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Street v R [2024] NZCA 643 (6 December 2024)
Last Updated: 9 December 2024
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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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CHRISTOPHER CHARLES STREET Appellant
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AND
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THE KING Respondent
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Hearing:
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7 November 2024
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Court:
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Ellis, Peters and Muir JJ
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Counsel:
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T D Clee for Appellant C P Howard and A L Chan for Respondent
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Judgment:
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6 December 2024 at 11.00 am
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
The appeals
against conviction and sentence are
dismissed.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Peters J)
- [1] Mr Street
appeals against a decision of Judge Patel declining to discharge him without
conviction on three offences, two of male
assaults female and one of assault
with intent to
injure.[1]
Absent success on that appeal, Mr Street appeals against his sentence.
- [2] An appeal
against a refusal to discharge a defendant without conviction, when a sentence
appeal is advanced in the alternative,
proceeds as an appeal against both
conviction and sentence.[2]
- [3] An appeal
against sentence must be allowed if the Court is satisfied there is an error in
the sentence imposed, such that the
sentence is manifestly
excessive.[3] The Court must
dismiss the appeal in any other case.
Background
- [4] Mr
Street committed the offending in 2021 against his then domestic partner. Mr
Street pleaded guilty to the offending on the
morning of his trial. We adopt
the Judge’s description of the
offending:[4]
[3] You and
[G] were in a relationship for about three and a half years, and you lived
together for a period ... The relationship
ended around February 2022.
[4] On 17 April 2021, at about 1.15 pm you and [G] were at home, and you
were arguing. You were standing next to a dresser. You
picked up a bottle of
conditioner and threw it at [G]. Fortunately, that missed her, and it hit the
wall behind her. You grabbed
[G] by the shoulder and pushed her up against the
bedroom. You then you kneed her between the legs, and this caused her to fall
to the ground. You then left the room. That forms the basis of the charge of
male assaults female.
[5] On 1 May 2021, at about 11 pm, you and [G] were at home. Again, you
were arguing. You were sitting at a computer, and you yelled
at [G]. She
responded by getting up in your face and saying: “how do you like being
screamed at?” You stood up, took
[G] by the throat with your right hand
and threw her into the corner of the room. This caused her to hit her head on
the wall and
she was dazed as a result. When [G] stood back up, you grabbed her
by the throat with one hand and threw her into a chair in the
middle of the
room, which caused the chair to fall over. [G] stood back up again, you grabbed
her by the throat again and threw
her into the television. You said to her:
“you’ll learn to shut up,” and walked downstairs into the
living room.
[6] [G] followed you. You again grabbed her by the throat and pushed her
into a half height concrete wall in the centre of the living
room, which caused
her to fall to the ground. [G] stood up and said: “you can kill me if you
want but we’re going to
have this conversation.” You responded by
punching [G] with a fist three times, hitting her in the forehead and the jaw,
and
you threw her into a beam. You went and locked yourself inside the
bathroom. After that you went downstairs into the bedroom.
[7] [G] went to the dining room and took photographs of her injuries. She
then went downstairs to the bedroom where you were and
confronted you while
recording the interaction on her mobile phone. She attempted to comfort you and
she encouraged you to get help.
You responded by punching her in the head.
[8] You then went upstairs to the bedroom that you and [G] shared, and she
followed you. She lay down on the bed next to you and
tried to comfort you and
convince you to get some help. You pinned [G]’s hand down with your left
hand and restricted her
breathing with your right hand. You then stood up,
curled your knees into your chest and jumped down onto [G]’s ribs. You
told [G] that you were sorry and then you left and went into the office. [G]
made a further recording of her injuries. That forms
the basis of the charge of
assault with intent to injure.
[9] On 21 September 2021 at about 11 am you and [G] were at home.
[G] was in the kitchen, and you were in the lounge. The two rooms
are
separated by a sliding door and the two of you were talking to each other
through that door.
[10] You were asked by [G] to put the rubbish in the bin not next to it.
You became angry, charged at the door between the two rooms
and punched a hole
in it with your fist. At the same time, you told [G]: “to shut the fuck
up.” You then picked up
a toy that belonged to a dog that you owned and
threw it through the gap in the door towards [G].
