HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
The Applicant, GS, for leave to appeal was charged on an indictment that contained one count alleging that he had sexual intercourse with the victim, PS, without her consent and knowing she did not consent contrary to s 61I of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW). On 9 June 2020, GS was arraigned before her Honour Judge O'Rourke SC sitting without a jury. He pleaded not guilty. On 16 June 2020, her Honour found the Applicant guilty and published reasons for her verdict. He was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 4 years with a non-parole period of 2 years and 4 months commencing 29 May 2019. His non-parole period expired on 28 September 2021 and he was released to parole on that day. He filed his appeal after his release.
The charge against the Applicant arose out of his attendance at PS's family's property at Taylors Flat in February 2010. The Crown alleged that the Applicant drove from interstate and visited those members of PS's family who lived there for approximately two weeks. The Crown alleged that the Applicant threw PS into the backseat of his car, forcibly removed her clothes and sexually assaulted her by forcing her to have penile-vaginal sexual intercourse.
PS is GS's niece. She was 17 years old at the time of the offence in 2010. She is legally blind and has never attended school. The trial judge recorded that it was not in issue that PS was continually sexually assaulted from a very young age by various family members, in particular by her father, TS, and her uncle, RS. Her mother "condoned, if not actively encouraged" the sexual assaults. PS said that her mother "used to force [my sisters and I] to have sex with our brothers". PS "was threatened with violence if she told anyone, including being told that she would be 'dead' and 'have a bullet in her head'."
PS told police in 2013 that she was sexually assaulted by the Applicant, but later retracted that statement. In 2017 she complained to police about sexual assaults committed against her by her family, but she did not mention the sexual assault by the Applicant. The trial judge noted that at the time PS retracted the 2013 statement, she was living with her mother who "encouraged the male family members to have sexual intercourse with her against her will".
In an interview with police, PS said that the vehicle in which the assault occurred was a green Holden Commodore. In cross-examination she said it was a green Ford "XR6". When pressed on this issue, she said "I'd rather not think about [the Applicant's] car, that's why I don't think about it. I don't remember sorry."
Although the Applicant's notice of appeal contained four grounds of appeal, at the hearing of this application only ground 4 was pressed. Ground 4 contended that "[t]he conviction of [the Applicant] cannot be supported having regard to the evidence."
The issues on appeal were:
(i) Whether the guilty verdict was unreasonable and could not be supported having regard to the evidence;
(ii) Whether any unfairness occurred at trial because of the comparative lack of detail of the sexual assault committed by the Applicant given in the first police interview compared with the greater detail of the assault given by PS in her oral evidence;
(iii) Whether the victim's evidence was unreliable due to her failure to mention the sexual assault by the Applicant at an earlier opportunity; and
(iv) Whether the victim's withdrawal of the complaints about sexual offences committed by other family members bore upon her credibility or reliability.
The Court held, dismissing the appeal:
As to issue (i) (per Beech-Jones CJ at CL, Garling and Wilson JJ agreeing):
- It was reasonably open to the trial judge to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt of the Applicant's guilt. None of the contentions raised by the Applicant raised any doubt about the Applicant's conviction (at [55], [59], [61] and [65]).
- Even if it had been established that the Applicant did not drive a vehicle as described by the victim to Taylors Flat, and to the extent that the Applicant relies on the difference between a green Ford and a green Commodore, in circumstances where the victim said that during the sexual assault that "I'd rather not think about his car", any inconsistency in the victim's evidence would only be a doubt that the trial judge's advantage in seeing and hearing her evidence was capable of resolving (at [55], [61] and [65]).
Dansie v The Queen (2002) 96 ALJR 728; [2022] HCA 25 applied ("Dansie"); Filippou v The Queen (2015) 256 CLR 47; [2015] HCA 29; M v The Queen (1994) 181 CLR 487 at 494-495; [1994] HCA 63; Pell v The Queen (2020) 268 CLR 123; [2020] HCA 12 considered.
Further, per Beech-Jones CJ at CL and Wilson J (Garling J not deciding):
- In considering whether a verdict following a judge alone trial is unreasonable and cannot be supported having regard to the evidence, the advantage enjoyed by the tribunal of fact in seeing and hearing the witnesses does not depend on the reasons of the trial judge. The scope of the advantage is not confined by any express statement by the trial judge describing, or even disclaiming, the advantages they enjoyed as such (at [51] and [65]);
Dansie considered.
As to issues (ii) and (iii) (per Beech-Jones CJ at CL, Garling and Wilson JJ agreeing):
- The suggestion that the victim gave details of the assault for the "first time" in her evidence was not substantiated. In the family context that she described, her account was not implausible. Given the explanations provided by the victim and the police as to what the police interviews concerned, no doubt was occasioned about the honesty or reliability of PS's evidence (at [55] to [57], [61] and [65]).
As to issue (iv) (per Beech-Jones CJ at CL, Garling and Wilson JJ agreeing):
- None of the charges withdrawn by the Director of Public Prosecutions concerned allegations against other family members which involved the victim as the complainant (at [58], [61] and [65]).