The State v Alex Tarsan (2011) N4312

JurisdictionPapua New Guinea
JudgeCannings J
Judgment Date16 June 2011
Citation(2011) N4312
Docket NumberCR NO 70 OF 2011
CourtNational Court
Year2011
Judgement NumberN4312

Full Title: CR NO 70 OF 2011; The State v Alex Tarsan (2011) N4312

National Court: Cannings J

Judgment Delivered: 16 June 2011

N4312

PAPUA NEW GUINEA

[IN THE NATIONAL COURT OF JUSTICE]

CR NO 70 OF 2011

THE STATE

V

ALEX TARSAN

Madang: Cannings J

2011: 18 April, 9, 16 June

SENTENCE

CRIMINAL LAW – sentence – Criminal Code, Subdivision VI.1.C (offences analogous to stealing) – Section 383A (misappropriation of property) – sentence on plea of guilty – K2,475.00 misappropriated – sentence of 18 months.

The head teacher of a primary school pleaded guilty to misappropriation of K2,475.00 of school funds.

Held:

(1) The maximum penalty for the amount misappropriated is ten years imprisonment.

(2) The starting point is 4 years imprisonment.

(3) Mitigating factors are: has repaid the money; pleaded guilty; genuine remorse; first-time offender.

(4) Aggravating factors are: multiple transactions committed over a long period; serious breach of trust; significant amount misappropriated.

(5) A sentence of 18 months imprisonment was imposed, which was fully suspended in view of a very favourable pre-sentence report.

Cases cited

The following cases are cited in the judgment:

Saperus Yalibakut v The State (2006) SC890

The State v Augustine Seckry CR 376/2005, 19.04.05

The State v Danny Yannam CR 68/2008, 22.02.08

The State v Graham Duk CR 150/2009, 15.07.09

The State v Joyce Gulum CR 1620/2005, 06.04.06

The State v Nancy Uviri CR 984/2007, 16.10.08

The State v Paul Taro CR 237/2006, 03.08.06

The State v Philip Wiamai CR 1031/2006, 18.10.07

The State v Rictor Naiab CR 387/2005, 08.09.05

The State v Scholar Zuvani (2004) N2641

The State v Steven Lasin CR 1631/2006, 17.08.07

The State v Wilfred Aisa CR 363/2008, 27.10.08

Wellington Belawa v The State [1988-89] PNGLR 496

SENTENCE

This was a judgment on sentence for misappropriation.

Counsel

S Collins, for the State

A Turi, for the offender

16 June, 2011

1. CANNINGS J: This is a decision on sentence for Alex Tarsan who pleaded guilty to one count of misappropriation contrary to Sections 383A(1)(a) and (2)(d) of the Criminal Code. In 2010 he was headmaster of Brahaim Primary School. Over a four-month period in the first half of the year he dishonestly applied K2,475.00 of school funds to his own use.

ANTECEDENTS

2. The offender has only a conviction for an unspecified traffic offence in 1984 against his name.

ALLOCUTUS

3. The offender was given the opportunity to address the court. He said:

I apologise sincerely for what I did. I thank the lawyers and everyone who has worked on my case. I feel that I am a victim of a system of administration that is not run well by the Division of Education in Madang, which needs to be much more supportive of head teachers and offer training in financial management. Head teachers, particularly those in remote areas, are often the subject of allegations, but they are not well trained in financial management and consequently can easily get into this sort of trouble.

OTHER MATTERS OF FACT

4. As the offender has pleaded guilty he will be given the benefit of the doubt on mitigating matters raised in the depositions, the allocutus or in submissions that are not contested by the prosecution (Saperus Yalibakut v The State (2006) SC890). The most significant matter is that in April this year he repaid the money he misappropriated. This does not make him innocent but it is a major mitigating factor for sentencing purposes.

PRE-SENTENCE REPORT

5. The court was presented with a report prepared by the Madang office of the Community Based Corrections Service.

Personal details of Alex Tarsan

Age : 54

Origin : Angoram, ESP

Upbringing : Village

Marital status : Married, with 3 children

Family : Both parents deceased, 4 siblings

Education : Goroka Teachers College, 1982

Employment : PNGDF 1973-1981; TSC 1983-2011

Occupation : Schoolteacher

Health : Sound

Religion : Catholic

Other aspects of the offender’s life

6. Alex Tarsan has a stable marriage. He has been a teacher for almost 30 years, most of the time in Madang Province. He is well known and highly regarded in the communities within which he has lived and worked. He is highly recommended for probation.

SUBMISSIONS BY DEFENCE COUNSEL

7. Ms Turi highlighted that the offender has no prior convictions and he pleaded guilty. He has been a law abiding citizen for all of his life until very recently. He has repaid the money misappropriated. A sentence of 18 months imprisonment, fully suspended would be sufficient, Ms Turi submitted.

