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Betfair Pty Limited v Racing New South Wales (No 9) [2009] FCA 1349 (11 November 2009)
Last Updated: 24 November 2009
Federal COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Betfair Pty Limited v Racing New South
Wales (No 9) [2009] FCA 1349
BETFAIR PTY LIMITED v RACING NEW SOUTH WALES ,
HARNESS RACING NEW SOUTH WALES and ATTORNEY-GENERAL (NEW SOUTH
WALES)
NSD 1566 of 2008
PERRAM J
11 NOVEMBER 2009
SYDNEY
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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BETFAIR PTY
LIMITEDApplicant
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AND:
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RACING NEW SOUTH WALES First
Respondent
HARNESS RACING NEW SOUTH WALES Second Respondent
ATTORNEY-GENERAL (NEW SOUTH WALES) Intervener
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- Until
further order, special protection be granted over the portions of the documents
listed in the Schedule appended to the applicant’s
statement of brief
reasons for claims for special protection dated 20 September 2009, which are
highlighted in pink, green, yellow
or orange in the exhibits to the affidavit of
Joshua Paul Blanksby .
- The
respondents pay the applicant’s costs of the motion of 26 October
2009.
- The
applicant’s motion of 5 November 2009 be dismissed with costs.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
eSearch on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 1566 of 2008
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BETWEEN:
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BETFAIR PTY LIMITED Applicant
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AND:
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RACING NEW SOUTH WALES First Respondent
HARNESS RACING NEW SOUTH WALES Second Respondent
ATTORNEY-GENERAL (NEW SOUTH WALES) Intervener
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JUDGE:
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PERRAM J
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DATE:
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11 NOVEMBER 2009
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- These
proceedings, which are set down for a three week trial commencing next Monday 16
November 2009, have involved at various times
the making of claims for
confidentiality. On 9 September 2009 I gave judgment on an application by
Betfair to have a confidentiality
regime imposed in relation to various classes
of document (see Betfair Pty Ltd v Racing New South Wales (No 5) [2009]
FCA 1011). One of the consequences of that judgment was a series of orders
which provided for an orderly way in which such claims might be
made, examined,
challenged and, if necessary, resolved. Betfair has now activated that regime
and the issue which arises is the
resolution of a set of claims. The documents
in question are comprised in various highlighted portions of a set of 16 lever
arch
folders.
- In
my opinion, Betfair is entitled to the confidentiality orders which it seeks for
the following reasons. Betfair conducts a betting
exchange upon which gambling
on a large number of semi-random events is facilitated. Dogs and horses are
some of the events covered.
Many others are covered as well. Tabcorp Limited
(“Tabcorp”) also provides gambling services to members of the public
who wish to bet on a large range of events. There is no doubt in my mind that
Tabcorp and Betfair are trade rivals.
- It
is inappropriate that either’s commercially sensitive documentation should
come to the attention of the other for reasons
explained by Hayne JA in Mobil
Oil Australia Ltd v Guina Developments Pty Ltd [1996] 2 VR 34. Tabcorp is
not a party to these proceedings however, and the ordinary issue of
confidentiality does not therefore directly arise.
Instead, Betfair seeks to
prevent the respondents, not Tabcorp, from having access to its documents. It
does this because it says
the respondents are effectively in such a closely
symbiotic relationship with Tabcorp that they should be treated as being in an
analogous state to it.
- On
the evidence as it presently stands, and that is the evidence which exists in a
purely interlocutory hearing, I accept this submission.
The evidence discloses
the existence of an agreement known as the Racing Distribution Agreement to
which each of the respondents
and Tabcorp is a party. That agreement provides
for revenue sharing across a range of gambling endeavours beyond dogs and
horses.
It also provides for a formal organ known as the Strategy Committee
whose purpose is the formulation between the various participants
to the
agreement of strategy decisions for their common good.
- Mr
Hutley SC, who appeared for Betfair, submitted, and I accept, that Tabcorp and
the respondents have very closely aligned interests
and a motive to pursue
cooperation shaped to meet those interests. Quite apart from the legal effect
of the Racing Distribution
Agreement, there was evidence placed before me (to
which I will not advert in any detail due to its confidential nature) which
showed
that the state of affairs which might reasonably be anticipated to flow
from the Racing Distribution Agreement did in fact flow -
that is, there was
evidence (which I accept) that showed that Tabcorp and the respondents did in
fact cooperate on strategic decisions
and did so outside the formal framework of
the Strategy Committee.
