The applicant's submissions on the appeal
31On the appeal the applicant's counsel acknowledged that were his Honour to have limited his finding of special circumstances to the fact that the number and range of offences for which the applicant was to be sentenced would inevitably attract an order for partial accumulation, and that the ratio between the non-parole period and the balance of term on the individual counts required adjustment for that reason, then the preservation of the statutory ratio after accumulation would not have been indicative of error. However, as counsel sought to emphasise, the finding of special circumstances was not made solely because of the need for partial accumulation but, additionally and importantly, because of his Honour's favorable finding as to the applicant's prospects of rehabilitation. Despite the applicant's lengthy criminal record and his breach of parole three months after his release from custody, counsel submitted that the evidence supported that finding and, when considered in the context of the applicant's compromised intellectual functioning, should have been reflected in a more beneficial sentencing outcome by a modest reduction in the total non-parole period in favour of an extension of the time under close supervision on parole.
32Whether through oversight or a failure to comply with the principled approach to sentence mandated by the High Court in Pearce v R [1998] HCA 57; 194 CLR 610, counsel submitted that the ultimate sentencing order did not achieve that result and that this Court should move to re-sentence.
33The error of principle upon which counsel relied was said to be evidenced in one part of his Honour's exchange with the Crown and the applicant's solicitor in the sentencing hearing in the following extract:
Well I suppose what I could do I could lump three, the first three together and then partially accumulate on top of those for the next three. I think that's the only way in which I can sensibly deal with it. It's a bit of a fiction but I think it will comply with the spirit of Pearce, and it will also comply with what you would like as some acknowledgement of accumulation because of the different offences.
34Counsel submitted that this extract revealed that the sentencing judge had effectively settled on a non-parole period of 3 years for each of the two sets of armed robbery offences, instead of considering the sentence to be imposed for each offence (or set of offences) and only then turning to consider the ratio of the non-parole period to additional term referable to the operation to s 44 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act (again both for each offence or set of offences) and then, after the order for partial accumulation, undertaking that same exercise. This error in approach was said to have either masked the error in the sentencing result or explained it, or both.
35It is an uncontroversial statement of sentencing principle that where a sentence of imprisonment is to be imposed it ought not be inflated to accommodate a finding of special circumstances. It is also well settled that, subject to the operation of s 53A of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act, sentences for multiple offences are to be imposed consistent with the approach mandated in Pearce. In my view, there is nothing in the above extract, or in the frank exchanges with counsel that preceded and followed it, that suggested an error of either kind. To the contrary. In what was a difficult and delicate sentencing exercise his Honour referred more than once to the need to comply with Pearce - an approach which finds eloquent expression in his sentencing remarks.
36The question that remains to be considered is whether the applicant has made good the contention that his Honour intended that the finding of special circumstances should translate into a reduction in the overall non-parole period but, by inadvertence, did carry his intentions into effect. A related question is whether this Court should move to re-sentence to correct that error were it found established.
37Counsel referred to a number of cases where this Court has intervened and re-sentenced in what were said to be like circumstances: Thorpe v R [2010] NSWCCA 261; R v Argent [2004] NSWCCA 270; R v Sharrock [1999] NSWCCA 289; R v Thornbury [2000] NSWCCA 526; R v Keen [2004] NSWCCA 86; R v Street [2005] NSWCCA 139; R v LWP [2003] NSWCCA 215.
38In the last mentioned case, said to be analogous to this case, the sentencing judge structured each of a number of individual sentences so as to reflect a finding of special circumstances on the basis of the offender's rehabilitation. In each case, the non-parole period was 66 per cent of the sentence. However, when the sentences were accumulated, the statutory ratio of 75 per cent under s 44 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act was preserved. This Court was satisfied that the sentencing judge had intended to give effect to his finding of special circumstances in the total sentence imposed, and that his sentencing discretion has miscarried for that reason. Importantly, the Court was also ultimately satisfied that, in accordance with s 6(3) of the Criminal Appeal Act 1912 (NSW), a less effective sentence was warranted in law and re-sentenced the applicant to carry the sentencing judge's intention into effect.
39Counsel accepted that even were we satisfied that his Honour did intend a variation in the ratio between non-parole period and additional term in the effective sentence, we would need to be satisfied that a lesser effective sentence was warranted at law. I do not understand that on re-sentence any alteration in the total effective sentence is sought. Rather, what was proposed was that the ratio of 66 per cent be applied to the total sentence (that is, the ratio that is applied to the sentences for both two sets of armed robbery offences) which would result in a non-parole period of 5 years and 3 months with a balance of term of 2 years and 9 months.
40The applicant's counsel also placed particular reliance upon the observations of Simpson J in Thorpe where her Honour said at [4]:
...Where the basis for a finding of special circumstances is to foster rehabilitation, it is the overall term, not the terms of individual sentences, that must be adjusted. If that is not the result, the finding of special circumstances is ineffective to achieve its objective. The applicant is entitled to the benefit of that finding in a practical, not merely theoretical, way.
