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Supreme Court of Victoria - Court of Appeal |
Last Updated: 3 June 2010
COURT OF APPEAL
SHANNON ASHE
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S APCR 2007 0886
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Applicant
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v
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THE QUEEN
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Respondent
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JUDGES:
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NEAVE and REDLICH JJA and COGHLAN AJA
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WHERE HELD:
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MELBOURNE
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DATE OF HEARING:
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27 October 2009
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DATE OF JUDGMENT:
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28 May 2010
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MEDIUM NEUTRAL CITATION:
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1st Revision: 3 June 2010 –
[1], [29], [32]
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JUDGMENT APPEALED FROM:
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R v Shannon Ashe (Unreported, County Court of Victoria, Judge Kelly,
15 October 2007)
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CRIMINAL LAW – Sentencing – Recklessly causing serious injury – Sentence of 10 years’ imprisonment with non-parole period of eight years – Catastrophic injuries suffered by victim – Foresight that maximum harm would be caused – Worst category of offending –DPP v Terrick [2009] VSCA 220 applied – Whether evidence of offender’s intellectual disability enlivened principles in R v Verdins [2007] VSCA 102; (2007) 16 VR 269 – Total effective sentence not manifestly excessive – Absence of reasons for longer than usual non-parole period – Re-sentenced to new non-parole period of seven years.
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APPEARANCES:
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Counsel
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Solicitors
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For the Applicant
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Mr M J Croucher
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Galbally & O’Bryan
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For the Crown
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Mr B L Sonnet
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Mr C Hyland, Solicitor for Public Prosecutions
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NEAVE
JA:
REDLICH JA:
COGHLAN AJA: (The judgment of
the Court was delivered by Redlich JA)
1 In October 2007 the applicant pleaded guilty in the County Court at Melbourne
to one count of causing serious injury recklessly.
The applicant had confronted
the victim on a suburban street, punched him to the ground and then continued to
assault him. As a
result the victim suffered permanent and near total
incapacity. The applicant was sentenced to a term of ten years’
imprisonment
with a non-parole period of eight years.
2 The applicant sought
leave to appeal against this sentence pursuant to s 582 of the Crimes Act
1958 (Vic). Leave was refused, on the basis that none of the proposed grounds
of appeal were ‘reasonably arguable’. The
Applicant has appealed
against that refusal and if successful, seeks to have the appeal heard
instanter.
3 The details of the offending conduct were agreed between the
parties on the plea and are as set out in the reasons of the learned
sentencing
judge:
On 14 May 2006 both the prisoner and Frendo went to Leggies Hotel in Moe. They met each other on the road outside the hotel and the prisoner punched Frendo’s head, causing him to fall backwards, striking his head on the road. The prisoner then punched Frendo’s face three times. When told that he should not leave him on the road to be run over, the prisoner dragged Frendo to the site of the road and threw him down, causing his head to hit the road again. The prisoner walked into the hotel saying, ‘You’d better ring an ambulance for that cunt I think I just killed’.
While a man named Mark De Mario was attempting to give succour to the unconscious Frendo, whose face was covered in blood and who had suffered a fit, the prisoner emerged from the hotel and punched the side of Frendo’s head. The prisoner was temporarily restrained by bystanders but broke free and was driven away by a friend.
4 Of the final throw, which was perhaps the most violent aspect of the offending, Mr Mercer a taxi driver said:
He literally threw this guy into the gutter and when he landed on I could hear his head hit the ground. It was a horrible sickening sound. I would describe it as a sound like breaking bone or smacking a coconut on the concrete and hearing it crack. I could hear the guy gasping and groan just after he got thrown to the ground, just horrible.
5 In his sentencing remarks the learned judge also said:
This was not a single incident of exclusive violence but a sustained series of attacks aimed at the victim despite his unconscious state and despite the prisoner’s own expressive awareness of the result of the attacks, in the expression, ‘I think I just killed’.
6 The applicant turned himself into police and was interviewed shortly after the
offending. He admitted the assault but sought to
minimise his offending. He
denied some aspects of his conduct and maintained that the victim had in fact
thrown the first punch.
On the plea he admitted the facts as outlined by the
prosecution.
7 As a result of the assault the victim suffered haemorrhaging
into the brain and has been reduced to a vegetative state. He has
suffered
permanent incapacitating brain damage. Medical evidence confirming his
condition was tendered on the plea.
