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[2024] NSWCCA 191
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R v Fisher [2024] NSWCCA 191 (25 October 2024)
Last Updated: 25 October 2024
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Court of Criminal Appeal Supreme Court
New South Wales
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Case Name:
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R v Fisher
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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7 August 2024
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Date of Orders:
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25 October 2024
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Decision Date:
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25 October 2024
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Before:
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Price AJA at [1]; Garling J at [3]; Rigg J at [4].
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Decision:
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1. Allow the appeal; 2. Quash the sentence imposed on the respondent in
the District Court on 26 April 2024, and in lieu thereof, sentence the
respondent
to a term of imprisonment of 15 years with a non-parole period of 11
years and 3 months, commencing on 20 April 2021. The date the
respondent is
first eligible for release to parole is 19 July 2032.
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Catchwords:
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CRIME — Appeals — Crown appeal against sentence
— Persistent sexual abuse of a child — Approach
to assessment of
objective seriousness — Manifest inadequacy — Appeal allowed —
Respondent resentenced
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Category:
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Principal judgment
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Parties:
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Rex (Appellant) Ronald Fisher (Respondent)
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Representation:
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Counsel: A Bonnor (Appellant) T Quilter
(Respondent)
Solicitors: Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
(Appellant) Legal Aid NSW (Respondent)
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File Number(s):
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2021/00110222
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Publication Restriction:
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Decision under appeal:
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Court or Tribunal:
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District Court
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Jurisdiction:
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Criminal
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Date of Decision:
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26 April 2024
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Before:
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Coleman SC DCJ
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File Number(s):
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2021/00110222
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JUDGMENT
- PRICE
AJA: As Rigg J explains, the sentencing judge did not have the benefit of
the recent decisions of this Court in MK v R [2024] NSWCCA 127
(“MK”) and RA v R [2024] NSWCCA 149
(“RA”). In RA, Wilson J provides helpful guidance,
particularly at [99] and [102], for judges when sentencing an offender for an
offence under
s 66EA of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) (“the Crimes
Act”).
- I
agree with Rigg J that the grounds of appeal have been established and the
residual discretion to decline to intervene should not
be exercised. I agree
with the orders that her Honour proposes.
- GARLING
J: I agree with the orders which Rigg J proposes for the reasons which she
gives.
- RIGG
J: This is a Crown appeal pursuant to s 5D(1) of the Criminal Appeal
Act 1912 (NSW) (“the Criminal Appeal Act”)
against an aggregate sentence imposed on the respondent by his Honour
Coleman SC DCJ (as his Honour then was) (“the sentencing
judge”) in
the District Court of New South Wales at Sydney on 26 April 2024, following
convictions by a jury.
- The
respondent pleaded not guilty to 11 sexual offences alleged to have been
committed against two girls. The first three of these
were that he:
(1) Between 1 January 2015 and 31 December 2018, maintained an unlawful sexual
relationship with CH, then 8 to 12 years of age, in
which he engaged in two or
more unlawful sexual acts (touching CH’s breasts; touching CH’s
genitals; digitally penetrating
CH’s genitals), contrary to s 66EA(1) of
the Crimes Act (count 1).
(2) In the alternative to count 1: Between 1 January 2018 and 31 December 2018,
had sexual intercourse with CH, then above 10 and
under 14 years of age, namely
11 or 12 years of age, in circumstances of aggravation (under authority),
contrary to s 66C(2) of the Crimes Act (count 2).
(3) In the further alternative to count 1: Between 1 January 2018 and 31
December 2018, indecently assaulted CH, then under 16 years,
namely 11 or 12
years, contrary to s 61M(2) Crimes Act (count
3).[1]
- Count
4 alleged the possession of child abuse material (two photographs of CH’s
breasts) in June 2019, in contravention of s 91H(2) of the Crimes
Act.
- Count
5 alleged that between 1 January 2017 and 7 March 2021 the respondent maintained
an unlawful sexual relationship with MH, then
7 to 11 years of age, in which he
engaged in two or more unlawful sexual acts (touching MH’s breasts;
touching MH’s genitals;
touching MH’s genitals with his penis; and
performing cunnilingus on MH), contrary to s 66EA(1) of the Crimes Act.
Counts 6 to 11 were alternatives to count 5 and were specified individual sexual
offences alleged to have been perpetrated against
MH with somewhat more defined
date ranges than count 5.
- On
7 July 2023 the jury returned verdicts of guilty to counts 1, 4 and 5. On 26
April 2024 the respondent was sentenced to an aggregate
term of 10 years
imprisonment with a non-parole period of 7 years and 6 months, commencing on 20
April 2021. Indicative sentences
were specified of 6 years imprisonment for
count 1, 1 year for count 4, and 7 years for count 5. The head sentence will
expire on
19 April 2031. The respondent will be first eligible for release on
parole on 19 October 2028.
- There
are two grounds of appeal; namely:
(1) Ground 1: The sentencing judge erred in his Honour’s assessment of the
objective seriousness of count 1 and count 5 by
acting upon a wrong principle
with respect to the unlawful sexual acts that did not form alternative counts on
the trial indictment;
and
(2) Ground 2: The aggregate sentence is manifestly inadequate.
- For
the following reasons, grounds 1 and 2 should be upheld. The parties are in
agreement as to the correct approach to sentencing
for contraventions of s 66EA
of the Crimes Act, including as to the approach that should have been
taken as to the unlawful sexual acts in this matter that did not form
alternative
counts on the trial indictment. I accept that their agreed approach
is correct. The relevant issue for the Court is whether his Honour
applied that
approach or did not. This requires reference beyond the sentencing judgment, as
necessary context for what is contained
within it.
Legislative
Framework
- Section
66EA of the Crimes Act provides, in part, as follows:
66EA Persistent sexual abuse of a child
(1) An adult who maintains an unlawful sexual relationship with a child is
guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty—Imprisonment for life.
(2) An unlawful sexual relationship is a
relationship in which an adult engages in 2 or more unlawful sexual acts with or
towards a child over any period.
...
(4) In proceedings for an offence under this section, the prosecution—
(a) is not required to allege the particulars of any unlawful sexual act that
would be necessary if the act were charged as a separate
offence, and
(b) is required to allege the particulars of the period of time over which the
unlawful sexual relationship existed.
(5) In order for the accused to be convicted of an offence under this
section—
(a) the jury must be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the evidence
establishes that an unlawful sexual relationship existed,
and
(b) the jury is not required to be satisfied of the particulars of any unlawful
sexual act that it would have to be satisfied of
if the act were charged as a
separate offence, and
(c) the members of the jury are not required to agree on which unlawful sexual
acts constitute the unlawful sexual relationship.
...
(7) This section extends to a relationship that existed wholly or partly before
the commencement of the relevant amendments, or the
predecessor offence, if the
acts engaged in by the accused were unlawful sexual acts during the period in
which the relationship
existed.
(8) A court, when imposing a sentence for an offence under this section
constituted by an unlawful sexual relationship that existed
wholly or partly
before the commencement of the relevant amendments, must take into account (but
is not limited by) the maximum penalty
for the unlawful sexual acts engaged in
by the accused during the period in which the unlawful sexual relationship
existed.
...
(10) A person who has been convicted or acquitted of an offence under this
section for having an unlawful sexual relationship with
a child cannot be
convicted of an unlawful sexual act in relation to the same child if the
occasion on which the unlawful sexual
act is alleged to have occurred is during
the period over which the unlawful sexual relationship was alleged to have
existed. This
subsection does not prevent an alternative verdict under
subsection (13).
...
(13) If on the trial of a person charged with an offence under this section the
jury is not satisfied that the offence is proven
but is satisfied that the
person has, in respect of any of the occasions relied on as evidence of the
commission of the offence under
this section, committed an unlawful sexual act,
the jury may acquit the person of the offence charged and find the person guilty
of that unlawful sexual act. The person is liable to punishment accordingly.
(14) Proceedings for an offence under this section may only be instituted by or
with the approval of the Director of Public Prosecutions.
(15) In this section—
adult means a person who is of or above the age of 18 years.
child means a person who is under the age of 16 years.
predecessor offence means this section before its substitution by
the Criminal Legislation Amendment (Child Sexual Abuse) Act 2018.
relevant amendments means the substitution of this section by the
Criminal Legislation Amendment (Child Sexual Abuse) Act 2018.
unlawful sexual act means any act that constitutes, or would
constitute (if particulars of the time and place at which the act took place
were sufficiently
particularised), any of the following offences—
(a) an offence under section 61I, 61J, 61JA, 61K, 61KC, 61KD, 61KE, 61KF, 66A,
66B, 66C, 66D, 66DA, 66DB, 66DC, 66DD, 66DE, 66DF,
66F or 80A,
(b) an offence under a provision of this Act set out in Column 1 of Schedule
1A,
(c) an offence of attempting to commit an offence referred to in paragraph (a)
or (b),
(d) an offence under a previous enactment that is substantially similar to an
offence referred to in paragraphs (a)–(c),
(e) an offence under the law of a place outside New South Wales that would, if
it had been committed in New South Wales, be an offence
referred to in
paragraphs (a)–(d).
- Reference
hereafter to the predecessor offence is in accordance with the definition above.
The objective seriousness of counts 1 and 5
Findings of fact regarding counts 1 and 5
- For
the purposes of sentencing, the Crown included as part of its tender bundle a
document headed “Proposed Statement of Facts
following verdict”
("the proposed facts"). The respondent did not take issue with the prospect of
the sentencing judge accepting
the proposed facts, which must be taken as based
on the evidence in fact given at trial. His Honour noted the lack of challenge,
or suggested qualification or addition, to the proposed facts; but also
indicated that he had considered them, and the evidence said
to support them,
before adopting them.
