No. 141 of 1999
CRIMINAL LAW - Sentencing - Statutory offence of sexual penetration of a person
with impaired mental functioning by a person supplying
services related to that
impairment - Digital penetration by employee in charge overnight of special
accommodation house - Sentence
of 18 months' imprisonment, with 12 months
minimum - No specific error in sentencing and sentence not manifestly excessive
- Crimes Act 1958 s.51.
- Phillips, J.A. will deliver the first judgment.
PHILLIPS, J.A.:
- The applicant was born on 20 November 1949. At the time of
the commission of the offence with which we are now concerned he was
48 years
old. On 23 June 1999 the applicant was arraigned before a judge in the County
Court and, an interpreter having been sworn,
he pleaded guilty to a presentment
containing one count. That count was that he, not being the spouse or de facto
spouse of the
complainant but being a person who provided medical services to
her, a person with impaired mental functioning, such services being
related to
that impaired mental functioning, took part in an act of sexual penetration
with the complainant in that he introduced
his fingers into her vagina. Such
conduct is made an offence by s.51(1) of the Crimes Act 1958. Under
s.51(3) consent is no defence. The maximum penalty for an offence against
s.51(1) is 10 years' imprisonment, a penalty which we were told was increased
to 10 years in 1997.
- On 23 June, the applicant was represented by counsel who made
a plea in mitigation on his behalf. During the plea, the report
was tendered
of a forensic psychologist, together with a bundle of documents relating to the
applicant's career. Applicant's counsel
submitted that the appropriate
disposition was a suspended term of imprisonment in view of the factors which
went in mitigation,
including the applicant's previous good character. His
Honour, however, sentenced the applicant to be imprisoned for a period of
18
months, ordering that he not be eligible for parole for 12 months. It is from
that sentence that the applicant now seeks leave
to appeal.
- The offence in question was committed on 23 March 1998 at a
special accommodation house where the complainant was a resident and
the
applicant an employee. The accommodation house in question is a supportive
residential service for psychiatric patients who
require 24-hour supervision
and the applicant had been employed there since 15 December 1997. The
applicant worked at the accommodation
house each Thursday to Monday between the
hours of 9 p.m. and 7.30 a.m. His duties included tending to the residents'
needs such
as providing them with hot and cold drinks, ensuring that they were
in bed each night by 10 p.m., seeing that lights and televisions
were turned
off each night and generally sitting in an upstairs office where he could watch
both corridors of the house. Once everything
was quiet he was to make the
required number of cigarettes for the following day (about 400). He was also
to listen to see if any
resident pressed the buzzer which was in each bedroom
and, if there was an emergency, he had to call the emergency doctor, the owner
of the establishment, the police or the ambulance or whatever the situation
required. On occasions, he had to distribute medication
to the residents and
during the hours when he was working there was no other person on duty. The
applicant was then the person in
charge.
- On 23 March 1998 the complainant entered the kitchen of the
special accommodation house between 11.15 and 11.30 p.m. to make a
sandwich.
The applicant who was present in the kitchen approached the complainant and
began kissing her. He then placed his right
hand on the inside of her
nightdress and began to caress her breasts. He then moved his hands downward,
caressing her stomach.
He then slid his hand into the front of the
complainant's underpants and began touching her vagina. He penetrated her
vagina with
two or three fingers, causing the complainant to say that he was
hurting her. The complainant alleged that the applicant told her
he loved her,
although the applicant was later to say in his interview that he told her only
that he liked her. According to the
complainant, she told him: "You better
stop doing it or I'll do something". The applicant then desisted; he walked
away and washed
his hands and the complainant left the kitchen and went to bed.
The complainant complained to her room-mate and to the owner of the
establishment on the morning after the incident; the matter was reported to
police and the applicant was interviewed through an
interpreter. The applicant
gave his version of what happened, saying that he touched the complainant's
vagina because he believed
that it would give her pleasure. He said he stopped
immediately when she said "That's enough. No more". To that point, he thought
that she was consenting.
