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Jones v The Queen [2009] HCA 17 (29 April 2009)
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Jones v The Queen [2009] HCA 17 (29 April 2009)
Last Updated: 29 April 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ
HAYNE, HEYDON, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ
CHRISTOPHER CLARK JONES APPELLANT
AND
THE QUEEN RESPONDENT
Jones v The Queen
[2009] HCA 17
29 April 2009
B40/2008
ORDER
Appeal dismissed.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of Queensland
Representation
P J Callaghan SC with P E Smith and A M Hoare for the appellant (instructed by
Ryan & Bosscher Lawyers)
A W Moynihan SC with B J Power for the respondent (instructed by Director of
Public Prosecutions (Qld))
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Jones v The Queen
Criminal law – Evidence – Joint murder trial – Admissibility
of evidence adduced by accused of bad character or
propensity of co-accused
– Whether appellant prevented by trial judge from fully adducing relevant
admissible evidence –
Whether jury misdirected as to use of evidence of
appellant's bad character.
Criminal law – Appeals – Application of proviso.
Words and phrases – "substantial miscarriage of justice".
Criminal Code (Q), s 668E(1A).
- FRENCH
CJ, HEYDON, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ. On 1 April 2005 the decapitated body of a
youth, Morgan Jay Shepherd, was found buried in
a shallow grave in bushland near
Dayboro, a township north of Brisbane. The deceased's head was found nearby.
There were numerous
stab wounds to the body. It was not possible to determine
whether many, or all, save one, had been inflicted post-mortem. It was
possible
that death had been occasioned by a single stab wound to the neck.
- The
deceased was last seen alive in the company of James Patrick Roughan ("Roughan")
and the appellant at Roughan's home in Sandgate.
The three had been drinking
together. The appellant and Roughan were jointly charged with the murder of the
deceased. Each pleaded
not guilty to that charge. Each pleaded that he was
guilty of being an accessory after the fact to the unlawful killing of the
deceased
by the other and to interfering with a corpse.
- The
Crown case was that either or both the appellant and Roughan murdered the
deceased or that one of them murdered him and the other
enabled or aided that
other in the attack with the intent of causing death or grievous bodily
harm[1].
- In
out of court statements tendered at the trial Roughan and the appellant each
claimed that the other had assaulted the deceased
and then obtained a knife and
stabbed him in the neck. The appellant's account was that he was in fear of
Roughan. He described
Roughan as a "psycho" and he said that Roughan had been
charged with stabbing "one of his mates" on another occasion. Roughan was
on
bail at the date of the offence on a charge of the attempted murder of a man
named McKenna ("the McKenna assault").
- The
case against the appellant was a strong one. Apart from his admission to having
been present at the time of the killing, there
were a number of witnesses who
gave evidence of admissions made by him to his involvement in the murder. Three
of these witnesses
had assisted in disposing of the body of the deceased. Each
had pleaded guilty to being an accessory after the fact to the murder
and
received a reduction in sentence on the strength of each undertaking to give
evidence in the prosecution of the appellant and
Roughan[2]. Two
of the witnesses who gave evidence of admissions made by the appellant were not
criminally concerned in the offence. The appellant
and Roughan travelled
together in the same prison van on an occasion after each was charged with the
murder. Their conversation
was secretly recorded. The appellant's statements
made in the course of the conversation may be thought supportive of the Crown
case but did not include any unequivocal admission of guilt.
- Neither
the appellant nor Roughan gave evidence at the trial. Each was convicted of
murder. Each appealed against his conviction
to the Court of Appeal. Roughan's
appeal was allowed and a new trial ordered. He has since been convicted of the
murder of the
deceased at the second trial. The appellant's appeal was
dismissed.
- The
appellant appeals by special leave from the orders made by the Court of Appeal
on the ground that there was a miscarriage of
justice arising as the result of
two errors in the conduct of the
trial[3]. These
were, first, that the trial judge (Atkinson J) prevented the appellant's
counsel from "fully adducing the evidence" that
Roughan had attempted to murder
a friend on another occasion. An examination of the course of the trial shows
that this complaint
is without substance. The second ground complains of a
misdirection[4].
