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Supreme Court of the ACT |
Last Updated: 1 September 2009
R v WR
[2009] ACTSC 93 (31 July 2009)
CRIMINAL LAW – application for interlocutory appeal – purpose of the Sexual and Violent Offences Legislation – expedition of complainant’s testimony – application refused.
Evidence Act 1995 (Cth), s 103
Evidence (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1991 (ACT), s 53
Sexual and Violent Offences Legislation Amendment Bill 2008 (ACT)
Queensland and Anor v JL Holdings Pty Ltd [1997] HCA 1; (1997) 189 CLR 146
AON
Risk Services Australia Ltd v Australian National University [2008] ACTCA
13
R v Iorlano and Anor [1983] HCA 43; (1983)
151 CLR 678
Re
Rozenes, Director of Public Prosecutions and Anor; Ex parte Burd and Ors
[1994] HCA 11; (1994) 120 ALR 193
Beljajev v Director of Public Prosecutions and
Anor [1991] HCA 16; (1991) 173 CLR 28
Joosse v Australian Securities
and Investment Commission [1998] HCA 77; (1999) 73 ALJR 232
R v Elliott [1996] HCA 21; (1996)
185 CLR 250
R v Sarlija [2006] ACTCA 22
Kola v The
Queen [2006] ACTCA 23
EX TEMPORE JUDGMENT
No. SCC 353 of 2008
Judge: Refshauge J
Supreme Court of the ACT
Date: 31 July 2009
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE )
) No. SCC 353 of
2008
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY )
R v W R
ORDER
Judge: Refshauge J
Date: 31 July 2008
Place: Canberra
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
1. The application be dismissed.
3. The purpose of this is set out in the revised explanatory memorandum to the Sexual and Violent Offences Legislation Amendment Bill 2008 (ACT). And I quote:
The pre-recording of evidence at a pre-trial hearing aims to redress fundamental problems with the criminal justice system and how it deals with children’s evidence.
And I pause to add that the complainant is a child.
Delays in the court process are inevitable but work against children’s ability to recount events long after they occur. For young children and people who are intellectually impaired, the ability to give cogent evidence many months or years after the event might be beyond their developmental and intellectual capacity, despite the fact that they are able to give coherent descriptions at the time closer to the events in question.
The pre-trial hearing, a unique pre-trial process, is held to facilitate the taking of the witness’s [sic] evidence and as such the pre-trial hearing is attended by the judge, the prosecutor, the defence lawyer and the accused.
4. There have been in this matter some procedural complications arising in part
out of the issuing of subpoenas for the bringing
before the court of certain
material. Some of that material included diaries of the complainant in which she
recorded her thoughts
and her dreams and other matters.
5. An application
was made yesterday by the accused’s counsel for leave to cross-examine the
complainant on matters arising
out of those diaries and other material, although
most of the other material was ultimately not relied upon by the accused.
6. Because two days had been set aside for the pre-trial hearing, most of
which were taken up with unfortunate procedural arguments,
and I was able to
take an additional day today to allow the proceedings to be concluded, I
considered the application overnight.
7. It involved some complicated issues
arising out of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) and the Evidence (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1991 (ACT), the interaction between the two and the way in which
the credibility rule now applies in relation to cross-examination of
issues such
as the prior sexual experience and other matters concerning the complainant.
8. This morning, having done the best I could to look at a vast amount of
material which was handed up to me, without a great deal
of assistance in
identifying the way in which particular parts might be said to be relevant, I
formed a view sufficient to announce
a ruling today but without the opportunity
to put my reasons carefully in writing which is necessary in these particular
circumstances.
9. I ruled that the accused was not entitled to cross-examine
on the material on which he had sought to do so. As a consequence of
that I
allowed a short adjournment for the accused’s counsel to take instructions
and upon resuming the proceedings I was advised
that an application was made for
an adjournment of these proceedings.
10. The application was to allow my
reasons to be reduced to writing and for consideration then to be given to those
reasons and a
decision made as to whether an application should be made for
leave to appeal against that decision and then, if leave was granted,
presumably
for an appeal to be made.
11. Mr Thomas, who appeared for the applicant and
made his application carefully and thoroughly, relied heavily on the decision of
the High Court in Queensland and Anor v JL Holdings Pty Ltd [1997] HCA 1; (1997) 189 CLR 146,
a summary of which was, in essence, that case management considerations should
not override the interests of justice, which even
in matters such as adjournment
applications should be given primacy and considerable weight.
12. That
decision, despite some dilution of it in New South Wales, still appears to be
good law in the Australian Capital Territory,
as was held by the Australian
Capital Territory Court of Appeal in AON Risk Services Australia Ltd v
Australian National University
[2008] ACTCA 13.
13. Mr Thomas indicated that
he wanted to test the ruling, which was on a relatively new piece of
legislation, and would be important
in the conduct of the trial. He indicated
that he wanted to give consideration to the reasons for the decision, and indeed
as I
have indicated, no reasons were given.
