R v Reddell [2001] QCA 515
[2001] QCA 515
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Appeal (Qld)
Decision date
2001-11-16
Before
Pherson JA, MacKenzie J, Chesterman J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (18 paragraphs)
The applicant admitted that he had been growing Crop 1 to pay out a sum he owed his former wife as a result of a divorce settlement. But he also claimed on appeal that the debt was only $63,000 and not $85,000 as alleged. I do not see that this affects the conclusion that he was growing or producing for commercial purposes. Unless he was intending to supply his former wife with the cannabis in specie, and perhaps even then, he must have been intending that the crop would be sold somewhere else in order to obtain the money to pay the debt.
He also complains that there is some confusion about the respective weights of the two crops in the sense that Crop 1, which had 130 plants, was said to weigh only 123 grams, whereas Crop 2, of 70 plants, weighed 832 grams. The difference, however, appears to be explained by the fact that the crops were in different stages of development or care in the sense that one of them had, it seems, been cut back, or to use the word in the record, "manicured" or pruned in some way, so that the regrowth consisted of leaves of a smaller and less usable kind.