![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Seed & Anor, R. v [2007] EWCA Crim 254 (13 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2007/254.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Crim 254 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers)
THE PRESIDENT OF THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(Sir Igor Judge)
and
THE VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL, CRIMINAL DIVISION
(Lord Justice Latham)
____________________
R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
TRIGGER ALAN MIKE SEED | ||
PHILIP STARK |
____________________
Wordwave International Ltd (a Merrill Communications Company)
190 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone 020-7421 4040
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR A BLAKE appeared on behalf of THE APPELLANT PHILIP STARK
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Tuesday 13 February 2007
THE LORD CHIEF JUSTICE:
Introduction:
"The court must not pass a custodial sentence unless it is of the opinion that the offence, or the combination of the offence and one or more offences associated with it, was so serious that neither a fine alone nor a community sentence can be justified for the offence."
This is an important provision. It requires the court, when looking at the particulars of the offence, to decide whether the "custodial threshold" has been passed. If it has not, then no custodial sentence can be imposed. If it has, it does not follow that a custodial sentence must be imposed. The effect of a guilty plea or of personal mitigation may make it appropriate for the sentencer to impose a non-custodial sentence.
"for the shortest term (not exceeding the permitted maximum) that in the opinion of the court is commensurate with the seriousness of the offence, or the combination of the offence and one or more offences associated with it."
This also is an important provision.
(a)the punishment of offenders;
(b)the reduction of crime, including its reduction by deterrence;
(c)the reform and rehabilitation of offenders;
(d)the protection of the public; and
(e)the making of reparation by offenders to persons affected by their offences.
Unless imprisonment is necessary for the protection of the public the court should always give consideration to the question of whether the aims of rehabilitation and thus the reduction of crime cannot better be achieved by a fine or community sentence rather than by imprisonment and whether punishment cannot adequately be achieved by such a sentence. We believe that there may have been a reluctance to impose fines because fines were often not enforced. Enforcement of fines is now rigorous and effective and, where the offender has the means, a heavy fine can often be an adequate and appropriate punishment. If so, the 2003 Act requires a fine to be imposed rather than a community sentence.
The Appeal of Trigger Seed
"He accepts he lost his temper and threw wine over Miss Piscina.
In doing so the glass left his hand, struck her and caused the injury complained of."
".... this offence of assault occasioning actual bodily harm on Samantha Piscina in which you struck her with a glass, close to her eye, causing a vertical laceration that required sutures is so serious that neither a fine alone nor a community sentence can in my opinion be justified. This was a wholly unprovoked assault with a glass which is, in effect, a weapon on a vulnerable person.
Miss Piscina had come to see you to spend the evening with you. You had been drinking together, there was an argument, you told her to leave and in the process of doing so you struck her face with a glass. I therefore pass a sentence of six months' imprisonment. This is the shortest which in my opinion matches the seriousness of your offence and takes into account your personal circumstances as described to me by Mr Compton on your behalf and all that has been said about you, including the fact that you have pleaded guilty to this offence, albeit not at the first available opportunity, the fact that you have learning difficulties, the fact that your character is good save for a number of related driving convictions in 2003, and that you have been engaged in unpaid charity work."
"Yes, I have sentenced you on your basis of plea which is that you lost your temper and threw wine over Miss Piscina. In doing so the glass left your hand and struck Miss Piscina in the face."
The Appeal of Philip Stark
"I have obviously been listening very carefully to all that has been said on your behalf, and you have much to thank Mr Blake for but, at the heart of all this, it is not a question of you being driven by love but you being dishonest. If there were those problems with Marjorie Stark, your true wife, then it is quite simple for you not to have gone through this ceremony of marriage in this country on 19 April 2003. That is quite the simple way, but you nevertheless did; you committed a criminal offence which undermines the status and legality of marriage which is an important institution, whatever anyone else may say about it, in this country, and then when you were found out you ran and left the jurisdiction, and those are serious matters, not something which a court can simply overlook in your case.
I bear in mind of course you are a man of 51 years of ago who has a good character, nothing known against you in the past. It is quite clear to me that you are a man of ability and intelligence and clearly a man who has got himself into a tangled web of deception really through your own fault, which gives you no credit at all.
It is difficult for me to have details about the effect of any injury you may have caused principally to your first wife, but I accept what is said within the prosecution papers from the prosecution witnesses that clearly she does not seek to get involved in this ....
It seems to me in the circumstances that you present me with that there is no other alternative other than a custodial sentence because in my judgment courts must be seen, as I have already said, to uphold the law and the legality of marriage and to ensure that someone leaving the jurisdiction to avoid the consequences of the crime should when you come back into the jurisdiction be punished for that."
"Sentences for bigamy must vary very much with the particular circumstances of the case. In many cases of bigamy it is possible to deal with the case by some sentence which does not involve deprivation of liberty. In other cases there may be a clear deception which has resulted in some injury to the woman concerned in which an immediate custodial sentence must be passed, and the length of that sentence must depend greatly on the seriousness of the injury that has been done."
"On the facts of this case the bigamy seems to me to involve rather more folly than injurious deception."
What were those facts?
_____________________