R. v. R.B.
Between
Her Majesty the Queen, Respondent, and
R.B., Appellant
R.B., Appellant
[2013] O.J. No. 278
2013 ONCA 36
Docket: C52908
Ontario Court of Appeal
Toronto, Ontario
J.I. Laskin, H.S. LaForme and A. Hoy JJ.A.
Heard: January 9, 2013.
Judgment: January 23, 2013.
Docket: C52908
Ontario Court of Appeal
Toronto, Ontario
J.I. Laskin, H.S. LaForme and A. Hoy JJ.A.
Heard: January 9, 2013.
Judgment: January 23, 2013.
(33 paras.)
Criminal law --
Criminal Code offences -- Sexual offences, public morals, disorderly conduct
and nuisances -- Sexual offences -- Sexual interference -- Invitation to sexual
touching -- Sexual exploitation -- Offences against person and reputation --
Assaults -- Sexual assault -- Appeal by accused from conviction for multiple
sexual offences dismissed -- Accused was found to have repeatedly abused niece
between 1988 and 1997 when niece was between six and 14 years of age --
Misconduct progressed from touching to intercourse -- Niece disclosed abuse to
mother in 2000 and reported it to police in 2002 and 2007 -- Trial judge
rejected accused's evidence denying abuse and contending his rejection of
niece's infatuation led her to fabricate allegations -- No error in trial
judge's analysis established -- Conviction for sexual interference stayed on
basis of Kienapple principle.
Criminal law -- Sentencing -- Criminal Code offences -- Sexual offences, public morals, disorderly conduct and nuisances -- Sexual offences -- Invitation to sexual touching -- Sexual exploitation -- Offences against person and reputation -- Assaults -- Sexual assault -- Particular sanctions -- Imprisonment -- Concurrent sentences -- Sentencing considerations -- Totality principle -- Offence involving breach of trust -- Sexual offences against children -- Seriousness of offence -- Deportation -- Procedure -- Appeals -- Appeal by accused from sentence for multiple sexual offences dismissed -- Accused was found to have repeatedly abused niece between 1988 and 1997 when niece was between six and 14 years of age -- Misconduct progressed from touching to intercourse -- Accused received five-year global sentence comprised of concurrent sentences -- He sought to have constituent sentences shortened but made consecutive to preserve right to argue against deportation with global sentence remaining unchanged -- Sentencing process could not be used to circumvent immigration provisions and policies -- Sentence as constructed was fit and complied with totality principle.
Criminal law -- Sentencing -- Criminal Code offences -- Sexual offences, public morals, disorderly conduct and nuisances -- Sexual offences -- Invitation to sexual touching -- Sexual exploitation -- Offences against person and reputation -- Assaults -- Sexual assault -- Particular sanctions -- Imprisonment -- Concurrent sentences -- Sentencing considerations -- Totality principle -- Offence involving breach of trust -- Sexual offences against children -- Seriousness of offence -- Deportation -- Procedure -- Appeals -- Appeal by accused from sentence for multiple sexual offences dismissed -- Accused was found to have repeatedly abused niece between 1988 and 1997 when niece was between six and 14 years of age -- Misconduct progressed from touching to intercourse -- Accused received five-year global sentence comprised of concurrent sentences -- He sought to have constituent sentences shortened but made consecutive to preserve right to argue against deportation with global sentence remaining unchanged -- Sentencing process could not be used to circumvent immigration provisions and policies -- Sentence as constructed was fit and complied with totality principle.
Appeal by the accused, RB, from a conviction and
sentence for multiple sexual offences. The accused was a permanent resident of
Canada from El Salvador and the complainant's uncle. Sexual misconduct
commenced in 1988 when the complainant was six years of age and continued until
1997. The sexual contact progressed from touching to intercourse. The
complainant reported the conduct to her mother in 2000 when she was 18 years of
age. She reported it to police in 2002 when she was 20 and gave a statement to
police in 2007 at age 25. The accused testified at trial and denied the
allegations. He contended that the complainant was infatuated with him and
fabricated the allegations after he rejected her. The trial judge rejected the
accused's evidence and found that it did not raise a reasonable doubt, as it
was unlikely the complainant would fabricate allegations in response to a
rejection at age 14. The judge accepted the complainant's evidence as credible
and reliable and noted that the delay in disclosing the conduct was not
uncommon. The accused was convicted of sexual assault, sexual interference,
invitation to sexual touching and sexual exploitation. He was sentenced to five
years' imprisonment comprised of four concurrent sentences. The accused
appealed the conviction and the sentence. He did not argue against the
resulting five-year term, but rather sought to have the constituent concurrent
sentences reduced in length and made consecutive in order to preserve his right
to argue against his deportation from Canada.