- It appears from the applicant's record of interview that this
was not the first occasion on which he had touched the complainant.
During the
interview, the applicant said that he had kissed her on an earlier occasion, in
the dining room. He said that on that
occasion he had told the complainant she
looked nice and placed his hand on her waist in a "dancing position". He said
that the
complainant had then leaned closer to him, placing her chin on his
shoulder and he embraced her. He said that she then kissed him
on the mouth.
In the course of his record of interview he also said that he had touched the
complainant on the breast on an occasion
which was about a week before 23
March. The complainant had come to the kitchen for some food or a cigarette
and he had touched
her left breast on the outside of her clothing. He told,
too, of another incident in which he had touched the complainant as he
brushed
past her in the hallway, although the date of that incident was not identified.
This question was then put to the applicant
in the course of his
interview:
"OK so it is correct to say that in the last week we've had the
dancing incident, this incident where you've touched her on the breast,
the one
where you've brushed past her in the hall and last night's incident? Is that
correct?'
To this the applicant said: "Yes."
- As for the complainant herself, the sentencing judge found as
follows:
"[The complainant] has a long history of psychotic illness.
According to her treating psychiatrist, she is treated with a range of
medications, including regular injections of anti-psychotic medicine. He also
says that while her intellectual functioning is not
high, she has no evidence
of intellectual disability. With that is to be compared the impression formed
by the doctor who examined
[the complainant] after [the applicant] had
penetrated her, who states that in his opinion she appears to have an impaired
intelligence,
although not formally tested. Despite this, she appeared to have
adequate comprehension.
I must, I think, prefer the evidence of her treating
psychologist that she has no evidence of intellectual disability, but certainly
from both her interview and statement and the observation by the treating
doctor, I am forced to the conclusion that her intellect
is indeed not good."
Of course, in this regard it must be remembered that the
applicant's plea of guilty is to an offence involving "a person with impaired
mental functioning", as the word "impaired" is defined in s.50.
- The applicant was well aware that any sexual contact between
him and any resident was forbidden. His employer, it seems, had made
that
clear. After rehearsing some of the questions and answers in the applicant's
record of interview, the sentencing judge said
this of the incident on 23
March:
"I am satisfied that on the occasion that brings you [the
applicant] here you were endeavouring to caress [the complainant] to orgasm
specifically by caressing her vagina. In the course of that performance some
penetration of her by you occurred. I am satisfied
that the act of penetration
to which you have pleaded guilty was not a spontaneous aberration but the
culmination of preceding sexual
contact, that is, I am satisfied that it was
premeditated. I am satisfied that a gross breach of trust and of your position
was
performed by you for your own gratification and perhaps to satisfy a
curiosity concerning western women with whom you had had previously
no sexual
contact."
This last was a passing reference to the applicant's sexual
history. From the report of the forensic psychologist it appears from
what he
was told by the applicant that the applicant, who was a married man with a
hitherto unblemished character and who in China
had been in a responsible
position with considerable social respect, had none the less, though some years
ago now, had extramarital
contacts of a sexual nature. He told the
psychologist that, though he had engaged in this sort of behaviour previously,
it had not
been unlawful. But in the light of what the applicant told the
psychologist and his behaviour with the complainant on this occasion,
the judge
said, when sentencing, that he was not prepared to conclude that the applicant
did not "continue to pose a risk".
- On the question of gaol or no gaol, the sentencing judge said
this:
"It was argued by Mr Steward [counsel for the applicant] in
what was an eloquent and at times moving plea on your behalf that gaol
will be
very hard for you, given your background. You did not, he said, take advantage
of someone who was feeble-minded and all
things considered, your breach of
trust was at the lower end of the scale. With that submission I cannot agree.
Laws such as the
one you broke are there to protect the helpless. Those who
break them to gratify their aberrant sexual urges commit a serious offence,
made more so when that offending is facilitated by a cynical violation of
trust."
