Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Using a house to kill

Legal historians and those with an interest in confiscation law are familiar with the deodand - The principle of forfeiting the instrument of a murder to the State. The modern successor to the deodand in Victoria is the definition of 'tainted property' in section 3(1) of the Confiscation Act 1997, which includes property that:
(a)  was used, or was intended by the accused to be used in, or in connection with, the commission of the offence
In one of the flurry of decisions from the Court of Appeal last week, the court considered when house in which a murder was committed would be caught under this definition.

Monday, December 19, 2011

The continued unhappy state of the law of consent

The High Court has listed the appeal hearing in R v Getachew for the end of February and the outline of submissions for both the DPP and the accused are now available on the High Court website. It looks like the DPP is using the occasion to take a shot at the earlier authority of Worsnop, as it argues that the Victorian Court of Appeal has misstated the law with its focus on belief in consent, rather than the statutory language of knew that the complainant was not or might not be consenting.

Despite that development, the Court of Appeal is still handing down decisions dependent on the line of authority developed in Worsnop. The latest is GBD v R [2011] VSCA 437, a decision which highlights the absurdity of the current state of the law in this area. In a strongly worded judgment, Harper JA said of the principal offender that he
abandoned any concept of decency he might otherwise have had. The appellant was some distance behind; but his conduct was nevertheless such that nobody with any sense of responsibility to others would have engaged in it. The conduct of both men was abhorrent to all notions of civilised behaviour.
The principal offender plied two young girls of 13 and 14 with significant quantities of speed before engaging in extensive sexual conduct with them. GBD was a friend of the principal offender and was invited to join in this behaviour. The issues at trial concerned his belief in the age of the girls and his belief in consent. Ashley JA granted leave for the appellant to make a Worsnop argument, and the Crown, consistent with the state of the law as it stands under Worsnop initially conceded the point. At the leave hearing, Tom Gyorffy SC, fresh from writing the DPP's submissions to the High Court for Getachew, sought to withdraw that concession and argue that Worsnop was wrongly decided. Sadly, this point received only the following treatment:

After hearing argument, the Court refused the application.
It is disappointing that such a significant issue is dismissed in such a summary fashion.

On the substantive issue of whether to allow the appeal, Harper JA stated:
Section 36 of the Crimes Act 1958 provides that, for the purposes of those subdivisions of the Act which deal with rape and indecent assault, incest, sexual offences against children and sexual offences against persons with a cognitive impairment, consent means free agreement. Furthermore, the section goes on to provide that circumstances in which a person does not freely agree to an act include those in which the person is so affected by drugs as to be incapable of freely agreeing. Emphasis is given to the importance of these provisions by s 37A, which sets out the objects of the relevant subdivisions. These are (a) to uphold the fundamental right of every person to make decisions about his or her sexual behaviour, and to chose not to engage in sexual activity; and (b) to protect children, and those with cognitive impairments, from sexual exploitation.
26 Those objectives were trashed on 13 December 2008. That is strong language, but it is used deliberately. To groom two girls, a mere 14 and 13 years of age respectively, with alcohol and drugs, to then take them to a private home and, in the laundry of that house, inject them with more drugs, and then to indulge with them in a wide variety of sexual acts over an extended period, is exploitation of the worst kind. It is no excuse that they were thought to be a little older. They were strangers. The law should strongly discourage any adult in those circumstances from taking risks.
27 Y has been punished for his part in this affair. The gravity of the appellant’s misconduct was considerably less. On the other hand, the appellant knew something of the episode in the laundry, and either knew of the general nature of the activities being indulged in by Y, or deliberately shut his eyes to them. There being no evidence to the contrary, it was open to her Honour to find for sentencing purposes – indeed, the conclusion was inevitable – that he knew that the drugs were administered to the complainants for the purpose of inducing their consent to whatever acts, however gross, he and (more especially) his co-offender, were minded to subject them.
28 It was in these circumstances that he, on his own admission, digitally penetrated the vagina of one of the two victims. The jury might well have concluded that she did not give her free consent. Anyone with a normal capacity for insight would have known for a certainty that this was so. Even assuming that the appellant was not endowed with the usual capacities of humankind, and believed that she was consenting, he must have known that she might not be giving her free consent to that act; that was the point of what must have been significant expenditure on the acquisition of speed, and of her subsequently being injected, by the appellant’s friend and to the appellant’s knowledge, with methylamphetamine. Nevertheless, on the authority of Worsnop, the law cannot, so long as the Crown fails to prove the absence of his belief in her consent, convict him. Accordingly, the appeal must on this ground be allowed and the conviction on count 19 must be quashed. But, in my opinion, the gap in the law which was identified in Worsnop cries out for the remedial intervention of the legislature.
As far as I am concerned, paragraph 28 perfectly demonstrates how appellate authority in this area has gone wrong. Despite section 36section 38, introduces an unjustified limitation on the efficacy of the definition of consent in section 36 and effectively introduces a fifth element of disproof of belief in consent which is not found anywhere in the language of the offence, and is barely discernible in the language of section 37AA. As Harper JA says, this is a matter that cries out for intervention. Time will tell whether the respite from this unsatisfactory state of the law comes from the High Court or the Victorian Parliament.

