The direction to the jury
39 On the question of lies, the trial Judge gave the following direction to the jury (su 31-33):
"Members of the jury, the Crown submits to you that the accused has lied to you and those lies are briefly that, the first lie being, the Crown alleges, that there was an encounter at the Bondi Junction Mall with [M]. The second lie, the crown alleges, the accused said was that there was an exchange of the Eurythmics tape at the unit of the accused.
Members of the jury, what then is a lie? A lie may be defined as speaking untruthfully with intent to mislead or deceive or to convey a false impression or practise a deception. Statements can be inaccurate without being a lie as the author may simply be mistaken or may be labouring out of misconception or misunderstanding. On the other hand, sometimes statements that are literally true may be used to mislead or deceive. The accused meets the allegation of lie when he gave you an account of [M] telling him he was a great fan of the Eurythmics pop group and this occurred when the accused and [M] were at Martin Place before the casual meeting at Bondi Mall, recounted here by the accused.
Members of the jury, before you can take these asserted lies, as alleged by the crown, into account as evidence of the guilt of the accused you must be satisfied that it was in fact not only lies but also deliberate lies. If you are not so satisfied you cannot use it for this purpose. If, however, you are satisfied that they were deliberate lies then you must also be satisfied that the lies, one, relate to an issue that is material or relevant to the offences charged and two, that the lies reveal a knowledge of the offence or some aspect of it and three, the lies were told because the accused knew that the truth of the matter about which he lied would implicate him in the offence charged or to put it another way, because of a realisation of guilt and fear of the truth. I emphasise that you must be satisfied of what was in his mind was guilt of the offence charged and not some other crime. You must remember, however, that people do not always act rationally and that conduct of this sort may sometimes be explained in other ways. There may be many reasons for telling a lie apart from realisation of guilt. For example, a lie may be told out of panic to escape an unjust accusation or to protect some other person or to avoid consequences unrelated to this offence. If you think there is a reasonable possibility that the lie was told for such a reason or the lies were told for such a reason then you cannot use it for this purpose. If you are satisfied, however, that the three matters I set out above to which I have referred then you are entitled to use the finding in aid of the other evidence of the crown case as pointing to the guilt of the accused. Standing by itself, however, it could not prove guilt."
40 Shortly before the summing up had been completed, Mr Martin in the absence of the jury asked the Judge for its discharge. The following exchange then ensued between Mr Martin and his Honour (T 45 2/4/07):
"MARTIN: …It's my motion that your Honour should discharge the jury. Your Honour has directed them that they can take into account alleged lies. The said lies are said to arise by the Crown suggesting to the accused in the witness box that he has given false accounts in relation to two incidents.
There is no independent evidence, in my submission, that the Crown points to, or could point to, indicating that those matters are lies. It is a mere contradiction by the complainant and in the absence of independent evidence from which the jury can conclude independently that those things were lies, then the Zoneff direction that your Honour has given is inappropriate and unnecessarily draws attention to contradictions that are merely contradictions between the complainant's evidence and the accused's evidence giving it an evidentiary value that it does not have--
HIS HONOUR: That's the submission on lies, is it, before you go on to something else?
MARTIN: Yes your Honour. My submission is that--
HIS HONOUR: Well, we'll deal with that first then. Firstly Mr Martin, I discussed what I was going to put to the jury in your presence, I asked for your comment, without the actual lies that I was going to do, and there was no demur from you.
MARTIN: Your Honour --
HIS HONOUR: Now Mr Martin, I haven't quite finished and I put it to you quite clearly and you agreed. That's the first point I make, quite clearly, and secondly a lie is a lie. It's a verbal statement and it could be true or false. So I reject your application…"
Mr Martin took his application no further.
Submissions
41 The appellant submitted that where the Crown had disavowed the use of the alleged lies as being available on the question of consciousness of guilt, the trial Judge should have specifically directed the jury that the alleged lies were not available for this purpose. By directing the jury in accordance with Edwards v The Queen, the alleged lies had been left to the jury as being available to be used as consciousness of the appellant's guilt even though the Crown had not suggested that they were capable of being used in that way. A miscarriage of justice had occurred and the convictions should be overturned.
42 The Crown agreed that it would have been better if the trial Judge had given a Zoneff direction but submitted that the trial Judge's direction whilst raising the prospect of lies evidencing consciousness of guilt effectively removed that possibility from the jury's consideration by the limitations it imposed on lies. The jury would have appreciated that the visits to the house could only have been evidence of the relationship between the appellant and M. Given the directions as to the limited use that could be made of the uncharged acts the jury would not have reasoned that any more use could be made of the visits to the apartment where no sexual acts took place. They would not have been satisfied that the lies (if they were found to be lies) revealed a knowledge of the offences or some aspect of them and were told because the appellant knew the truth would implicate him in the offences charged. The jury, the Crown submitted, may have considered it possible that he lied although no offence occurred in the unit because the visits were in the circumstances inappropriate and did not reflect well on his character. To find that the appellant had lied, the jury had to have decided that M was a credible witness. Having reached that conclusion, the Crown contended conviction was inevitable.