14. The legislation does require
reasons to be given, but only if I allow the application, and although I do
consider that it is appropriate
in these circumstances to give reasons, the
absence of reasons is not a breach of the legislation, and insofar as that is
relevant
it does not seem to me that it supports the application.
15. Mr
Thomas did not mention, but yesterday when a proposal was put by the Crown
prosecutor for a way in which one might deal with
this issue, he did submit to
me that he considered that it was important to deal with this matter to finality
because of the way
in which he proposed to conduct the
cross-examination.
16. Unfortunately he did not give any particulars of that
but did indicate that the “flow of the cross-examination” would
be
affected adversely if, for example, one were to conduct a cross-examination on
these matters under a kind of voir dire process
with the possibility for
excision from the recording, if ultimately the material was held to be
inadmissible. That may be so, but
I will address that later.
17. Ms Jones,
the Crown prosecutor, opposed the application. She made the point that in an
ordinary criminal trial, decisions in
relation to admissibility of evidence
would be made and they would be accepted by the parties. It would be
extraordinary and highly
unlikely that a jury trial, for example, would be
adjourned halfway through just to test a ruling on evidence.
18. She
indicated that in her submission this particular proceeding should not operate
in any other way than as with a criminal trial.
She also relied upon the
revised explanatory statement, and in particular on the part of it that I have
set out above (at [3]),
noting that delay in prosecution was one of the
objectives that the legislation was intended to try and remove, at least so far
as
the evidence of the complainant was concerned.
19. She also relied on the
interests of the community as expressed through the prosecution and of the
complainant, as a witness who
would be disadvantaged.
20. It is always
important to be careful in making decisions in relation to adjournments, and I
have given careful consideration to
the submissions made by both parties. I do
not regard issues of case management as particularly significant in this case.
The interests
of justice are important, and therefore while I accept, of course,
what was said by the High Court in Queensland and Anor v JL Holdings
Pty Ltd, it
does not seem to me that it weighs particularly heavily either way in this
particular matter.
21. I do note that there is a very strong and long
tradition of courts setting their face against the criminal trial process being
interrupted by rulings and interlocutory rulings, and there are some very strong
statements by the High Court. In R v Iorlano and
Anor [1983] HCA 43; (1983) 151 CLR 678, a
joint judgment of the Court, the Court said (at 680):
However it seems necessary to repeat that it is highly undesirable to interrupt the ordinary course of criminal proceedings by applications for leave to appeal or prerogative relief for the purpose of challenging rulings on admissibility of evidence.
The fact that the court has expressed its conclusion on the substantive question at issue in the present case is not intended to encourage applications of this kind. Both applications are dismissed.
22. Later in Re Rozenes, Director of Public Prosecutions and Anor; Ex parte Burd and Ors [1994] HCA 11; (1994) 120 ALR 193, Dawson J said (at 195):
This court has repeatedly indicated that the fragmentation of a criminal trial by proceedings to contest the rulings of a trial judge, by way of either leave to appeal or prerogative relief, is highly undesirable and will only be allowed in exceptional circumstances (see e.g. R v Iorlano [1983] HCA 43; (1983) 151 CLR 678 at 680, Yates v Wilson [1989] HCA 68; (1989) 168 CLR 338 at 339).
23. As Brennan J said in Beljajev v Director of Public Prosecutions and Anor (1991) 173 CLR 28 (at 32):
The jurisdiction of this court is not fitted to the supervision of interlocutory processes of a criminal trial.
24. In Joosse v Australian Securities and Investment Commission [1998] HCA 77; (1999) 73 ALJR 232, Hayne J rejected an interlocutory application and said (at 234):
This court has said repeatedly that the criminal process should not be interrupted by testing interlocutory rulings that may be given in the course of proceedings. (footnote omitted)
25. In R v Elliott [1996] HCA 21; (1996) 185 CLR 250, a decision of the High Court, the prosecution there, having had critical evidence excluded from the trial, sought special leave to appeal. That special leave was rejected. The court consisting of Brennan CJ and Gummow and Kirby JJ said (at 257):
It is understandable that the ordinary course of criminal procedure in Victoria requires the interlocutory rulings of a trial judge to be accepted for the purposes of the trial, whether those rulings be right or wrong. If the rulings are wrong then, upon conviction, an accused person is entitled to challenge the ruling on appeal. But the prosecution has no such right. If the ruling results in an acquittal the ruling, albeit erroneous, can be canvassed on appeal, but only to correct the ruling – not to impeach the acquittal: see s 450A.
Obviously two considerations are in competition here. On the one hand, the prosecution is entitled no less than the defence to a trial according to correct rulings on questions of law. On the other, interlocutory appeals in criminal trials delay the trial and are likely to produce miscarriages of justice in ways unrelated to the ruling. The personal and financial stress of criminal trials, the dimming of witnesses’ memories and the sheer delay between criminal conduct and the administration of condign punishment are factors which weigh heavily in favour of expediting the process of the criminal trial even though incorrect rulings have to be accepted by the prosecution in order to achieve that object, subject to s 450A.