Wednesday, November 16, 2011

Court formalises the meaning of 'no point of principle'

The Court of Appeal has now formalised the status of the 'no point of principle' (NPP) catchword. Practice Note 8 of 2011 states:
The criminal appeal reforms currently being implemented by the Court of Appeal are designed to promote the efficient disposition of criminal appeals and to maximise the effective utilisation of judicial resources. To further these objectives, the Court wishes to discourage unnecessary citation of prior decisions of the Court.
The following practice will be adopted with effect immediately. When a bench of the Court considers that its reasons for judgment in a criminal appeal contain no new point of principle, the catchwords on the cover sheet will include the words ‘No point of principle’.
A judgment thus classified may not be cited in a subsequent appeal without the leave of the bench hearing that appeal.
This practice note formalises the point the Court of Appeal has been making for most of this year, that there are some decisions which are just not that important and so practitioners shouldn't need to trawl through countless cases for rare statements of principle. It will be important to see how the profession reacts to this practice note. Will it be thought that a diligent and professional solicitor or barrister can simply ignore any case marked NPP and still fulfilling their obligation to stay up to date in the law? Will counsel appearing on a sentencing plea refer to cases marked NPP when attempting to ascertain current sentencing practices and thread the needle between the court's denunciation of raw sentencing statistics and the court's denunciation of direct case comparisons? And what process will the Court of Appeal apply when deciding whether a case raises no point of principle? As I've written previously, there have been at least two occasions where a case marked NPP or "without precedent" appears to develop the established law.

Despite these concerns, the practice note does constitute an important step in stemming the tide that threatens to overwhelm both the court and the profession, and it is to be hoped that it will be effective in that goal.

Thursday, October 27, 2011

Don't mention the elephant

Back in 1991, the High Court stated that:
in examining the evidence of a witness in a criminal trial – including the evidence of the accused – the jury is entitled to consider whether some particular interest or purpose of the witness will be served or promoted in giving evidence in the proceedings. But to direct a jury that they should evaluate evidence on the basis of the interest of witnesses in the outcome of the case is to strike at the notion of a fair trial for an accused person.
These two sentences seem to set down a proposition that while the jury are entitled to consider whether some interest of the accused would be served by giving the evidence he has (such as, you know, securing an acquittal), it is an error of law for the judge to tell the jury that. Yesterday, the High Court reiterated that prohibition.

Friday, October 21, 2011

The safety of taxis and the media beat-up

The Director of Public Transport has recently had his latest loss in the long-running battle to stop the anonymised XFJ from obtaining a taxi licence. The Court of Appeal handed down its decision last week and, like the two previous decisions, found that the Director could not use concerns over public confidence as a basis for refusing a taxi licence to a person who, 18 years ago, was found not guilty of murder due to insanity. The Court of Appeal has included a good summary of the history of the matter and its decision at the start of its judgment, which substantially reduces what I need to say about the case. My interest, instead, is on the media reaction to the decision.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

