Trotter v R
[2016] NSWCCA 57
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Criminal Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2016-03-16
Before
Beazley P, Johnson J, Harrison J
Catchwords
- CRIMINAL LAW - joint criminal enterprise - limited evidence against applicant - whether separate trial
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
Solicitors: Jeffreys Lawyers (Applicant) Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions NSW (Respondent) File Number(s): CCA 2014/80329 Decision under appeal Court or tribunal: District Court Jurisdiction: Criminal Date of Decision: 20 October 2015 Before: Lakatos SC DCJ File Number(s): 2014/80329
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment] The applicant is charged with one count of knowingly taking part in the supply of cocaine contrary to the Drug Misuse And Trafficking Act 1985 (NSW), s 25(1), being count 8 of an indictment comprising 18 counts against six accused. She sought leave to appeal from an interlocutory decision of Lakatos SC DCJ in which his Honour refused her application for a separate trial pursuant to the Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW), s 21(2). The Crown alleges that the applicant was involved in a joint criminal enterprise with three other accused including her husband, James Trotter, to supply cocaine. Separately, the Crown alleges the existence of a joint criminal enterprise to supply heroin involving four of the other accused. No involvement by the applicant in the supply of heroin is alleged. By count 8 on the indictment, the Crown contends that the applicant knowingly took part in the supply of approximately 1.5 g of cocaine on 24 January 2014. The evidence proposed to be adduced to support that contention comprises intercepted phone and SMS conversations between James Trotter and the purchaser and between James Trotter and the applicant. The applicant's case is that she was an innocent agent for her husband in the transaction. Apart from the intercepts from 24 January 2014, which were said to be likely to take up about 30 minutes of a 5 or 6 week trial, there is no evidence directly implicating the applicant in the joint criminal enterprise to supply cocaine. However, the Crown contended that other evidence relating to that enterprise, including other phone intercept evidence and evidence of drugs and other items found in searches of the applicant's premises and elsewhere, are relevant to proving the applicant's knowing participation in the offence with which she is charged. The applicant contended that the trial judge's discretion miscarried in refusing to order that the applicant be tried separately. Specifically, she contended that his Honour erred by failing to have regard to a text message which was said to weigh against the proposition that the applicant was knowingly involved in the supply of cocaine and thus in favour of the granting of a separate trial; and that he had failed to turn his mind to the principles of joint criminal enterprise and the evidence required to satisfy them.