Provocation
71The only issue in the trial was whether the Crown had proved that the appellant had not acted under provocation. There was no suggestion that the appellant acted in self defence. Section 23 of the Crimes Act 1900 presently provides the legal structure within which the "defence" of provocation may be established. Section 23 provides:
"(1) Where, on the trial of a person for murder, it appears that the act or omission causing death was an act done or omitted under provocation and, but for this subsection and the provocation, the jury would have found the accused guilty of murder, the jury shall acquit the accused of murder and find the accused guilty of manslaughter.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), an act or omission causing death is an act done or omitted under provocation where:
(a) the act or omission is the result of a loss of self-control on the part of the accused that was induced by any conduct of the deceased (including grossly insulting words or gestures) towards or affecting the accused, and
(b) that conduct of the deceased was such as could have induced an ordinary person in the position of the accused to have so far lost self-control as to have formed an intent to kill, or to inflict grievous bodily harm upon, the deceased,
whether that conduct of the deceased occurred immediately before the act or omission causing death or at any previous time.
(3) For the purpose of determining whether an act or omission causing death was an act done or omitted under provocation as provided by subsection (2), there is no rule of law that provocation is negatived if:
(a) there was not a reasonable proportion between the act or omission causing death and the conduct of the deceased that induced the act or omission,
(b) the act or omission causing death was not an act done or omitted suddenly, or
(c) the act or omission causing death was an act done or omitted with any intent to take life or inflict grievous bodily harm.
(4) Where, on the trial of a person for murder, there is any evidence that the act causing death was an act done or omitted under provocation as provided by subsection (2), the onus is on the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt that the act or omission causing death was not an act done or omitted under provocation.
(5) This section does not exclude or limit any defence to a charge of murder."
72Her Honour concluded that but for the question of provocation the appellant would be guilty of murder. Her Honour's judgment includes a discussion of s 23(2) and s 23(3) and correctly identifies the elements of each section and the fact that the onus rests upon the Crown, if provocation has been raised, to disprove it beyond reasonable doubt. As her Honour indicated this can be done by the Crown disproving either of the elements in s 23(2) to the requisite standard.
73Her Honour indicated that counsel were in agreement that identical issues were raised in relation to each of the counts with which the appellant had been charged. The two deceased were clearly acting in concert when they went to the appellant's home and accordingly provocative conduct by either of them was relevant in relation to both counts.
74Her Honour first considered whether the appellant had lost his self control. In the course of considering this question her Honour examined the evidence in relation to whether or not the appellant had the gun or whether it was brought to the scene by one of the victims. Her Honour concluded that although it was probable that the appellant brought the revolver into the confrontation there was "insufficient evidence to satisfy me of that matter beyond reasonable doubt, or to put it another way: although I consider it unlikely that one of the Willis brothers brought the gun with him, I cannot conclude that it is not reasonably possible that he did so." Her Honour then indicated that this finding was significant because the appellant relied upon the brandishing of the revolver as a major part of the provocative conduct causing him to lose his self control together with the fact that the two men were calling out or "loud mouthing" outside the appellant's home. Her Honour indicated that the "loud mouthing" would almost certainly not have constituted adequate provocation: R v R (1981) 28 SASR 321; Moffa v The Queen (1977) 138 CLR 601 at 616.
75When considering the issue of the loss of self control by the appellant her Honour instructed herself that "a loss of self control involves a temporary suspension of the capacity to reason, or to think rationally and sensibly." It is a question of fact.
76Much was made at the trial of the fact that the first two shots were fired in rapid succession followed by a gap of some seconds before the firing of the third shot. That issue was again ventilated before this Court. Counsel for the appellant submitted that the gap may have been explained by the fact that the appellant was pulling the trigger of the gun but the chambers were empty and accordingly no shots were fired. The trial judge believed this to be a matter of mere speculation observing that a good explanation for the gap between the second and third shots is provided by the known sequence of events supported by the evidence of Mr Allan. The first and second shots were fired at the two brothers when they were still standing and close to the appellant. The third shot was fired from a completely different angle. The appellant was observed by Mr Allan to be bending over slightly with his arm outstretched and pointing towards the silhouette on the ground before the third shot was fired.
77For these reasons the trial judge concluded that the appellant's acts were not of themselves such as to indicate a loss of self control on his part. Her Honour said that "if anything, his conduct both during the shooting and immediately after it, point in the opposite direction."