Lessons from non-precedential appeals

I've blogged previously about the Court of Appeal's innovative use of catchwords to declare that a case raises no point of principle (see here and here). Recently, Ashley and Weinberg JJA released another batch of decisions with the "no point of principle" catchword. One of them, however, arguably does raise a (minor) point of principle and so raises the question of how later courts should treat it. In Harper v R [2011] VSCA 314, the offender was a Thai national who attempted to smuggle over 100g of heroin into Australia, concealed in body cavities. During the sentencing remarks, the judge stated:
By resorting to internal concealment of the drugs, you made detection of the offence even more difficult. This is an aggravating feature of your crime.
Although there was no ground of specific error, Ashley JA at [22] took the time to comment that:
Counsel for the Crown did not submit today that this was a correct statement of principle. In my opinion, it was not. It is at the heart of the particular offence that detection of the drugs will be made as difficult as possible. So to say does not mean that what I regard as a manifestly excessive sentence is to be explained by the judge’s particular observation. Rather, I take the opportunity to indicate my opinion that the observation was unsound.
Bearing in mind what the Court said in Ciantar & Rose, should judges give any weight to this statement, or should they treat it as wholly irrelevant? Is there a difference between a case that raises "no point of principle" and one that is "without precedent value"? Indeed, if there is a later case where a judge again treats the manner of concealment as an aggravating factor for importation, would the court reprimand counsel for referring to Harper in an argument that this constituted specific error? These are a couple of questions that are thrown up when, despite declaring that a case raises no point of principle, the court makes statements on important general issues, such as whether or not something is an aggravating factor.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Baseline sentencing and the High Court's implacable opposition to two-stage sentencing

The Sentencing Advisory Council currently has a reference from the Attorney-General regarding baseline sentences. The parameters of the government's idea of baseline sentences are spelt out in 5 bullet points:

  • Baseline sentences will apply for serious offences as defined in the Sentencing Act 1991 and for additional offences such as arson, recklessly causing serious injury, aggravated burglary and major drug trafficking.

  • Baseline sentences will provide the starting point for the court in determining the minimum sentence (i.e., non-parole period) to be imposed in cases where a baseline sentence applies, and will indicate the sentence that the parliament expects will be the median or mid-point of minimum sentences imposed for cases involving that offence.

  • In determining the non-parole period to be served by the offender, the court will be required to start from the baseline minimum sentence before applying aggravating or mitigating factors that would alter the non-parole period up or down from the baseline.

  • Where a baseline sentence applies, the appropriateness of a non-parole period is to be assessed on appeal primarily by reference to the applicable baseline sentence, rather than by reference to current sentencing practice.

  • The baseline sentencing regime is to operate so that, over time, the Court of Appeal will be able to determine whether or not the median levels of minimum sentences being handed down are in fact aligned with the baseline sentences specified by parliament and, if not, to require changes accordingly in sentencing practices.

  • Following yesterday's High Court decision in Muldrock v R [2011] HCA 39, one model the council presumably won't be looking to emulate is the New South Wales approach to standard non-parole periods.

    Wednesday, October 5, 2011

    Special leave report: R v Getachew

    As Jeremy Gans mentioned in the comments to the previous post, the High Court has granted special leave to appeal Getachew v R. The transcript is available here. It is fascinating reading, starting with this exchange immediately after counsel make their appearances:
    HEYDON J: Mr Boyce, I think it might be convenient if we hear from you first.
    MR BOYCE: Thank you. Your Honours, it is submitted in this case that special leave should be refused because the applicant’s grounds have no point of principle worthy of a grant of special leave.
    HEYDON J: I agree with that, but it does seem an extraordinary judgment by the Court of Appeal.
    Chris Boyce did his best to defend the decision, stating that it was a natural extension of the principle from R v Worsnop and consistent with authority in Victoria, but Heydon and Bell JJ weren't convinced. Bell J also made some remarks that could cast doubt on the reasoning that underlie Worsnop, as she questioned whether an odd-on belief that a person is awake and hence consenting could rebut a mens rea of "aware that the person is not consenting or might not be consenting" (emphasis added). She did, however, qualify her remarks and indicated that they were not concerned with the correctness of Worsnop. Ultimately, the High Court granted special leave for the DPP to appeal the decision, without calling on the DPP to make any submissions.

    It looks like the Crown will be running two grounds on the appeal. The first concerned the need for s37AA and s37AAA directions at all in the circumstances, when the accused's defence is that he wasn't there, and hence consent or awareness of consent were not real issues. This invites the court to further explain Pemble and the opening words to s37AAA on when the direction is necessary. The second argument is that the judge's original direction was entirely correct. I've written about my views on the second point previously, here.

    In the circumstances, I'd think that the Court of Appeal would need to hold any further appeals that raise this issue in reserve until the High Court hands down its judgment, as otherwise there could be a long string of cases ordering retrials in circumstances where the High Court later decides that the reasoning underlying the decisions is erroneous. More difficult is to know what happens to Roberts and Neal, since they relate to the same point, but weren't the subject of the special leave application. The retrial in Neal can probably stand on its own feet, but Roberts is far more similar to Getachew and, if Getachew is overturned, that should logically take the retrial order in Roberts with it. Maybe the Crown will seek the join the matters later in some way?

