The Evidence at Trial
7The complainant (then aged 19) and Ms Munro arrived at the Panthers Leagues club about 9 pm. They entered the nightclub "Lynx" and over the course of the evening consumed some alcohol and danced with friends. The complainant said she was not affected by alcohol. Ms Munro and the complainant spoke to Gavin Duncan and the appellant (then aged 21). They had previously met Mr Duncan at another club in Penrith. The complainant met the appellant for the first time at the Panthers Leagues club approximately 4 weeks earlier.
8During the time the complainant and Ms Munro were at the club, the complainant attempted to call and sent several text messages to her boyfriend. The complainant had arranged to meet him at the club but he did not arrive.
9CCTV footage obtained from the nightclub depicted the complainant, Ms Munro, Gavin Duncan and the appellant in each other's company from time to time. Despite the complainant being left alone by Ms Munro for approximately 45 minutes, the complainant was not involved in any significant discussion or interaction with either the appellant or Mr Duncan.
10The complainant left the dance floor to find Miss Munro. The latter was in the female toilets in an intoxicated state and almost asleep. They remained inside the toilet for about half an hour, until security guards knocked on the door and told them to leave. When they left the toilets at about 2 am, they were asked to leave the club. At this point, Ms Munro had a conversation with Mr Duncan and the appellant.
11All four persons left the nightclub together. The appellant and Mr Duncan stayed inside the club premises for a short time, whilst Ms Munro and the complainant moved outside to a nearby taxi rank. When Mr Duncan and the appellant came outside, Ms Munro walked towards them and they had a conversation. CCTV footage from the taxi rank area depicted Ms Munro, Mr Duncan and the appellant in the vicinity of the taxi rank, whilst the complainant stood some distance away.
12Ms Munro called the complainant over and indicated that Mr Duncan would give them a lift. The complainant said she initially refused but when Ms Munro pointed out the length of the taxi queue, she relented. The complainant said that Mr Duncan told her he would take her home. She replied "Are you sure?"
13CCTV footage of the taxi rank area and of the car park depicted all four persons walking together to the far corner of the car park. The complainant said in evidence in chief that they were walking towards the car and the appellant was next to her on her left side. After crossing the road and entering the car park, the appellant put his arm round her and began to grab her breast. The complainant said he placed his hand down the front of her top or dress and into her strapless bra. She said that she attempted to move in front of him as they were walking. When the CCTV footage was played to the complainant in cross-examination, she agreed that it did not demonstrate that the appellant was near her when they entered the carpark, rather he was walking ahead of her. The complainant insisted that the appellant did grab her breast on the way to the car, but she was unable to "pinpoint the time" when he did so. There was nothing visible on the CCTV footage that demonstrated the alleged sexual conduct by the appellant towards her.
14Mr Duncan gave evidence that the appellant began to undo his pants when they reached the car, apparently with the intention of urinating nearby. Mr Duncan stopped him from doing so. The appellant later confirmed this incident to police. The complainant told Mr Duncan that she would not get in the car if the appellant's pants were undone. When this episode was put to the complainant at trial, she could not remember it.
15The complainant's evidence was that when they reached the car, she and the appellant climbed into the back seat. Mr Duncan and Ms Munro were in the front seats. The complainant said that the appellant started to touch her leg and tried to lift her dress and touch her breast. She moved his hand away and told him that she did not welcome his advances. She said that his left hand was up her dress and on top of her underwear, with his right hand grabbing her breast. The appellant's right arm was draped around her shoulder. She said she continued to move his left hand away, but at one point his hand got inside her underpants to her vagina. The complainant said that she kissed the appellant on the lips for about five seconds, while attempting to pull his hands away. She said that she kissed him only because she thought it would stop him from touching her. She agreed that she made no complaint about the appellant's conduct either before she entered the car or during the journey. She said she felt uncomfortable.
16The complainant denied that she was continuously kissing the appellant during the journey to South Penrith. Mr Duncan gave evidence that, during the journey, he had looked in the rear vision mirror and observed the complainant and the appellant kissing and touching each other all the way to the house. Ms Munro also gave evidence that the appellant and the complainant were kissing each other in the car.
17The complainant said that when she arrived at the house in South Penrith she did not know where she was and had not been there before. She asked Mr Duncan where they were and he told her it would not take long. In cross-examination, the complainant maintained that during the walk to the car they had told her they were going to a friend's house, but that Mr Duncan said he would take them home. The complainant also acknowledged that she was aware that she was not going directly home, before she got into the car. She agreed in cross examination that her statement to the police in her record of interview ("We were driving. I thought we were home but we weren't. I got out and it wasn't my home") falsely suggested that she was unaware that they were going to another house.
