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R v MATHERS [2011] NSWSC 339 (28 April 2011)
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R v MATHERS [2011] NSWSC 339 (28 April 2011)
Last Updated: 26 May 2011
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Decision:
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Imprisonment for a term of 2 years. In order to
allow for the period of 20 days already served in custody, such sentence is
taken
to have commenced on 8 April 2011 and to expire on 7 April 2013. I suspend
execution of the sentence as from today and direct that
you be released from
custody on condition that you enter into a bond for the operative remaining
period of the 2 year sentence. The
bond will contain the following conditions:-
(1) That the offender appear before the Court, if called on to do so, at any
time during the term of the bond. (2) That he be of good behaviour. (3)
That he inform the Registrar of this Court of any change in residential address.
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Catchwords:
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MANSLAUGHTER - sentencing offender on basis of
substantial impairment - offender assisted his deceased partner to commit
suicide -
ingestion of amitriptyline tablets and final act of suffocation -
deceased had been partner of offender in a loving relationship
of 22 years -
deceased had suffered pain arising from spinal condition - expressed her wish to
die as expressed in suicide note -
offender's participation would not have been
discovered or established were it nor for offender's disclosures to police-
medical
evidence established offender suffered a depressive illness/adjustment
disorder arising from an underlying condition within meaning
of s.23A of the
Crimes Act 1900 - sentencing considerations - only motive was to assist
deceased in carrying out her express intention - no lengthy period of planning
or premeditation - culpability at low end of range of sentences for the offence
of manslaughter - leniency extended for offender's
disclosures and confession of
guilt and for plea of guilty - term of imprisonment of 2 years - suspended
sentence - allowance made
for time spent in custody of 20 days.
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Parties:
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REGINA v David Scott MATHERS
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Representation
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Counsel: C: R Hobart SC O: A Bellanto QC/H
White
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- Solicitors:
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Solicitors: C: S Kavanagh O: Acclaim
Legal
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sentence
- HALL
J: On 11 April 2011, Mr David Scott Mathers pleaded guilty to a charge of
manslaughter in the following terms:-
"That on 7 July 2009 at Ashfield he feloniously did slay Eva
Griffith. Section 18(1)(b) Crimes Act 1900 (NSW)"
- On
11 April 2011, Mr Mathers was remanded on bail until today for sentence.
- His
plea was accepted in full satisfaction of a charge of murder that had previously
been preferred.
- The
circumstances of the offence to which a plea of guilty has been entered are such
that I propose to release Mr Mathers upon imposing
a wholly suspended sentence
of imprisonment of 2 years backdated to take account for the time already spent
in custody, namely, 20
days.
- That
determination has been made following a conclusion reached by me that Mr Mathers
should have his culpability assessed towards
the lower end of the possible
range. I will refer shortly to the facts and circumstances upon which I have
relied in reaching that
conclusion.
Background
- The
deceased was 78 years and 3 months of age as at the date of death. Her date of
birth was 5 April 1931.
- Mr
Mathers was 64 years and 11 months of age as at the date of her death. He was
born on 25 July 1944. Accordingly, at the present
time he is 66 years and 9
months of age.
- The
Crown has tendered a number of documents which have been marked as Exhibits A1
to A15.
- Mr
Mathers participated in interviews conducted by police on 7 July 2009. In the
ERISP transcript of that date, he provided information
about his relationship
with the deceased and other background matters. He spoke of his relationship
with Ms Griffith over some 22
years which had always been conducted in separate
houses, he having lived since 1981 at an address in Lidcombe and the deceased
having
lived in a home unit at Ashfield.
- They
had originally met through a music group. Both he and the deceased had been
musicians. Neither he nor the deceased had any children.
Ms Griffith had a twin
sister, Gloria Jackson.
- The
Crown tendered a Certificate pursuant to s.35A of the Crimes (Sentencing
Procedure) Act 1999 which confirms that consultation has taken place with Ms
Jackson through her solicitor.
- Mr
Mathers gave a history to police that the deceased had the condition of
osteoporosis and that she had been under the care of a
rheumatologist at Concord
Hospital. She was prescribed but later taken off medication because he said it
was not doing her any good
and it was not preventing the degeneration.