The impugned direction was found to be erroneous in the Court of Appeal. The
appellant's complaint in this Court is with the Court
of Appeal's decision to
nonetheless dismiss his appeal. No error in the approach the Court of Appeal
took to the application of
s 668E(1A) of the Criminal Code
(Q)[5] is
established. For the reasons that follow the appeal should be dismissed.
The first ground of challenge
- At
the trial the appellant's counsel sought to cross-examine Detective Sergeant
Williams, the officer who had arrested Roughan and
charged him with the murder,
to elicit details of the circumstances of the McKenna assault. The trial judge
allowed evidence to
be adduced from Detective Williams of the fact that Roughan
was on bail charged with an offence that involved the stabbing of a mate.
The
evidence was relevant to the credibility of the appellant's account that he was
in fear of Roughan. In a series of rulings,
she refused to allow
cross-examination of Detective Williams about his knowledge of the circumstances
of the McKenna assault.
- In
the Court of Appeal, the appellant's ground of challenge was that the trial
judge did not allow counsel to "fully cross-examine
Det Williams about the Att
murder charge that Roughan had been charged with especially after Roughan's
counsel in effect led evidence
of Roughan's good character." The Court held
that the trial judge had been right to refuse to permit cross-examination of
Detective
Williams as to the detail of the allegations against Roughan because
cross-examination on these lines could only have elicited
hearsay[6]. The
ground of challenge in this Court raises a different and wider complaint. Save
in one respect, to which it is necessary to
return, the appellant accepts that
the ruling confining the cross-examination of Detective Williams was correct.
His complaint is
that the practical effect of the rulings was to foreclose any
opportunity for his counsel to adduce admissible evidence of the facts
of the
McKenna assault. It appears that this wider ground was raised in the Court of
Appeal.
The course of the trial
- On
the first day of the trial the appellant's counsel foreshadowed his intention of
cross-examining Detective Williams "to get a
background of the basis of why
[Roughan] was charged [with the attempted murder of McKenna]". Counsel
identified two bases for the
admission of the evidence. The first was that the
appellant's knowledge of Roughan was relevant to an understanding of why he
behaved
in the way that he did. The second was that "the jury, when weighing up
who might be responsible for [the murder of the deceased],
can look at this
character and decide who they believe is responsible for the murder."
- In
the course of exchanges with counsel, her Honour said:
"[I]f you want to have a collateral trial of whether or not he committed those
offences, then you take yourself out of, I would have
thought, admissible
evidence."
- Her
Honour subsequently ruled:
"With regard to Jones' interview and his expression of fear of Roughan because
of his knowledge of Roughan being charged with attempted
murder and grievous
bodily harm, which is not objected to by [counsel for Roughan], I will allow
evidence of that. It does appear
as if it will have to be led by the Crown but
it is not at the Crown's insistence to lead it because it is being requested by
[counsel
for the appellant] in furtherance of his case and not objected to by
[counsel for Roughan].
At present I'm minded to allow limited questioning of the arresting officer on
that matter but I haven't yet decided to what extent
I will allow you to
question him on that. I can see that it is a positive advantage to Jones' case
that the arresting officer confirms
that he was arrested for that offence and
there may be some limited details that may be of assistance to Jones' case
but to the extent that it then starts to become a collateral – a trial
of collateral issues, that is, whether or not Roughan
actually committed that
offence I won't allow questions as to that." (Emphasis added)
- The
appellant submits that this ruling ("the initial ruling") governed all that
followed, because in the context of the discussion
that preceded it, it was
clear that her Honour viewed any evidence concerning the facts of the McKenna
assault as involving a collateral
issue. The initial ruling, it is said, made
it pointless for counsel to consider options including calling McKenna or the
other
witnesses to the McKenna assault.
- There
was further discussion of the scope of the cross-examination of Detective
Williams on the fourth day of the trial. In the
course of this the Crown
Prosecutor gave her Honour a copy of a document titled "QP9", which contained a
summary of the police brief
of evidence against Roughan in relation to the
McKenna assault. The allegation was that Roughan had stabbed McKenna in the
back.
