Grounds One and Three
14 In R v Way [2004] NSWCCA 131 this Court held:
[86] Some of the relevant circumstances which can be said "objectively" to affect the "seriousness" of the offence will be personal to the offender at the time of the offence but become relevant because of their causal connection with its commission. This would extend to matters of … mental illness, or intellectual disability, where that is causally related to the commission of the offence, in so far as the offender's capacity to reason, or to appreciate fully the rightness or wrongness of a particular act, or to exercise appropriate powers of control has been affected … Such matters can be classified as circumstances of the offence and not merely circumstances of the offender that might go to the appropriate level of punishment.
15 The applicant submitted that though his Honour had taken into account her history as special circumstances for the purpose of setting the non-parole period he had not taken those matters into account on the question of criminality and culpability.
16 The applicant sought to establish, by a close analysis of the report of Ms Freeman, that the applicant had suffered from major depression following the birth of her child, which condition continued to the time of sentence and that this, and the circumstances leading up to it, clouded her judgment and caused her to depart from a substantially law abiding life. Applicant's counsel conceded that the case had not been conducted in this way before the sentencing Judge.
17 It is well accepted that in some cases of an offender suffering from a mental disorder or disability, deterrence is a consideration to which less weight should be given. As Wood CJ at CL said in R v Henry [254]:
The reason for this approach lies in the circumstance that the community will readily understand that the offender who suffers from a mental disorder or abnormality is less in control of his or her cognitive facilities or emotional restraints, and in some instances lacks the ability to make reasoned or ordered judgments. Almost invariably there is a limited appreciation of the wrongfulness of the act, or of its moral culpability, which although falling short of avoiding criminal responsibility does justify special consideration upon sentencing. Moreover, such a condition is inherent and its presence does not depend upon any element of choice.
18 His Honour found that the applicant was suffering from a major depressive illness at the time of sentence. However there was no medical or psychological evidence before him that such illness clouded her judgment and was the reason for committing the offence or that there was a limited appreciation of the wrongfulness of the act. Indeed the applicant told the court, the probation and parole officer who prepared the pre-sentence report and Ms Freeman that she committed the offence in order to finance her heroin addiction. In my opinion the necessary causal connection between mental illness and the commission of the offence was not established. Accordingly, this ground of appeal is rejected.
Ground Two - The learned sentencing Judge erred in failing to apply the principle of parity in the circumstances of this case