McKinley v R

Case

[2022] NSWCCA 14

09 February 2022

No judgment structure available for this case.

Court of Criminal Appeal


Supreme Court


New South Wales

Medium Neutral Citation: McKinley v R [2022] NSWCCA 14
Hearing dates: 12 November 2021
Date of orders: 9 February 2022
Decision date: 09 February 2022
Before: Macfarlan JA at [1];
Rothman J at [2];
Dhanji J at [67]
Decision:

(1)   Leave to appeal granted;

(2)   Appeal allowed;

(3)   The sentence imposed upon the applicant, Rhys Cale McKinley, in the District Court at Newcastle on 2 October 2020 be quashed and in lieu thereof the applicant be sentenced to the following term of imprisonment:

(i)   A non-parole period of 3 years and 11 months commencing 11 December 2019 and concluding 10 November 2023, with the remainder of the term of 1 year and 4 months concluding 10 March 2025. The applicant will be first eligible for parole on 10 November 2023.

Catchwords:

CRIME – appeal – assistance to authorities – Ellis discount – insufficient discount applied – appeal granted – resentenced

Legislation Cited:

Crimes Act 1900 (NSW), ss 97(1), 112(2), 117, 154A(1)(a), 195(1A)(b)

Criminal Procedure Act 1986 (NSW), s 166

Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 (NSW), s 23(2)(a)-(i), s 23(3), s 23(4)

Cases Cited:

FS v R [2009] NSWCCA 301

Hili & Jones v The Queen (2010) 242 CLR 520; [2010] HCA 45

House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499; [1936] HCA 40

R v Ellis (1986) 6 NSWLR 603

R v Gallagher (1991) 23 NSWLR 220

R v Sukkar (2006) 172 A Crim R 151; [2006] NSWCCA 92

Ryan v The Queen (2001) 206 CLR 267; [2001] HCA 21

R v XX (2017) 266 A Crim R 132; [2017] NSWCCA 90

SZ v R (2007) 168 A Crim R 249; [2007] NSWCCA 19

York v The Queen (2005) 225 CLR 466; [2005] HCA 60

Category:Principal judgment
Parties: Rhys Cale McKinley (Applicant)
Regina (Respondent)
Representation:

Counsel:
A Evers (Applicant)
C Dodds (Respondent)

Solicitors:
Legal Aid NSW (Applicant)
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) (Respondent)
File Number(s): 2019/390818
 Decision under appeal 
Court or tribunal:
District Court
Jurisdiction:
Criminal
Date of Decision:
02 October 2020
Before:
English DCJ
File Number(s):
2019/390818

Judgment

  1. MACFARLAN JA: I agree with Rothman J.

  2. ROTHMAN J: The applicant, Rhys Cale McKinley, applies for leave to appeal and, if leave be granted, appeals the sentence imposed upon him in the District Court on 2 October 2020.

  3. The applicant pleaded guilty to 5 indictable offences: aggravated break and enter and commit serious indictable offence (larceny) committed on 23 June 2019, contrary to s 112(2) of the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW), which carries a maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment and a standard non-parole period of 5 years’ imprisonment; take and drive conveyance without consent of owner, committed on 26 June 2019, contrary to s154A(1)(a) of the Crimes Act, the maximum penalty for which is 5 years’ imprisonment and for which there is no prescribed standard non-parole period; break and enter and commit serious indictable offence (larceny of Holden Commodore motor vehicle), said to have been committed on 30 October 2019, contrary to s 112(1) of the Crimes Act, the maximum penalty for which is 14 years’ imprisonment; robbery armed with offensive weapon (a tomahawk), said to have been committed on 26 June 2019, contrary to s 97(1) of the Crimes Act, the maximum penalty for which is 20 years’ imprisonment; and larceny (of a generator with a value greater than $5,000 in less than $15,000), committed on 25 October 2019, contrary to s 117 of the Crimes Act, for which the maximum penalty is 5 years’ imprisonment.

  4. Over and above the foregoing, there were two offences taken into account on a Form 1 pursuant to s 33 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 (NSW), being intentionally destroy property, which was placed on the first Form 1 and larceny of handbag placed on the second Form 1. The intentionally destroy property (an Audi Q3 motor vehicle) was committed on 27 June 2019 and is an offence under s 195(1A)(b) of the Crimes Act, the maximum penalty for which is 11 years’ imprisonment and was taken into account on the aggravated break and enter and commit serious indictable offence.