78The trial judge observed that there was a significant factual question arising because of what her Honour believed to be the different observations of Mr Allan and the evidence of the appellant's wife, Mrs Filippou. Mrs Filippou said that after the appellant went out into the street the first time he briefly came back into the house and ask her to ring their son. Her Honour believed that this was consistent with Mr Allan's observations. But she also said that after the appellant went out again she could hear the altercation continuing. Her Honour concluded that if this evidence was correct the shooting must have occurred on the second occasion that the appellant went out onto the street. However, her Honour thought that Mr Allan's evidence would suggest that the shooting occurred on the first occasion and on the later occasion the appellant returned to place the gun in the hand of the deceased, Sam Willis.
79This of course overlooks the fact that Mr Allan was not alerted to look in the direction of the incident until he heard the sound of the gun being fired. This could only have been after, on Mrs Filipou's account, the appellant had briefly returned inside, an event which would have occurred before Mr Allan made his observations.
80Her Honour compared the two accounts and concluded that the evidence of Mr Allan should be accepted. For my part having read the evidence I do not discern any necessary inconsistency.
81Her Honour concluded that the most likely picture of the relevant events was as follows:
"When the accused first went out to the street, a verbal confrontation took place between himself and the Willis brothers which culminated in the shooting. The accused then went back inside and asked his wife to ring their son, before returning to the scene of the shooting and placing the revolver into Sam Willis's hand. After doing that he went straight back inside, took his car keys and immediately drove off."
82However, for my part I am satisfied that this account is not correct. I am satisfied that the appellant went out to the street and then returned inside. He then went out again, the brothers were shot and the appellant then went inside or moved in that direction before returning to place the gun and then again leave the scene by returning to the house. Although after the shooting Mr Allan observed the appellant to walk back into the front yard of the house he did not see him go inside. Mrs Filipou said that the appellant came back inside on two occasions but on the second occasion rather than return to the scene of the shooting he took a motor vehicle and left altogether.
83Her Honour observed that Mr Allan described the appellant as walking "quite calmly" when he went back towards the house. Mrs Filippou said that he was running, or was walking quickly and was angry. Her Honour concluded that the appellant's actions in returning outside and placing the revolver into Sam Willis's hand is an action "at least suggestive of rational thinking."
84Again, I believe her Honour has not identified the correct sequence. On the first occasion the appellant went back inside, which was before the shooting he was agitated. However, after the brothers had been shot his demeanour changed and he in relative calm returned to place the gun.
85Her Honour then turned to consider the statements which the appellant had made when he was interviewed by the police. Her Honour said:
"The first relevant comment was made shortly after the accused handed himself into police on the morning of 28 June 2010. He said:
'.. they pulled a gun on me and I took it off 'em and shot 'em. They're shit. If you're going to pull a gun on me be prepared to use it.'
Later, during the course of his ERISP, the accused said (in answer to question 43):
'..one of them, the right handed one pulled a gun and he goes, I've got this. I said, you've got that, have you? And then I ripped it off him and shot them. That's it. No more and no less. You know, they want to be heroes, that's what happens.'
Three answers later, he volunteered the following comment:
'But I've always said, you know, come fight, you know, by fist. Pull a gun on some cunt, sorry sweetness, pull a gun on someone, it's a different story altogether, right.'
The accused went on to describe the shooting, during the course of which he made the comment (described more fully in paragraph [54] above): "I should have shoved the gun up his arse." Finally, towards the end of the ERISP, the following exchange occurred:
'Q166 Why would you have shot him when he was on the
ground?
A It was, just, it was just happening, right. He, that's what happened, I shot them, you've got your thing, you know, lock me up so to speak ...
Q:167: All right
A: ...but you know, don't come around to my place and be heroes, you know, like I've always been taught if you pull a gun use it on someone. You know, don't be a hero and ...
Q168 How were you feeling at the time, Chris?
A Well I was feeling nothing to tell you the truth when they, I mean I just wanted to know what they were going on about when I went out the front, sort of thing. Do you get me? But after I shot them like to tell you the truth, you know, they probably deserved what they got. Right. Either get shot or, or shoot them, so to speak. So that's it, I'm not going to go into any more, I shot 'em, you got your thing, you know, your charges whatever you got, you know.'
