R v McCarthy
[1992] QCA 203
•1/06/1992
COURT OF APPEAL [1992] QCA 203
FITZGERALD P
DAVIES JA
DEMACK J
CA NO 64 of 1992
THE QUEEN
v.
| GARY CHARLES McCARTHY | (Appellant) |
| BRISBANE | |
| .. DATE 1/6/92 JUDGMENT |
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THE PRESIDENT: The appellant has appealed against his
conviction in the Magistrates Court at Innisfail on 4 February
1992 for an offence of assault occasioning bodily harm on 15
November 1991. The ground of appeal which has been argued is
that the verdict was unsafe and unsatisfactory.
The charge arose out of an altercation in the public bar at a
hotel in Innisfail. A number of witnesses were called
including the complainant, the complainant's wife, a friend of
the complainant who was present at the time, the appellant,
and a friend with whom the appellant had been drinking in the
hotel for a considerable period. There was undoubtedly
evidence upon which the Magistrate could make the findings
which he did which supported his conclusion that the appellant
was guilty of the offence with which he was charged. While
that does not of itself mean that the verdict of the
Magistrate was not unsafe or unsatisfactory, the analysis of
the evidence made in the submissions for the appellant does
not justify a conclusion that a reasonable Magistrate ought to
have had a reasonable doubt and therefore acquitted the
appellant. Not surprisingly, there are inconsistencies in the
various versions of the events which occurred, including
inconsistencies between the evidence of the complainant and
the witnesses who supported him. Further, there were
inconsistencies between the evidence of the complainant's wife
and the evidence of his friend. Additionally, in some
respects, each of the complainant, his wife and friend had
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internal inconsistencies in his or her evidence.
The major point stressed for the appellant was that the evidence of the complainant' s friend, whom the Magistrate found corroborated the complainant on an important point, did
not really do so, at least not reliably. Criticisms of the
evidence of the complainant's friend as unclear, equivocal and
involving inconsistencies and on the basis that it emerged for
the first time in cross-examination were all available to be
made. On the other hand, as was pointed out by the
respondent, the cross-examination of the witness did not seek
to challenge what he said on the point. It was open for the
Magistrate to conclude as he did that the witness supported
the complainant on the material issue. The quality of the
evidence against the appellant was not such that the
Magistrate could not assess the credibility, reliability and
substantive effect of the evidence of the various witnesses,
accept the evidence which he did or make the findings which
led to the appellant's conviction. That being so and there
being no other reason to doubt the conclusions at which the
Magistrate arrived, there is no basis upon which this Court
should interfere.
Accordingly, the appeal should be dismissed.
DAVIES JA: I agree.
DEMACK J: I agree.
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THE PRESIDENT: The appeal is dismissed.
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