8 A victim impact statement was
tendered by the victim’s ex-wife, who wrote of the consequences of the
attack on the victim’s
three children. She said:
Andrew Frendo was delivered the worst outcome imaginable, he now lays in a hospital bed a vegetable. The past months have been nothing short of living a worst nightmare. My children are suffering everyday... I cannot fully explain on paper how badly this has [a]ffected them.
9 The applicant was aged 32 at the date of sentencing. He has been convicted of
25 prior offences in eight separate court appearances.
Eleven of these offences
involved violence or the threat of violence. They include causing injury
recklessly, threat to kill, threat
to inflict serious injury, assault with a
weapon, resisting a police officer, riotous behaviour, reckless conduct
endangering serious
injury and assaulting a police officer. He has not
previously been imprisoned.
10 The applicant is of low cognitive ability
and was at the time of the offence habituated to illicit drugs and alcohol. The
applicant
had been drinking heavily on the night of the incident, although it
was not suggested that he was affected by amphetamines or other
illicit
drugs.
11 It was submitted on the plea, on behalf of the applicant, that he
was ‘truly remorseful’ for what had occurred and
reliance was placed
upon one of the forensic psychologists reports that the applicant presented as
remorseful. This was contested
by the Crown who suggested little remorse was
demonstrated in his conduct during the period following the attack. Attention
was
drawn to the record of interview where the applicant said, apparently
speaking of the victim, ‘you create your own shit and
I think he created
his own shit’. The sentencing judge made no finding as to remorse.
12 Under ground 1, counsel for the applicant submitted that the learned
sentencing judge erred by failing to give sufficient weight
to the
applicant’s ‘extremely low range of intellectual functioning’.
Evidence was tendered on the plea that the
applicant may have suffered frontal
lobe brain damage as a result of a motorcycle accident when he was 21 years of
age. A report
of an examination by a forensic psychologist, was tendered in
which it was opined:
[the applicant’s] general cognitive ability as measured by FSIQ [Full Scale Intelligence Quotient], was found to be within the extremely low range of intellectual functioning. As such, his overall thinking and reasoning abilities are exceeded only [by] those of approximately .3 per cent of his age peers. This result is consistent with [the applicant’s] report of frontal lobe brain damage.
13 On the basis of these findings it was submitted, on the appeal, that the applicant was entitled to the benefit of the principles set out in R v Verdins.[1] These principles were said to require the moderation of the sentence to account for :
(a) the applicant’s reduced moral culpability;
(b) the need to temper the relevance of denunciation;
(c) the need to temper general deterrence;
(d) the need to temper specific deterrence;
(e) the increased burden of imprisonment on an offender with a condition of the kind suffered by the applicant.
14 As was recognised by the sentencing judge during submissions made on the
plea, the applicant’s intellectual disability may
have engaged the
principles in R v Verdins. These principles were developed in relation to
psychiatric disorders and abnormalities
but are equally applicable to
intellectual disability.[2] In DPP v Patterson
this Court cautioned that it is always necessary to consider how the particular
condition affected the mental
functioning of the offender in the particular
circumstances, or how it is likely to affect him in the future. The question
will
always be whether, in the particular case, it has been shown that the
offender’s moral culpability, or the significance of
general or specific
deterrence, is reduced because of intellectual
disablement.[3]
15 The Crown contended that no
link was shown between the applicant’s condition and his offending. The
Court was referred to
the reasons of the learned sentencing judge where his
Honour said:
Were one to accept the FSIQ functioning at face value, one might conclude that the prisoner wholly lacked qualities of judgment and control and was barely responsible for his actions. As such, he would not be a proper vehicle for general deterrents [sic]. But the facts of this case speak otherwise. This was not a single incident of exclusive violence but a sustained series of attacks aimed at the victim despite his unconscious state and despite his unconscious state and despite the prisoner’s own express awareness of the result of the attacks, in the expression, ‘I think just killed.’ The learned prosecutor draws attention also to the prisoner’s attempted minimisation of his actions when interviewed by police.