The last relevant comment made by the accused that day was when he said to Senior Constable King later that afternoon: "I was always taught never to bring a gun unless you are prepared to use it", followed by a change of demeanour, and his saying: "I'm fucking proud of what I done. Fucking proud of it". (See paragraph [71] above.)
The accused has been in custody since his arrest on 28 June 2010. On 18 August 2010, when he was in Parklea Correctional Centre, he made a telephone call to his wife, which was recorded and tendered into evidence. During the course of the conversation the following exchange took place:
'FILIPPOU: They come around with a fucken gun we didn't
Glenda: No I know that' see that's our good point too
FILIPPOU: No there'll be no good points to this
Glenda: No but I mean you didn't it wasn't planned
FILIPPOU: No no no
Glenda: You know what I mean it wasn't a planned thing
FILIPPOU: It should have fucken been you know what I mean fucken garbage like that what the fuck was their fucken problem
Glenda: Who the hell do they think they are
FILIPPOU: Yeah who the hell do they think they are that's what the
Glenda: That's what I get angry at
FILIPPOU: Who the fuck do they think they are coming around like fucken would be gangsters
Glenda: Who the hell do they think they are somebody special who can do as they please with everything
FILIPPOU: That's what I mean you know like I said to ya if they had of fucken brought a knife I would have cut their fucken heads off
Glenda: Yeah
FILIPPOU: You know that's that's what amazes with these those sort of people
Glenda: Gives ya the shits they're just garbage people.'
86The trial judge correctly observed that it was not necessary for an accused person to say after the event that he or she had lost self-control in order for the "defence" of provocation to succeed. It depends upon the evidence. Her Honour concluded that it was "abundantly clear" from the totality of the evidence that the appellant was at the relevant time an inherently angry man. This was sought to be used to his advantage by his counsel who submitted that he had a low threshold of tolerance and was particularly susceptible to losing his self-control when confronted by the two brothers calling abuse outside his home and wielding a gun.
87With respect to the issue of the appellant losing his self-control her Honour said that she regarded the statements made by the appellant after the event as ultimately determinative of this issue, for the following reasons:
"...
A loss of self-control under s 23 necessarily involves the accused committing the act causing death whilst his capacity to think rationally has been temporarily suspended by reason of the provocative conduct of the deceased. By definition it is an act which the person would not have done if he was in his normal state of mind. It follows that if the person continues, well after the effect of the provocative conduct has ceased, to justify his conduct and indicate that he would do the same thing again in the same situation, then this is inconsistent with the proposition that it was a temporary loss of self-control which caused him to act as he did. And this is precisely what the accused has continued to do. He did it several times the following day, when he was being interviewed by the Police. Amongst other things, he said that the deceased brothers "probably deserved what they got", and that he was "fucking proud" of what he had done. This is not the attitude of a man who has come back to rationality after a temporary loss of control. Even in his telephone conversation with his wife some six weeks later he was placing the blame on the deceased brothers, saying that they were "just garbage people".
88Her Honour then expressed her conclusion in the following terms:
"I am firmly of the view that it was the accused's inherently angry nature which led to his behaving as he did when he fired the fatal shots. I am abundantly satisfied that there is no reasonable possibility that it was a loss of self-control which caused him to fire those shots."
89For this reason her Honour concluded that the "defence" of provocation "could not succeed." However, her Honour proceeded to consider the issues raised by s 23(2)(b), which she shortly described as the "ordinary person test."
90Her Honour instructed herself as to the elements of the test and in particular that it is established that the particular attributes, characteristics and background of an accused are relevant in assessing the gravity of the effect of the provocative conduct of the person in question. Her Honour referred to the decision of the High Court in Masciantonio v The Queen [1995] HCA 67; (1995) 183 CLR 58 at 67 where Brennan CJ, Deane, Dawson and Gaudron JJ said:
"However, the gravity of the conduct said to constitute the provocation must be assessed by reference to relevant characteristics of the accused. Conduct which might not be insulting or hurtful to one person might be extremely so to another because of that persons' age, sex, race, ethnicity, physical features, personal attributes, personal relationships or past history. The provocation must be put into context and it is only by having regard to the attributes or characteristics of the accused that this can be done. But having assessed the gravity of the provocation in this way, it is then necessary to ask the question whether provocation of that degree of gravity could cause an ordinary person to lose self-control and act in a manner which would encompass the accused's actions."
