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Salt v R [2022] NZCA 611 (6 December 2022)
Last Updated: 12 December 2022
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
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BETWEEN
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TREMAYNE JORDAN SALT Appellant
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AND
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THE KING Respondent
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Hearing:
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23 November 2022
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Court:
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Goddard, Woolford and Fitzgerald JJ
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Counsel:
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E P Priest for Appellant Z R Hamill for Crown
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Judgment:
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6 December 2022 at 10.00 am
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
- An
extension of time to appeal is granted.
- The
application to adduce fresh evidence is declined.
- The
appeal is allowed.
- The
concurrent sentences of eight years and two months’ imprisonment on each
charge are quashed and replaced with concurrent
sentences of
six years’
imprisonment.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Woolford J)
- [1] On 29 June
2017, Mr Salt was sentenced to eight years and two months’ imprisonment on
charges of kidnapping and wounding
with intent to cause grievous bodily
harm.[1] He now appeals against the
sentence, almost five years out of time. Leave is
required.
Leave to appeal
- [2] Mr Salt has
filed an affidavit explaining the delay. He says the Judge gave him a small
discount for personal factors, but overall
he was unhappy with the sentence. He
asked his lawyer about an appeal, but she told him there was no point in
appealing as an appeal
would not succeed.
- [3] It was only
when he later spoke to other prisoners that he learnt that a
cultural report may enable an otherwise appropriate sentence
to be
discounted when an offender’s background is said to have been a cause of
their offending. He also recently found out
that his age at the time he
committed the crimes (21 years old) meant he may also be able to get a discount
for that too.
- [4] This Court
has regularly held that it will only entertain an appeal that is many years out
of time in exceptional circumstances.
That said, the merits of the appeal are
likely to be determinative of a leave application in such circumstances. The
Crown opposes
leave for the same reasons that it opposes the appeal on the
merits.
Factual background
- [5] Mr Salt was
part of a street gang called Dope Money Sex (DMS), which was involved in serious
criminal offending, including the
supply of methamphetamine. Over a 12 month
period, the victim’s father built up a substantial debt to the gang for
methamphetamine
allegedly supplied to him by Mr Salt’s older brother.
Threats were made to the victim’s father and he and the victim
went into
hiding.
- [6] In an effort
to secure repayment of the drug debt, Mr Salt and his brother decided to kidnap
the victim and hold him against his
will with threats to try and get his father
to pay the debt paid owed by him. At around 10:30 pm on 10 July 2016,
Mr Salt and his
brother found out where the victim lived and lured him out
of the house. Mr Salt was armed with a .22 calibre rifle. He pointed
this at
the victim, got him into a car and took him with others to a house where he was
then effectively imprisoned. He was told
he would be held until his father paid
the debt and he would be shot with a pistol if he tried to run away.
Mr Salt and his brother
told the victim his father had until midnight to
pay the debt. During that time, they made the victim periodically call his
father
and ask him to repay the debt. Mr Salt himself spoke to the
victim’s father demanding the debt be paid.
- [7] During this
time, Mr Salt and others took turns assaulting the victim by punching him to the
head, chin, body and arms. The victim
was also assaulted with an aluminium
pipe, although this specific act was not attributed to any one person.
- [8] The assaults
were sometimes timed so the victim’s father could hear them over the
telephone. Mr Salt frequently threatened
the victim during his detention that
he was going to be shot. At one stage Mr Salt’s brother stabbed his right
knee with a
scalpel.
- [9] At around
3:30 am on 11 July 2016, Mr Salt blindfolded the victim with black tape.
He was taken back into a car where he was
made to sit alongside Mr Salt who was
again armed with a pistol. During the car journey he was told that he would be
killed if he
spoke to the police and, before he was let go, he would be shot as
a warning to his father. He was made to choose between being
shot in his leg or
his hands.
