The Complainant's Credibility.
49It may be accepted that there was no appreciable difference in the lapse of time between all four incidents. However, the complainant first gave a detailed account of the incidents three years after they were said to have occurred. Accepting that the evidence of the sexual assaults derived from the interviews, the complainant's capacity to accurately recall each of the two episodes must have been affected to some extent by the passage of time.
50The delay in complaint was in the order of two and a half years. The Crown Prosecutor's address to the jury, as summarised by the trial judge in the course of the summing up, invited the jury to consider the complainant's age at the time of the alleged offences, the fact that she loved the appellant, was told by him that there was nothing wrong with the sexual activity and that she was not to tell anybody. The complainant's anxiety over the appellant's emotional distress, his physical and psychological deterioration and her sense of responsibility for his care (all of which were acknowledged by the appellant) compounded the difficulty of making such a disclosure. The jury was entitled to accept this as a reasonable explanation for the delay in complaint.
51The trial judge correctly directed the jury that the evidence of complaint went "only to the consistency of conduct of the complainant and cannot be used as evidence of the truth of the allegations that the accused sexually assaulted the complainant". The jury were also reminded a number of times to consider each charge separately.
52With reference to the "significant delay between the allegations in 2004 and the complaint in May 2007 and the arrest of the accused in December 2007", the trial judge said :-
You have heard evidence from Detective Senior Constable Scott in cases of sexual assault, if there is an immediate report, it is not unusual for medical examinations of the victim to be conducted, in which injuries might be detected consistent with sexual assault. Bodily fluids can be analysed by way of DNA testing, clothing and sheets etc can likewise be examined for the presence of semen.
Any potential forensic evidence that may have been available, had the matter been reported immediately, is unavailable to the accused, which may have had the effect of exculpating him. In that sense, the accused does suffer a significant forensic disadvantage and has suffered some prejudice in not having such evidence available to him.
53The direction on complaint was given after this direction on the jury's approach to the evidence of the complainant :-
Now wherever in a criminal trial the Crown seeks to establish the guilt of an accused person with a case based largely or exclusively on a single witness is important that the jury are told that they should exercise caution. That is what I'm going to tell you now.
You must exercise caution before you convict the accused because the Crown case largely depends on your accepting the reliability of the evidence of a single witness, in this case the complainant. This being so, unless you are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the complainant is both an honest and accurate witness in the account she has given, you cannot find the accused guilty.
Before you can convict the accused, you should examine the evidence of the complainant very carefully, in order to satisfy yourself that you can safely act upon that evidence to the high standard required in a criminal trial.
...
In a criminal trial where the Crown case relies substantially upon the evidence of a single witness, the jury must always approach that evidence with particular caution, because of the onus and standard of proof which is placed upon the Crown. I am not suggesting for one moment that you are not entitled to convict the accused upon the evidence of the complainant.
Clearly you are entitled to do so but only after you have carefully examined the evidence and satisfied yourself that it is reliable beyond a reasonable doubt. In considering the complainant's evidence and whether it does satisfy you of the accused's guilt, you should of course look to see if it is supported by any other evidence.
54While this direction drew attention to the twin aspects of credibility, honesty and reliability, it is important to appreciate that the defence case at trial was that the complainant's allegations were lies, fabricated by her with the assistance of "leading questions" from the police. It was squarely put that the complainant was merely attention-seeking when she wrote to Mr Turner, and that her maintenance of the lie was a feature of her characterisation of herself as a victim. The complainant's veracity was the real battleground at trial, not her reliability. The complainant's reliability was nevertheless called into question by the nature of the cross-examination and counsel's closing address.
55The cross-examination of the complainant highlighted the fact that between August 2004 and February 2005 the complainant was counselled by a number of trained professionals. She exhibited anxiety, depression, eating disorders, self-harm, some obsessive compulsive traits and fantasies relating to the appellant which were variously considered to be associated with bullying at school and the nature of her relationship with the appellant. On any view of that material, the complainant was a very disturbed young girl.