  5. The larceny was committed on 26 June 2019; is an offence under s 117 of the Crimes Act; and carries a maximum penalty of 5 years’ imprisonment. The larceny was notified on a Form 1 and taken into account in relation to the robbery armed with offensive weapon.

  6. As already stated, the applicant pleaded guilty to all offences for which he was sentenced. The District Court, Judge English DCJ, imposed a sentence of imprisonment for 7 years with a non-parole period of 5 years and 3 months, commencing 11 December 2019. The applicant had the benefit of a reduction in sentence on account of the plea of guilty at the earliest possible opportunity and on account of assistance provided.

  7. The following table sets out the sequence number on the Indictment, the offence, the maximum penalty, the indicative sentence and the discount applied to each and best summarises the circumstances in relation to the sentence imposed on the applicant.

Seq No

Offence

Maximum Penalty

Indicative Sentence

Discount applied

1.

Aggravated break, enter and steal (s 112(2) Crimes Act)

20 years (SNPP of 5 years)

3 years 9 months

40%

3.

Take and Drive conveyance (s 154A(1)(a) Crimes Act)

5 years

1 year 8 months

40%

7.

Break, enter and steal (s 112(1) Crimes Act)

15 years

2 years and 3 months

35%

8.

Armed robbery (s 97(1) Crimes Act)

20 years

5 years

40%

9.

Larceny (s 117 Crimes Act)

5 years

2 years 9 months

40%

Grounds of appeal

  1. In effect, the grounds of appeal, while three in number relate to the same issue. The complaint is that her Honour failed to provide sufficient reduction in the sentence on account of the voluntary disclosure of unknown guilt. The grounds of appeal are in the following terms:

Ground 1: Her Honour erred in failing to give reasons for limiting the discount for the voluntary disclosure of guilt to 15% or less;

Ground 2: Her Honour erred in failing to consider the impact of voluntary disclosure of unknown guilt in assessing the weight given to general and specific deterrence, the prospects of rehabilitation, and the protection of the community;

Ground 3: The sentence is manifestly excessive.

Procedural and factual history

  1. As already indicated, the applicant pleaded guilty to all of the charges for which he was sentenced. Having pleaded guilty at the earliest possible opportunity and, indeed, on one view, earlier than the usual earliest opportunity, he was entitled to a reduction of his sentence of 25% for the utilitarian value of the plea of guilty. I have already indicated those matters that were taken into account in the Form 1.

  2. The applicant was sentenced to an aggregate sentence of 7 years with a non-parole period of 5 years and 3 months commencing from the time of the applicant entered custody, which was 11 December 2019. The non-parole period expires on 10 March 2025 and the head sentence expires 10 December 2026. The applicant, on the current orders, is first eligible for release to parole on 10 March 2025.

  3. Notwithstanding the limited ground of appeal and the lack of any challenge to the findings of fact or the conclusions of her Honour, it is necessary briefly to summarise the circumstances of each of the offences. The circumstances of the offences were agreed between the parties and set out in a document entitled Agreed Facts, which was the basis upon which her Honour sentenced the applicant. [1]

    1. Appeal Book, pp 70-75; Agreed Facts, pp 1-6.

  4. Her Honour summarised the Agreed Facts, which I will summarise further. Before doing so, it is important to understand that the circumstances in which the applicant came to be charged arose as a result of the applicant voluntarily disclosing his guilt to the offences at a time when he was being spoken to by police in respect of other much less serious offences.

  5. Sequence 1, the aggravated break and enter, occurred on 23 June 2019 when, between 5:45 PM and 7:15 PM, the offender removed the fly screen from the outside of the victim’s bedroom window that was slightly open. The applicant gained entry into her bedroom.

  6. The applicant stole a bedside drawer and its contents and other items comprising of: spare house keys; keys to the victim’s Audi motor vehicle; a garage remote-control; three passports; a wallet containing business cards; $600 in cash; a backpack and its contents; a jewellery box containing jewellery; two handbags; and an Apple MacBook Pro laptop. An insurance claim for $8,950 was lodged for the jewellery.

