Ground 3: the sentencing judge erred in partially accumulating the sentences or by accumulating them by a period of 5 months
34Mr Barrow submitted that the second offence of supply was so closely associated with the ongoing supply offence that the sentences ought to have been wholly concurrent. He contended that the concession made by the applicant's counsel at the sentence hearing ought not to have been made, in circumstances where there was a continuing course of conduct. He also submitted that the count under s 25(1) could have been charged as part of the conduct under s 25A and that, accordingly, any degree of accumulation was erroneous. He also contended, in the alternative, that if there was to be accumulation it ought to have been for a lesser period than five months.
35The Crown submitted that any sentence for the offending in the principal count (s 25A) had to take into account the offences on the Form 1, one of which was a deemed supply of 1 g. However, it contended that because the secondary count (s 25(1)) concerned the separate offence of deemed supply, it could not be included in the principal count of ongoing supply. The Crown argued that because of the separate criminality it was open to the sentencing judge to accumulate the sentences for both offences to some degree and that five months was an appropriate degree of accumulation.
36There is no general rule that determines whether sentences ought be dealt with concurrently or consecutively, this determination being a matter pre-eminently within the discretion of the sentencing judge, subject to the principle of totality which is an overriding principle by reference to which sentences are to be measured: Postiglione v The Queen [1997] HCA 26; (1997) 189 CLR 295 at 308 (McHugh J).
37The framing of charges is a matter that concerns prosecutorial discretion. The need to prove, for a count under s 25A(1) of the DMTA, the additional element that the supply was "for financial or material reward" may have provided a reason for distinguishing between the actual supplies, that were covered by the principal count, and the deemed supply of heroin (arising from the quantity) that was the subject of the secondary count under s 25(1) of the DMTA.
38Whether the deemed supply was included in the principal count (and therefore made the offending conduct on that count more serious), or charged as a separate count is, however, immaterial to the overall criminality of the offending conduct which is necessarily constant, however the charges are framed. Accordingly, this issue need not be considered further.
39It would have been open to the sentencing judge in the present case to make the sentences wholly concurrent having regard to the close relationship between the criminality of the principal and the secondary count. However, it was also open to her Honour to accumulate the sentences for the two offences, as the applicant's counsel at the sentence hearing, in my view, properly conceded.
40In Zreika v R [2012] NSWCCA 44 (Zreika), at [83] Johnson J (McClellan CJ at CL agreeing) referred to:
"the primacy of the rule that appeal grounds should relate to arguments put, and decisions made, at first instance."
41Although there are occasions where matters not raised or conceded on behalf of an applicant at the sentence hearing will nonetheless give rise to errors which can be corrected by this Court, it is generally undesirable for leave to appeal to be sought on grounds which are contrary to concessions made before the primary judge, unless there are exceptional circumstances: Zreika at [81] per Johnson J. It was not suggested, nor could it have been suggested, that there were exceptional circumstances in the present case.
42I am unable to detect any error in the exercise of her Honour's discretion. Accordingly, the third ground has not been made out.