(xiv) Alternatively, if you were satisfied that the accused formed the intent to kill the deceased before they left the Commercial Hotel you would have to ask yourselves whether a reasonable person in the position of the accused could have been provoked in the manner and to the extent that the accused had been provoked, could have so lost his self control as to have formed the intention, not just to injure and seriously injure, but formed the intention to kill the deceased."
41 In the main, I have again underlined the differences. In addition, there was in paragraph (xiii) a reversal of phrases used in paragraph (vi) which did not affect the sense.
42 Section 23 of the Crimes Act, so far as is presently relevant, provides:-
"(1) Where, on the trial of a person for murder, it appears that the act or omission causing death was an act done or omitted under provocation and, but for this subsection and the provocation, the jury would have found the accused guilty of murder, the jury shall acquit the accused of murder and convict him of manslaughter.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) an act or omission causing death is an act done or omitted under provocation where:-
(a) The act or omission is the result of a loss of self control on the part of the accused that was induced by any conduct of the deceased (including grossly insulting words or gestures) towards or affecting the accused; and
(b) That conduct of the deceased was such as could have induced an ordinary person in the position of the accused to have so far lost self control as to have formed an intent to kill, or to inflict grievous bodily harm upon, the deceased.
whether that conduct of the deceased occurred immediately before the act or omission causing death or at any previous time.
(3) For the purpose of determining whether an act or omission causing death was an act done or omitted under provocation as provided by subsection (2), there is no rule of law that provocation is negatived if:-
(a) There was not a reasonable proportion between the act or omission causing death and the conduct of the deceased that induced the act or omission;
(b) The act or omission causing death was not an act done or omitted suddenly; or
(c) … "
43 Paragraph (vi) was the only written direction to the jury which reflected the principle laid down by the High Court in Stingel v R (1990) 171 CLR 312, Masciantonio v R (1995) 69 ALJR 598 and Green v R (1997) 191 CLR 334 to the effect that in considering the question of provocation, a tribunal is required to consider the gravity of the conduct suggested as having been provocative, from the viewpoint of the particular accused, and to put the provocation into context the tribunal is to have regard to the attributes or characteristics (such as "age, sex, race, ethnicity, physical features, personal attributes, personal relationships or past history") of that accused - see Stingel at 326, Masciantonio v R at 602-3, Green v R at 340, 355, 368-9.
44 Only when that gravity is appreciated, is it possible to apply the test whether the conduct of the deceased was such as could have induced an ordinary person to have so far lost self control as to have formed an intent to kill, or to inflict grievous bodily harm upon, the deceased.
45 In Green v R McHugh J accepted that this was the law but, in a passage from which the remarks of Dunford J are obviously taken, was content to avoid a separate inquiry as to the gravity of the provocation by reference to such matters and look merely at the severity and reasons therefor of the provocation on the accused. As a matter of logic, there can be, with respect, no error in that approach. Indeed counsel who appeared for the Appellant felt obliged to accept that, but for the other, and in particular earlier oral directions, the passage presently the subject of consideration, contained no error.
46 His complaint was, however, that the earlier oral direction was not withdrawn and in totality the directions on this topic were confusing.
47 There is an argument that it would have been better had his Honour withdrawn his earlier directions or identified the changes he was making. For the earlier directions did contain errors. The references to "acted" in paragraph (xii), rather than to intention, and "reasonable person" rather than "ordinary person" in paragraph (xiv) are examples. However both of these courses would have had their own disadvantages. Certainly any attempt to identify specific changes would have been calculated to confuse. Given the accumulation of the jury's intimation that they had some confusion arising from the oral directions, that the written directions were then given to the jury and his Honour indicated that the written directions contained changes, I would be confident that it was those written directions to which, in their deliberations, the jury had regard. Thus, it does not seem to me that the complaint of "confusion" is made out or that it is necessary to reflect further on his Honour's oral directions.