91Apart from her finding that the appellant was an inherently angry man with a susceptibility to lose his temper quickly her Honour otherwise determined that he had no particular characteristics that would have made him more vulnerable. Her Honour identified the history of neighbourhood conflict between the households and the fact that on the previous evening the appellant's car had been the subject of minor vandalism. However, the conflict between the households had never previously involved physical clashes. Her Honour believed that the history of conflict "might well" have made the appellant more wary when he went outside and confronted the two brothers.
92Her Honour then expressed the following conclusions in relation to the "ordinary person test":
"The second stage of the test is whether, given this background, an ordinary person in the position of the accused could have so far lost self-control as to have formed the intent to kill or inflict grievous bodily harm on the deceased. And it is here that the defence case must fail.
When the accused went out of his home that evening he was confronted by two young men who were calling out and shouting. They may well have been using abusive language. But as we heard many times during the course of the trial, the accused himself was no stranger to strong language, and he regularly peppered his speech with swear words. The additional provocation in this case consisted of Luke Willis producing a revolver and saying 'We've got this'. It was at this point that the accused grabbed the gun from Luke and proceeded to shoot both brothers at point blank range, starting with Sam, who was the one who was 'mouthing off'.
I am quite unable to accept that an ordinary person, confronted with this situation, could have lost self-control so as to form an intention to kill or inflict grievous bodily harm on the brothers. I am hesitant to use the word 'disproportionate', for there is no requirement of proportionality in relation to the defence of provocation as currently formulated. However, if the response is grossly disproportionate to the provocation, then it inevitably means that it will fail the 'ordinary person' test. And that, in my view, is clearly the situation here.
Had the accused, contrary to my earlier finding, in fact lost his self-control when he shot the two brothers, then this could only have been because of his own unusually low threshold of uncontrollable anger. This does not assist him in relation to the defence of provocation. As Brennan CJ said in Green v R (1997) 191 CLR 334 at 340; 149 ALR 659 at 660:
'Paragraph (b) requires the jury to take account of the sting of the provocation actually experienced by the accused, but eliminates from the jury's consideration any extra-ordinary response by the accused to the provocation actually experienced. Thus extra-ordinary aggressiveness or extra-ordinary want of self-control on the part of an accused confer no protection against conviction for murder.'
It follows that the defence of provocation must fail, and I find the accused guilty of murder in relation to both charges."
93Before turning to consider the specific grounds of appeal I should refer to the submissions made on behalf of the appellant in relation to the firing of the gun. The weapon was a 5-shot Smith & Wesson pistol. When it was examined by a scientific officer from the Forensic Ballistics Investigation Section of the police he found that chambers 3, 4 and 5 contained spent cartridges. The chamber under the hammer was empty indicating that there had been an attempt to discharge the firearm after the last shot had been fired. However, it was not possible to determine the position in which the chamber may have been when the trigger was first pulled.
94The appellant offered a variety of alternatives as to the number of times the trigger had been pulled and the sequence in which the trigger was pulled and cartridges fired. From this analysis the appellant argued that the trigger must have been pulled more than 3 times making it less likely that the appellant had produced the gun having previously loaded it himself. It was also submitted to be relevant to the appellant's asserted lack of self-control that he may have pulled the trigger on more occasions than there were bullets in the chamber.
95In SKA v The Queen [2011] HCA 13; (2011) 243 CLR 400 at [11] - [14] (French CJ, Gummow and Kiefel JJ), the High Court set out the test to be applied when considering an appeal on the basis that a verdict was unreasonable or unsupported by the evidence:
"The task of the Court of Criminal Appeal
It is agreed between the parties that the relevant function to be performed by the Court of Criminal Appeal in determining an appeal, such as that of the applicant, is as stated in M v The Queen by Mason CJ, Deane, Dawson and Toohey JJ:
"Where, notwithstanding that as a matter of law there is evidence to sustain a verdict, a court of criminal appeal is asked to conclude that the verdict is unsafe or unsatisfactory, the question which the court must ask itself is whether it thinks that upon the whole of the evidence it was open to the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty".
