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TRINGALI LAWYERS
CRIMINAL DEFENCE

Criminal appeals in Melbourne.

A result in the Magistrates' Court is not always the end of the matter. Tringali Lawyers advises on the prospects of an appeal and runs appeals against conviction and sentence.

§The Practice
OVERVIEW

How do criminal appeals work in Victoria?

An appeal is a challenge to a result: a finding of guilt, a sentence, or both. In Victoria, an appeal from the Magistrates' Court is made to the County Court, and there are strict time limits. The first question in any appeal is not how to run it, but whether it is worth running, and that calls for honest advice.

An appeal from the Magistrates' Court to the County Court is a de novo appeal, which means a fresh hearing. The County Court is not reviewing the magistrate's reasoning for error; it hears the matter again and reaches its own decision. An appeal can be against conviction, against sentence, or against both. The right to appeal is governed by the Criminal Procedure Act 2009, and an appeal must generally be lodged within 28 days of the decision, although an application can be made to extend that period.

Appeals from a trial in the County Court or the Supreme Court are different. Those appeals go to the Court of Appeal, they are based on identifying an error rather than a fresh hearing, and they require the court's leave. For those matters Tringali Lawyers works with experienced Counsel.

Because a Magistrates' Court appeal is a fresh hearing, it is also an opportunity: material that was not before the magistrate can be put before the County Court. But an appeal is not without risk, and the honest assessment of prospects, including the risk that a sentence is not reduced, comes first. Tringali Lawyers gives that assessment plainly before any appeal is run.

§Appeals in Victoria
TYPES OF APPEAL

The appeals we run.

An appeal can challenge a conviction, a sentence, or both. The route and the procedure depend on which court made the original decision.

Magistrates' Court matters

Appeal against conviction

Criminal Procedure Act 2009

An appeal against conviction challenges a finding of guilt. From the Magistrates' Court the appeal is heard afresh in the County Court, which reaches its own decision on the evidence put before it.

Magistrates' Court matters

Appeal against sentence

Criminal Procedure Act 2009

An appeal against sentence accepts the finding of guilt but challenges the penalty. The County Court hears the question of sentence afresh, which means the sentence can be reduced, confirmed, or increased.

Out-of-time appeals

Extension of time

Criminal Procedure Act 2009

A Magistrates' Court appeal must generally be lodged within 28 days. Where that period has passed, an application can be made for an extension of time, supported by an explanation for the delay.

County / Supreme Court matters

Appeals to the Court of Appeal

Criminal Procedure Act 2009

Appeals from a trial in the County or Supreme Court go to the Court of Appeal. They turn on identifying an error and require the court's leave. The firm works with experienced Counsel on these matters.

§The Defence
OUR APPROACH

How an appeal is approached.

An appeal starts with an honest assessment of prospects. Running an appeal that should not be run helps no one.

Honest advice on prospects

The first step is a frank assessment: what an appeal could realistically achieve, what it would involve, and what the risks are. That assessment is given plainly, before any decision to appeal is made.

The de novo County Court appeal

A Magistrates' Court appeal is a fresh hearing. That shapes the strategy: the County Court decides the matter again, so the appeal is prepared as a hearing in its own right, not a review of the magistrate's reasons.

Fresh material and preparation

Because the County Court hears the matter afresh, material that was not before the magistrate can be put before it. Identifying and preparing that material is a significant part of giving an appeal its best prospects.

Higher-court appeals

An appeal from a County or Supreme Court trial to the Court of Appeal turns on error and requires leave. For those matters the firm works with experienced Counsel while continuing to instruct.

OUR APPROACH
The first question on an appeal is not how to run it. It is whether it should be run at all.
Talia TringaliPrincipal
HOW WE WORK

Three steps when you are considering an appeal.

  1. Act within time

    A Magistrates' Court appeal must generally be lodged within 28 days. The first call establishes the decision, the date, and whether the appeal period is still open.

  2. Assess the prospects

    We review the result, the transcript where relevant, and the circumstances, and give an honest view of what an appeal could achieve and what the risks are.

  3. Prepare and appear

    If the appeal is worth running, we lodge it, prepare the hearing including any fresh material, and appear in the County Court through to the result.

FAQS

Common questions about criminal appeals in Victoria.

An appeal from the Magistrates' Court must generally be lodged within 28 days of the decision. Where that period has passed, an application can be made to extend the time.

Under the Criminal Procedure Act 2009, an appeal from the Magistrates' Court to the County Court must generally be lodged within 28 days of the decision being appealed. The period is short, which is why early contact matters. If the 28 days have already passed, an appeal is not necessarily lost: an application can be made for an extension of time, supported by an explanation for the delay. Whether an extension will be granted depends on the circumstances, so a matter where time has passed should still be raised promptly.

WHAT'S NEXT

Considering an appeal?

The appeal period is short. We respond to new enquiries the same business day; book a consultation or call so the prospects can be assessed while the appeal period is still open.

Or email talia@tringalilawyers.com.au