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Jersey Unreported Judgments |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Jersey Unreported Judgments >> Coelho v AG 16-Oct-2020 [2020] JRC 216 (16 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/je/cases/UR/2020/2020_216.html Cite as: [2020] JRC 216 |
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Superior Number Appeal - Grave and criminal assault - reasons for dismissing the appeal
Before : |
R. J. MacRae, Esq., Deputy Bailiff, and Jurats Crill, Blampied and Dulake |
Alexandre Paulo Ribeiro Coelho
-v-
The Attorney General
Advocate M. P. Boothman for the Appellant.
J. C. Gollop Esq., Crown Advocate.
JUDGMENT
THE DEPUTY BAILIFF:
1. On 10th September, 2020, we gave the Appellant leave to appeal the sentence imposed upon him by the Inferior Number of the Royal Court and, having heard counsel for the Appellant and Respondent respectively, dismissed that appeal. This judgment gives the reasons for our decision.
2. The Appellant was convicted on a guilty plea on a count of grave and criminal assault committed against his partner of three months at her home on 20th October 2019.
3. The Appellant was sentenced to two years' imprisonment, made subject to a restraining order pursuant to Article 5(2) of the Crime (Disorderly Conduct and Harassment) (Jersey) Law 2008 for a period of five years and his deportation was recommended (AG v Coelho [2020] JRC 140). No appeal is made against the length or terms of the restraining order. The sentence of imprisonment and deportation order were both subject to appeal.
4. The Appellant's arguments on appeal can be reduced to three submissions:
(i) That the Appellant was sentenced on the wrong basis;
(ii) That the sentence imposed was manifestly excessive and that the Court should have given weight to previous similar decisions of the Inferior Number; and
(iii) That the decision to deport the Appellant was wrong.
5. It is convenient to examine these points in turn.
6. One of the principal aspects of the offence was the Appellant's grabbing of a black handled kitchen knife from the kitchen block next to the sink, him pointing to the Complainant's face whilst shouting and screaming at her. The Appellant accepted that this was frightening and threatening for the Complainant but pleaded guilty on the basis that the Complainant came to believe that the Appellant was going to give the knife to her. Although he never handed the knife to the Complainant, the defence say that at no point did he intend to stab the Complainant and the fact that both parties believe that he was going to hand the knife to her reinforces this mitigating feature. It is said the Court overlooked this matter. In fact, on analysis, there is nothing inconsistent with the basis of plea to be found in the Court's reasoned judgment and, in argument, counsel for the Appellant accepted that he could not say that the Court incorrectly recorded the basis upon which the Appellant was being sentenced. The most that can be said is that the Court did not set out in full the basis of plea. However, it was not obliged to do so. The Court gave a brief and balanced summary of the evidence in the case, which omitted to record various aggravating features of the Appellant's conduct. We make no criticism when we make this observation. In the view of the members of this Court, the sentencing court is not obliged to repeat or rehearse the prosecution's summary of facts. The advantage of providing a brief summary of the facts in the Court's judgment is for the public and the defendant to understand the key features of the offence for which a defendant is being sentenced. However, such a summary may be very brief indeed, particularly bearing in mind that the Crown's summary of facts, which has been provided to the defence in advance and is frequently reported in detail to the public by the media, contains a detailed statement of the factual basis upon which the Defendant falls to be sentenced.
7. It is useful to now set out the prosecution's case, the relevant mitigation and thereafter examine the Court's sentencing remarks in order to illustrate these points and also to provide the background to the second ground of appeal, which we consider next.
8. The transcript of the Crown's opening to the Inferior Number contained the following passages, which commenced with the events of the morning of 19th October 2019:
"The Complainant told the Defendant that their relationship was over, and she wanted to be friends; she stated that "he did not take it well". He became angry and shouted insults calling her "bitch" "prostitute". He left the flat. During the afternoon of the 19th October she received text messages from him saying he'd been drinking; the messages became progressively more aggressive. She took her son to stay overnight at her sister's at a separate address and then went to her place of work.
During that evening, the Defendant sent messages to the Complainant saying that he was in her flat. She asked him what he was doing there and said that she had not given him permission to be there. The Complainant believed that the Defendant had been drinking.
On the morning of Sunday 20th October, the Complainant left work, collected her son and headed home to the flat. "When we came home I was expecting [the Defendant] to be in the flat". She was scared about returning home because she knew the Defendant had been drinking the previous evening. The Defendant was lying on the sofa bed in the lounge; an iPad originally belonging to the Defendant was on the sofa. The Complainant asked the Defendant to leave immediately and took the iPad into her bedroom, stating that she would return it once she had removed personal photos. The Defendant remonstrated with the Complainant about his belongings in the flat and the iPad; he became angry and started shouting and abusing her calling her "Bitch" and "Pig".
