37 In my view this Ground of Appeal has not been made out. I would propose that leave should be refused. As to recent authorities concerning the application of rule 4, see R v Roberts [2001] NSWCCA 163; R v Moussa [2001] NSWCCA 427; R v Nguyen [2002] NSWCCA 342.
38 I might add that were I to be in error in relation to rule 4, in that there had been deficiencies in the trial judge's directions upon this subject such as to warrant a new trial, I would, because of the strength of the Crown case, have no hesitation in proposing that the proviso to s 6(1) of the Criminal Appeal Act 1912 should be applied. See Festa; R v Yates & others [2002] NSWCCA 520.
39 The second ground of appeal asserts that "his Honour failed to adequately sum up the evidence with respect to the charge of steal motor vehicle."
40 In order to understand the submissions in relation to this Ground of Appeal it is necessary to refer to what his Honour said upon this subject:
The fourth rule is this; although in the way this trial has been conducted, this rule does not have any application, but you would have been required to consider each of the two counts separately and distinctly, one from the other, and I would have told you that if you find the accused to be guilty or not guilty of one, does not mean that he necessarily is guilty or not guilty of the other. However, because of the way this trial has been conducted, if it should be that you find the accused to be guilty of one, then you will find him to be guilty of both and if you find him not guilty of one, then you will find him to be not guilty of both. That is because, on the evidence of Mrs Guest, and her evidence was not challenged, the two robbers, when they left the bank of St George Bank, ran to the purple BMW and drove off in it. So, if you are satisfied about the accused's guilt for one, then you will find him guilty of both. If you are not satisfied about the accused's guilt for one, you will find him not guilty of both.
Members of the jury, another thing I would have told you would be this; each charge that the Director of Public Prosecutions brings against the accused contains an essential element. The Crown has to satisfy the jury beyond reasonable doubt of the essential element of the charge if there is only one, or the essential elements of the charge if there are more than one. The Crown does not have to satisfy the jury about everything about which evidence is being given. What the Crown has to satisfy the jury about is the essential element of the charge if there is only one, or the essential elements of the charge if there are more than one. I would have then gone on to tell you what are the elements of the charge of stealing a motor vehicle, or conveyance as it is said in the indictment. But, having regard to the way this trial has been conducted, I need not do that. That is because the issue in the trial is whether or not the evidence satisfied you that the accused was one of the two men who robbed the St George Bank Branch and drove away in the purple BMW. If the evidence satisfied you beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was one of those two men, then you find him guilty of both counts in the indictment. If the evidence fails to satisfy you beyond reasonable doubt that he was one of those two men, then you find him not guilty of both counts in the indictment.
41 The appellant's written submissions in support of this Ground are in the following terms:
It is submitted that it was open to the jury to accept or reject [the evidence of Ms Guest, the witness who saw the two men run to and enter the car] regardless of their assessment of the other witnesses inside or near the bank. It is thus respectfully submitted that his Honour erred in not summing up the evidence to provide an objective framework for the assessment of the second count in the indictment.
His Honour did not describe the elements of the offence to the jury and the evidence left open the possibility that the person in the car had no knowledge of it having been stolen by someother person and being an innocent passenger.
42 In considering this Ground it is critical to bear in mind the way in which the trial was conducted. Right at the outset of the trial, his Honour told the jury that he had been informed by counsel that the sole issue for their determination was whether or not the Crown could prove that the appellant was one of the men who participated in the robbery and the theft of the stolen vehicle, it being common ground that the same two men had committed each of those offences. The trial proceeded upon that basis. In those circumstances it is hardly surprising that Ms Guest's evidence was not the subject of challenge. His Honour, in any event, summarised the effect of Ms Guest's evidence in an entirely appropriate fashion. In all the circumstances I can see no substance in the appellant's submission that the trial judge failed to adequately summarise the evidence upon this count.
43 The trial judge was clearly aware of the normal requirement that the jury be given directions in relation to the essential elements of the offence and that they be informed that they must consider each of the two counts separately. His Honour said so in terms but then went on to say that he was relieved of that obligation by reason of the way in which the trial had been conducted. His Honour's directions in that regard drew no complaint from trial counsel.
44 With due respect to trial counsel, the approach taken by him was the only sensible tactical course available to him. It is difficult to conceive how a reasonable jury could have imagined in all the circumstances of the present case that the appellant may have been "an innocent passenger" in the stolen BMW especially as the age, condition, value, and distinctive features of the vehicle would have been readily apparent from the photos of it which were in evidence. Had trial counsel thought that such a consideration was reasonably open upon the evidence, but had not for tactical reasons wished to raise it himself, then he could nevertheless have simply asked the trial judge to have directed the jury upon the issue. Significantly counsel did not adopt such a course.
45 It is instructive to recall what the High Court has recently said concerning the scope of a summing-up. In Holland v R (1993) 117 ALR 193, a majority of the Court, Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane and Toohey JJ, in a joint judgment said that:
A failure by a trial judge fully to direct the jury about all the elements of an offence does not automatically mean that, in the event of a conviction, there has been a miscarriage of justice. To determine whether there has been a miscarriage, regard must be had to all the circumstances of the case, including the conduct of the trial. As Dixon, Williams, Webb, Fullagar and Kitto JJ observed in Alford v Magee:
. .. it may be recalled that the late Sir Leo Cussen insisted always most strongly that it was of little use to explain the law to the jury in general terms and then leave it to them to apply the law to the case before them... He held that the only law which it was necessary for them to know was so much as must guide them to a decision on the real issue or issues in the case, and that the judge was charged with, and bound to accept, the responsibility (1) of deciding what are the real issues in the particular case, and (2) of telling the jury, in the light of the law, what those issues are. If the case were a criminal case, and the charge were of larceny, and the only real issue were as to the asportavit, probably no judge would dream of instructing the jury on the general law of larceny. He would simply tell them that if the accused did a particular act, he was guilty of larceny, and that, if he did not do that particular act, he was not guilty of larceny.
