The
Court of Appeal, having been referred to the earlier judgment of
R v Jordan, rejected the appellant's argument that the trial judge had misdirected the jury with regard to the medical staff's acts. Lord Justice
Roy Beldam stated that it was only necessary for the Crown to prove that the defendant's actions caused the victim's death, but not that they need be the only or even main cause of death. As a general principle, the Court stated that: The judgment therefore consigns the verdict given in
R v Jordan to exceptional cases where the operative cause of death is not the result of the defendant's acts. The ordinary consideration for a jury must be whether the negligent treatment of a victim is so independent of the defendant's acts that it renders them insignificant to the eventual death. ==See also==