The Defendant followed the Complainant into the bedroom wrestled the iPad from her grip. The Complainant tried to retrieve it and the Defendant pushed her away with such force that she fell over onto the bed onto the floor, hitting the left back side of her head. The son was in the bedroom doorway and having witnessed the above, he tried to call 999 on his mother's mobile phone. The Defendant tried to leave the flat with the Complainant's phone, but she managed to obstruct him and retrieve the phone from him.
The Defendant went into the kitchen; the Complainant followed. The Defendant grabbed a black handled kitchen knife, with a 6-inch blade, which was in the knife block on the kitchen surface. There's a photograph of the knife at divider 7 Sir, behind the two injury photographs.
As the Complainant entered the kitchen the Defendant pointed the knife to the face of the Complainant and threatened her. The Complainant stated, "He had the knife close to my face", in her estimation "It was about a foot away". The Defendant was screaming at the Complainant and continued with his verbal abuse of her. As he pointed the knife towards the Complainant's face the Defendant said that he knew how to use karate, and he continued to call her names such as "Bitch" and "Pig". The Complainant was fearful for her safety and for that of her son.
The son stood in the hallway and witnessed the shouting and his mother being threatened with a knife. He was scared. The Complainant told Edson - told the son to go to a friend's flat on the top floor and ask them to call the Police. The Defendant snatched the iPad from the Complainant's arms; there was a struggle for the iPad which fell to the floor. The Complainant fell; the Defendant lashed out at her, hitting her on the nose, causing it to bleed and feel tender. The Defendant ran off.
The Complainant went back into the flat from the corridor. Her son was screaming that she was bleeding. The son had rung his auntie and asked for help. The Complainant tried to telephone the Emergency Services however her mobile phone was out of credit. Fortunately Sir, Police Officers had traced the address of the 999 call and attended. The son walked out of the living room, approached the police officer and said words to the effect of: "Alex had a knife to my Mummy's face" and "They were fighting". A Police Officer took two photographs of the Complainant, entitled "nose bleed" and "hand injury" respectively. Those Sir are at divider 7. The Complainant stated that the whole incident lasted about thirty minutes; the episode with the knife lasting about two or three minutes."
9. The Crown went on to draw the Court's specific attention to the basis of plea and the cross-reference to the witness statements of the Complainant within the basis of plea which were both included in the Crown's bundle so that factual basis was understood by the Court in its proper context. The defence in mitigation explored and explained the basis of plea to the Court in some detail as follows:
"Mr Coelho submitted a basis of plea and that basis of plea has been accepted and therefore Sir he is to sentenced in accordance with it and if I may Sir kindly ask you to turn to divider 5 of my learned friend's bundle. Sir, paragraph 5 of the basis of plea it says as follows "Regarding the knife incident, the Defendant accepts the Complainant's version of events as set out in paragraph 7 of Statement 1 and paragraph 10 of Statement 2 save that he does not believe that he was as close as a foot away from the Complainants face. He at no point intended to stab the Complainant with the knife however he accepts that by holding a knife (by the handle) towards the Complainant during a domestic incident she was likely to feel fearful and threatened by his actions. He accepts that he was trying to get the Complainant to take the knife as she states in paragraph 10 of Statement 2." So paragraph 10 of statement 2 is the penultimate page of that divider and it's on the back of that page. And this is the victim's account of what took place. "After I took my phone Alex walked into the kitchen which is next to the front door. He came straight into the kitchen and straight to the knifes. He grabbed one of the kitchen knives from the block. It was a 6 inch kitchen knife from the block. As I came in he pointed the knife towards me as if he wanted me to take it. I told him to leave again. Alex was saying stuff about the knife and that he knew karate. He was calling me a bitch and a pig. He had the knife close to my face, it was about a foot away. He was holding the handle of the knife. He was in the kitchen with his back against the counter and I was in front of him. I think he was trying to get me to take the knife so that he could use that against me. Edson was in the hallway as he was scared, he was probably about2 meters away from us." Sir, aside the distance that the knife was being held towards the face of the Complainant that you will have seen is agreed. The fact is Sir that the Crown.., my learned friend stated in his Conclusion, it's referred to at paragraph 5 of those Conclusions, behind divider 1 that it is entirely - it states Sir half way down paragraph 5 "lt is entirely fortuitous that the Complainant was not seriously hurt." The fact is Sir in his basis of plea and even in the victim's own account he was trying to pass the knife to her and he is to be sentenced in accordance with his basis of pleas which states at no point he intended to stab her.
