Grounds of Appeal 1 and 2
16 Counsel for the appellant dealt with the first and second grounds of appeal against conviction together and it is convenient to follow this course. Only one submission was put in support of the two grounds. I observe in passing that the first ground of appeal is not felicitously worded (it was not drafted by counsel who appeared for the appellant at the hearing of the appeal) but nothing turns on how the ground is worded.
17 At the trial the trial judge, as well as orally summing-up to the jury, gave the jury written directions. In both the written directions and in the oral summing-up the trial judge identified the act on which the Crown relied on the charge of murder as being "the thrusting of a knife into Mr Eskaria". The jury were directed that the appellant should be found guilty of murder, if, but only if, the Crown established beyond reasonable doubt each of a number of ingredients, including:-
(i) That Fouad Eskaria had died.
(ii) That his death was caused by a deliberate act.
(iii) That the deliberate act was an act of the appellant.
(iv) That at the time the act was done it was done with an intention to kill or an intention to inflict grievous bodily harm.
18 It was not submitted by counsel for the appellant that any of these directions were wrong. However, it was submitted that they were inadequate.
19 Counsel then referred to a part of the oral summing-up in which his Honour said:-
"There was considerable attention given by Mr Nicholson (counsel for the appellant at the trial) to the issue of whether there was any deliberate act of the accused which caused the deceased's death. You will remember that one of the points he made was that the entry of the knife into the deceased could have been the result of movement by the deceased, or others. He referred to, among other things, the dynamics of the fight; indeed, of any fight".
20 After referring to what Mr Nicholson had said, the trial judge gave two further directions, which had not been included in the written directions.
21 The first of these further directions was:-
"…if a person creates a situation intended to kill and it does kill, it is no answer to a charge of murder that it caused death in a way that was, to some extent, unexpected".
22 The second of these further directions was:-
".. the question of cause you have to decide under paragraph (ii) of the murder directions is to be determined by applying your commonsense to the facts as you find them, appreciating that the purpose of the inquiry is to decide whether to attribute legal responsibility in a criminal matter".
23 It was not submitted by counsel for the appellant on the appeal that either of these further directions was wrong. The first direction was taken verbatim from the joint judgment of McGarvie J and O'Bryan J in R v Demirian (1989) VR 97 at 113 and was quoted with approval in Royall v The Queen (1990) 172 CLR 378 by Mason CJ at 392, Brennan J at 400, Deane J and Dawson J at 411 and McHugh J at 452. The second direction is a standard direction on causation.
24 Although it was not submitted that any of the directions given by his Honour were wrong, it was submitted that, in the circumstances, they were inadequate. The direction which, it was submitted, his Honour should have given, and had not given, was a direction to the effect that if the jury thought it was reasonably possible that the force, which caused the stabbing motion of the knife and thereby the entry of the knife into the victim's body so as to occasion the fatal wounding, was an intervention of a third party, then the jury would have to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the appellant or a person in his position could reasonably have foreseen the intervention of the third party. It was conceded that at the trial the trial judge had not been asked to give any such direction.
25 In support of the submission that this direction should have been given, counsel referred to a passage in the judgment of Brennan J in Royall v The Queen at 398-399. In Royall the appellant had been charged with the murder of a woman who had fallen from the bathroom window of her sixth floor flat. There was evidence at the trial that she and the appellant had had a violent argument in the flat. The Crown case was that the appellant had murdered the woman in one or other of three ways, namely:-
26 (i) He had pushed her out of the window.
27 (ii) He had attacked her and she had fallen out of the window in the course of avoiding the attack.
28 (iii) Having a well founded and reasonable apprehension of life threatening violence, she had jumped from the window.
29 At pp398-399 Brennan J said inter alia:-
"The basic proposition relating to causation in homicide is that an accused's conduct, whether by act or omission, must contribute significantly to the death of the victim. It need not be the sole, direct or immediate cause of death. However, when the death is not caused directly by the conduct of the accused but by something done by the victim or by a third person in response to the conduct of the accused, there is a question whether the chain of causation has been broken"
* * *
"Nevertheless, an accused cannot be held criminally responsible for a death that has been caused in fact by his conduct, if the final fatal step taken by the victim was neither foreseen nor reasonably foreseeable. Foresight or reasonable forseeability marks the limit of the consequences of conduct for which an accused may be held criminally responsible."
30 It was submitted that this statement of principle was equally applicable, whether the final fatal step was taken by the victim or a third party.
31 I do not consider that the direction suggested by counsel for the appellant was a direction which the trial judge was required to give.
32 In the first place, the views expressed by Brennan J in Royall about reasonable forseeability would not appear to have been shared, or at any rate fully shared, by other members of the High Court. For example, Mason CJ said at p390:-
"In the English cases the natural consequence test has been linked to the concept of foreseeability. Because the natural consequence test inevitably invites conjecture about the likelihood of an occurrence, it is impossible to divorce completely the application of the test from the concept of foreseeability. However, in my view, to invite the jury to consider foreseeability would be more likely, at least in the majority of cases, to confuse than to clarify the issue of causation".
33 At p412 Deane J and Dawson J in their joint judgment said:-
"On occasions forseeability may play some part in a jury's inquiry into the cause of death but, in directing a jury, it is, for practical purposes, desirable to keep causation and intent separate as far as possible and to avoid the introduction of questions of foreseeability in relation to causation".
34 In the second place, even if a direction of the kind suggested would sometimes be required, it was not required in the present case. In the present case, the trial judge in both his written and his oral directions unequivocally identified the act on which the Crown relied on the charge of murder as being the act of thrusting a knife into Mr Eskaria's body so as to cause the fatal wound. The jury were directed, both orally and in writing, that they could find the appellant guilty of murder, only if they were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that that act was a deliberate act of the appellant, done with the intent required for murder, which had caused the death of the victim. If the jury were satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of those matters, then the jury would necessarily have been satisfied that Mr Eskaria's death had been caused directly by a deliberate act of the appellant, and not by something done by either the victim or a third party, for example some movement by the victim in the fight or some movement by a third person perhaps done in an endeavour to stop the fight or disarm the appellant. Given the way in which the act causing death was identified in the Crown case and by the trial judge, there was no final fatal step taken by a person other than the appellant and hence no need to direct the jury about whether some step taken by a person other than the appellant was reasonably foreseeable by the appellant or by someone in the appellant's position. Given the way in which the act causing death was identified by the Crown and by the trial judge, there was no real issue about causation at all.
35 The submission made by counsel for the appellant may have had more force, if the act of the appellant relied on by the Crown had been identified (solely or in the alternative) as some act antecedent to the thrusting of a knife into the victim's body so as to occasion the fatal wound, for example the act of holding a drawn knife close to the victim's body. If the act of the appellant had been so identified and the knife had entered the victim's body as a result of some movement of the victim or a third person and not as a result of a willed act of stabbing by the appellant, then issues would have arisen which might have called for further directions than those given by his Honour.
36 I would reject the first and second grounds of appeal.