  7. Sequence 3, the take and drive conveyance, occurred on 26 June 2019, when the victim, being the same victim as occurred in relation to sequence 1, returned home from work and parked her car in the detached garage. At approximately 9 PM, the applicant took the victim’s 2018 Audi Q3, without her permission and drove it away. The vehicle had been purchased for $36,000. The vehicle was later found and had been burnt out. As a result of these incidents the victim subsequently moved to a new house.

  8. Sequence 8, is the robbery armed with an offensive weapon and was committed on 26 June 2019. As the victim in this offence was leaving the Boatrowers Hotel, Stockton, near Newcastle, the victim pushed the door open and saw two males standing in front of him.

  9. The male closest to him, the applicant’s co-offender, was holding a rifle. The victim was unable to describe the second male, being the applicant, who was holding a tomahawk and had clothing covering his face. The two offenders entered the bar and took approximately $6,000 in cash from the till.

  10. Sequence 9 is the larceny offence. It was committed on 25 October 2019, when the applicant stole a Kubota Generator, valued at $7,400 from Marine Rescue NSW, Lemon Tree Passage.

  11. Sequence 7 is the offence of break and enter and commit the serious indictable offence of larceny. It was committed on 29 October 2019.

  12. The victim in this matter returned home and parked his car inside a wooden garage at his house. Between 11:30 PM on 29 October and 7:30 AM on 30 October, the applicant opened the garage doors and stole the victim’s vehicle, being a Holden Commodore.

  13. The applicant was arrested on 11 December 2019 for an unrelated matter of unlawful entry on enclosed lands and custody of a knife in a public place. Upon arrest, the applicant indicated he wished to disclose other offending to the police and participated in an interview in which he made disclosures to the police that formed the counts outlined in the preceding paragraphs of this summary.

  14. In addition to disclosing his own involvement in the offences, he also provided other information as to the circumstances of the theft of the Audi motor vehicle (sequence 3); the robbery at the Boatrowers Hotel (sequence 8); destruction by fire of the Audi (Form 1); and the theft of the Kubota Generator (sequence 9).

Respondent’s submissions

  1. The Crown submits that there is no requirement on her Honour to give reasons for limiting the discount for assistance to 15%. Section 23 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act grants to the Court a discretion and does not mandate a particular approach.

  2. The Crown submits that, in deciding to impose a lesser penalty, her Honour was required to consider and did consider the matters set out in s 23(2)(a)-(i) of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act. [2]

    2. Appeal book, p 39; Remarks on Sentence, p 15.

  3. The applicant’s submission that her Honour erred if she were to have misunderstood her discretion to afford a discount of more than 40% is wrong, the Crown submits, for the following reasons:

  1. First, there is nothing in the sentencing remarks that suggests that the sentencing judge misunderstood her discretion. Her Honour did not indicate that her discretion to afford a discount was constrained in any way;

  2. Secondly, it is clear that the sentencing judge carefully exercised her discretion, as can be seen in the different approach her Honour took to sequence 7 and the other counts.

  1. As to Ground 2, the Crown submits that her Honour did not err by not considering the impact of voluntary disclosure on the weight to be given to general deterrence. Nor, it is submitted, was there any error in her Honour’s reference to specific deterrence; prospects of rehabilitation; and the protection of the community looming large in the exercise of discretion.

  2. The weight to be given to the different purposes of sentencing are issues within the discretion of the sentencing judge and for the judge. It was open to her Honour, it is submitted, to place weight on the need for specific deterrence and the protection of the community.

  3. In relation to Ground 3, the Crown submits that the aggregate sentence imposed for the five serious offences was neither unreasonable nor plainly unjust. The Crown points to the legislative guideposts of the maximum penalty and standard non-parole period in relation to Sequence 1; the aggravation in relation to Sequence 1 that the offence was committed in the home of the victim and at a time when the applicant was subject to conditional liberty by way of a Community Corrections Order and an Intensive Corrections Order.

  4. Further, in relation to Sequence 3, the Crown submits that this offence could be assessed against its maximum penalty of 5 years and was, also, committed while the applicant was subject to conditional liberty. As to Sequence 8, it was required to be assessed against its maximum penalty of 20 years’ imprisonment and was again committed while the applicant was subject to conditional liberty.