16 On the plea it had been submitted that the applicant’s judgment had
been impaired because of the drugs and the alcohol he
had consumed which had
resulted in ‘significant disinhibition, reduction of impulse control and
most importantly a marked reduction
of his frustration intolerance and tendency
to impulsive reaction’. His Honour, quite correctly in our
view,[4] responded during argument to the effect
that this was not a case in which voluntary drug taking could be regarded as a
mitigating
circumstance. The applicant had been taking drugs for a considerable
time and must have known the effects upon him so that he was
responsible for
those effects. The applicant may regard himself as fortunate that it was not
contended by the prosecution that this
was a circumstance of aggravation.
17 In his sentencing remarks, the sentencing judge referred to the forensic
psychologist’s reports that the prisoner was habituated
to illicit drugs
and alcohol and had consumed both in vast quantities in the hours before the
attack. His Honour concluded that
the ingestion of drugs did not provide any
mitigation of the prisoner’s conduct and that while the applicant’s
low intelligence
had some effect upon his judgment and control, the applicant
knew and controlled what he was doing in taking the drugs and in assaulting
the
victim. This conclusion reflected the view that his Honour had previously
articulated in the course of the plea.
18 It was said without elucidation on
the plea that the applicant’s low intellectual capacity gave some context
as to why he
behaved in the ‘explosive’ manner that he did. It
appears from the argument on the plea that his Honour was not prepared
to
characterise this as a ‘single incident of explosive behaviour’ but
as an assault which continued, with interruptions,
for some time, despite
attempts by others to restrain the applicant.
19 Great emphasis on appeal was
placed on how the applicant’s intelligence functioning must have affected
his judgment. His
conduct, it was said, demonstrated that he had lost control
and any appreciation of what he was doing. It was also said that some
of his
answers in his record of interview showed that his behaviour at the time was
bizarre and irrational. His disability did not
receive the same emphasis on the
plea. We agree with the submission made by the Crown on appeal that it was not
established on the
plea that there was any causal connection between the
applicant’s impaired intellectual functioning and his offending behaviour
beyond the general assertion, to which we have referred. Nor was it shown by
evidence or submission on the plea that the sentence
would weight more heavily
on the applicant than it would on a person with a higher intellectual capacity.
20 While Verdins states that it is self evident that a prisoner suffering
from a mental illness such as severe depression will find
prison more burdensome
than a person in normal health and that imprisonment may cause a deterioration
in such a condition such outcomes
are not equally obvious in the case of a
prisoner with low intelligence. It is not evident that this condition will
necessarily
make prison a greater burden. No submission was made or evidence
called on the plea that suggested that the sentence should be mitigated
on that
account. This ground is not made out.
21 Under ground 2 the applicant
submits that the learned sentencing judge erred by placing too much weight on
the consequences of
the assault. The applicant was sentenced on the basis that
he had foreseen the probability of catastrophic injury. The seriousness
of
those injuries was acknowledged but it was submitted that the applicant did not
intend that the victim suffer the actual serious
injury which he sustained.
22 The learned sentencing judge suggested on the plea that there was little
to differentiate this case from one of intentionally causing
serious injury.
His Honour observed that a reasonable person would have realised that there was
a grave danger of causing serious
injury if not death, and that the applicant
had ignored warnings that should have made that risk clear, and continued the
attack.
This was accepted by counsel for the applicant on the plea, who
acknowledged that the applicant’s conduct should be placed
at the highest
end of ‘reckless behaviour’. However he maintained that the
applicant did not intend to permanently incapacitate
the victim.
23 Counsel
drew attention to those decisions in which it has been said that whilst
unintended consequences must be taken into account
in sentencing, they should
not be permitted to overwhelm the exercise of the discretion and swamp other
sentencing considerations.[5]
24 The Court
considered a similar submission in DPP v
Terrick[6] where the victim had been left with
catastrophic injuries of a similar gravity to those suffered in the present
case. The victim
had been punched and kicked by three offenders who were acting
in concert, and the attack had continued after the victim fell unconscious.
Two
were convicted of intentionally causing serious injury and one of recklessly
doing so. The Court was required to consider the
submission, advanced on behalf
of the offenders, that they had not foreseen the full consequences of their
actions. The Court reviewed
the relevant authorities in these terms:
The appeal submissions for the respondents echoed those advanced on the plea. Counsel for both Marks and Terrick relied on the following statement by Eames JA in Director of Public Prosecutions (Vic) v Cook:
“The severity of the consequences suffered by a victim of a criminal act [is] relevant to sentencing, but however catastrophic they be the extent of the injury and damage flowing from an offence ought not be permitted to swamp all other sentencing considerations. That is especially so where the consequences were unintended: R v Van Boxtel.”