[11] [G] entered the room and sat on the end of the couch. You told her
that you were going to go for a walk, and she responded
by saying: “Well
try not to punch a hole in anything.” This angered you and you told [G]:
“To fuck off”
and pushed her backwards onto the couch.
[12] You walked away from [G] towards the door. She followed you and picked
up a hairbrush and hit you with it three times on the
back of the head while
telling you to stop hitting her. You then turned around, threw [G] into the
couch, and held her down by the
head. You attempted to leave again by walking
towards the door. [G] followed you and punched you once from behind on the
bottom
half of your body. You turned around and pushed her into the dog crate
and then you left the room. This incident was captured on
CCTV footage that had
been set up within the home that you were sharing. This forms the basis of the
second charge of male assaults
female.
[13] As a result of the assault on 17 April 2021, [G] suffered bruising and
swelling to her crotch area. As a result of the assault
on 1 May 2021, [G]
received a split lip from the punches, bruising to her back, a cut on her arm,
an injury to her wrist, and marks
on her neck. As a result of the assault on
21 September 2021, [G] received bruising to her bottom and tenderness to
the right side
of her neck.
- [5] Having
declined Mr Street’s application for a discharge without
conviction,[5] the Judge adopted a
starting point of two years’ imprisonment on the lead offending (being the
May 2021 offending, addressed
in the assault with intent to injure charge), and
then uplifted that sentence by two months for each charge of male assaults
female.[6] The Judge then allowed
discounts totalling 60 per cent, reducing the end sentence to 11 months’
imprisonment.[7] Ultimately, the
Judge imposed a sentence of six months’ community detention on the lead
offending, and 12 months’ supervision
on each of the male assaults female
charges.[8]
Appeal
against refusal of discharge without conviction
- [6] The Judge
adopted the accepted approach to determining an application for a discharge
without conviction: assess the gravity of
the offending having regard to all
relevant aggravating and mitigating factors; identify those consequences of
which there is a real
and appreciable risk; and determine whether those
consequences are out of all proportion to the gravity of the
offending.[9] Only if satisfied those
consequences are out of all proportion may the Court grant the
application.[10]
- [7] In this
case, the Judge assessed the offending as of moderate
gravity.[11] The Judge did not
accept the consequences of conviction were out of all proportion to the gravity
of the offending, and so dismissed
the
application.[12]
- [8] Mr Clee
submits the Judge made two principal errors in his consideration of the
application. First, Mr Clee submits the Judge
overlooked or gave insufficient
weight to particular mitigating factors and thus took too harsh a view of the
gravity of the offending.
Secondly, Mr Clee submits the Judge erred in
determining the consequences of conviction were not out of all proportion to the
gravity
of the offending.
Assessment of gravity of
offending
- [9] There is no
challenge to the aggravating factors the Judge identified, these being:
(a) Mr Street had committed three violent offences in the space of
five months, and “family violence” offences at that;
(b) the offending included Mr Street putting his hands around the victim’s
throat and attacks to her head;
(c) the victim had been vulnerable when Mr Street jumped on her ribs in the May
2021 offending; and
(d) the effects of the offending on the victim.
- [10] The
mitigating factors the Judge identified were:
(a) Mr Street’s guilty pleas;
(b) that Mr Street had attended two Living Without Violence courses;
(c) Mr Street’s prior good character, which
included both an absence of prior convictions and assistance to a charity
assisting
young people dealing with mental health issues; and
(d) that Mr Street has had to grapple with his own mental health difficulties.
- [11] The Judge
also took into account that these latter difficulties were exacerbated by the
consequences of COVID‑19 related
lockdowns and/or restrictions. Indeed,
the Judge acknowledged those restrictions may have contributed to the September
2021 offending,
which occurred during a lockdown.
Conduct of
the victim
- [12] Mr Clee
submits the Judge erred in failing to accept his submission that the conduct of
the victim contributed to the May and
September 2021
offending.[13]
- [13] The gist of
Mr Clee’s submission, to the sentencing Judge and on appeal, was that on
each of these occasions Mr Street
had sought to extricate himself when the
argument began, but the victim had pursued and/or antagonised him. Mr Clee thus
submits
that the Judge erred in not treating the conduct of the victim as a
mitigating factor.