- His
Honour's sentencing judgment at [9]-[25] sets out the familial relationship
between the respondent and victims, and their circumstances
between 2015 and
2021, consistently with the proposed facts but without quoting them verbatim.
The respondent is the victims' maternal
uncle. During the period referred to in
the counts on the indictment, he was aged 45 to 51 years. CH was aged 8 to 12
years during
the time frame specified in count 1, and MH was aged 7 to 11 years
during the time frame specified in count 5. CH and MH are sisters.
CH suffers
from an autism spectrum disorder.[2]
- The
victims' family resided in a coastal town in New South Wales in a single-storey
dwelling which included a front computer room
(containing two computers and a
bed) and a single lock-up garage used to play pool. Passwords to the computers
in the front computer
room were only known by the adults in the family,
including the respondent.
- The
respondent resided with his mother, CF, who suffered from epilepsy. The
respondent assisted in her care. From no later than 2010,
to 8 April 2017, they
lived in the same town as the victims’ family. From then until 20 April
2021 they lived further away
from the victims.
- In
2010 the victims' mother recommenced part-time work. Whilst the respondent and
CF resided in the same town as them, CF cared for
the victims two to three times
per week, generally for three hours at a time, while their parents were at work.
The respondent accompanied
CF on around two-thirds of these occasions. He and
his mother also attended the victims' house for birthday parties, Christmas and
other functions.
- Between
30 August 2017 and 22 February 2021 the respondent reported to police that he
intended to visit the relevant town on at least
44
occasions.[3] Although not
specifically mentioned in his Honour's sentencing judgment, the proposed facts
made clear that many of those individual
visits were for multiple days.
- In
light of the grounds of appeal, it is important to have an understanding of how
the proposed facts were framed regarding the unlawful
sexual acts committed by
the respondent. This can be done most suitably by reference to count 1 and its
two alternatives. Further,
although it is not generally necessary to make
reference to the course of exchange between counsel and the sentencing judge, in
this
case such exchange provides important context to understand the impugned
aspects of the sentencing judgment.
- [28]-[31]
of the proposed facts were in the following terms:
“28. CH said that her uncle had been doing sexual things to her in her
home – touching her around her “private
areas”, which she
identified as her breasts and genitals, “a lot”. When he touched her
breasts, he would “squeeze
them, jiggle them... Also will kiss the
nipples”. When he touched her vagina, he would “stick up his finger
through a
hole, take it out, lick it”; He would “thrust it in before
he took pulled [sic] it out”.
29. When he thrust his finger in, CH described feeling “really, really
sore”.
30. The offender sexually abused CH every time he came to visit, unless he was
on a very tight schedule to get back to [the town
where he then lived]. The
evidence of her parents was that he visited at least twice a week prior to 8
April 2017 and thereafter
visited about once or twice a month. CH disclosed it
happened “(l)oads of times”, “so many times she “lost
count”.
31. CH described what the offender did to her as “just like a
routine”. She described the routine as “...he would
go to the office
with me, by myself. And he will touch my breasts first, then he’ll go to
the vagina, put his finger in, push
it, push it in, out, in, out, he thrusts it,
but then he’ll take it out and lick it. And then someone would say, if
someone
wants a coffee or a biscuit, then that stops”.” (Footnotes
omitted).
- The
proposed facts referred to aspects of CH’s evidence such as the respondent
taking photographs of her breasts on many of
the occasions of his offending
against her. She referred to the approximate school year she was in the first
time (year 3 or 4, 2015
/ 2016) and last time (year 6, 2018) these acts
occurred. She described how she felt and reacted to the offending. She described
mechanisms as she grew older “to try and stop the offender's
advances” such as stating that she was menstruating or pretending
to be
very sleepy.
- The
proposed facts at [38]-[39] summarised CH’s description of the very last
occasion of offending as follows, supporting counts
2 and 3 which were the
alternative counts to the s 66EA offence in the indictment:
“The last occasion (MFI 3, A94-202)
38. CH remembers that on a specific occasion in 2018, at around the time of
MH’s birthday when CH was in year 6, the offender
visited the
complainants’ home in [the town where they lived]. After getting home from
school CH emptied her school bag and
gave the offender and her Nan a hug. After
emptying out her lunchbox and put [sic] things away, she went into her room to
get changed
and then she did her homework. After she had finished her homework,
she then went into the computer room to play games on the computer.
39. She asked the offender to enter the password on the computer so she could
play computer games. She went into her room while he
entered the password and
then when he told her he had done so, she went into the office. While she sat in
front of the computer closest
to the door and the offender was sitting on the
bed. The offender touched the complainant under and over her clothes, mostly
under,
on the breasts and then the vagina. When he was touching her he was
sitting and standing, but mostly standing. The offender 'squeezed'
and [sic]
both of CH’s breasts (Count 2 in the alternative – s 61M(2)).
He then inserted his finger into her vagina and thrust it in before taking his
finger out and licked [sic] it. He inserted his
finger into her vagina
underneath her clothes. This caused her to feel “really really sore”
(Count 3 in the alternative – s 66C(2)).” (Footnotes omitted)
- The
description in the proposed facts of MH’s evidence was similar, in that
there was description generally of what the respondent
did to her, this
outlining repeated unlawful sexual acts. There was also evidence of four
specific occasions of abuse she remembered,
which were the first instance, the
last instance, and two occasions of abuse in between which occurred at the pool
table in the house.
The four specific occasions were the basis for the
alternative counts numbered 6 to 11 in the indictment.
- Consistently
with the absence of challenge to the proposed facts by counsel for the
respondent, his Honour's summary of the sexual
acts committed against CH
accorded generally with what has been set out above. It is clear that his Honour
accepted all the evidence
of CH, as had been summarised in the proposed facts.
In the sentencing judgment at [22]-[24] his Honour accepted the general outline
of the sexual offending, consistently with the proposed facts.
- His
Honour acknowledged CH's recollection of the timing of the first and last
occasions of abuse, the location of all the abuse being
at her home, and her
reaction to the offending. His Honour continued in the sentencing judgment as
follows, at [27]:
“I cannot be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt as to the particulars of
these other acts as if they were charged as separate
matters. That is, I cannot
be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt as to any specific occasion on which they
occurred or the specific
number of such sexual acts which took place. I am
however, satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the offender engaged in a course
of persistent sexual abuse of CH between 1 January 2015 and 31 December 2019
when he engaged in the acts described by CH.”
- His
Honour then referred to CH's evidence of the specific occasion in 2018, which
was the last time sexual offending against CH occurred.
His Honour was satisfied
beyond reasonable doubt of this evidence, and the fact that it comprised an
unlawful sexual act contrary
to s 61M(2) of the Crimes
Act[4] and an unlawful sexual act
contrary to s 66C(2) of the Crimes Act. His Honour noted the maximum
penalties of 10 years and 20 years imprisonment for these.
- His
Honour similarly accepted MH's evidence, as summarised in the proposed facts,
regarding the sexual offending throughout the relationship,
and, in her case,
four specific incidents which she described (these forming the basis of the
alternatives to count 5). Of the more
generalised description of abuse by MH,
his Honour set out his findings, in accordance with the proposed facts, at
Remarks on Sentence
[31]-[32] (footnote added):
“[31] The offender was also convicted of count 5 on the indictment which
charged that between 1 January 2017 and 7 March 2021,
the offender maintained an
unlawful relationship with MH when MH was between the ages of 7 and 11. The
charged acts were particularised
as the offender touching MH’s breasts and
vagina.[5] I am satisfied beyond
reasonable doubt from the evidence including the evidence of MH which I accept,
that the sexual abuse of MH
by the offender started by the offender touching the
“boobs” or breasts and then the vagina or “bottom part”
of MH. I am satisfied the offending progressed to the offender licking
MH’s vagina and placing his penis on her vagina.
[32] I accept that this happened to MH, “again and again”, when the
offender came to the house in [the town where they
lived]. MH estimated that she
was abused by the offender around 120 to 140 times but she did not know. The
sexual abuse would occur
either in her bedroom or around the kitchen. I cannot
be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt as to the number of times the offender
sexually abused MH or the specifics of any actual occasion of such conduct other
than the ones I will mention. But I am satisfied
beyond reasonable doubt that
during the period of 1 January 2017 to 7 March 2021, the offender engaged in a
course of persistent
sexual abuse of MH at the house in [the town where they
lived].”
- His
Honour thereafter described, and stated that he found proved beyond reasonable
doubt, the acts which occurred on the four specific
occasions MH described
(corresponding with the alternative counts 6 to 11).
Approach of
the parties to the assessment of objective seriousness of counts 1 and 5
- Although
there was no disagreement as to the accuracy of the proposed facts, the approach
of the parties to the significance of these
facts was at variance, and at
variance with the approach taken by both parties on appeal. His Honour’s
approach needs to be
understood in the context of the submissions made to him
and the less clear state of the law in connection with sentencing for
contraventions
of s 66EA at that time than is now the case. Both parties’
written submissions were finalised prior to the delivery of judgment by the
High
Court in Xerri v R [2024] HCA 5; 98 ALJR 461 (“Xerri”)
on 6 March 2024. The sentence proceedings, however, took place on 4 April 2024.
- Defence
counsel in written submissions dated 14 February 2024 advanced propositions of
law which can be seen to correspond almost
precisely with the entries in the
Sentencing Bench Book, published online by the Judicial Commission (“the
Sentencing Bench
Book”), for contravention of s 66EA, that persist to the
time of writing this judgment.
- The
following appears in the Sentencing Bench Book and was quoted almost verbatim by
Defence Counsel:
“Fact finding following a guilty verdict
It had been held that if a jury returns a guilty verdict to a s 66EA offence
committed before 1 December 2018, the judge must consider which of the
foundational offences are established beyond reasonable doubt so as to sentence
in accordance
with the verdict: ARS v R [2011] NSWCCA 266 at
[230].[6] This is consistent with the
duty of the judge to determine the facts relevant on sentence: ARS v R at
[233] citing R v Isaacs (1997) 41 NSWLR 374 at 378; Cheung v The
Queen [2001] HCA 67; (2001) 209 CLR 1 at [4]–[8], [161]–[166].”