It should be noted, however, that his Honour went on to say this:
“Whilst it is appropriate that the unintended consequences of the crime ought not overwhelm other considerations, in particular mitigatory factors which ought weigh in favour of the offender, full weight must nonetheless be given to the effect on the victim of the crime. To do less would be to undervalue one of the most important factors in sentencing.”
Reliance was also placed upon Director of Public Prosecutions v Fevaleaki. A similar submission was made there, to the effect that, although the offender had intended to cause serious injury, the catastrophic results were unintended. Redlich JA said:
“The crime of intentionally causing serious injury is the most serious of the non-homicidal injury offences in which there is a concurrence of serious injury with the intention to cause it ... Unlike unlawful and dangerous act manslaughter, which may occur where the offender does not intend the consequences and they are unexpected, the offence with which we are concerned requires proof that the offender intended to cause a serious injury which was sustained by the victim. Here it was submitted that despite the respondent’s plea of guilty, the respondent was not to be sentenced on the basis that he intended the catastrophic results of his assault.
A similar argument was advanced in R v Economedes although that was a case concerning the offence of recklessly causing serious injury. The offence of recklessly causing serious injury requires foresight on the part of the offender of the probability of serious injury as a consequence of their conduct and indifference as to whether or not those consequences occur.
In Economedes the offender had repeatedly punched and kicked the victim to the head resulting in severe brain damage which left the victim grossly disabled. The offender had been released by the sentencing judge on a community based order. In dismissing a Director’s appeal the Court gave particular emphasis to the fact that the very serious consequences of the attack on the victim were unintended.
On this appeal, counsel for the Director accepted that there were unintended consequences from the respondent’s attack. Neither party in submissions identified the serious injury which the respondent intended. In R v Harrison Coldrey J was confronted with a similar dilemma. The offender had pleaded guilty to recklessly causing serious injury. He had punched the victim once to the side of the head causing serious brain damage. On the plea it had been submitted that the serious injury which the offender had foreseen was a loss of consciousness by the victim. Coldrey J considered there was a degree of artificiality in such a formulation. In the present case, whatever the serious injury the respondent intended, it was recognised on both sides that the attack produced unintended catastrophic consequences. Although that was acknowledged, it was said on the respondent’s behalf that the Director’s submission placed too much weight upon the severity of the unintended consequences suffered by the victim, which should not be permitted to swamp other sentencing considerations.
In assessing the adequacy of the sentence imposed, the consequences for the victim must be taken into account whether or not the respondent intended all of those consequences. That said, the fact that the respondent did not intend the profound consequences for the victim has a significant bearing upon the Director’s contention that the sentencing judge’s discretion miscarried”.
There is, of course, no presumption in criminal law that a person intends the natural and probable consequences of his or her actions. But the Director’s submission relied on no such presumption. The submission for the Director was that this was a case of actual intent, in the case of Terrick and Marks, and actual foresight of consequences, in the case of Stewart. That is, the evidence demonstrated that the respondents did intend — or, in the case of Stewart, did foresee — the full consequences of their actions.
Counsel for the Director referred to Director of Public Prosecutions v Lepoidevin, where this court (Cummins AJA) said:
“In my view the learned sentencing judge fell into error in treating as a mitigatory factor that the respondent had not intended to cause injuries of the actual character or magnitude of those sustained by the victim. The respondent, a strong young man, viciously attacked a 16 year old girl by punching, squeezing, banging her head against a metal seat, kicking her in the head and stomping on her face. He knew what he was doing. It was obvious his actions were likely to cause her very serious injury indeed. He told investigating police he intended to hurt her. His plea admitted that he intentionally caused her serious injury. In the circumstances it does not avail the respondent that he lacked the specificity of medically qualified prescience. He stood for sentence for intentionally causing serious injury, into which offence these circumstances fell. The maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment reflects the potentiality of the offence.”[7]
25 The applicant referred to his comments during the police interview that he
was ‘dumbfounded and surprised’ that the
victim was rendered
unconscious because of the assault. The Crown submitted that the statement was
disingenuous and involved an
attempt to minimise his culpability. It was
inconsistent with his persistence in assaulting the victim after he had in fact
lost
consciousness and his contemporaneous statement that he believed he had
‘killed’ the victim.