  5. Sequences 9 and 7 were to be assessed against the maximum penalties of 5 years and 14 years respectively and were each committed while the applicant was subject to conditional liberty. As a consequence, the indicative sentences were within range in relation to each of the offences and the aggregate sentence, which is the subject of appeal, was also within range and neither unreasonable nor plainly unjust.

Consideration

  1. In some respects, the Court can accept all that has been said by the Crown in relation to each of the grounds of appeal. There can be no doubt that section 23 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act is discretionary and interference with the exercise of discretion by this Court on appeal will occur only on one of the well-known bases classically described in House v the King. [3]

    3. House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499; [1936] HCA 40 (Dixon, Evatt and McTiernan JJ).

  2. An error occurs and is identifiable where the judge acts upon a wrong principle; allows extraneous or irrelevant matters to affect the exercise of discretion; mistakes the facts; or does not take into account some material consideration. Otherwise, if the result is unreasonable or plainly unjust, the Court on appeal may infer that there has been a failure properly to exercise the discretion, in which case there is manifest error, being error in the exercise of the discretion that is not identifiable.

  3. Ordinarily, in dealing with a reduction in sentence on account of assistance to authorities, a court is dealing with assistance granted in relation to an offence for which the offender has been charged or of which the offender is suspected of having committed. As a consequence the Court, in sentencing such a person and providing for a reduction, is required by the terms of s 23(4) of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act to specify that part of the assistance that is given for past assistance and that which is provided for future assistance.

  4. Usually, future assistance involves an undertaking to give evidence in court and like issues. Past assistance may include admissions of fact, including the identity of the offenders or the location of property or persons.

  5. The foregoing is not intended to be exhaustive. In rare circumstances, an offender, not otherwise suspected of, or charged with, an offence, will confess in circumstances where the police may not otherwise be aware of the offence or of the perpetrators of the offence or offences. The circumstance before the Court, in this instance, is one of those rare occasions.

  6. In the current circumstances, as is made clear from the foregoing factual summary, the law enforcement authorities were aware of the commission of the offence but were unaware of the perpetrator or perpetrators of the offence. The police had commenced an investigation, but that investigation had not, at the time that the applicant confessed to the serious offences for which he was sentenced, borne fruit.

  7. As a consequence, the applicant was entitled to a significant added element of leniency for his voluntary disclosure of involvement in serious crimes of which the police had no knowledge. [4] The first and most important aspect of the discount to be applied in cases that give rise to such a discount, commonly referred to as an Ellis [5] discount, is the policy relating to the administration of justice.

    4. R v Ellis (1986) 6 NSWLR 603.

    5. Ibid.

  8. Offenders must be encouraged to come forward and confess crimes that may otherwise not be resolved. In Ellis, Street CJ said:

“When the conviction follows upon a plea of guilty, that itself is the result of a voluntary disclosure of guilt by the person concerned, a further element of leniency enters into the sentencing decision. Where it was unlikely that guilt would be discovered and established were it not for the disclosure by the person coming forward for sentence, then a considerable element of leniency should properly be extended by the sentencing judge. It is part of the policy of the criminal law to encourage a guilty person to come forward and disclose both the fact of an offence having been committed and confession of guilt of that offence.

The leniency that follows a confession of guilt in the form of a plea of guilty is a well-recognised part of the body of principles that cover sentencing. Although less well recognised, because less frequently encountered, the disclosure of an otherwise unknown guilt of an offence merits a significant added element of leniency, the degree of which will vary according to the degree of likelihood of that guilt being discovered by the law enforcement authorities, as well as guilt being established against the person concerned.” [6]

6. R v Ellis, supra, at 604 (Street CJ).

  1. The High Court in Ryan v The Queen [7] referred to the principles established by Street CJ and cited the forgoing passage with approval. In delivering one of the majority judgments, McHugh J said:

“[12]    Thus, according to Ellis, the degree of leniency to be shown for the disclosure of unknown offences will vary according to (1) the likelihood that the offences would have been discovered by the authorities; and (2) the likelihood that the offences could have been proven beyond reasonable doubt in a court without the disclosure.” [8]

7. Ryan v The Queen (2001) 206 CLR 267; [2001] HCA 21.

8. Ryan v The Queen, supra at [12] (McHugh J).

  1. In the judgment of McHugh J in Ryan, his Honour was at pains to point out that the Ellis factor is not to be rigidly or mechanically applied, but is a factor, when determining the appropriate sentence, which is both significant and not insubstantial, and must be considered on the credit side of the sentencing process. Nevertheless, it is not a rule to be quantitatively, rigidly or mechanically applied.