48 However, before leaving this aspect of the appeal, I would venture to suggest that, in that paragraph s23(2)(b) requires a consideration of "the position of the accused" and an "ordinary person" and, in case of the gravity of the provocation to the former, requires attention to matters subjective to him whereas in the case of the ordinary person the test is objective, there is advantage in a judge contrasting the two situations or tests and in the course of directing attention to "the position of the accused" then referring to the accused's attributes or characteristics such as "age, sex, race, ethnicity, physical features, personal attributes, personal relationships or past history" referred to by the High Court rather than merely referring back to the degree of severity to which the accused was actually provoked.
49 Had it stood on its own, I would also have taken the view that the paragraph I have numbered (ii) contains error in its apparent explanation that an "ordinary person in the position of the accused" is a "person with the ordinary or common range of temperaments of a person of the accused's age and maturity". Such an explanation obviously ignores the significance of the words "in the position of the accused" and the need to appreciate the gravity of the provocation from his or her perspective.
50 However, paragraph (ii) did not stand alone. His Honour explained it, as I think, adequately in paragraph (vi).
51 As was conceded by counsel appearing for the Crown in this Court, the second passage objected to, that in the paragraph numbered (viii), does contain error. Putting aside the question of reckless indifference which is of no present relevance, jurors in a murder trial, considering the question of intent, may convict so long as they are satisfied that the accused had an intention to kill or to inflict grievous bodily harm and they are not required to decide which. Indeed, they may individually have different views. Against that background there is no basis for concluding that when paragraph (b) of s23(2) of the Crimes Act refers to a person having "so far lost self control as to have formed an intent to kill, or to inflict grievous bodily harm" it requires the jury to embark upon the task of considering which of these intentions the particular accused had.
52 By the very nature of many crimes of murder, commonly the evidence will not enable a determination of this question, a fact which also argues for the view that s23 should be construed so as to avoid the question arising. The sub-section states a composite test of what the conduct of the deceased could have induced. The jury should have been directed accordingly, not in the terms they were.
53 And the difference was of significance in the case. The addresses of the legal representatives were transcribed. They show that the Crown case (or at least a substantial part of it) was that the Appellant had formed an intent to kill the deceased prior to leaving the hotel room and that the Appellant's actions at that stage were "cold calculated planning". The case for the Appellant was that the Appellant did not have the intent to kill, was provoked into wanting to inflict grievous bodily harm on the deceased by the latter's actions but during the course of inflicting grievous bodily harm he lost, or lost further, self control.
54 Against such an issue, His Honour's error has a significance which in other circumstances it might not have. It was in effect to remove from the jury's consideration the defence case on the issue of provocation. Although not taken away prior to counsel's address as occurred in Green v R the effect was the same. Given the significance of the misdirection, providing there was evidence justifying the issue of provocation being left to the jury, by parity of reasoning - appreciating that the reasoning is not all the same - with the judgments of Brennan CJ (at 346), Toohey J (at 357), and McHugh J (at 371-2) in that case, the circumstances are not such where it is proper to apply the proviso. If the defence of provocation was open, and even if this Court should think it inevitable that the Crown would have satisfied the jury that the killing was unprovoked within s23, the effective removal of one of the main issues in the trial from the jury's consideration would make it impossible to conclude that there has been no substantial miscarriage of justice - Wilde v R (1988) 164 CLR 365 at 373. c.f. Krakouer v R (1998) 72 ALJR 1229 at [37, 76-78].
55 The Crown sought to overcome the consequences of this conclusion by submitting that the evidence bearing on the topic of provocation was such that the issue should not have been left to the jury and therefore that this Court should apply the proviso to s6 of the Criminal Appeal Act.
