Whitlow v Police

Case

[2017] NZHC 1834

3 August 2017

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND CHRISTCHURCH REGISTRY

CRI-2017-409-000080 [2017] NZHC 1834

BETWEEN

TAWHAI WHITLOW

Appellant

AND

NEW ZEALAND POLICE Respondent

Hearing: 3 August 2017

Appearances:

C Nolan for Appellant
S L Dayal for Respondent

Judgment:

3 August 2017

ORAL JUDGMENT OF GENDALL J

Introduction

[1]      The  appellant  Tawhai  Whitlow  was  sentenced  in  the  District  Court  at

Christchurch to 13 months imprisonment after pleading guilty to   the following

11 charges:1

(a)       Driving while suspended x 2 (b)           Receiving ($500-$1000)

(c)       Obtaining by deception (over $1000)

(d)      Obtaining by deception ($500-$1000) x 3

(e)       Offering to sell/supply psychoactive substance;

1      Police v Whitlow [2017] NZDC 14535.

WHITLOW v NEW ZEALAND POLICE [2017] NZHC 1834 [3 August 2017]

(f)       Breaching community work; and

(g)      Breaching supervision x 2

Leave to apply for home detention was declined in the District Court.

[2]      Mr Whitlow appeals his sentence, saying the Judge erred in not imposing a sentence of home detention being the least restrictive sentence that was appropriate in the circumstances here.

Background

[3]      Turning  now  to  the  background  facts  in  this  matter,  the  receiving  and obtaining by deception charges relate to advertisements made by Mr Whitlow on a Facebook ‘for sale’ page in July and August of 2016.  The appellant listed an iPad valued at $899 on the site which had been reported as stolen.   The appellant also listed a motorbike, a collection of power tools, and two rifles for $1,700, $1,000,

$800, and $800 respectively for sale on the same page.  After reaching an agreement to buy certain items, third party purchasers transferred the purchase monies to the appellant who withdrew the funds from his bank account but did not did not release the advertised items.

[4]      Next, in June 2016 the appellant was suspended from driving due to excess demerit points.   On one occasion in August 2016 and one in September 2016 the appellant was caught driving while still suspended.

[5]      In October 2016 a search of the appellant’s phone revealed text messages sent

by him offering to sell synthetic cannabis.

[6]      Lastly,  the  breach  of  community work  and  supervision  charges  relate  to numerous  incidents  where  the  appellant  failed  to  report  and  to  comply  with sentences imposed for common assault charges.

[7]      In  the  District  Court  His  Honour  Judge  Couch  had  given  a  sentencing indication of 12 months’ imprisonment in relation to the receiving, obtaining by

deception, and offer to sell or supply psychoactive substance charges.   This was accepted by the appellant and he entered guilty pleas.   At sentencing the Judge adopted, in relation to those charges, the indication.  For the five dishonesty charges, Judge Couch took a starting point of 10 months, and uplifted by three months for the other charge.  Noting as aggravating features the high degree of premeditation, the appellant’s prior history of dishonesty offending, and the fact that the offences were committed while he was subject to community based sentences, the Judge uplifted the sentence by three months, before reducing by four months for early guilty pleas.

[8]      In his indication, the Judge had noted that he had been informed there may be other  charges,  and  said  that  any  sentence  on  those  matters  was  likely  to  be cumulative  to  the  12  months  indicated.    At  sentencing,  the  Judge  treated  the remaining charges as concurrent, but imposed uplifts on the indicated sentence to reflect them:  two months for the driving charges, and three months for the sentence breaches.  The Judge then reduced the 17 month sentence by four months to reflect the fact that the appellant had been on electronically monitored bail for eight months leading up to sentencing.

[9]      His Honour then considered whether home detention should be imposed.  He noted the conclusion in pre-sentence reports he had before him that the appellant was “only marginally suitable” for home detention.   Taking into consideration the appellant’s history of breaching community based sentences, the Judge concluded that home detention was not appropriate here.

Jurisdiction and principles of appeal

[10]     Turning now to jurisdiction and the principles on appeal, the appellant here appeals as of right.2   This Court can only allow the appeal if it is satisfied that there is an error in the sentence imposed and that an alternative sentence should be imposed.3    If the sentence under appeal can be properly justified having regard to relevant sentencing principles, this Court cannot substitute its own views for those of the  sentencing  Judge.     The  sentence  must  be  either  manifestly  excessive  or

inappropriate if the sentencing Judge’s discretion is to be interfered with.