- [10] On arriving
at a park, the victim was made to leave the car whereupon Mr Salt instructed him
to hold out his hands. Standing
about a metre from the victim, Mr Salt shot at
the victim’s hands. He missed twice as the victim moved his hands when
the
shots were fired. A third shot hit the back of the victim’s right
hand between the thumb and forefinger and exited through
the palm of his hand.
Because the victim had his hands together, the bullet travelled into the palm of
his left hand where it remained
lodged. The victim was left at the park. The
victim required multiple surgeries on his hand, including to remove the bullet
and
is likely to have arthritis in his thumb for the rest of his
life.
High Court sentencing
- [11] On 19 May
2017, at Mr Salt’s request, Woodhouse J gave him a sentence indication.
The Judge identified the aggravating
factors of the offending as follows:
(a) violence over an extended period;
(b) substantial pre-meditation;
(c) extent of harm to the victim;
(d) use of weapons — pistol, aluminium pipe and scalpel;
(e) attack to victim’s head with the pipe and with fists;
(f) violence used as part of overall objective of recovering a drug debt; and
(g) multiple attackers.
- [12] The Judge
adopted a global starting point of 11 years’ imprisonment for the two
offences, although he commented that it
could be in excess of 11 years. The
Judge said he would not increase Mr Salt’s sentence because of his
previous convictions.
He then fixed a discount of 20 per cent for Mr
Salt’s pleas of guilty if he was to accept the sentence indication.
Finally,
the Judge commented that any further adjustment would have to be left
for the sentencing when he would have much more information
about Mr
Salt’s background.
- [13] Mr Salt
accepted the sentence indication and pleaded guilty. Sentencing took place on
29 June 2017. The Judge referred to the
sentence indication as forming part of
the sentence, to be attached to his sentencing notes.
- [14] The Judge
referred to the information he had received about Mr Salt’s background.
He had a pre-sentence report, a letter
from his mother, Mr Salt’s own
letter and a certificate from the Department of Corrections confirming Mr
Salt’s attendance
at a preliminary alcohol and drug support programme.
The Judge then listed the matters which he was satisfied should be taken into
account in Mr Salt’s favour to reduce the sentence that would otherwise be
imposed:
(a) Youth — Mr Salt had just turned 21 at the time of the offences.
(b) Family circumstances — he had been brought up by his grandparents when
he was younger, but thereafter was badly influenced
by at least some of his
older brothers. He had no real guidance from his father.
(c) Remorse — he had some genuine remorse for what he had done, beyond
what was reflected in the guilty pleas and an understanding
of the effect on the
victim.
- [15] The Judge
noted that the Sentencing Act 2002 required him to have regard to the above
matters, but in his judgment the reduction
could not be large in relation to the
total sentence “when these positive matters are weighed against the
gravity of what [Mr
Salt]
did”.[2] Also, the Judge said
that although he would not increase the sentence because of Mr Salt’s
previous offending, the previous
offending nonetheless did weigh against the
positive considerations. The Judge concluded: “Putting that in simple
terms, I
cannot look at all the good things and just ignore a long period of bad
things”.[3]
- [16] In the end,
the Judge gave Mr Salt a discount of nine months for a combination of youth,
family circumstances and remorse. That
brought the starting point down to 10
years and three months’ imprisonment before the previously indicated
discount of 20 per
cent for Mr Salt’s guilty pleas. The end sentence
imposed on Mr Salt was therefore eight years and two months’ imprisonment
on each charge, to be served concurrently.
Application to
adduce fresh evidence
- [17] Mr Salt
seeks leave to admit fresh evidence on appeal in the form of a cultural report
pursuant to s 27 of the Sentencing Act
by Elynn ‘Atiola and Semisi Pohiva
of Tuitala Law Ltd. Counsel for Mr Salt, Ms Priest, acknowledges that
s 27 reports should
not generally be produced for the first time on
appeal. Section 335 of the Criminal Procedure Act 2011 does, however, allow new
evidence to be presented on appeal if it is necessary or expedient in the
interests of justice. New evidence will need to be credible
and fresh, but the
overriding criteria is the interests of justice. Counsel submits that as
such an appellate court can allow the
admission of s 27 reports on appeal and
can substitute sentences when a report is clearly relevant to
culpability.