56 I am prepared to concede that the claim that the deceased's death was or may have been a result of his provocation was weak, indeed, as it appears to me, very weak. Nevertheless, there was evidence of both a loss of self control on the part of the Appellant and conduct of the deceased in touching the breasts of the Appellant's girlfriend which might fairly be regarded as affecting the Appellant and as calculated to result in some violence. In the form of drugs, drink, and the Appellant's personality and mental condition there was evidence which might permit an argument that the deceased's conduct was likely to be, to the Appellant, more serious than it would be to many others. That said, it is also appropriate to recognise that there was no specific evidence suggesting that this was so. It must also be borne in mind that although, according to the Appellant, the deceased's conduct was repeated some five times, the first occurrence did not deter the Appellant and his girlfriend from going to the deceased's hotel room, or staying there when they were free to depart after the second, third and fourth touching incidents.
57 Nevertheless, there still remains the question whether, taking the provocation from the viewpoint of the Appellant at the highest possible level which the evidence permits, an ordinary person in his position could have so far lost self control as to have formed an intention to inflict grievous bodily harm on the deceased. As is apparent, I can quite accept that the touching of the breasts of the Appellant's girlfriend was conduct calculated to result in some violence but it is another step to accept that an ordinary person's reaction could have been to intend violence extending as far as grievous bodily harm, whether that expression is regarded as meaning or encompassing, really serious bodily harm or any permanent or serious disfigurement.
58 While I do not seek to minimise the deceased's conduct, in the scale of things, the touching of a girl's breasts - which modern fashion, if not society, seeks to make attractive and an object of interest - is hardly a major affront. It is far less heinous or objectionable than much other conduct and many other offences of a sexual nature and the fact that the deceased was obviously drunk, well known to be a somewhat disinhibiting condition, tends to further reduce the seriousness of, or insult in, his offence. The circumstances were radically different from those which existed in Green v R where the Appellant asserted that he had been subjected to a homosexual approach which was forcible, persistent, a breach of trust and evoked recollections of breaches of trust on the part of the Appellant's father when the Appellant was young.
59 Taking the provocation at the highest level available on the evidence, it could not, in my view, have been sufficient to satisfy the minimum requirements of self control contemplated by s23(2)(b). The issue of provocation should not have been left to the jury and thus the error which occurred in his Honour's directions led to no miscarriage of justice. On this ground, it is appropriate to apply the proviso to s6 and dismiss the appeal against conviction.
60 I turn to the application for leave to appeal against sentence. Mr Odgers, appearing for the Appellant, said that he could not point to any specific error made by Dunford J in the course of his remarks on sentence and I am not conscious of any. The submission was that in all the circumstances, and in particular the Appellant's youth and psychiatric problems, the sentence was manifestly excessive.
61 His Honour's remarks make it clear that he was conscious of both of these factors. Indeed the Appellant's youth was one of the factors which inspired his Honour to make the additional term a greater proportion of the minimum term than usual. His Honour also expressly recognised that the sentence he was imposing was longer than in many other cases of murder. A consideration of his Honour's remarks reveals why. Inter alia his Honour said:-
"The majority of (the six stab wounds to the neck) were only a couple of centimetres or less deep but the major one was a zigzag shaped wound 41mm in length which penetrated the tissue immediately beneath the skin, the muscles of the neck, and in at least two points went through the back of the tongue to the front of his spin to a depth at its deepest point of 5½ cms, the penetration of the tongue at 2 points indicating two thrusting movements of the knife.
… There were also considerable internal injuries, including… fractures to the back of (3) ribs on the left side, the front of (4) ribs on the same side, and the front of (5) ribs on the right side… In the opinion of Dr Boterill, the pathologist, the cause of death was the combined effect of stab wounds to the neck, strangulation and the blunt force injuries to the trunk resulting in the fractured ribs, tears to the lining of the lung and the lung surfaces themselves, and bruising around the right kidney area.
