Grounds of appeal
19The applicant nominates five grounds of appeal. Pursuant to s 5(1)(c) of the Criminal Appeal Act 1912, the leave of the court is required to appeal against the sentences passed. Two of the grounds raised by the applicant (grounds 1 and 4) are, in my view, without substance and do not warrant a grant of leave. It is convenient to address those grounds first.
20Ground 1 is:
That the sentencing judge erred in law by adopting an impermissible tiered or mathematical approach when sentencing the applicant.
21The judge said:
The sentence I impose in this case will be very heavy necessarily, given the fact that he is a major drug dealer who seems to think that he will be assisted somehow by having a gun. I will construct the sentences in such a way that a large number of the punishments will overlap with one another, or partly so, because if I were to impose a sentence which consisted of a sequence of separate sentences added on top of one another he would not get out of jail for 40 or 50 years. The law of sentencing requires that a sentencing judge take account of a principle of totality - that is to say one looks at the overall impact of a sentence on a person and does not impose a sentence which is crushing on the individual or grossly out of kilter with sentences for the worst kinds of crimes such as murder. Nonetheless, the conduct involved in this case is disgraceful. It is deliberate, and it requires and will attract a heavy sentence.
22The applicant submitted that it may be inferred from those remarks that his Honour engaged in a tiered approach of the kind condemned by the High Court in Markarian v R [2005] HCA 25; (2005) 228 CLR 357. In that case, the Court said at [39] that a sentencing court "may not add and subtract item by item from some apparently subliminally derived figure, passages of time in order to fix the time which an offender must serve in prison".
23It was submitted that, contrary to that principle, the judge had in mind a starting point, opaquely identified as "very heavy" and proceeded to adjust the sentence incrementally and "decrementally" from that point.
24I do not think there is any substance in that contention. As submitted on behalf of the Crown, the sentencing judge's reference to the need for a very heavy sentence was no more than a statement of the obvious. It says nothing as to his Honour's methodology. The remarks on sentence should not be construed as if his Honour came on to the bench not knowing what sentences he would pass, exposing the sequence of his deliberations with each further remark. Ground 1 should be dismissed.
25Ground 4 relied upon by the applicant is that the court erred by describing the applicant as a "major drug dealer".
26In addressing that ground, the applicant conceded that he was "a committed significant dealer in illegal drugs for financial gain and consumption". As submitted by the Crown, it is difficult in that context to regard complaint as to the use of the word "major" as anything more than semantic. The agreed facts reveal that the applicant had a group of distributors to whom he regularly supplied significant quantities of methylamphetamine, well in excess of the trafficable quantity (3 grams) and the indictable quantity (5 grams). He was found in possession of the equipment of a dealer including scales, a ledger or debt book, a large sum of cash and a loaded gun with further ammunition. He travelled interstate to supply the drugs, which were of high purity. He told police that, whilst he had begun dealing in drugs in order to repay a debt, greed had got the better of him. He lived an extravagant lifestyle, travelling business class and buying an expensive car with the proceeds of his offending.
27In those circumstances, the suggestion that it was not open to the sentencing judge to describe the applicant as a major drug dealer must, in my view, be rejected.
28It is convenient to address the remaining grounds (grounds 2, 3 and 5) together. They are:
2. That the Court erred in law in its application of the totality principle in sentencing.
3. That the Court erred by ordering that the sentence for dealing with the proceeds of crime be a wholly consecutive sentence.
5. That the sentence was manifestly excessive.
29It should be noted that ground 5 was not directed to any of the individual sentences passed, but only to the aggregate sentence.
30Grounds 2 and 3 assert patent error in the exercise of the discretion as to the degree of accumulation required to achieve a fair and reasonable aggregate sentence. The quality of that discretion was considered by Simpson J in R v Hammoud [2000] NSWCCA 540; (2000) 118 A Crim 66 where her Honour said at 67, [7] (Mason P agreeing at [2]):
Whether or not to accumulate sentences imposed in relation to multiple offences is, in the end, an exercise of discretion to be made in accordance with established principle. Features common to two or more offences are all matters relevant to be taken into account (pointing towards concurrence) as are features indicating the disparate nature of the offences (pointing the other way). There will be many cases in which sentencing judges might take differing views but neither view could be said to be wrong.
31As noted on behalf of the Crown, the discretion is constrained by the totality principle, which serves to mollify what would otherwise be a crushing accumulation of discrete terms for multiple offences.
32There is no suggestion that the sentencing judge was not aware of those principles. The applicant's submissions in support of this ground rested on the fact that the judge mentioned the totality principle before imposing any sentence. It was submitted that his Honour was required, but failed, to take one last look at the total sentence after having arrived at the individual sentences to be imposed in order to determine whether the aggregate sentence was appropriate in all the circumstances.
33As with ground 1, I think that submission mistakes the remarks on sentence for a chronological exposition of the judge's process of deliberation. In my view, it is clear from the remarks on sentence set out above that his Honour approached his task with a correct understanding of the applicable principles, including the requirement, after determining the individual sentences to be imposed and the degree of concurrency and accumulation between them, to consider the overall impact of the aggregate sentence.
34It may be accepted that the extent of accumulation resulted in a stern sentence. However, I am not satisfied that error is established in his Honour's application of the totality principle.
35Ground 3 complains of specific error in structuring the sentences such that the sentence passed for the offence of dealing with the proceeds of crime was wholly consecutive. The applicant relied on the remarks of Howie J in Cahyadi v R [2007] NSWCCA 1; (2007) 168 A Crim R 41 at 47, [27] where his Honour said:
In any event there is no general rule that determines whether sentences ought to be imposed concurrently or consecutively. The issue is determined by the application of the principle of totality of criminality: can the sentence for one offence comprehend and reflect the criminality for the other offence? If it can, the sentences ought to be concurrent otherwise there is a risk that the combined sentences will exceed that which is warranted to reflect the total criminality of the two offences. If not, the sentences should be at least partly cumulative otherwise there is a risk that the total sentence will fail to reflect the total criminality of the two offences.
36On the strength of those remarks, the applicant's submissions proceeded on the premise that, if the sentences for the drug supply offences were capable of comprehending the criminality of the offence of dealing with the proceeds of crime, error was established in accumulating those sentences. That is not how I would understand the remarks of Howie J in Cahyadi. It may be accepted that there was a measure of harshness in accumulating the sentence for dealing with the proceeds of crime. However, there is no authority for this Court to intervene in such a decision unless it can be said that it was not open to the sentencing judge to exercise his discretion in the manner in which he did. I am not so satisfied. It follows that ground 3 must be rejected.
37Ground 5 is that the sentence was manifestly excessive. As already noted, however, it was not contended that any individual sentence was excessive. Rather, the ground was directed to the overall sentence imposed. For the reasons I have already expressed in respect of grounds 2 and 3, whilst I accept that the aggregate sentence was a stern sentence, I do not think manifest excess is established.
38For those reasons, the orders I propose are that leave to appeal be granted but that the appeal be dismissed.
39BELLEW J: I agree with McCallum J.