41Her Honour's views were expressed in the context of the complexities of the case under consideration which involved a review of two sentencing exercises before different judges of the District Court, and where the sentence under appeal, the subject of the second sentence proceeding, was committed prior to the offences the subject of the earlier proceeding. I do not interpret her Honour to have intended to express that in every case where individual sentences have been accumulated and special circumstances have been found on the basis of the need to provide for an offender's rehabilitation, a variation in the ratio in the overall term will inevitably result. As I see it, the question in any particular case is whether a finding of special circumstances has been effectively translated into the sentencing outcome in a "practical, not merely theoretical, way" by providing for a parole period that allows for an adequate period under supervision in the community which remains proportionate to the non-parole period as the mandatory period an offender is to serve in custody without inappropriate emphasis on that mandatory period.
42While there is no fixed criterion referable to which a finding of special circumstances under s 44 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act might be made, the need for the structure of a sentence to reflect a favourable finding as to an offender's prospects of rehabilitation, and the corresponding need to foster rehabilitation as a recognised sentencing objective, is commonly invoked. The fact of accumulation across a number of separate sentences is also invoked in order to accommodate and reflect the principle of totality (see the observations of Simpson J in Kalache v R [2011] NSWCCA 210 at [20] and the remarks of Allsop P at [2] and Buddin J at [45] as to the significance of the operation of s 44 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act in promoting rehabilitation as an important part of the sentencing exercise).
43In this case, I acknowledge that the sentencing judge specifically found that both rehabilitation and aggregation warranted a finding of special circumstances. I also note that when his Honour appointed the expiration dates of both the effective non-parole period and the total effective sentence in the sentencing order, he stated that he had "not complied with the 75/25 per cent ratio" when, in fact, the statutory ratio was applied. This lends some support for the applicant's claim that it was through inadvertence that the statutory ratio in the overall sentence was not varied. However, as the Crown emphasised in submissions and, in my view, not without significance, the sentencing reasons in this case were delivered ex tempore. It is not suggested by the Crown that there is any lack of order or structure in his Honour's sentencing remarks. It was submitted, however, that the precision in expression or refinement which might be incorporated into a sentencing judgment delivered after the luxury of time to prepare it may explain why his Honour stated in his sentencing reasons that he had not complied with the statutory ratio when, in a robust exchange with counsel in the sentencing hearing that immediately preceded the pronouncement of the sentencing order, he made it clear to the parties that he intended that the minimum period the applicant should spend in custody was 6 years.
44At one point in the exchange with counsel, which in my view accurately reflects his Honour's intention which he carried into effect in the sentencing order, he said:
...about six years, on the bottom I'm talking about, expire about six years away. That's the sort of figure I'm thinking about. I think it reflects, it does three things, it reflects the seriousness of the offence, (2) it's going to give him the opportunity within the prison system hopefully of re-adjusting his mindset and thinking. And number (3), it's going to in that period of time protect the community from - that's the sort of figure I've got in mind and any more would be crushing, any much less would be - would not reflect the criminality.
45For my part, I am not persuaded that the error the applicant contends for has been made out. While it is true that the progressive accumulation of the two sets of sentences for the six armed robbery had the effect of restoring the statutory proportion between non-parole period and additional term to the aggregate sentence, and whilst that might on one view of the cases to which we were referred be an unusual result, I am not satisfied that it was an unintended result. To the contrary. I am satisfied that his Honour's very favourable findings as to the applicant's prospects of rehabilitation were not only reflected in the structure applied to the individual armed robbery offences but, in addition, they were also fairly reflected in the 2 year parole period applied to the aggregate sentence. This structure had the ultimate effect of not only addressing principles of totality, it also left the non-parole period of 6 years to reflect the serious criminality comprehended by each of the eight offences the subject of sentence, each of which was aggravated by being committed whilst the applicant was on parole.
46CAMPBELL J: The applicant seeks leave to appeal against the sentence passed upon him by his Honour Judge Solomon in the District Court of New South Wales on 16th December 2010. He was sentenced for six armed robbery offences and two offences of taking and driving a car without the consent of the owner. Two additional offences were taken into account in sentencing for the first armed robbery offence, occurring on 6 September 2009, on a Form 1. These were a further armed robbery and a further taking and driving a car.
47The sentencing judge imposed an effective sentence of eight years imprisonment, consisting of a non-parole period of six years and an additional term of two years.
48The offending occurred in what might be regarded as a one-man crime wave between 19th August and 14th September 2009. The applicant was then on parole for previous offences, including a number of armed robberies, being part of a sentence imposed on him by the District Court on the 27th of May 2004.
49His offending was related to his heroin addiction. The applicant pleaded guilty at the first available opportunity.