56This psychological history was relied upon by the appellant at trial in three respects. First, that the complainant was already suffering from a mental illness before the alleged offences in October or November 2004. Second, that the complainant had numerous opportunities, arising out of her contact with trained professionals outside the family, to disclose the sexual activity if it was occurring, particularly in circumstances where the focus of much of the counselling was the complainant's relationship with the appellant. Third, that the complainant's separation from the appellant after Christmas 2004 was explained by the implementation of a strategy by her counsellors to lessen her attachment to the appellant.
57The Crown maintained that the complainant's disturbed psychological state obviously arose out of a highly dysfunctional relationship with an emotionally fragile, needy father, who ultimately took advantage of the complainant by seeking emotional and sexual comfort from her as though she were a surrogate wife. It was pointed out that the complainant was not psychotic. Moreover, many aspects of the complainant's description of her relationship with the appellant before the commission of the offences were supported by KC.
58The impact of KC's evidence as tendency evidence was and is, in my view, considerable, particularly where the only disputed aspect of her evidence was the appellant kissing the complainant on the lips and the regularity with which the complainant sat in the front seat of the car. KC was not shaken on this evidence.
59The jury was directed in the following terms :-
The evidence is before you because the Crown says there is a pattern of behaviour that reveals that the accused had a tendency to act in a particular way or to have a particular state of mind, namely to be sexually attracted towards the complainant. The evidence of the accused having that tendency can only be used by you in the way that the Crown asks you to use it if you make two findings beyond reasonable doubt.
The first finding is that you are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that one or more of those acts occurred. In making that finding, you do not consider each of the acts in isolation but consider all the evidence and ask yourself whether you are satisfied that a particular act relied upon actually took place.
If you cannot find any of those acts are proved beyond reasonable doubt, then you must put aside the suggestion that the accused had the tendency advanced by the Crown, namely to be sexually attracted towards the complainant.
The second matter is this, you must ask yourself whether from the act or acts you have found proved, you can infer or conclude beyond reasonable doubt that the accused had the tendency the Crown alleges, namely to be sexually attracted towards the complainant. If you cannot draw the inference or conclusion beyond reasonable doubt, then again you must put aside any suggestion that the accused had that tendency alleged. So if having found one or more of the acts attributed to the accused have been proved beyond reasonable doubt and you can from the proved act or acts infer or conclude beyond reasonable doubt that the accused had the tendency to act in a particular way or having that state of mind that the Crown alleges, you may use the fact of that tendency or state of mind in considering whether the accused committed the offences charged.
60It is unlikely, in my view, that the jury would not have been satisfied to the requisite standard that some of the activity described by KC occurred, even if they entertained a doubt that the appellant kissed the complainant passionately on the lips. KC's description of the appellant and the complainant "spooning" on the couch in front of the television, holding hands, and of the appellant fondling the complainant's thigh while she was sitting on his lap, was uncontested.
61Further, it is also very unlikely that the jury would not have been satisfied to the requisite standard that the appellant's conduct in this regard demonstrated a sexual interest in the complainant. The defence suggestion that this behaviour lacked any sexual connotation was, and is, unconvincing, particularly when it was common ground that the appellant did not conduct himself in that way towards KC. KC's uncontradicted evidence was that she told both the appellant and the complainant that their behaviour was sexually inappropriate. The appellant told her to mind her own business.
62It is therefore not the case that there was no evidence supporting the complainant's account of the sexual activity between herself and the appellant. In some respects, that conclusion begs the question posed by the appeal : if the complainant was accepted as a witness of truth, why would verdicts of guilty not be returned in respect of counts 1 and 2? In my view, the answer lies in the jury's assessment of the complainant's reliability with respect to counts 1 and 2, coupled with the jury's principled consideration of each count, the directions on complaint and the directions which highlighted the forensic disadvantage to the accused occasioned by the late complaint.
