Sentencing Factors Relating to the Criminal Proceedings: Difference between revisions
Created page with "{{LevelZero}}{{HeaderPrinciples}} ==General Principles== {{seealso|Sentencing Factors Relating to the Offender}} === Guilty Plea === A guilty plea is a major mitigating facto..." |
No edit summary |
||
Line 181: | Line 181: | ||
{{reflist|2}} | {{reflist|2}} | ||
[[Category:Provisions Enacted or Amended in 1985]] | |||
[[Category:Provisions Enacted or Amended in 1995]] | |||
[[Category:Provisions Enacted or Amended in 2009]] | |||
[[Category:Provisions Enacted or Amended in 2018]] |
Revision as of 08:02, 15 May 2019
General Principles
Guilty Plea
A guilty plea is a major mitigating factor.[1]
- Reasons for Mitigation
A guilty plea is a mitigating factor in a number of respects:
- it is evidence of remorse [2],
- it is a sign of greater chance at rehabilitation.[3]
- it saves the justice system resources where a trial is not needed[4]
- it excuses victims from the stress of having to testify and reliving the horrors of the events;[5]
- it spares victims and their family from the uncertainty of a trial.[6]
Frequently a guilty plea is a product of negotiations with the Crown where another charge may be withdrawn or a lighter recommendation will be made in exchange for the guilty plea.[7]
- Not Guaranteed Mitigation
The offender is not entitled to a sentence reduction simply for pleading guilty but rather it is within the discretion of the judge to account for a guilty plea in sentencing.
It does not require a "set standard of mitigation".[8] The effect on sentence will vary depending on the circumstances.[9]
The sentencing judge can consider whether the guilty plea was simply "a recognition of the inevitable" as revealed by the absence of a defence to the charges or compelling and uncontradicted evidence.[10]
Where the victim still is forced to testify at the sentencing, the mitigation should not be based on conservation of judicial resources or giving a degree of finality to the complainant.[11]
The amount of credit given for a guilty plea it not fixed as it can mitigate in several different ways. It has been suggested however that it can often lead to a reduction of sentence by one-third.[12]
- Timing of Plea
The timing of a guilty plea is important. An early guilty plea generally deserves "considerable weight" in sentencing.[13] It may entitle the accused to "substantial credit" in sentence.[14]
A guilty plea during trial may still deserve mitigation on sentence.[15]
- Lack of Guilty Plea Not Aggravating
A lack of guilty plea is not an aggravating factor. However, related to a lack of a guilty plea, if the accused was convicted after trial where testimony of the accused was determined to be false, the judge may consider that as aggravating.[16]
- ↑
R v Holder, 1998 CanLII 14962 (ON SC), (1998), 21 C.R. (5th) 277 (Ont. S.C.J.), per Hill J at 281-2
R v Beier, [1995] OJ No 2552 (C.A.), 1995 CanLII 681 (ON CA), per curiam, at para 2
R v Sawchyn, 1981 ABCA 173 (CanLII), (1981), 60 CCC (2d) 200 (Alta. C.A.), per Laycraft JA at 210 - ↑
R v Gardiner, [1982] 2 SCR 368, (1982) 68 CCC 477 (SCC), 1982 CanLII 30 (SCC), per Dickson J (4:3)
R v Fegan, 1993 CanLII 8607 (ON CA), (1993), 80 CCC (3d) 356, per Finlayson JA (3:0) at 360–61, 13 O.R. (3d) 88 (C.A.)
R v Ticne, 2009 BCCA 191 (CanLII), per Mackenzie JA (2:1), at para 23
R v Wisniewski, (1975) 29 CRNS 342 (Ont.)(*no CanLII links) - ↑
Holder, supra
R v Randhawa, 2007 BCCA 598 (CanLII), per Hall JA, at para 7
- ↑ R v Johnson and Tremayne, [1970] 4 CCC 64 (Ont. C.A.), per Gale CJ at 67
Randhawa, ibid., at para 7
Ticne, supra, at para 23
- ↑
R v Faulds et al., et al., 1994 CanLII 770 (ON CA), (1994), 20 O.R. (3d) 13 (C.A.), per curiam (3:0), at p. 17
R v Santos (J.) , (1993), 67 O.A.C. 270 (C.A.)(*no CanLII links) at 270-271
Randhawa, supra, at para 7 - ↑
Randhawa, supra, at para 7
Ticne, supra, at para 23
- ↑ R v Roberts, [1998] OJ No 461 (C.A.), 1998 CanLII 2643 (ON CA), per curiam, at para 6
- ↑ R v FHL, 2018 ONCA 83 (CanLII), per Epstein JA (3:0), at para 22
- ↑
Holder, supra
Faulds, supra at 14 and 17 ("[t]he effect of a guilty plea in setting the appropriate sentence will vary with the circumstances of each case. In some cases, a guilty plea is a demonstration of remorse and a positive first step towards rehabilitation. In other cases, a guilty plea is simply a recognition of the inevitable")
R v Lake, 2008 ABCA 204 (CanLII), 429 A.R. 398, per Watson JA, at para 12 (“its significance as [a mitigating] factor is variable”)
R v Carreira, 2015 ONCA 639 (CanLII), per Epstein JA, at para 15
- ↑
FHL, supra, at paras 22 to 23
- ↑
FHL, supra, at para 23 ("the appellant chose to test the Crown’s evidence relating to the more aggravating aspects of his case. As a result, [the victim] was made to relive the assaults in her testimony and to undergo cross-examination designed to impugn her credibility. The guilty plea, therefore, did not conserve judicial resources or provide a degree of finality to the complainant.")