- The
following is contained in the Sentencing Bench Book and most of it was cited or
quoted verbatim in the written submissions for
the respondent:
“Assessing the seriousness of an offence
When sentencing an offender for a s 66EA offence committed on or after 1
December 2018, a consideration of the conduct constituting the unlawful sexual
acts towards the child
is integral to the assessment of objective seriousness:
GP (a pseudonym) v R [2021] NSWCCA 180 at [65]. The offence potentially
embraces a wide range of circumstances: Towse v R [2022] NSWCCA 252 at
[13]. A number of factors bear upon an assessment of the objective seriousness
of a s 66EA offence as observed in Burr v R [2020] NSWCCA 282 (see
non-exhaustive list at [106]) and these factors are also relevant when
sentencing for a s 66EA offence committed on or after 1 December 2018: GP (a
pseudonym) v R at [64]; see also Towse v R at [26]. Regard should
also be had to the maximum penalty of 25 years imprisonment for a s 66EA offence
committed before 1 December 2018, and life imprisonment for an offence on or
after 1 December 2018.[7]
It is not logical to approach the sentencing task by considering what sentences
the individual offences (or unlawful sexual acts
for an offence committed on or
after 1 December 2018) would have attracted had they been charged as isolated
offences: R v Fitzgerald [2004] NSWCCA 5; (2004) 59 NSWLR 493. There is nothing to suggest
Parliament intended sentencing for a course of conduct that had crystallised
into a s 66EA conviction to be more harsh than sentencing for the same course of
conduct had it crystallised into convictions for a number of representative
offences: R v Manners [2004] NSWCCA 181 at [21]. Section 66EA is capable
of applying to a wide range of conduct constituting sexual offences against
children: R v Manners at [34].
Where the offences constituting the s 66EA charge are three or more
representative charges (that is, they are not isolated incidents but part of a
course of conduct), s 66EA does not permit a departure from the common law
approach taken to sentencing for representative counts: ARS v R at [226].
The court can still sentence on the basis the offences were not isolated
incidents but the uncharged offences cannot be
used to increase the punishment:
R v Fitzgerald [2004] NSWCCA 5; (2004) 59 NSWLR 493 at [13]; ARS v R at
[226].” (Footnotes omitted)
- The
submissions also quoted part of the judgment of Johnson J (Leeming JA and
Rothman J agreeing) in Burr v R [2020] NSWCCA 282; 285 A Crim R
504 (“Burr”) at [106] which sets out factors relevant to the
assessment of objective seriousness of the predecessor offence (collectively
“the Burr factors”), as follows:
“Assessing the Objective Seriousness of a s 66EA Offence as Enacted in
1998
[106] It may be seen from statements in decisions of this Court concerning
sentencing for a s.66EA offence as enacted in 1998 (and before the 2018
amendments) that a number of factors will bear upon an assessment of the
objective
seriousness of the offence (see [86]-[95] above). These include:
(a) the number of "sexual offences" (as defined in s.66EA(12)) which were
committed on separate occasions by the offender against the victim - the minimum
number of ingredient offences to constitute
a s.66EA offence was three and the
greater the number of offences beyond that threshold, the more serious the
s.66EA offence will be;
(b) the nature of the sexual offences committed by the offender against the
victim - in this case, each of the 12 offences was an
offence under s.66C(3)
Crimes Act 1900 for which the maximum penalty was imprisonment for 10
years - the 12 offences included penile-vaginal intercourse, fellatio,
cunnilingus,
digital penetration of the anus and insertion of a vibrator into
the victim's vagina;
(c) the age of the victim at the time of the ingredient offences -
"child" is defined in s.66EA(12) as meaning a person under the age of 18
years and the younger the victim was at the time of the ingredient offences, the
graver the
s.66EA offence will be - here the ingredient offences under s.66C(3)
applied to a victim between the ages of 14 and 16 years - the younger the victim
is in that relatively narrow band period, the more
serious the offence;
(d) the period of time during which the ingredient offences were committed
against the victim;
(e) the age of the offender at the time of the commission of the ingredient
offences against the victim and the age differential
between the offender and
the victim during the relevant period;
(f) the context in which the offender had access to the victim to commit the
ingredient offences over the period of time which constituted
the s.66EA offence
- if the context involves the offender and the victim being in a family or
quasi-family setting, which has a capacity to
influence the power differential
between the two persons and the susceptibility or vulnerability of the victim,
this will elevate
the objective seriousness of the s.66EA offence.”
- Written
submissions for the Crown dated 18 February 2024 did not contend that anything
set out in defence counsel's written submissions
was wrong as a matter of
principle. Although it is not clear whether they were received prior to
completion of the Crown submissions,
no oral submission was advanced to that
effect either.
- The
Crown submissions referred to the decision of this Court in MK v R; RB v
R (2023) 112 NSWLR 96; [2023] NSWCCA 180 (“MK and RB”) in
relation to the construction of the elements of the offence. The Crown submitted
that as a result of this decision there
was no need to establish a sexual
relationship over and above two or more unlawful sexual acts. It was submitted
that the relevant
relationship was that of uncle and niece, and the verdict
determined the commission of at least two unlawful sexual acts upon each
child
during the course of that
relationship.[8] The Crown submitted
that his Honour was however not obliged to sentence on the basis most favourable
to the respondent, and usual
principles of determining the extent and
seriousness of offending as in cases such as R v Olbrich (1999) 199 CLR
270; [1999] HCA 54 (“Olbrich”); Cheung v R (2001) 209
CLR 1; [2001] HCA 67 and R v Isaacs (1997) 41 NSWLR 374
applied.
- The
prosecutor also urged upon his Honour consideration of the Burr factors
and submitted to his Honour that “... these factors are not different when
sentencing under the new provision”,
citing GP (a pseudonym) v R
[2021] NSWCCA 180 (“GP”) at [64] (Cavanagh J, Brereton JA and
N Adams J agreeing) and JG v R [2023] NSWCCA 33 (“JG”)
at [59]-[67] (Davies J, Simpson AJA agreeing).
- In
addressing the number of sexual offences which were committed on separate
occasions by the offender against the victim CH, it was
submitted that her
account was that the respondent sexually abused her every time he came to visit
except when he was on a very tight
schedule to get to his home, and that it
happened “a lot”. Reference was made to the age of the victim and
respondent
across the time range particularised by the evidence.
- It
was submitted in writing, as to the overall gravity of the offending against CH,
that:
“Considering all of the above factors: CH’s age (ranging from 8-9
and 12 years)... the regularity of the offending conduct,
the digital
intercourse being part of the ‘routine’ which cause (sic) pain...
the period of offending over 2-3 years...
makes this an example of very serious
offending.”
- Similar
submissions were made regarding the offending against MH, taking into account
all of her evidence.
- During
the sentencing proceedings on 4 April 2024 his Honour made clear his
understanding that defence counsel's submissions were
based upon the guidance
provided in the Sentencing Bench Book and there was no demur. His Honour
expressed concern that the Sentencing
Bench Book was not consistent with the
decisions of the High Court in Xerri nor this Court in Xerri v R
[2021] NSWCCA 268; 292 A Crim R 355 (“Xerri,
CCA”). Neither counsel submitted that the Sentencing Bench Book was in
any way wrong or in need of adjustment in application. The Crown
Prosecutor
continued to endorse the Burr factors, and in particular the requirement
to consider the number of offences, which is the first factor in Burr. It
was submitted that his Honour was required to find at least two acts but that it
was open in theory to accept the whole of each
complainant's evidence.
- His
Honour sought assistance from counsel as to any up to date authorities regarding
the sentencing process, but it was indicated
that no further assistance could be
provided.
His Honour's assessment of objective seriousness
- The
sentencing judge referred to the Burr factors as bearing upon assessment
of objective seriousness. His Honour accepted that these factors applied but
noted that in Burr the predecessor offence was under consideration, and
there had been a plea of guilty with express admissions to 12 "ingredient
offences"
and a statement of agreed facts, thus Johnson J did not need to
consider the question of what facts should be found for the sentencing
process.
His Honour referred to the endorsement of the continuing relevance of these
considerations to the assessment of objective
seriousness of offending pursuant
to s 66EA in its current form, in GP at [64] and JG at [67], as
had been advocated by the Crown.
- His
Honour stated as follows at [67] of the sentencing judgment:
“As the facts above indicate, for CH the evidence establishes beyond
reasonable doubt two unlawful acts by the offender of
touching the
victim’s breasts and vagina and then penetrating her vagina with his
finger. As I have set out, I have also found
that the offender engaged in a
pattern of abuse of the victim during the period specified in the indictment but
I cannot find beyond
reasonable doubt the number of sexual acts he performed on
her. I will take the continued course of abuse into account in understanding
that in the relationship the two unlawful sexual acts that were able to be
established beyond reasonable doubt were not isolated
in nature (see ARS v R
[2011] NSWCCA 266 at [226]- [233]).”
- Similarly
regarding MH his Honour stated at [68]:
“For MH, the evidence established four specific unlawful sexual acts. Like
CH however I am also satisfied that there was a
continuing course of sexual
abuse of MH by the offender over the period specified in the indictment. However
as for CH I cannot be
satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of the number of sexual
acts committed by the offender on MH. I will take the continued course
of abuse
into account in understanding that in the relationship, the four unlawful sexual
acts that were able to be established were
not isolated in their nature.”