The police had located the knife at the scene and obtained statements
from McKenna and two witnesses. Roughan was alleged to have
made admissions to
being present and in possession of a fishing knife at the scene. His admissions
fell short of an acknowledgment
that he had intentionally stabbed McKenna. He
said that he had the knife with him because he had been out fishing. He claimed
that
McKenna sustained the stab injury in the course of a struggle in which he,
Roughan, was defending himself from unlawful attack by
McKenna.
- After
reading QP9 the trial judge pointed out to the appellant's counsel that "[t]he
problems, though, are with the quality of the
evidence that you're wanting to
get out. I just want to think about that for a minute." Her Honour went on to
say:
"[M]y view is that I should allow you to cross-examine the arresting officer
about those matters [that Roughan was on bail on a charge
of stabbing a mate],
but any further than that I don't think it goes to anything that's relevant in
this case and it's very prejudicial
to Roughan.
COUNSEL: Well, just on the prejudice aspect, that's not a basis for excluding
it, your Honour, as I understand the authorities.
HER HONOUR: Well, it's not relevant. I can't see how it goes to –
positively goes to your case."
Shortly after this ruling the appellant's counsel applied for a separate trial.
He submitted:
"I am not allowed as I understand your Honour's ruling to cross-examine the
police officer about the attempted murder in detail,
I'm not allowed to lead
from the – or cross-examine the witness Hore about the statement [Roughan]
made to her about the attempted
murder charge".
- The
reference to cross-examining the witness Hore was with a view to adducing
evidence that Roughan had said to her "he thought he
was going to get five years
for that attempted murder". The appellant does not complain of this ruling. It
is accepted that proof
of this assertion would not serve to establish any
relevant propensity on Roughan's part. The application for a separate trial was
refused.
- After
the close of the evidence counsel for the appellant made a further
application:
"Your Honour, I just renew my application to lead the evidence that your Honour
ruled that I couldn't ask about in relation to Roughan's
committing the –
or being charged with the offence of stabbing his mate, and I wish to refer to
the QP9 which your Honour ruled
I couldn't. That there has been an attempt to
put evidence of good character before the jury of Roughan and as the Crown
Prosecutor
has said, he will re-open the case if your Honour wishes to
re-consider that ruling. I submit that it has been raised in that positive
light albeit no convictions in Queensland and some minor discrepancies or minor
touches with the law where he's only received a caution.
HER HONOUR: It would be different I think if he'd been convicted of it but the
problem with his being charged with it is that he
is entitled to the presumption
of innocence and the dangers of the prejudicial effect of it. The fact that he
has been charged with
stabbing a mate and was on bail is itself, I think,
relevant to your case and that's why I've allowed you to lead that. So I've
tried to, in that difficult case, walk the line between allowing you to lead
what's probative in your case but not allowing it to
go over the line into
something that's unduly prejudicial in Roughan's case and so I don't think I'll
change my mind."
- Senior
counsel for the appellant submitted that trial counsel's application was met by
the same "flawed response" as the application
which led to the initial ruling.
He complained that her Honour had not inquired as to the nature of the evidence
that was sought
to be adduced. The reasoning of which he complained is that her
Honour took into account that evidence of the McKenna assault would
occasion
prejudice in Roughan's trial and that she considered the evidence was not
relevant to any issue in the appellant's trial.
The first consideration would
have substance if it had led to the rejection of relevant, admissible evidence
in the appellant's
case. However, it did not. The application was the renewal
of the application to adduce hearsay evidence of the contents of QP9
in the
event that the Crown case was re-opened.
- In
this Court the appellant put in issue the characterisation of all of the
assertions in QP9 as inadmissible hearsay. This was
because the document
included a summary of admissions said to have been made by Roughan. The
appellant relied on the analysis in
Freer and
Weekes[7] in
support of the admissibility of an out of court third party confession. The
question of whether evidence of third party confessions
are an exception to the
rule against hearsay was left open in Bannon v The
Queen[8].