Approach on appeal
- [18] Mr Salt
appeals his sentence under s 244 of the Criminal Procedure Act. Section 250(2)
provides that the Court must allow the
appeal only if satisfied that there was
an error in the sentence and a different sentence should be imposed. Although
s 250(2) makes
no express reference to the concept of a manifestly
excessive sentence, this concept is long-standing, is consistent with the
statutory
language in s 250(2) and continues to be utilised when considering s
250(2).[4] This Court has emphasised
that the focus is on the correctness of the end sentence, not the process by
which the sentence was
reached.[5]
Submissions
- [19] Mr Salt
does not take issue with the starting point of 11 years’ imprisonment
adopted by the Judge, nor with the discount
of 20 per cent for Mr Salt’s
guilty pleas. The sole issue is whether the deduction of nine months’
imprisonment (or
6.8 per cent) was sufficient to reflect the three mitigating
factors identified by the Judge of youth, family circumstances and remorse.
- [20] Ms Priest
submits the discount for personal factors should instead total
30–35 per cent, comprised as follows:
(a) 10 per cent discount for youth;
(b) 15–20 per cent discount for factors identified in the s 27 report,
including Mr Salt’s addiction and rehabilitative
potential; and
(c) five per cent for Mr Salt’s remorse.
- [21] Ms Priest
submits that these discounts were justified based on the material before the
sentencing Judge, and the appropriateness
of these discounts was confirmed by
the s 27 report that Mr Salt sought to adduce as fresh evidence on appeal.
- [22] Ms Hamill,
counsel for the Crown, submits that the Judge was correct to temper the quantum
of discount by reference to the gravity
of the offending and
Mr Salt’s criminal history. She submits that in assessing the
available discount for mitigation against
the overall circumstances of the case
and Mr Salt’s background, the Judge did not err. The discount he fixed
was appropriate
in the circumstances.
- [23] The Crown
says that the s 27 report should not be received as further evidence on appeal.
It is not fresh. Nor is it cogent:
it simply fleshes out, with more detail, the
information that was before the sentencing Judge contained in the pre-sentence
report
and in a letter from Ms Salt’s mother.
Should the s
27 report be received as fresh evidence?
- [24] On a number
of occasions this Court has said that generally s 27 reports should not be
submitted for the first time on
appeal.[6]
- [25] However, if
the information in a s 27 report is cogent then we accept sometimes it will be
appropriate for it to be considered
by a court on
appeal.[7]
- [26] In this
case there was substantial information about Mr Salt’s background and
family circumstances available to the sentencing
Judge in the pre-sentence
report and in the letter from Mr Salt’s mother.
- [27] The
pre-sentence report noted that Mr Salt was a heavy user of methamphetamine at
the time of the offending and if he was “straight”
would not have
done “all of this”. He had no structure in his life and was in a
“dark place”. He got expelled
from school in Year 9 and had never
had a job. Once he was expelled, he gravitated to anti-social peers. Mr Salt
felt sorry for
the victim and was willing to participate in restorative justice
if the victim was willing to do so. He also acknowledged the need
for drug
rehabilitation.
- [28] Mr
Salt’s mother advised the Court by way of a letter that Mr Salt was the
seventh of her nine children. He was the youngest
son. Mr Salt was initially
raised by his grandparents. Problems started when his grandfather died when he
was five years old.
Mr Salt found it hard when he went to live with her,
and he looked up to his older brothers as role models as his father was never
a
real presence in the children’s lives.
- [29] Mr
Salt’s mother advised the Court that three of Mr Salt’s brothers
have been incarcerated and one of his older brothers
was a co-offender. Mr
Salt’s use of methamphetamine was also highlighted by his mother. She
said she felt as if she has failed
Mr Salt and society and wished she could
turn back time and be given another chance to guide him and love him.
