CJM v JDA
[2010] QDC 207
•5/05/2010
[2010] QDC 207
DISTRICT COURT
CIVIL JURISDICTION
JUDGE KOPPENOL
No 38 of 2010
| CJM | Applicant |
| v | |
| JDA | Respondent |
| IPSWICH ..DATE 05/05/2010 ORDER |
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HIS HONOUR:
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1. This is an application for a compensation order, under part
3 of the Criminal Offence Victims Act 1995 (the Act).
| 2. The respondent was served with the application and | 10 |
| supporting material but did not appear today when the matter was called on. | |
| 3. At the relevant time, the applicant was a boy aged between | |
| eight and nine. He was indecently dealt with by the respondent | 20 |
| who, at the time, was in his late teens or perhaps 20 years of age. The respondent and the applicant engaged in mutual oral sex and masturbation. Those events occurred in 1994. | |
| 4. On March 20, 2009, the respondent was convicted of those | 30 |
| offences (four offences of indecent dealing with a child under 12) and I sentenced him to two years imprisonment with a parole recommendation after six months. | |
| 5. The amount sought by the applicant was comprised of (a) | 40 |
| $11,250 for post-traumatic stress disorder with a degree of mental and nervous shock (moderate) (15%, item 32) and (b) $11,250 for a major depressive disorder with anxiety (chronic) which was said to constitute an adverse impact of the sexual offence. | 50 |
| 6. In Parkes v Edwards [2006] QDC 175, Judge Dearden said, at paragraph [18], that: |
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"R v Attwell ex parte Jullie [2002] 2 QdR 367 held that "adverse impacts"
can be compensated under the Criminal Offence Victims Regulation 1995, only
in respect of the totality of the adverse impacts of a sexual offence
suffered by a person, to the extent that those impacts were not an injury
under the Act, which they will be if the injury amounts to "nervous or
| mental shock". Mental or nervous shock has been interpreted broadly as | 10 |
| being "not limited to cases where there is a diagnosable mental disorder or psychiatric illness resulting from the criminal offence, although it must be more than fear, fright, unpleasant memories or anger, or other adverse impact on feelings". | |
| 20 | |
| 7. His Honour also said, at paragraph [25], that: | |
| "There is no doubt that there are significant difficulties in assessing | |
| "adverse impacts" pursuant to the Criminal Offence Victims Regulation s.1A, | |
| even in an apparently straightforward case confined to criminal | |
| compensation arising out of solely or substantially sexual offences only. | 30 |
| It is, of course, far more complicated where the "adverse impacts" arise out of a series of offences, only one of which is a relatively minor sexual assault, and where the prosecution did not proceed in respect of an indictment alleging (in addition to the sexual assault charge) the count of rape". | |
| 40 | |
| 8. His Honour then said that: | |
| "In all of those circumstances, I consider on the balance of probabilities that the asserted adverse impact [in the case before his Honour] of being "too fearful and without confidence to have any further relationships" is a compensable "adverse impact" under the regulations.” | 50 |
| and went on to say that: | |
| "I do not consider that the other two asserted "adverse impacts", namely |
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"loss of appetite" and "continuing periods of lowered moods" are "adverse
| impacts" that could, on the material, be causally linked to the relevant | 1 |
| "personal offence of a sexual nature"." | |
| 9. I respectfully agree with the approach adopted in Parkes v | |
| Edwards. |
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10. In the present case, the psychological report by Ms Rachelle Hampson satisfies me that the applicant did suffer psychological and psychiatric injuries as a result of the respondent's actions towards him, and that the applicant has
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suffered and is suffering from a post-traumatic stress disorder with a degree of mental and nervous shock (moderate). However on the material before me, I am not satisfied that the major depressive order with anxiety (chronic), which was said to constitute an adverse impact of the sexual offence, is
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separate from the post-traumatic stress disorder with a degree of mental and nervous shock (moderate). I therefore decline to award the additional $11,250 claimed.
11. Having considered the written and oral submissions made by
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the applicant and all relevant provisions of the Act, I am satisfied that a compensation order in favour of the applicant should be made against the respondent in the amount of $11,250 for the injury suffered by the applicant, caused by a personal offence committed against him by the respondent.
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12. Accordingly, pursuant to section 24(3) of the Act, I order that the respondent pay $11,250 to the applicant because of the injury.
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