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Supreme Court of Vanuatu |
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IN
THE SUPREME COURT
OF
THE REPUBLIC OF
VANUATU
PUBLIC PROSECUTOR
v
ANDRE THOMAS
CHARGE
Intentional
assault - S 107(c)
SENTENCE
Imprisonment for 2 years
and 6 months - suspended for 3 years.
REASONS FOR SENTENCE
The accused pleaded guilty
to one count of Intentional Assault. The charge was brought under Section 107(c)
Penal Code Act CAP 135. This sub paragraph relates to assaults causing damage of
a permanent nature and provides a maximum penalty of 5 years
imprisonment.
Permanent harm was caused in this case, which will mean that the victim, the
wife of the accused will have for the
rest of her life a deformed leg, which
will cause her to walk with difficulty and with a
limp.
On 31 May 1994, the wife of
the accused was in the kitchen of her home. Her 15 year old son was with her.
The accused saw them in
the kitchen together and thought to himself that there
was something wrong with the two of them being together. I find that there
is no
reason at all for the accused to have come to this view. Some time later, the
accused spoke to his wife about the son and understandably,
she had no idea what
he was talking about. During the talk, the accused picked up a coffee stick and
began to beat his wife with
it.
He
struck her on the back at least twice and she tried to run out of the kitchen.
He then struck her on the leg. He again hit her
to the leg and this time did so
with such force that the leg broke. She told him that her leg was broken but he
hit her two or three
times more. She was crying and afraid. She then called for
help and another man came to her assistance and she was taken to the Northern
District Hospital. The fracture of the leg was complicated and she was
transferred to the Vila Hospital. After she went to Vila her
husband came to
Vila to help look after her.
Mrs
Thomas has accepted her husband back and they are presently living together with
their children. The accused is 52 years old and
they have 5 children. Three of
the children are still attending school. They are paying off a loan for their
house. The wife does
not work and so the only income of the family is that of
the accused. He works as a cook at the Northern District
Hospital.
Mrs Thomas has signed a
letter which was tendered to the Court. In that letter she says that she does
not wish the case to proceed
against her husband. She says that since the time
she went to the hospital her husband has been good to her. She also points out
that her husband is her only means of financial support and she concludes by
saying that it is not in her heart to report her husband
for what he has done to
her.
The attitude and position of
Mrs Thomas and her children makes the sentencing task a most difficult one. In
the end I think that it
impossible to do justice in this situation. The decision
I have made is made because if I were to send the accused to prison now,
the
victims of his crime would be the ones who suffered again. On the other hand, by
not sending him to gaol, the message may not
be given to the community, that it
is a grave crime for a husband to beat his wife. As I have pointed out in other
cases, domestic
violence seems to be prevalent in the community. By imposing a
sentence of 2 and a half years imprisonment, I hope that people will
realise
that the law treats domestic violence seriously. The sentence that I have
imposed is half the maximum available sentence
for this
crime.
The accused is a first
offender and he has pleaded guilty. Any sentence imposed on such a man, must be
reduced because of these factors.
Therefore, I regard the sentence fixed as
being a high sentence for a first offender. The particular circumstances of the
victim
and the children are in this case of such a compelling nature, that I
have decided to suspend the sentence. I have selected the maximum
time for the
suspension of a sentence of 3 years. If the accused commits any crime within
this time, he will be required to serve
the sentence I have imposed upon him. He
will not get a second chance.
It
is to be hoped that the accused realises that what he has done is both morally
and legally unacceptable. Women must not be treated
in the way that he has
treated his wife. It is to be hoped that his time in this Court, where he has
heard a number of other serious
matters dealt will as well as his own, will
ensure that he does not offend
again.
The accused has the right
to appeal against the decision of this Court. Should he wish to do so, he must
do so in writing within 14
days of this
date.
4
November, 1994
JUDGE
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/vu/cases/VUSC/1994/23.html