late D Supt Andrew Lister. The scientific work was carried
out by the forensic laboratory of Grampian Police. It was not
until August 1985 that the appellant was arrested.
[4] The appellant lodged a special defence of alibi to the effect
that at the relevant time he was in the Dundonnell-Braemore area
with an associate, Colin Hawkins; but he withdrew that defence
during the trial and substituted a special defence of incrimination
in which he accused Hawkins of the murder. He was convicted by
a majority verdict and sentenced to life imprisonment with a recommendation
by the trial judge, Lord Hunter, that he should serve a minimum
period of 25 years imprisonment. This recommendation was based
on the nature of the injuries inflicted on the deceased.
[5] The appellant served 171/2 years of this sentence before
being given interim liberation some months after the lodging of
the Commission's referral.
[6] The Crown has conceded that the conviction cannot stand.
It is for this Court to decide whether that concession is well-founded.
In our opinion, it is.
The essential evidence
[7] The Commission has given us a thorough analysis of the evidence.
We need not rehearse it in detail. It is sufficient to say that
there was no forensic evidence linking the appellant to the deceased,
to the murder weapon or to the locus. The Crown relied on (1)
the eye witness evidence of Hawkins, (2) the evidence of a prisoner
named Trevor Proudfoot that the appellant had confessed to the
murder in a conversation with him when they were sharing a cell,
and (3) evidence of footprints found outside and inside the house
that were said to be linked to the appellant.
The evidence led before the withdrawal of the alibi
The footprint evidence
[8] On the day after the murder DS Ross and DC Birnie of the
Identification Branch photographed four footprints in the vegetable
patch in the garden. They made a cast of the most detailed of
these. DS Ross concluded that the positions of the footprints
indicated that the person who made them was running. Footprints
made with soil were found on the carpet of the bedroom where the
body was found.
[9] DS Ross suggested that the footprints in the garden appeared
to have been made by the same person. It was difficult, because
of movement, to pin down exactly the size of the footprint of
which they had taken the cast, but in his opinion it was a footprint
of a size 9 to size 10 type of footwear. DC Birnie corroborated
the view that the four footprints appeared to have been made by
one person. In relation to the size of the footprint from which
the cast was made, he could say only that it appeared to be of
a larger size than his own feet, which were size 71/2 or 8.
[10] DI Angus McQuarrie said that he had recovered a pair of
shoes from the appellant in Porterfield Prison. The appellant
had been wearing them when he had first seen him at Durham Police
Station on 9 August 1985. These shoes were size 9. He said that
when he saw him at Durham Police Station on 12 August 1985, Hawkins
was wearing size 7 shoes.
[11] We should mention at this stage that Hawkins himself had
said in a precognition on oath that his feet were size 8; but
that point was not brought out at the trial
[12] After the appellant dropped the defence of alibi, D Supt
Lister gave further evidence about the footprints. We shall refer
to that evidence later.
The evidence in chief of Hawkins
[13] Hawkins said that he and the appellant were in Culbokie
on the day of the murder. They had been on an expedition of theft
and housebreaking. As they drove their van past the deceased's
house, the appellant said that it was a "likely place to
screw." The appellant turned off the main road and parked
on a dirt track just past the house and less than 15 yards from
it. He left the van and climbed over the fence between the van
and the gable of the house. He looked through a rear window and
entered the house by the back door. He was away for about 30 to
45 minutes. When he returned, he looked visibly shocked. He acted
as though he had something on his conscience. His hands, which
had been dirty, were now clean. His coat, which had been open,
was now zipped up.
The evidence led after the withdrawal of the alibi
The appellant's new line of defence
[14] Hawkins concluded his evidence in chief at the end of the
second day of the trial. On the following morning, counsel for
the appellant was given leave to withdraw the alibi and to lodge
the special defence of incrimination. Hawkins was then cross-examined
on the basis that he committed the crime.
The evidence of Trevor Proudfoot
[15] Proudfoot said that sometime in August-September 1985 he
shared a cell with the appellant in Porterfield Prison. The appellant
told him that he had been questioned by the police about the Culbokie
murder and he said "They'll never be able to get me for that."
The appellant said that he had committed the murder but that they
would be unable to prove it.
The evidence of D Supt Lister
[16] D Supt Lister said that the footprints outside the house
were size 9 at least, and possibly size 10. He said that they
had been made by the same person. He then said
"It was the same footprint in the garden as was in the house,
and this was later confirmed to me, of course, by the lab."
There was no documentary or oral evidence to support this last
assertion. D Supt Lister said that when he saw him in prison,
Hawkins was wearing size 7 shoes. He confirmed that the shoes
taken from the appellant were size 9.
[17] In cross-examination, he was asked about the size of the
shoe that made the impressions in the soil. This was his evidence:
"Q - Can you be sure that the imprint that can be made in
soft soil by a heavy type of shoe or boot can in actual fact look
much larger than the shoe or boot maybe when it is not on the
ground?-
A - This is a point that was brought to us by the lab. They said
that it could be a size smaller than the actual print, that there
was some slippage in the soft soil."
In re-examination, his evidence on the point was:
"Q - So far as the print in the soil is concerned did you
at any stage consider whether this might have been made by Hawkins?
A - Oh yes, that is why I looked at his feet.
Q - And what conclusion did you reach about that?
A - That his feet were far too fine to have made the print we
had in the plaster cast.
Q - By the Court: Far too what?
A - Far too fine, too small and narrow to fit the print in the
plaster cast.
Q - Re-examination continued by the AD: Did you reach any conclusions
as to whether McPhee might have made that print?
A - Yes, only insofar as McPhee's footwear was the right size,
certainly not the footwear he was wearing but the size was right.
Q.- And so far as the print in the soil is concerned I suppose
the manner in which that footprint was impressed in the ground
would depend on a number of factors, is that right?
A.- Without a doubt.
Q.- They would depend firstly on the softness of the ground and
otherwise?
A.- Yes.
Would it also depend on the weight of the person and size of
the person?
A.- Yes, that would be true of any soil.
Q.- And it might also reflect the type of shoe?
A.- I don't think there is any question about that, it did appear
a heavy soled shoe."
[18] D Supt Lister therefore offered opinion evidence which excluded
Hawkins and pointed to the appellant as the maker of the footprint.
He admitted that what he said was subject to the qualifications
put to him in the exchanges that we have quoted.
The evidence of the appellant
[19] The appellant said that when he and Hawkins were driving
towards the house, he saw the deceased walking along the verge
towards Culbokie, coming from the direction of the house. He told
Hawkins that there might be something in the house worth stealing.
They stopped and parked the van behind the house. Hawkins went
towards the house. After about 15-20 minutes, Hawkins returned
and said "Let's get out of here. I've been caught."
The appellant asked him "Did they get a good look at you?"
Hawkins replied "No, I don't think so." Hawkins had
a fair amount of blood on his shirt, jacket and trousers.
Sufficiency of evidence
[20] Even without the footprint evidence, there was sufficient
in the evidence of Hawkins and Proudfoot to entitle the jury to
convict; although, as the Commission convincingly explains, and
as the transcript shows, these unsavoury individuals had serious
problems of credibility.
The trial judge's charge
[21] The trial judge approached the evidence on the view that
when the special defence was changed, the footprints became a
key issue. He pointed out that while the appellant was pleading
alibi, the footprints might not have been of any material importance,
since they could have been made by anybody; but that once the
appellant admitted that he and Hawkins were at the locus at the
material time, the question became in substance which of them
was the intruder. In our view, that approach was correct.
[22] The trial judge dealt with the footprint issue in the following
way:
"Now, when the case is presented that way, if you reach
that stage, and it is always if you reach that stage, the respective
sizes of shoes worn by the accused and Hawkins, and their relation
to the footprints found in the vegetable patch, you know, the
four footprints, may become of very great importance, and the
Crown maintain that the footprints in the vegetable patch were
of a size 9, possibly 10, and they refer to the evidence of DS
Ross, the Scene of Crime Officer, and D Supt Lister in that respect,
who say it was the same person and that they were of a size 9,
possible 10.
There is evidence from other police officers, I think MacQuarrie,
Lister and Lowson, that the shoes being worn by the accused when
he was brought north, were size 9, and there is evidence I think
- although I don't think it was very clearly put - that Hawkins
was wearing shoes when brought north, or before he was brought
north, of size 7, and D Supt Lister - a very experienced officer
- did say according to my note of his evidence, but it is for
you to remember, that Hawkins' foot was far too fine, small and
narrow to have created the impressions that were in the vegetable
plot.
So, ladies and gentlemen, you will have to bear in mind what
was said by either side in this regard, but I do think it is necessary
that I should point out to you that if you reached the stage where
it is a choice between two men then this evidence, which might
not have counted for much if the alibi defence had been persisted
in, may be of a little importance, but it is for you to decide
what you make of it."
It is apparent therefore that the trial judge put the Crown case
on the footprint evidence at its highest, mentioning none of the
qualifications that D Supt Lister had to attach to the opinion
that he gave.