This test has been restated to reflect the terms of s 6(1) of the Criminal Appeal Act. In MFA v The Queen McHugh, Gummow and Kirby JJ stated that the reference to "unsafe or unsatisfactory" in M is to be taken as "equivalent to the statutory formula referring to the impugned verdict as 'unreasonable' or such as 'cannot be supported, having regard to the evidence'."
The starting point in the application of s 6(1) is that the jury is the body entrusted with the primary responsibility of determining guilt or innocence, and the jury has had the benefit of having seen and heard the witnesses. However, the joint judgment in M went on to say:
"In most cases a doubt experienced by an appellate court will be a doubt which a jury ought also to have experienced. It is only where a jury's advantage in seeing and hearing the evidence is capable of resolving a doubt experienced by a court of criminal appeal that the court may conclude that no miscarriage of justice occurred."
Save as to the issue whether the Court of Criminal Appeal erred in not viewing a videotape of the complainant's police interview, to which reference will be made later in these reasons, this qualification is not relevant to the present matter.
In determining an appeal pursuant to s 6(1) of the Criminal Appeal Act, by applying the test set down in M and restated in MFA, the Court is to make "an independent assessment of the evidence, both as to its sufficiency and its quality". In M, Mason CJ, Deane, Dawson and Toohey JJ stated:
"In reaching such a conclusion, the court does not consider as a question of law whether there is evidence to support the verdict. Questions of law are separately dealt with by s 6(1). The question is one of fact which the court must decide by making its own independent assessment of the evidence and determining whether, notwithstanding that there is evidence upon which a jury might convict, 'none the less it would be dangerous in all the circumstances to allow the verdict of guilty to stand'." (footnotes omitted)
96In relation to grounds of appeal 1(a), 2(a), 2(b) and 2(c) the appellant submitted that it was accepted that the appellant at no stage expressed any regret or remorse for his actions. It was submitted that her Honour appears to have regarded this evidence of the appellant's apparent lack of remorse as fatal to his case on the issue of loss of self-control. It was submitted that the portion of her Honour's reasons which I have extracted at [88] contains significant errors of law and misdirections. In particular it was submitted that the actions of a person well after the event and statements that he or she would do the same thing again were not relevant to the issue of whether at the time of the shooting the appellant had lost his self control.
97It was submitted that her Honour's use of the word "continues" strongly suggests an assumption on Her Honour's part, that the state of mind that the appellant evidenced in his statements to the police was but a continuation of the state of mind that had existed at the time of the shooting. It was asserted that this was an assumption that her Honour was not entitled to make.
98It may be accepted that a tribunal of fact may in various circumstances have regard to the subsequent statements of an accused person to assist in understanding the state of mind of a person at a relevant time. Sometimes there is no difficulty in doing so, the most obvious occasion being where an accused person unequivocally asserts that he had a particular state of mind at the relevant time.
99Where, however, an accused person's statements do not unequivocally assert a particular state of mind the question is whether any inference can be drawn from those statements as going to establish the state of mind at the relevant time. An obvious example is where the prosecution submits that lies were told by an accused person out of a consciousness of guilt and may be relevant to establish the state of mind of an accused person at the time of the relevant offence. Part of the direction given to a jury in those circumstances would be a caution about too readily drawing the asserted inference and the need to be satisfied that the inference as to the state of mind sought to be established by the Crown is the only rational available inference.
100In the present case none of the statements of the appellant spoke unequivocally as to his state of mind at the time of the shootings. He did not assert that he lost his self control and nor was he required to do so in order to raise the issue of provocation. In the case of each statement relied upon by her Honour the appellant expressed a state of mind at that time, that is his state of mind at the point in time at which he was speaking. The possible exception is in the ERISP.
"Q168 How were you feeling at the time Chris?
A Well I was feeling nothing to tell you the truth, I mean I just wanted to know what they were going on about when I went out the front, sort of thing. Do you get me? But after I shot them [emphasis added] like to tell you the truth, you know, they probably deserved what they got. Right. Either get shot or, or shoot them, so to speak. So that's it, I'm not going to go into any more, I shot 'em, you got your thing, you know, your charges whatever you got you know.
101The question did not with any particularity direct the appellant to respond with respect to his capacity or actions at the time of the shooting. The first part of the answer deals with the appellant's state of mind at the time that the two deceased went to the front of his home. The balance deals with his state of mind after the shooting.