- [30] We agree
with Crown counsel that there is substantial overlap between the
s 27 report and the information contained in the pre-sentence
report
and in the letter from Mr Salt’s mother. The s 27 report gives more
detail and context to some of the themes covered
by the other documents such as
the poverty faced by the family, and that Mr Salt’s disruptive
behaviour at school (which resulted
in reduced educational opportunity) was to
some extent because of a lack of food at home. The fact of Mr Salt’s
poor educational
outcome and the changing dynamics and challenges of his family
life were, however, before the Judge.
- [31] As the
Crown acknowledges, the use of severe physical discipline and
Mr Salt’s cultural disconnect were factors that were
not explicitly
identified in the material available at sentencing. But the clearest factors
contributing to Mr Salt’s offending
that are discernible from the s 27
report are Mr Salt’s family dynamics, the influence of his older brothers
and his methamphetamine
use at the time. These were matters explicitly
identified by the Judge at sentencing. Likewise, Mr Salt’s motivation to
rehabilitate
was also before the Judge at sentencing.
- [32] In those
circumstances, we consider the s 27 report should not be admitted as fresh
evidence. As Ms Priest very properly accepted
in the course of argument, much
of the information in it was already before the Judge, albeit not articulated in
the most helpful
way to identify its relevance to culpability. This Court has
the benefit of Ms Priest’s submissions articulating the causal
link
between Mr Salt’s background and the offending; further evidence is not
required for that purpose. The application to
adduce fresh evidence is
therefore declined.
- [33] We go on to
consider whether, by reference to the material that was before the sentencing
Judge, there was a material error in
the sentence imposed.
Discussion
Youth
- [34] The Crown
notes that the Judge did identify Mr Salt’s relative youth as a mitigating
factor and submits the Judge did not
err in assessing it together with
Mr Salt’s general personal circumstances. It further submits that a
discrete discount for
youth was not required in the circumstances of this
case.
- [35] The extent
to which Mr Salt’s youth formed part of the overall 6.8 per cent discount
for personal factors is, however,
not clear. In our view, it would have been
preferable for a discrete discount for youth to have been separately
identified.
- [36] Churchward
v R[8] and subsequent cases
recognise the relevance of youth, noting that young people are more vulnerable
to external pressures, negative
influences and may act more impulsively than
adults. Young persons may fail to appreciate the full gravity of the offending,
while
at the same time knowing that it is wrong. Further, the effect of
imprisonment on young persons may be crushing, especially long
sentences.
Lastly, young people have greater capacity for rehabilitation.
- [37] This was
premediated offending over an extended period of more than five hours, not
impulsive conduct in response to unfolding
circumstances as in
Diaz v R.[9]
But we accept that Mr Salt was acting under the influence of his older
brother, and the street gang he had become involved with
through his
brothers’ influence. His relative youth made him susceptible to external
pressures and anti‑social peers,
particularly in the context of his
upbringing and his family circumstances following the death of his grandfather.
- [38] In those
circumstances, we accept Ms Priest’s submission that a youth discount of
10 per cent would have been appropriate,
particularly when taking into account
the length of the term of imprisonment Mr Salt was facing.
Family
circumstances
- [39] The
Judge’s overall discount of 6.8 per cent was described as including an
allowance for Mr Salt’s family circumstances,
including his addiction to
methamphetamine. We have already concluded that an allowance of 10 per cent for
Mr Salt’s youth
would have been appropriate. What additional allowance
should have been made for his family circumstances?
- [40] In Zhang
v R,[10] this Court recognised
that a number of mitigating considerations arose in relation to addiction. It
considered that addiction may
logically give rise to a discount of up to 30 per
cent of the sentence depending on the extent to which it mitigates moral
culpability
for the offending. The Court cautioned, however, that any such
discount should be based on persuasive evidence as opposed to mere
self-reporting.[11] Here, Mr
Salt has reported an addiction. His addiction is confirmed by both the
pre-sentence report and his mother. The nature
of the offending —
a kidnapping and wounding with intent to cause grievous bodily harm for the
purpose of recovering a drug
debt owed to the gang that Mr Salt was involved
with, and from which he was obtaining drugs — took place in the context of
that addiction, and the pressures to which it gave rise. Mr Salt explains that
the victim’s friend contacted Mr Salt to get
some methamphetamine.
