Ahosivi v R
[2024] NSWCCA 56
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Criminal Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2024-03-11
Before
Ward P, Rothman J, Wright J, O'Rourke J, Wright JJ
Catchwords
- [2022] NSWCCA 136 Dansie v The Queen (2022) 274 CLR 651
- [2022] HCA 25 M v The Queen(1994) 181 CLR 487
- [1994] HCA 63 Pell v The Queen (2020) 268 CLR 123
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (18 paragraphs)
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment] Following a trial before a jury in the District Court in September 2023, the applicant was convicted of one count of sexual touching of one complainant ("X") contrary to s 61KC(a) of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW) and sentenced to a community corrections order for a period of two years commencing on 27 October 2023 (the applicant was separately acquitted of one count of sexual intercourse without consent in relation to a second complainant ("Y")). The incident occurred in December 2021 outside the Captain Cook Hotel in Botany. The applicant and the complainants had been socialising with work colleagues at several venues over the course of the day, and the particularised act of sexual touching was captured on CCTV footage tendered at trial (Exhibit D). The applicant sought leave to appeal against conviction, raising the sole ground of unreasonable verdict. Held granting leave to appeal but dismissing the appeal (Ward P, Rothman and Wright JJ): (1) At the timestamp of the Ex D footage particularised by the Crown, it is clear that the applicant lifted X's skirt and placed his hand on her buttock; and there is sufficient motion at that point to conclude that the applicant's hand briefly ran up the buttock (Ward P at [84], Rothman J at [91]-[92], Wright J at [93]). The footage also makes abundantly clear that each time the applicant lifted or flipped X's skirt she pushed or swatted his hand away; it is perfectly clear that X was not consenting to such conduct; and it was open to the jury to accept X's evidence that she told the applicant to stop touching her (Ward P at [86], Rothman J at [91]-[92], Wright J at [93]). It is inconceivable that the applicant was not aware that X was not consenting to such conduct (Ward P at [87], Rothman J at [91]-[92], Wright J at [93]). There was no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the applicant. M v The Queen (1994) 181 CLR 487; [1994] HCA 63; Dansie v The Queen (2022) 274 CLR 651; [2022] HCA 25; AJ v R (2022) 110 NSWLR 339; [2022] NSWCCA 136 considered.