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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NAURU
Criminal Appeal No. 5 of 1981
KARL JIRONC
v
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
5th May,
1981
Criminal
law - proof beyond all reasonable doubt - no error in finding of primary facts -
inference of secondary facts necessary for
guilt to be established - inference
to be drawn only if no other inference reasonably
possible.
Appeal against
conviction for driving a motor vehicle whilst under the influence of
intoxicating liquor. The primary facts found by
the magistrate to have been
proved fell into two categories. The first was facts relating to the appellant's
physical condition;
the second was facts relating to the manner of his driving.
The facts in the first category were such that the magistrate could properly
infer that the appellant was intoxicated, but not the degree of his
intoxication. He relied on the facts in the second category to
draw the
inferences that the degree of the appellant's intoxication was such as to have
been likely to have had a substantially detrimental
effect on his driving
skills. However, the manner of his driving was reasonably explicable on grounds
other than
intoxication.
Held:
As inferences other than that the degree of the appellant's intoxication was
such as to have been likely to have had a substantially
detrimental effect on
his driving skills could reasonably be drawn from the primary facts, his guilt
had not been proved beyond all
reasonable
doubt.
Appeal allowed. Conviction
quashed.
Mrs M.L. Billeam for the
appellant
Respondent in
person
Thompson
C.J.:
The appellant was convicted
by the District Court on three counts, the first of driving a motor vehicle
while under the influence
of intoxicating liquor, the second of driving a motor
vehicle negligently, and the third of failing to comply with a traffic control
sign. He was sentenced to one month's imprisonment with hard labour on the first
count and fined $75 and $10 respectively on the
second and third counts. He has
appealed against conviction on the first two counts and against sentence on all
the counts.
So far as the second
count is concerned, there was ample evidence upon which the learned magistrate
could reasonably find that the
appellant drove negligently. Two prosecution
witnesses gave evidence that the appellant's car came out of a side road and
turned
left onto the main island road a short distance in front of their police
car and then almost immediately turned right into another
side road, in the
process crossing in front of a motor cycle travelling in the opposite direction
on the main island road and causing
it to slow down. The appellant gave evidence
that the police car was some considerable distance away when he drove out of the
side
road and that he did not see any motor cycle coming in the opposite
direction along the main island road. But the learned magistrate
believed the
prosecution witnesses; although there were minor discrepancies between their
evidence, they were of the kind which adds
verisimilitude to evidence rather
than detracting from its credibility. There was, therefore, no reason why the
learned magistrate
should not have accepted their evidence. That being so, as
the only ground of appeal against the conviction of the appellant on the
second
count is that the finding of guilty was unreasonable and against the weight of
the evidence, that appeal must
fail.
The appeal against the
appellant's conviction on the first count is on the same single ground. However,
in argument Mrs Billeam submitted
also that the learned magistrate took into
account as probative of intoxication facts of which there was an innocent
explanation
or which were, at the least,
equivocal.
So far as the findings
of primary fact are concerned, there was no reason why the learned magistrate
should not have found them as
he did, relying on the evidence of the prosecution
witnesses. However, secondary facts - in this case the fact that the appellant
was intoxicated and the fact that his intoxication was such as to have been
likely to have had a substantially detrimental effect
on his driving skills -
could properly be inferred from those primary facts only if there was no other
inference which could reasonably
be drawn from
them.
The primary facts found fell
into two categories; they were -
(1) the appearance and conduct of the appellant, other than his actual driving of his motor vehicle; and
(2) the manner in which he drove his motor vehicle.
The
learned magistrate approached his task of considering what inferences could
properly be drawn from the primary facts by considering
first what could be
inferred from those in the first category. He concluded that they established
that the appellant "was really
under the influence of intoxicating liquor while
he was driving his mini moke that night". He then went on to consider whether an
inference could be drawn that the degree of the appellant's intoxication was
such as to have been likely to have had a substantially
detrimental effect on
his driving skills. He concluded that it was; in reaching that conclusion he
relied entirely on the manner
in which the appellant drove his motor vehicle. He
did not rely for it on the primary facts in the first
category.
The manner in which the
appellant drove was certainly negligent and inconsiderate of the other road
users affected by it. But it was
not so bad as to be categorised as reckless or
dangerous. Indeed, regrettably, it merely conformed to the abysmally low
standard
of much of the driving observable daily on the roads of Nauru, driving
by persons of undoubted sobriety but lacking consideration
for others. It was
certainly not such as to permit of an inference being drawn from it as to the
degree of the appellant's intoxication.
The learned magistrate erred in drawing
from it the inference that the appellant's intoxication was such as to have been
likely to
have had a substantially detrimental effect on his driving
skills.
I have considered whether
the learned magistrate ought to have drawn such an inference from the primary
facts in the first category.
In many cases such an inference is the only one
which can reasonably be drawn from facts of that nature. In this case, if there
had
not been a possible innocent explanation of the appellant's unsteadiness on
his feet, I think that the learned magistrate would have
erred if he had not
drawn such an inference from the primary facts which he found
proved.
However, I am satisfied
that he cannot be regarded as having erred in limiting the inference which he
drew from the other indicia
of intoxication which were proved, that is to say in
concluding from that evidence only that the appellant was intoxicated without
drawing any conclusion as to the degree of his intoxication. That being so, the
appeal against conviction on the first count must
be
allowed.
The sentences imposed in
respect of counts 2 and 3 are neither harsh and excessive nor wrong in
principle. They relate to entirely
separate offences; that is to say, neither is
wholly comprised within the other. So section 16 of the Criminal Code of
Queensland,
in its application to Nauru, has not been
contravened.
The appeal against
the conviction of the appellant on the first count is quashed and the sentence
set aside; the appeal against his
conviction on the second count and against the
sentences imposed in respect of those counts is dismissed.
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