CONSIDERATION
24In light of the circumstances in which the appellant's case has again come before this Court, it is appropriate to commence by referring to the principles applicable to sentencing for offences in respect of which a standard non-parole period is prescribed.
25The approach to be adopted in such cases is set out in Muldrock (supra). The Court must reach a determination having regard to the range of applicable factors, both aggravating and mitigating, which bear upon the determination of an appropriate sentence. In particular, the Court must not engage in a process of sentencing which involves asking whether or not there are factors which warrant some departure from the standard non-parole period. The Court must also ensure that it does not give the standard non-parole period primary or determinative significance.
26At the same time, it is important to recognise that the standard non-parole period, along with the maximum penalty, constitute the two legislative guide posts which are relevant to the determination of an appropriate sentence: R v Nguyen [2013] NSWCCA 195 at [62].
27With these matters in mind, I turn firstly to consider the circumstances of the appellant's offending.
28On any view, the offending was objectively serious. On the facts found by the sentencing judge the appellant forced his penis into the vagina of his daughter who was then only 9 years of age. The offending occurred in the immediate presence of the appellant's other children.
29As the victim's father, the appellant was in a position of trust. The victim was entitled to feel safe in his presence. The appellant's actions betrayed that entitlement and his position of trust was seriously abused.
30I accept that the duration of the offending was short. I also accept that this is a factor relevant to a determination of the objective seriousness of the offending. However in my view, the more important factor is that whatever its precise duration, the offending occurred over a sufficient period of time, and with sufficient force, to tear the victim's hymen.
31Moreover, even accepting that the offending was limited to a short period of time, the resultant effect upon the victim is not similarly limited. The importance of taking into account the ongoing effect, upon a young victim, of offending such as this was recently emphasised by this Court (Leeming JA, Johnson and Hall JJ) in R v Gavel [2014] NSWCCA 56 at [110]-[112]:
"This Court has observed that child sex offences have profound and deleterious effects upon victims for many years, if not the whole of their lives: R v CMB [2014] NSWCCA 5 at [92]. Sexual abuse of children will inevitably give rise to psychological damage: SW v R [2013] NSWCCA 255 at [52]. In R v G [2008] UKHL 37; [2009] 1 AC 92, Baroness Hale of Richmond (at [49]) referred to the "long term and serious harm, both physical and psychological, which premature sexual activity can do". The absolute prohibition on sexual activity with a child is intended to protect children from the physical and psychological harm taken to be caused by premature sexual activity: Clarkson v R [2011] VSCA 157; 32 VR 361 at 364 [3], 368-372 [26]-[39].
111. This factor no doubt contributes to the setting of the heaviest maximum penalty known to the criminal law for s.66A(2) offences, accompanied by a standard non-parole period of 15 years. It is important that sentences for s.66A(2) offences reflect this grave element implicit in the offence itself.
112. This is an important feature in the present case. Young child victims are especially vulnerable. It is important that sentences passed for s.66A(2) offences recognize the harm done to the victim of the crime: s.3A(g) Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999."
32In my view, those observations are apposite to the present case. Concentrating upon the duration of sexual offending has the capacity to minimise, if not ignore, the significance of the long term effect of such offending upon a young victim.
33The appellant denied (and apparently continues to deny) the offending. That was, and remains, his right. It is not an aggravating factor, but it necessarily means that expression of contrition and remorse is not something that the appellant can have taken into account in his favour.
34Counsel for the appellant properly pointed out that a failure to express remorse does not disentitle an offender to a finding that his prospects of rehabilitation are good: BP v R [2010] NSWCCA 159 at [84] per Johnson J (Hodgson JA and Rothman J agreeing), citing Alseedi v R [2009] NSWCCA 185 at [65] and Ali v R [2010] NSWCCA 35 at [48]. However, remorse remains a major factor in determining whether an offender is likely to re-offend. Its absence renders it difficult to reach such a determination: R v MAK; R v MSK [2006] NSWCCA 381 at [41].
35In terms of the affidavit evidence which was relied upon, two particular observations should be made.
36Firstly, ill health does not necessarily require that a sentence be mitigated from that which would otherwise be appropriate. One of the relevant factors in determining what, if any weight, should be given to that factor will be the seriousness of the offence. Another will be whether the medical condition existed at the time of the offence and whether it has deteriorated in the period between the offence and sentence: R v Wickham [2004] NSWCCA 193 per Howie J at [18] (Bell and Hislop JJ agreeing) citing R v Kier [2004] NSWCCA 106 and R v L (NSWCCA unreported 17 June 1996).
37In the present case, the offending is obviously serious. Moreover, at least some of the appellant's health issues are of long standing, and pre-dated the offending. In particular, when giving evidence before Judge Garling in the sentencing proceedings in 2005, the appellant said (inter alia) that he had previously:
(i)contracted Barmah Forest Virus;
(ii)contracted hepatitis C in or about 1997; and
(iii)been diagnosed with depression (for which he had been medicated since 1997).
38Further, this is not a case in which the appellant has asserted that the treatment which has been administered to him in custody has somehow been inadequate. On the contrary, the medical records annexed to the affidavit of Mr Eccleshall tend to establish that the appellant has received appropriate medical treatment, including referral for specialist treatment when that has been considered necessary.