The question in that case involved an out of court confession to the offence
with which the accused was charged. This appeal does
not require determination
of that question nor the question of the admissibility of declarations against
penal interest which are
not exculpatory of the accused. There was no
application to examine Detective Williams to ascertain whether the admissions
were
made in his presence. There is nothing in QP9 to establish that they were.
There was no application to cross-examine the police
officer to whom the
admissions were made on the basis of the point now taken. Indeed, the first
time this point appears to have
been taken was in the appellant's submissions in
reply in this Court. Furthermore, the admissions did not serve to establish any
relevant propensity since Roughan gave an innocent explanation for being in
possession of the knife and claimed to have been acting
in self-defence.
- In
the Court of Appeal each of their Honours accepted that evidence of the
propensity of one accused may be relevant and admissible
in the case of a
co-accused[9].
They differed concerning the basis for the admission of evidence of this
character. Keane JA considered that where the evidence
is of conduct
evidencing propensity the facts must exhibit the kind of "striking similarity"
which makes it probable that the co-accused
committed the crime with which he
and the co-accused are
charged[10].
McMurdo J
considered[11]
that the propensity of a co-accused may be established by evidence that does not
show striking similarity between the other matter
and the subject charge, nor
any other characteristic as described in the joint judgment in Hoch v The
Queen[12].
- In
Pfennig v The Queen a tendency to treat evidence of similar facts, past
criminal conduct and propensity as if they raise the same considerations in
terms
of admissibility was
noted[13].
It was explained that the requirement that evidence of similar facts when
adduced by the Crown possess a "striking similarity" is
because the capacity of
the evidence to establish a step in the proof of the prosecution case on the
criminal standard depends upon
the improbability of its having some innocent
explanation. The appellant was not seeking to adduce similar fact evidence to
prove
Roughan's guilt by a process of improbability reasoning. He was seeking
to demonstrate that Roughan was a person having a particular
propensity which
made it more likely that Roughan had killed the deceased, as the appellant
claimed that he had done. The issue
which appears to have troubled
Keane JA was whether evidence of some general propensity in Roughan to
behave violently had a
capacity rationally to bear on the determination of the
likelihood that it was he who carried out this murderous assault.
- In
Lowery v The
Queen[14]
expert evidence adduced by one accused of the personality of his co-accused was
held to have been rightly admitted. The offence
involved the motiveless,
sadistic killing of a young girl. The expert evidence tended to establish that
Lowery possessed a personality
with sadistic traits and that his co-accused did
not. Lowery has been said to be high authority for the proposition that
the propensity to violence of a co-accused may be relevant to the issues
between
the Crown and the accused tendering the
evidence[15].
In R v Randall it was said that there must be cases in which the
propensity of one accused may be relied on by the other irrespective of whether
he has put his character in
issue[16]. As
the admissible evidence of Roughan's propensity which the appellant claims to
have been prevented from adducing is unknown,
this appeal does not provide the
occasion to consider the principles discussed in Randall. It is trite to
observe that all evidence, including that adduced by an accused in order to
raise a doubt as to guilt, must be relevant
in the sense that it could
rationally affect, directly or indirectly, the assessment of the probability of
the existence of a fact
in issue in the
proceedings[17].
At the trial, in the course of the submissions made prior to the initial ruling,
the appellant's counsel identified the propensity
which he sought to establish
as "a propensity to violence". On the appeal senior counsel identified it with
greater particularity,
as a propensity to form an intention to kill and to use a
knife to give effect to that intention. Accepting for present purposes,
that
proof that Roughan was a person with a propensity to have this state of mind and
to act in this way, may support a reasonable
possibility that the appellant's
account (given in his interview with the police) was true, the fact remains that
counsel did not
seek to adduce admissible evidence that Roughan had such a
propensity.
- The
initial ruling and the subsequent rulings did not prevent the appellant's
counsel from seeking to adduce direct evidence of the
circumstances of the
McKenna assault. Her Honour's remarks are to be understood in the context of
the rulings that she was asked
to make. The applications were to adduce hearsay
evidence of the detail of the incident in cross-examination. The submission
that
her Honour should have inquired whether counsel wished to adduce direct
evidence of the McKenna assault must be rejected. There
was no indication at
any time in the trial that counsel was seeking to lead evidence of the McKenna
assault in the appellant's case.
