April 8, 2020 — 4.24pm

Malcolm Knox Journalist, author and columnist for The Sydney Morning Herald.

Whenever the criminal justice system is able to resume empanelling new juries, the High Court has given potential jurors a new reason for being excused from their duty: that they are wasting their time.

Cardinal George Pell is released from Barwon Prison on Tuesday after the High Court quashed his conviction.CREDIT:JASON SOUTH

For the best part of 800 years, juries have had a single function in criminal trials that higher courts could not meddle in. The jury was the finder of fact. In Australian law, this began to change in the 1994 case of M v The Queen, when the High Court said an appeal court could ask "whether it thinks that upon the whole of the evidence it was open to the jury to be satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty". Victoria’s Criminal Procedure Act gave statutory back-up to this evolution of the courts’ role in 2009.

In the trial in which George Pell was found guilty, only 12 people saw and heard the 50-plus witnesses questioned, and only those 12 people were qualified to say whether or not Pell committed crimes. All of those 12 decided, beyond a reasonable doubt, that he did. And yet their months of service, and their first-hand experience, has been overturned by the High Court, not for reasons of law, but because the seven justices would have come to a different conclusion. Those jurors are entitled to ask what, then, was the point of the original trial?

For centuries since the Magna Carta, appeal courts used not to judge facts. They judged judges, ruling on legal errors. Did the trial judge allow the jury to hear ineligible witnesses? Did the trial judge misdirect the jury? These are the matters for a higher court to rule on as a tribunal of law, not fact. Appeal courts have never been designed to hear cases again and pretend to be jurors themselves.

 

Since the ‘M’ case, there has evolved a mechanism for higher courts to overturn "unsafe", or egregiously misguided, jury verdicts, and the key question was whether the Pell case should be considered one of them. Even the High Court’s language in its Pell judgment can be read ambiguously: it accepted "the assumption that the jury assessed [the complainant's] evidence as thoroughly credible and reliable" and made "full allowance for the advantages enjoyed by the jury" in actually hearing the witnesses, yet it still concluded that the jury did not make a "rational" verdict.

The High Court’s 129-paragraph decision makes scant reference to case and statute law. Instead it is filled with the facts that emerged in the Pell trial. How have appeal courts come to set themselves up as quasi-juries? As Melbourne Law School Professor Jeremy Gans has written, by viewing videotape of trial evidence, higher courts have stealthily turned themselves into tribunals of fact. The Victorian Court of Appeal did that in the Pell case, which enabled the High Court, as reviewer of the Court of Appeal, to interpose itself in the same way.

It’s a neat fiction: "We’re not re-trying the case, we’re only assessing another court’s viewing of videotape of parts of the case." However, like videotape itself, the version becomes distorted and more distanced from the original delivery in each new generation. It is, perhaps illogically, the final court (which didn’t view the videotape but only read transcripts and heard argument from lawyers who were not at the Pell trial) which has the power to impose its interpretation upon the tribunal that saw the witnesses in the flesh or by live video-link.

A misconception of the Pell case was that it was one man’s word against another’s. The complainant, under oath and severe cross-examination, provided his version. Pell availed himself of his so-called "right" to silence. Instead, Pell’s case was advanced by church witnesses who speculated on the logistical difficulty of committing the sexual abuse in the circumstances that had been alleged. Pell’s refusal to testify, for his own reasons, is not uncommon and cannot be held against him, but if he did turn his trial into one man’s word against another’s, and his case was so strong, he might never have spent one day in jail.

Instead, the jury appears to have decided what many juries decide: the fact that committing this crime would have been risky and stupid did not mean Pell didn’t do it. As anyone in the lower courts knows, accused people are often found guilty of doing risky and stupid things.

There is one foreseeable consequence of this verdict. Appeal courts are going to be crammed. If higher courts can effectively retry cases and second-guess juries, if a legitimate ground for appeal is simply that the jury was "not rational" – not that a jury has made a catastrophic error, but simply that it was wrong – the system can get set for an avalanche of appeals.

Some think the jury system is outdated, and criminal trials should be heard by judges alone. But trial judges are equally exposed by the powers the higher courts have arrogated to themselves in Pell’s and previous cases. When a prospective juror says, "I refuse to serve because I may be wasting my time", trial judges may sympathise, because they will be in the same boat. When every fact they find can be second-guessed and retried by a higher panel of would-be jurors in legal robes – people who, by the way, have never sat on a jury – our 800-year-old "black box of justice" might as well ask if it has any purpose at all.

 

Much focus, since Pell has been freed, has fallen on the victims of abuse in the Catholic Church committed by those other than Pell. There is another group of mistreated people here: the 12 who actually heard the evidence. Juries have no lobby group, no institutional backing, no voice. Amid other indignities the legal system visits on jurors, it compels them to suffer this insult in silence. But they are us. We citizens are potential jurors, and our response to future requests for our time might be: If you won’t trust us, why should we trust you?