18The complainant's account was that as they walked to the front door of the house, Mr Duncan entered first, followed by herself and Ms Munro. The appellant was the last to enter the house.
19Mr Duncan's evidence was that the appellant and the complainant were close together, touching each other, and that they both walked towards the spare bedroom. He claimed to have seen them enter the spare room, although he conceded that he could not see around corners and that it was not possible for someone in his location to see the entry to the spare room. The entry to the bathroom was immediately opposite the door to the spare room. Both doorways were not visible from Mr Duncan's position.
20According to the complainant, after they entered the house, Mr Duncan went to the bathroom, which was some distance further into the house along the hallway and to the right. The complainant said the appellant went with him and stood in the hallway. The complainant and Ms Munro went to the lounge room, which was immediately to the left of the front door, where they spoke to Scott Buckley who was seated on the lounge. Ms Munro then walked to where Mr Duncan was in the hallway and the complainant followed her.
21Mr Buckley's evidence was that, from his position in the lounge room, he saw the appellant and the complainant walk in the direction of the spare room, but he could not see the door to the spare room. Mr Buckley said he saw Mr Duncan and Ms Munro walk towards the main bedroom of the house, which was to the right of the front door, opposite the entry to the loungeroom.
22According to the complainant, Mr Duncan said to her "There's the bedroom if you want to have a lie down, it won't take long". (Mr Duncan maintained that he did not need to tell her that.) This was apparently a reference to Ms Munro and Mr Duncan intending to have intercourse before taking the complainant home. (Ms Munro said to the complainant on entering the house that she "needed to get it out of her system.") The complainant said that the appellant went into the bathroom at this point. The complainant went into the bedroom that had been indicated by Mr Duncan, where she removed her sandals and belt, turned the light off and got into a fold-out lounge bed, facing the wall. She left the bedroom door slightly ajar, but the bedroom itself was dark. She covered herself with the doona.
23The complainant heard the door to the bedroom open and shut. She turned around and saw the appellant enter the room. He was on her right side on the bed. He said to her "You didn't come here for sleeping and we're going bareback". (The term "bareback" was a reference to having intercourse without a condom.) The complainant replied "No, I'm sleeping; I didn't come here for this."
24The appellant then rolled the complainant onto her back and climbed on top of her, pulling her dress straps and her bra down. The appellant put his hand up her dress and started rubbing her vagina. The complainant said she tried to stop him and that she pushed him off and said "No". At this point the appellant put his hand over her mouth. He grabbed her breast and attempted to force her legs open with one hand. The complainant was struggling to keep her legs shut. The appellant moved her underwear to one side and put his penis into her vagina. The complainant was trying to stop him with her hands by attempting to push him off her. The complainant started to cry. The appellant continued to have sexual intercourse with her until she pulled herself up into a sitting position.
25She did not scream or cry out for help because she was petrified and crying. She agreed that at some point the appellant raised her legs above her head when he was attempting to penetrate her.
26The appellant removed his penis and put his fingers into her vagina and then placed them in her mouth. He pulled her legs down and resumed sexual intercourse. The appellant had his hand over her mouth. At one point the appellant had his hands around her neck and at some stage during intercourse, he placed a pillow over her face.
27Mr Duncan's evidence was that after seeing the appellant and the complainant walk towards the spare room, he entered Shane Lee's bedroom, which was at the end of the hallway past the entry to the bathroom. Mr Duncan said that when he came out of Shane's bedroom a short time later, he saw the appellant come out of the spare room and they had a conversation about finding a condom. Mr Duncan told the appellant to look in his (Mr Duncan's) bag. The appellant went to the loungeroom, asked Mr Buckley about a condom, then returned towards the spare room.
28Mr Duncan claimed that he and Ms Munro were in the loungeroom, after the appellant had asked for a condom, for some minutes. They then went to the main bedroom for ten minutes, but were asked to leave by Mr Buckley, who was acting on the instructions of Mr Lee. Mr Duncan and Ms Munro went to the back patio where they remained for half an hour. Ms Munro's evidence was that she and Mr Duncan entered the main bedroom soon after entering the house, and then went to the back patio. She was not challenged on this aspect of her evidence.
29Mr Buckley's evidence was also broadly consistent, in so far as he saw the appellant in the loungeroom asking for a condom. Mr Buckley went to the main bedroom and told Mr Duncan to leave. However, Mr Buckley's evidence that he then went with Mr Duncan to Mr Lee's bedroom, where all three of them sat and listened to "moaning" and "panting" sounds from the spare bedroom, was inconsistent with Mr Duncan and Mr Lee's evidence in that regard.