Once he met with her, she told him where the victim was, and said she would take
him to the victim in exchange
for some drugs. Mr Salt says he was not planning
on kidnapping the victim until all of this unfolded.
- [41] Mr
Salt’s introduction to methamphetamine was at an early age of 15 or
16 years through the influence of his older brothers.
Apart from
addiction, other factors which contributed to the offending were exposure to
physical abuse, poverty, neglect and cultural
disconnect. In this case, we
consider that an appropriate discount for Mr Salt’s family circumstances,
including his addiction
to methamphetamine, would be 10 per
cent.
Remorse
- [42] The
sentencing Judge accepted Mr Salt was remorseful. He
stated:[12]
From what
the probation officer has said I can accept that you have some genuine remorse
for what you have done, beyond what is reflected
in the guilty pleas, and an
understanding of the effect on the victim.
- [43] Where there
is tangible evidence of genuine remorse, a discount of five to eight per cent
may be appropriate.[13] Should
there be a further discount for remorse, in addition to youth and family
circumstances, in this case?
- [44] Mr Salt
felt very sorry for the victim and was willing to participate in restorative
justice with him if he wished to do so.
He acknowledged his need to take part
in rehabilitation programmes and had voluntarily participated prior to sentence
in a Department
of Corrections preliminary alcohol and other drug support
programmes. The Judge accepted that Mr Salt was remorseful beyond the
remorse
inherent in his guilty pleas. In those circumstances, a separate discount of
five per cent for remorse was appropriate.
Overall discount for
mitigating factors
- [45] The Judge
acknowledged that the Sentencing Act required him to have regard to mitigating
factors, but said the reduction could
not be a large one because of the gravity
of the offending. However, the gravity of the offending should already be
reflected in
the starting point adopted. The Judge’s approach of denying
otherwise appropriate discounts for mitigating factors because
of the
seriousness of the offending risks an element of double counting.
- [46] This Court
has acknowledged the possibility that the seriousness of the offending might
temper any discount given for personal
factors.[14]
- [47] However,
the Court has applied relatively substantial discounts for personal factors,
even in cases of murder and other serious
offending.[15] In Orchard v
R, this Court held (in the context of a discount for mental
health) that discounts for mitigating factors should only be reduced or refused
if full mitigation would not properly give effect to the principles of
sentencing set out in the Sentencing
Act.[16]
- [48] Crown
counsel points to the case of Tahuri v
R[17] as illustrative of the
principle, adopted by the Judge in this case, that discounts for mitigation
cannot be assessed in a vacuum.
As such it provides a useful comparison,
according to the Crown.
- [49] Mr Tahuri
and his neighbour were associated with rival gangs. When an argument ensued
between them, Mr Tahuri retrieved a shotgun
and fired two shots at the
neighbour’s house injuring one of the occupants. The injury was to the
shoulder and consistent
with being close-range. The victim required surgeries
and had on-going pain. A starting point of 11 years’ imprisonment was
adopted in that case followed by a discount of 18 months for youth (21 years
old) and rehabilitation prospects. Mr Tahuri had relatively
minor previous
convictions that did not justify any increase.
- [50] The Crown
notes that the Court in Tahuri observed those factors “might in
some circumstances justify a somewhat larger
discount”.[18] However, the
Court held that “any credit for youth and previous good character cannot
be assessed in a vacuum”.[19]
It pointed to the gravity of Mr Tahuri’s offending and “overtones of
gang tensions” as relevant to the assessment
of the appropriate
discount.[20] Together with an
absence of remorse in that case, these factors justified the quantum of discount
and this Court found no error.
