HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
The applicant, Mirwais Danishyar, was found guilty by a jury of the offences of murder, on the basis he was an accessory before the fact, and accessory after the fact to murder. For the offence of murder, the applicant was sentenced by Fagan J to 15 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 11 years. For the accessory after the fact offence, he was sentenced to imprisonment for a fixed term of 2 years, to be served wholly concurrently with the murder sentence.
The murder itself was a cold blooded execution-type shooting. The Crown case was that Abuzar Sultani was party to a joint criminal enterprise with Siar Munshizada and Joshua Donald Baines to murder the deceased and Mr Sultani did, in fact, murder the deceased by firing multiple shots with an intent to kill or cause grievous bodily harm, and which thereby caused or significantly contributed to death.
On the Crown case the applicant's role was to drive with the principal offenders to a location where a second car, intended to be used in the commission of the offence, was located. The principal offenders drove that second car to a location where they waited for the victim and then carried out the murder. While this was happening the applicant drove the first car around nearby suburbs and maintained contact with the principal offenders. Following the murder of the deceased by the principals, the applicant was directed to drive to a street running alongside a park where the car used in the murder was burned. The applicant picked up the three principal offenders and drove them to a different location, following which clothing that had been worn during the shooting was removed and disposed of.
The applicant appealed his conviction for murder and his sentence. The Crown also appealed against the sentence imposed.
As to the conviction appeal
In the conviction appeal, the applicant advanced two grounds, first, that the trial judge's directions with respect to the state of mind to be proved gave rise to an error of law and occasioned a substantial miscarriage of justice, and, second, that the way the Crown case was presented, left open the possibility of the applicant being convicted on the basis of a mental state which was insufficient to prove his guilt of the offence. The applicant submitted the directions impermissibly allowed for conviction on the basis of an intention to do grievous bodily harm of an "unidentified kind" by an "unidentified act".
In relation to conviction appeal, the Court held, per Dhanji J (Simpson AJA and McNaughton J agreeing), granting leave but dismissing the appeal:
1. The question of whether liability of an accessory before the fact requires knowledge of the manner in which the offence will be brought about discussed: at [18]-[32]. In the circumstances of this case, it was neither necessary or appropriate to resolve the question: at [33].
Giorgianni v The Queen (1985) 156 CLR 473; [1985] HCA 29; Johnson v Youden [1950] 1 KB 544; R v Ancutta (1990) 49 A Crim R 307; Jaghbir v R [2023] NSWCCA 175; Bruce v Williams (1989) 46 A Crim R 122; R v Spiteri-Ahern (No 11) [2017] NSWSC 1820; R v Russell [1933] VLR 59; Director of Public Prosecutions (Northern Ireland) v Maxwell [1978] 3 All ER 1140, considered.
1. A single phrase in the directions to the jury may be taken out of context. For this reason, "the effect of the summing up must be determined by considering the written and oral directions taken as a whole and in the context of the conduct of the trial": at [36]-[37].
Beattie v R [2021] NSWCCA 291; Hadchiti v R (2016) 93 NSWLR 671; [2016] NSWCCA 63; Cliff v R [2023] NSWCCA 15, applied.
1. There was no alternative case based on the applicant's belief of Mr Sultani's intention to inflict grievous bodily harm of an unidentified kind through an unidentified act. Read as a whole, the Crown case, as put to the jury in closing, was that the applicant knew that the deceased was to be killed, or, to the extent that any plan may have encompassed an intention to inflict grievous bodily harm, it was part of essentially the same enterprise, namely that the deceased would be shot: at [53], [65].
2. Likewise, the written and oral directions, read as a whole, did not leave open any possibility of conviction based on some enterprise different to one involving an intention to inflict at least grievous bodily harm by shooting the deceased: at [65].
As to the applicant's appeal against sentence
The applicant sought leave to appeal against the sentence imposed upon him on the following ground: The sentencing judge failed to engage with a critical submission advanced on the applicant's behalf namely that there existed a doubt that the applicant knew that the principal or principals intended to kill the deceased as distinct from the infliction of grievous bodily harm.
In relation to the applicant's appeal against sentence, the Court held, per McNaughton J (Simpson AJA and Dhanji J agreeing), granting leave to appeal but dismissing the appeal:
1. The sentencing remarks dealt with four offenders and three murders following several separate trials and sentence hearings. It would not have been efficacious to set out painstaking reasons for every finding. It is appropriate to look at the remarks as a whole, in their full context, including the issues in the trial on which they were largely based: at [105].
2. When viewed in the context in which the issue arose at trial, and the manner in which the sentencing judge considered carefully both the direct and circumstantial evidence against the applicant, it is clear that the sentencing judge necessarily engaged with the so-called "critical submission" advanced on the applicant's behalf at sentence. The reasoning process was clear, sound, and adequate: at [109].
As to the Crown's appeal against sentence
The Crown appealed against the sentence imposed on Mr Danishyar ("the respondent" on the Crown appeal) on the basis that the sentence pronounced is manifestly inadequate (Ground 1) and the sentencing judge erred in failing to accumulate the sentence imposed in relation to Count 2 to any extent (Ground 2).
In relation to the Crown appeal against sentence, the Court held, per McNaughton J (Simpson AJA and Dhanji J agreeing), allowing Ground 1, but dismissing Ground 2, quashing the sentence and resentencing the respondent on Count 1:
1. Ground 1 of the Crown appeal is directed to the sentence imposed with respect to the murder count (Count 1), albeit not specifically pleaded that way: at [112], [136].
2. The large disparity between the sentence imposed upon the respondent's co-offender, Mr Baines, when used as a comparable sentence, advances but does not establish the Crown's complaint of manifest inadequacy: at [139]-[140].
R v FF [2023] NSWCCA 186; R v Lembke [2020] NSWCCA 293, cited.
1. The combination of the maximum penalty for the offence (life imprisonment), the critical role of the respondent in the gravely serious criminality, his knowledge of the intention to kill the deceased, the unavailability of any discount on sentence flowing from his plea of not guilty, his lack of a compelling subjective case, his lack of remorse and his poor prospects of rehabilitation, combine such that the sentence imposed upon the respondent is manifestly inadequate, especially given that the sentence imposed for Count 2 was fully concurrent: at [137]-[138], [141].
Aoun v R [2007] NSWCCA 292; R v Batak (No 5) [2022] NSWSC 1217, cited.
1. Having found the sentence for Count 1 inadequate, the consideration of Ground 2, which invites a determination of the appropriateness of concurrency of the sentence for Count 2 with the sentence now found to be inadequate, becomes academic and falls away: at [145].