Malcolm Knox is the author of Secrets of the Jury Room: Inside the Black Box of Criminal
Justice in Australia, an account of his experiences on a criminal trial jury and an inquiry into the history of the jury system.

 

 

Journalist, author and columnist for The Sydney Morning Herald.

You need to be a member of 1Eyed Eel to add comments!

Join 1Eyed Eel

Votes: 0
Email me when people reply –

Replies

  • Whoever wrote this tripe is an idiot

  • He makes a valid case. 

  • I can't understand the hyperventillation going on about this case being overturned. That is our judicial system, and is nothing new. I am comfortable that we have a system that can look in depth into a case from multiple view points to ensure that our liberty remains and that people are innocent until proven guilty beyond reasonable doubt. Maybe Pell is guilty, but there is just not enough evidence to convict him, as the High Court has stated. Jurors won't always see this as the High Court judges will.

    • Happy Easter Everybody 

      • This reply was deleted.
        • He always got everything which is the biggest.but that's okay he also is a big softy at heart

This reply was deleted.

Latest comments

Mallee57 replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"Your probably right Poppa. I just wonder if these modern day Rugby League players would perform the same if: they had unlimited tackles, leather boots, leather football, no 40/20, return of the biff, heavier jerseys, no physiological pampering, and…"
50 seconds ago
Poppa replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"Just treat it like sex Carl's, close your eyes through the bad parts and remember the good olds at Dundas Drive In."
10 minutes ago
Prof. Daz replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"Two charts that spell trouble. One, set restart rate of first half is double that of second half (and Eels not coping with increased defensive load that results from runs of possession against them in the first half's). Two, Tigers have a greater…"
12 minutes ago
Richard Jackson replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"Thats true Prof. it is some consolation"
12 minutes ago
Poppa replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"I think you would lose that one on every level Mallee, the athletecism of todays footballer's leaves past ones for dead.....but transplanting those players from those era's and having them with the same facilities is the only truly  subjective…"
13 minutes ago
Prof. Daz replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"Thx Fake Midget. I believe Stats insider attributes tries conceded/scored to where the initiating event was that led to a try conceded/scored? I assume this to be the case because the eye test suggests the Eels concede linebreaks and offloads in the…"
17 minutes ago
Graham polkinghorne replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"The Eels are still diamonds and rocks as a team. Moses hasn't had much imput in most games. Parra need to start games more conservative, get through there sets. We can win today but sadly we can also have 30 plus put on us. I go in with hope more…"
20 minutes ago
fishbulb replied to Kurupt - Your Mums Favourite Thug's discussion Congratulations Michael Ennis!
"It's hard to win without peptides!"
22 minutes ago
Poppa replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"I doubt it, I think Hoey has taken it to a new level.....how to communicate to them Hoey is "we hope you are reading this site"..... I think I know how your doing it, so don't tell them. make them employ you at a fee....you do the "shrink" work as…"
23 minutes ago
Prof. Daz replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"Great read HOE. Saw a graph on the Rugby League Eye Test that is relevant. The set restarts in the first half of games is DOUBLE that of the second half. Assuming ruck infringements and penalties might be affected by fatigue, we should not expect a…"
29 minutes ago
Parrafan101 replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"Paulo is the reason why we lose the middle, we don't have another aggressive forwaRd to keep the one two punch going like we did with RCG."
38 minutes ago
fake midget pseudoachondroplasia replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"A massive concern is our middle defence.  Although our edge defences seem to have improved, we conceed more tries through the middle then any other team with 40% of tries conceeded through the middle.
Tigers have the best ratio of tries scored in…"
46 minutes ago
Prof. Daz replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"I was waiting for NOS to reply but then NOS replied so NOS is not Godot"
47 minutes ago
Prof. Daz replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"Joel, saw the Moses ankle roll in the Panthers game. Thought a calf cramp at first. We will know if there is an issue if Moses sets off on a long downfield run. "
48 minutes ago
Prof. Daz replied to Prof. Daz's discussion GWME DAY BLOG, R5 vs TIGERS: The Trial
"On the topic of news hints that Moses is playing injured, two things.
One, gee what's new he has been averaging half the games for a few seasons now. It's unfortunate because he is they key to a good season.
Two, but saw a new stat that was…"
50 minutes ago
Mallee57 replied to Hell On Eels's discussion We Don’t Lose Games in Moments. We Lose Them in Minutes.
"Point V - Or be on some supplements "
54 minutes ago
More…

Keaon done deal

As of Thursday, December 11, 2025, South Sydney Rabbitohs forwardKeaon Koloamatangi has reportedly agreed to a deal with the Parramatta Eels, but it is not yet officially announced by the clubs.  Soon to be announced.

Read more…
14 Replies · Reply by Poppa Jan 9
Views: 2272

 

<script src="https://pagead2.googlesyndication.com/pagead/js/adsbygoogle.js"></script>
<!-- Sidebar -->
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<script>// <![CDATA[
(adsbygoogle = window.adsbygoogle || []).push({});
// ]]></script>