Sir, he accepts that holding a knife during the course of a domestic incident is entirely unacceptable and he accepts that through his guilty plea and it accepts that that clearly makes this offence a grave and criminal assault."
10. The following paragraphs of the judgment of the Inferior Number summarised the key facts as follows:
11. Accordingly, the Court was unable to discern any merit in the first ground of appeal.
12. The Appellant's principal submission was that there was a body of case law involving similar offences to which the Court should have paid closer attention. It was said that the appropriate sentence, on the basis of these cases, was between 12 and 18 months. The Inferior Number was criticised for not finding it a "useful exercise to consider these cases". It also said that the Court should have taken into account such previous cases because they were "strikingly similar" to this case. Reference was made to the need for there to be consistency in sentencing which this Court accepts is an important objective.
13. What connected those cases was that they each featured the use of a knife in a domestic context where little or no physical injury was caused to the complainant. These cases were AG -v- Horn [2010] JRC 104, AG -v- De Freitas [2013] JRC 065, AG -v- R [2013] JRC 162, AG -v- Thomson [2015] JRC 251 and AG -v- Moiro [2020] JRC 048.
14. This Court is not going to set out the facts of any of these authorities as every case is different. Each case involved an offender of different age with different antecedents carrying out different acts constituting the offence of grave and criminal assault, with different aggravating and mitigating features. As the Court of Appeal said in Wood -v- AG [1994] JLR N-15, and as cited, in Harrison -v- AG [2004] JLR 111 at paragraph 62:
15. We entirely agree with the approach of the Inferior Number, which was to extract the relevant principles to be drawn from those cases, without considering the sentences imposed in any of them. This is what the Inferior Number said:
16. It is useful to look at previous cases in this area (sentencing for grave and criminal assault) in order to ascertain guiding principles to which the sentencing court should have regard, but in terms of the sentence imposed every case is different. There are no leading or guideline cases. Sentencing in these cases is a discretionary exercise. Different principles apply in the context of cases involving the importation of and possession with intent to supply of certain controlled drugs and there is a body of case law, binding on the Inferior Number, which has developed necessitating the calculation of a starting point, usually by reference to weight or some other objective feature of the drug involved. The court will then determine the sentence to be imposed by reference to mitigating factors personal to the defendant. Such an approach is often also appropriate in the case of sex offences where, again, there is a developing body of guideline cases. But, as the Court of Appeal observed in Harrison -v- AG at paragraph 119, "the multiplicity of circumstances which result in charges of grave and criminal assault afford a wide band of sentencing options for the Royal Court". The court in that case went on at paragraph 120 to set out a list of matters which the Crown, when drafting the statement of facts, and the Jurats when addressing themselves at sentence, should consider. These are now known as the "Harrison factors". They are a common feature of the Crown's summary of facts.
17. However, we do not accept the suggestion made to us that it is necessary for the Inferior Number to specifically address the Harrison factors when imposing sentence. The Court did carry out such a task in this case but was not obliged to do so.
18. Counsel for the Appellant also criticised the Royal Court for not setting a starting point for this offence. Certainly there are often advantages in setting a starting point, as referred to by the Court of Appeal in Harrison. However, bearing in mind the variety of circumstances in which the offence of grave and criminal assault can be committed, we do not think that it is necessary for the Crown generally to propose starting points for this type of offence. Indeed such an approach might simply lead counsel to start comparing starting points selected by the Crown in relation to cases which are bound to be different from the case before the Court. It is always important for it to be clear whether a discount has been given for a guilty plea, and the extent to any discount. But, as observed by the Court of Appeal in Harrison at paragraph 57:
19. This Court also wishes to make two general points for the guidance of the Inferior Number in other cases of domestic abuse.
20. First, in addition to the general undesirability of comparing the sentence imposed in other cases, it is noteworthy that many of the cases that were urged upon us as being relevant comparators were cases where the offence was committed some years ago. The passage of time has led to a hardening of the approach of the courts to cases of domestic violence.
21. The second and connected point is that there is now a greater awareness in the community as a whole of the damaging effects, which may give rise to long term or permanent consequences, of domestic abuse/violence to the victims and the children of victims, a general abhorrence of such conduct and a need to deter offenders and others from similar offending. This has led to penalties for domestic violence increasing.
22. Finally, although the Harrison factors are useful, are of general application and of particular assistance in cases such as street violence, they are not tailored to meet the context of domestic abuse. Here, the essential aggravating features of the offence were the use of the knife, the fact that the Complainant was assaulted in her own home (including in her own bedroom) and the assault was witnessed by her terrified six year old son, who tried to call 999 on his mother's mobile phone. It needs to be recognised that these sort of factors are at least as important as the "Harrison factors" in cases of domestic abuse and need to be given weight when assessing the gravity of the offence.