The renewed application to lead evidence of
the contents of QP9 was made after the appellant had elected under s 618 of
the
Criminal Code (Q) not to adduce evidence in his defence. In Ali v
The Queen, Gleeson CJ observed that an appellate court will generally
not know what is in counsel's brief and speculation about why a
particular line
was not pressed will often be uninformed and
fruitless[18].
It is simply not known whether trial counsel was in a position to lead direct
evidence of the McKenna assault. It is to be noted
that he had succeeded in
adducing evidence that Roughan was on bail at the date of the offence on a
charge involving the stabbing
of a mate. A forensic decision not to adduce
evidence in the defence case and thus preserve the right of last
address[19]
would be understandable in the circumstances.
The second ground of challenge
- At
the trial, evidence was adduced of the appellant's bad character. This
comprised evidence that the appellant had used, and supplied
to others, cannabis
and speed, that he smoked cannabis in front of his infant daughter, that he had
bashed a person, and that he
had a criminal history involving assault and
offences relating to property.
- The
trial judge directed the jury
that[20]:
"[E]vidence that is only admissible against James Roughan is evidence that you
have heard in this case that Chris Jones has used
illegal drugs such as speed
and cannabis and has some criminal convictions. That is only relevant in the
prosecution case against
James Roughan to endeavour to demonstrate that James
Roughan was a less violent and dishonest person than Jones. You must not use
it
for any other purpose. You may not seek to draw some inference from it that
because Chris Jones has committed other offences,
or has been said to be
involved in undesirable conduct, that he is therefore more likely to have
committed the offence you are considering.
In other words it would be quite
wrong for you to say having heard that evidence that the defendant is the sort
of person likely
to have committed the offence. If you accept this evidence you
may use it only to consider whether it [assists] the prosecution
in the way I
have described to prove its case against James Roughan."
- The
evidence of the appellant's criminal convictions was led without objection. No
application was made at the trial for a re-direction
arising out of her Honour's
direction concerning the evidence. The direction was not the subject of a
ground of appeal in the Court
of Appeal. Roughan challenged a direction in like
terms relating to the evidence that he was on bail for another offence involving
stabbing a mate. Keane JA pointed out that it was an error to invite the
jury to reason from the fact that Roughan had been
charged with an
offence that he was a person of more violent disposition than the appellant.
His Honour went on to observe that the direction
– that evidence may be
used to establish that the appellant was of a less violent disposition than
Roughan, but not that Roughan
was the sort of person likely to have committed
the offence – involved a distinction so fine as to be
illusory[21].
When his Honour came to consider the appellant's case he concluded that the
direction relating to the appellant's bad character
was wrong for the latter
reason[22].
McMurdo J agreed with Keane JA's criticism of the direction relating
to Roughan's bad
character[23].
However, his Honour did not consider that the direction relating to the
appellant's bad character was wrong. He considered that
it was a direction that
the jury would be able to understand and
apply[24]. In
McMurdo J's view, there was no risk that the jury would reason towards the
appellant's guilt from knowledge of his convictions.
This provided an
explanation for the stance that his counsel had taken in not objecting to the
evidence; he wished to have the jury
compare the appellant's relatively minor
matters with knowledge that Roughan was charged with an offence involving the
stabbing of
a
mate[25].
- Muir JA
expressed his general agreement with the reasons both of Keane JA and
McMurdo J[26].
It was accepted on the appeal that this Court should treat the Court of Appeal
as having held that the direction concerning the
appellant's bad character was a
misdirection and, accordingly, no occasion arises to consider the difference
between the views expressed
by Keane JA and McMurdo J on this
question.
- Keane JA
discussed the proviso in s 668E(1A) of the Criminal Code (Q) in the
course of addressing Roughan's
appeal[27].
Roughan's appeal succeeded because the admission of the evidence that he had
been charged with stabbing a mate was irretrievably
prejudicial. The prejudice
was exacerbated by a direction that this evidence could be used, when
considering the appellant's case,
as confirming that the appellant was of a less
violent disposition than Roughan. His Honour held upon a review of the trial
that
it was not possible to be satisfied of Roughan's guilt beyond reasonable
doubt. In this context he observed that the Court was not
in a position to
assess the reliability of the evidence of the three accomplices.