  2. Sentencing is not a mathematical exercise. Nor is it an exercise in which the sentencing judge is required to proceed formulaically through a number of statements.

  3. However, the public policy relating to the administration of justice, to which these reasons earlier referred, being the encouragement of persons to come forward and confess crimes that are otherwise unknown to the authorities or for which the perpetrators are unknown, is a matter of great significance in the administration of justice.

  1. Further, a confession of an offence of which the police are unaware, or for which they are unaware of the offender’s involvement, is a matter that goes significantly to the issues of general deterrence as it reduces materially the appropriateness of general deterrence as a significant factor in the sentencing process. General deterrence is intended to dissuade others from committing crimes of that nature. In the case of a person who has confessed to a crime not otherwise known, the general deterrence would be directed to an extremely small class of individuals minded to commit crimes and then admit to them.

  2. Over and above the foregoing, the issue of specific deterrence, which is intended to deter the particular offender from committing other crimes of a like nature, is also significantly diminished, as the confession to an unknown crime or a crime in which the offender is not known to have been involved, discloses significant remorse and leads to a conclusion that the prospects of rehabilitation are significantly improved.

  3. Nevertheless, the other purposes of sentencing, namely retribution, denunciation and punishment are still aspects that require consideration and are of considerable importance.

  4. One other aspect needs discussion. It is always important that a sentencing court not impose a sentence for an offence, which is inappropriate or disproportionate to the nature and circumstances of the offence. In the case of assistance afforded to which the Ellis factors apply, the legislative intention in s 23(3) of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act requires attention.

  5. That provision requires that a sentence that is reduced because of the factors of assistance, even those to which Ellis factors apply, must not be “unreasonably disproportionate” to the nature and circumstance of the offence. That provision indicates that the sentence may be “disproportionate”, but not unreasonably so.

  6. In the past, when a more arithmetic and prescriptive approach was taken to the sentencing discretion, it had been said that certain percentages should be allowed for the plea of guilty and assistance, which, in ordinary circumstances, ought not to exceed 40%. [9] Further it has been held that it would be a rare case where a discount of more than 60% would not result in a manifestly inadequate sentence. [10]

    9. R v Sukkar (2006) 172 A Crim R 151; [2006] NSWCCA 92; SZ v R (2007) 168 A Crim R 249; [2007] NSWCCA 19; FS v R [2009] NSWCCA 301.

    10. FS v R [2009] NSWCCA 301.

  7. The foregoing arithmetic view probably does not withstand later authority criticising an arithmetic approach to sentencing. Consistency in this area, like others, must be determined by the consistent application of sentencing principles. [11] The principles applicable to determining assistance, which it is unnecessary to repeat or summarise, were discussed more fully by this Court in R v XX. [12]

    11. Hili & Jones v The Queen (2010) 242 CLR 520; [2010] HCA 45.

    12. R v XX (2017) 266 A Crim R 132; [2017] NSWCCA 90.

  8. The foregoing is not intended to suggest that too great a discount for assistance, regardless of the kind of assistance, should be given such that the sentence is unreasonably disproportionate to the nature and circumstances of the offence and the offender. The determination of the reduction for assistance pursuant to the terms of s 23 of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act depends on assessment of the mandatory considerations prescribed by s 23(2).

  9. Those mandatory considerations include: the significance and usefulness of the assistance to the authorities, taking into consideration the evaluation of the authorities themselves; the truthfulness, completeness and reliability of the information provided; the nature and extent of the offender’s assistance; the timeliness of the assistance; any other benefit that the offender gains or may gain by reason of the assistance; whether the offender will suffer harsher custodial conditions as a consequence of the assistance; any injury suffered by the offender or offenders family or the danger of such injury resulting from the assistance provided; and whether the assistance concerns the offence for which the offender is being sentenced.

  10. Leaving aside injury suffered by the offender or the offender’s family, for which there is no substantive evidence, each and every one of those factors are relevant to the assessment of the reduction that ought to be granted and ought to have been granted to the applicant and should be used to the credit of the applicant.

