Appeal against Conviction in UK Law

Leading Cases
  • R v Donald Pendleton
    • House of Lords
    • 13 December 2001

    The Court of Appeal can make its assessment of the fresh evidence it has heard, but save in a clear case it is at a disadvantage in seeking to relate that evidence to the rest of the evidence which the jury heard. For these reasons it will usually be wise for the Court of Appeal, in a case of any difficulty, to test their own provisional view by asking whether the evidence, if given at the trial, might reasonably have affected the decision of the trial jury to convict.

  • R v Graham
    • Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)
    • 25 October 1996

    If the court is satisfied, despite any misdirection of law or any irregularity in the conduct of the trial or any fresh evidence, that the conviction is safe, the court will dismiss the appeal. But if, for whatever reason, the court concludes that the appellant was wrongly convicted of the offence charged, or is left in doubt whether the appellant was rightly convicted of that offence or not, then it must of necessity consider the conviction unsafe.

    In these four cases the court did not find that the convictions were safe: it considered that no miscarriage of justice had actually occurred and applied the proviso. Our sole obligation is to consider whether a conviction is unsafe.

  • R v Hayward, R v Jones (Anthony), R v Purvis
    • Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)
    • 31 January 2001

    This appellant, as it seems to us, had, clearly and expressly by his conduct, waived his right to be present and to be legally represented.

  • R v Cooper (Sean)
    • Court of Appeal (Criminal Division)
    • 08 November 1968

    That means that in cases of this kind the Court must in the end ask itself a subjective question, whether we are content to let the matter stand as it is, or whether there is not some lurking doubt in our minds which makes us wonder whether an injustice has been done. This is a reaction which may not be based strictly on the evidence as such; it is a reaction which can be produced by the general feel of the case as the Court experiences it.

  • Hinds v Attorney General of Barbados and another
    • Privy Council
    • 05 December 2001

    It would be undesirable to stifle or inhibit the grant of constitutional relief in cases where a claim to such relief is established and such relief is unavailable or not readily available through the ordinary avenue of appeal. As it is a living, so must the constitution be an effective, instrument.

  • R v Church
    • Court of Criminal Appeal
    • 22 March 1965

    For such a verdict inexorably to follow, the unlawful act must be such as all sober and reasonable people would inevitably recognise must subject the other person to, at least, the risk of some harm resulting therefrom, albeit not serious harm.

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Legislation
  • Criminal Justice and Courts Act 2015
    • UK Non-devolved
    • Thursday January 01, 2015
    ... ... are dealt with before and after conviction; to create offences involving ill-treatment or ... under section 21 or 23 brought against an unincorporated association, the following ... an appeal under paragraph 23 against a decision of a fines ... ...
  • Homicide Act 1957
    • UK Non-devolved
    • Tuesday January 01, 1957
  • Criminal Appeal Act 1968
    • UK Non-devolved
    • Monday January 01, 1968
    ... ... Part I: Appeal to Court of Appeal in Criminal Cases ... Appeal against conviction on indictment ... 1: Right of appeal ... ...
  • Criminal Appeal (Scotland) Act 1926
    • UK Non-devolved
    • Friday January 01, 1926
    ... ... F2 Except in the case of a conviction involving sentence of death, the time within which notice of appeal or of ... ...
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Books & Journal Articles
  • The Legal History of the Lockerbie Aircraft Bombing Case and a Reference for Another Appeal
    • No. 84-6, December 2020
    • Journal of Criminal Law, The
    • 0000
    The only person against whom a charge of murder was proved in regard to the Lockerbie bombing case in 1988 had an appeal against conviction refused. A subsequent referral of the case back for furth...
    ... ... ShielsSolicitor in Scotland, UKAbstractThe only person against whom a charge of murder was proved in regard to the Lockerbiebombing case in 1988 had an appeal against conviction refused. A subsequent referral of thecase back for further consideration ... ...
  • The Lockerbie Aircraft Bombing Case and the Final Appeal
    • No. 85-4, August 2021
    • Journal of Criminal Law, The
    • 0000
    The only person against whom a charge of murder was proved in regard to the Lockerbie bombing case in 1988 had an appeal against conviction refused. A subsequent referral of the case back for furth...
    ... ... ShielsSolicitor in Scotland, UKAbstractThe only person against whom a charge of murder was proved in regard to the Lockerbiebombing case in 1988 had an appeal against conviction refused. A subsequent referral of thecase back for further consideration ... ...
  • Couldn’t Tell You Even If I Wanted To? Anonymity of Journalists’ Sources, Voluntary Disclosure and Abuse of Process
    • No. 81-3, June 2017
    • Journal of Criminal Law, The
    • 0000
    In October 2016, the Court of Appeal handed down judgment in Norman, an appeal against conviction for misconduct in public office on the basis of information sold to a newspaper by a serving prison...
    ... ... QC)AbstractIn October 2016, the Court of Appeal handed down judgment in Norman, an appeal conviction for misconduct in public office on the basis of ... was eventually taken to offer no evidence against Mr Moyes.Mr Norman contended that he had divulged ... ...
  • When Should a Retrial be Permitted After a Conviction is Quashed on Appeal?
    • No. 74-5, September 2011
    • The Modern Law Review
    The power to permit a retrial after a conviction has been quashed on appeal is an established part of criminal procedure, with over a third of successful appeals against conviction in England and W...
    ... ... retrial after a conviction has been quashed on appeal is an established part of criminal procedure, with over a third of successful appeals against conviction in England and Wales now resulting in a retrial being ordered. Despite this, relatively little attention has been paid to the ... ...
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Law Firm Commentaries
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Forms
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