30Mr Duncan went to the bathroom. When he came into the hallway, he saw Ms Munro near the spare room. The complainant gave evidence of hearing Ms Munro open the door, turn the light of the bedroom on momentarily and say "What are youse doing?" The appellant replied "Yeah, boy". Ms Munro then left the room. At this time, the appellant still had his penis inside the complainant's vagina. Mr Duncan and Ms Munro both saw the appellant lying on top of the complainant. They then went to the loungeroom.
31According to the complainant, the appellant told her he was going to get a drink and he left the bedroom. She covered herself with the doona. Shortly thereafter, Ms Munro returned to the bedroom, turned the light on and asked the complainant what was wrong. The complainant looked distressed. She said that the appellant wouldn't get off, that she did not want to be there and wanted to go home. She started to cry then began sobbing. She was fixing her dress, saying that this was not what she had wanted.
32Ms Munro tried to call the complainant's boyfriend about five times, before leaving the room.
33On leaving the bedroom, the complainant and Ms Munro walked into the hallway, where they saw Mr Duncan. Mr Duncan asked the complainant what was wrong and the complainant repeated that she did not want to be there and wanted to leave. The complainant said to Mr Duncan "When someone says no it means no". Mr Duncan said that the appellant "was his best mate and he wouldn't to that".
34Mr Duncan told the complainant he would take them home. As they started to leave the house, the appellant, who was standing naked near the kitchen, ask the complainant what was wrong and where she was going. Mr Duncan told him to go back inside. At this point, the appellant screamed out "What, wasn't it big enough for you?"
35Mr Duncan then left the house and drove the complainant and Ms Munro to the complainant's home. The complainant gave evidence that she sustained bruising to the inner side of her right breast, neck, cheek and her inner thigh, near her vagina.
36Mr Lee's evidence was that he was asleep in his bedroom before the arrival of the group who had come from the club. He was woken by the appellant asking if he had a condom. The appellant had jeans on, but no shirt. He went back to sleep but was woken again by Mr Buckley who was looking through his window into the back patio area. He again fell asleep and woke to the sound of a girl crying and some commotion in the loungeroom. He went to the loungeroom and heard the appellant say in a raised voice "Wasn't it big enough for you?"
37The complainant and Ms Munro arrived at the complainant's home at about 4 am. Mr Duncan walked the complainant to the front door where he asked her if she had told the appellant to stop. Mr Duncan's statement to police recorded the complainant saying that she had told the appellant "no" once. However, at trial, Mr Duncan said that the complainant's response was "Oh no, not really."
38When Mr Duncan returned to the Lee's house, Mr Lee heard Mr Duncan say to the appellant "I think Nathan could be in a bit of trouble here, I think you've done something that she doesn't want you to do." The appellant replied "I don't think that happened, ... that's not the feeling I got." Mr Duncan gave evidence that he said to the appellant "Mate, she's accusing you of some pretty serious stuff." That comment was based upon what the complainant had said to Mr Duncan at her home.
39On entering her home, the complainant and Ms Munro went to sleep. Ms Munro left the house at about 7:30 am. The complainant sent a text to her sister at 7:50 am on 12 October 2008 asking her to call the complainant as soon as possible. She rang the complainant, who was in a distressed state, and asked her what had happened. The complainant said "Someone came on to me". When asked if someone had forced themselves on her, the complainant said yes. She was asked if she had been raped and the complainant said yes. There was no further discussion. The complainant's sister then contacted her sister-in-law and asked her to see the complainant straight away. Shortly afterwards, the complainant's brother and sister-in-law arrived at her home.
40The complainant was examined by a doctor in the Sydney West Area Health Unit at Nepean Hospital on 12 October 2008 at about 6 pm. The complainant gave the doctor a history of sexual assault. The doctor saw a round purple bruise over the complainant's right breast. The complainant said at trial that the appellant had bitten her right breast at some point during intercourse. The doctor agreed that the bruise to the breast may have been the result of being grabbed or sucked or by way of a love bight. The doctor noted two small abrasions just inside the opening of the vagina and a circular purple bruise on the outer part of the vagina in the groin area, between the thigh and the vagina.
41The complainant reported the matter to Penrith police after leaving the hospital. Photographs taken by the complainant's sister on 14 October 2008 were e-mailed to police at Penrith. Further photographs were taken by the police on 16 October 2008. Some of these photographs were before the jury, including the photograph of the complainant's right breast. One of the photographs depicted a linear bruise on the inner thigh in the area of the groin, consistent with the application of pressure from the complainant's underpants being forced to one side (Ex J).