- Before us counsel for the applicant made a number of
criticisms of the judge's sentencing remarks, some of which are mentioned
specifically in the grounds taken in the notice of application. Thus he
contended that the word "premeditated" as used by the judge
had been wrong and
that the offending had not been "premeditated" in any relevant sense. In
context, however, I think that the judge
clearly meant no more than that the
applicant's misconduct on 23 March was "the culmination of preceding sexual
conduct". The judge
said as much and that was not error in
itself.
- At least in the outline of argument, counsel submitted also
that there was no basis in the evidence for the judge's concluding
that the
misconduct on 23 March was intended to "satisfy a curiosity concerning western
women with whom you had had previously no
sexual contact". In the record of
interview this lack of contact was frankly conceded, but the rest was, I agree,
somewhat speculative
on the judge's part. However, the judge gave it only
passing reference, prefacing his remark with "perhaps", and I do not think
it
was significant to his sentencing.
- More importantly, perhaps, counsel submitted that the judge
fell into error when sentencing on the basis that the applicant posed
a risk of
re-offending. All the evidence, he said, pointed the other way: there had
been no suggestion of any previous offending
in the applicant's sexual history,
whether in China or in Australia; nothing in the psychologist's report lent
support to the judge's
view; and both the psychologist and the judge found the
applicant remorseful. Counsel relied, too, upon what was said in R. v.
Pickard [1998] VSCA 50 (an unreported decision of the Court of Appeal on 28
September 1998). In the joint judgment of Winneke, P. and Charles, J.A., it
is
said in substance that if there is a dispute about the risk of re-offending and
the judge needs to resolve it and resolves it
adversely to the interests of the
accused, then that must be to the degree of satisfaction consistent with the
standard of which
the majority spoke in R. v. Storey [1998] 1 V.R.359 at
371.
- There is, I think, more than one answer to this submission in
so far as it depended upon what was said in Pickard. First, I am not at
all clear that the judge saw the risk of the applicant's offending again as an
aggravating circumstance. Rather,
what he said was this:
"I cannot conclude, in the light of what you told Mr Joblin,
that answer and your behaviour with the complainant, that you do not
continue
to pose a risk [that is, a risk of re-offending]."
To say that seems to me to be the converse of the situation
considered in Pickard. The mere commission of the crime in question
will ordinarily require the judge to turn his mind to specific deterrence and
in this
case the judge was saying only that that consideration had not been
shown to be altogether irrelevant.
- Nor, in my view, was there any relevant "dispute" in this
case, such as was mentioned in Pickard. During the plea, counsel for
the applicant had invited the judge to "clearly find and accept that this man
is most unlikely ever
to re-offend". The judge promptly demurred to this
invitation, saying: "All I am saying to you is I would not be prepared to
assume
it will not happen again. I don't know. It might not." To this
counsel said: "I understand and accept what Your Honour says",
immediately
adding that the applicant was too intelligent to put himself in this position
again. Counsel then went to another point.
- In all the circumstances I do not see Pickard as
relevant. The gravamen of counsel's complaint on this score was that the judge
had erred in finding a need for specific deterrence,
or, more accurately, such
a need for specific deterrence as would justify an immediate custodial
sentence. But that error was not
shown to have been made; for specific
deterrence was only one of a number of sentencing considerations brought to
account. As applicant's
counsel frankly conceded to us, specific deterrence
was plainly to play some part. In short, I cannot find on this score that what
his Honour said was such specific error as would justify our intervention. In
part at least that is because of the nature of the
applicant's offending. It
seems to me that, by its very nature, a crime of this kind will ordinarily call
for condign punishment,
and that must mean a very real risk of an immediate
custodial sentence.
- In this case it is true that there were a number of factors
that went in mitigation, on each of which applicant's counsel relied
before us.