HELD: Appeal dismissed. The conviction for sexual
interference was stayed based on an application of the Kienapple principle.
Otherwise, there was no error in the trial judge's analysis or decisions on
either of the issues of the complainant's motive to fabricate or the
complainant's disclosure. The conclusions were supported by the trial judge's
lengthy reasons for judgment. The loss of a potential remedy against a
deportation order was not a mitigating factor on sentence. Nor could the
sentencing process be used to circumvent the provisions and policies of the
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act. To impose a sentence of two years or
less for the sustained sexual assault of a young family member would be
patently inadequate or artificial. Proper application of the totality principle
supported the sentence imposed by the trial judge. Sentence: Five years'
imprisonment for sexual assault; one-year concurrent for invitation to sexual
touching; four years' concurrent for sexual exploitation.
Statutes, Regulations and Rules Cited:
Statutes, Regulations and Rules Cited:
Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001,
c. 27, s. 64(1), s. 112, s. 113, s. 114
Appeal From:
Appeal From:
On appeal from the conviction entered on June 17,
2009 and the sentence imposed on October 21, 2009 by Justice Alison Harvison-Young
of the Superior Court of Justice, sitting without a jury.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
H.S. LaFORME J.A.:--
INTRODUCTION
1 The
appellant is married to the sister of the complainant's mother and is thereby
the uncle of the complainant. The sexual offences were found to have started in
1988 when the complainant was 6 years old and they continued until 1997 when
she was almost 15. Throughout that time the sexual contact progressed from
sexual touching to intercourse.
2 The
complainant reported the appellant's conduct to her mother in 2000 when she was
18; to the police on October 27, 2002 when she was 20; and she gave a statement
to the police on October 31, 2007 when she was 25. In other words, her
reporting of the assaults and her police statement were 4, 6 and 11 years after
the last assault.
THE TRIAL
3 At
trial it was essentially the evidence of the appellant and his wife against
that of the complainant. The appellant's evidence was a denial of all the
allegations. His testimony was that the complainant became infatuated with him
and that when he rejected her, she made the false allegations. The result of
the trial therefore turned on credibility findings and the application of R. v. W.(D.), [1991] 1 S.C.R. 742.
4 The
trial judge rejected the appellant's denial of involvement and his assertions
that the complainant was infatuated with him and his rejection of her when she
was 14 motivated her to fabricate the allegations. She held that the evidence
of the defence did not raise a reasonable doubt, particularly the suggestion
that the complainant would fabricate allegations as a result of having been
rejected at the age of 14. She found that there was no air of reality to this
assertion.
5 Finally,
the trial judge held that the rest of the evidence proved the appellant's guilt
beyond a reasonable doubt. She accepted the complainant's evidence, finding her
to be a credible and reliable witness. She found that details, such as which
vehicle the offences occurred in, were understandably unclear and peripheral.
She also found that the delay in reporting is not uncommon in such cases and
did not negatively affect the complainant's credibility.
6 The
trial judge convicted the 42 year old appellant of four historic sexual
offences -- sexual assault, sexual interference, invitation to sexual touching,
and sexual exploitation. She sentenced him to a "fair, fit and
global" term of 5 years imprisonment. In addition, he was required to
provide a DNA sample for registration for a period of twenty years and a
weapons prohibition for a period of ten years.
THE APPEAL
7 On
appeal the appellant submitted that the trial judge made three critical errors.
First, he argued that the trial judge ought to have applied the principle in R. v. Kienapple, [1975] 1 S.C.R. 729. Second,
he submitted that the trial judge improperly reversed the onus of proof on the
issue of the complainant's motive to fabricate. Third, he submitted that the
trial judge failed to consider all the circumstances in her assessment of the
delay of the complainant in reporting the offences. Finally, the appellant
argues that the sentence imposed is unfit.
Conviction appeal
8 We
did not call upon the Crown to respond to any of the grounds of appeal against the
convictions. We allowed the appeal on the Kienapple issue and dismissed the balance of the appeal against convictions.
The following brief reasons will sufficiently explain our decision.
9 The
trial judge decided that the Kienapple principle -- that an accused cannot be convicted of two offences
where they are both arise out of substantially the same facts -- should not
apply in this case. On appeal, the appellant submitted that the principle ought to have applied and that
count 2 should have been stayed.
10 Given
the particularity in the indictment in count 1 (sexual assault) and count 2
(sexual interference) the Crown did not oppose this submission. We agreed, and
accordingly the less serious offence in count 2 was stayed.
11 On
the balance of the appeal against the convictions, we found no error in the
trial judge's analysis or decisions on either of the issues of the
complainant's motive to fabricate or the complainant's disclosure. The trial
judge provided lengthy reasons for her decision and when those reasons are read
as a whole, the appellant's assertions of errors are simply not present.