  11. The Court has a confidential exhibit, as did the sentencing judge, which provides the assessment by law enforcement authorities of the assistance obtained in relation to these offences. That assistance is significant and was significant. It was given at the earliest time and, as earlier stated, at a time when the applicant was not being interviewed for these offences.

  12. Even on the arithmetic approach to which the Court referred,[13] the Court was largely dealing with assistance to authorities other than those to which Ellis factors apply. [14] In FS, with the concurrence of Campbell JA and Buddin J, I said:

    13. See, in relation to Commonwealth offences but relevant to State offences, FS v R (2009) 198 A Crim R 383; [2009] NSWCCA 301.

    14. R v M [2005] NSWCCA 224 (Buddin J, with whom James J and I agreed)

“[14]    Assistance to authorities in the prosecution of offences is a public benefit and a public duty. Nevertheless, in the sentencing process, leniency is extended to offenders for assistance to authorities. It is not an uncommon practice. That leniency takes into account a number of factors, which were summarised in the High Court in the following manner:

‘[3]    It is common sentencing practice to extend leniency, sometimes very substantial leniency, to an offender who has assisted the authorities, and, in so doing, to take account of any threat to the offender’s safety, the conditions under which the offender will have to serve a sentence in order to reduce the risk of reprisals, and the steps that will need to be taken to protect the offender when released. The relevant principles are discussed, for example, in R v Cartwright (1989) 17 NSWLR 243 and R v Gallagher (1991) 23 NSWLR 220. Atkinson J gave the appellant credit for her assistance to the authorities, her early plea of guilty, and other personal factors of no present relevance, in a combination of two ways. She imposed a lesser term of imprisonment than would otherwise have been the case (but not lesser to an extent that she considered would of itself fully recognise such factors), and she suspended the sentence. Her reasoning made it clear that, if she had not suspended the sentence, she would have fixed a shorter term of imprisonment.’ (York v R [2005] HCA 60; (2005) 225 CLR 466; (2005) 79 ALJR 1919 per Gleeson CJ.)

[15]    His Honour Chief Justice Gleeson referred, after the passage cited immediately above, to two judgments of the Court of Criminal Appeal that discuss the relevant principles. In one of them, R v Gallagher (1991) 23 NSWLR 220, Gleeson CJ observed:

‘Those last-mentioned matters may, depending upon the circumstances, be very difficult to separate from other considerations which might arise quite apart from the matter of assistance to the authorities. In this case, for example, the appellant was entitled to receive, and received, credit for pleading guilty, and for the contrition which that plea of guilty reflected. It was also said to be to his credit that he had good prospects of rehabilitation. It seems hardly likely that these were subjective matters which were entirely separate from the matter of his assistance to the authorities. It must often be the case that an offender’s conduct in pleading guilty, his expressions of contrition, his willingness to co- operate with the authorities, and the personal risks to which he thereby exposes himself, will form a complex of inter-related considerations, and an attempt to separate out one or more of those considerations will not only be artificial and contrived, but will also be illogical.’

[16]    The calculation of the amount of any such discount has developed over the last decade. Thus, in R v Pang [1999] NSWCCA 4; (1999) 105 A Crim R 474, Wood CJ at CL with whom Meagher JA and Barr J agreed, observed that:

‘There is no fixed tariff for the reduction that should be given for assistance, and so far no guideline judgment has been delivered in this area. However, the discount customarily given in this State for assistance, has ranged between 20 and 50 percent of the sentence that would otherwise have been imposed.’

It should be pointed out, that the reference to percentage discounts for assistance is a reference to a combined percentage discount for both assistance and the utilitarian value for the plea of guilty associated with it: see R v M [2005] NSWCCA 224, per Buddin J, with whom James J and I agreed.

[17]    The matters associated with a level of discount were discussed by the Court of Criminal Appeal in SZ v Regina [2007] NSWCCA 19, in which the Court made it clear that a combined discount for pleas of guilty and assistance should not normally exceed 50% and that discounts exceeding 50% should be reserved for very exceptional circumstances.