    Thursday, September 29, 2011

    The new proviso - Just like the old one

    One of the reforms introduced by the Criminal Procedure Act 2009 was a change to the structure of what had previously been standard form criminal appeal grounds. The old statute required an appellant on a conviction appeal to establish one of three things:
    • That the verdict was unreasonable or unsupported by evidence;
    • That there was a wrong decision on a question of law; or
    • That on any other basis there was a miscarriage of justice.
    These three grounds were then qualified by the proviso that the appeal would not be allowed if the prosecution showed that there was no substantial miscarriage of justice. Under the new Act, the proviso was folded into the substantive appeal grounds, so that the court must allow the appeal if and only if:
    (a) the verdict of the jury is unreasonable or cannot be supported having regard to the evidence; or
    (b) as the result of an error or an irregularity in, or in relation to, the trial there has been a substantial miscarriage of justice; or
    (c) for any other reason there has been a substantial miscarriage of justice.

    Sunday, September 11, 2011

    Special leave update - September 2011

    Before wading through the 273 pages of Momcilovic, it's worth having a brief look at the latest additions to the High Court's workload. Back on the 2nd of September, the High Court granted special leave in four criminal cases - 3 from Victoria and 1 from New South Wales.


    Friday, August 19, 2011

    One wrong leads to another

    One sentencing principle that regularly makes an appearance in appellate judgments is that of parity, which states that it is appealable error where the sentences between co-offenders are so different (or not different enough) as to create a "justifiable sense of grievance". Where all co-offenders are sentenced at the one time, parity arguments seem to me to have particular potency, as it indicates that a single judge has failed to adopt a consistent approach to sentencing co-offenders, or alternatively, has failed to recognise the significant differences between the sentences that are appropriate for different co-offenders. But parity is not only relevant when all co-offenders are sentenced at once. It applies equally, though with more difficulty, when several co-offenders are sentenced by separate judges.

    Recently though, courts have grappled with the question of how to deal with a parity ground of appeal when the comparison sentence is inadequate and the offender received an appropriate disposition. Can an offender be said to have a justifiable sense of grievance for not receiving a manifestly inadequate sentence, such as the one his co-offender received? Regrettably, the answer is yes.



    Wednesday, August 10, 2011

    Heeman, Pato and Grixti - Three recent sentencing decisions

    Justices Harper and Hansen have recently released a spate of sentence appeal decisions, three of which warrant special attention.

    Grixti v R [2011] VSCA 220
    Grixti started as an appeal against sentence for a cannabis cultivation, but turned into an appeal against sentence on the basis of double punishment, as the offender was sentenced (following a plea of guilty) for both cultivating cannabis and possessing the product of that cultivation. The problem arose because the prosecution double-counted some harvested cannabis from earlier planets as both part of the cultivation (along with 39.75kg found at the time of arrest) and separately providing the basis for a charge of possession (which weighed 5.43kg - Somehow the plea was conducted on a total amount of 45.42kg, whereas the sum of those two values is 45.18 - It is not clear where the additional 240g came from). Prosecution and defence solicitors really need to be careful when negotiating pleas of guilty to avoid this kind of thing. It clogs up the appellate system and really is a basic error. While the prosecution ran an argument on the appeal that the possession related to distinct cannabis, this was hampered by the statement on the plea that "the dried cannabis the subject of count 3 ‘was harvested material from the crop’." The court held:
    That is reasonably to be taken as a concession that the cannabis the subject of count 3 was harvested from the plants the subject of count 1 during the cultivation period of 1 April to 14 July alleged in count 1. By his plea and conviction on count 1, the appellant admitted cultivating cannabis in the relevant period, including the cannabis which he harvested that became the subject of count 3. The total weight of the cannabis cultivated was 45.42 kilograms, which included the 5.43 kilograms of dried cannabis the subject of count 3. There was no suggestion that any of the cannabis recovered, whether as living plants or dried cannabis, was cultivated outside the period charged in count 1.
     Where there are distinct factual bases, the prosecution will need to be careful to clearly articulate that basis. In this case, I suspect the prosecution meant to submit the dried cannabis came from an earlier crop, which is couldn't establish beyond reasonable doubt, whereas the cultivation charge related only to the cannabis currently being grown. However, the difference in weights made this argument more difficult to follow, and the 5.67kg difference between the plant weight and the factual basis of the cultivation charge made the limits of the cultivation charge hard to identify.

