Stanley v. Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) is a decision of the High Court of Australia.[1][2][3][4]
Stanley v. Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) | |
---|---|
Court | High Court of Australia |
Full case name | Stanley v. Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) |
Citations | [2023] HCA 3, 407 ALR 222 |
Case opinions | |
4:3 | |
Majority | Gordon, Edelman, Steward, Gleeson JJ |
Dissent | Kiefel CJ, Gageler J, Jagot J |
The case concerned an administrative law appeal under the writ of certiorari, against a decision of the NSW Court of Appeal to impose a criminal sentence.
Background
editStanley had been convicted and sentenced to three years imprisonment for contraventions of the Firearms Act 1996 (NSW). When this happened, the judge declined to make an 'intensive correction order' (ICO), which would have made the sentence served 'by way of intensive correction in the community'.
The convicted person then appealed to the District Court of NSW against the severity of the sentence. On appeal, which was conducted as a de novo review, they asked the district court to make an ICO. Section 66(2) of the Sentencing Procedure Act provided that 'community safety' is a 'paramount consideration', and that when considering community safety, the court must assess between whether an ICO or full-time detention would be more likely to address an offender's risk of reoffending. The district court dismissed the appeal, without making any express reference or findings in relation to s66(2).
They then appealed to the NSW Court of Appeal under the writ of certiorari, attempting to quash the district court's decision. It found, by majority, that non-compliance with s66(2) did not amount to a jurisdictional error.
Judgement
editBy 4:3 majority, the High Court allowed the appeal, holding that the jurisdiction to make an ICO calls for a subsequent and separate decision to be made after a decision on sentencing is imposed. It found that the district court failed to consider the 'paramount consideration' of s66(1) by assessing 'community safety' as described in s66(2). From this, the High Court decided that the district court didn't understand the function it was supposed to have performed; and so didn't act within jurisdiction. In doing so the majority said:
"Given the invalidity, there has been no decision on the issue of an ICO at all. As there is a duty to consider whether to grant an ICO in cases where the power is engaged (as it clearly was in this case), this duty remains unperformed. Therefore, the District Court failed to perform its duty and did not determine the appellant's appeal according to law. It was therefore appropriate to set aside the order of the District Court dismissing the appellant's appeal, and order the Court to determine her appeal according to law." - Gordon, Edelman, Steward and Gleeson JJ
The majority then ordered that Stanley's appeal to the NSW District Court be heard and determined according to law.
Dissent
editIn three separate dissenting judgements, justices Kiefel, Gageler, and Jagot each wrote in support of dismissing the appeal.
Jagot found that although the District Court judge had not adequately discharged their obligation to give reasons for their decision. However, the mere failure to give reasons was not a jurisdictional error. This failure to give reasons was a separate issue to whether or not the judge had made the assessment required by s66(2) at all. Jagot didn't agree that, in context, it could be argued from the judge's reasons that they'd failed to undertake the assessment at all.[5]
Gageler found that in the context of the whole act, including the construction and intention of s5(4) which preserved the validity of some decisions even in the event of other non-compliance by a court; s66 shouldn't be interpreted as requiring its elements to be treated as jurisdictional facts.[6]
Kiefel found that it 'It is not possible to infer that Parliament intended the obligation under s 66(2) to condition the validity of the sentencing process. Section 66(2) cannot be read in isolation and thereby elevated to a condition upon the exercise of the power under s 7(1)'.[7]
References
edit- ^ Marchant, Cayla (17 April 2023). "Administrative law – jurisdictional error". Proctor. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
- ^ Wong, Justin (10 March 2023). "Stanley v DPP [2023] HCA 3 - Avoiding Full Time Imprisonment". Streeton Lawyers. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
- ^ O'Brien, Peter (22 February 2023). "Intensive correction order: Stanley v DPP [2023] HCA 3". Retrieved 11 August 2023.
- ^ "Did the District Court's failure to conduct the assessment contemplated by s 66(2) of Crimes (Sentencing Procedure) Act 1999 (NSW) amount to jurisdictional error?". aisles.com.au. 1 February 2022. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
- ^ "Stanley v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) [2023] HCA 3 - BarNet Jade". jade.io. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
Paragraph 241.
- ^ "Stanley v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) [2023] HCA 3 - BarNet Jade". jade.io. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
Paragraph 45:
The absence from s 66 of a provision along the lines of s 5(4), explicitly preserving validity in the event of non-compliance, cannot be taken to indicate that such an odd result was contemplated in the legislative design. The presence of s 5(4) is explained by an evident legislative concern to avoid the potential for a court to infer that the satisfaction required of a sentencing court by s 5(1)[45] was legislatively intended to be a "jurisdictional fact" absence of which would deprive the court of authority to impose the sentence[46]. Applying orthodox principles of construction, the language and structure of s 66, and the essentially evaluative nature of the decision for which it calls[47], do not carry the same potential for an inference to be drawn that any element of the section was intended to be treated as a jurisdictional fact. - ^ "Stanley v Director of Public Prosecutions (NSW) [2023] HCA 3 - BarNet Jade". jade.io. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
Paragraph 12.