- He
said that in a period prior to her death, the deceased had experienced pain and
that one night, he thought in the middle of June
2009, she was unable to move by
reason of pain and was crying out in pain.
- The
deceased's condition was diagnosed as one of osteoporosis, arthritis and
sciatica. She was admitted to Concord Hospital suffering
immense pain in her
back on 13 June 2009 and was discharged on 16 June 2009.
- She
had further severe episodes of extreme pain, causing her to be admitted to Royal
Prince Alfred Hospital on 19 June 2009. She was
discharged on 23 June 2009.
- Copies
of the relevant records from Royal Prince Alfred Hospital and Concord Hospital
were tendered by the Crown (Exhibit C). I have
had regard to those records for
the purposes of determining the nature of the deceased's medical condition,
diagnosis and treatment
given to her. I have also had regard to the statement of
Dr Sharda Patel, general practitioner.
- Mr
Mathers told police that he had, on occasions, discussed Ms Griffith's future
with her. He said that she had made up her mind to
commit suicide because, if
things got to the stage where she had to go a nursing home, her ability to take
control, she believed,
would be taken from her. He said the last time he
discussed these sort of matters with her was on 5 July 2009 in her bedroom.
- He
said that, on the Sunday before her death, 5 July 2009, the deceased took a
large number of amitriptyline pills (an anti-depressant
but also used for
treatment of pain) and she drank some wine and fell asleep. She was asleep the
next day, the Monday, and that during
the day her breathing was faint.
- Later
in the day, Monday 6 July 2009, Mr Mathers said that the deceased was calling
out in pain every time she moved. The offender
said that this was when he
assisted her to take more of the pills. He gave her another 13 amitriptyline
tablets. This was at about
5.00 pm. He said that she went off to sleep, in an
interview with police, he said that the next morning, 7 July 2009, "I
finished what she'd started, didn't I" (Q.114). When asked what he meant, he
said "I suffocated her" . He said this occurred at about 7.30 am in her
bedroom. He said she was still breathing but he did not think that she was
conscious.
He said he tried to suffocate her with a pillow and she seemed to be
getting air from somewhere. He then tried a towel and putting
pressure on the
airways, the mouth and nostrils and then he used a plastic bag. He said
(Q.131):-
"She always talked about, you know, looked at her mother in a
nursing home and said, 'when I get to that stage, it's a handful of
pills and a
plastic bag'."
- Mr
Mathers stated that in taking action to suffocate the deceased he was intending
to kill her. When asked why, he responded (Q.145):-
"Because firstly she wanted to do it, it was a , there were one
failed suicide, I think the others, ... the next one looked like being
a failure
too. She was in pain, I had to ... If I wasn't facing you having committed the
crime, I'd be facing her in a bloody nursing
home and she'd be immobilised and
in pain if she moved and why didn't I do something when I could."
- He
told police that Ms Griffith's sister was not present on the Sunday evening but
was there in the afternoon and "... she witnessed what I was doing" .
- He
said that Ms Jackson was present and then he handed the pills to the deceased
and put the glass to her lips.
- The
Crown Case Statement records that at about 9.30 am on 7 July 2009 Mr Mathers
telephoned the NSW Ambulance Service. Ambulance officers
attended Ms Griffith's
address at 9.57 am and spoke to Mr Mathers, who directed them to a bedroom where
they found the deceased on
a bed with no signs of life. The officers heard Mr
Mathers contact a solicitor by telephone.
- When
the ambulance officers entered the room, Mrs Gloria Jackson, the twin sister of
the deceased, was present. She pointed out a
handwritten note under the pillow
supporting the deceased's head. The note indicated that because she suffered
non-reversible disintegration
of the spine which would get worse, she had
decided to commit suicide.
- Mr
Mathers told ambulance officers that he knew about the suicide note and that it
had been written two days previously. He said that
he had been with the deceased
the whole time.
- Soon
after police arrived at the scene, ambulance officers showed them the note under
the pillow. They told Mr Mathers that there
were indications that Ms Griffith
had committed suicide and because of that the matter would be reported to the
coroner and her body
examined.