Accordingly, apart from the Kienapple point, the appeal of the convictions was dismissed.
Sentence appeal
12 We
were, however, somewhat sympathetic to the appellant's submissions on his
sentence appeal, and reserved our decision in order to consider it more fully.
In the circumstances of this case, we saw some merit in the approach submitted
by the appellant, which is set out more fully below. In essence, the totality
of the sentence would not change and would therefore result in the appellant
serving the period of imprisonment found by the trial judge to be appropriate.
Moreover, we initially wondered whether the principles and objectives of
sentencing would still be addressed and would continue to reflect the objective
seriousness of the offences if we were to adopt the appellant's submissions.
13 However,
after further consideration, and although my initial impressions of the merits
remain, I conclude that the authorities limit our ability to accede to his
request. The following will explain my reasons for this conclusion.
14 At
the sentencing hearing defence counsel argued for a total sentence of 3-4 years
imprisonment, while the Crown sought the maximum of 10 years. The trial judge
noted that the appellant "came to Canada, having fled war-torn El Salvador
in 1987 ..." She rejected the Crown's submission that this was a case
deserving of the maximum sentence of 10 years. Also, it is clear that she did
not consider this case to be one which required strict adherence to this
court's decision in R. v. D.D.
(2002), 58 O.R. (3d) 788 (C.A.).
15 As
noted, the trial judge ultimately sentenced the appellant to a 5 year total
term of imprisonment. She apportioned his imprisonment as follows: on count 1,
sexual assault, 5 years; on count 2, sexual interference, 5 years (concurrent);
on count 3, invitation to sexual touching, 1 year (concurrent); and on count 4,
sexual exploitation, 4 years (concurrent). Given that count 2 is stayed, the
sentence being considered by us is only in respect of counts 1, 3 and 5.
16 The
only submission the appellant makes on appeal is that the totality of the
sentence be apportioned differently from that of the trial judge. In other
words, he does not argue against the five years total sentence. Rather, he asks
this court to recognize the circumstances of the appellant and the consequences
to his family and to assist them by imposing a maximum sentence of two years
less a day for any of the counts of 1, 3 and 4, but have them run consecutively
and maintain the total sentence of five years imprisonment. He submits that
this would not impose a shorter sentence in totality and would be entirely in keeping
with the principles and objectives of sentencing.
17 The
appellant is a permanent resident of Canada, originally from El Salvador, and
was convicted of criminal offences that resulted in his being ordered deported.
Thus, one of the avenues by which he could challenge that deportation order has
been lost by virtue of the length of the sentences imposed for those offences,
namely more than two years imprisonment: see, Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act, S.C. 2001, c. 27. Under s.
64(1) of the Act, the appellant
has no right to appeal the deportation order if he receives a sentence of two
years imprisonment or more for any single offence. While the trial judge may
have been aware of the appellant's permanent resident status, she does not
consider its implications in her sentencing analysis.
The appellant's
circumstances
18 I
begin, as the appellant suggests, with the comments of Doherty J.A. in R. v. Hamilton (2004), 72 O.R. (3d) 1 (C.A.),
at para. 87:
·
Sentencing is a very human
process. Most attempts to describe the proper judicial approach to sentencing
are as close to the actual process as a paint-by-numbers landscape is to the
real thing. I begin by recognizing, as did the trial judge, that the fixing of
a fit sentence is the product of the combined effects of the circumstances of
the specific offence with the unique attributes of the specific offender.
19 It
is the unique attributes and circumstances of the appellant, which he says can
allow this court to reflect "the human face of the sentencing
process" by giving him another opportunity to remain in Canada with his
family. He has been in Canada since 1987, his family is here and he wishes to
access every opportunity to remain here with them. His statutory release date
we were told is February 19, 2013.
20 The
appellant says he left El Salvador in 1985 "because of the war",
which the trial judge seems to accept. He originally entered the United States
as a refugee and in 1987 came to Canada. He obtained landed immigrant status in
Canada in 1991.
21 Also
in 1991, the appellant married the sister of the complainant's mother and they
have three children now aged 15, 17 and 19. He did not complete high school
because, he says, of the war in El Salvador. Nevertheless, since in Canada he
has learned to be an auto mechanic, which was his occupation at the time of
these offences. He is the sole provider for his family.
22 In
his pre-sentence report he is described by others as being "devoted to his
wife and children" and has a close connection with his Christian church.
He is a first time offender.
ANALYSIS
23 Generally
speaking I think the overall principles and objectives of sentencing would
still be addressed and would continue to reflect the objective seriousness of
the offences if we were to adopt the appellant's submissions. However, there
are also the interests of the Parliament of Canada and existing legal
principles from this court that must be considered. Because of these
considerations, I believe the Crown's arguments must prevail, and ultimately
compel the dismissal of the appeal against sentence.