- [51] We agree
with Crown counsel that direct comparison of the quantum of discount provides
only limited assistance, but in Tahuri the sentencing Judge gave twice
the discount given in this case (18 months versus nine months) just for
Mr Tahuri’s youth and
the importance of promoting rehabilitation in
young offenders. The pre-sentence report indicated that Mr Tahuri denied he was
guilty
of the offence and expressed no remorse for the injuries suffered by the
victim. He took no responsibility for the offending and
was assessed as being
of high risk of re-offending.
- [52] The Court
in Tahuri nonetheless found that whilst the extent of the discount in
that case of 18 months for youth with any addition for previous good character
may be at the low end of an appropriate range, it was by no means out of the
range.[21]
- [53] In this
case, we have concluded that discounts totalling 25 per cent were appropriate to
reflect mitigating circumstances personal
to Mr Salt. That would be added to
the 20 per cent discount for a guilty plea. We do not consider that this is a
case in which
otherwise appropriate discounts should not be taken into account
in sentencing. Applying a 45 per cent discount to the starting
point of 11
years’ imprisonment would result in an end sentence of six years’
imprisonment.
- [54] Standing
back, and considering all the circumstances of the offending and the offender,
we consider that this is an appropriate
sentence. The offending was serious.
It had a significant impact on the victim: it caused terror, injury and pain at
the time and
has had significant long term health consequences. A substantial
term of imprisonment is required. But that term of imprisonment
needs to
reflect the mitigating factors that reduce Mr Salt’s culpability, and
suggest a real prospect of rehabilitation.
A sentence of six years’
imprisonment strikes that balance.
An extension of time should be
granted and the appeal allowed
- [55] It follows
that the appeal has real merit. An appropriate approach to mitigating factors
would result in a material reduction
in Mr Salt’s sentence from eight
years and two months’ imprisonment to six years’ imprisonment. In
those circumstances
it is in the interests of justice to grant an extension of
time to bring the appeal, and to allow the appeal.
Result
- [56] An
extension of time to appeal is granted.
- [57] The
application to adduce fresh evidence is declined.
- [58] The appeal
is allowed.
- [59] The
concurrent sentences of eight years and two months’ imprisonment on each
of the two charges are quashed and replaced
with concurrent sentences of
six years’ imprisonment on each
charge.
Solicitors:
Crown Law Office,
Wellington for Respondent
[1] R v Salt [2017] NZHC
1467.
[2] R v Salt, above n 1, at
[17].
[3] At [17].
[4] Tutakangahau v R [2014]
NZCA 279, [2014] 3 NZLR 482 at [26].
[5] At [36].
[6] Simcic v R [2022] NZCA
592 at [43]; and Laipato v R [2021] NZCA 562 at [13], citing Carroll
v R [2019] NZCA 172 at [8] and Clarke v R [2021] NZCA 96 at [14].
[7] Laipato v R, above n 6, at [16].
[8] Churchward v R [2011]
NZCA 531, (2011) 25 CRNZ 446 at [77]–[79].
[9] Diaz v R [2021] NZCA
426.
[10] Zhang v R [2019]
NZCA 507, [2019] 3 NZLR 648.
[11] At [148]–[149].
[12] R v Salt, above n 1,
at [16].
[13] McArthur v R [2013]
NZCA 600 at [13]–[14]; and Rowles v R [2016] NZCA 208 at [18].
[14] Carr v R [2020] NZCA
357 at [65]; Ross v R [2014] NZCA 272 at [24]; and R v Gordon
[2009] NZCA 145 at [49].
[15] Waikato-Tuhega v R
[2021] NZCA 503 at [47]; citing R v Rakuraku [2014] NZHC 3270; R v
Nepia [2019] NZHC 1932; R v Beattie [2019] NZHC 3108; R v
MacDonald [2021] NZHC 224; Waho v R [2020] NZCA 526 and
Taiapa v R [2020] NZHC 3355.
[16] Orchard v R [2019]
NZCA 529, [2020] 2 NZLR 37 at [50]–[51].
[17] Tahuri v R [2013]
NZCA 254.
[18] At [42].
[19] At [43].
[20] At [43].
[21] At [44].
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