- Keane JA
did not think that the evidence of the appellant's bad character was
significantly prejudicial. In his opinion it
was not capable of supporting an
inference that the appellant was disposed to engage in the kind of murderous
assault to which the
deceased was subject, much less that he was more likely to
have done so than
Roughan[28].
- In
Weiss v The Queen it was said that there are cases in which it is
possible for an appellate court to conclude that an error at trial would have
had
no significance in determining the
verdict[29].
This was such a case. Keane JA described the impugned direction in the
appellant's case as innocuous. He observed that it
had occasioned no real
forensic disadvantage to the
appellant[30].
Given the issues in the trial and the conduct of it, which included the trial
judge's direction as to the use the jury might make
of the evidence of Roughan's
bad character, this assessment of the effect of the misdirection was well open.
Moreover, after a detailed
review of the evidence Keane JA concluded that
the case against the appellant was one of overwhelming
strength[31].
That conclusion was also well open.
- The
Court of Appeal did not err in finding that no substantial miscarriage of
justice actually occurred in the trial of the appellant.
- For
these reasons the appeal should be dismissed.
- HAYNE J.
I agree that the appeal should be dismissed. I agree with the joint
reasons.
- There
is no occasion in this case to decide whether or when evidence about the alleged
propensity to violence of a co-accused would
be admissible. The particular
evidence which it was sought to lead about the alleged propensity to violence of
the appellant's co-accused
was hearsay and for that reason not admissible.
- In
Lowery v The Queen, the Privy Council
said[32] that
in the circumstances of that case it would be unjust to prevent either of two
co-accused from calling any evidence of probative value which could point
to the probability that the perpetrator was the one rather than the other.
Accordingly,
expert evidence said to
show[33] that
one of two men accused of a brutal murder had a "basic callousness", and that
the other did not, was
held[34] to be
relevant and admissible. Some emphasis was
given[35] to
the fact that the accused who was alleged to have a "basic callousness" had put
his character in issue, but the proposition that
it would be unjust to prevent
the adducing of any evidence of this kind was not expressed in terms that
readily admit of qualification. And as Lord Steyn later rightly pointed out
in
R v
Randall[36],
it may be doubted that the Privy Council was correct to say in
Lowery[37]
that the evidence in question was "not related to ... criminal tendencies".
- These
questions apart, the House of Lords held in
Randall[38]
that one of two co-accused jointly tried for murder was entitled to tender
evidence of the propensity to violence of the other co-accused
as relevant to
the issues between the prosecution and the accused tendering the evidence. The
evidence was treated as relevant not
only to the co-accused's credibility, but
also the likelihood of his having attacked the deceased.
- Whether
the applicable principle is expressed as it was in Lowery or as it was in
Randall, the adducing of evidence by one co-accused about the
propensities of another co-accused presents real difficulties for the conduct
of
a trial, especially a joint trial. There may be a question about whether the
admissibility of evidence of this kind depends upon
the accused against whom the
evidence is led having first put his or her character in issue. There are also
other more deep-seated
questions that may require examination. In particular,
if it is suggested that where each of two co-accused attributes guilt of
the
offence to the other, one may tender evidence about the criminal propensities of
the other, there is no little risk of the trial
being diverted into the byways
of collateral issues about the nature, extent and probative significance of
those propensities. And
questions like whether or how a rule of the kind
described in Pfennig v The
Queen[39]
could, or should, be applied in these circumstances, or whether a rule of that
kind, if applied, would address the fears that the
tribunal of fact would be
diverted from focusing upon the central issues that are being tried in the
matter, are questions that did
not arise and were not examined in argument in
this matter. Nor was there any consideration of whether or when, if evidence of
the
criminal propensities of one co-accused is to be admitted, the trial should
nonetheless continue as a joint trial. These are questions
that are to be
reserved for another day.
[1] Section 7(1) of the Criminal
Code (Q).