- [14] Although
the Judge did not address the submission as to the May 2021 offending, he
considered that the victim’s actions
during the September 2021 incident
were in response to Mr Street’s actions, which included swearing at the
victim and punching
a hole in a wall (see [10] of the judgment under appeal,
quoted above at [4]). Mr Clee takes
the point that Mr Street was not charged with punching a hole in the wall. That
may be so, but it misses the point
that it was Mr Street’s initial actions
which led to the victim’s response. It is irrelevant that Mr Street was
not
charged with those preceding actions.
- [15] As to the
May 2021 offending, the circumstances of the incident do not come close to
mitigating culpability. By the time Mr
Street started to walk away, he had
already put his hand(s) around the victim’s neck three times, and thrown
her into a wall,
a chair, and a TV.
- [16] The reality
is that Mr Street was the initial aggressor in all of the incidents, and nothing
the victim did or said affects that
position. Lastly, we note that in
Taueki this Court said that culpability may be reduced if “there
was serious provocation which was an operative cause” of the
subsequent
violence.[14] That was not the
situation in this case.
COVID-19
- [17] Mr Clee
next submits the Judge erred in failing to recognise that Mr Street was
adversely affected by the consequences of COVID-19
restrictions throughout the
period of offending, and not solely at the time of the September 2021 offending
when Auckland was in
“lockdown”.
- [18] In his
affidavit of 11 May 2024, Mr Street refers to the mental health difficulties
with which he has had to contend since his
teenage years (Mr Street is now 30),
and how the COVID-19 restrictions affected him. Mr Street says that his
employer required him
to work from home, even outside periods of lockdown, and
being isolated at home gave rise to a series of issues, causing him to act
in a
way he usually would not. As a result of working from home, Mr Street says he
lost the social connections and experiences that
he relied on to be well. He
got bored and began to drink heavily — so much so that he entered a
rehabilitation facility in
October 2020.
- [19] The essence
of Mr Street’s affidavit is that the disruption to his usual daily life
and interactions had a devastating
effect on his mental wellbeing.
- [20] Mr Street
supported this evidence with an affidavit of 7 April 2024 from Ms Tina
Jones. Ms Jones is a “registered counselling
practitioner”
(presumably registered with the New Zealand Association of Counsellors) and is
also the founder of the charity
referred to at [10](c) above. Ms Jones, who has had a
longstanding connection with Mr Street, speaks highly of him, and of the
considerable assistance
Mr Street has rendered to others.
- [21] In her
affidavit, Ms Jones says that the lockdowns were devastating for some people and
that her organisation was “swamped
by what would be considered
‘normal’ homes that were suddenly volatile with serious and often
violent consequences”.
Ms Jones says that she has never known Mr
Street to be aggressive or violent, and that lockdowns put vulnerable
people, such as
Mr Street, into situations “that no competent clinician
... would consider safe or appropriate”.
- [22] On the
basis of this evidence, Mr Clee submits the Judge took too narrow a view of the
issue.
- [23] We have no
reason to doubt that the COVID restrictions had an adverse effect on Mr
Street’s mental health. We accept that
he may still have been affected in
April and May 2021. That said, Auckland was at Alert Level 1 between 12 March
and 17 August 2021.
Accordingly, even if Mr Street was still having to
work from home at the time, we expect the adverse effects of doing so could have
been ameliorated to some extent by activities undertaken outside of work hours
and indeed on weekends — when the April and
May offending occurred.
- [24] In any
event, whatever the position may be, the extent of Mr Street’s offending
means that any additional allowance which
might be made for this factor would
not achieve a significant reduction in the gravity of the offending, so as to
put Mr Street closer
to the discharge he seeks.
- [25] Lastly, Mr
Clee submits the Judge may have, wrongly, considered alcohol played a part in
the offending. It is not apparent to
us the Judge did so, and we say no more
about the point.
Consequences of conviction
- [26] The Judge
accepted that convictions would carry distress, embarrassment, and a loss of
pride. However, the Judge declined to
accept that there was a real and
appreciable risk that convictions would compromise Mr Street’s
ability to regain employment
in the insurance industry — there being no
evidence to support that submission.
- [27] Mr Clee
submits that the Judge erred in declining to accept this consequence and he
submitted to us, as he did to the Judge,
that this consequence could be inferred
from this Court’s decision in Brown v
R.[15]
- [28] In
Brown, this Court accepted that there was a real and appreciable risk
that a conviction, in that case for assault, would “severely
compromise
the appellant’s ability to obtain employment” in the information
technology sector (IT).[16] Mr Clee
submits insurance is a similarly “white collar” field and the same
consequence can thus be assumed.