26 Like Terrick, this was not a case where
‘one punch’ or ‘an unfortunate act’ resulted in
catastrophic consequences.
In Terrick the court expressed its conclusion on
this issue in the following terms:
In our view, the respondents fell to be sentenced on the basis that they intended to cause (in the case of Marks and Terricks) or foresaw the likelihood of (in the case of Stewart) very serious injuries, if not the injuries that were actually caused. It was conceded during the course of argument on the appeal — rightly in our view — that the respondents intended to cause ‘really serious injury’, to inflict ‘maximum harm’ on their victim. In view of the ferocity of the attack and, above all, the persistence of the respondents in attacking the victim after he became unconscious, no other conclusion was reasonably open.
Where (as here) an offender intends to cause (or foresees the likelihood of causing) really serious injury to another person, and does so, the fact that the offender did not foresee the precise nature, or extent, of the injuries actually inflicted will not ordinarily reduce the offender’s culpability. Even if it be accepted that the respondents did not contemplate the exact nature of the injuries, or the state of permanent disablement, which they inflicted on Mr Schueth, that circumstance does not mitigate their responsibility for what occurred, given that they intended to cause maximum harm or foresaw the likelihood of that consequence.[8]
27 In the present case the attack by the applicant was sustained. It comprised
four separate attacks of escalating violence against
a victim whose condition
was obviously deteriorating. The victim’s head was thrown towards the
ground while he was probably
unconscious, and was unable to defend himself. The
victim’s head was later punched while it was cradled in the arms of a
person
offering emergency assistance. The probability that maximum injury would
be caused must have been apparent. That probability increased
each time the
applicant returned to inflict further injury on the victim. Such facts compel,
the conclusion that the applicant must
have foreseen maximum harm would result
from his actions. The sentencing judge correctly sentenced the applicant on the
basis that
he had foreseen the probability of that degree of injury suffered by
the victim and had acted with recklessness as to that consequence.
This ground
is not made out.
28 Under ground 3 the applicant maintains that the sentence
and non-parole period are manifestly excessive. He relied on the following
matters:
(a) the applicant’s extremely low range of intellectual functioning;
(b) the unintended consequences of the applicant’s actions;
(c) the fact that the applicant voluntarily presented himself to police shortly after the offending;
(d) the applicant’s plea of guilty; and
(e) the remorse expressed to the forensic psychologist.
29 At the forefront of the argument was the fact that the sentence was almost
the equal to the longest term of imprisonment ever
imposed in this State for the
offence of recklessly causing serious injury. While conceding the offence was
very grave, it was submitted
that when one took into account the factors
personal to the applicant which become relevant to the categorisation of the
seriousness
of the offending, it was error for the sentencing judge to have
placed this offence in the ‘top category of offences of recklessly
causing
serious injury’. Hence it was submitted that it is possible to conceive
of a worse category of offending where some
or all of these factors are absent.
30 The maximum penalty for the offence is 15 years’
imprisonment.[9] The sentence imposed on the
applicant was some 66 per cent of the maximum for the head sentence. In Terrick
the third co-offender,
who had been found guilty of recklessly causing injury,
was re-sentenced on the Directors appeal to 11 years’ imprisonment
with a
non-parole period of nine years. As the Court said in Terrick:
The highest sentences previously imposed for an offence should not be regarded as creating a ceiling or a sentencing practice which constrains the imposition of higher sentences in ‘worst category’ cases. The need to have regard to current sentencing practices does not mean that the measure of manifest inadequacy is ‘capped’ or ‘collared’ by the highest sentences previously handed down. The possibility is not foreclosed that a sentence near the largest previously imposed may be manifestly inadequate.[10]
31 The applicant must be taken to have foreseen the probability of maximum harm
being caused by his actions and as we have already
observed there was little to
distinguish it from the offence of intentionally causing serious injury. In
some cases, and Terrick
was one, no meaningful differentiation in sentence
between the two types of offence will be
warranted.[11] The culpability of a reckless
offender will increase as the degree to which the offender has adverted to the
actual consequences
of his conduct increases. The offender’s culpability
in such cases has sometimes been compared with some circumstances of
manslaughter where the conduct is sufficiently grave and productive of serious
consequences.[12]
32 As has been often
pointed out by this Court, the offence of recklessly causing serious injury is a
broad one, the elements of which
can arise in many circumstances. In the
present case the sentencing judge was correct to accept the prosecutor’s
submission
that this was in the worst category of offending. It is not to the
point, as was submitted on this appeal, that some characteristic
or mitigating
factor was present in this case, that might not be present in another. This is
the same fallacious reasoning as the
submission that the maximum penalty be
reserved for the worst imaginable offence. In all the circumstances, including
the horrendous
injuries suffered by the victim and the continuing nature of the
attack, the case was properly judged as one which might be considered
in the
worst category, not withstanding the presence of the mitigating factors referred
to on the plea and on this appeal.[13] We are
not persuaded that the sentence imposed was outside the range of discretion
available to the sentencing judge. The head
sentence is not manifestly
excessive.
