!!! IN THE DISTRICT COURT AT DUNEDIN CRI NEW ZEALAND POLICE Informant. EDWARD HAMILTON LIVINGSTONE Defendant.

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Transcription:

IN THE DISTRICT COURT AT DUNEDIN CRI-2013-012-002610 NEW ZEALAND POLICE Informant v EDWARD HAMILTON LIVINGSTONE Defendant Hearing: Appearances: Judgment: 15 November 2013 T R Hambleton for the Informant J A Westgate for the Defendant 15 November 2013 ORAL JUDGMENT OF JUDGE S J COYLE 1. Mr Livingstone, you are here today having pleaded guilty to a charge of a breach of a protection order on 11 October last. No conviction has been entered as you, at that time, indicated that you wished to seek a discharge without conviction, pursuant to s 106 Sentencing Act 2002.

2. The maximum penalty for breaching the protection order is two years imprisonment, although around 12 days after this incident the penalty has increased to now three years imprisonment for breaching a protection order. 3. You seek a discharge without conviction, as I have said, in relation to this matter, and I note that in relation to an identical charge you had earlier been diverted. In deciding to exercise a discretion under s 106 Sentencing Act, the Court gains guidance from s 107. It says: The Court must not discharge an offender without conviction unless the Court is satisfied that the direct or indirect consequences of a conviction would be out of all proportion to the gravity of the offence. It is clearly a balancing exercise, therefore, in considering whether to exercise the discretion under s 106. 4. In your case, it is submitted that the application to grant you a discharge under s 106 should be granted because of the impact that it potentially will have on your employment. You are employed by a Government department and having been charged with this offence, you have immediately notified that department that you are facing this charge and after some initial investigations, you were stood down and suspended while this matter was proceeding and further investigation. Subsequent submissions and representations made by you have resulted in the suspension being lifted, but you assert that following the disposition of this matter, and in particular that if a conviction is entered, that there is a distinct possibility that your employment will be in jeopardy as a consequence of that review. 5. The police oppose the application and they do so on the basis that they submit there is insufficient evidence to show that it is inevitable you will lose your employment and on that basis it is submitted by the police that the Court should not exercise its discretion in favour of granting you a discharge without conviction, as there is no direct evidence of any direct consequences of the entry of a conviction.

6. In considering this matter, I have considered the three relevant Court of Appeal decisions in relation to the exercise of the Court s discretion, R v Hughes [2008] NZCA 546, [2009] 3 NZLR 222, Blythe v R [2011] NZCA 190, [2011] 2 NZLR 620 and Z (CA447/12) v R [2012] NZCA 599, [2013] NZAR 142. Although there were differences in what factors that should be taken into account and at what stage, all stages uphold a three step approach when considering the disproportionality test. I adopt the approach of the Court of Appeal in Z v R at paragraph 27, and in particular I adopt the approach that I need to consider the aggravating and mitigating factors relating to the offending and you, then identify the direct and indirect consequences of the entry of a conviction, and consider whether those consequences are out of all proportion to the gravity of the offence, and that if I determine they are out of all proportion, then I need to consider, as there remains a residual discretion, as to whether I should exercise that discretion and grant you a discharge. I note, as the Court of Appeal said in Blythe v R, it will be a rare case where a Court will refuse to grant a discharge without conviction in such circumstances. 7. The first is to identify the gravity of the offending and its particular factual context. A protection order was issued against you on 5 May 2013. The applicant in that application was your former wife and the mother of your children. On 14 September, you were in Milton and you rang your wife s cellphone a number of times, but she did not answer. Then, as she was talking to a friend on the cellphone, you rang her home phone number and left a message on her answer service. That you phoned her and left a message is in direct contravention of the terms of the protection order. The content of the message, it is accepted, was not in any way threatening or intimidating, but rather you left a message apologising for your previous behaviour. That you made contact, in and of itself, was frightening to your wife. The victim impact statement indicates that she realised the calls were from you and because of the frequency of the calls on the cellphone, she