[2] Under s 13A of the
Penalties and Sentences Act 1992 (Q).
[3] The Notice of Appeal contains a
third ground, 1(c), which was abandoned.
[4] Notice of Appeal, par 1(b): "The
Learned Trial Judge misdirected the jury in directing them that they could use
the evidence of
the Appellant's bad character to reason that the co-offender was
a less violent and dishonest person than the appellant."
[5] Section 668E(1A) of the
Criminal Code (Q) provides that the court may, notwithstanding that it is
of the opinion that the point or points raised by the appeal might be
decided in
favour of the appellant, dismiss the appeal if it considers that no substantial
miscarriage of justice has actually occurred.
[6] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 404 [73] per Keane JA, 406 [88] per
Muir JA, 410 [101] per McMurdo J.
[7] R v Freer and Weekes [2004]
QCA 97 at [81]- [91] per Jerrard JA (Jones and Holmes JJ agreeing).
[8] Bannon v The Queen (1995)
185 CLR 1; [1995] HCA 27; see also Nicholls v The Queen [2005] HCA 1; (2005) 219 CLR
196 at 266 [183] per Gummow and Callinan JJ; [2005] HCA 1 and Ali v The
Queen [2005] HCA 8; (2005) 79 ALJR 662 at 665 [11] per Gleeson CJ, 666 [21] per Hayne
J (McHugh J agreeing); [2005] HCA 8; 214 ALR 1 at 5, 6; [2005] HCA 8.
[9] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 403 [68]- [70] per Keane JA, 406 [88] per
Muir JA, 410 [102] per McMurdo J.
[10] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 403 [72].
[11] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 410 [102].
[12] [1988] HCA 50; (1988) 165 CLR 292 at 294-295;
[1998] HCA 50.
[13] Pfennig v The Queen
[1995] HCA 7; (1995) 182 CLR 461 at 483 per Mason CJ, Deane and Dawson JJ; [1995]
HCA 7.
[14] [1974] AC 85.
[15] R v Randall [2004] 1 WLR
56 at 65 [29] per Lord Steyn (the other members of the House of Lords
concurring); [2003] UKHL 69; [2004] 1 All ER 467 at 476; see, too, Knight v Jones; Ex parte
Jones [1981] Qd R 98; Priestley and Mason (1985) 19 A Crim R 388;
Winning v The Queen [2002] WASCA 44.
[16] R v Randall [2004] 1 WLR
56 at 64 [29] per Lord Steyn; [2003] UKHL 69; [2004] 1 All ER 467 at 476.
[17] Goldsmith v Sandilands
[2002] HCA 31; (2002) 76 ALJR 1024 at 1029-1030 [31] per McHugh J; [2002] HCA 31; 190 ALR 370 at 377; [2002]
HCA 31; Nicholls v The Queen [2005] HCA 1; (2005) 219 CLR 196 at 215 [37] per
McHugh J.
[18] Ali v The Queen [2005] HCA 8; (2005)
79 ALJR 662 at 664 [7]; [2005] HCA 8; 214 ALR 1 at 4.
[19] Section 619 of the
Criminal Code (Q).
[20] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 405-406 [80].
[21] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 401 [59].
[22] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 406 [81].
[23] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 408 [94].
[24] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 410-411 [105].
[25] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 410-411 [105].
[26] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 406 [88].
[27] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 402 [62].
[28] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 406 [82]- [83].
[29] Weiss v The Queen (2005)
224 CLR 300; [2005] HCA 81.
[30] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 406 [83].
[31] R v Roughan and Jones
[2007] QCA 443; (2007) 179 A Crim R 389 at 406 [83].
[32] [1974] AC 85 at 101.
[33] [1974] AC 85 at 100.
[34] [1974] AC 85 at 103.
[35] [1974] AC 85 at 101-102.
[36] [2004] 1 WLR 56 at 64 [29];
[2004] 1 All ER 467 at 476.
[37] [1974] AC 85 at 101-102.
[38] [2004] 1 WLR 56; [2004] 1
All ER 467.
[39] (1995) 182 CLR 461; [1995] HCA
7.
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