    Heeman v R [2011] VSCA 221
    Heeman is a case about parity between co-offenders (or, strictly, maintaining appropriate levels of disparity between co-offenders based on differences in circumstances). The Court decided that:
    In my opinion the arguments put forward on behalf of the appellant do demonstrate that her position was such as to warrant a greater difference in the sentences which were imposed upon each, but in the particular circumstances of this case, I think that the difference can be appropriately represented by a reduction in the appellant’s non-parole period from 20 months to 19 months. I propose, therefore, to allow the appeal to the extent that the non-parole period should be reduced as I have indicated; but the total effective sentence remain at three years and three months.
    Really? Decisions like this undermine the statements about preserving a sentencing judge's discretion, the existence of a range of correct sentences, and the need to avoid tinkering. After cases like this, you have to wonder whether there should really be only one ground of appeal against sentence - That it was outside the range reasonably open to the judge, and everything else is just an explanation for why that happened.

    Pato v R [2011] VSCA 223
    Pato concerns the application of the Verdins principles. The offence involved serious, alcohol-fueled violence against the offender's de facto partner. The offender relied on a psychiatric report which disclosed longstanding depression, extensive alcohol use and poor anger management. The offender's counsel relied on the Verdins principles to moderate the sentence and the judge held that:
    Mr Pato, you had consumed large quantities of alcohol on this night and, to put it bluntly, you lost it. Mr Pato, having found that you were suffering severe depression I propose to moderate the sentence that I otherwise may have imposed, that is in accordance with Verdins.
    This was the extent of any discussion of Verdins. The Court of Appeal held that this was insufficient and that the judge needed to do more to explain how the Verdins principles were relevant:
    The difficulty is that the judge needed to go further and explain how the appellant’s impaired mental functioning was relevant to the particular factors in Verdins. Unfortunately he merely quoted passages from the report and stated that, having found the appellant was suffering severe depression, he proposed to ‘modify’ the sentence that he otherwise may have imposed, in accordance with Verdins. There was thus no indication as to which of the six factors in Verdins were relevant and the relative weight they received.
    In a system of intuitive synthesis, explaining with any precision how the six different factors identified in Verdins actually impacts on the sentence is always going to be a difficult process, though it is likely that the court was looking for some sort of quantification, even if that quantification was vague by saying that the judge was moderating the sentence "somewhat", "slightly" or "significantly".

    Importantly, the Court of Appeal explicitly noted the new statutory provisions on sentence appeals; s281 of the Criminal Procedure Act 2009, which requires identification of error and satisfaction that a different sentence should be imposed. While this provision was, according to the explanatory material, meant to codify existing practice, it is interesting to see the court explicitly note the new provisions and the need to consider the two questions separately.

    Thursday, July 28, 2011

    Conservation of criticism

    Last year, Carolyn Burnside attracted heavy criticism for inadequate pre-trial disclosure in a case where a complainant had previously made untrue statements in an earlier trial regarding another accused. Yesterday, the Court of Appeal released an addendum to its earlier decision after Ms Burnside contacted the court stating that she had not disclosed the material due to a belief that others had already done so. According to the addendum, another barrister made a note in the Crown case file, indicating that the material had been disclosed, though the barrister who previously held the brief now has no recollection of the matter. Ultimately, the court reiterates that the trial prosecutor, Ms Burnside, should have realised that the material had not been disclosed. The court concluded:
    39 The Chief Crown Prosecutor advised the Court that the Crown accepted the proposition that in circumstances where, for any reason, a prosecutor returns a brief to prosecute in a trial and the brief is subsequently delivered to another member of counsel, the duty of disclosure arises for consideration and discharge again by the new prosecutor. It is the personal responsibility of that prosecutor to ensure that that duty has been discharged prior to the commencement of the trial and as and when any further occasion calling for its exercise arises. This Court endorses the Crown’s position as expressed by the Chief Crown Prosecutor.
    40 Finally, the ground of appeal upon which the Appellant was successful was, understandably, added, by amendment, at a very late stage. The Senior Crown Prosecutor who conducted the appeal for the Crown was, clearly, insufficiently instructed as to the added ground. He ought to have sought an adjournment (to which in the circumstances, the Crown would have been entitled) to obtain full instructions as to the events which gave rise to the added ground of appeal.
    41 In the circumstances it is appropriate that the criticism directed at the trial prosecutor in the Court’s judgment be tempered to take account of the matters to which reference has been made in this addendum.
    This statement, which tempers the criticism of Burnside and shifts it to counsel on the appeal, should perhaps be termed 'conservation of criticism', in the theory that new facts can only shift the balance of criticism in a given situation, and neither increase or reduce the level of criticism. Then again, perhaps there are some principles of physics that simply can't be translated to a legal context.