- The
sentencing judge stated at [70] that s 66EA(8) requires the Court to take into
account the maximum penalty for the unlawful sexual acts engaged in, where the
relationship existed
wholly or partly before the commencement of the amendments
on 1 December 2018. His Honour noted the maximum penalties of the specific
acts
he had found proved beyond reasonable doubt. His Honour noted at [71] the
applicable maximum penalty for counts 1 and 5 as being
life imprisonment,
continuing to state:
“Thus, s 66EA(8) when it applies is important as the sentencing judge must
consider the maximum penalties for the underlying offences where, such
as in the
case with CH, there are only a limited number of unlawful sexual acts proven
beyond reasonable doubt and it would be incongruous
if the judge only considered
the maximum penalty of life imprisonment as the guidepost. That is because as
here with CH where there
are only two offences with the maximum penalties I have
set out found beyond reasonable doubt, even in the very worst case of such
offending it would be disproportionate to impose a life sentence on an
offender.”
- The
sentencing judge was unable to determine the duration of the individual acts
against CH, but found that the offending by the respondent
would not have been
fleeting.
- His
Honour’s determination of the issue of objective seriousness of counts 1
and 5 is set out at [78]-[79] of the sentencing
judgment:
“[78] I consider the offending against CH to be a moderately serious
example of this type of offending. If the old hypothetical
scale was used it
would be below the mid-range. I am conscious of the Burr factors I have set out
and particularly the nature of
the offending. However, I am also conscious of
the fact that only two unlawful sexual acts could be found beyond reasonable
doubt.
Whilst I have also found that there was a pattern of other abuse and that
these two specific instances are representative, and I
have taken this into
account in noting that the unlawful sexual acts I have found beyond reasonable
doubt were not isolated, objectively
I consider that for an offence of this type
on the facts that I have found this is the appropriate assessment.
[79] For the count 5 offence against MH, the Crown submitted that this was a
very serious example of such offending. Again, this
followed the Crown’s
analysis of the Burr factors. Defence submitted this offence fell below
the mid-range of objective seriousness. I consider this to be a slightly more
serious
offence than that against CH although still below the mid-range. The
evidence allowed a finding of four specific instances of unlawful
sexual acts as
I have described. Again these are only representative and the abuse perpetrated
upon MH over the period was not isolated.”
Subjective case
- The
respondent did not give or call evidence on sentence. He was 54 years of age
when sentenced. He was convicted in May 2009 and
September 2010 of possession of
child pornography, resulting in suspended periods of imprisonment of two years
and one year respectively.
His consequential reporting obligations are mentioned
above in relation to providing notification to police of his movements. He
was
fined in 2020 for a failure to comply with reporting obligations. The Crown did
not submit at first instance that the offending
was a breach of any condition on
liberty, and this position was maintained on appeal.
- A
Sentencing Assessment Report dated 25 September 2023 (“the 2023
report”) recorded that the respondent was his mother’s
primary carer
prior to his arrest, and that she died in June 2022 during his time on remand.
He maintained positive relationships
with two of his sisters and planned to live
with one of them on his release.
- The
2023 report recorded that the respondent took no responsibility for his
offending and continued to assert that the victims fabricated
their allegations.
At [90] of the sentencing judgment, the sentencing judge remarked that it was
difficult to accept the respondent’s
denial of a sexual attraction to
children, recorded in the 2023 report.
- A
psychological report prepared in 2010 for the earlier charges indicated a low
risk of repeating the offending. The 2023 report recorded
assessment by a
Community Corrections psychologist of an above average risk of sexual reoffence
relative to other male sex offenders,
and a medium risk of reoffending
generally. The case note of this assessment (which was solely based on file
review) was also tendered.
The respondent had previously complied with
supervision, and he was willing at the time of the preparation of the 2023
report to
undertake intervention deemed necessary by Community Corrections,
despite his denial of the offences.
- The
sentencing judge found there was nothing to mitigate the offending, nothing to
reduce the respondent’s moral culpability
for it, no remorse, and a lack
of insight into his offending. His Honour found that the respondent’s
prospects of rehabilitation
could not be accurately reassessed.
Grounds of appeal
Ground 1: The sentencing judge erred in his Honour’s assessment of
the objective seriousness of count 1 and count 5 by acting
upon a wrong
principle with respect to the unlawful sexual acts that did not form alternative
counts on the trial indictment
- It
is the common position of the parties that his Honour, having accepted beyond
reasonable doubt the totality of offending described
by each of CH and MH, was
obliged to take all such offending into account in determining the objective
seriousness of each s 66EA offence, in determining the appropriate sentence for
each s 66EA offence so as to specify indicative sentences for them, and in
imposing the aggregate sentence. It is common ground that his Honour
would have
been in error to limit his determination of these issues to the specific
offending captured by the alternative counts
on the indictment. The decisions of
this Court determined shortly prior to the hearing of this appeal in MK,
and shortly after the hearing in RA confirm the joint position of the
parties as correct.
- The
dispute on appeal is whether his Honour did or did not limit the role of the
offending beyond the specified individual occasions
corresponding with the
alternative counts. To resolve the issue in dispute, it is necessary to consider
the sentencing judgment,
and the submissions made to his Honour, with an
understanding of the principles of sentencing in relation to the predecessor
offence.
- It
is a well established principle of sentencing that a person cannot be sentenced
for offences for which he has not been charged
and convicted: R v De
Simoni (1981) 147 CLR 383; [1981] HCA 31; Olbrich.
- It
has long been the case that sexual offending beyond specific counts for sentence
may be taken into account in a particular way.
This has usually occurred where
such offending is before the Court by way of agreed facts for sentence, or where
a sentencing judge
has made a finding accepting such broader misconduct (such as
where it has been adduced at trial as context or tendency evidence
in support of
substantive charges of which a person is convicted). In R v H (1980) 3 A
Crim R 53 this Court accepted the distinction between the impermissible
process of aggravating an offence for which a person stands to be sentenced
because of other uncharged misconduct, and the legitimate denial of leniency to
an offender in such circumstances. Of the offender’s
disclosure in that
case, in a record of interview, of other sexual contact with his daughter,
Street CJ said (at 59):
“The Crown is entitled to point to this as negativing such benefit as the
respondent might otherwise have sought to obtain
from the assertion that this
was a wholly spur of the moment lapse, unprecedented by anything in any way
irregular in his earlier
conduct towards his daughter.”
- The
Crown contention that H’s admissions required him to be dealt with on the
basis that the act of incest for which he was
to be sentenced was a culmination
of a series of similar offences, and that the sentence should reflect such prior
criminality, was
rejected.
- Like
the difference between not escalating a sentence for a person having pleaded not
guilty, and on the other hand mitigating a sentence
where a person has pleaded
guilty (see Siganto v R (1998) 194 CLR 656; [1998] HCA 74
(‘Siganto’), in which criticism of such distinction as
“semantics” is noted), the distinction relating to uncharged
criminal
misconduct disentitling an offender to leniency has been criticised as
seeming to “approach the metaphysical”: Reiner (1974) 8 SASR
102 per Bray CJ at 105, frequently subsequently cited.
- The
Queensland case of R v D [1996] 1 Qd R 363; [1995] QCA 329 (reported sub
nom R v Dales [1995] QCA 329; (1995) 80 A Crim R 50) (“Dales”), which
held that withholding leniency for uncharged misconduct is equivalent to
punishing the person for such misconduct
and thus contrary to principle, was not
followed in this State: R v JCW [2000] NSWCCA 209; 112 A Crim R 466 at
[38] (“JCW”). In JCW, statements of the two victims
were placed before the sentencing court without objection. They revealed an
extensive course of sexual
abuse, as well as the particular charges to which the
offender pleaded guilty. It was conceded during the sentencing proceedings,
on
the offender’s behalf, that the pleas in relation to one of the victims
were representative of the abusive conduct. There
was further material before
the sentencing court (record of interview and psychiatric report) in which the
offender made admissions
to ongoing sexual misconduct. The sentencing judge in
JCW made clear that the offender was not being sentenced for this other
behaviour, but that it was relevant in depriving the offender
of the leniency
which may have been provided to him if the particular charges to which he
pleaded guilty were isolated incidents.
- On
appeal it was unsuccessfully argued that sentencing on the basis of charges
being “representative” offended the principle
that no one is to be
punished for offences for which there has not been a conviction. Spigelman CJ,
with whom Ireland and Simpson
JJ agreed, invoked Siganto (decided after
Dales) where, as indicated above, the analogous issue of mitigation for a
plea of guilty was explored and accepted: see [44]-[52] of JCW.
- The
evidence of uncharged acts before the sentencing judge in JCW was
ultimately described (at [68]) as follows:
“An admission of this general character is appropriate to be taken into
account for purposes of rejecting any claim to mitigation
and attendant
reduction of an otherwise appropriate sentence. It is not, however, in my
opinion, appropriate to be taken into account
as a circumstance of aggravation,
if that be permissible at all.”
- This
established approach was applied by way of analogy to the predecessor offence.
In R v Fitzgerald (2004) 59 NSWLR 493; [2004] NSWCCA 5
(“Fitzgerald”), the offender pleaded guilty to that offence.
The offending occurred over a period of approximately seven months. The
indictment
particularised the conduct as an act of indecent assault and six acts
of sexual intercourse without consent. The material facts were
essentially
undisputed. They specified the detail of these seven events. It was also
specified that each of the victim and offender
gave police information regarding
further offending in general terms, although inconsistent as to the number of
times such offending
occurred.
- In
Fitzgerald the Crown contended that the sentencing judge had erred in
following the approach to such situations established by R v D [1997] SASC 6350; (1997) 69
SASR 413 (“D”) for a similar offence provision in South
Australia. The sentencing judge had followed an aspect of this decision, which
supported
the approach that where specific incidents are proved as well as some
more generalised offending, the relevant person should be sentenced
for
“representative counts” only. The Crown contended that, instead, the
sentencing judge should have sentenced the respondent
for the whole of the
relevant conduct proved.