Among these he mentioned that the offence involved only brief digital
penetration of a clothed victim, ceasing immediately
upon the complainant's
request; that the offence was preceded by no coercion, manipulation or
planning; that the offence was committed
by the applicant believing the
complainant had consented; that the offence was followed by no cajoling or
pressure to be silent;
that the relationship between the applicant and the
complainant provided only the context of the offence, but "was not deployed
instrumentally by the applicant to achieve a pre-planned aim"; that the
applicant was remorseful and co-operated with the police;
that he pleaded
guilty at the first opportunity and had no prior criminal history; that the
applicant had no relevant psychological
difficulty or predisposition, having no
history of sexual involvement with the mentally impaired or disadvantaged;
that the applicant
had been a useful member of the community until the offence;
that he had endured a delay of 15 months before plea and sentence and
that by
reason of age and situation he might be expected to suffer prison more harshly
than most others. Perhaps some of these,
as stated in the argument, tended to
overstate the case for the applicant; for instance, the relative positions of
applicant and
complainant might, I think, have been more significant to the
offending than the foregoing suggests. Nonetheless, all of these factors,
or
at least the substance of them, made a powerful base for the plea in mitigation
which was made below and I have no doubt that
the sentencing judge had regard
to all of what was put to him. But the offence itself remained a grave one,
involving, as the sentencing
judge said, a very serious breach of
trust.
- On the night in question the applicant was the person in
charge; he was the one who, so far as the complainant was concerned,
was "in
authority" or akin to one in authority. She on the other hand was mentally
impaired, as must be accepted from the applicant's
plea. As such she was
particularly vulnerable. Like its counterpart s.52, s.51 was plainly enacted
to provide a measure of protection for those unfortunate enough to need it, and
in s.51 Parliament has specifically proscribed any act of sexual penetration
(no matter how brief) and any indecent act (as defined) between
one supplying
services, like the applicant, and one who receives them, like the complainant;
and Parliament has fixed 10 years' imprisonment
as the maximum penalty. True
it is that the sexual aspect of the applicant's misconduct does not, perhaps,
fall at the gravest end
of the spectrum; one can imagine, unfortunately, worse
cases, so far as the sexual component is concerned. But the breach of trust
that was involved is another matter, and it is for that, as much as for the
sexual penetration itself, that the applicant must be
sentenced.
- It was put to us that this was not a "bad case" of an offence
under s.51 and that the judge was wrong to so characterise it. I do not accept
that that is what the judge meant when he referred to a gross
breach of trust.
He was referring then only to the breach of trust itself and in its context
that was, it seems to me, serious or
grave. The applicant was, after all, in
charge on the night in question. He was the very person who, it might be said,
was employed
to provide for the residents a measure of protection; yet it was
he who offended and he who initiated the offending. The judge
declined to
accept counsel's submission that the breach of trust was at the lower end of
the scale, and, despite the argument now
put to us that his Honour erred in so
doing, I cannot find error.
- Finally, counsel's submission came down to this: that, given
the factors going in mitigation - and I have mentioned them already
- the
sentence imposed was manifestly excessive. Again I cannot agree. On one view
it might be thought to be a heavy sentence for
what was a relatively fleeting
sexual encounter if, as was put to us, the penetration was brief and the
applicant desisted when required
to do so. But, as I have attempted to stress,
there are other considerations operating here and in the end, after giving
careful
consideration to counsel's argument, I think that the sentence was
reasonably open to the sentencing judge given the circumstances
of the
offending and the personal circumstances of the offender.
- I find no need in this case to set out seriatim the several
grounds of appeal, which were amended when a further ground was added
on 26
November last. Indeed, one of the grounds was not pursued in argument. In
what I have said I have now dealt with all those
that were argued. In short,
the applicant has not established, in my opinion, any specific error in the
sentencing process below,
nor has he shown that the sentence imposed was
manifestly excessive.
- It follows that in my opinion the application should be
dismissed.
BROOKING, J.A.:
- I agree.
BUCHANAN, J.A.:
- I also agree.
BROOKING, J.A.:
- The application is dismissed.
- - -
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