The appeal
[23] There was an appeal on the grounds that the verdict was
perverse and unreasonable and that the trial judge misdirected
the jury. The appeal was heard on 24 June 1986 and refused. The
case is not reported. There is no Opinion of the Court in the
records of Justiciary Office. We infer from such records as there
are that the appeal was refused in summary fashion.
The Commission's Referral
[24] The Commission has concerns regarding all three strands
of the Crown case. These are its concerns about the credibility
and reliability of Hawkins and Proudfoot.
"126. The Commission has serious concerns regarding the
credibility and reliability of the evidence of Mr Hawkins. He
substantially altered his position as to his and the applicant's
whereabouts on the day of the murder in the five statements he
gave to police officers. The Commission is not aware of any good
reason for Mr Hawkins changing his position in his statements
or of any attempt by Northern Constabulary to question him about
his changing position. The Commission is unable to ascertain for
certain that the Crown made full disclosure to the defence of
Mr Hawkins' change of position. The evidence found in his Crown
precognition and his precognition on oath, and that which he gave
at trial is not entirely consistent with or supported by that
of other witnesses. His description of the locus of the murder
is poor. The Commission is of the view that had the full circumstances
of Mr Hawkins' involvement in the conviction of the applicant
been known to the jury, this would have had a material impact
upon the jury's consideration of the evidence Mr Hawkins gave
at trial.
127. In his dealings with the Commission, Mr Proudfoot has freely
and frankly admitted that at that time of the murder and during
the subsequent police inquiry he was abusing illegal drugs and
that this affected his recollection of events, both subsequent
to and at the time of the 'confession.' The procurator fiscal
was sufficiently concerned about Mr Proudfoot's ability to recollect
events accurately that he communicated this fact to Crown Office.
Despite having been given the opportunity to read a transcript
of the evidence he gave at the trial, Mr Proudfoot was unable
to match this with his own recollections of that evidence. The
court was not made aware of Mr Proudfoot's drug related difficulties.
The Commission accordingly has concerns as to the reliability
of Mr Proudfoot's evidence. The Commission is of the view that
it is arguable that Northern Constabulary offered Mr Proudfoot
inducements to give evidence and that he was given information
about the murder of Mrs Sutherland by them. The Commission notes
that Mr Proudfoot was moved from his usual 'double' cell in HMP
Porterfield to a dormitory type cell for twenty-four hours only.
For approximately three hours of that time the applicant was placed
in the cell with Mr Proudfoot and it was during that time that
the 'confession' was said to have been made. The Commission has
obtained an affidavit from Ronald Thomson regarding the placing
of the applicant in the cell with Mr Proudfoot, discussed at paragraphs
89 - 92 above. The Commission is of the view that Mr Thomson is
a credible and reliable witness. Mr Proudfoot has expressed doubts
to the Commission as to his certainty about hearing a 'confession'
from the applicant. Accordingly, the Commission has serious concerns
regarding the credibility and reliability of Mr Proudfoot as a
witness in this case."
Having considered the question of the appellant's credibility
in relation to his alibi, with which we are not now concerned,
the Commission comes to the following conclusions.
"141 ... However, the Commission has particular concerns
regarding the credibility and reliability of the material elements
of the Crown case. These concerns are made acute by the fact no
forensic evidence exists to link the applicant to the deceased,
the murder weapon or the locus of the crime. While there is no
requirement for the Crown to adduce any such evidence, the Commission
is of the view that the lack of such evidence brings the credibility
and reliability of the Crown witnesses into sharp focus. The Commission
is of the view that the whole circumstances in which the evidence
of Mr Hawkins and Mr Proudfoot was obtained was not properly before
the jury or the High Court at appeal. The Commission is further
of the view at [sic] the way in which the evidence of the police
officers regarding the footprints was presented to the jury by
the Crown in the absence of the available evidence from the forensic
scientists as to its unreliability resulted in unfairness to the
applicant. The Commission is of the view that had these circumstances
been ventilated and the additional evidence and material been
before the jury, this would have been of material assistance to
the jury in determining the material issues at trial.
This last aspect of the Commission's concerns has led the Crown
to concede the appeal.
Evidence that has come to light
[25] The Crown has discovered that the police prepared a number
of life-size photographs of the footprints and took measurements
from them. It seems likely, although it is not certain, that the
Grampian Police Laboratory was given all of those photographs.
It also seems likely that an informal view as to the size of the
shoe that made the print was formed by at least one of the scientists
in the laboratory. But no record has been found to demonstrate
that the laboratory scientists ever concluded that the shoeprints
were made by a shoe of any particular size or range of sizes.
During 1984 and 1985 a number of pairs of shoes belonging to potential
suspects were examined in relation to the cast and the photographs,
with negative results.