39I accept that the circumstances surrounding his mother's death are necessarily the source of considerable anxiety for the appellant. I also accept that the age and health of his father, the location in which he resides, and the health issues of the appellant's siblings all combine to render it difficult for the applicant to have regular contact with his family. However it is not uncommon for those in the prison population to have elderly parents: Pham v R [2009] NSWCCA 25; (2009) 193 A Crim R 190 at [51] per Latham J. Moreover, separation from family members is an inevitable consequence of incarceration.
40That then brings me to consider the appellant's reliance upon sentencing statistics, along with a series of decisions in other cases of offending contrary to s. 66A, a combination of which was said to demonstrate that the sentence imposed was harsh and unwarranted. Before doing so, it is necessary to refer to a number of statements of principle.
41Firstly, consistency in sentencing is not demonstrated by, and does not require, numerical equivalence. What is sought is consistency in the application of the relevant legal principles: Hili v R; Jones v R [2010] HCA 45; (2010) 242 CLR 520 at [48]-[49].
42Secondly, in seeking consistency, other cases may establish a range of sentences which have been imposed. But the sentences imposed in other cases do not mark the outer bounds of the permissible sentencing discretion. They stand as a yardstick against which to examine a proposed sentence. What is important are the unifying principles which such sentences reveal and reflect: Barbaro v R; Zirilli v R [2014] HCA 2; (2014) 305 ALR 323 at [41].
43Thirdly, the presentation of sentences passed in the form of numerical tables and graphs is of limited use: Hili (supra) at [48]. This is because reference to the lengths of sentences passed says nothing about why the sentences were fixed as they were.
44Consistent with such statements of principle, this Court has emphasised the need to adopt a careful approach when asked to utilise statistics: R v Nikolovska [2010] NSWCCA 153 at [117] per Kirby J, Beazley JA (as her Honour then was) and Johnson J agreeing. A similarly careful approach is required when the Court is asked to compare a sentence imposed in one case with a sentence imposed in another: RLS v R [2012] NSWCCA 236 at [132] per Bellew J, McClellan CJ at CL and Johnson J agreeing. The need to take care in each instance arises, in part, from the fundamental fact that there will inevitably be differences, both in terms of the objective circumstances of offending and the subjective circumstances of the offender, between one case and another.
45In the present case, counsel for the appellant took the court to sentencing statistics which, it was submitted, demonstrated the harshness of the sentence which had been imposed upon the appellant. It was pointed out, in particular, that only three other offenders charged with offending contrary to s. 66A had received a sentence greater than 14 years imprisonment. It was also pointed out that each of those cases involved multiple offending, compared with that of the appellant which involved an isolated instance.
46Even if such conclusions are supported by the statistical material, they do not lead to the further conclusion that some other sentence is warranted in the present case. The sentence imposed upon the appellant might well be the highest imposed for a single instance of offending contrary to s. 66A. That does not demonstrate that the sentence is unduly harsh. As a matter of common sense, there will always be one sentence which constitutes the longest sentence imposed for particular offending: Jolly v R [2013] NSWCCA 76 at [75]. In my view, the statistical material put before the Court in the present case does not support a conclusion that some other sentence is warranted.
47I have considered the cases to which the Court was referred in which sentences were imposed for similar offending and which were said to demonstrate the harshness of the sentence imposed upon the appellant. I am not persuaded that they support the conclusion that some other sentence is warranted, nor am I persuaded that they establish that the sentence imposed upon the appellant is at odds with some established sentencing range.
48I do not propose to undertake an analysis of each and every case to which the Court was referred. I need only refer to two in order to demonstrate the difficulties which are prone to arise from comparative exercises of this kind.
49In RR v R [2011] NSWCCA 235 the offender was convicted of one offence contrary to s. 66A and was sentenced to imprisonment for 12 years with a non parole period of 9 years. Once again, that sentence was substantially less than that imposed upon the appellant. The complainant in that case, who was 5 years old, had been playing with the offender's son. The offender forced his penis into the complainant's mouth. The offender was obviously supervising the complainant at the time but he was not her parent. Moreover, the offender was found to have borderline intellectual functioning and his prospects of rehabilitation were assessed as being reasonable. None of those factors apply in the case of the appellant.
50In Jones v R [2012] NSWCCA 262 the offender was sentenced in respect of two offences contrary to s. 66A on the basis that they formed part of the one continuous act. The offender performed fellatio on a 12 year old boy, and then penetrated the boy's anus with his own penis. The sentence imposed upon the offender, one of 12 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 8 years, was obviously substantially less than that imposed upon the appellant. Equally, the offender was not the victim's parent, he was only 20 years of age, and he had the benefit of a finding of good character. Again, none of those factors form part of the present case.
51Although the offending in each of those cases was contrary to the same statutory provision as the appellant's offending, an examination of those two cases demonstrates that they were not really comparable at all. In fact, they were materially different from the appellant's case in several important respects. The presence of such differentiating factors explains, at least in part, why the sentence imposed in each case was less than that imposed upon the appellant. All of these considerations demonstrate why it is that sentencing is not, and can never be, directed towards achieving numerical equivalence.
52There is no doubt that the sentence imposed upon the appellant was stern. However, having considered the submissions advanced on behalf of the appellant, I am not persuaded that some other sentence is warranted. In coming to that view, I have had regard to the two legislative guideposts to which I previously referred.
53I propose the following order:
(1)The appeal is dismissed.