SUBMISSIONS BY THE STATE

8. Mr Collins stressed that the offender was given the opportunity by the police to repay the money but failed to live up to the promise that he made to do so – until very recently. He was guilty of an abuse of trust. A sentence of two years is warranted. The State did not oppose a suspended sentence.

DECISION MAKING PROCESS

9. To determine the appropriate penalty I will adopt the following decision making process:

· step 1: what is the maximum penalty?

· step 2: what is a proper starting point?

· step 3: what sentences have been imposed for equivalent offences?

· step 4: what is the head sentence?

· step 5: should the pre-sentence period in custody be deducted?

· step 6: should all or part of the sentence be suspended?

STEP 1: WHAT IS THE MAXIMUM PENALTY?

10. As the amount of money misappropriated is more than K2,000.00 the maximum penalty under Section 383A(2)(d) is ten years imprisonment.

STEP 2: WHAT IS A PROPER STARTING POINT?

11. The Supreme Court set out some starting point ranges in Wellington Belawa v The State [1988-89] PNGLR 496, depending on the amount of money misappropriated. Thus:

· K1.00 to K1,000.00 – a jail term should rarely be imposed;

· K1,000.00 to K10,000.00 – two years imprisonment;

· K10,000.00 to K40,000.00 – two to three years imprisonment;

· K40,000.00 to K150,000.00 – three to five years.

12. There is an enhanced level of community concern about corruption, dishonesty and misappropriation both in the public sector and in the private sector. In my view this should be reflected by doubling the tariffs suggested in Belawa. That is:

· K1.00 to K1,000.00 – suspended sentence usually appropriate;

· K1,000.00 to K10,000.00 – four years imprisonment;

· K10,000.00 to K40,000.00 – four to six years imprisonment;

· K40,000.00 to K150,000.00 and beyond – six to ten years.

13. The present case falls into the second category, which means the starting point range is four years imprisonment.

STEP 3: WHAT SENTENCES HAVE BEEN IMPOSED FOR EQUIVALENT OFFENCES?

14. Before I fix a sentence, I will consider some misappropriation sentences I have imposed in recent years as shown in the following table.

SENTENCES FOR MISAPPROPRIATION

No

Case

Details

Sentence

1

The State v Scholar Zuvani (2004) N2641, Wewak

Guilty plea – bank officer infiltrated two school bank accounts and transferred money to her sister’s account, then withdrew money - applied monies to her own use – K22,000.00 misappropriated.

4 years

2

The State v Augustine Seckry CR 376/2005, 19.04.05, Kimbe

Guilty plea – offender employed as an accounts clerk by NBPOL – dishonestly cashed company cheques that were supposed to have been cancelled – applied monies to his own use – K18,000.00 misappropriated.

4 years

3

The State v Rictor Naiab CR 387/2005, 08.09.05, Kimbe

Guilty plea – cashed cheques in his custody as an accounts clerk, employed by Hargy Oil Palms – used the money in hotels – K2,000.00 misappropriated.

18 months

4

The State v Joyce Gulum CR 1620/2005, 06.04.06, Kimbe

Guilty plea – employed as accounts clerk by Hargy Oil Palms, deposited company cheques and cash into private bank account and applied to her own use – K14,000.00 misappropriated.

2 years

5

The State v Paul Taro CR 237/2006, 03.08.06, Kimbe

Guilty plea – over a period of three months monies paid in cash for hire vehicles were not receipted – offender was acting branch manager of Hertz Hire Car, Kimbe – K18,000.00 misappropriated.

4 years

6

The State v Steven Lasin CR 1631/2006, 17.08.07, Kimbe

Guilty plea – offender given custody of two cheques worth K10,888.00 intended for 28 individual electoral officers as allowances – cashed the cheques and applied the proceeds to his own use.

4 years

7

The State v Philip Wiamai CR 1031/2006, 18.10.07, Madang

Guilty plea – offender helped a friend, a retired schoolteacher, get his finish pay of K16,848.79, then put all the money into his own bank account and applied it to his own use.

4 years

8

The State v Danny Yannam CR 68/2008, 22.02.08, Madang

Guilty plea – offender got K800.00 in good faith from a family he had befriended on the pretext that he would buy them a TV – he took the money and never returned and never provided the goods.

1 year

9

The State v Nancy Uviri CR 984/2007, 16.10.08, Kimbe

Guilty plea – offender misappropriated K300,000.00 from her employer over an 18-month period – she engineered a scheme of presenting bogus invoices and obtaining cash.

7 years

10

The State v Wilfred Aisa CR 363/2008, 27.10.08, Madang

Guilty plea – offender was a ledger clerk with PNG Power –...

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