102It was open to her Honour to have regard to the appellant's subsequent statements to the extent they were capable of shedding light on his state of mind at the time of the shootings. However, her Honour could not reason that because those statements made at a time when the appellant was apparently calm and rational, sought to justify the killing without a suggestion that he lost control were determinative of his state of mind at the time of the shootings. Nor could the statements of themselves negative loss of self-control.
103There is an ambiguity in her Honour's reasons. Her Honour said that the appellant's later statements were "ultimately determinative" of the issue. If her Honour meant that they alone determined the issue I could not agree. If she meant that they provided determinative weight I, with respect, could also not agree. To my mind the statement justifying his conduct together with the indication that he would do the same thing again (although no doubt engendering a sense of revulsion in ordinary people), does not provide any significant assistance in determining the state of mind under which the appellant did the relevant acts and whether he lost his self control. It is conceivable that a person who temporarily loses their self-control may later not regret their actions. Although they may have acted in a complete absence of control, later justification of their actions may not prove to be of any assistance to the prosecution case.
104There are many ways in which the point can be illustrated. A man may kill the person who has killed his wife or child. The fact that that person may be proud that they had done so or assert that they would do it again or assert that their victims deserved their fates, would not inevitably, on account of those feelings or assertions lead to the conclusion that they had not acted while under a loss of self-control. Indeed they could indicate the opposite.
105Notwithstanding my reservations about her Honour's approach to the issue I am not persuaded that her Honour's conclusion was erroneous. Indeed, having considered the evidence I am satisfied that the Crown discharged the onus that it carried to the criminal standard. I have previously related the findings that her Honour made in relation to the actions of the appellant and the observations of his movements made by the witnesses. The appellant said in his ERISP that he removed the gun from one of the deceased and then fired it to kill both brothers. There was nothing to suggest that he acted as a result of losing his self-control. Indeed the only available conclusion was that in taking the gun and shooting the brothers he acted in a deliberate and calculated way not only in firing the first two shots but in firing the third shot, which the evidence established was responsible for the death of Sam Willis.
106There was nothing to suggest that having approached the brothers as he said in his ERISP "feeling nothing" he thereafter almost instantly changed his response and lost control. It must be remembered that the appellant had previously threatened to shoot Sam Wilis, a threat that the circumstances enabled him to carry out. Having killed the brothers the appellant was observed to walk "fairly casually" away.
107In reaching this conclusion I have not overlooked the argument that the appellant may have pulled the trigger on the gun on more than three occasions. This may have happened. However, to my mind it does not either by itself or with any other evidence suggest that the appellant may have lost his self-control. I am also satisfied that the delay between the second and third shots, identified by Mr Allan as a matter of seconds, was almost certainly due to the appellant changing position and firing at Sam Willis who by this stage had collapsed onto the ground.
108Complaint was made that her Honour failed to warn herself about the caution necessary in drawing inferences. There is no reason to doubt that her Honour, a very experienced trial judge, was mindful of the need to be careful in this respect and there is nothing in her Honour's judgment which would suggest that the proffered criticism could be sustained.
109With respect to the issue concerning the "ordinary person" the appellant criticised her Honour's conclusion, which I have incorporated at [93] above.
110It was submitted that by expressing herself as she did her Honour has reversed the onus of proof. I am not persuaded that the submission should be accepted. The criticism is focused on the paragraph which commences with the words "I am quite unable to accept ..." A reading of the entire paragraph suggests that her Honour may have merely been intending to convey that in the circumstances she was satisfied beyond any doubt that an ordinary person could not have been induced to lose their self-control and kill the brothers. Her Honour's finding is reflected in the last sentences of the paragraph where she identifies the response as being grossly disproportionate to the provocation with the consequence that the Crown has proved its case to the criminal standard.
111Irrespective of whether her Honour should be understood as framing her conclusion in an inappropriate manner I am nevertheless completely satisfied that there has been no miscarriage of justice. Even accepting the appellant's submission that he did not bring the gun to the scene and that he responded to the fact that the brothers brought it, he must have taken it from the brother carrying it and then without any apparent hesitation used it to kill both of them. There was no suggestion of a struggle or any attempt by the appellant to remove himself from the scene or deal with the situation without using the gun. I have no doubt that an ordinary person with the characteristics of the appellant, including his tendency to anger, would not have acted as the appellant did in the circumstances by taking the gun and forming the intention to kill.