To the same effect were the comments of Lord Hailsham of St Marylebone in R v Lawrence :
The purpose of a direction to a jury is not best achieved by a disquisition on jurisprudence or philosophy or a universally applicable circular tour round the area of law affected by the case. The search for universally applicable definitions is often productive of more obscurity than light. A direction is seldom improved and may be considerably damaged by copious recitations from the total content of a judge's note book. A direction to a jury should be custom built to make the jury understand their task in relation to a particular case. Of course it must include references to the burden of proof and the respective roles of jury and judge. But it should also include a succinct but accurate summary of the issues of fact as to which a decision is required, a correct but concise summary of the evidence and arguments on both sides, and a correct statement of the inferences which the jury are entitled to draw from their particular conclusions about the primary facts. (at 200-1)
46 In R v Chai (2002) 187 ALR 436 the Court said:
First, it is not the function of a trial judge to expound to the jury principles of law going beyond those which the jurors need to understand to resolve the issues that arise for decision in the case. Secondly, the law should be explained to the jury in a manner which relates it to the facts of the particular case and the issues to be decided. The judge's task was not to compose an essay on the topic of accessorial liability for manslaughter. It was to explain to the jurors so much of the law as they needed to know in order to decide the issues that arose from the charges, the evidence, the case for the prosecution and the defence case. (at 441)
47 Those remarks are, in my respectful view, of direct relevance to the present case.
48 In my view the trial judge's summing-up was appropriately tailored to meet the circumstances of the case and was accordingly in conformity with what the relevant authorities require. I would reject this Ground of Appeal.
49 The final ground is an application for leave to appeal against the severity of the sentences which were imposed by the sentencing judge.
50 In support of this application, it is submitted that the sentencing judge erred in two respects. First, it is contended that the sentence which was imposed for the armed robbery offence was manifestly excessive when compared with the sentence imposed upon the co-offender, Mr Shanks. Secondly, it is argued that the sentencing judge failed to properly "take into account the principle of totality in considering the total period that the offender would spend in custody."
51 The applicant was almost 25 years of age at the time of the offence and 27 when he stood for sentence. His Honour had regard to his background which featured considerable periods of unhappiness in his youth and drug and alcohol abuse extending back to his early teens. He had performed poorly at school and has rarely been in gainful employment.
52 The applicant has acquired a number of convictions for serious offences. In New Zealand he was dealt with as a juvenile in respect of a number of matters of dishonesty which included convictions for burglary and unlawfully taking a motor vehicle. Upon his arrival in Australia he was before the Children's Court and the Local Court on a number of occasions for offences of break, enter and steal. In 1994 he was imprisoned for offences of armed robbery, robbery in company and robbery with striking. In 1996 he was placed upon a recognisance for a further offence of robbery. In 1999 he was again imprisoned for an offence of robbery in company. He escaped whilst serving that sentence and thus was at large when he committed the present offence. Following his recapture in February 2000, he was sentenced in respect of the escape (and another offence). That sentence expired on 19 April 2002 at which time the sentence with which this court is concerned, was ordered to commence.
53 There were, as the sentencing judge acknowledged, a number of features of the case that revealed that the applicant's behaviour was of very considerable objective seriousness. The offence was planned by two people who acted in concert, one of whom was carrying a firearm. A very large sum of money was taken, none of which has been recovered. Staff members were threatened by the co-offender who was holding a firearm. Moreover, the applicant was, as I have said, an escapee, who was at the time then serving a sentence for an almost identical offence. There were also of course his earlier convictions for similar offences to be considered.
54 The sentencing judge had previously sentenced Mr Shanks. That offender was sentenced to a term of imprisonment for 8 years with a non-parole period of 5 years in respect of the armed robbery offence. It is to be noted that he received a discount for having pleaded guilty and that he was dealt with for a further unrelated offence in respect of which he received a sentence which was to be served cumulatively upon the sentence which was imposed for the armed robbery offence. It was submitted that some differentiation should have been made between the two sentences, to the applicant's advantage, to reflect the fact that he had played a less significant role in the offence. Even upon that assumption, I remain unpersuaded that an argument based upon considerations of parity can be made out when due weight is given to the overall circumstances of each of the respective offenders. The applicant can entertain no justifiable sense of grievance. See Lowe v the Queen (1984) 154 CLR 606.
55 In respect of the argument concerning the principle of totality, the applicant recognises that the sentencing judge gave effect to it by specifically reducing, for that very reason, each of the individual sentences. It is submitted however that his Honour overlooked the principle insofar as he did not specifically refer to it when making an assessment of the overall period which the applicant must spend in custody (that being an overall non-parole period of 8½ years).
56 I would not be prepared to assume that the sentencing judge overlooked this feature of the case particularly as his Honour made a finding of "special circumstances" within the meaning of s 44(2) of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 by reason only of the fact that the sentences which he was imposing were to be served cumulatively upon the sentences which the applicant was then serving.
57 In my view there is no substance in either complaint.
58 I propose the following orders: