R v Greenwood
[1996] QCA 549
•4 December 1996
[1996] QCA 549
COURT OF APPEAL
DAVIES JA
McPHERSON JA
MOYNIHAN J
CA No 475 of 1996
THE QUEEN
v.
KAREN LINDA GREENWOOD Applicant
BRISBANE
..DATE 04/12/96
JUDGMENT
1
MOYNIHAN J: This is an application for leave to appeal
against sentences to 18 months' imprisonment suspended for two
years after a term of six months' imprisonment was served.
The sentences were imposed in respect of convictions after a
trial before a jury for three offences, assault occasioning
bodily harm while armed with an offensive weapon, wilful
destruction of property and unlawful detention. The offences
arose in circumstances where the applicant conceived that the
complainant had stolen her purse which contained a large sum
of money from a hotel bar, I think it was, at which they were
drinking. Later that night the complainant was procured to
come outside where she was assaulted by the applicant ‑
punched a few times in the face, stabbed with an object
similar to a penknife or the like, in the arm. Her false
teeth were smashed by being stomped on. She was taken to a
house where apparently she maintained that she was not
responsible for taking the purse and assisted in a search for
it.
The complainant and the applicant met again on the following
day, that seems to have been fairly amicable, but then she was
approached by the applicant and invited to get into the boot
of a car. She declined that invitation but was put in the
car, taken to a deserted house where the applicant and a male
companion were joined by another man. The complainant was
tied up to a clothes line, whipped with a piece of rope,
leaving injuries which the examining doctor described the
complaint as more severely flogged than anyone he had seen in
civilian life. She was tied up under the house while the
applicant, as she described it, was up out of the mosquitoes
but came down to the complainant from time to time. All this
was apparently directed to having her sign a document
admitting that she had stolen the purse containing some $800.
Her signature to such a document prepared by, one might
assume, the applicant was finally procured and she was
released.
The complainant was pregnant. She was kicked between the legs
by the applicant in the course of this outrageous conduct.
She had injuries; small penetrating stab-like wounds to the
arms, bruises to the arms, to the face, the eyes, the cheek,
grazes to the cheek, bruising to the jaw, marked bruising to
the chin, over her ear, to the left side of her chest wall,
and various other bruises to the lower part of her body.
The applicant has a criminal history of some consequence in
that there are a number of convictions for assault, and others
for property offences, driving offences, possession of
cannabis.
The trial Judge really seems to have been influenced by two
factors in sentencing the applicant which he regarded as
mitigating. One is that it could not be certain that the
applicant inflicted all the injuries. I interpolate that one
could safely infer however that in so far as she did not she
procured their infliction by invoking the assistance of the
two who were involved in the assault at the house. The trial
Judge also seems to have regarded the fact that the applicant
believed the complainant had taken her purse as mitigating.
I am not sure that that is a mitigating factor at all. Such a
belief certainly does not justify or even particularly
satisfactorily explain the outrageous course of conduct that
the applicant embarked on.
We are told that the appeal, among other things, is motivated
by the fact that the applicant cannot take care of her five-
year-old child while she was in prison. All that can really
be said about that is that she should have thought of that
before she embarked on the course of conduct that she did
embark on, or at least thought of it during the course of
conduct and desisted from pursuing it.
I really cannot see any merits in this application. Indeed,
in my view the applicant was fortunate in the sentence that
was imposed. I would refuse leave.
McPHERSON JA: I agree.
DAVIES JA: I agree.
McPHERSON JA: The application for leave to appeal is refused.
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