- ↑ R v Conlon, 2011 ABPC 259 (CanLII), per Daniel J
- ↑
R v Patterson, [1998] OJ No 937 (C.A.), 1998 CanLII 2154 (ON CA), per curiam, at para 1
R v Pitkeathly, 1994 CanLII 222 (ON CA), (1994), 29 C.R. (4th) 182 (Ont. C.A.), per curiam at 184-5
R v T(R), 1992 CanLII 2834 (ON CA), (1992), 17 C.R. (4th) 247 (Ont. C.A.), per Doherty JA at 263
- ↑
R v Mann, 2010 ONCA 342 (CanLII), per MacPherson JA (3:0), at para 21
- ↑
R v Garofoli et al., 1988 CanLII 3270 (ON CA), (1988), 41 CCC (3d) 97 (Ont. C.A.), per Martin JA at 153 aff'd on other issue at 1990 CanLII 52 (SCC), per Sopinka J
- ↑ R v Vickers, 1998 CanLII 14982 (BC CA), per Esson JA (3:0)
Conduct During Trial
Though not the same as a guilty plea, the making of admissions during trial can be considered as a mitigating factor.[1]
A finding that the accused lied in his testimony cannot be used as an aggravating factor to sentence.[2]
- ↑
R v Davis, 2012 ONSC 6486 (CanLII), per Spies J, at para 34
R v White, [2008] OJ No 4511 (ON SC), 2008 CanLII 58421 (ON SC), per Spies J, at para 21 ("Although not the same as a guilty pleas, I do find these significant admissions are a mitigating factor"
- ↑
R v Bradley, 2008 ONCA 179 (CanLII), [2008] OJ No 955, per curiam, at paras 15 and 16
R v Kozy, 1990 CanLII 2625 (ON CA), [1990] OJ No 1586 (C.A.), per Carthy JA, at paras 4-6
R v Bani-Naiem, 2010 ONSC 1890 (CanLII), [2010] OJ No 1234, per MacDonnell J, at para 13
Bail Conditions
Strict bail conditions are not treated as equivalent to pre-trial detention, and so remand credit is not applicable for strict bail conditions.[1] The court may consider the bail conditions that the offender up to the date of sentencing.[2] If the individual was under house arrest conditions for bail, this may be accounted as a reason to reduce the sentence as the house arrest may have a punitive element to it. This is a discretionary, however, and will usually needed to be justified by showing that the offender's circumstances were particularly tough beyond the average person.[3]
Restrictive bail conditions should be treated flexibly. The amount of credit, if any, is in the discretion of the trial judge to determine.[4]
In Ontario, the following guidelines are suggested:[5]:
- Time spent on stringent pre-sentence bail conditions, especially house arrest, is a relevant mitigating factor.
- As such, the trial judge must consider the time spent on bail under house arrest in determining the length of sentence.
- The failure of the trial judge to explain why time spent on bail under house arrest has not been taken into account is an error in principle.
- The amount of credit to be given for time spent on bail under house arrest is within the discretion of the trial judge and there is no formula that the judge is required to apply.
- The amount of credit will depend upon a number of factors including, the length of time spent on bail under house arrest; the stringency of the conditions; the impact on the offender’s liberty; the ability of the offender to carry on normal relationships, employment and activity.
- Where the offender asks the trial judge to take pre-sentence bail conditions into account, the offender should supply the judge with information as to the impact of the conditions. If there is a dispute as to the impact of the conditions, the onus is on the offender to establish those facts on a balance of probabilities in accordance with s. 724(3) of the Criminal Code.
- ↑ R v Panday, 2007 ONCA 598 (CanLII), per MacPherson JA (3:0)
- ↑ R v Downes, 2006 CanLII 3957 (ON CA), per Rosenberg JA (3:0) at 23
- ↑ R v Knockwood, 2009 NSCA 98 (CanLII), per Saunders JA
- ↑ Downes, supra, at para 36 (“a trial judge faced with an offender who has spent time on bail under house arrest should adopt a flexible approach, ... the amount of credit and the manner in which it is to be taken into account as a mitigating factor is a matter for the trial judge.”)