    Monday, June 27, 2011

    Special leave watch: R v Guariglia

    I've previously blogged about R v Guariglia [2010] VSCA 343, critical of the majority's decision to allow the appeal and its reasoning. It seems that the DPP was also unhappy with the decision, as the Crown recently sought special leave to appeal the decision (transcript here). Regretably, the High Court knocked back the application, holding that it was not a suitable vehicle and there were insufficient prospects of success.

    On reading the transcript, there don't appear to be many indications of what the High Court thinks about the general issues in the case. The questions that were asked involved:
    • an indication of scepticism about any practice of the judge referring to the strength of Crown case;
    • a recognition that the issue relates to the free choice of plea;
    • an inquiry whether this was a test case;
    • an inquiry about the current status of the accused and whether he was serving time on other matters.
    I must say that the DPP's argument that this was all about case management in criminal trials is a bit of a reach. I suspect that it was necessary to formulate the case that way in order to meet the general importance requirement for special leave. It did, however, invite the view that the trial judge's purpose was to pressure the accused to plead guilty, so as to get rid of the proceeding. And that view of the trial judge's actions plays into the position taken by the majority from the Court of Appeal that judicial statements about discounts on a guilty plea and the strength of the Crown case deprive a person of a free choice of plea.

    Encouraging guilty pleas certainly is a way to economically resolve the business of the court and, to that extent, could be part of good case management. But where do you draw the line between proper case management and improper pressure to forfeit the right to put the prosecution to its proof? The difficulties I see with Guariglia are not the sort of "big picture" issues that would attract special leave. Instead, they relate to the court's presumption that the plea was involuntary despite the evidence that the accused was represented by competent counsel and was well able to protect his interests (as shown in his insistence that the Crown drop forfeiture proceedings against his car in exchange for the plea of guilty).

    The long term effect of Guariglia are hard to predict. If the County Court adopts a cautious approach to the issues raised by the case, then judicial statements about the guilty plea discount will disappear from case management hearings, along with any preliminary thoughts about the strength of the Crown case. An intermediate step would be to continue to refer to guilty plea discounts, but omit any statements about the Crown case. In each case, the combined effect of the Court of Appeal's decision and the refusal of special leave will likely leave County Court judges more cautious about making any statements that might sway the accused's decisions regarding the plea.

    Tuesday, June 14, 2011

    When the possibility of consent is (or is not) enough

    Since 1991, s36 of the Crimes Act has contained an expanded statutory definition of the circumstances in which a person is deemed not to consent to sexual intercourse. Many of these are common sense propositions and indeed, I've wondered from time to time why it is that Parliament needs to tell us, for example, that a person who submits to intercourse under duress, is taken not to consent. But it is there and courts need to make sense of it.

    In
    Getachew v R [2011] VSCA 164, the court curtailed the operation of s36, by effectively confining its operation to the factual question of whether a person is consenting, and not the allied question of whether the accused was aware the complainant was not or might not be consenting.



    Wednesday, May 11, 2011

    Tendency, relevance and the legacy of the common law

    The Supreme Court has recently released a number of rulings in an attempted murder trial from last year - DPP v Hills, NC, Cooper and RAC. Ruling No 6 concerns the operation of the UEA and warrants close consideration. The case alleged by the prosecution was that a group of four people went to the vicitm's house, abducted her, drove her to the Maribyrnong River and attempted to drown her. They desisted when they believed that another car was approaching. The Crown case relied in part on the evidence of one co-offender, Meulenbrock, who agreed to give evidence against the other co-offenders.

    Monday, May 2, 2011

    R v Al-Assadi: Experience of crime and apprehended bias

    In the week before Easter, the Court of Appeal handed down the decision of R v Al-Assadi [2011] VSCA 111. While there were multiple grounds of appeal, the only one that succeeded was an apprehended bias argument. This case is, to my knowledge, the first time an apprehended bias argument has succeeded on the basis that the judge knew someone who had experienced a crime similar to that alleged by the complainant. It will, I expect, present substantial problems for the judge in question (who cannot be named because it would reveal the identity of a victim of a sexual offence), given the bulk of work in the County Court.