[18]    In SZ v Regina, Buddin J, with whom Simpson J and Howie J agreed, said:

‘[52]    I acknowledge, as did Latham J in Sukkar (supra), that there will be cases in which a combined or composite discount of more than 50% is called for. There may well be a case in which the assistance proffered is of a quite extraordinary kind. Alternatively there may be a case in which the offender is entitled to an additional discount, in accordance with the principles enunciated in R v Ellis (1986) 6 NSWLR 603, on account of having disclosed information which was otherwise unknown to the authorities. Indeed, composite discounts in excess of 50% have been allowed on several occasions when this Court has proceeded to re-sentence following a successful appeal by an offender. See, for example, R v NP (supra); R v OPA [2004] NSWCCA 464 and R v AMT [2005] NSWCCA 151.

[53] However, in light of the authorities to which I have referred and particularly given the statutory mandate contained in s 23(3) of the Act, it is my opinion that a combined discount exceeding 50% should be reserved for an exceptional case. Counsel for the applicant went so far as to suggest that a combined discount of 75%, comprising a discount of 25% for the plea of guilty to which would be added a further 50% for assistance to authorities, may be available in an appropriate case. In view of the matters to which I have referred, I regard such a submission as being simply untenable. Apart from any other consideration, the aggregation of discrete discounts is at odds with the observations of Gleeson CJ in Gallagher (supra) which are recited in the extract from El Hani (supra) which appears at par 31 of this judgment. See also R v NP (supra) at pars 30 and 47.’

[19]    In the same judgment, in separate comments agreeing with Buddin J, Howie J said:

‘[7]    Counsel for the applicant argued that a proper application of both the guideline in Thomson and Houlton as to the effect of the utilitarian value of a plea of guilty and the acknowledged range of the discount available for assistance meant that it was legitimate in an appropriate case to discount a sentence by up to 75 per cent. It was argued that, as the discount for the plea and the discount for assistance reflect two different policies and did not overlap, because the utilitarian value of the plea had nothing to do with contrition, the court should give them both their full effect. But the argument simply overlooks the fact that it is impossible to see how a sentence that is only 25 per cent of what would otherwise be appropriate could not be “unreasonably disproportionate to the nature and circumstances of the offence”.

[8]    I accept that what is “unreasonably disproportionate” is not simply determined by the objective facts of the offence and has to take into account matters such as the threat posed to the offender by reason of the assistance given and the nature and extent of the assistance: R v C (1994) 75 A Crim R 309. But this does not relieve the judge from the primary task of imposing a sentence that reflects the objective circumstances of the offence: R v WHS (NSWCCA, unreported, 27 March 1995). The decision in York v R [2005] HCA 60; (2005) 221 ALR 541 does not suggest otherwise.’” [15]

15. FS, supra, at [14]-[19].

  1. The foregoing was said in the context of a Commonwealth offence, but the comments are applicable to both State and Commonwealth offences, save as to the reference to the different legislative schemes.

  2. As earlier stated, ultimately the test that must be utilised depends upon the fulfilment of the purpose of the administration of justice. The reduction needs to be sufficiently significant that it will encourage those persons who have committed crimes to come forward and confess the crime, notwithstanding that the police are unaware of either the crime or the perpetrators of the crime.

  3. The limit is determined by ensuring that the sentence imposed is not “unreasonably disproportionate” to the nature of the offence and the offender. As was stated by Howie J in SZ [16] that which is “unreasonably disproportionate” is not simply determined by the objective facts of the offence but must also take into account matters such as the threat posed to the offender by reason of his or her assistance and the nature and extent of the assistance.

    16. SZ v R [2007] NSWCCA 19.

  4. In York v The Queen [17] , Gleeson CJ said:

“[3]    It is common sentencing practice to extend leniency, sometimes very substantial leniency, to an offender who has assisted the authorities, and, in so doing, to take account of any threat to the offender’s safety, the conditions under which the offender will have to serve a sentence in order to reduce the risk of reprisals, and the steps that will need to be taken to protect the offender when released. The relevant principles are discussed, for example, in R v Cartwright and R v Gallagher. Atkinson J gave the appellant credit for her assistance to the authorities, her early plea of guilty, and other personal factors of no present relevance, in a combination of two ways. She imposed a lesser term of imprisonment than would otherwise have been the case (but not lesser to an extent that she considered would of itself fully recognise such factors), and she suspended the sentence. Her reasoning made it clear that, if she had not suspended the sentence, she would have fixed a shorter term of imprisonment” [18] (Footnotes omitted.)