- Sully
J (with whom Barr J and Newman AJ agreed) dismissed the Crown appeal, holding
that the sentencing judge had been correct to
adopt the South Australian
approach. His Honour stated at 503, after indicating his agreement with the
reasoning of Doyle CJ in D:
“In my opinion, there is nothing in the New South Wales s 66EA, just as
there is nothing in the South Australian s 74, to suggest that Parliament
intended that the sentencing for a course of conduct
which has crystalised into
a 66EA conviction, should be more harsh in outcome than sentencing for the same
course of conduct had
it crystallised into convictions for a number of
representative offences.”
- The
judgment was addressing directly the approach to sentencing where specific
incidents were able to be particularised, as well as
a less specific description
of broader offending.
- ARS
v R [2011] NSWCCA 266 (“ARS”) was a conviction and
sentence appeal following a jury trial resulting in conviction of one count of
the predecessor offence.
The indictment set out the s 66EA allegation as count
1, and referred in describing count 1 to “alternative charges and
described offences” for consideration
of the requirement of conduct in
relation to the child on at least three separate occasions and on at least three
separate days.
The indictment then included 13 alternative counts and described
seven additional separate offences. The complainant’s evidence
described
different types and locations of offending. Generally, the alternative counts
corresponded with the description of the
first occasion of a type of sexual
misconduct, or first time at a particular location, which had been described
with some particularity.
The seven described offences were specific further
occasions of offending (by reference to a holiday, or a film that was being
watched,
for example). The evidence indicated there was more widespread
offending than the 13 alternative counts and 7 described offences.
- In
dismissing the appeal against sentence, Bathurst CJ (with whom James and Johnson
JJ agreed) noted at [226] that the sentencing
judge found all the foundational
offences bar one proved beyond reasonable doubt. The complaint was that the
applicant should have
been sentenced on the basis that he committed only three
offences, the minimum to make out the predecessor offence [not the 19 offences
the sentencing judge found proved beyond reasonable doubt]. In the course of
dismissing this ground of appeal, it was noted at [226]
that the sentencing
judge had acknowledged that before he took any “foundational
offence” into account he must be satisfied
that it occurred within the
dates set out in the indictment and satisfied as to the nature of the offence.
It was also noted that:
“He acknowledged that the uncharged offences could not be used to increase
the penalty provided under s 66EA, and that the fact that the foundational
offences may be representative of a broader course of conduct could not be taken
into account
as an aggravating feature.”
- Burr
involved a guilty plea to count 1 of an indictment, which was a commission of
the predecessor offence. Twelve counts of having sexual
intercourse with a child
between 14 and 16, contrary to s 66C(3) of the Crimes Act, were not
proceeded with but were regarded as constituting the “ingredient
offences” for the s 66EA offence. The facts were agreed. It was common
ground that those 12 ingredient offences were representative counts, and did not
represent
the totality of the applicant’s sexual offences against the
victim.
- Johnson
J (with whom Leeming JA and Rothman J agreed) undertook an extensive analysis of
the predecessor offence, and its history
and interpretation: [81]-[95]. This
included reference to Fitzgerald at [83], [86]-[88] and R v
Manners [2004] NSWCCA 181 at [89]- [90]. His Honour stated the following at
[96]-[99]:
“[96] The Applicant was to be sentenced upon the basis that his s.66EA
offence comprised 12 separate sexual offences under s.66C(3) Crimes Act
1900 in that he had sexual intercourse with the victim who was
above the age of 14 years and under the age of 16 years.
[97] These 12 ingredient offences occurred in the course of eight separate
incidents over a period of 20 months in 2006 and 2007.
[98] It was common ground that these incidents did not constitute an
exhaustive list of the offences committed by the Applicant against
the victim,
but were themselves representative counts to be dealt with in accordance with
the principles stated by Spigelman CJ in
R v JCW (2000) 112 A Crim R
466; [2000] NSWCCA 209 at [63]- [68]. The ingredient offences which
constituted the s.66EA offence for which the Applicant was to be sentenced were
not isolated incidents so that the Applicant was not entitled to assert,
as a
type of mitigating factor, that the sexual offences which made up the s.66EA
offence constituted the entirety of his offending against the victim.
[99] It remained the case, however, that the Applicant was not to be sentenced
for other uncharged conduct which lay outside the
ingredient
offences of the s.66EA offence: AK v R [2016] NSWCCA 238 at
[67]- [75]; Mills v R at [64] (see [93] above).”
- At
[149] it was again pointed out (by noting an acknowledgment from the
applicant’s counsel) that the ingredient offences were
not isolated, so
the applicant was not entitled to leniency, in accordance with the principles in
JCW.
- It
was in the course of determining (and dismissing) grounds of appeal asserting
error in assessment of objective seriousness (by
reference to the ingredient
offences), and manifest excess, in these circumstances, that the Burr
factors were set out. Johnson J specifically noted multiple times the
differences between the predecessor offence and the section
as commenced on 1
December 2018.
- Section
66EA, in its current form, took effect from 1 December
2018.[9] Significant differences
between the current form of the offence and the predecessor offence were set out
in the judgment of this
Court in Xerri, CCA at [91], MK and RB,
then the High Court in
Xerri.[10] The issues for
determination were different in those decisions; namely the retrospective
operation of the maximum penalty of life
imprisonment in Xerri, CCA and
Xerri, and the elements of the offence in MK and RB. However the
decisions all contain detailed consideration of the purpose of the section in
its current form, relevant to the determination
of the correct approach to
sentencing.
- As
set out in these cases, there is no longer any requirement for the prosecution
to allege particulars for any unlawful sexual act
such as would be necessary if
the act was charged as a separate offence. Previously, the charge had to specify
with reasonable particularity
the period during which the offences occurred and
had to “describe the nature of” the separate offences alleged to
have
been committed by the accused during that period.
- Further,
the jury is not required to be satisfied of the particulars of any unlawful
sexual act that it would have to be satisfied
of if the act were charged as a
separate offence. Rather, the jury must be satisfied that the evidence
establishes that an unlawful
sexual relationship existed; that is, that there
existed a relationship in which an adult engaged in two or more unlawful sexual
acts with or towards a child over any period.
- Under
the predecessor offence, the jury had to be satisfied that the evidence
established at least three separate occasions, on separate
days during the
period concerned, on which the accused engaged in conduct constituting a sexual
offence in relation to a particular
child of a nature described in the charge.
The jury had to be satisfied about the material facts of the three occasions,
but did
not need to be satisfied of the dates or order of those occasions. If
more than three occasions were relied on as evidence of the
commission of an
offence against the section, all the members of the jury had to be satisfied
about the same three occasions.
- In
Xerri, CCA Price J (as his Honour then was) at [94]-[96] referred to the
focus of the predecessor offence on the separate offences alleged,
and the
manner of sentencing for “ingredient offences” as articulated in
Burr; and contrasted this with the centrepiece of the current offence as
the unlawful sexual relationship, without requirement to allege
the particulars
of any unlawful sexual act that would be necessary if the act was charged as a
separate offence. His Honour stated
at [97]:
“Accordingly, it is unnecessary for the prosecution to identify
‘ingredient offences’ and uncharged acts. It is
the whole of the
evidence of the relationship between an accused person and the child that may be
put before the jury to establish
that an unlawful sexual relationship existed
and for an offender to be sentenced for all of an offender’s sexual
misconduct
whilst he maintained that unlawful sexual relationship.”
- Beech-Jones
CJ at CL (as his Honour then was), writing the lead judgment in MK and RB
(Ward P, Price, Wilson and Lonergan JJ agreeing), traced the history of the
predecessor offence, current provision and similar interstate
provisions, and
their interpretation over time: see [19]-[81]. At [39]-[42] his Honour referred
to the recommendations of the Royal
Commission into Institutional Responses to
Child Sexual Abuse (“the Royal Commission”), of not requiring
particularisation
in a manner inconsistent with the ways in which complainants
remember the child sexual abuse they have suffered, and allowing for
the
effective charging and successful prosecution of repeated but largely
indistinguishable occasions of child sexual abuse.
- The
judgments in the High Court in Xerri also placed reliance on the
recommendations of the Royal Commission in the construction of the
legislation.
- In
the current matter the Crown at first instance relied upon two decisions where
the Burr factors were applied, subsequent to the commencement of the
provision in its current form, and his Honour referred to these authorities
in
the sentencing judgment at [64]-[65].
- In
GP there were four specific occasions of penile-vaginal intercourse
relied upon, although the second occasion occurred during a period
of five
months where the applicant had also forced the victim to perform fellatio upon
him at the family home and had penile-vaginal
intercourse with her in her
bedroom “on a number of occasions”: see N Adams J at [9], Cavanagh J
at [27]-[36]. The relevant
ground of appeal concerned factual error in the
assessment of objective seriousness (ejaculation on “some occasions”
when evidence supported one occasion only), and did not require consideration of
the specific terms of the Burr factors, despite the general endorsement
of the relevance of those factors at [64]. In the course of considering the
respondent Crown’s
submission that the factual error did not have the
capacity to affect the sentencing outcome, Cavanagh J stated at [68]:
“As the sentencing judge found, there were a number of acts of intercourse
occurring over a seven month period when the victim
was 12 or 13. It was not
necessary for the prosecution to particularise precisely how many there were and
when and where those acts
occurred, provided that there were at least two
unlawful sexual acts. Certainly, the type and nature of the acts would
be relevant
to the exercise of the sentencing discretion but, in
circumstances in which it is not an essential element of the offending
to make
findings as to precisely how many unlawful sexual acts occurred
during the period of the maintenance of the unlawful sexual relationship,
some
uncertainty in the description of each individual act might not have the
significance that it might have if considering the
circumstances of a specific
offence under another section.”