- Admissions
made by Mr Mathers when subsequently interviewed by police formed the basis of a
charge of murder brought against him.
He was refused bail. He spent 20 days in
custody prior to release on bail.
- A
committal hearing was held on 17 June 2010. There were two witnesses called for
cross-examination at the committal, Dr Mathew Orde,
forensic pathologist, who
performed the post-mortem and Dr Judith Perl who provided a toxicology report as
to the effects of amitriptyline
and paracetamol.
- Dr
Judith Perl provided an expert report dated 23 March 2010. Confirmation was
conducted on a femoral blood sample taken from the
deceased which indicated the
presence of amitriptyline (1.2 mg/L) and paracetamol (less than 3 mg/L).
- Dr
Perl explained that amitriptyline is an antidepressant although it can be used
for other conditions including pain relief.
- The
blood concentration of amitriptyline found in the blood of the deceased was well
above the expected therapeutic concentrations
and potentially within the lethal
range and that death due to cardiac effects or a respiratory depression could
not be excluded.
- The
blood concentration of paracetamol was generally below the target therapeutic
range. It is generally given for management of mild
to moderate pain. Dr Perl
concluded:-
"10. In summary, the significant concentration of amitriptyline
does suggest an excessive dose of this drug was ingested by the Deceased
and
such a level is highly likely to have contributed to her death."
- At
the committal hearing, Dr Perl accepted that, given the amount of tablets
ingested on the Sunday and Monday evening, it was more
likely that death would
have occurred. Her suffocation, having regard to the depressant effects of the
drugs on respiration, would
simply have accelerated death.
- Mr
Mathers was committed for trial on the charge of murder.
The objective seriousness of the offences
- In
determining an appropriate sentence, it is necessary to establish the objective
seriousness of the offence committed, as well as
the personal circumstances of
the offender.
- There
is, of course, nothing more precious than human life and, in this case, the
death of Ms Griffith is particularly poignant, having
regard to the long
relationship which she enjoyed with Mr Mathers. It was a relationship marked by
a shared happiness and devotion
to one another.
- There
are, as one would expect, degrees of culpability in relation to the offence of
manslaughter. In R v Blacklidge (NSWCCA, unreported 12 December 1995),
Gleeson CJ stated (at 4):-
"It has long been recognised that the circumstances which may
give rise to a conviction for manslaughter are so various, and the range
of
degrees of culpability is so wide, that it is not possible to point to any
established sentencing tariff which can be applied
to such cases. Of all crimes,
manslaughter throws up the greatest variety of circumstances affecting
culpability."
- In
August 2010, Mr Mathers offered to plead guilty to a charge of manslaughter on
the basis of substantial impairment. The Crown accepted
the plea on that basis.
The plea involves what is referred to as a partial defence formerly known as
diminished responsibility.
- In
Blacklidge (supra), the Chief Justice commented upon the partial defence
in the following terms (at 4):-
"... The abnormality of mind substantially impairs the
offender's mental responsibility for his or her act but it does not negate
such
responsibility. The reduction in the capacity for self-control which results
from the abnormality of mind diminishes the responsibility
but it does not
excuse the act (R v Low (1991) 57 A Crim R 8)."
- Accordingly,
in the present case, it is necessary to establish the relevant state of mind of
Mr Mathers at the time he committed the
offence. Having done so, the question
then arises as to what extent is it reasonable to attribute culpability or moral
blameworthiness
to him, given his state of mind.
- Section
23A of the Crimes Act , in part, provides that a person who would
otherwise be guilty of murder is not to be convicted of murder if:-
(1) At the time of the acts or omissions causing the death
concerned, the person's capacity to understand events or to judge whether
the
person's actions were right or wrong or to control himself or herself, was
substantially impaired by an abnormality of mind arising
from an underlying
condition.
(2) The impairment was so substantial as to warrant liability for murder
being reduced to manslaughter.
- The
onus is on the person accused to prove that he or she is not liable to be
convicted of murder by virtue of s.23A. Section 23A(8) defines "underlying
condition" as meaning a pre-existing mental or physiological condition,
other than a condition of a transitory kind.
