REGINA v POPOVIC
[2003] NSWCCA 103
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Criminal Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2003-03-25
Before
Spigelman CJ, Hulme J, Buddin J, O'Keefe J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (9 paragraphs)
Background Facts 4 The development of an acrimonious relationship between the Applicant and Mr Ravnjak is at the centre of these tragic events. It appears that Mr Ravnjak had an association with Ms Maria Nacin. She broke up with him and, it emerged, she had falsely informed the deceased that she had developed an association with the Applicant. There then followed a long period of confrontation between the Applicant and the deceased. 5 They had previously been friends, but the friendship ceased and a course of harassment by Mr Ravnjak of the Applicant commenced. There were telephone calls in which the Applicant was threatened by the deceased. 6 On 18 January 1999, there was confrontation between the two men, during the course of which Mr Ravnjak said to the Applicant: "I am going to kill you when we get outside". This confrontation culminated in a fight, but at this stage the Applicant claims not to have taken the threats seriously. The Applicant claimed in evidence before the sentencing judge that during the course of this fight, Mr Ravnjak produced a knife. However, his Honour did not accept that evidence and concluded that the fight was a fist fight. As a result of the fight, the deceased spent some days in hospital. 7 After the deceased was released from hospital, he telephoned the Applicant again and threatened him. Again he said he would kill him. The Applicant says that, at this stage, he started to believe that the deceased was capable of doing what he said and he became scared. 8 On a subsequent occasion at a nightclub, on either 25 or 26 January 1999, Mr Ravnjak pointed to the Applicant and made a motion indicating that he intended to slit the Applicant's throat. The sentencing judge accepted that about this time the Applicant was beginning to think that Mr Ravnjak would be capable of carrying out his threats and may do so. 9 Thereafter, there were many threatening phone calls from Mr Ravnjak to the Applicant, during the course of which Mr Ravnjak threatened to kill the Applicant's mother and his son. The Applicant reacted strongly to these statements and threatened the deceased. 10 The sentencing judge concluded: "Although I am firmly of the opinion that there is some exaggeration on the part of the prisoner in his evidence … I am satisfied on the balance of probabilities that threats of a kind that were very upsetting, disturbing and quite worrying were made by Mr Ravnjak to the prisoner. They included threats to kill the prisoner, his mother and his son." The prisoner's reaction was that he was angry and scared and that he felt ' like a cat, a cat when it stands and its spine just goes up. I felt like all my hairs just gone up into my head, my body '. I accept this evidence and further accept that by this time he had come to believe that Mr Ravnjak was capable of carrying out his threats." 11 The Applicant contacted Mr Ravnjak's father to seek assistance to prevail upon his son to stop making threats. Nevertheless, frequent threatening phone calls from Mr Ravnjak continued. 12 There was an incident just a few days before the actual killing. Mr Ravnjak went to the vicinity of the home of the Applicant's mother and was seen by him in the street. The Applicant then took a .357 Magnum pistol, which he had purchased, rushed out of the premises, chased Mr Ravnjak and fired five shots at him. The Applicant gave evidence he thought that the deceased had a pistol in his hand on this occasion. 13 The sentencing judge noted that the Applicant had not mentioned any such pistol in his statements to the police, nor had he mentioned it to either of his treating psychiatrists. His Honour did not accept the evidence of the Applicant on this matter. Nevertheless, his Honour had no doubt that Mr Ravnjak had come to the house of the Applicant's mother and that the Applicant had fired a gun on that occasion. 14 The Applicant retrieved a sawn off shot gun, which he had purchased some eight to twelve months before the shooting, from its hiding place. Thereafter he kept the gun, together with some ammunition, at close hand. Furthermore, he had purchased the Magnum pistol, to which I have referred, about one week before the shooting. 15 The sentencing judge noted that in 1992 the Applicant had pleaded guilty to illegally possessing firearms and had been fined. 16 The sentencing judge went on to find that from early February until the day before the killing, the deceased made further numerous threatening telephone calls to the Applicant. His Honour concluded: "There was thus a basis for the belief that I am satisfied the prisoner had by that time formed that Mr Ravnjak was capable of carrying out his threats and well may do so." 17 The Applicant gave evidence that he carried the shotgun with him during this period, including on the morning of the killing. In the course of his record of interview the following was said: "Q. What was your intention if you had found Vedran Ravnjak on one of those occasions with your loaded firearm? A. I would have shot him. Q. And what was your intention when you shot him? Was it to wound him or was it to kill him? A. I don't know. First thought probably just wound him. But, that particular day I wanted to kill him." 18 On 22 February 1999, the Applicant had his shotgun with him. He and a male companion drove to Keira Street, Wollongong, in the afternoon. When he got out of the car, the Applicant saw Mr Ravnjak on the western side of Keira Street. The Applicant reached back into his vehicle, took out the backpack in which he had the shotgun and ammunition. He crossed to the eastern side of Keira Street. When he reached the footpath on the east, the Applicant called out to Mr Ravnjak. 