…
Although I accept that he was using cannabis and alcohol from the age of 18 and hard drugs, including amphetamines from New Years Eve 1995/96, I do not believe he was using them to the extent he claimed, particularly in the period leading up to the killing…
I am satisfied that the deceased… may have made inappropriate comments about RF and may have put his arms around her and touched her breasts, but he was so drunk as to be quite incapable of doing any real harm. Even if he did touch RF, and giving the Prisoner the benefit of the doubt in that regard, I am satisfied that that was not the cause of what followed. The Prisoner and RF could have got up and left at any time.
I am satisfied that the Prisoner saw this almost helpless drunk as an easy target for his aggression and thought he could have some fun at the victim's expense …
But I am satisfied to the requisite standard that in the course of inflicting the belting he found himself enjoying it and formed an intention to kill which he carried out by stabbing, strangling and stomping until he was sure the victim was dead.
I am satisfied he remembered the stabbing as he claimed in the interview. He did it because he wanted to do it, and in the interview he was proud of it and boasting of it.
Alcohol, and possibly cannabis may have made him less inhibited than otherwise may have been the case, but in no way reduced his responsibility for the offence. This was a deliberate and callous attack on one of the less fortunate members of the community, who was quite incapable of defending himself. Although not in the worst category of cases, the objective criminality is very high.
I am not satisfied that the Prisoner has shown any genuine remorse … The Prisoner was born on 17 August 1978, so that he was aged 18 ½ at the time of the murder, and is now aged 20. He had a most unfortunate childhood."
62 After referring to the Appellant's criminal history which apparently commenced in about early January 1996 and to the fact he had been subjected to a control order for 3 months, probation for 18 months and imprisonment for 4 months Dunford J went on:-
"He does not appear to have learnt anything beneficial from his time in custody …
He appears to have embarked on a life of crime and to have decided that Society's rules do not apply to him.
Four psychiatrists gave evidence in the trial …
In light of this evidence I am satisfied that the Prisoner had, and has, an anti-social personality disorder as attested by Drs Strum, Milton and Delaforce, noting that his conduct demonstrates an attitude not to abide by Society's rules, as evidenced by the break, enter and steal, car stealing, the drug and alcohol use and this particular killing with no credible motive.
He may also have some symptoms of depression, although not a major depressive illness, and a borderline personality disorder."
63 His Honour then quoted from a report of Dr Strum:-
"Having said all this, I believe that Mr Bowhay is the net result of his upbringing but I do not think that it be the whole story. I think that Anti-social Personality Disorder is largely constitutional. … I think Mr Bowhay is capable of learning from experience… I think that, with time and future education, Mr Bowhay may possibly be at a state where he can fit into society. Poor impulse control and a tendency to run away are his most unfortunate attributes although his recent time in jail seems to have settled him down a little. The overall prognosis remains guarded."
64 His Honour continued:-
"… Having regard to my finding of anti-social personality disorder, the protection of the community and personal deterrence assume particular importance. I note his youth and was referred to cases dealing with young offenders…
Taking into account all of the matters to which I have referred I consider that the sentence should be longer than is the case in many other murder sentences but the increase should be weighted towards the additional term rather than the minimum term because of the Prisoner's youth, and so that, if released on parole at the expiration of the minimum term… he will then be subject, not only to supervision for a lengthy period, but also be liable to be returned to custody if he fails to behave in a lawful manner."
65 Reflection on the deceased's injuries alone is chilling. So also is a consideration of the Appellant's actions. So also is viewing the video record of his interview with police where, at least unemotionally, he talks of what he did. Even were I to put aside the findings of Dunford J that the Appellant set out to have fun and enjoyed some of his actions and in the ERISP was boasting, I would nevertheless regard the sentence imposed as a proper one. But for the Appellant's youth, the sentence could well have been considerably longer. One can but hope that before the Appellant is released, he will have taken the opportunity to learn and accept the standards of behaviour required in any civilised society.
66 The appeal against conviction should be dismissed. Because of the length of the sentence imposed, leave to appeal against sentence should be granted, but the appeal should be dismissed.
67 GREG JAMES J: I agree with Stein JA.
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