Jabari Sensimania Nervais v The Queen; Dwayne Omar Severin v The Queen

JurisdictionCaribbean States
JudgeByron, P.
Judgment Date25 January 2018
CourtCaribbean Court of Justice
Docket NumberCCJ Appeal Nos. BBCR2017/002; BB Criminal Appeal No. 7 of 2014; CCJ Appeal No. BBCR2017/003
Date25 January 2018

Caribbean Court of Justice

Byron, P.CCJ; Saunders, J.CCJ; Wit, J.CCJ; Hayton, J.CCJ; Anderson, J,CCJ; Rajnauth-Lee, J.CCJ; Barrow, J.CCJ

CCJ Appeal Nos. BBCR2017/002; BB Criminal Appeal No. 7 of 2014; CCJ Appeal No. BBCR2017/003

Jabari Sensimania Nervais
and
The Queen
Dwayne Omar Severin
and
The Queen
Appearances:

Mr. Douglas L Mendes SC, Mr. Andrew O G Pilgrim QC, Ms. Naomi J E Lynton and Ms. Kamisha Benjamin for the appellants

Mr. Anthony L Blackman, Deputy Director of Public Prosecutions (Ag), Ms. Krystal C Delaney, Senior Crown Counsel and Neville Watson, Crown Counsel for the respondent

Constitutional Law - Fundamental rights and freedoms — Right to life — Constitutionality of the mandatory death penalty — Violation of Article 2 of the Inter American Convention on Human Rights — Enforceability of section 11 of the constitution declaring rights and freedoms — Whether section 11 was a preamble — Whether the mandatory death penalty deprived the court of the opportunity to tailor the punishment to fit the crime.

Byron, P.
INTRODUCTION
1

On 21st February 2012 the First appellant, Jabari Sensimania Nervais (“Nervais”), was convicted of the murder of Jason Burton and sentenced to death in accordance with section 2 of the Offences Against the Persons Act (“OAPA”), Cap 141. The Court of Appeal, comprising Mason, Burgess and Goodridge JJA, dismissed his appeal against conviction and sentence on 17th May 2017. Nervais sought special leave from this Court to appeal, as a poor person, his conviction and sentence. He contended that the learned Justices of Appeal erred when they found that his conviction was safe and that the mandatory nature of the death penalty was constitutional.

2

On 28th May 2014, the Second appellant, Dwayne Omar Severin (“Severin”) was convicted of the murder of Virgil Barton and sentenced to death in accordance with section 2 of the OAPA. The Court of Appeal, comprised of Sir Marston Gibson, Chief Justice, Mason and Goodridge JJA, dismissed his appeal against conviction and sentence on 17th May 2017. Severin also sought special leave of this Court to appeal, as a poor person, his conviction and sentence. He too contended that his conviction was unsafe and that the mandatory death penalty was unconstitutional.

3

When the applications for special leave came before us, we were satisfied that they raised issues of great general and public importance. Accordingly, special leave to appeal and leave to appeal as a poor person were granted respectively to Nervais and Severin. During the Case Management process, the parties agreed, and it was ordered by the Court, that the appeals in relation to the convictions of Nervais and Severin would be heard separately and, given the similar challenge to the mandatory death penalty, the appeals against sentence heard together. The appeals against conviction were dismissed and we now turn to the appeals against sentence.

ISSUES TO BE DETERMINED
4

After consideration of the oral and written submissions of the parties before us, we concluded that these appeals against sentence raise four broad issues to be determined by this Court. Namely:

Before discussing each in turn, we will set out the background against which these issues must be determined.

  • a. Is section 11 of the Constitution separately enforceable?

  • b. Does section 2 of the OAPA breach section 11 (c) of the Constitution?

  • c. To what extent, if at all, can section 2 of the OAPA be modified to bring it into conformity with the Constitution?

  • d. Whether section 2 of the OAPA breaches section 15 (1) or 18 ( 1) or 12(1) of the Constitution?

BACKGROUND
5

Section 2 of the OAPA provides: “Any person convicted of murder shall be sentenced to, and suffer, death.” This has been presented as a highly complex and controversial matter. But the issue for resolution in this case may be simplified to whether it is legally permissible for the use of the word “shall” in section 2 of the OAPA to be modified to “may”. In this context, it should be noted that this case is not about whether the death penalty is constitutional or not. It is about the circumstances under which it can be imposed. This follows on a longstanding observation which has been universally accepted. The proposition is that the conduct for which, and circumstances under which a person would be liable to conviction for murder varies enormously with varying degrees of culpability. The corollary is that not everyone convicted of murder deserves to be executed and the courts should be required to consider each case separately and apply a sentence that is proportionate to the individual case. That is why the question is phrased whether it is legally permissible for the sentencing provision stipulating that the judge “shall” sentence to death to be read instead as “may” sentence to death the convicted murderer.