- ↑
Downes, supra, at para 37
R v Ijam, 2007 ONCA 597 (CanLII), per MacPherson JA (3:0), at para 63
Delay
Delay between the date of the offence and sentence is not usually a reason for mitigation. If the delay is due to flight of the accused from the jurisdiction he is not entitled to any benefit from the passage of time. [1]
Where the breach of s. 11(b) rights to a trial in a reasonable time is insufficient to warrant a stay of proceedings, the delay can still be a mitigating factor on sentence in limited circumstances.[2] Courts are reluctant to give sentence credit for this reason, however.[3]
Dated offences, such as historical sexual assault, do not warrant a significant reduction on penalty simply due to the time that has passed since the offence as the magnitude of the offence and degree of culpability remains the same.[4]
On serious offences, the passage of time between the offence and sentence does not reduce the need for denunciation or deterrence.[5]
Other factors in delay to consider include:[6]
- the effect of delay on sentencing is a case‑specific inquiry
- deliberate acts to evade detection by the authorities, whether flight or contribution to delayed complaint tend to weigh against assigning mitigating impact to the fact of delay
- reform and rehabilitation during the intervening period tend to eliminate the prospect of recidivism and to nullify the need for specific deterrence to be reflected in the court's disposition
- certain very serious crimes require sentences with measures of general deterrence and denunciation regardless of the offender's lengthy crime‑free existence subsequent to the crime(s)
- objectively speaking, taking into account delay, the court's disposition should not be seen as a reward or benefit eliminating or depreciating the concept of proportionate punishment.
- ↑ R v Jansons, 2008 YKCA 15 (CanLII), per Kirkpatrick JA
- ↑
R v McAulay, 1987 ABCA 44 (CanLII), per Kerans JA
R v Bosley, 1992 CanLII 2838 (ON CA), (1992), 18 CR (4th) 347, per Doherty JA, at p. 358
R v Leaver, 1996 CanLII 10223 (ON CA), (1996), 3 CR (5th) 138 (ONCA), per curiam
R v Dwyer, [2000] OJ 3598 (ONSC)(*no CanLII links)
R v Spencer, [2003] OJ 10 (ONSC), 2003 CanLII 36890 (ON SC), per Mossip J
Right to a Trial Within a Reasonable Time
- ↑
R v Glykis, 1995 CanLII 1277 (ON CA), (1995), 41 CR (4th) 310 (ONCA), per Dubin CJ (3:0)
- ↑ R v Archibald, 2012 ABCA 202 (CanLII), per curiam (3:0) , at para 13
- ↑ R v Partridge, 2005 NSCA 159 (CanLII), per Bateman JA (3:0)
- ↑ R v Critton, 2002 CanLII 3240 (ON SC), [2002] OJ No 2594 (ONSC), per Hill J, at para 76
Pre-trial Custody
719.
...
- Determination of sentence
(3) In determining the sentence to be imposed on a person convicted of an offence, a court may take into account any time spent in custody by the person as a result of the offence but the court shall limit any credit for that time to a maximum of one day for each day spent in custody.
- Exception
(3.1) Despite subsection (3), if the circumstances justify it, the maximum is one and one-half days for each day spent in custody.
- Reasons
- (3.2) The court shall give reasons for any credit granted and shall cause those reasons to be stated in the record.
...
R.S., 1985, c. C-46, s. 719; R.S., 1985, c. 27 (1st Supp.), s. 157; 1995, c. 22, s. 6; 2009, c. 29, s. 3; 2018, c. 29, s. 66.
– CCC
Section 719(3.1)--as it existed prior to December 2018--consists of amendments from 2010 where the practice of giving 2:1 credits was significantly limited. Certain judges have given 1.5:1 credit where warranted for loss of remission.[1]
The judge cannot deny pre-trial custody credit to a sentence simply because of the nature his record.[2]
- ↑
R v Johnson, 2011 ONCJ 77 (CanLII), per M Green J
R v Dann, 2011 NSPC 22 (CanLII), per Derrick J - ↑ R v Crawford, 2010 ABCA 290 (CanLII), per Rowbotham JA (3:0)
Civil Liability
Where the offender is likely to face substantial civil liability and he is not otherwise impecunious, then this should be a factor in sentence.[1]
- ↑ R v Stone, 2001 BCCA 728 (CanLII), per Mackenzie JA (3:0), at paras 32-35
R v Sadler, 2009 BCCA 386 (CanLII), per curiam (3:0), at paras 23-29