- The
judgment in GP does not specifically endorse the aspects of the
Burr factors which are of potential difficulty in the current appeal;
namely, the need to be satisfied of a specific number of unlawful
sexual acts,
nor the focus on “ingredient offences”. The ongoing reference to the
Burr factors, as adopted in GP at [64], was endorsed without need
for close consideration of its terms in JG (Davies J at [48], [67];
Simpson AJA agreeing; Wilson J dissenting but not on this point – see
[106]). The two contraventions
of s 66EA were reasonably confined in number of
unlawful sexual acts (one specific occasion then 10 to 15 other occasions for
count 4, and
10 occasions for count 5).
- The
Crown in the current appeal made clear it did not contend that these statements
are “misplaced”. It was however submitted
that the new s 66EA,
more so than the previous provision, focuses attention in the sentencing
exercise upon the maintenance of the unlawful sexual relationship
as the
centrepiece of the offence, being a relationship perpetuated in a state of
corruption by the commission of unlawful sexual
acts against the child,
referring to Xerri, CCA at [96]; Xerri at [60(a)]; and GP
at [67]. The respondent does not disagree with this contention.
- Subsequent
to his Honour’s sentencing of the respondent two decisions of this Court
have more squarely addressed the issue.
- In
MK the first ground of appeal was that the sentencing judge failed to
properly determine the facts of the applicant’s offending
by sentencing
him on the basis of the estimated frequency of the offending. The applicant was
convicted by a jury of three contraventions
of s 66EA because of his repeated
offending over a number of years against three brothers. The indictment had also
included 24 alternative
counts of sexual and indecent assaults against the
victims which alleged specific offences. A ground complaining of manifest excess
was also pursued, but not argued independently of success on the first
ground.
- The
sentencing judge had recounted the victims’ estimates of frequency of
offending, such as one victim’s evidence that
the offending occurred
“for a period of seven months, mostly twice a week, sometimes once a week,
when his mother was at the
gym.” Another described fellatio occurring, and
also the applicant attempting penile-anal intercourse some 30 to 50 occasions.
The best description of the frequency of abuse by the third victim was that it
was “full on”. His Honour accepted the
evidence of the victims
beyond reasonable doubt, and referred to these descriptions of the frequency of
abuse, and the relevant time
periods over which it occurred, in his assessment
of the objective seriousness of offending against each victim.
- The
central contention on appeal was that the sentencing judge failed to properly
find the facts of the offending by sentencing the
applicant on an estimated
frequency of offending, and thus sentencing him for a course of conduct. It was
submitted that the sentencing
judge was required instead to identify specific
occasions on which the applicant committed offences, and to treat those
occasions
as representative of a wider course of conduct. Reliance was placed on
D, Fitzgerald, ARS, and Burr.
- Sweeney
J, with whom Huggett J agreed, dismissed the appeal. Her Honour was not
persuaded that the sentencing judge failed to properly
determine the facts of
the applicant’s offending. Her Honour rejected the argument that ss
66EA(4)-(5) apply only to facilitate convictions, and do not apply to fact
finding on sentence: MK at [70], [85]. After quoting aspects of the
judgments of the High Court in Xerri and this Court in MK and RB,
her Honour held at [85] that:
“The construction of s 66EA and the approach to sentencing for offences
against it contended for by the applicant is contrary to the plain terms of the
section,
the intent and purpose of the provision and the mischief it was
intended to address.”
- Mitchelmore
JA agreed with the orders proposed by Sweeney J and stated her reasons shortly.
At [5] of MK, her Honour noted the applicant’s reliance on s
66EA(8), which was said to direct attention to the specific unlawful sexual acts
in which the applicant engaged, and held at [7] that neither
this nor the
balance of the section supported the approach to sentencing which formed the
applicant’s central contention. Her
Honour noted s 66EA(4)(a) in
particular, by which the prosecution is not required to allege the particulars
of unlawful sexual acts that it would need to if
the acts were charged as
separate offences. Her Honour found at [8] that the contention that it was not
open to the sentencing judge
to rely on the estimates of frequency would also be
contrary to the broader legislative context as described by Sweeney J.
- Mitchelmore
JA noted the ongoing requirement for evidence based findings concerning the
extent and seriousness of the offending: [9].
Her Honour held there was no error
in the fact-finding process, based on acceptance beyond reasonable doubt of
frequency.
- In
RA the applicant had been sentenced to an aggregate sentence for a number
of sexual offences committed against his children and step-grandson.
Two of
these were contraventions of s 66EA. The second ground of appeal contended that
the sentencing judge erred in sentencing the applicant for these offences on the
basis
of the construction of s 66EA in R v RB [2022] NSWCCA 142; 300 A
Crim R 1 (“RB (No 1)”).
- Agreed
facts before the sentencing judge recorded that the applicant’s daughter
described the first incident of abuse when she
was aged 8 or 9 years old, the
year before her brother was born. Abuse of this type happened four or five times
before another type
of conduct occurred when she was 8 to 10 years of age. The
second type of offending happened approximately five times, until she
was 10. A
third type of offending against her happened “at least weekly” from
when she was 9 to about 10.
- The
applicant’s son described sexual abuse commencing in 1993 when he was
around 9, until 1996 when he was around 12, on average
every two to three weeks
and usually on weekends when he played basketball and no one else was home. He
described the nature of the
sexual acts committed.
- The
sentencing judge, having referred to the decisions of this court in MK and
RB, Xerri, CCA, and GP, and the Second Reading Speech, noted
inter alia that the offence provision in its current form was intended to
overcome difficulties
faced by the prosecution in establishing particulars of
time, date and individual offence frequently experienced in cases of repeated
child sexual abuse. Her Honour had noted that it is unnecessary to identify the
“ingredient offences” and “uncharged
acts”, with the
offender rather to be sentenced for the whole of the unlawful sexual
relationship. She had found that the Burr factors remain relevant, and
the precise number and description of individual sexual acts is not an essential
part of proof of the
elements of the offence.
- Wilson
J refused leave to appeal. Her Honour indicated at [83] that the applicant had
argued that the decision in MK and RB departed from the principles
earlier set out by this Court in RB (No 1) and Xerri, CCA, such
that focus in sentencing must be on the “ingredient offences” as
with the predecessor offence. Reliance had been
placed on decisions relevant to
the predecessor offence, including D, Fitzgerald, and ARS,
to argue that the correct approach was to identify specific occasions on which
sexual offences were committed, and impose sentence
reflecting only those
offences, treating them as representative counts. The sentencing judge was said
to have erred in describing
the extent of offending by phrases such as
“multiple occasions” and “on average every two or three
weeks”.
- Wilson
J held at [85] that this argument traverses basic principles of sentencing law.
Her Honour referred at [86]-[88] to the rationale
behind the introduction of s
66EA. After quoting the Second Reading Speech, her Honour stated at [89] that
Parliament intended that the section in the form it is in
now:
“...would both facilitate proof of the offence of persistent child abuse,
and ensure that a sentencing court could have regard
to all features relevant to
the proper assessment of the gravity of the unlawful sexual relationship
maintained by the adult offender
with a child under 16 years to formulate the
sentence to be imposed.”
- Her
Honour relied particularly on s 66EA(4), (5), (8) and (15). Her Honour concluded
at [99] that:
“It is beyond question that sentencing judges are required to take into
account any conduct that occurs within the period of
the offence as charged that
would amount to an offence of the nature listed in s 66EA(15), whether or not
individual instances of the offending conduct can be identified, enumerated, or
particularised. It is enough that
the sentencing judge is satisfied that the
unlawful sexual acts were committed. The focus of s 66EA is not on proof of a
particular number of individual sexual offences, but on proving the existence of
a particular kind of relationship.
The sentencing judge was accordingly correct
to sentence on the basis of repetitive and persistent sexual offending.”
- At
[102] her Honour listed features relevant to the gravity of offending in terms
similar to the Burr factors, but without referring to the number of
offences, nor using the term “ingredient offences”. Adamson JA
agreed
with the orders proposed by Wilson J, largely for the reasons given by
her Honour.
- Dhanji
J at [159]-[160] stated that he did not accept the applicant’s argument
that the decision of MK and RB regarding proof of the elements also
shifted the sentencing exercise to ingredient offences, because the sentencing
judge was not
limited to the elements of the offence. Of the principle that a
person should not be sentenced for an offence for which they have
not been
convicted, and the approach in cases such as JCW, his Honour stated at
[161]:
“... In the circumstances of a charge or charges relating to a particular
act, it is plain that it would not be proper to sentence
an offender for acts
with respect to which they were not convicted. Where, however, the charge
relates to maintaining a relationship
with a particular quality, it is not
apparent that the same issue arises.”
- At
[162]-[163] his Honour held that there was no issue of the applicant having been
sentenced for offences with respect to which he
had not been convicted in breach
of De Simoni. His Honour was of the view that leave should be granted,
but the appeal dismissed.
- Further
recent decisions of this Court in Massequoi v R [2024] NSWCCA 125 and
Nolan v R [2024] NSWCCA 140 raise somewhat related issues, but not as
squarely relevant to the issues in the current appeal. They are not inconsistent
in any
way with the joint position of the parties to this appeal as to the
applicable law.
The submissions on appeal
- The
Crown submitted that the sentencing judge erred in limiting the relevance of the
general description of repeated or persistent
offending, which his Honour
accepted, to a finding that the limited acts which were charged as alternative
counts on the indictment
were not “isolated”.
- The
Crown relied upon his Honour’s statements at [67]-[68], [71] and [78]-[79]
of the Remarks on Sentence, quoted above at [43]-[45]
and [47], regarding the
assessment of objective seriousness of the offending. It was submitted that his
Honour applied a wrong principle
as he was not required to be satisfied of the
particulars of the “other acts” in order to find that they occurred
for
the purposes of sentencing for the s 66EA offences. It was submitted that
his Honour’s failure to sentence for all the offending he was satisfied
had been proved was
confirmed by the reference to ARS, which involved
sentencing under the predecessor provision with “representative”
charges, and other acts being “taken
into account” to show that the
“representative” acts were not isolated.