- It
has been held "abnormality of the mind" means "a state of mind so
different from that of ordinary human beings that the reasonable man would term
it 'abnormal'". It has been held wide enough to cover the mind's activities
in all its aspects including the ability to form a rational judgment as
to
whether an act is right or wrong: R v Byrne [1960] 2 QB 396 per Lord
Parker CJ at 403.
The medical evidence
- The
medical evidence tendered in the present proceedings includes a report from a
treating doctor, Mr Mathers' general practitioner,
Dr Razvan, dated 23 July 2009
together with specialist medical opinion including, in particular, the opinions
of Dr Nielssen and
Dr Samuels and Dr John Hilton, consultant in forensic
medicine.
(1) Dr Razvan, general practitioner
- Dr
Razvan, in his report, stated that Mr Mathers' general state of health was poor.
He said that he suffered from hypertension and
hyperlipidaemia. He underwent a
radical prostatectomy for a cancer followed by a degree of incontinence. He also
underwent bilateral
corneal grafts. One failed and he needs to use pinhole
glasses in order to see. He was prescribed medication for his hypertension
and
hypolipidaemia and has been prescribed medication by his ophthalmologist.
- Dr
Razvan stated that Mr Mathers is highly regarded in the community and observed:-
"I know him as a cultured person, a gentle person known as 'the
blind musician'."
(2) Dr Nielssen, psychiatrist
- Dr
Nielssen's report dated 7 April 2011 contains a detailed history of events
concerning Mr Mathers' relationship with Ms Griffith
and relevant events prior
to her death, details of his medical and psychiatric history and other general
history.
- Dr
Nielssen noted that he had had a relationship with the deceased for 22 years and
that in the early part of it, Ms Griffith was
caring for her elderly mother, who
eventually moved to a nursing home. She said that after visiting her mother she
would often say
that she never wanted to be placed in a nursing home herself. Mr
Mathers told Dr Nielssen that he himself had a similar experience
with his
mother's death from a painful cancer.
- He
provided Dr Nielssen with an account as to Ms Griffith's problems associated
with osteoporosis and arthritis and, in particular,
severe back pain and the
doctors who had cared for her had told her that "nothing could be done"
about her condition or her pain. He said that after she received that
advice, she decided to end her life.
- The
offender told Dr Nielssen "at this stage I wonder what my role is ... On one
hand, I don't want to lose her and on the other hand I did not want to see her
in agony" . He said "I asked her if I put on a display could I change
your mind and she said 'no'" .
- Mr
Mathers' history to Dr Nielssen included the fact that the deceased had
discussed the plan with her twin sister who had been aware
of Ms Griffith's wish
to end her life because of the severity of her pain and her wish to avoid going
to a nursing home.
- He
told Dr Nielssen that after Ms Griffith had taken the medication she lapsed into
unconsciousness and began to breathe irregularly.
He said that the state of her
breathing convinced him that she was "brain dead" but said that as he
watched her she continued to breathe. He said "I felt that I'd run out of
options ... If she woke up, she would have been a vegetable and would have had
to go to a nursing home,
which was her worst nightmare ... so I suffocated her
with a pillow" (p.2).
- In
the history of the relationship, Mr Mathers told Dr Nielssen that, although they
had separate houses, they spent a lot of time
together and he would see Ms
Griffith everyday and would speak to her at night when he stayed at his own
place.
- He
said that they had had a group of mutual friends and several holidays together
including overseas trips. He said that when it became
evident how unwell and
limited Ms Griffith had become, he was prepared to become her carer, including
moving in to live with her
if necessary.
- The
material in evidence establishes that he was a beneficiary in her Will but he
had been so in an earlier Will. He told Dr Nielssen
"money was not a
motivation" . The Crown accepts the truth of the evidence in that respect.
- As
to his own emotional state at the time, Mr Mathers told Dr Nielssen that he was
"highly stressed" . He said that he has always been an anxious person and
had retired from teaching because of the anxiety experienced in teaching
situations.
He said that when Ms Griffith expressed her wish to commit suicide,
he felt very distressed and sad about the prospect of losing
her.