2      Criminal Procedure Act 2011, s 244.

[11]     It is not enough that the Judge made an error in his or her reasoning.  The focus is on the sentence imposed rather than the process by which the sentence was reached.4

Submissions

[12]     Turning now  to  submissions  I have received,  before  me  counsel  for  the appellant confirmed that Mr Whitlow takes no issue with the starting point adopted by Judge Couch, nor the uplifts and discounts, nor the end sentence of 13 months. However,   he   argues   that   the   least   restrictive   outcome   appropriate   in   the circumstances here was one of home detention, and as such Judge Couch’s refusal to grant home detention resulted in a manifestly excessive sentence.

[13]     As  to  this  aspect,  counsel  submits  that  Mr  Whitlow’s  compliance  with stringent conditions while on electronic bail for eight months prior to sentencing should assure the Court that he can comply with home detention.   Counsel also submits that the Judge was wrong to consider the appellant’s “turbulent” relationship with his father as a factor against home detention as his father is now supportive of home detention and the two, it appears, have lived together at his bail address over the last eight months without issue.

[14]     In response, the respondent submits that given, first, the appellant’s failure to comply with community based sentences in the past, secondly, the pre-sentence reports which indicate he is at increasing risk of reoffending, and thirdly his failure to attend community work whilst on bail, it was clearly open to the Judge to exercise his discretion to decline the application for home detention.   Counsel for the respondent before me suggests therefore that no error has occurred here.

Analysis

[15]     On this home detention issue, the Court of Appeal in James v R said5:

…an appeal against a refusal to grant home detention does not provide an

opportunity to revisit or review the merits.   The question is whether [the

4      Tutakangahau v R [2014] NZCA 279, [2014] 3 NZLR 482 at [36].

judge] erred in exercising his sentencing discretion:  that is, did he apply an incorrect  principle,  give  insufficient  or  excessive  weight  to  a  particular factor, or was he plainly wrong?

[16]     In his sentence decision I am satisfied Judge Couch clearly turned his mind to home detention and set out his reasons for declining it.  Those reasons, in my view, are sound.   The appellant has six convictions for breaching community based sentences.  This must demonstrate, as I see it, a concerning disregard for authority and surely indicates that such sentences have not had the desired deterrent effect. Whilst it is true that the appellant has complied with his bail conditions on this occasion, this does not make the prior breaches irrelevant.  Judge Couch had before him two presentence reports dated 15 November 2016 and 30 May 2017, both of which referred to the appellant’s poor compliance, his low motivation and increasing risk of reoffending.  Further, as Judge Couch noted, the appellant has not made the most of opportunities afforded him while on bail to engage in community work and demonstrate a reformed attitude.  Given these factors, it was certainly open to him as the sentencing Judge to reach the conclusion that non-compliance with home detention conditions was a real possibility.   It is not for this Court, which in my judgment is not as well placed to assess this matter, to contradict his reasonable conclusion.

[17]     In addition to these factors, the dishonesty offending in this case is of a moderately serious nature.  It comes too after a long history of related offending.  It was  open  for  Judge  Couch  to  find  that  home  detention  would  not  in  the circumstances satisfy the sentencing purposes of deterrence and denunciation.

[18]     I accept that the ‘turbulent’ relationship between the appellant and his father as noted in the pre-sentence reports is not a particularly compelling factor, although it has some relevance here.   However, I do not consider the Judge placed undue weight on this, and declining home detention in the circumstances would have been reasonable absent this.

[19]     Finally, I note certain comments of the Court of Appeal in the decision R v D6

which held:

6      R v D [2008] NZCA 254 at para 66.

[66]      In  a  case  like  this,  the  sentencing  Judge  is  required  to  form  a judgment on whether imprisonment is necessary or home detention can respond adequately to the seriousness of the offending.  The closer one gets to the dividing line, the more difficult it becomes to articulate reasons for preferring one approach to the other.  In such cases, the view of a sentencing Judge  from  the  jurisdiction  in  which  crimes  of  the  type  in  issue  are frequently tried assumes greater weight.  He or she will be in a much better position than an appellate Court to determine which type of offending falls on one side of the line or another.  The broader the base of similar offending a particular Judge sees, the more likely it is that the chosen sentencing response will be appropriate.

[20]     Taking into account these comments in R v D and the other matters I have noted above, I am satisfied Judge Couch here appropriately assessed home detention as an unrealistic alternative.

Conclusion

[21]     For all these reasons I conclude here that the appellant has not shown there was an error in the sentence imposed in the sense that home detention was refused and that a different sentence should be substituted. This appeal is dismissed.

...................................................

Gendall J

Solicitors:

Public Defence Service, Christchurch

Raymond Donnelly & Co, Christchurch

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Cases Citing This Decision

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Cases Cited

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Statutory Material Cited

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Tutakangahau v R [2014] NZCA 279
R v D [2008] NZCA 254