- The
Crown submitted that the evidence accepted by his Honour enabled evidence-based
findings to be made beyond reasonable doubt of
the frequency, if not the number,
of acts perpetrated against CH. Reference was made to Cavanagh J’s
statement at [65] of GP, where his Honour stated that this was an
aspect of what is “integral to the assessment of objective
seriousness” for a s 66EA offence. It was submitted that a finding did not
have to be precise as to the number, referring also to the judgment of N Adams J
in GP at [8].
- It
was submitted that the evidence accepted by his Honour established that unlawful
sexual acts against CH occurred routinely, up
to around once per week or
fortnight between 1 January 2015 and 8 April 2017, and once per month
between 8 April 2017 and 31 December
2019. It was submitted that such
a finding would appropriately have captured the frequency of the sexual
offending against CH even
though it was not possible to determine specifically
particularised individual acts.
- Similarly,
as to the nature of the sexual offending, the Crown submitted that the evidence
accepted by the sentencing judge was that
the respondent committed sexual acts
routinely against CH by touching, squeezing and “jiggling” her
breasts, kissing
her nipples, digital penetration of her vagina with his finger
causing substantial pain, and by thrusting his finger into her vagina
then
taking it out and licking it.
- The
Crown submitted that evidence-based findings as to the nature and extent of
offending could also be made for count 5, concerning
MH. It was submitted that
the accepted evidence enabled a finding beyond reasonable doubt in relation to
the frequency of the offending,
as occurring around monthly and likely more
frequently at times over the period between 1 January 2017 and 7 March
2021. The sentencing
judge accepted that the unlawful sexual acts happened to MH
“again and again”. While she did not know how many times
it
happened, she estimated it was 120 to 140 times. The accepted evidence was that
the respondent started by touching MH’s
breasts and then her vagina, and
later committed unlawful sexual acts in the nature of licking her vagina and
placing his penis on
her vagina.
- Counsel
for the respondent argued that although the passages relied upon by the Crown
indicated “at face value” problems
with his Honour’s approach,
when the sentencing judgment was read as a whole the Crown had not demonstrated
that his Honour
had, as a matter of substance, acted upon a wrong principle. It
was submitted that despite those specific passages, the Crown had
not
established that his Honour did not assess objective seriousness based upon the
totality of the offending in the two unlawful
sexual relationships, and impose
sentence accordingly. Two particular factors were relied upon to support that
submission.
- The
first was that his Honour, after referring to the Burr factors, stated
that CH was aged 7 to 8 when the abuse
started[11] and aged 12 on the last
occasion. As the list in Burr refers to the age of the victim at the time
of the ingredient offences, the submission advanced was that his Honour as a
matter of
substance must have included consideration of the full range of
offending against CH in his assessment of objective seriousness and
consideration of the appropriate sentence. It was submitted that if this was not
the case, his Honour would have identified the age
of CH as 12 at the time of
offending.
- It
was secondly submitted that his Honour’s conclusion that count 1 was a
“moderately serious example of this type of
offending” or as
“below the midrange” was not apt for a case involving two
(non-isolated) unlawful sexual acts
of the kind perpetrated against CH on the
last occasion in 2018. It was submitted that if his Honour was in fact confining
his assessment
of objective seriousness of count 1 to the single occasion CH
specifically remembered, a less serious characterisation of the offending
should
have been made.
Determination of ground 1
- I
am of the view that his Honour did limit his treatment of offending other than
that corresponding with the alternative offences
to its capacity to show those
particularised offences were not isolated. It is common ground that this would
reveal patent error,
and it does so. The reasons for which I have determined
that his Honour did so limit the evidence are as follows.
- The
manner in which the case was advanced for the respondent at first instance
involved clear engagement with an approach to sentencing
taken for the
predecessor offence, of limiting evidence of offending which was not
sufficiently particularised to found individual
“ingredient
offences” or “representative offences” to its capacity to show
the ingredient offences were not
isolated, which was not the correct approach in
this matter. This approach was supported by extracts from the Sentencing Bench
Book.
There was no opposition by the Crown to this approach as a matter of
principle. The reliance by both parties on the Burr factors, without
qualification, was apt to reinforce the focus on ingredient offences and their
number.
- The
decisions of this Court in MK and RA were delivered after his
Honour was required to sentence the respondent, and would have clearly addressed
the concerns his Honour
raised during the sentencing hearing.
- The
impugned aspects of the sentencing judgment are clear, particularly when the
history of sentencing in this area and the submissions
made to his Honour are
taken into account.
- Once
the sentencing judge was satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of the totality of
the evidence of both victims, the respondent was
to be sentenced for all of it.
Although his Honour was required to address the nature and extent of the
offending, there was no need
in this case for his Honour to determine
specifically the number of discrete offences. There was no need to look for
“ingredient
offences”, or “representative offences” or
to contrast these with “uncharged offences” or “other
offences” which would have a role only in showing the ingredient offences
were not isolated. There was no reason to focus on
the unlawful sexual acts
which corresponded with the alternative counts. Sentencing for maintaining these
unlawful sexual relationships
was different to sentencing for the same
course of conduct had it crystallised into convictions for representative
offences.
- The
principle of not sentencing a person for something for which they have not been
convicted is of paramount importance. It has a
well established understanding in
criminal law. For a sentencing judge to state expressly that he is treating
certain offending,
which is sexual offending not specifically particularised, as
having the role of showing other specified sexual offending to not
be isolated
clearly invokes those principles, indicating he is not sentencing for that
conduct. His Honour’s citation of ARS confirms this.
- His
Honour’s statement at [71] that the maximum penalty of life was
incongruous for count 1, because there were only two specific
offences proved
beyond reasonable doubt, with maximum penalties of 10 years and 20 years
respectively, confirms that his Honour was
not treating the rest of the
offending as part of that for which sentence was to be imposed. His
Honour’s statement that s 66EA(8) was important in this case because of
the maximum penalties for those two “underlying offences”
corresponds with the
treatment of “ingredient offences” under the
predecessor offence.
- His
Honour’s reference to CH being 8 or 9 when the offending commenced is not
capable in my view of negating the explicit statements
made by his Honour as
relied upon by the Crown. Further, this age was not reflected in his
Honour’s suggestion as to the maximum
penalties to be taken into account
in accordance with s 66EA(8). His Honour referred to a contravention of s 66C(2)
of the Crimes Act, which is sexual intercourse with a child aged of or
above 10 years and under 14 in circumstances of aggravation, with a maximum
penalty of 20 years imprisonment. Section 66A of the Crimes Act has
provided for life imprisonment for sexual intercourse with a child under 10
years of age since June 2015, and life imprisonment
for aggravated sexual
intercourse with a child under 10 years of age in the earlier part of 2015. CH
was under 10 in 2015 and for
much of 2016 and the offending was aggravated at
least because of her being under the authority of the respondent (if not also
because
of her cognitive impairment). The lack of stated consideration of this
issue, alongside a statement that the offending against CH
commenced when she
was 8 or 9, confirms his Honour did not treat the generalised description of the
routine of offending as amounting
to “underlying offences” in the
same way as the two considered for sentence, corresponding with alternative
counts 2
and 3, when CH was clearly over 10.
- His
Honour specifically mentioned at [35] and [54] of his judgment the terms of s
80AF of the Crimes Act, concerned in part with uncertainty as to a
child’s age at the time an offence is committed. This was in connection
with the
two pool table incidents described by MH. These involved sexual
intercourse, but it was not clear whether she was 8, 9 or 10 when
they occurred.
His Honour accordingly treated these as contraventions of s 66C(2) of the
Crimes Act with 20 year maximum penalties (rather than the more serious
offence with a maximum penalty of life imprisonment if she had been
under 10).
The absence of reference to this provision in relation to the early months or
years of the offending against CH supports
the proposition that his Honour did
not regard these incidents as before the Court for sentence.
- I
do not regard his Honour’s description of the offending against CH as
“moderately serious” and “below midrange”
as undermining
the Crown’s argument. There is insufficient clarity as to what his Honour
meant by below midrange to discern
from this a conclusion one way or the other
as to whether the totality of offending described by CH was taken into account.
I do
not know for example whether his Honour had in mind the middle 10% of
offending as the midrange, or the middle
60%.[12] Further, the word
“below” was not quantified in any way.
- The
sentencing exercise miscarried in his Honour’s assessment of the objective
seriousness of the s 66EA offences. The relevance of the commission of repeated,
persistent, unlawful sexual acts which were accepted as having taken place
by
the sentencing judge was erroneously limited to demonstration that a small
number of specific acts were not isolated. This defeated
the purpose of the s
66EA offences in allowing sentencing to take place for unlawful sexual acts
which cannot be particularised with specificity, where such
acts occur in the
maintenance of an unlawful sexual relationship with a child.
- Ground
1 should be upheld. As I am also of the view that the sentence is manifestly
inadequate, there is no need to consider the issue
of whether the demonstration
by the Crown of patent error alone is sufficient to result in the Court’s
intervention.
Ground 2
- To
establish manifest inadequacy, the Crown must establish that the sentence
imposed was unreasonable or plainly unjust in circumstances
where there is no
single correct sentence, and judges at first instance are to be allowed as much
flexibility in sentencing as is
consonant with the application of proper
principle and consistency of approach: Dinsdale v The Queen (2000) 202
CLR 321; [2000] HCA 54 at 325 [6]; Markarian v The Queen (2005) 228 CLR
357; [2005] HCA 25 at [25]; Hili v The Queen; Jones v The Queen (2010)
242 CLR 520; [2010] HCA 45 at 538 [58].
- Manifest
inadequacy is a conclusion that does not depend on the establishment of specific
or patent error. However identification
of error may assist to explain why a
sentence is manifestly inadequate.
