MURRAY, APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE BY AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_27 (09 January 2018)


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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> MURRAY, APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE BY AGAINST HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_27 (09 January 2018)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2018/[2018]_HCJAC_27.html
Cite as: [2018] HCJAC 27, [2018] ScotHC HCJAC_27

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Lord Menzies
Lord Turnbull
APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY
[2018] HCJAC 27
HCA/2017/000628/XC
OPINION OF THE COURT
delivered by LORD TURNBULL
in
APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE
by
ANDREW MURRAY
against
HER MAJESTY’S ADVOCATE
Appellant
Respondent
Appellant: Findlater; Faculty Services Limited (for Ward & Co, Perth)
Respondent: M Hughes, AD; Crown Agent
9 January 2018
[1]       The appellant Andrew Murray is now 22 years old. On 15 September 2017 he pled
guilty to a contravention of section 39(1) of the Criminal Justice and Licensing (Scotland)
Act 2010 and, after preparation of a Criminal Justice Social Work Report, received a sentence
of 21 months’ imprisonment on 24 October 2017. The sentence was restricted from the
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2
period of 24 months which the sheriff would otherwise have imposed but for the appellant’s
plea of guilty.
[2]       The offence to which the appellant pled guilty was one of engaging in a course of
conduct which caused his then partner fear and alarm. It was committed over a 6 month
period between April and October 2016.
[3]       The circumstances of the appellant’s conduct were explained in the report which the
sentencing sheriff provided to this court. They can be summarised as follows. In May 2016
the appellant moved into a property in Coupar Angus which the complainer was the tenant
of. They had previously been in a relationship. The complainer’s neighbours, family and
friends quickly noticed a difference in her behaviour. She stopped wearing makeup, rarely
left the house and was hostile to any well-meaning enquiry. Neighbours often heard the
appellant shouting in the house and heard the complainer crying and clearly being upset.
The appellant was jealous of any males who were friendly with the complainer and
instructed her to remove male acquaintances from her Facebook account. He regularly
checked her mobile telephone and social media messages and behaved in a controlling
manner. He regularly criticised her, including calling her an unfit mother. He caused
damage to items in the house. He punched a hole in a bedroom wall and smashed a
photograph hanging above the bed. He threw cups against a wall and repeatedly
threatened to injure himself. He accused the complainer of being unfaithful to him and, if
she dressed in a certain way, suggested that she was going to meet another male.
[4]       The appellant continued to act in a bullying, offensive and controlling manner
towards the complainer and various examples of this conduct were provided by the sheriff
in his report. This included the appellant sending a photograph to a friend of his without
the complainer’s consent which showed him and the complainer lying on a sofa in her home
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3
in which she could be seen in a state of partial undress. Towards the end of September 2016
the complainer left her property in order to live with her own mother having reported the
appellant’s actions to the police. The appellant continued to reside in the flat at
Coupar Angus. On 26 September 2016 the complainer received a series of Facebook
messages from the appellant during which he informed her that he had found a scrapbook
which she had prepared as a tribute to her late father. The appellant made various
complaints to the complainer about the content of the scrapbook. On 3 October the
complainer returned to her flat and discovered that certain pictures in it had been defaced
by the appellant. This was a matter of particular upset to the complainer.
[5]       In light of this conduct the sentencing sheriff concluded that the appellant had pled
guilty to a serious offence. He took account of the nature and characteristics of the
appellant’s behaviour, the affect it had on the complainer, the fact that it was committed in a
domestic context and his assessment, drawn from the Criminal Justice Social Work Report,
that the appellant did not accept responsibility for his conduct. The sheriff also took account
of the proposals in the Criminal Justice Social Work Report for the imposition of a
non-custodial penalty. He observed that the appellant was assessed as unsuitable for the
Building Better Relationships accredited group work programme and considered that there
was a question mark over whether he was prepared to engage satisfactorily with an order
for the imposition of unpaid work.
[6]       The sheriff concluded that a non-custodial disposal would not constitute an
appropriate penalty for the appellant’s actions and, as he put it, that he, and perhaps as
important other persons, had to be made aware that such behaviour was totally
unacceptable. In these circumstances he concluded that only a sentence of imprisonment
was appropriate and settled on the headline period of 24 months.
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4
[7]       On the appellant’s behalf Mr Findlater adopted the content of the written
submissions in support of the appeal tendered in advance of the hearing. He acknowledged