- He
said he was also saddened by the effect her chronic pain had on her. The history
given included an inability to fall asleep and,
when he did so, waking up
worrying what to do. He said that he had had difficulty thinking clearly or
making a decision.
- He
had given a history of being badly depressed in the past, but he said that his
experience on this occasion "wasn't like that" .
- He
was seen by a psychiatrist in the late 1970s by reason of stress experienced
whilst teaching and was invalided from teaching on
the grounds of anxiety and
depression. Since leaving work he had not had any kind of counselling or other
treatment for any psychiatric
disorder.
- The
history given to Dr Nielssen was that Mr Mathers had experienced symptoms of
depression at intervals during his adult life and
he reported a severe episode
of depression around the time that he dropped out of teaching when he
contemplated suicide.
- He
had a further period of depression when he made an unsuccessful attempt to
retrain as a physiotherapist.
- Whilst
he said that the years that he had with Ms Griffith had been the happiest of his
life, he became depressed again after she
became ill.
- During
the deceased's illness, he said that he experienced difficulty thinking clearly
and was unable to make a decision. His sleep
was interrupted and he felt
feelings of anxiety for no clear reason.
- Dr
Nielssen, as I have earlier indicated, made a diagnosis of anxiety disorder and
of a depressive illness. He said the disordered
condition was best described as
an adjustment disorder or a clinically significant response to a life event,
namely, in his case,
the grief reaction surrounding his long term partner's
physical condition and her planned suicide.
- Dr
Nielssen considered that Mr Mathers' mood disorders were an underlying condition
within the meaning of s.23A of the Crimes Act and that his condition gave
rise to an abnormality of mind, in the form of a state of anxiety and depression
which affected his perception
of events, his ability to judge right from wrong
and also his ability to control his actions. He further opined that his
depressed
state effected his moral decision-making during his sleepless vigil
after the deceased's initial overdose and his decision to help
her take a
further overdose and then to suffocate her when she continued to breathe in an
erratic way. He said these were affected
by the morbid perception of events and
belief about the deceased's wishes and what he had to do. Further, inflexible
thinking arising
from his unusual personality contributed to the severity of the
impairment in his reasoning which he experienced at the time of the
offence.
(3) Dr Samuels, forensic psychiatrist
- Dr
Anthony Samuels, consultant psychologist, examined the offender at the request
of the Director of Public Prosecutions on 6 April
2011. In his detailed report,
he reviewed the sources of information that had been provided to him including
the Crown Case Statement
and Dr Perl's report of 23 March 2010.
- Dr
Samuels noted that at the time of Ms Griffith's death, Mr Mathers was on an
anti-viral agent and that there was some evidence that
this medication could
cause depressive and anxiety type symptoms. He said it was certainly possible
that this medication could have
increased his vulnerability to depression.
- Dr
Samuels expressed the opinion that he had a vulnerability to depression which
had become more prominent in his mid-30s and that
there were vulnerabilities in
his personality structure that compounded his difficulties in coping with his
partner's illness.
- He
observed that Ms Griffith was an enormously important friend and person in his
life and, in the context of her deteriorating physical
state and the prospect of
losing her, he suffered a return of depressive and anxiety symptoms.
- The
history included a three week period in which he was preoccupied with the
deceased's pain and suffering and was not sleeping and
was consulting with
professionals and desperately seeking ways to help her.
- On
the issue of substantial impairment, Dr Samuels was of the view that, as at the
time of Ms Griffith's death on 7 July 2009, Mr
Mathers was suffering, possibly
for up to a period of three weeks, a depressive reaction in terms of DSM-IV-TR
which was most likely
an Adjustment Disorder with Depression and Anxiety.
- In
the days before her death, his mood and anxiety symptoms could have reached a
threshold and diagnosis of Major Depressive Disorder.
He considered that the
depressive condition was an underlying condition which lead to an impairment of
an abnormality of mind within
the meaning of s.23A of the Crimes Act.
- In
light of the medical evidence of Dr Nielssen and of Dr Samuels, it is clear that
the Crown appropriately acted in accepting the
plea to manslaughter.
