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Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish High Court of Justiciary Decisons >> Thomson v. Her Majesty's Advocate [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_53 (11 September 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotHC/2007/HCJAC_53.html
Cite as: [2007] ScotHC HCJAC_53, [2007] HCJAC 53

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APPEAL COURT, HIGH COURT OF JUSTICIARY

 

Lord Macfadyen

Lord Johnston

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] HCJAC53

Appeal No: XC184/07

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

delivered by LORD MACFADYEN

 

in

 

NOTE OF APPEAL AGAINST SENTENCE

 

by

 

DAVID ANDREW THOMSON

 

Appellant;

 

against

 

HER MAJESTY'S ADVOCATE

 

Respondent:

 

_______

 

 

Act: Shead, Mackenzie; Jim Friel & Co.

Alt: Kearney, A.D.; Crown Agent.

 

11 September 2007

Introduction

[1] The appellant, David Andrew Thomson, and his co-accused, Sean Paul Kergan ("Kergan"), pled guilty at the High Court in Glasgow on 28 April 2006 to a charge of murder in the following terms:

"on 19 September 2005 at Sighthill Park, Pinkston Road, Glasgow near to the M8 Motorway footbridge, you DAVID ANDEW THOMSON and SEAN PAUL KERGAN did assault Stephen Michael Daly, now deceased, and repeatedly punch, kick and stamp on his head and body and repeatedly strike him on the head with a razor or similar instrument all to his severe injury and you did murder him".

The libel had originally contained a further averment that the appellant and Kergan had set fire to the deceased's clothing and his foot, but the deletion of those words from the pleas was accepted by the Crown.

[2] On 12 June 2006 the Trial Judge sentenced each of the appellant and Kergan to detention for life, and set the punishment part in respect of each sentence at thirteen years. The sentences were backdated to 27 September 2005. In each case the punishment part is expressed in the court minutes as "thirteen years, modified from a period of sixteen years". We were informed that Kergan appealed against the length of the punishment part imposed on him, but that the appeal was refused.

[3] The appellant appeals against the punishment part selected by the Trial Judge, submitting that it is excessive having regard to the nature of the crime and his personal circumstances.

 

The circumstances of the crime

[4] As the Trial Judge narrates in his Report, the assault on the deceased took place at the end of the bridge mentioned in the libel, but his body was then removed to a position against a fence underneath the north side of the bridge, where it was left lying supine. There were no independent eye witnesses to the assault. From CCTV film, admissions made by the appellant and Kergan, forensic examination of the locus and the findings on post mortem examination of the body, the events may be reconstructed as follows. At about 11.00 pm the appellant and Kergan were at Buchanan Street Bus Station, both under the influence of drink. They made their way to a hostel in the vicinity, and outside it fell in with the deceased, who was not known to them and was also drunk, and struck up a conversation with him. They walked together towards Sighthill. At the footbridge, an argument broke out, and Kergan punched the deceased on the face. The origin of the disagreement appears to have been an attempt by the deceased to take an MP3 player from Kergan. The deceased was then subjected to a sustained assault whereby he suffered extensive head injuries consistent with punching, kicking and stamping, as well as three slashing injuries. Kergan admitted that it was he who inflicted the slashing injuries, and that he punched the deceased, knocking him unconscious. The appellant admitted punching, kicking and stamping. The cause of death was certified as inhalation of blood due to blunt force injuries to the head.

 

The approach of the Trial Judge

[5] It is convenient, before turning to the submissions made on the appellant's behalf, to note certain of the observations made by the Trial Judge in his report. He emphasised the deletion that had been accepted from the libel. He noted that the previous criminal histories of the appellant and Kergan were not identical, but said that he would make no distinction between them. He then continued:

"In my judgment, in order to reflect the degree of violence shown to the victim as well as the other circumstances of the crime, ... the appropriate punishment part to reflect the crime itself was one of 16 years. However, there had to be taken into account the relative youth of the appellant at the time of the offence - the appellant was 18 and the second accused was 17. There had also to be taken into account the remorse shown by both accused which was reported upon by the social workers in their reports to the court. There had also to be taken into account the early attempts to negotiate a plea of guilty which, of course, did not come to fruition until after the first day of the trial. I am, however, aware of substantial efforts being made prior to that to secure the pleas. These factors, in my opinion, reduce the punishment part in each case from one of 16 years to one of 13 years."

With particular reference to the grounds of appeal, the Trial Judge noted that the appellant had no previous convictions for violence, that he had been recorded as showing "considerable victim empathy" (which he took to be an indication of remorse), that the crime was not premeditated and the appellant did not use a weapon, that he surrendered voluntarily to the police, and wished from a relatively early stage to plead guilty. He noted that:

"The fact, however, is that pleas of guilty were not made until after the first day of the trial.

It should be appreciated that on Du Plooy principles little discount can be made for such a late plea."

 

The submissions on behalf of the appellant

[6] Mr Shead criticised the approach of the Trial Judge in that he had selected a "starting point" appropriate to reflect the crime, and had then reduced it to take account of other considerations such as the appellant's age, the remorse he had shown, and the steps he had taken to negotiate a plea of guilty. He submitted that the proper course was to select a starting point which reflected all relevant mitigating considerations other than the plea of guilty, then to apply to that starting point a discount in terms of section 196 of the Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995, if it was appropriate to do so.

[7] Mr Shead submitted that the circumstances of the offence did not justify the selection of a starting point which exceeded the range that was "considered to be generally appropriate". That range, he suggested, was between twelve and fourteen years. This was an all-too-common type of murder, which prima facie fell within that range. When account was taken of the lack of premeditation, the fact that the appellant did not use a weapon, his age, his lack of any relevant record, his remorse, and his voluntary surrender, a much lower starting point than sixteen years was appropriate.

[8] Mr Shead further submitted that, although not an early plea, the appellant's plea of guilty should be regarded as having some utilitarian value, and therefore meriting a discount from the sentence that would otherwise have been appropriate.

 

Discussion

[9] There is, in our view, force in Mr Shead's criticism of the Trial Judge's approach. In applying section 196, when it is appropriate to do so, the proper approach is to select the sentence (or punishment part) that would be appropriate in the whole circumstances of the case, including such mitigatory factors as lack of premeditation, the absence of the use of a weapon, the appellant's age, and lack of relevant criminal record. To do otherwise obscures what, if any, statutory discount is given under section 196. When account is taken in the present of case of the nature of the crime in comparison to others that attract a life sentence, and to the mitigatory factors founded upon on the appellant's behalf (and accepted by the Trial Judge), we are of opinion that a starting point of thirteen years would be appropriate.

[10] In our opinion, the Trial Judge was right that the appellant's plea of guilty, offered when it finally was, should attract only a modest discount under section 196. We consider that the appropriate discount, confined to section 196 considerations, would be one year.

 

Result

[11] In the result, therefore, we consider that the appropriate staring point for assessment of the punishment part to be applied to the appellant is thirteen years, and that a discount of one year from that figure should be allowed in respect of the discretion conferred by section 196. We therefore allow the appeal, quash the punishment part of thirteen years imposed by the Trial Judge, and substitute a punishment part of twelve years.


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