- The
indicative sentences are not themselves amenable to appeal, and even if the
indicative sentences are assessed as being inadequate,
it does not necessarily
follow that the aggregate sentence is manifestly inadequate.
- Although
count 1 on the indictment included a time period of four full years (1 January
2015 to 31 December 2018), CH was not sure
whether she was in year 3 or 4 at
school when the abuse started and did not otherwise nominate an age. She was
clear that the last
incident was when she was in year 6 at school, close to her
sister’s birthday (which was in the first half of 2018, when CH
would have
been 11). Thus the offending continued for at least 1 and a half years, with the
period prior to April 2017 involving
more frequent abuse than the period after
that time, when the respondent did not visit as frequently.
- With
this qualification as to the time frame of offending, I accept the Crown’s
estimate of frequency of offending against CH
(routinely, up to around once per
week or fortnight before 8 April 2017, and once per month after then) as a
conservative estimate.
CH was subjected to routine indecent assault by the
respondent interfering with her breasts and genital area, and painful sexual
intercourse by digital penetration. This occurred so many times she lost
count.
- For
the purposes of s 66EA(8) it is not clear that the unlawful sexual acts included
sexual intercourse with CH when she was under 10, which would have amounted
to a
contravention of s 66A of the Crimes Act with a maximum penalty of life
imprisonment. However in light of the significant number of occasions of sexual
abuse of CH by way
of indecent assault and sexual intercourse, the particular
maximum penalty for an individual unlawful sexual act is not important.
CH was
significantly below 16 years of age throughout the respondent’s
maintenance of an unlawful sexual relationship with
her.
- The
relationship of uncle and niece may be regarded as not as oppressive when abuse
occurs as the situation where the offender is
a parent or adult in the position
of a parent. However there was still a breach of trust and CH was under the
authority of the respondent
when he took responsibility with his mother for
caring for her while her parents were at work. The offending occurred in her
home.
The respondent is 37 years older than CH. CH was particularly vulnerable
because of her autism spectrum disorder. The proposed facts
include reference to
her evidence that she felt her body shutting down, and of going inside herself
to get away from the pain she
felt about what the respondent was doing to
her.
- The
offending against MH seems to have continued for a longer period of time. It
commenced with offending in the nature of indecent
assaults, by touching her
breasts when she was 7 or 8 years of age. The respondent started touching her
vagina also and performed
these acts “again and again”. His conduct
progressed to cunnilingus and pressing his naked penis on her genitals. I adopt
his Honour’s lack of certainty as to whether the first pool table
incident, which included cunnilingus, happened when the victim
was 8, 9 or 10.
However it is not clear whether this was the first occasion of such sexual
intercourse. Either way, by no later than
the time MH was about 10 the
respondent’s offending had progressed to sexual intercourse of this kind.
She was also significantly
below the age of 16. The respondent is 39 years older
than MH.
- MH’s
estimate was of about 120 to 140 instances of sexual abuse in total although she
was not sure. The proposed facts provide
no information as to the proportion of
this estimate involving sexual intercourse as distinct from indecent assaults.
On the last
occasion of abuse the respondent indecently assaulted MH by touching
her breasts for about five minutes. She was 10 or 11, so this
occurred either in
the second half of 2019, or 2020, or in 2021 prior to the discovery by others of
the respondent’s offending.
- The
Crown referred to a number of relevant sentencing decisions of this Court, and
sentencing statistics maintained by the Judicial
Commission which show
relatively few sentences for contraventions of s 66EA shorter than 7 years
imprisonment (acknowledging the bluntness of this demonstration). Keeping
relevant limitations in mind, recent
sentencing authorities of this Court in the
following cases have assisted: WP v R [2024] NSWCCA 77, DB v R
[2024] NSWCCA 18, DC v R [2023] NSWCCA 82, Towse, MK, and
RA.
- The
respondent emphasised that 10 years is an extremely long sentence, particularly
for a person who has never previously been imprisoned.
The submission that its
impact will be more than twice as onerous as a sentence of imprisonment for five
years can be accepted.
- Count
4 was committed by the possession of two photographs of CH’s naked
breasts. Taking this offending into account with the
offending in counts 1 and
5, committed in the circumstances I have outlined, and the respondent’s
circumstances, I am of the
view that the aggregate sentence of 10 years
imprisonment is manifestly inadequate. The applicant was to be sentenced
for two offences
which carried maximum penalties of life imprisonment, and these
were serious contraventions of s 66EA of the Crimes Act.
Residual Discretion
- Correction
of the patent error in relation to ground 1 allows this Court to perform its
proper function in responding to a Crown appeal,
of laying down principles for
the governance and guidance of courts having the duty of sentencing convicted
persons. Although the
same principle has been addressed in two recent decisions
of this Court, MK and RA, confirmation of error in the specific
way demonstrated by his Honour provides an opportunity for further
guidance.
- The
respondent argued that any manifest inadequacy is not so marked as to amount to
“an affront to the administration of justice”,
citing Green v R;
Quinn v R (2011) 244 CLR 462; [2011] HCA 49 at [42]. I am however of the
view that the inadequacy is to a degree that warrants intervention. The residual
discretion to decline to intervene
under s 5D of the Criminal Appeal Act
should not be exercised against the Crown.
- Grounds
1 and 2 should be upheld and the Court should proceed to
resentence.
Resentencing
- The
respondent presented material for the purposes of resentencing which
demonstrates that he has used his time in custody well. He
has taken steps
towards self-improvement and seems motivated to work, improve his health, and
complete any programmes offered to
him. He has continued to be supported by two
sisters and some friends. He speaks with one sister daily. His capacity to
grieve the
death of his mother has been impaired by his incarceration. He has
not committed any relevant disciplinary offences.
- Contrary
to the approach of the sentencing judge I see no reason to indicate a lower
sentence for count 1 than count 5. Count 5 may
have involved offending over a
longer period of time. However, unlike the offending against CH, there is not a
basis to find that
the offending always or even more often than not involved
sexual intercourse, once the respondent had progressed to performing cunnilingus
on MH. Some recognition of this uncertainty as to the seriousness of the
unlawful sexual acts is required, despite the focus on the
relationship rather
than specified acts. The commission of unlawful sexual acts against MH continued
frequently for a number of years,
and this sometimes involved cunnilingus as
well as the respondent placing his naked penis against MH’s naked genital
area,
in addition to the indecent assaults. Although the unlawful sexual
relationship with CH was likely maintained for a shorter period
of time, CH as
the victim of count 1 was particularly vulnerable due to her autism. The
frequent offending against CH routinely involved
painful digital penetration of
her vagina.
- The
indicative sentences must be appropriate for each offence and the aggregate just
and appropriate to the totality of the respondent’s
offending. There is no
reason to vary the statutory ratio to provide for a longer period on parole than
flows from its usual application.
No party submitted that a finding of special
circumstances to do so should be made. There was a substantial overlap between
the offending
in time and circumstance. There nonetheless needs to be distinct
recognition of the harm done to each victim, and of the additional
criminality
of the offending in count 4. In my view, in all the circumstances, the following
sentences are indicated:
(a) Count 1: 11 years imprisonment;
(b) Count 4: 1 year imprisonment; and
(c) Count 5: 10 years imprisonment.
- I
would impose an aggregate sentence of 15 years imprisonment with a
non-parole period of 11 years and 3 months.
- The
orders I propose are as follows:
(1) Allow the appeal;
(2) Quash the sentence imposed on the respondent in the District Court
on 26 April 2024, and in lieu thereof, sentence the respondent
to a
term of imprisonment of 15 years with a non-parole period of 11
years and 3 months, commencing on 20 April 2021. The date the
respondent is first eligible for release to parole is 19 July 2032.
**********
Amendments
25 October 2024 - Typographical amendment to [37].
[1] Section 61M(2) of the Crimes
Act was repealed on 1 December 2018 by the Criminal Legislation Amendment (Child
Sexual Abuse) Act 2018 (NSW). It was, alongside s 61L of the Crimes Act,
replaced with the offences of sexual touching as set out in ss 61KC and 61KD
(for adults) and ss 66DA and 66DB (for children). However, s 61M(2) continues to
apply to conduct before 1 December
2018.
[2] Although not included in
the Remarks on Sentence, the proposed facts referred to the evidence of
CH’s mother to the effect
that the disorder causes significant social
dysfunction, speech delays and intellectual
difficulties.
[3] This was pursuant
to the respondent’s obligations under the Child Protection (Offenders
Regulation) Act 2000 (NSW), following
a conviction for possession of child
pornography in 2010.
[4] See
footnote 1.
[5] As noted above at
[6], the acts particularised in the indictment also included the respondent
touching MH's genitals with his penis
and performing cunnilingus on MH. As this
paragraph goes on to state, his Honour accepted that these unlawful sexual acts
occurred.
[6] The italicised
portion of this sentence was not included in the written
submissions.
[7] This paragraph was
not wholly quoted in the submissions but most parts of it were quoted or
paraphrased in the submissions.
[8]
This submission was repeated during oral submissions at the sentence
hearing.
[9] Criminal Legislation
Amendment (Child Sexual Abuse) Act 2018
(NSW).
[10] Xerri at [15]-[22]
(Gageler CJ, Jagot J); [60] (Gordon, Steward and Gleeson
JJ).
[11] His Honour actually
said 8 to 9, but the point is the same: see Remarks on Sentence
[72].
[12] The potentially
unclear nature of such terminology has been referred to on numerous occasions.
See for example R v Pearce [2020] NSWCCA 61 at [56], [58]-[59], R v Sharrouf
[2023] NSWCCA 137 at [274], Walker v R [2023] NSWCCA 219 at [2]- [3], Towse v R
[2022] NSWCCA 252 at [33], RA at [151]. .
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