Ground 1
173 It is worth repeating what was said by McHugh, Hayne and Callinan JJ in Pearce v The Queen [1998] HCA 57; 194 CLR 610. It was:
"45 To an offender, the only relevant question may be 'how long', and that may suggest that a sentencing judge or appellate court should have regard only to the total effective sentence that is to be or has been imposed on the offender. Such an approach is likely to mask error . A judge sentencing an offender for more than one offence must fix an appropriate sentence for each offence and then consider questions of cumulation or concurrence, as well, of course, as questions of totality. (italics added)
174 At the conclusion of his Remarks on Sentence, and after he had announced the sentences he proposed to impose, the judge said:
"It will be clear that I have sought to punish for the entirety of the criminality involved."
175 That suggests to me that his Honour did commit the error referred to in the Pearce passage extracted. He has had regard only to the total effective sentence.
176 That conclusion is reinforced when regard is had to the actual sentences. In this respect, however, it is of considerable importance to recall that his Honour was not sentencing under current sentencing patterns, but attempting to retrieve or recreate the sentencing pattern of two decades earlier. It is also of importance to note that, since 2003, judges have been sentencing under the regime prescribed by Pt 4 Div 1A of the Sentencing Procedure Act (which, in respect of some offences, including certain sexual offences, prescribes "standard non-parole periods"). The prescription of standard non-parole periods, particularly in respect of sexual offences, has significantly increased sentences. Care must be taken not to evaluate the sentences imposed by reference to current expectations.
177 Counts 1 and 2 were brought under s 66A of the Crimes Act 1900, as it then stood. It carried a maximum penalty of imprisonment for 20 years. These offences involved, in quick succession, digital penetration of the complainant's anus and then her vagina. She was six years of age. He was 34 or 35 years of age. He was in a position of some trust, being her uncle, with easy access to her home. He was, it seems, trusted by her parents and grandparents. He warned the complainant not to disclose what he had done, for fear of getting him into trouble. On each of these counts, the appellant was sentenced to imprisonment for a fixed term of 2 years, commencing on 1 December 2009.
178 On any view, sentences of 2 years were inadequate, and manifestly so, to mark the criminality involved. The sentences do not approach a proper recognition of the objective gravity of the offences. The error is precisely that identified in Pearce: because the sentences were wholly subsumed in the longer sentence imposed in respect of the last offence, the manifest inadequacy of these sentences was masked. These offences were also accompanied by the inciting of the complainant to commit an act of indecency that constituted the offence charged in count 3. That offence, it will be remembered, involved the appellant requiring the complainant to fondle his erect penis, and to smell his fingers after he had penetrated her. For that, the appellant was sentenced to imprisonment for a fixed term of 6 months, to be served wholly concurrently with the sentences imposed in respect of counts 1 and 2. That, also, was manifestly inadequate. The sentence fails to reflect the objective gravity of the offence.
179 Counts 4, 7 and 8 were of indecent assault, brought under s 61E(1) and s 61M(2) of the Crimes Act, carrying a maximum penalty of imprisonment for 4 years. On each of these also the appellant was sentenced to wholly concurrent fixed terms of six months.
180 The offence charged in count 4 was the offence committed when, after a shopping trip, the appellant rubbed the outside of her tracksuit pant over her vaginal area and gave her a small amount of money. I would accept that, of its kind, this was an offence of lesser gravity than some. I do not find the sentence imposed in respect of this offence manifestly inadequate.
181 Counts 7 and 8, of the same genre, were the offences committed while the complainant's parents were out for the evening and her grandmother was distracted. The appellant took her into her parents' room and locked the door. In the face of her protests, he exposed his penis to her and told her to touch it. He asked her to kiss it. She resisted, told him she did not want to do it and that she wanted her mother. When she did as he ordered, he ejaculated.
182 These were manifestly more serious instances of indecent assault. The sentences were also manifestly inadequate. They do not reflect the objective gravity of the offence.
183 Count 5 was another count of sexual intercourse, constituted again by digital penetration. It was also accompanied, not only by the appellant telling the complainant that "this is our little secret", but also warning her against disclosure because he would get into trouble. The appellant was again sentenced to a wholly concurrent fixed term of 2 years.
184 That sentence was manifestly inadequate. It fails to recognise the objective gravity of the offences.
185 Counts 10 and 11 were also of sexual intercourse, again carrying maximum penalties of imprisonment for 20 years. Count 10 was an offence of digital vaginal penetration, committed while the complainant was in her bed into which the appellant intruded; count 11 was constituted by penile penetration of her vagina. A fixed term of imprisonment for 2 years was imposed in respect of count 10. That was manifestly inadequate. It also fails to recognise the objective gravity of the offence. Although I consider that imprisonment for a fixed term of 5 years imposed in respect of count 11 was lenient, I would not conclude that it was outside the range of the sentencing discretion available.
186 Counts 12, 13 and 14, were all of sexual intercourse, carrying the same maximum penalty. The offence constituting count 12 was also committed after the complainant had been asleep and was woken by the appellant and after she protested and told him she did not want him to do what he was doing to her. Nevertheless, he penetrated her vagina digitally. She was sobbing. He was trying to comfort her - demonstrating that he was well aware of the distress he was causing. A sentence of imprisonment for a fixed term of 2 years was imposed.
187 This sentence was manifestly inadequate. It fails to recognise the objective gravity of the offence.
188 Counts 13 and 14 were again constituted by, respectively, digital and penile penetration followed by ejaculation. The sentence imposed in respect of count 13 was a fixed term of imprisonment of 2 years. For the same reason, it was manifestly inadequate.
189 In respect of count 14, the offence of sexual intercourse constituted by penile vaginal penetration, the appellant was sentenced to imprisonment for 7½ years, with a non-parole period of 5 years. I am not prepared to conclude that, in respect of that offence, that sentence was outside the range of legitimate sentencing discretion.
190 Each offence was committed in the complainant's home, where she should have felt, and been safe. A Victim Impact Statement (described by the judge as "affecting") attests to the emotional harm caused to the complainant.
191 Having regard to these conclusions, it will be necessary to propose fresh sentences. I will do that after I have considered the other grounds of appeal.