It may be said that an examination of the evidence discloses a number of circumstances which may be described as corroborative of the confession in the sense that if the evidence (consisting in part of admissions made by the accused in the box) were accepted by the jury, it would make the truth of the confession probable. It is not, however, necessary to consider whether such corroboration added to the confession would be sufficient to justify a verdict of guilty, because the direction of the learned Judge was unequivo- cally to the effect that a voluntary confession which was direct and positive and satisfactorily proved was sufficient to justify a conviction without any corroboration of any kind.
In the course of the argument a number of text books and decisions have been cited, but there is no decision of a Court which lays down the proposition for which the applicant contends, namely, that a confession must always be corroborated before a jury can act upon it. The opinions of text writers exhibit much divergence upon the subject. In Halsbury's Laws of England, 2nd ed., vol. 9, p. 207, it is stated that a defendant may be convicted on his own confession without any corroborating evidence," but, at p. 183, note g, it is stated that the corpus delicti may be proved by direct evidence or by irresistible grounds of presumption doubtful whether it must be established by some evidence other than the mere confession of the accused." In Phipson on Evidence, 6th ed. (1921), p. 264, Best on Evidence, 12th ed. (1922), p. 474, and Archbold's Criminal Pleading, Evidence and Practice, 29th ed. (1934), p. 398, it is stated that a confession is sufficient to justify a conviction without any corroborative evidence. In fact the learned Chairman of General Sessions in this case evidently framed his charge upon the basis of the statement in Archbold. On the other hand, Wills on Circumstantial Evidence, 5th ed. (1902), p. 92, Taylor on Evidence, 12th ed. (1931), p. 546, and Roscoe's Criminal Evidence, 15th ed. (1928), p. 38, all state that the matter is doubtful. In R. v. Falkner and Bond 1 a confession of one of the accused persons was held sufficient to justify his conviction without any corroborative evidence. In R. v. Tippet 2 the majority of Judges held that, apart from any confirmatory evidence, the confession was sufficient, and, although
1(1822) Russ. &R. 481.
2(1823) Russ. &R. 509.