SENTENCING APPEAL GROUND ONE: THE SENTENCE IS MANIFESTLY EXCESSIVE
48A maximum penalty of 14 years imprisonment and a standard non-parole period of seven years is applicable to each of the offences of which the appellant was convicted. The sentencing judge, who was also the trial judge, concluded in his Remarks on Sentence of 23 August 2010 that the offences each fell in the middle of the range of seriousness but that the offences charged in Counts 1 and 3 were slightly less serious than those charged in Counts 2 and 4 (being penile/anal intercourse) and Count 5 which involved ejaculation.
49In relation to subjective factors, the sentencing judge took into account the absence of any significant criminal history on the part of the appellant and his reasonable prospects of rehabilitation and of not re-offending. His Honour also took into account the appellant's "somewhat problematic" upbringing, which left him "poorly equipped for the emotional roller coaster of this particular relationship with the victim" (Remarks on Sentence, p 9).
50As the appellant had not previously been in custody and the sentences were partially accumulated, his Honour found special circumstances that justified a limited change to the statutory ratio between the non-parole period and balance of term.
51He then imposed the following sentences:
Counts 1 & 3: 7 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 5
years to date from 19 May 2010;
Counts 2 & 4: 8 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 5½
years to date from 19 November 2010;
Count 5: 8 years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 5
years to date from 19 November 2011.
OVERALL SENTENCE: 9½ years imprisonment with a non-parole period of 6½ years to date from 19 May 2010.
52As the imposition of a sentence involves a discretionary judgment, the question for an appeal court where specific error is not shown is whether the sentence is "unreasonable or plainly unjust" or, as it is usually put, manifestly excessive (Markarian v R [2005] HCA 25; 228 CLR 357 at [25]). As pointed out in Markarian, "a court of criminal appeal may not substitute its own opinion for that of the sentencing judge merely because the appellate court would have exercised its discretion in a manner different from the manner in which the sentencing judge exercised his or her discretion" (at [28]).
53In my view the objective seriousness of the appellant's offences needed to be assessed in the context of the relationship between the appellant and the complainant. As noted earlier, they had been together for some three years prior to their final break-up in March 2009. The complainant's evidence indicated that it was a sexual relationship (Transcript 25 May 2010, p 23), with the complainant at one stage conceiving, but losing, the appellant's child (Transcript 24 May 2010, p 2). The complainant accepted in cross-examination that after March 2009 all she sought from the appellant "was the occasional meeting for occasional sex" (Transcript 25 May 2010, p 24). This evidence was consistent with the complainant asking the appellant by text message to come to her home on 30 April 2009 for sex and nothing more. The appellant himself stated that the complainant "had used text messages to invite him over for sex on several occasions in the passed [sic] even when they were not seeing each other" (Appellant's Written Submissions [38]). Psychologist George Dieter, who was asked to provide a psychological assessment of the appellant prior to his sentencing, emphasised the 'casual, sexual' nature of his relationship with the complainant, and the fact that it was "within this emotional background that the current offence took place" (Report 21 June 2010, p 2). Whilst the relationship between the complainant and the appellant was conceded by the complainant to be "fiery" and "on again and off again" (ibid p 20), her feelings for the appellant must have been strong given that she sent him a text message the day after the sexual assaults, which in part read, "u know i love you so much that's wot braken my heart im scared moor of loseing the love I have for u".
54His Honour does not seem to have attached any significance to the relationship in his reasoning, as he simply noted:
"that this offence was committed against the background of what had originally been a domestic relationship but which was at the time a casual sexual relationship between the victim and the offender" (Remarks on Sentence, p 5)
55In relation to the significance of ejaculation, his Honour observed:
"I note defence submissions regarding what was said to be the lower level of criminality involved in ejaculation where there was some ongoing relationship, as distinct from a stranger situation. I am not sure that this is a legitimate distinction to make, but in any event it does seem to me that even in relationship situations the fact of ejaculation without a condom can properly be seen as an aggravating factor" (p 6).
56The significance in sentencing of a relationship between an offender and a victim was considered by this Court in Bellchambers v R [2011] NSWCCA 131. In that case, offences under s 61I of the Crimes Act were committed on four occasions over a four year period, commencing a year after a relationship commenced between the victim and the applicant. The offences were accompanied by force and threats. In the course of his judgment Hoeben J (as his Honour then was) (with whom Campbell JA and RS Hulme J agreed) said:
"47 There was also a difficulty in his Honour's failure to review the facts, both relating to the circumstances of the offences and in relation to the applicant's personal and medical circumstances. A review of the offences would have revealed that while serious they occurred in a domestic relationship which involved considerable ambivalence on the part of the complainant. Whilst sexual assault even within the confines of a continuing relationship cannot be condoned, that fact and the comparatively low level of violence are matters of relevance to the objective seriousness of the offences. Regrettably, that comment is made against the background of sexual assaults which come before this Court involving very considerable threats and violence.
...
51 In [re-sentencing] I should record my view that each of the first three offences was, because of the factors I have identified, substantially below the midrange of objective seriousness, albeit not at the bottom of that range. The applicant's persistence in the face of the complainant's greater resistance in the case of the second offence makes that one somewhat more serious than the first.
52 The fourth offence was also appreciably below the midrange although, because it was committed in the context of the threats made on the previous day, more serious than the previous three".
57The applicant was re-sentenced for the four offences to terms of imprisonment of three, four, four and five years respectively, with non-parole periods of two years for all offences other than the fourth offence for which the non-parole period was three years. After significant accumulation, no doubt influenced by the two year periods separating the first and second offences and also the second and third and fourth offences, the total sentence imposed was seven years with a non-parole period of five years.
58The importance of considering the nature of the relationship between an offender and victim was also emphasised in R v Hendricks [2011] NSWCCA 203 at [86], in that case, in the context of consideration of the extent of concurrence of sentences. That a prior sexual relationship between a victim and an offender may, depending upon the particular circumstances of the case, be an important mitigating factor in sentencing for sexual offences was recognised by the Northern Territory Court of Criminal Appeal in Wiren v R (1996) 89 A Crim R 356 at 360 and following. See also R v Mason [2001] VSCA 62 at [6] and [7].
59In the present case, the complainant suffered considerable pain as a result of the forced anal intercourse and her text messages of 1 and 2 May 2009 indicate that she suffered considerable emotional trauma as a result of the sexual assaults. However, in light of her lengthy prior sexual relationship with the appellant and the intermittent sexual relationship that still existed at the time of the offences, I do not consider that the offences can be equated to those involving sexual assaults by strangers, which must almost inevitably give rise to extreme terror and fear in the mind of the victim. Here, the victim had been prepared until moments before the assaults to have sexual intercourse with the appellant, and the complainant had indeed, only three minutes before the appellant's arrival at her home, invited him over for that very purpose. My view is that in these circumstances the sentencing judge erred in characterising the offences as falling within the mid-range of seriousness. They were in my view well below that, although not at the bottom of the range.
60These comments are in no way intended to suggest that the appellant's offences were not serious. He committed serious criminal offences deserving of severe punishment. However, the sentences that the sentencing judge imposed, amounting to an overall sentence of nine and a half years with a non-parole period of six and a half years, were in my view manifestly excessive in light of the particular circumstances of the case.