[26] By letter dated 5 November 1985 the procurator fiscal at
Dingwall, Mr Steel Carnegie, wrote to the Chief Constable of Grampian
Police requesting that further work be undertaken by the forensic
laboratory. He said
"I am having sent through by Detective Chief Inspector Johnston
a plaster cast and a pair of shoes and I understand that Detective
Chief Inspector Johnston has arranged for the comparison of the
shoes with the cast and the measurement of the shoe for foot size."
It seems that the procurator fiscal thought that these shoes
had been worn by the appellant, although the evidence for that
was rather weak.
27] On 8 November 1985, the Chief Constable replied to the procurator
fiscal on this point as follows.
"In the case of the footprint plaster cast, Detective Inspector
Jensen has informed me that the footprint represented in the cast
is incomplete in that only part of the heel is visible. The shape
of the cast indicates that a double, if not triple, application
has occurred. The pattern associated with the second - and, if
present, the third - application merges into the main impression
and makes the interpretation of size impossible. Nor is it possible
to state with confidence whether the footprint in the cast was
made by a left or right shoe."
The Commission found this letter in the procurator fiscal's file.
There is no copy of it in the Crown Office file. It contradicts
the evidence of D Supt Lister. The Commission reports on the point
as follows:
"117. The legal officer assigned to this case spoke to the
scientists Ian Wilkie and Eric Jensen responsible for the examination
of the plaster cast at Grampian Police Laboratory. They confirmed
that despite their training, knowledge and expertise they were
unable to state the size of the shoe that made the impression
in the plaster cast. They had regard to the photographs taken
of the footprints, but due to the impressions being incomplete
and the photographs being inconclusive they were unable to state
the shoe size. They were not in a position to say what type of
foot could have made the impression. The scientists clarified
that the muddy footprints found within the house were not 'distinctly
different' from the cast and photographs provided from the garden."
This too contradicts the evidence of D Supt Lister as to shoe
size; and the last sentence of this paragraph is at variance with
his unsubstantiated assertion at the trial that the internal and
external footprints had been made by the same person and that
this had been confirmed by the laboratory. Neither DI Jensen nor
Mr Wilkie was called at the trial.
[28] The Crown confirms that the advocate depute was unaware
of the contents of the Chief Constable's letter dated 8 November
1985. If he had been, he would not have allowed D Supt Lister
to give the evidence that he gave.
[29] The Commission comments on the evidence of D Supt Lister
and DC Ross as follows.
"118. The findings of Grampian Forensic Laboratory in connection
with the footprint evidence were communicated to Northern Constabulary.
At the time of his giving evidence D Supt Lister had twenty-nine
years' police service. He was in charge of the inquiry into the
Culbokie murder. The evidence of the footprints was a major line
of enquiry. The Commission is of the view that it is reasonable
to infer that D Supt Lister as the most experienced officer and
the officer in charge of the enquiry, would have been made aware
of the report from Grampian Police Laboratory. While it is noted
that D Supt Lister may have acquired particular skills in certain
areas through his experience as a police officer, given the fact
that scientists trained in the examination of such footprints
could not state, for example, the size of the print, the Commission
is of the view that such evidence from D Supt Lister was outwith
his expertise, and if it were given in the knowledge of the report,
it was clearly disingenuous. The shoeprints were not complete.
In order to state accurately the size of the shoe that made the
print, one would have to estimate and extrapolate from other characteristics
of the shoe print. In the opinion of both of the experienced and
trained scientists who examined the available evidence regarding
the shoeprints, this was not possible. The Commission is of the
view that it was inappropriate for D Supt Lister and DC Ross to
give evidence about the shoeprints in the way that they did. Such
evidence related to a material issue at trial."
[30] The Commission's inference that D Supt Lister would have
been aware of the report from the Grampian Police Laboratory has
been shown to be correct. The laboratory staff seem to have interpreted
the procurator fiscal's letter of 5 November 1985 as a request
to size the cast itself. The answer that they gave is set out
in a laboratory report dated 14 November 1985 that was found at
the Grampian Police Laboratory this year. It relates to two productions,
the plaster cast and the appellant's shoes. The material part
of it is as follows:
"Details of case and examinations required
Request from PF that plaster cast of footprint already examined
be re-examined and opinion if any expressed in relation to size.
Results of examination
Nothing to be gleaned from cast in terms of size etc - report
to PF D'wall - copy filed under B140/85."
This report is initialled by Mr Wilkie. D Supt Lister has counter-signed
it, acknowledging receipt, on 14 November 1985. That was less
than three weeks before he gave evidence. There is no evidence
that the Crown was in possession of this document before this
year.
