How does the constraint of the continued offence affect the determination of the sentence when the offences that compose it are punishable by different types of penalties, one custodial and one pecuniary? The Court of Cassation, Section VI, judgment no. 9251 filed on March 6, 2025, addresses a topic that is only apparently technical but of crucial importance for the concrete execution of the sentence and, consequently, for the defence strategy. In the case at hand, the defendant – identified in the judgment as M. I. – had been convicted of a principal offence punishable by imprisonment and a so-called 'satellite offence' punishable by a fine. On appeal, the increase pursuant to art. 81 of the Italian Criminal Code (c.p.) had been calculated by mechanically summing days of imprisonment to pecuniary amounts, with the risk of exceeding the legal threshold of the lesser sanction.
In matters of concurrent offences punishable by heterogeneous sanctions, unified by the constraint of continuation, the increase in the custodial penalty provided for the more serious offence must be adjusted, through conversion, to the pecuniary penalty provided for the satellite offence, but in no case may it exceed the maximum penalty prescribed by law for the less serious offence.
The Court, referring to the United Sections no. 40983/2018 and the consistent precedents no. 8667/2019 and 22088/2020, brings order to the jungle of divergent practices. The key criterion is the adjustment between custodial and pecuniary penalties: starting from the penalty for the more serious offence (imprisonment), it is converted into a pecuniary amount (art. 135 c.p.) and the increase is calculated. However, once the imprisonment has been 'monetised', this increase can never exceed the maximum statutory penalty provided for the less serious offence. In this way, the Cassation explains, it is avoided that the satellite offence – conceived by the legislator as of lesser social alarm – generates a disproportionate multiplier effect.
The Cassation emphasizes that the limit to 'exceeding the maximum' derives directly from the principle of legality enshrined in art. 25, paragraph 2, of the Constitution and art. 7 of the ECHR: the penalty must remain within the boundaries set by the legislator for each offence. An unlimited increase would lead to an undue equivalence of less serious judged facts, violating the principle of proportionality.
The judgment offers useful clarifications for criminal lawyers who find themselves discussing continuation between offences with different penalties. In particular:
Finally, the possible impact on the execution should not be overlooked: if the conversion leads to a negligible pecuniary amount, the defendant may opt for payment, averting restrictive alternative measures.
Ruling no. 9251/2025 consolidates an orientation favourable to the protection of the principle of proportionality in continued offences with heterogeneous sanctions. The Cassation reiterates that the increase in penalty can never exceed the maximum statutory penalty of the less serious offence, filling an application gap and offering operational guidelines to judges and lawyers. For the criminal law professional, the decision constitutes a precedent to be invoked whenever the accessory penalty risks becoming, paradoxically, the main sanction.