Submissions
- I
have had the benefit of detailed written submissions prepared by counsel for Mr
Mathers, Mr A Bellanto QC and Mr H White of counsel.
I have also had detailed
submissions from the learned Crown Prosecutor dated 19 April 2011. The written
submissions by counsel were
supplemented by oral submissions.
- I
express my indebtedness to all counsel for their detailed and helpful
submissions.
The appropriate sentence
- There
are a number of well-recognised aspects to the sentencing of offenders. They
include punishment, denunciation, deterrence and
protection of the community.
- However,
sentencing is not a blunt instrument Sentences are to be imposed in accordance
with accepted sentencing principles and imposed
only after careful assessment of
all material facts and circumstances concerning the particular offence and the
offender. There is
no basis for excluding a merciful application of relevant
principles where the evidence demands it.
- Important
in this case are the following matters:-
(1) Ms Griffith, on the evidence, was in a cognitively sound state
of mind when she decided that she wished to end her life.
(2) In that respect, she held a strong fear that the painful condition from
which she had suffered would culminate in her being confined
to a nursing home
and to there live the life of a fully dependent invalid.
(3) The fact that Ms Griffith had mental capacity, at the relevant time, at
the relevant time is an important fact. This is not a
case of one person making
a decision for another.
(4) Ms Griffith made known to Mr Mathers her wishes, he being the person that
she loved more than anyone else. That presented the
offender with an agonising
conflict. As he told police, "She couldn't see any other way out to do this.
And I couldn't see anything else but to respect that decision" (ERISP Q.96).
(5) Human experience indicates that lucidity of thought in resolving
situations involving personal conflict is often difficult to
achieve. Where, as
in the present case, there is affirmative evidence that the offender's
decision-making was impaired by his depressive
state, it is clear that his
capacity to resolve the situation that he was in, namely, a life/death decision
of the person that he
loved, was significantly reduced. Dr Nielssen encapsulated
the dilemma facing the offender as follows (p.7):-
"... People who are depressed have a view of the world that is pervasively
negative, and from that perspective Mr Mathers saw Ms Griffith's
future as bleak
and her decision to commit suicide as rational. His depressed state affected his
moral decision-making during his
sleepless vigil after her initial overdose, and
his decision to help her to take a further overdose and then to suffocate her
when
she continued to breathe in an erratic way, notwithstanding the possibility
that he exaggerated his role in her suffocation, was
affected by the morbid
perception of events and belief about her wishes and what he had to do, arising
from the perspective of a
person in a depressed state. Inflexible thinking
arising from Mr Mathers' unusual personality contributed to the severity of the
impairment in his reasoning he experienced at the time of the offence."
- In
R v Hill (1981) 3 A Crim R 397, Street CJ at 402 observed:-
"The circumstances leading to the felonious taking of human life
being regarded as manslaughter rather than murder can vary infinitely,
and it is
not always easy to determine in any given case what should be done in the matter
of sentence. At the start it should be
recognised that the felonious taking of a
human life is recognised both in the Crimes Act 1900 and in the community at
large as one of the most dreadful crimes in the criminal calendar. The courts
have, however, over the decades
gradually manifested a willingness to recognise
factual context which provides some basis for understanding the human tragedies
that
can lead to the taking of a life. The manifestation of this humanitarian
tendency is necessarily attended by the utmost caution.
It can be seen to be
constantly written in the decisions of the courts and in the enactments of the
legislature that the taking of
a human life is a grave action calling for a
correspondingly grave measure of criminal justice being meted out to the guilty
party."
- In
a case such as the present, the imposition of a sentence which meets both the
standards and demands of the criminal justice system
and the expectations of the
community at large, but which also takes account of the offender's dilemma and
mental state, is not one
without difficulty.
Mitigating factors
- In
determining the sentence to be imposed, I find and take account of the following
mitigating circumstances:-
(1) The offender's previous good character.
(2) The motives of love and compassion which attended his acts contributing
to Ms Griffith's death.
(3) The fact that Ms Griffith was very ill and in severe pain and wanting to
end her life.