became very anxious and fearful, and she felt alone and unprotected. She did receive the message from you, apologising for your previous actions, and when she did, she phoned the police. She remains fearful that you will breach the protection order and describes feeling constantly harassed and fearful for her safety and that of the children. She states candidly that she cannot take much more of the contact from you and the breaches of the protection order. 8. You yourself do not have any previous convictions, although it is accepted by you and fully disclosed that earlier this year you were arrested in relation to breaching the protection order, but in relation to that matter were diverted. This, therefore, is your second breach of the protection order this year. 9. In support of your application, you have provided an affidavit and attached to that letters from your psychiatrist, Dr Wisely. They indicate that after the first incident you sought assistance and treatment from Dr Wisely. The effect of the separation on you has been traumatic and has led to you having some issues which have required medication. Following this second incident, you have again approached Dr Wisely and the letter from him indicates that he has changed the medication you are receiving and that you are now more stable. It is clear, therefore, that at the time of the circumstances leading to this offending, while you were receiving treatment for your mental health issues, the medication you were receiving were not quite levelling you out to the point where you were able to totally control and manage your behaviours, and things again got on top of you and you reacted spontaneously and in contravention of the order. 10. It is significant, in my view, that the message that you left was in no way threatening, intimidating or abusive, but really was left to apologise as, in effect, an olive branch to the victim. In saying that, I don t demean or diminish the effect of it on her, because it is well-documented that simple contact, even pleasant contact, for a victim of domestic violence when that

contact is unwanted, can be equally as terrifying, disturbing and traumatic as contact that is abusive or intimidating. Clearly from the victim impact statement, it was not the content of what you said that affected her, but the fact that you breached the order and made contact in disregard from an order of the Court, that you were to have no contact at all. 11. You are, I accept, genuinely remorseful, and as I have said your medication has now been changed. The indications from Dr Wisely, and the evidence from him you have provided, points to the emotional factors in your life that were present at this time of offending no longer being present because of the medication and your ongoing engagement with Dr Wisely. 12. In terms of assessing the gravity of your offending, I agree with Mr Westgate that in terms of the type of circumstances that this Court routinely sees in relation to breaches of protection order, that this matter is not the most serious, but again I reiterate in saying that I do not demean or diminish the impact of the contact that did occur had on your wife. 13. I now need to consider the direct and indirect consequences of a conviction. As Mr Westgate has highlighted in his submissions, the decision Iosefa v Police HC Christchurch CIV-2005-409-64, 21 April 2005 is authority for the proposition that it is not necessary that the identified consequences will inevitably or probably occur, but it is sufficient that the Court come to a decision that there is real and appreciable risk that such consequences would occur. As I have said, in relation to you it is submitted that the entry of a conviction is going to reactivate the disciplinary procedure in relation to your employment and that there is the potential for you to lose your employment. It is quite clear from the affidavit evidence that is provided and the letters from the manager that have been provided indicate that your employer treats this type of offending very seriously. That is appropriate given the nature of the Government Department in which you work and the need, in terms of perception, and the profile of the type of people that you deal with routinely,

and the need for employees of that department to be above and beyond reproach, particularly in relation to concerns around employees in your Government department being prone to violence. That, appropriately, is a concern to your employer. 14. It is clear that this type of offending is likely to constitute serious misconduct in terms of the department s code of conduct and if a conviction is entered, will trigger an investigation. While I agree with the submissions of Constable Saxton on behalf of the police, that it s not inevitable you will lose your job, there is, in my view, a clear risk that that is an outcome of what will occur. That is against a background of you appearing, in your fifties, for the first time in Court, with no previous convictions, and offending that has occurred, it seems, as a consequence of two factors. Firstly, the breakdown of a relationship that you did not want to end and secondly, some mental health issues which have now, to a large extent, been alleviated through the adjustment of your medication. 15. Thus, if you are to be convicted in relation to these matters, there is a real and appreciable risk that you might lose your employment as a consequence, and I am satisfied that that consequence is out of proportion to the gravity of your offending and I grant the application and In relation to this matter, you are discharged without conviction. 16. You have indicated through your counsel you are prepared to make a voluntary donation and I direct you make a donation of $500 to the Dunedin Stopping Violence programme within seven days. 17. So in relation to this matter, you are discharged without conviction, but you are ordered to pay reparation by way of a donation in the sum of $500 to Dunedin Stopping Violence within seven days.

S J Coyle District Court Judge