    Tuesday, April 12, 2011

    The privileged position of journalists

    At the end of March, the Federal Parliament finally passed amendments to the Commonwealth Evidence Act to create what have often been called journalist shield laws. This may, however, be a misleading description if the privilege, as it arguably exists to protect sources and promote the flow of information rather than to protect journalists.

    As readers would be well aware, the Commonwealth amendments will only apply in proceedings under the Commonwealth evidence laws. So far, I haven't heard whether New South Wales or Tasmania plan to follow suit. However, last Friday, The Australian ran a story that Victoria will not adopt the same provisions, and will instead adopt slightly different shield laws.


    Friday, April 8, 2011

    The not-so-unfettered discretion

    Some days, I just can't help but feel sorry for Parliamentary drafters. Take a reasonably simple provision like s669A of the Criminal Code (Queensland):
    (1) The Attorney-General may appeal to the Court against any sentence pronounced by--
    (a) the court of trial; or
    (b) a court of summary jurisdiction in a case where an indictable offence is dealt with summarily by that court;
    and the Court may in its unfettered discretion vary the sentence and impose such sentence as to the Court seems proper.
    When Parliamentary Counsel wrote that provision, what sort of fetters do you think he or she intended would apply to the Court's ability to vary the sentence and impose such sentence as seemed proper?

    In Lacey v AG [2011] HCA 10, a 6-1 majority of the High Court (Heydon J dissenting) settled on the word "appeal" in the opening words to hold that, like other appeals, the appellate court could not interfere unless it first determined error in the original sentence.


    Wednesday, April 6, 2011

    The intention to be successful

    Drug offences throw up all kinds of problems for the police and the courts. Traffickers are often highly organised and highly motivated. Trafficking is also an activity that, unlike many other crimes, is designed to take place on multiple occasions over a period of time. It can be, essentially, like a business. It is for that reason that courts have recognised that carrying on a business of trafficking is, itself, a form of trafficking. This is known as Girretti trafficking and its existence is relevantly uncontentious.

    However, Victorian courts have recently been struggling with various issues around Giretti trafficking. In particular, how does Giretti trafficking operate in the context of aggravated offences such as trafficking a commercial quantity of a drug of dependence, or trafficking a large commercial quantity of a drug of dependence?

    Thursday, March 31, 2011

    "Irrationally generous"

    Yesterday the High Court handed down its decision in Stubley v Western Australia [2011] HCA 7, which concerns the admissibility of tendency evidence (or, as WA calls it, propensity evidence) or relationship evidence in a sexual offence proceeding. The case, in broad terms, is fairly straightforward. Several years after ceasing treatment, 2 women alleged that their psychiatrist, Stubley, had sexual intercourse with them during therapy sessions. They claimed that they either actively communicated their lack of consent, or that their acquiescence was not consent, but was improperly induced by threats and other misconduct. The prosecution sought to lead evidence from 3 other women who also alleged that Stubley had sexual intercourse with them in the context of a professional-client relationship. The defence case did not dispute the allegations of sexual intercourse, but relied on consent or belief in consent. The defence denied that consent was obtained by threats.

    Tuesday, March 22, 2011

    More unenthusiasm for interlocutory appeals

    Finn v R [2011] VSCA 68 continues the general trend of the Court of Appeal discouraging the routine use of interlocutory appeals. This time, the appellant sought to challenge a decision admitting evidence of statements by a deceased under s65(2)(b) of the Evidence Act 2008.

    Thursday, March 10, 2011

    Lies and videotapes

    For several years, consciousness of guilt has posed serious problems for Victorian trial judges. While the theory behind consciousness of guilt is arguably just common sense (a person who lies about important matters or engages in other incriminating conduct, like attempting to flee the State after an alleged offence may be more likely to be guilty of that offence) the reasons for the problems numerous and arguably a predictable result of the current state of the law:
    • The directions required are long and complex, requiring precise identification of each separate piece of evidence and requires the judge to suggest other explanations for the lie or other evidence.
    • The Court of Appeal has been incredibly vigilant for the slightest slip
    • Prosecutors, concerned about the directions leaving the jury confused or considering the issue too hard and just setting the evidence to one side, may eschew reliance on consciousness of guilt reasoning
    • Defendants, concerned that extensive directions on the topic would give it unwarranted prominence, encourage prosecutors and judges to eschew reliance on full consciousness of guilt directions
    Johnstone v R [2011] VSCA 60 is then merely the latest in the long line of cases where consciousness of guilt evidence has brought a trial undone.