(4) The medical evidence which uniformly establishes that, in the events
occurring in the three weeks prior to Ms Griffith's death,
Mr Mathers suffered a
depressive reaction and the development of an adjustment disorder and depression
with anxiety which led to
an impairment of his perception of events and his
decision-making capacity.
(5) The plea of guilty to the charge of manslaughter and the fact that he was
genuinely remorseful for his actions.
(6) The candour of Mr Mathers' disclosure and admissions to police and the
fact that his frank record of interview was accepted by
the Crown as having been
an accurate account.
(7) The absence of any prior convictions and that he has led an unblemished
life.
- In
the present case, it is noted that there are no aggravating factors that the
Crown relies on.
- It
has been submitted by Mr Bellanto QC for Mr Mathers in the present proceedings
that there is no reason or cause for specific deterrence
of the offender from
committing similar offences. I accept that submission. I am satisfied that the
offender will never offend again.
- I
also accept the submission made on behalf of Mr Mathers in determining sentence
that there is no need to protect the community from
him. This is a case in which
the public hearing, the period spent in custody and the imposition of the
sentence to be imposed will
make Mr Mathers accountable for his actions, both in
terms of consequences to the deceased and to the community.
- On
the issue of motive, the evidence uniformly establishes that Mr Mathers and Ms
Griffith were devoted to one another and that the
only motivation in assisting
Ms Griffith's bringing her life to an end was a selfless act borne out of the
love the offender held
for her and what the offender understood to be in
accordance with the deceased's express wishes. There is no evidence that his
voluntary
and intentional acts were motivated by any other factors.
- I
take into account that Mr Mathers' decision to assist Ms Griffith in bringing
her life to an end was one made within a short time
and driven by the
circumstances to which I have referred. There was no long-term planning
involved. There was no evidence of preparation
by him.
- The
circumstances associated with Ms Griffith's death were such that the offender
had the option of maintaining his silence or of
volunteering, by way of
admissions, his role in the events leading to her death. Mr Mathers chose the
latter. For that he must be
commended. Had he not done so, it is highly unlikely
that his role or participation in the events would have been brought to the
attention of the relevant authorities.
- It
is in accordance with sentencing principle that 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: R v Ellis (1986) NSWLR 603 per Street CJ at 604. See also
Ryan v R (2001) 206 CLR 267 and AB v R [1999] HCA 46; (1999) 198 CLR 111 at 126.
- In
addition, it is also accepted that leniency is to be extended where the
confession of guilt is in the form of a plea of guilty.
- The
fact that the offender did voluntarily reveal his involvement has, I believe, an
added significance beyond the admissions which
were likely to lead to a criminal
charge being preferred against him. His voluntary disclosures, in my assessment,
at least indirectly
provide a high level of corroboration of the truthfulness
his account as to the circumstances preceding Ms Griffith's death and as
to his
motive and state of mind generally.
- Ten
references were tendered at the sentence hearing. I have read each one of them
and they speak eloquently of Mr Mathers and of
his commendable personal
qualities.
- It
was submitted on behalf Mr Mathers that the objective criminality of the offence
is at the lower end of the scale for manslaughter.
I have earlier indicated that
that submission accords with my own assessment. The maximum penalty for such an
offence is 25 years
imprisonment: s.24, Crimes Act . However, it is well
recognised that there are different categories of manslaughter - some involving
the requisite intent for murder
and others not.
- The
Crown referred to the observations made in R v Dally [2000] NSWCCA 162; (2000) 115 A Crim R
582 at [64]:-
"It is not the variety of manslaughter but the facts which
determine the objective gravity of the offence. Neither variety (in that
case,
provocation or unlawful dangerous act) is inherently more serious than the
other."
- Accordingly,
there is a uniform line of authority which accepts that manslaughter is an
offence for which there is a truly wide range
of culpability and, accordingly,
there exists an extremely wide range of appropriate sentences.
- By
reason of the variety of circumstances that may arise, there is no precedent
case or sentence which will determine the sentence
to be imposed in a case such
as the present. That said, I have had regard to the sentencing remarks to which
I have been referred
by counsel in their submissions.
