George v Parsons
[2009] NTSC 66
•09/12/2009
George v Parsons [2009] NTSC 66
PARTIES: PRESTON LEE GEORGE v MATTHEW ALAN PARSONS TITLE OF COURT: SUPREME COURT OF THE
NORTHERN TERRITORYJURISDICTION: SUPREME COURT OF THE
NORTHERN TERRITORY
EXERCISING APPELLATE
JURISDICTIONFILE NO: JA 46 of 2009 (20932407) DELIVERED: 9 December 2009 HEARING DATE: 9 December 2009 JUDGMENT OF: RILEY J CATCHWORDS: REPRESENTATION: Counsel: Appellant: I Rowbottam Respondent: M Thomas Solicitors:
Appellant: North Australian Aboriginal Justice
AgencyRespondent: Office of the Director of Public
ProsecutionsJudgment category classification: B
Judgment ID Number: Ril0917 Number of pages: 9 IN THE SUPREME COURT
OF THE NORTHERN TERRITORY
OF AUSTRALIA
AT DARWINGeorge v Parsons [2009] NTSC 66
No. JA 46 of 2009 (20932407)
BETWEEN:
PRESTON LEE GEORGE
Appellant
AND:
MATTHEW ALAN PARSONS
Respondent
CORAM: RILEY J
EX TEMPORE
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT (Delivered 9 December 2009)
| [1] |
On 3 November 2009, following his guilty plea, the appellant was convicted driving whilst unlicensed. In addition to a period of disqualification from holding and obtaining a driver's licence he was sentenced to imprisonment for a period of two months. The appellant appeals against the imposition of the term of imprisonment on the grounds that the learned magistrate failed to consider alternative dispositions to an actual term of imprisonment, the sentence was manifestly excessive and the learned magistrate took into account irrelevant considerations.
The offending occurred on 25 September 2009 when the appellant was stopped by police and subjected to a roadside breath test. It was not suggested that his driving attracted the attention of police. He returned a positive reading and was subsequently determined to have a blood alcohol content of 0.170%. The court was informed that the appellant did not have any good reason for driving.
| [3] | for driving whilst unlicensed and two convictions for driving whilst |
The appellant has a relevant history of convictions. He has two convictions criminal history of the appellant also revealed that he had served time in prison for other offences.
The reasons for decision
In sentencing the appellant the learned magistrate referred to the prior convictions of the appellant which he described as "a considerable history of driving under the influence". His Honour correctly pointed out that driving under the influence is a common cause of motor vehicle accidents in this community and that the maximum penalties reflect the seriousness with which such offending is to be regarded. His Honour indicated that general deterrence is a significant consideration in determining an appropriate sentence.
| [7] | did not explicitly address alternative dispositions. When considering |
The appellant complains that the magistrate failed to consider alternative dispositions to an actual term of imprisonment and, further, that his Honour took into account irrelevant considerations.
The reasons for decision were given immediately after submissions by both counsel had been completed. Consistent with the nature of the proceedings and the circumstances in which the hearing was conducted the reasons were not expansive. It was apparent from the sentencing remarks that the learned magistrate placed emphasis upon the need for general deterrence, the
seriousness of the offending and the significant relevant criminal history of
the appellant. I see no error on the part of his Honour in his approach to
these matters.Alternative dispositions
It is true, as the appellant submitted, that the learned sentencing magistrate delivered by magistrates in busy courts, an appellate court is entitled to assume that the magistrate has considered all matters which are necessarily implicit in the conclusion reached. It is to be assumed that magistrates are well aware of sentencing options open to them. It should not be inferred that, merely because a magistrate failed to specifically mention a particular sentencing option in the course of ex tempore sentencing remarks, he or she did not consider all of the options[1]. In my opinion this ground has not been made out.
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| [10] |
|
The learned magistrate took into account irrelevant considerations
(a) The driver's licence
The information provided to the learned sentencing magistrate was that the appellant told police that he had never held a driver's licence. In the course of submissions to his Honour the prosecutor confirmed that: "Mr George has never held a licence. He has been disqualified previously, but he has never held a licence". Counsel who appeared on behalf of the appellant in the Court of Summary Jurisdiction did not challenge the claim which, it seems, was consistent with her client's instructions. The learned magistrate proceeded to sentence on that basis.
In this court it was, for the first time, submitted on behalf of the appellant that he must have had a driver’s licence and passed a driver's test because, in 1997, he was convicted of an offence of driving without ‘P” plates and
| [11] | unlicensed should be equated with driving disqualified. Reference to the |
(b) Driving disqualified
The appellant complains that the magistrate erred in considering that driving considered driving unlicensed should be equated with driving disqualified. Further, there is nothing to support the submission of the appellant that his Honour placed the appellant in "the same category of offender as drink drivers who drive whilst disqualified". The complaint is without foundation.
| [14] | imposed upon an offender is manifestly excessive are well known[2]. It is |
(c) Passing remarks
The appellant also complains that the magistrate erred when, in referring to the period since the last conviction of the appellant for driving whilst under the influence of alcohol, his Honour said that "going five years to that
previously convicted does not always mean that he has never done it for five
years". Those remarks were of a throwaway kind made in the course of
discussion with counsel. The remarks were not repeated in the course of
sentencing and there is nothing to suggest that his Honour proceeded to
sentence on the basis that the appellant had offended in the intervening
period.
It has not been demonstrated that his Honour took into account irrelevant considerations. This ground of appeal is dismissed.
Manifest excess
The principles applicable to an appeal based upon the ground that a sentence excessive. It interferes only if it be shown that the sentencing magistrate was in error in acting on a wrong principle or in misunderstanding or in wrongly assessing some salient feature of the evidence. The error may appear in what the sentencing magistrate said in the proceedings or the sentence itself may be so excessive or inadequate as to manifest such error. In relying upon this ground it is incumbent upon the appellant to show that the sentence was not just excessive but manifestly so. He must show that the sentence was clearly and obviously, and not just arguably, excessive.
| [15] |
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| [16] | history was relevant to show that these offences were not an uncharacteristic |
The appellant had the criminal history to which I have referred. That need to impose condign punishment to deter the offender and other offenders from committing further offences of a like kind."
The appellant has an unfortunate history of driving offences. In relation to such offending he had previously been dealt with by way of fines, disqualification and suspended sentences of imprisonment. In addition he had served terms of actual imprisonment in relation to other offending. There was no suggestion that he had learned from his experience or that he would not offend in the same way in the future. In the circumstances the learned magistrate was required to impose a sentence which placed significant, indeed paramount, emphasis upon the need for deterrence both personal and general[4].
In my opinion it has not been established that the sentence was manifestly excessive.
[19] The appeal is dismissed.
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[1] Kuiper v Brennan [2006] NTSC 54 at [33]; Simon v Garner[2007] NTSC 33 at [12]; Henda v Cahill
[2009] NTSC 63
[2] House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 503; Cransen v The King (1936) 55 CLR 509; Liddy v The
Queen [2005] NTCCA 4.
[3] Veen v The Queen (No2) (1987/1988) 164 CLR 465 at 477.
[4] Eldridge v Bates (1989) 8 MVR 394 at 395 & 396.
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