1"> 26. Mr Thomas also referred me to a number of decisions of the Australian Capital Territory Court of Appeal, by which of course I am bound. In R v Sarlija [2006] ACTCA 22, an interlocutory application was made by the Director of Public Prosecutions in relation to a decision of the court, ruling certain evidence inadmissible. Having referred to the general provision, the court continued (at [14]):
We certainly endorse this view and would be most reluctant to grant leave to appeal from a mere discretionary ruling on admissibility of evidence. The submissions of the Director of Public Prosecution for the Territory highlight the exceptional nature of this case in that they raise a significant question of law of more general application and illustrate that the ruling is, in effect, determinative of the trial, because, if the fingerprint is inadmissible, then the Crown case against the respondent/accused would disappear.
The Victorian Director supported the submission that the matter raises a case of general importance and noted that his Honour’s decision would be called in aid in proceedings before Victorian Magistrates and in the Victorian County Court.
27. In the decision of Kola v The Queen [2006] ACTCA 23, a decision of Crispin P on an application by the appellant for leave to appeal, his Honour granted leave to appeal and in doing so said this ([at 5]):
The second issue that arises is whether leave to appeal is warranted. It seems to me that there are two observations which should be made about that. First, it is common ground that the resolution of the challenge to the validity of the warrant may be decisive of the trial and that it is in the public interest for the matter to be resolved before the trial commences. Second, the legal issues that arise for resolution on the proposed appeal are serious and of potential importance to other cases.
28. It seems to me that this case is somewhat different from those two cases.
It is true that the issue here is one of considerable
importance and the
interaction between s 103 of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) and s 53 of the
Evidence (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1991 (ACT) is a matter of some public
importance.
29. However this case is different in that my ruling is by no
means decisive of the case. There is cross-examination allowable to
the accused
and that cross-examination can continue and can be completed.
30. The
balance of convenience seems to me to be to proceed with the case today and if,
in the intervening period between the completion
of the pre-trial hearing and
when the trial is actually listed, there is an opportunity and a wish to appeal
against that decision,
that can be taken. That has the effect that it will
potentially mean that the complainant may have to come back and give further
evidence, but that is only one outcome that is possible. It may be that the
Court of Appeal will refuse leave or, if it grants leave,
will ultimately reject
the appeal, in which case the complainant would not have to come back and give
evidence.
31. It seems to me that on the terms of the legislation and in
accordance with the purpose of the legislation, at least insofar as
it is
expressed in the revised explanatory statement, it is preferable that the court
takes the opportunity to complete the evidence
consistently with the legislation
if that is at all possible, and if there is a risk that the complainant will
have to come back,
then so be it. Indeed, that might happen, I suppose, if the
trial were to continue and there is a conviction that is appealed and
my ruling
is overturned on appeal.
32. In my view, this does not prevent a fair
trial. I have made the decision after anxiously considering the fairness, not
only to
the accused, but to the community. While the fairness to the community
is important as is that to the complainant, obviously the
fairness to the
accused is of more significance because the accused is at greater risk and
ultimately bears the burden at the end
of the day.
33. In my view, the
Human Rights Act 2004 (ACT), while relevant and mandating the right of a fair
trial, does not change that position. It is not a zero-sum game, it is not
the
position whereby fairness to the complainant reduces fairness to the accused
– both can sit comfortably together. The accused
has had the
opportunity of putting the submissions and they have been put in a strong way by
Mr Thomas and I have made my ruling.
He does not lose any right that he has and
he is able to proceed. I am not satisfied on what Mr Thomas has said to me,
insofar
as I understand it, that any “flow” involved with the
cross-examination will be so affected adversely that the right
to a fair trial
would be compromised.
34. I might finally say that it is a matter of
concern to me that I was not able to give reasons now for my earlier decision,
but
it seems to me that those reasons are not really the genesis of the
application. The genesis of the application is that the decision
has
substantially affected the way in which the accused wished to run his trial, and
I understand that, and that he wants to challenge
that, and he has a right in
the appropriate time and circumstances to do so.
35. I do note what the
High Court said recently in the case of Evans v The Queen [2007] HCA 59; (2007) 241 ALR 400
where (at [244]) Heydon J made it clear that the failure to give reasons for
evidentiary rulings is not necessarily a ground for
complaint and for
adjournment.
36. In all the circumstances I am satisfied, having given as
careful consideration as time will permit, that the application should
be
refused and that the cross-examination should proceed today.
I certify that the preceding thirty-six (36) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of his Honour, Justice Refshauge.
Associate:
Date: 31 July 2009
Counsel for the prosecution: Ms M Jones
Solicitor for the prosecution: Director of Public Prosecutions
(ACT)
Counsel for the accused: Mr R Thomas
Solicitor for the accused: Paul
Edmonds and Associates
Date of hearing: 31 July 2009
Date of judgment: 31
July 2009
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