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WAYNE MICHAEL STEWART, R v. [1998] EWCA Crim 1988 (18th June, 1998)
No:
98/2710/X5
IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL
CRIMINAL
DIVISION
Royal
Courts of Justice
The
Strand
London
WC2
Thursday
18th June 1998
B E F O R E :
MR
JUSTICE HOLLAND
and
MR
JUSTICE ASTILL
- - - - - - - - - - - -
R E G I N A
- v -
WAYNE
MICHAEL STEWART
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Computer Aided Transcript of the Stenograph Notes of
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
180 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2HD
Tel No: 0171 421 4040 Fax No: 0171 831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
- - - - - - - - - - - -
MR
N FRIDD
appeared on behalf of the APPELLANT
- - - - - - - - - - - -
JUDGMENT
(
As
approved by the Court
)
- - - - - - - - - - - -
Crown Copyright
Thursday
18th June 1998
MR
JUSTICE ASTILL: On 2nd April 1998 this appellant was sentenced after a trial
to twelve months' imprisonment for an offence of theft and to a concurrent
sentence of twelve months' imprisonment for an offence of going equipped for
theft.
It was the early hours of the morning of 25th August 1996 that police
officers saw the appellant and another man (he has since absconded and has not
been brought to trial) in a van which was being driven by the appellant. The
officers became aware that a telephone kiosk near to the van had been attacked
and money taken from it. They noticed oxyacetylene cylinders in the rear of
the appellant's van. The van was stopped and searched. That search revealed
£225.50 in various coins, and the officers noticed that the nozzle of the
oxyacetylene equipment was still warm. £104 had been stolen from the
telephone kiosk which had been broken open. The appellant was arrested.
When he was interviewed about it, he denied theft. He said that he had
been called to a breakdown but that, when he arrived, no one was there. He
said that the equipment was his but had not been used that day; and that he had
changed the nozzle and tested it about an hour before his arrest. It was that
unlikely story that the jury clearly rejected.
The appellant was sentenced on what the sentencing judge called
"overwhelming evidence of carefully planned offences to break into telephone
kiosks and steal money". He made the obvious point that no credit could be
given for a plea of guilty.
There were reports before the court, which set out domestic and personal
difficulties suffered by this appellant, and the judge expressly took those
into account.
In the view of this Court, he rightly took the view that offences of this
kind are serious and justified the passing of an immediate custodial sentence.
This appellant has previous convictions: three for handling stolen goods
and two for theft.
The grounds of appeal, advanced succinctly by Mr Fridd, are threefold:
that having regard to the cases of
R
v Arslan
(1993) 15 Cr App R (S) 90;
R
v Costello
(1993)
15 Cr App R (S) 24; and
R
v Ferry and Wynn
[1997] 2 Cr App R (S) 42, this sentence of twelve months was too long. The
second point that Mr Fridd makes is that the domestic difficulties and the
depression set out in the reports were not reflected or reflected sufficiently
in the sentence passed. The third point he makes on behalf of the appellant is
that the gap between the offence and the sentence and the progress meanwhile
were matters that properly could reduce the length of the sentence.
In
Ferry
and Wynn
the appellants were sentenced on the basis that they were involved in, as the
Court called it, "a sustained enterprise to break into telephone boxes in rural
areas". Those appellants pleaded guilty. The position here, as is obvious
from the facts, was that this appellant went out with another to break into a
telephone box, and in the car was found cash in small denominations which went
beyond the amount that had been taken from that box. There was no other
report, it is true, that any other box had been broken into by him, but the
facts of the matter show that this appellant and his companion went out in the
early hours of the morning equipped to commit precisely this kind of offence.
It is in these circumstances that we come to consider whether the facts of
this case and the facts of
Ferry
and Wynn
can be distinguished so as to enable this Court to consider a sentence
appropriate of less than the twelve month sentence that was passed.
We are unable to accept the submission that this sentence was too long.
This appellant, against overwhelming evidence, contested the matter. The
appellants in
Ferry
and Wynn
did not. The facts of this case show that this appellant with his companion
went out equipped to break into this telephone box and in the car was found in
denominations of a similar kind that could come from another telephone box.
In all the circumstances, and bearing in mind that in
Ferry
and Wynn
the Court was upholding a sentence and not suggesting that twelve months was
the appropriate tariff, we have come to the conclusion that this sentence
cannot be said to be manifestly excessive. Accordingly, this appeal must be
dismissed.
© 1998 Crown Copyright
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