23. In K -v- AG [2016] JCA 219 the Court of Appeal considered the utility of the guidance provided in England and Wales by the Sentencing Guidelines Council. As to the analysis of aggravating and mitigating factors the Court of Appeal said that the Royal Court's conclusions were that:
24. The Court of Appeal went on to say at paragraph 33:
25. We note that the Sentencing Council has produced guidance in respect of domestic abuse dated 2018 which provides, in respect of assessing seriousness:
26. The Sentencing Council also lists aggravating mitigating factors as follows:
27. It is not suggested that it is necessary or appropriate for the Crown, as is the practice with the Harrison factors, to identify the presence or absence of each factor but the Crown, and the Court when passing sentence should be alive to the specific aggravating and mitigating factors relevant to domestic abuse cases which are adopted by this Court and listed above.
28. It can immediately be seen that several of the aggravating factors were present in this case. One such aggravating feature, namely a proven history of violence in the domestic context, was a significant factor in this case. On 27th June 2017, the Appellant committed another grave and criminal assault against another woman in her own home. The Crown said this about that offence:
"The facts of the 2017 grave and criminal assault bear similarity to those for which the Defendant is to be sentenced today. The Defendant had been in a relationship with the Complainant for some months and the couple were living together in a flat. The Defendant was drunk when the Complainant returned home from an evening with female friends. In the early hours of the morning the Complainant was awakened by the Defendant shouting abuse at her calling her "bitch" and "prostitute". There then followed an assault involving the Complainant being pulled around the flat by her hair, kicked and slapped. The Defendant was sentenced in the Magistrate's Court to a 12-month Probation Order, a Community Service Order for 160 hours and a 3-year Restraining Order. Within 6 months of sentencing the Defendant had breached the Community Service Order by non-compliance, he had breached the Restraining Order and the Probation Order."
29. For those breaches the Appellant was sentenced to five months' imprisonment.
30. In conclusion, the Inferior Number was entitled to find that this was an offence which warranted the imposition of a sentence of two years' imprisonment and a restraining order.
31. A complaint is made about the application of the second limb in Camacho -v- AG [2007] JLR 462.
32. As is well understood that when considering making a recommendation for deportation the Inferior Number needs to consider:
(i) Whether the defendant's continued presence in Jersey would be detrimental to the community?
(ii) If so, would an order for deportation be disproportionate having regard to the rights given to the defendant and his family under the European Convention on Human Rights particularly pursuant to Article 8?
33. It is helpful to set out the terms of Article 8, which provide:
34. In Camacho the Court of Appeal said:
35. It is not suggested that the Inferior Number was wrong in deciding the first question in the affirmative. However, its assessment of the second limb of the test is challenged. This is what the Royal Court said:
36. It is said that the Royal Court fell into error when saying that the Appellant had a "large and stable family" in Portugal. The Inferior Number was presumably relying on paragraph 1 of the social enquiry report which said that the Appellant was in "regular contact with his siblings" - of whom there are seven living in Portugal. On appeal it was said that he was estranged from all of those persons and the only sibling with whom he was in touch was his brother who lives in Jersey, and that his father, who lives in Portugal, is now 87 and in poor health and, since the hearing before the Royal Court, has moved into a nursing home. The Appellant's 20 year old son still lives in Portugal, although he has considered moving to Jersey. The mother of the Appellant's son continues to reside in Portugal, although it is said that the Appellant finds it easier to support his son's mother by earnings in Jersey when he is in employment. A significant factor is undoubtedly the fact that the Appellant has lived in Jersey for most of the last 16 years, leaving Portugal when he was 30 years of age.
37. However, the Inferior Number was entitled to conclude, as is plainly the case, that the Appellant has no dependents in Jersey and has spent most of his life to date living in Portugal, notwithstanding the amount of time he has spent in Jersey. Accordingly we agree that the Inferior Number was entitled to find in its discretion that the second limb of the test in Camacho was satisfied and that it directed itself on the appropriate principles correctly. Even if the Royal Court erroneously recited that the Appellant has a "large and stable family" in Portugal, that error was not attributable to the Court, as there appears to have been no attempt to correct the contents of the social enquiry report. If it had been alleged that this error in fact vitiated the decision of the Royal Court, then we would, on appeal, have reached the same decision as the Royal Court did, with full knowledge of the relevant facts. Accordingly this appeal is dismissed.