The joinder by the prosecution of two or more co-accused in the same indictment is of common occurrence in criminal trials. Where offences they have committed are linked one to another or are a product of joint concert, it makes both economic and practical sense to try the defendants jointly. In those cases where joint trial would cause serious injustice to one or more of the parties, the judge may order separate trials. However, severance of indictments in such cases is governed by rules which, perhaps uncharacteristically, would seem to favour the prosecution rather than the defence and defence applications for separate trials are seldom successful. The initiative, therefore, lies principally with the prosecution when it comes to deciding whether or not defendants will be tried jointly. In addition, it should be added that it is the prosecution which decides in which order co-defendants' names appear in the indictment. Although at first sight this may appear a purely routine matter, this decision, too, can have important repercussions on the course of the trial for, although the trial judge retains a residual discretion to order matters in his court as he thinks proper, Halsbury informs us that:- ‘If there are more defendants than one, they address the jury, cross-examine witnesses and give evidence in the order in which their names appear on the indictment’.