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Court
of Appeal
Criminal Appeal No. 1 of 1977
MICHAL HOGAN, J.A.
CLIFFORD INNISS, J.A.
P. T. GEORGES, J.A.
Criminal
Appeal - Application for leave to appeal against sentence
- Applicant arguing that sentence of 15 years imprisonment
for attempted murder disproportionate to the offence and
influenced by irrelevant considerations - Appropriate considerations
to be taken into account in sentencing a first offender
- Aim of sentence should be individual deterrence rather
that general deterrence - Trial judge imposing long prison
sentence to protect society for a long time from Applicant's
unpredictable violence - Whether trial judge's reasons for
sentence appropriate - Leave to appeal against sentence
granted, application treated as appeal and sentence reduced.
J U D G M E N T
The applicant
in this case seeks leave to appeal from a sentence of 15 years
imprisonment imposed on him after conviction by a jury of
attempted murder.
The facts
as disclosed in the summation were substantially undisputed.
The applicant walked into the office of Dr. Humberto Del Castillo
Van Heinkel at the Belize City Hospital and attacked him with
a knife inflicting two wounds which could be described as
dangerous to life. The doctor's alertness and courage in defending
himself and the immediate availability of medical help prevented
the attack from being fatal and fortunately there does not
appear to have been any residual disability.
The reason
for the attack was revenge. Six years before when the applicant,
who is a Druggist, worked with the doctor in the public service,
the doctor had had occasion to report on his increasing unpunctuality
and absenteecism. This led to the applicant's transfer to
Belize City. The applicant's pattern of behaviour did not
change and in due course he lost his job in the public service.
He seems thereafter at have had great difficult in holding
jobs in his professional field and for a while worked as a
labourer.
There
is a history of his having received psychiatric treatment
and his defence at the trial was insanity. No medical evidence
was called, however, and the jury proceeded to convict him.
Immediately
after attacking the doctor the applicant was heard to say
that he was now going to finish off Issacs, the officer under
whom he had been working at the time of his losing his job
in the public service.
Mr. Sosa,
in his detailed and very thorough argument on behalf of the
applicant, was content to argue the appeal on the basis that
this Court should not interfere unless the sentence can be
shown to be wrong in principle or manifestly excessive (see
Benjamin v. Reg. 7 W.I.R. 459) but maintained that
it can be faulted on both these grounds.
Although
the argument was presented from different angles the basic
criticism was that the sentence was disproportionate to the
offence and that the length of it must have been influenced
by two factors neither of which should have been taken into
account ? the first being the general consideration of serving
as a deterrent to others and the second being the need to
protect the public for a long time from the applicant who
seemed to be mentally unstable.
Authority
for the first proposition is to be found in Curran (1973)
57 Cr. App. R. 945. In that case a sentence of 4 years
imprisonment had been imposed for the offence of handling
a Post Office saving account book. In reducing the sentence
to two years the Court said ?
"The
only question is whether the sentence of three years was
excessive. As a general rule it is undesirable that a first
sentence of immediate imprisonment should be very long,
disproportionate to the gravity of the offence, and imposed
as this sentence was, for reasons of general deterrence,
that is as a warning to others. The length of a first sentence
is more reasonably determined by considerations of individual
deterrence; of what sentence is needed to teach this particular
offender a lesson which be has not learnt from the lighter
sentence which he has previously received."
In referring
to a first sentence the Court was speaking of imprisonment
as distinct from the earlier fines and the circumstances were
in many ways dissimilar from the instant case, nevertheless
this statement of principle is, with respect unexceptionable,
but here there were no remarks by the trial judge preceding
the sentence as there were in Curran so the basic issue
remains whether the sentence is in fact disproportionate.
The same
situation arises as regards the second consideration - putting
the applicant away for along time because he may be likely
to erupt into violence unpredictably. We agree with the principle
that a trial judge in passing sentence should accept fully
the implications necessarily inherent in the verdict of a
jury - Sonny Jobe v. R. (1969) 15 W.I.R. 397 at p.
398. Inferentially the jury's verdict negatived insanity as
legally defined but this does not mean that the trial judge
was precluded from taking into account in passing sentence
such indications as may have been available from the evidence
of the applicant's mental instability. There are reported
cases in England where this has been done see ? Wolland
(1966) 51 Cr. App. R. 65 where a sentence of life imprisonment
passed to enable a prisoner to be released as soon as possible
after treatment was upheld. There was no evidence of mental
illness nor subnormality but medical opinion was that quite
clearly the prisoner had an unstable personality. Where there
is no evidence of mental instability making it likely that
the prisoner will be a danger to the public, an indeterminate
sentence should not on that account be imposed and the Court
should fix the term see Knight (1966) 51 Cr. App.
R. 466 and Archbold 38th Ed. para. 939. Again there is
nothing to indicate that the learned trial judge took this
into account in the present case and it would be unsafe to
infer it merely from the length of the term.
In urging
that the sentence was disproportionate, Counsel sought to
make comparisons with sentences imposed for manslaughter,
In our view such a comparison must be treated with reserve.
In attempted murder the intent to be established is the much
more serious intent to kill. Where, as here, wounds dangerous
to life are actually inflicted in the course of the attempt
there may well be good reason for imposing a penalty more
severe than that generally imposed in bad cases of manslaughter.
As indicated
in the final analysis the question remains whether the term
of 15 years can be said to be so disproportionate to the gravity
of the offence, having regard to the circumstances of the
applicant, that it is excessive. Undoubtedly it is in the
top range of fixed terms. The applicant had three previous
convictions? two of them involving violence but they were
all in the month before this episode and, as Mr. Sosa argued,
can fairly be regarded as part of the build up of anti? social
emotion which culminated in this episode. It has been stressed
that he was unemployed and apparently moving into the stage
where he would be unemployable ? a factor which caused intense
worry and affected his thought processes and capacity for
self?control. We are very much aware of the increase which
the Director of Public Prosecutions told us has occured in
crimes of violence, nevertheless taking all the factors into
consideration and accepting that a term of 15 years comes
very close to the top of the range of sentences for this type
of offence, we are of the view that a term of 12 years' imprisonment
would adequately convey the abhorrence of the society for
the criminal act and should afford protection against it likely
recurrence.
Accordingly
leave to appeal against sentence is granted, the application
is treated as the appeal which is allowed. The sentence imposed
is quashed and a sentence of 12 years substituted.
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