24 I
acknowledge at the outset that the risk of deportation can be a factor to be
considered in choosing among the appropriate sentencing responses and tailoring
the sentence to best fit the crime and the offender: R.
v. Melo (1975), 26 C.C.C. (2d) 510, at p. 516 (Ont.
C.A.). However, the loss of a potential remedy against a deportation order is
not a mitigating factor on sentence, nor can the sentencing process be used to
circumvent the provisions and policies of the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act: Hamilton, at paras. 156 and 157. The Crown submits that circumventing the
Act is what results here if the appellant's submissions are accepted. I agree.
25 The
second submission by the Crown is that the appellant's suggested approach is
simply not available even if the totality of the sentence is not disturbed.
This is because, it is argued, the appropriate sentence for either of counts 1
and 4 in this case cannot reasonably be less than 5 years imprisonment. The
Crown relies on several authorities including this court's decision in R. v. D.M., 111 O.R. (3d) 721. Once again I
agree.
26 This
court's fairly recent decision in R. v. Badhwar, 2011 ONCA 266 comments on both the Immigration
and Refugee Protection Act issue and adjusting the
length of sentences where an accused person has been convicted of multiple
counts as here. Moldaver J.A. first described the adjustment of the length in
counts without interfering with the total length of sentence as amounting to a
benefit over someone convicted of a single count. He then goes on in para. 45
to caution that:
·
No matter how one chooses to
come at the issue, the bottom line remains the same. Courts ought not to be
imposing inadequate or artificial sentences at all, let alone for the purpose
of circumventing Parliament's will on matters of immigration.
27 Without
commenting on whether or not there is any benefit to the appellant because of
his multi-count convictions, the fact remains, a sentence of 2 years less a day
for either of counts 1 or 4 would be patently "inadequate or
artificial." This was made abundantly clear by this court in D.M. where the issue on appeal was the proper
range of sentence for prolonged sexual assault including intercourse on a
single child by a person in a position of trust. At para. 44, Feldman J.A. left
little doubt about the appropriate range of sentence:
·
To conclude on the issue of the
proper range of sentence, although sentencing is always an individualized
process of decision-making, where there is prolonged sexual abuse and assault
of a child, including penetration, by an adult in a position of trust, the
minimum sentence will be five or six years in the penitentiary.
28 It
is important to recall that Feldman J.A. observed that the reason the courts
were being called upon to focus on sentencing in this type of case is because
of the increasing number of them over the past 20 years. Partly because of this
increase, the courts' strict sentencing has evolved to respond to it: see D.M., at paras. 24-26. The appellant in our
case was found to have committed sexual offences against his niece from 1988
when she was 6 years old continuously until 1997 when she was almost 15. And as
I noted at the outset, the sexual assaults progressed from sexual touching to
intercourse.
29 Finally,
I want to comment briefly on the principle of totality: i.e. a series of sentences, each properly imposed in relation to the
offence to which it relates, is on the whole just and appropriate. When this
principle is properly understood and applied to facts of the appellant's case,
it will be seen that it does not assist him.
30 The
proper approach to applying the principle of totality on sentencing is to first
identify the most serious part of the accusations or offences made against the
person that resulted in the criminal offenses he or she was charged with. Next,
the court is to determine the total sentence to be imposed, and then to impose
sentences with respect to each offence that they add up to the total sentence.
In doing so, the sentence for each offence must properly reflect the most
serious part of the overall criminal conduct and must reflect the proper
sentence for that offence. At this stage the court will then decide whether a
particular sentence should be consecutive or concurrent to the other sentences
imposed: R. v. Jewell; R. v. Gramlick, [1995] O.J. No. 2213 (Ont.
C.A.), at para. 27.
31 Once
again, in the appellant's case, the most serious part of the offences is the
sexual assault of his niece reflected in count 1. And, as I explained, this has
a sentencing range that begins at least at 5 years. To accept the appellant's
submissions would require the imposition of a sentence that is inadequate or
artificial. Although sympathetic to the appellant's concerns to remain in
Canada with his family, I believe this court is required to dismiss the appeal
against sentence.
DISPOSITION
32 For
these reasons I would dismiss the appeal against convictions. I would grant
leave to appeal the sentence, but I would dismiss it.
33 I
would conclude by noting that although the appellant may be denied his right of
appeal to the Immigration Appeal Division as a consequence of this result, he
is not entirely without further recourse. The appellant still has the right to
apply to the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness for
protection: Immigration and Refugee Protection Act, at ss. 112-114.
H.S. LaFORME J.A.
J.I. LASKIN J.A.:-- I agree.
A. HOY J.A.:-- I agree.
J.I. LASKIN J.A.:-- I agree.
A. HOY J.A.:-- I agree.
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