6

Justice Mason delivered the judgments on behalf of the Court of Appeal in both the Nervais and Severin matters now before us. In both cases, in addition to submissions made on behalf of the appellants, the late Mr. Charles Leacock QC, then DPP of Barbados, had submitted on behalf of the State, that the imposition of the mandatory death penalty for all convictions of murder in Barbados, without mitigation and individual sentencing, was patently unconstitutional. He recommended that the court should strike down the mandatory death penalty and make it discretionary. The court felt constrained to reject these submissions, “despite the fact that the mandatory death penalty is inconsistent with and in violation of the international human rights law ratified by Barbados because, while the mandatory death penalty is inhuman and degrading punishment within the meaning of the Constitution, it is provided for in a law that predated the Constitution and is thereby afforded immunity from judicial challenge.” Nervais v. The Queen BB 2017 CA 9, 84

7

That ruling of the Court of Appeal applied the decision of the majority of the Privy Council in Boyce and Joseph v. The Queen (“ Boyce and Joseph”), [2004] UKPC 32 which will be considered in some detail later in this judgment. The court stated that it considered itself bound by that decision unless and until it was overruled by the Caribbean Court of Justice (“CCJ”), relying on paragraph 18 of the CCJ decision in Attorney General and Others v. Joseph and Boyce [2006] CCJ 3 (AJ) (“ AG v. Joseph and Boyce”) where this Court outlined its approach to judgments of the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council (“Privy Council”). The Court accepted that decisions made by the Privy Council, in relevant cases, while it was the final Court of Appeal for Barbados, were binding on Barbados unless and until they are overruled by this Court. Mason J specifically applied that opinion. However, the CCJ had only been established in 2005 and did not start with a body of jurisprudence. In the years that have elapsed since then the jurisprudence of the Court has been steadily developing. This requires evolution and change in relation to the approach to the decisions from the Privy Council. There are cases where the jurisprudence emanating from the CCJ differs from and is inconsistent with decisions made by the Privy Council while it was the final appellate court for Barbados. In such cases, even in the absence of a specific overruling of that decision of the Privy Council, it must be open to the courts in Barbados to apply the jurisprudence emanating from the CCJ.

8

There were at least two wings to the proposition that Leacock QC presented to the Court of Appeal. One was that the mandatory imposition of the death penalty, without any opportunity to individualise the sentence to fit the particular circumstances of the offence and the offender, contravened the provisions of the Constitution. There was abundant authority to support his argument. But the Court of Appeal ruled that these principles were subordinate to section 26 of the Constitution itself (“the savings clause”) as mentioned at para [10] and set out at [51] below.

9

In 1966 Barbados became an independent nation, with a body of laws derived from the United Kingdom that included the imposition of a mandatory sentence of death upon a conviction of the crime of murder. By that time English citizens had benefitted from major criminal justice reforms including the abolition of the death penalty passed by the British Parliament via the Murder (Abolition of the Death Penalty) Act 1965 which had not been extended and applied to Barbados [Saul Lehrfreund, International Legal Trends and the Mandatory Death Penalty in the Commonwealth Caribbean 1 Oxford U. Commw. LJ. 171 (2001)].

10

Section 1 of the Constitution of Barbados evinced an important result of independence by declaring that the Constitution is the supreme law of Barbados and, subject to the provisions of the Constitution, any other law that is inconsistent with it, shall be void to the extent of the inconsistency. The Constitution also contained section 26 which has been described as a “savings clause” because it was considered to preserve the validity of existing laws, that were in force on the date the Constitution came into force, which were inconsistent with sections 12 to 23, the protection of fundamental rights provisions of the Constitution. The interpretation and application of these provisions have proven to be complicated for the Privy Council as evidenced by the decision of Boyce and Joseph where there were significant differences of opinion resulting in a split decision of 5 to 4. Having said that, all judges in that case considered that the imposition of the mandatory death penalty contravened the provisions of section 15(1) of the Constitution [Supra (n.2) [27], [78]. But the majority felt that section 26 of the Constitution prevented them from making that declaration.

11

It may be that the division of opinion arose because there was more...

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