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Bakhshi v R [2023] NZHC 3597 (8 December 2023)

Last Updated: 14 December 2023

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA TĀMAKI MAKAURAU ROHE
CRI-2023-404-526
CRI-2023-404-527 [2023] NZHC 3597
BETWEEN
TARAT BAKHSHI and ADIL TAJEK
Appellants
AND
THE KING
Respondent
Hearing:
5 December 2023
Appearances:
A N Gruebner for the Appellants P R McNabb for Respondent
Judgment:
8 December 2023

JUDGMENT OF O’GORMAN J

This judgment was delivered by me on 8 December 2023 at 3.30 pm pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules.

Registrar/Deputy Registrar

Solicitors/Counsel:

J D Munro, Barrister, Auckland

A N Gruebner, Barrister, Auckland Tucker & Co, Auckland

Meredith Connell, Auckland

BAKHSHI v R [2023] NZHC 3597 [8 December 2023]

Legal principles

1 R v Bakhshi [2023] NZDC 22262.

2 Criminal Procedure Act 2011, s 250.

3 Tutakangahau v R [2014] NZCA 279, [2014] 3 NZLR 482 at [26]–[27] and [31]–[35].

4 At [36].

5 At [32].

The offending

6 R v Boyd [2004] NZCA 342; (2004) 21 CRNZ 169 at [38].

victim and slashed him, causing lacerations to his arms, back and torso. Following this prolonged attack, they took the victim’s shoulder bag and returned to their white Audi.

District Court decision

(a) Premeditation — This offending was highly premeditated, given that the appellants armed themselves with weapons and took a full face mask. Further, the appellants waited in the vehicle for a full 40 minutes before the victim appeared.

(b) Vulnerability of the victim — Once he had been hit by the Audi, the victim was lying prone on the street with compound fractures to his legs. He was not able to get up and run away and, by the time the attack actually occurred, his associates had left him.

(c) Extent of harm caused — The victim suffered deep lacerations to the back and side of his torso, a collapsed lung, a five cm laceration to his diaphragm and wounds to his forearm and right thumb. From being hit by the Audi, he suffered a wound to his left lower leg, a fractured rib, compound fractures to his left tibia and fibula, and a damaged left kneecap. The injuries were life-threatening and required emergency surgery, leaving the victim in hospital for 12 days and having to undergo further surgery.

Appellants’ submissions

7 R v Taueki [2005] NZCA 174, [2005] 3 NZLR 372.

as aggravating because that level of seriousness is inherent in the offending itself. Furthermore, no victim impact statement was provided, so there was no factual information to substantiate lasting physical or psychological impact. In the circumstances, it was unsafe for the Judge to give any weight to this factor.

(a) R v Buttar — This case involved a group attack by five defendants who had a prior feud with the victim.8 They attacked their victim’s head and body with a traditional sword and metal rod. Some without weapons prevented the victim from escaping, and also punched and kicked him. While considerable violence was involved, this was not considered to reach an “extreme” level.9 The victim suffered serious lacerations and skull fractures, among other injuries. A starting point of seven years’ imprisonment was imposed for the principal offender and upheld on appeal.10

(b) Diaz v R — Mr Diaz was the main participant in a group attack involving violence, multiple attackers, use of tree branches and a car as weapons, serious injury and victim vulnerability.11 Premeditation was not considered to be a significant feature, but nor could it be ignored. A starting point of seven years’ imprisonment was upheld on appeal to be “well within range, even lenient”.12

(c) R v Chen — Mr Chen drove to the victim’s house late at night to confront the victim.13 The two got into a heated argument involving pushing and shoving. Mr Chen retrieved a knife from his car and returned to stab the victim in the shoulder. This wound entered the

8 R v Buttar [2008] NZCA 28.

9 At [12].

10 At [24].

11 Diaz v R [2021] NZCA 426.

12 At [10]–[15] per Thomas and Wylie JJ.

13 R v Chen [2023] NZHC 1947.

victim’s chest cavity and severed an artery. A starting point of between six years and six months’ and seven years’ imprisonment would have been regarded as appropriate if death had not ensued, reflecting that there was a limited degree of provocation, but Mr Chen had returned with a knife knowing the victim was unarmed.14

Analysis

14 At [14]–[15]

(a) The victim in Buttar was not vulnerable and the injuries were not life-threatening. There was also a lower degree of premeditation (with no pre-planning).

15 R v Taueki, above n 7, at [31(i)]. See also Tuau v R [2013] NZCA 623 at [26].

  1. At [39(a)] and [41(a)], comparing the examples given by the Court of Appeal for a “concerted street attack” compared with a “serious concerted street attack”.
(b) In Diaz, the victim threw the first punch, the victim was not vulnerable at the beginning, in fact there was an issue of self-defence at the outset, the tree branches were used opportunistically from the scene, there was less premeditation, and the injuries were much less serious.

(c) In Chen, the victim was known to be unarmed but was otherwise not vulnerable and there was a lower degree of premeditation, with events only escalating after a heated argument. The knife had been in the car in the fishing kit, rather than taken to the scene for the purposes of the confrontation. This contrasts with the present case with the appellants taking a machete and hunting knife to the victim’s street with the intention of using those weapons to attack the victim.

17 Pink v R [2022] NZCA 306.

Result

O’Gorman J

18 Moses v R [2020] NZCA 296, [2020] 3 NZLR 583 at [49].


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