33 In relation to the non-parole period we are, however,
satisfied that the sentencing judge erred and that some reduction in sentence
is
required. In fixing a non-parole period of eight years’ imprisonment the
sentencing judge imposed a period of some 80 per
cent of the head sentence.
Although this court has made clear that there is no usual or standard non-parole
period,[14] Callaway JA in R v Bolton &
Barker[15] has observed:
As with the discount appropriate to a plea of guilty, there is no fixed ratio between a head sentence and a non-parole period. In the majority of cases the proportion is between two-thirds and three-quarters, but both shorter and longer periods are found.
34 A non-parole period which exceeds three-quarters of the length of the head
sentence is not necessarily indicative of error as
there is no fixed standard
for the non-parole period. However, as was said in R v
Detanamo,[16] where a non-parole period is
imposed which is unusual by comparison with other cases and having regard to the
facts of the instant
case and the course of the plea, reasons should generally
be given. An absence of reference to the sort of factors mentioned by
Callaway
JA in R v VZ[17] invites appellate scrutiny and
may reflect error.[18] In the present case a
non-parole period of 4/5 of the head sentence appears high in the circumstances
of the case. That is not
to say that in all circumstances such a ratio will be
inappropriate. As was pointed out by Coghlan JA in argument, the longer the
head sentence may be, the shorter the non-parole period might be as a proportion
of the head sentence. Here, unfortunately, the
reasons of the sentencing judge
provide no explanation of the reasons for the non-parole period adopted.
35 In our view, the non-parole period is manifestly excessive and should be
reduced. Having regard to the applicant’s intellectual
disability, his
lack of relevant prior convictions and the evidence on the plea of familial
support, there is no basis for the imposition
of a non-parole period which is
longer than that customarily imposed. We would fix a new non-parole period of
seven years’
imprisonment.
- - -
[1] [2007] VSCA 102; (2007) 16 VR 269.
[2] R v McIntosh [2008] VSCA 242, [84]–[104]; DPP v Patterson [2009] VSCA 222, [43].
[3] R v Wise [2007] VSCA 266 (Ashley JA).
[4] R v Martin [2007] VSCA 291; (2007) 20 VR 14; DPP v Arvanitidis [2008] VSCA 189, [28]–[29].
[5] DPP v Fevaleaki [2006] VSCA 212; (2006) 165 A Crim R 524, 527–528, DPP v Cook [2004] VSCA 11; (2004) 141 A Crim R 579, 586–7; R v Boxtel [1994] VicRp 54; (1994) 2 VR 98, 103–104; R v Economedes (1990) 58 A Crim R 466.
[7] Ibid [35]–[38] (citations omitted).
[8] Ibid [40]–[41].
[9] Section 17 Crimes Act 1958 (Vic).
[10] [2009] VSCA 220, [81] (citations omitted).
[11] Ibid [86]–[91].
[12] DPP v Zullo [2004] VSCA 153, [11] (Nettle JA).
[13] See DPP v Terrick [2009] VSCA 220.
[14] R v Tran [2006] VSCA 222, [27]–[28]; R v Ng and Siu [2009] VSCA 218, [28].
[16] [2007] VSCA 160, [26].
[17] [1998] VSCA 32; [1998] 7 VR 693.
[18] Ibid.
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