[31] DI Jensen has found a sketch of the cast that he prepared
some time in 1984. The sketch relates to the pattern characteristics
of the footprint; but DI Jensen has written on the sketch "size
?"
The Crown's conclusion
[32] We are indebted to the advocate depute for his meticulous
explanation of the Crown's position. The Crown's overall conclusion
is that it is possible and perhaps likely that someone in the
laboratory, perhaps DI Jensen, informally suggested to the police
that the shoe that made the print was size 9 or 10. DI Jensen
is content that this would not be an unreasonable judgment. However,
Mr Wilkie wholly rejects the validity of the opinion evidence
that was given. DI Jensen's own sketch bearing the word "size
?" suggests his own lack of confidence on the point. The
Chief Constable's letter of 8 November 1985, and the doubts of
Mr Wilkie that seem to underlie it, should have been disclosed
in the light of D Supt Lister's evidence.
[33] The advocate depute summarised the Crown's position as follows:
"Opinion evidence relating to footprints found outside the
locus on the day of the murder was presented which, in the light
of what is now known, ought not to have been presented or at least
ought not to have been presented without disclosure of contradictory
material. The material in question was not known to the advocate
depute who conducted the trial. At this distance it is not clear
why the material was not made available to him. It should have
been made known to him, but it would not have been obviously relevant
prior to the change of line of defence after the start of the
trial. What is clear is that had the advocate depute known of
the material in question he would not have led the evidence in
question.
In charging the jury, the trial judge gave that evidence a central
significance."
The advocate depute made no submission as to the credibility
or reliability of Hawkins or Proudfoot or on the question of misdirection.
He said that, in light of the new information about the footprints,
the Crown could not support the conviction.
Submissions for the appellant
[34] Senior counsel for the appellant submitted that there were
other factors in the case that she would have wished to have considered,
including the conduct of D Supt Lister, and in particular the
mention of a reward by him to Proudfoot; police pressure on and
inducements to Proudfoot and a fellow prisoner, Ronald Thomson,
who is referred to in paragraph 127 of the referral (supra), and
the five inconsistent police statements now known to have been
made by Hawkins. In the circumstances, she did not pursue these
matters.
Conclusions and decision
[35] In our opinion, there has been a grave miscarriage of justice.
The key issue, in our opinion, is the footprint evidence. The
evidence of DS Ross and DC Birnie on the point was led without
objection, although neither was qualified to express the opinion
that he gave; but at that stage of the trial counsel for the defence
was, we think, entitled to regard the footprint evidence as a
side issue. That it later became crucial is entirely the responsibility
of the appellant himself.
[36] In our view, the miscarriage of justice in this case lies
in the footprint evidence that was given by D Supt Lister. That
evidence ought not to have been given.
[37] Why the Chief Constable's letter to the procurator fiscal
dated 8 November 1985 was not passed to Crown Office, as appears
to be the case, and why a copy of the laboratory report dated
14 November 1985 was not submitted to the Crown, as also appears
to be the case, are not questions that we need explore. We need
only assess the significance of D Supt Lister's evidence and the
effect upon it of the information that has since come to light.
[38] We conclude that D Supt Lister's evidence that the laboratory
confirmed his view that the footprints inside and outside the
house were made by the same person was simply untrue. His evidence
as to the size of the footprint was untrue and was contradicted
by the Chief Constable's letter dated 8 November 1985 and by the
laboratory report dated 14 November 1985. D Supt Lister must have
known of the letter of 8 November 1985. He certainly knew of the
laboratory report that he received and counter-signed. He can
scarcely have forgotten about these documents. These documents
cannot have been in the possession of Crown Office. Why they were
not will probably never be known. If the trial advocate depute
had been in possession of them, he would not have allowed D Supt
Lister's evidence about the footprints to be given.
[39] The advocate depute submitted to us that the overall impression
was that D Supt Lister was not acting in bad faith. We find that
difficult to accept. But that is not the question in these proceedings.
Whether D Supt Lister lied or had a lapse of memory, he spoke
with the authority of a senior police officer. At that stage the
footprint evidence had become crucial. The scientific evidence
that disproved what he said was not brought to the notice of the
advocate depute, the defence or the jury. The trial judge told
the jury that the evidence about the footprints in the vegetable
patch might become "of very great importance" and he
reminded them that D Supt Lister was "a very experienced
officer." In our view, D Supt Lister's evidence was vital
to the jury's consideration. It was untrue. Therefore, in our
opinion, the appellant did not receive a fair trial.
[40] We conclude therefore that the Crown's concession is well-founded.
We shall allow the appeal and quash the conviction.