17. York v The Queen (2005) 225 CLR 466; [2005] HCA 60.

18. York, supra, at [3] (Gleeson CJ).

  1. Further to the above, Gleeson CJ (then of this Court) in R v Gallagher [19] said:

“Those last-mentioned matters may, depending upon the circumstances, be very difficult to separate from other considerations which might arise quite apart from the matter of assistance to the authorities. In this case, for example, the appellant was entitled to receive, and received, credit for pleading guilty, and for the contrition which that plea of guilty reflected. It was also said to be to his credit that he had good prospects of rehabilitation. It seems hardly likely that these were subjective matters which were entirely separate from the matter of his assistance to the authorities. It must often be the case that an offender’s conduct in pleading guilty, his expressions of contrition, his willingness to co-operate with the authorities, and the personal risks to which he thereby he exposes himself, will form a complex of interrelated considerations, and an attempt to separate out one or more of those considerations will not only be artificial and contrived, but will also be illogical.”

19. R v Gallagher (1991) 23 NSWLR 220.

  1. Returning to the issues in this case more specifically, apart from the quantum of the discount generally, the other aspect of the reduction provided for the plea of guilty and assistance is that a lesser reduction was provided for sequence 7, the break, enter and steal than for the other offences.

  2. In my view, there is no good reason to differentiate the break, enter and steal in terms of the assistance provided. It seems that the sentencing judge has applied a reduction or discount for the plea of guilty and assistance to authorities that is more in line with the usual assistance that may be provided from time to time and not in line with the rare circumstances associated with the application of the principles in Ellis and the discount for the Ellis factor.

  3. Insufficient discount has been provided in the particular circumstances of the assistance provided, particularly in light of the assessment of the law enforcement agencies in relation to the assistance. That assistance was of high value; it was provided in relation to offences of which the law enforcement agencies were aware and for which they had begun an investigation; but it was done at a time when the law enforcement agencies were unaware of the involvement of the applicant in those offences.

  4. It is necessary for the Court to resentence. No complaint is made either by the Crown or by the applicant as to the other factors and assessment of the sentencing judge and I would not interfere with the other aspects. I would apply a 55% reduction for the plea of guilty and the assistance provided, including assistance taking into account Ellis factors.

  5. Taking into account all of the foregoing factors, I would set indicative sentences as follows:

  1. Aggravated break and enter and steal, taking account of the offence of intentionally destroying property, the car, on the Form 1, contrary to s 112(2) of the Crimes Act, an indicative head sentence of 2 years and 9 months and an indicative non-parole period of 2 years and 1 month;

  2. Take and drive conveyance, contrary to s 154A(1)(a) of the Crimes Act, an indicative head sentence of 15 months;

  3. Break, enter and steal, contrary to s 112(1) an indicative head sentence of 18 months and an indicative non-parole period of 18 months;

  4. Armed robbery, contrary to s 97(1) of the Crimes Act, taking into account the larceny of the handbag on the Form 1, an indicative head sentence of 3 years and 9 months;

  5. For larceny, contrary to s 117 of the Crimes Act an indicative head sentence of 2 years and 7 months.

  1. I would impose an aggregate sentence of 5 years and 3 months as the head sentence, with a non-parole period of 3 years and 11 months.

  2. As a consequence of the foregoing, I propose that the Court make the following orders:

  1. Leave to appeal be granted;

  2. Appeal be allowed;

  3. The sentence imposed upon the applicant, Rhys Cale McKinley, in the District Court at Newcastle on 2 October 2020 be quashed and in lieu thereof the applicant be sentenced to the following term of imprisonment:

  1. A non-parole period of 3 years and 11 months commencing 11 December 2019 and concluding 10 November 2023, with the remainder of the term of 1 year and 4 months concluding 10 March 2025. The applicant will be first eligible for parole on 10 November 2023.

  1. DHANJI J: I also agree with Rothman J.

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Endnotes

Decision last updated: 09 February 2022

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Cases Citing This Decision

4

R v Ambler [2022] NSWDC 627
R v Song [2022] NSWDC 100
R v Alfred (a pseudonym) [2022] NSWDC 494
Cases Cited

19

Statutory Material Cited

3

FS v R [2009] NSWCCA 301
Hili v The Queen [2010] HCA 45