- In
sentencing, it is necessary that account be taken of the specific purposes for
which a Court may impose a sentence on an offender
as set out in s.3A of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act . In addition, the Court is to have
regard to the relevant aggravating and mitigating and other factors referred to
in the provisions
of s.21A of the Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act .
- Mr
Mathers' history, situation and circumstances of his offending means that three
of the principal purposes of sentencing have no
part to play in the
determination of the sentence to be imposed. There is no need for specific
deterrence. There is no need to protect
the community from him and no need for
rehabilitation or any tendency towards criminal or other anti-social behaviour.
- In
those circumstances, there remains considerations of general deterrence and
retribution. In a case such as the present, one can
be confident that few
persons in the position that Mr Mathers was in prior to an offence concern
themselves with what a court is
likely to do if they fail.
- However,
because manslaughter remains a serious offence, it cannot be said that general
deterrence has no part, as a general proposition,
to play in the sentencing of
offenders who come within the ambit of the section. Accordingly, it is a matter
to which I give due
weight.
- The
principle of general deterrence, though relevant and important in this case, is,
however, modified by the fact that, at the time
of the relevant acts, Mr Mathers
suffered from the depressive illness diagnosed by Dr Nielssen and Dr Samuels.
- The
question of retribution, in a case such as the present, is tied up with the
concept of the community's entitlement to feel that
justice has been done,
particularly given the sanctity of human life. That said, however, it is
difficult to see a community view
in a case such as the present which would
emphasise retribution as being a matter that would warrant a substantial term of
imprisonment.
- The
various sentencing options available are determined by the relevant legislative
provisions. These include, in the case of an offender
who is sentenced to
imprisonment for not more than 2 years, the making of an intensive correction
order or an order suspending the
sentence.
- In
his oral submissions, Mr Bellanto proposed that a bond would be well within the
sentencing discretion. The Court certainly has
the power under s.9 of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act to make an order directing an offender
to enter into a good behaviour bond for a specified term instead of imposing a
sentence of
imprisonment.
- It
was the Crown submission that, whilst a term of imprisonment should be imposed
in order to express general deterrence and denunciation
of the crime of
manslaughter, the sentence should be fully suspended in order to reflect the
tragic subjective features of the case.
- In
that respect, the Crown drew attention to the provisions of s.12 of the
Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act concerned with suspended sentences.
That section provides that a Court may impose a sentence of imprisonment on an
offender (being
a sentence for a term of not more than 2 years) may make an
order, inter alia, suspending execution of the whole of the sentence
for such
period (not exceeding the term of the sentence) as the Court may specify in the
order and, secondly, directing that the
offender be released from custody on
condition that he or she enters into a good behaviour bond for a term not
exceeding the term
of the sentence.
- It
is well accepted that there are a number of steps involved in the imposition of
a term of imprisonment such as a suspended sentence.
They are discussed in R
v Zamagias [2002] NSWCCA 17; Douar v R [2005] NSWCCA 455; (2005) 159 A Crim R 154; R
v Assaad [2009] NSWCCA 182.
- In
all the circumstances of the present case, including Mr Mathers' age and the
circumstances of his offending, I have determined
for the reason identified by
the Crown that the appropriate sentence is a term of imprisonment. However, this
is a case in which
a sentence of full-time custody is not called for. The
sentence should be suspended. In so concluding, I have also had regard to
the
matters to which I have referred and the period of time that Mr Mathers has
spent in custody.
- In
determining the commencement date of the sentence to be imposed, I will backdate
the sentence to commence on 8 April 2011 in order
to allow for the period of 20
days that Mr Mathers spent in custody.
- David
Scott Mathers, I sentence you to imprisonment for a term of 2 years. In order to
allow for the period of 20 days that you have
already served in custody, such
sentence is taken to have commenced on 8 April 2011 and to expire on 7 April
2013. I suspend execution
of the sentence as from today and direct that you be
released from custody on condition that you enter into a bond for the operative
remaining period of the 2 year sentence.
- The
bond will contain the following conditions:-
(1) That you appear before the Court, if called on to do so, at any
time during the term of the bond.
(2) That you be of good behaviour.
(3) That you inform the Registrar of this Court of any change in your
residential address.
**********
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