    Wednesday, March 2, 2011

    New Criminal Appeal rules

    The Court of Appeal has released a new practice statement on criminal appeals, following amendments to Chapter VI of the Supreme Court Rules. These amendments follow what seemed to be a short consultation process in the last weeks of December last year.

    Wednesday, February 23, 2011

    Commonwealth specified discounts

    The obligation to quantify the discount for an early guilty plea in Sentencing Act 1991 s6AAA has clearly troubled Victorian judges. From the early comments about trying to unscramble an omelette to complaints about it being an artificial exercise, it is clear that judges are uncomfortable with the deviation from the intuitive synthesis required by the legislation. However, its worth remembering that s6AAA isn't unique. Section 21E of the Commonwealth Crimes Act (not to be confused with the Commonwealth Criminal Code), requires judges to quantify the discount for promised future cooperation. This quantification then becomes relevant as a kind of 'ceiling' on an appellate court if the offender fails to provide the promised cooperation.

    Wednesday, February 9, 2011

    Setting the law back to the 1800s

    First off, I want to congratulate the Human Rights Law Resource Centre for its excellent coverage of the Momcilovic appeal over twitter. In the coming days, I'll sit down with the transcript and give my thoughts on which way the wind was blowing at the hearing. In the meantime, I recommend you all get on Twitter, do a search for #momcilovic, and read the HRLRC's summaries. It's a credit to them that they managed to compress the gist of several party's arguments into the Twitter character limit.

    I now want to turn to a brief article I saw in the MX on the way home, which is reproduced in most of the Herald Sun's companion papers. The article warns that "UNDERAGE girls in NSW could be charged with being an accessory to their own rape due to a legal loophole" (link here)

    The article goes on to state:

    Tuesday, February 8, 2011

    Previews of Momcilovic

    Today will see the commencement of the High Court hearing in Momcilovic v The Queen. The case, as most readers of this blog (all two or three of us...) are aware, concerns the interaction between the Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities and the reverse onus provisions in the Drugs, Poisons and Controlled Substances Act. One tip I've heard suggests that all States and Territories will make submissions in response to the s78B constitutional notices and the case will run all week, an incredibly long time for a High Court hearing.

    Unfortunately, I won't be able to attend the hearing, so like the rest of us, will have to make do with anything the Castan Centre and others provide on Twitter and media reports on the hearing. However, the media discussion of the case have already started in the Herald Sun.

    Monday, February 7, 2011

    Harsh and outdated language

    Last Friday, the Herald Sun and associated News Limited outlets run a story with this opening:
    Appeal judge Justice Geoff Nettle said the sentence handed down to Brett Janson, 40, was so inadequate it would "shock the public consciousness".
    By a 2-1 majority the court held that the sentence was "manifestly inadequate" and they re-sentenced him to a total of four years with a two-year minimum.
    Over the weekend, Alan Howe, sentencing expert in chief at the Herald Sun (or so it seems), wrote an opinion piece with this opening line:
    Perhaps she is a delicate petal, County Court judge Felicity Hampel. But it seems she might be among our worst judges.
    The case itself, DPP v Janson [2011] VSCA 19, only became available on Austlii today.

    According priority to different trials

    While the content of the right to a fair trial is elastic and nebulous at the margins, it is surprising that it includes an obligation to protect an accused from the possibility that he may make statements in one trial that undermine a defence in another. And yet, that seems to be what the Victorian Court of Appeal has just decided.

    Friday, January 21, 2011

    Admissibility of a record of interview

    Imagine the following scenario. Mr Smith is charged with aggravated burglary. He is interviewed by police and denies involvement in the offence. In the course of the interview, he makes some exculpatory statements that suggest that other police witnesses may have a motive to lie. Is this interview admissible in the trial? Even if it is admissible, is the prosecution obliged to tender it?

    Friday, January 7, 2011

    Dangerous delays

    Applicants for special leave to appeal to the High Court are well familiar with three standard bases on which special leave is refused:
    1. The case does not raise any issue of sufficient importance
    2. The case does not have sufficient prospects of success
    3. The case is not a suitable vehicle for raising the issue in question
    So far, one striking feature of the French High Court has been its increasingly aggressive position on the issue of court delays. As a result, we may start to see the emergence of a fourth basis:
    • The delays in the case have been too great to justify further extending proceedings