- [29] We do not
accept this submission. Quite aside from whether it would ever be appropriate
to infer a consequence of this nature,
the present case is different to
Brown.
- [30] In
Brown, the appellant had embarked on study in the IT field. He did not
have employment in that industry, but rather was intending to seek
a position
when he had completed his qualification. The appellant adduced affidavit
evidence from a consultant in the IT field which
satisfied the Court that, as a
novice, the appellant would encounter considerable difficulty in gaining such a
position if he had
a conviction for assault. As Judge Patel said in the present
case, Mr Street’s position is different, in that he has ten years’
experience in the insurance industry. It is thus reasonable to assume he might
have less difficulty in persuading an employer to
engage him, even with
convictions.
- [31] To
conclude, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, the Judge did not err in
declining to accept that there was a real and
appreciable risk to Mr
Street’s future employment prospects, and we are not persuaded that the
Judge erred in dismissing Mr
Street’s application for a discharge without
conviction.
Sentence appeal
- [32] Mr Clee
submits the end sentence was manifestly excessive, as a result of the Judge
adopting too high a starting point —
two years’ imprisonment —
on the lead offending. Mr Clee submits the appropriate starting point was 12
months’
imprisonment. That starting point, with the same uplifts and
reductions, would mean an end sentence of six to seven months’
imprisonment. Mr Clee proposes a final sentence of three months’
community detention in place of the six months imposed.
- [33] In
setting the starting point, the Judge referred to R v Richardson,
Teka v Police, Kanuta v R, Nelson-Wright v Police,
Goodman v R, and Hansen v
R.[17]
- [34] None of
these cases is on all fours with the present, but ultimately the Judge settled
on Hansen as the most relevant. In Hansen, a starting point of
two years’ imprisonment was upheld on appeal for one representative charge
of assault with intent to
injure.[18] The charge covered
three separate incidents, all of which were serious. Each incident involved Mr
Hansen obstructing the victim’s
breathing in some way, and on one occasion
the victim lost consciousness.
- [35] We accept
the offending in Hansen was more serious than the present and, given
that, Mr Street might consider he was entitled to a lower starting point.
That said,
there are material differences, for instance as to the charges,
between the cases referred to in [33]
and the present case, such that those cases are not particularly helpful.
- [36] In any
event, the short point on the sentence appeal is that even if the starting point
was a relatively high one, the end sentence
imposed cannot be considered
manifestly excessive because of the generous discounts totalling
60 per cent applied by the Judge.
Result
- [37] The appeals
against conviction and sentence are dismissed.
Solicitors:
Crown Solicitor, Manukau for
Respondent
[1] R v Street [2024] NZDC
12007 [judgment under appeal].
[2] Jackson v R [2016] NZCA
627, (2016) 28 CRNZ 144 at [9].
[3] Criminal Procedure Act 2011, s
250; and Tutakangahau v R [2014] NZCA 279, [2014] 3 NZLR 482 at
[32]–[35].
[4] Judgment under appeal, above n
1.
[5] At [48].
[6] At [55]–[56].
[7] At [57]–[58].
[8] At [62]–[63].
[9] At [19], citing Z
(CA447/12) v R [2012] NZCA 599, [2013] NZAR 142.
[10] Criminal Procedure Act, s
107.
[11] Judgment under appeal,
above n 1, at [38].
[12] At [46]–[48].
[13] Sentencing Act 2002, s
9(2)(c).
[14] R v Taueki [2005] NZCA 174; [2005] 3
NZLR 372 (CA) at [32(a)].
[15] Brown v R [2012]
NZCA 197.
[16] At [27].
[17] R v Richardson
[2012] NZHC 1465; Teka v Police HC Auckland CRI-2009-404-253, 7 September
2009; Kanuta v R [2016] NZHC 436; Nelson-Wright v Police [2015]
NZHC 2302; Goodman v R [2016] NZCA 64; and Hansen v R [2020] NZHC
2129.
[18] Hansen v R, above n
17, at [32]. See also [12] of that
decision, where the High Court Judge notes that the starting point was set by
reference to both
the representative charge and another charge of assault with
intent to injure. No uplift was given for the second charge.
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