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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Robson, R. v [2006] EWCA Crim 1414 (23 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2006/1414.html Cite as: [2007] 1 All ER 506, [2006] EWCA Crim 1414 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM BRISTOL CROWN COURT
JUDGE SIMON DARWALL SMITH
S20050686
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE KEITH
and
MR JUSTICE LLOYD JONES
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The Queen |
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- and - |
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Kevin Robson |
Appellant |
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Smith Bernal WordWave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Mr Kerry Barker and Mr Richard Posner for the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Keith:
Introduction
The facts
The appellant's background
The age of the appellant for the purpose of sentence
"In the case of an offender who has passed from one relevant age group to another between committal and his appearance before the Crown Court, the Crown Court should ensure that he is sentenced as a member of the appropriate age group. An offender committed under the PCC(S)(A) 2000, ss. 3,4 or 6, must be sentenced on the basis of his age when he appears before the Crown Court (see R v Robinson, unreported, November 20, 1962, decided on the CJA 1948, s.29(3))."
(The reference to the Criminal Justice Act 1948 was wrong. It should have referred to the Magistrates' Courts Act 1952). A similar conclusion was expressed in Blackstone at para. D21.19:
"In disposing of the committal the Crown Court is not limited to the sentence that the magistrates' court could have imposed but may deal with the offender as if he had just been convicted on indictment. One consequence of this is that if he has attained an age of relevance to sentencing powers during the period between the magistrates' court and Crown Court proceedings then he is to be sentenced on the basis of his age when he appears in the Crown Court (Robinson (1962) CSP L12-3AO1)."
If this view is correct, the age of a defendant committed to the Crown Court for sentence is treated for the purpose of sentence differently from the age of a defendant convicted after trial on indictment. The latter has to be sentenced on the basis of his age at the date of his conviction, either by the verdict of the jury or by a plea of guilty: see Danga (1992) 94 Cr.App.R. 252 and Robinson (1993) 96 Cr.App.R. 418.
"This section applies where… a person aged under 18 is to be sentenced for…"
If the relevant age for the purpose of sentence was the offender's age at the date of the offence, sections 226(1) and 228(1) would have been drafted as follows:
"This section applies where… a person is convicted of a serious [or specified] offence committed when he was aged under 18…"
Sections 225(1) and 227(1) would have been similarly drafted. As a matter of statutory construction, we conclude that the age of the offender for the purpose of determining which of the statutory regimes under Chapter 5 of Part 12 of the 2003 Act applies to him is the offender's age at the date of conviction, and that Judge Darwall Smith was right to sentence the appellant by reference to sections 226 and 228 of the 2003 Act.
"(1) This section applies where on the summary trial of a specified offence a person aged under 18 is convicted of the offence.
(2) If, in relation to the offence, it appears to the court that the criteria for the imposition of a sentence under section 226(3) or 228(2) of the Criminal Justice Act 2003 would be met, the court must commit the offender in custody or on bail to the Crown Court for sentence in accordance with section 5A(1) below."
Section 5A(1) of the 2000 Act (which was inserted by para. 27 of Schedule 3 to the 2003 Act) deals with the powers of the Crown Court on such a committal, and its provenance, via a series of intervening Acts in the meantime, was section 29(3) of the Magistrates' Courts Act 1952. It provides, so far as is material:
"Where an offender is committed by a magistrates' court for sentence under section… 3C… above, the Crown Court shall inquire into the circumstances of the case and may deal with the offender in any way in which it could deal with him if he had just been convicted of the offence on indictment before the court."
This is the provision which the editors of Archbold and Blackstone had in mind.
The appellant's dangerousness
"Repetitive violence or sexual offending at a relatively low level without serious harm does not of itself give rise to a significant risk of serious harm in the future. There may, in such cases, be some risk of future victims being more adversely affected than past victims but this, of itself, does not give rise to significant risk of serious harm."
On the other hand, sexual assaults which are relatively minor from the physical point of view may lead to severe psychological injury. Indeed, in Bowler (1994) 15 Cr.App.R.(S) 78, which was referred to in Lang, the point was made that that applies to adult women just as much to young girls. Some women might be able to shrug off unwelcome sexual attention, but others might not. The court took the view that the purpose of a provision which required the court to assess what longer custodial term was necessary to protect the public from serious harm from the offender included "the protection of those women, less robust than average, who may be vulnerable to the kind of conduct that [the offender in that case was] likely to perpetrate and who might, in those circumstances, suffer serious psychological harm". We recognise the force of these remarks, but we doubt whether it would be right to say that an offender represents a significant risk that women would be caused serious harm if only a relatively small proportion of women would be susceptible to severe psychological injury as a result of what the offender might do.
The sentence for the breach of the supervision order
The appropriate sentence
Conclusion