in those submissions the unacceptable nature of the appellant’s conduct as set out in the
charge to which he pled guilty but it was submitted that the conduct ought to have been
viewed in the course of a dysfunctional relationship. It was submitted that the charge itself
was not one which would be bound to result in a custodial sentence. Principally though, the
written submissions founded upon the appellant’s personal circumstances in support of the
contention that a non-custodial disposal was appropriate or, in the alternative, that the
period selected was excessive. It was pointed out that the appellant was aged 20 years old at
the start of the offending and aged 21 at the end. It was pointed out that he was of previous
good behaviour. Attention was drawn to the appellant’s difficult upbringing as set out in the
Criminal Justice Social Work Report and to the behavioural issues which were seen to
underpin his offending by the author of that report. It was submitted that, to some extent at
least, those behavioural issues resulted from the appellant’s difficult upbringing. It was also
explained that since the offending ceased the appellant had taken various steps to bring
about change in his life. He had moved to live with the family of a friend which provided a
positive and nourishing base for him. He was making positive use of his time and was
looking for employment. In supplement of those submissions Mr Findlater explained to us
that the appellant has been offered a place on a college course in Newcastle.
[8]       In the written submissions particular emphasis was given to the suggestion that the
sentencing sheriff had failed to give appropriate weight to the appellant’s youth in
identifying the appropriate disposal. Attention was drawn to the apparent absence of this
consideration in the passages of the sheriff’s report in which he assesses disposal. The
written submissions reminded us of what had been said in the cases of Kane v Her Majesty’s
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5
Advocate 2013 SCCR and Smart v Her Majesty’s Advocate 2016 SLT about the importance of
taking account of an accused person’s youth and upbringing in assessing sentence. The
written submissions also criticised the sheriff’s assessment of the appellant’s suitability to
participate in the sort of non-custodial disposals suggested in the Social Work Report.
[9]       We have given due consideration to all of the points identified. In considering the
sentence imposed in this case appropriate weight has to be given to the terms of section 204(2)
of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995. That provision provides that:
“A court shall not pass a sentence of imprisonment on a person of or over 21 years of
age who has not been previously sentenced to a period of imprisonment or detention
unless the court considers that no other method of dealing with him is appropriate.”
Further factors to be given appropriate weight are the appellant’s age and background.
Although he was aged 22 by the date of sentencing, the appellant was only 20 and 21 at the
time of the offending. There were also a number of relevant factors concerning his upbringing
which were detailed in the Criminal Justice Social Work Report.
[10]       In our opinion, there is force in the submission concerning the apparent lack of weight
attached by the sheriff to the appellant’s age and to his lack of previous offending. The
Criminal Justice Social Work Report identified the presence of a number of issues of concern,
such as domestic abuse, anger and emotion management, victim awareness, problem solving,
consequential thinking skills and issues in relation to impulsivity. The author of the report
considered that these were issues which could be addressed with benefit through intervention
programmes. Although the appellant was assessed as being unsuitable for the Building Better
Relationships group work programme it was proposed that work could be undertaken with
him on a one to one basis. As we would understand it, this was the basis upon which the
recommendation for a non-custodial sentence was made. Whilst the sheriff refers in his report
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6
to the appellant being unsuitable for the group work programme he makes no mention of the
suggestion that a one to one programme would be available.
[11]       As set against these considerations full weight has to be given to the nature of the
appellant’s offending. He undoubtedly engaged in unpleasant and offensive behaviour. We
recognise that aspects of his conduct must have caused considerable upset to the complainer,
particularly given her own distressing circumstances. In no sense are we intending to suggest
that such behaviour can be condoned or excused. On the contrary, it is behaviour which
requires to be punished. However, it is important to note that there were no incidents of
physical violence being directed towards the complainer herself.
[12]       Given the appellant’s age at the time offending, the fact that he had no previous
history of criminal conduct and taking account of the other circumstances which we have
drawn attention to, and bearing in mind that the appellant has now served a period which is
the equivalent of a sentence of over 4 months’ imprisonment, we are persuaded that the
sentence imposed by the sheriff was excessive.
[13]       We are therefore minded to quash the sentence and in its place to impose a
Community Payback Order for a period of 2 years with a supervision requirement and a
requirement to perform a period of 200 hours unpaid work in the community.



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