19 According to his Honour's finding, the deceased was then walking diagonally from west to east across Keira Street towards the north. The deceased's back was half turned away from the Applicant, who was, by that time, on the eastern side of Keira Street. There was a verbal exchange between the Applicant and Mr Ravnjak, which was initiated by the Applicant and was quite short. Independent evidence did not establish what was said. 20 I should note the version propounded by Mr Ramage, who appears for the applicant, was that it was Mr Ravnjak who had originally called out the Applicant's name and initiated the conversation. 21 In the record of interview, the Applicant said this: "… I asked him in Serbian, the things he said over the phone and he, you know, 'Are you gonna commit to them, going to do it?' And he had a smile on his face and he went, 'Yeah', so, you know, if you translate it bloody oath you know … And that's when I snapped … Darkness fell over my eyes. I took it out of my bag. He watched me load it. I loaded it, took it up; he didn't really notice what it was and sort of came forward towards me … I swung the gun over. I hit him with the gun, that's when the first shot fired …" 22 His Honour concluded that it was clear that the deceased was not carrying anything in his hands. He had no bag with him and was wearing loose-fitting clothing. His Honour noted that the Applicant claimed that he thought the loose clothing might possibly have concealed a knife. His Honour said that this was not mentioned in the record of interview at the police station, or at the demonstration which took place at the scene. That is not challenged by Mr Ramage. 23 His Honour concluded: "When considered in the light of the plea entered on behalf of the prisoner I am satisfied beyond any doubt that the killing of Mr Ravnjak by the prisoner did not occur in circumstances in which the prisoner was in any actual fear on the particular occasion for his own life or bodily well being. He was, however, provoked to do what he did largely by the threats made by the deceased concerning the prisoner's mother and son. That he was provoked is the effect of the plea." 24 Two shots were fired in quick succession within seconds. The first shot caused injury to nine bystanders who were spread along the eastern side of Keira Street at various distances up to some fifty metres. They included men, women and a child. They suffered a number of different injuries. None of the wounds resulted in serious and permanent disablement, though in one case, it produced certain ongoing effect, which were debilitating. 25 The second shot was discharged when Mr Ravnjak was approximately a metre from the Applicant. The contents of that cartridge did not have an opportunity to scatter. They entered the abdomen of the deceased and the pellets spread out inside him with fatal effect. 26 After the shooting, the Applicant and his companion slowly walked back across the western side of Keira Street and left the scene. The Applicant declined to identify his companion. An eyewitness observed the Applicant and his companion walking slowly, placing the gun in the bag, getting into the car and driving away. 27 The Applicant was at large for about four days, during which time he gave an interview to the media concerning the events of the day. He expressed no remorse for the killing of Mr Ravnjak, but he did express some remorse with respect to the shooting of the bystanders. 28 His Honour, after reciting the above facts concluded, correctly, that "objectively the circumstances of the killing were serious." He did note, however, that the plea of guilty to manslaughter based on provocation meant that the act causing death was committed as a result of the loss of self-control on the part of the Applicant, which was induced by the conduct of the deceased. 29 His Honour concluded: "Having regard to the circumstances in which the killing occurred, the relative situations of the deceased and the prisoner on the day in question, such of the evidence given by the prisoner as I have said I accept, and the plea accepted by the Crown, I am satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that the prisoner intended to kill Mr Ravnjak, but that such intention was a consequence of the provocation proffered by Mr Ravnjak over a period of time and finally on the day of the shooting." 30 That reference to "on the day of the shooting" is no doubt a reference to a statement which the Applicant attributed to the deceased to the effect that he indicated in Serbo/Croatian, something roughly translated as "bloody oath" to a question as to whether he intended to carry out his threats.