63The complainant was interviewed for the first time on 23 November 2007 shortly before she turned 14 years of age. At the beginning of the interview, she became emotional and started to cry when describing in general terms the appellant's behaviour towards her. The complainant went on to describe the first time that the appellant put his hand and his penis inside her vagina, consistent with the summary set out at [14] - [16] above.
64When the complainant was asked whether she was wearing clothes she replied "I think so". She was asked how the appellant placed his hands inside her clothing and she replied "I don't know". She thought that the appellant was not wearing clothes. Later, when describing the act of penile/vaginal intercourse, the complainant said that she was not sure if she had any clothes on at that particular time.
65When describing the second occasion, the complainant said that she thought it may have been on her birthday. She described the appellant touching her "in her vagina" with his fingers and then touching himself on his penis. She said that she could see the appellant rubbing himself, that he had no clothes on and that it was daytime. She was asked "did you see anything come out of his penis this time?" She replied that she saw "like white. ... like, sperm or whatever", which went on the sheets. She confirmed that the two occasions she had described were the only times that the appellant had touched her genitalia.
66The second interview took place on 26 November 2007. The interviewing police sought further details from the complainant with respect to each incident. In relation to the first occasion, the complainant said that she could not see the appellant's penis. When asked "how do you know then it was his penis that was inside you?", she replied "I don't know, I just think it was."
67In relation to the second occasion, the complainant said that the appellant was under the covers of the bed, and that she saw that he was rubbing himself because "the sheets [were] moving and stuff. They were moving like up and down and stuff". The complainant said that she could not see the appellant's penis. She knew that the appellant had placed his fingers in her vagina because of the position of his arm. She confirmed that she saw semen on the sheets after the event.
68There are a number of distinguishing features of the complainant's account of the first and second episodes. The first was at night and the complainant was unsure of a number of matters, including whether she was wearing clothes, how the appellant placed his hand inside her clothing and whether it was in fact the appellant's penis that penetrated her. The complainant associated penetration of her vagina with pain, but could not say with any degree of particularity how that came about.
69Accepting that the terms of the complaint conveyed that the complainant believed the appellant had penile/vaginal intercourse with her on this occasion, the complainant's evidence of this episode nonetheless introduced a measure of doubt. The jury may well have drawn back from acting upon the complainant's evidence of forceful penetration in the absence of medical evidence tending to confirm that penetration did occur.
70By way of contrast, the complainant's evidence of the second episode was not attended with the same qualifications. It occurred in daylight, albeit they were under the bedclothes. The complainant described the appellant "touching" her in her vagina with his fingers. The absence of forensic evidence for the purposes of this offence would arguably not have troubled the jury, particularly where the complainant's description of the assault did not include the experience of pain. Her description of the appellant rubbing himself, the movement of the sheets and her evidence of ejaculation was clear and unequivocal. Obviously, even if forensic evidence of this event were available, it was not necessarily probative of the complainant being in the appellant's bed.
71These considerations are consistent with the jury's "cautious approach to the discharge of a heavy responsibility" : MFA at 617 [34].
72The decision in AE is not relevantly analogous to the instant case. In AE the jury convicted one out of thirteen counts, all based upon the evidence of the one complainant. In particular, the evidence in support of counts 9 and 11 was in identical terms (acts of penile/vaginal intercourse in a car whilst parked in a State forest at Christmas time in consecutive years), yet the jury acquitted on count 9 but convicted on count 11. AE falls into that category identified by Wood CJ at CL in Markuleski at [234] where "verdicts of not guilty were returned on a preponderance of the counts in an indictment".
73I am not persuaded that the circumstances of the jury's deliberations provide any support for the contention that the verdicts are unreasonable. It is impossible to determine whether the verdict upon which the jury first agreed was one of "guilty" or "not guilty", or to which count that verdict related. The jury simply carried out the instruction to consider each count separately.
74Having reviewed the whole of the evidence at trial, I have concluded that it was open to the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused was guilty of counts 3 and 4. There is nothing unreasonable or illogical about the appellant's acquittal on counts 1 and 2. I would dismiss this ground of the appeal.