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Last Updated: 11 December 2019
PUBLICATION OF NAME(S) OR IDENTIFYING PARTICULARS OF COMPLAINANT(S)
PROHIBITED BY S139 CRIMINAL JUSTICE ACT 1985
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND
CA104/03
THE QUEEN
v
C (CA104/03)
Hearing: 19 June 2003
Coram: Glazebrook J Heath J Doogue J
Appearances: D G Slater for Appellant
J M Jelaś for Crown
Judgment: 25 June 2003
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT DELIVERED BY DOOGUE J
Introduction
[1] This is an appeal against the sentence of 3½ years’
imprisonment imposed
following trial in the Invercargill District Court in respect of an
offence of sexual
R V C CA CA104/03 [25 June 2003]
violation by unlawful sexual connection, namely digital penetration. The
appellant was also sentenced to one year’s imprisonment
for an associated
indecent assault. The sentences are concurrent.
[2] The appeal is brought upon the basis that the sentence
imposed was manifestly excessive. In particular it is
submitted that the
offence consisted of one incident brief in time and not repeated by a man with
no previous offending at all of
a remotely like nature.
Background
[3] The appellant was the de facto partner of an aunt of the
complainant. The complainant looked upon him as an uncle and he
looked upon her
as a favoured niece.
[4] On the night of the offence the complainant was asleep in the home
of her aunt and the appellant, as she regularly visited
them and stayed
overnight. The appellant, who was much the worse for alcohol, entered her room
and lay on the bed beside her.
He rubbed her stomach and put his hand under her
top and touched her breasts. He then put his hand down her shorts and digitally
penetrated her vagina. The complainant cried and pushed his hand away and ran
from the room. She telephoned for help. She was
so distressed she ran into
the street where she received assistance, notwithstanding the early hour of the
morning.
[5] At the trial the appellant gave evidence that he had no
recollection whatever of assaulting the complainant.
[6] The sentencing Judge noted that the appellant acknowledged that at an earlier stage of the evening he had been to the bedroom for the purpose of checking on the complainant. The Judge accepted that the appellant was heavily under the influence of alcohol. The jury verdict negated the possibility the appellant mistook the identity of the person to whom he was making the advances. The Judge acknowledged that the appellant was deeply sorry for what he had done and that the conduct was out of character and that the episode was brief. He accepted that the appellant was
normally a good man who suffered, however, from binge drinking. The Judge
noted the aggravating features of the offending relating
to the 13 year old
complainant and the breach of trust involved. He noted also the profound
effects upon the complainant.
[7] The Judge took the view that the range of sentence
available varied somewhere between 2 and 5 years’ imprisonment.
Having
regard to the need for deterring others from such conduct and denounce such
misconduct upon young children he regarded
the appropriate sentence as that
under appeal.
The appeal
[8] The appeal proceeds upon the narrow basis already mentioned.
Having regard to the serious breach of trust arising
in the case and the age of
the complainant and the effects of the offence upon her, the sentencing Judge
was clearly justified in
taking as both a starting point and a finishing point a
figure in the 2-5 years range recognised in R v M [2000] NZCA 24; [2000] 2 NZLR
60.
[9] The appellant seeks credit for the brevity of the assault. The
sentencing Judge has already given such a credit, notwithstanding
that that
factor is not a mitigating factor but simply the absence of an aggravating
factor. This Court has made plain that once
the offence is complete, the
damage is done, as was clear in the present case. A continuation of the
offending is an aggravating
feature. That is absent here as the sentencing
Judge recognised.
[10] The sentencing Judge made plain that he also took into account the
other factors urged upon us in mitigation and, in particular,
the remorse of the
appellant, notwithstanding that he went to trial, and his otherwise good
character apart from his alcohol abuse
problem and some old offending of a
different nature.
[11] Standing back and looking at the matter overall it is impossible to say that a sentence of 3½ years’ imprisonment was outside the range reasonably available to the sentencing Judge. He was the trial Judge. He had had the opportunity of assessing both the complainant and the appellant. He took into account the
mitigating circumstances urged on behalf of the appellant. He did not
overstate the aggravating circumstances that undoubtedly existed.
The
resultant sentence at the midpoint of the range recognised in R v M
cannot be said to be manifestly excessive.
Result
[12] The appeal is dismissed.
Solicitors:
D G Slater, Invercargill for Appellant
Crown Law Office, Wellington
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