- On
the present application, the respondents proffered undertakings from their
senior executives not to participate in the deliberations
of the Strategy
Committee. The consequence of this was said to be an avoidance of any
difficulty arising from inadvertent use of
the information in formulating a
joint strategy.
- I
do not think that those undertakings are sufficient to resolve the present
problem. I have already accepted that Tabcorp and the
respondents cooperate at
a broader level than merely through the Strategy Committee. In a sense, that
committee is merely a formal
organ which constitutes the apex of a cooperative
venture of a broader scope. That statement ranges somewhat further than my
initial
analysis of the problem in Betfair (No 5) but this is only
because the evidence is now more extensive. I do not doubt that the
undertakings may reduce the size of the problem,
but they do not eliminate it.
Indeed, I do not think the problem is likely to be, in reality, much reduced by
the undertakings.
- The
respondents’ solicitor, Mr Price, gave evidence that the confidentiality
regime was preventing him from obtaining instructions
from his clients in
relation to the documents in question. No doubt this is true, but nothing was
placed before me to indicate why
that presented any particular prejudice to the
preparation of the trial.
- In
his submissions, Mr Kerr SC, who appeared for the respondents, put that having
in place such a regime was going to complicate
the orderly running of the case.
I accept that that is so, but I do not regard it, in what is effectively a trade
rival situation,
as providing a strong reason not to uphold the claim.
- Accepting,
as I do, a degree of inconvenience for all parties, I nevertheless think it is
appropriate to uphold Betfair’s contentions.
Tabcorp and Betfair are
trade rivals. The respondents’ interests and actions are intertwined with
those of Tabcorp. That
degree of symbiosis makes it unrealistic to expect that
the import of commercially confidential information could be kept from the
mainstream of decision-making. In the balancing exercise which this area of the
law inevitably invites the scales favour Betfair.
- There
are three further matters which I should mention. First, I have taken
into account the respondents’ submission that the risk suggested by
Betfair was merely one of inadvertent disclosure.
I rejected such a risk in
Betfair (No 5) as being sufficient to justify a confidentiality order.
It is a question of degree. Given the extent of the relationship now revealed
by the evidence, I do not think that it is realistic to expect that the
Harman obligation (Home Office v Harman [1981] QB 534; Hearn v
Street [2008] HCA 36; (2008) 235 CLR 125) will be sufficient to prevent the kind of mixing
of information and decision-making which the current situation throws up.
- Secondly,
the respondents submitted that Betfair could not step outside the grounds it had
asserted in the brief statement of reasons which
the previous machinery orders
required to be proffered. There is no basis for that suggestion in my orders
and I reject it.
- Thirdly,
Mobil Oil suggests that ordinarily a judge confronted with a claim for
confidentiality should inspect the documents in question for himself.
I have not
taken that course. The reasons for this are:
(a) I have already
surveyed a collection of the documents in Betfair (No 5) and was
satisfied that, in principle, they were commercially sensitive in a trade rival
sense;
(b) the parties accepted that they were relevantly confidential and that the
ordinary approach in Mobil Oil should not be followed; and
(c) the extent of the Court’s resources to determine the issue prior to
the commencement of the trial is greatly limited. I
am sitting every day this
week and it would not be physically possible for me to read the 8000 or so pages
before the case commences.
- In
all those circumstances, I make the order sought in Betfair’s notice of
motion filed on 26 October 2009. The respondents
are to pay Betfair’s
costs of that application.
- I
turn then to Betfair’s notice of motion of 5 November 2009 by which it
seeks an order that the respondents comply with orders
1 and 2 made by me on 30
September 2009. Those orders were as follows:
(1) The first respondent file and serve an affidavit, within seven days,
deposing to the steps taken to discover the emails from
or to Mr V’Landys
in the period 1 July 2004 to 31 December 2007.
(2) The second respondent file and serve an affidavit, within seven days,
deposing to the steps taken to discover the emails from
or to Mr Poole.
- Other
orders were made. They are not presently material.
- Orders
1 and 2 followed from a judgment given by me on the same day, entitled
Betfair Pty Ltd v Racing New South Wales (No 6) [2009] FCA 1120. On 8
October 2009, Mr Price, in apparent compliance with orders 1 and 2 of 30
September 2009, filed an affidavit setting out, on
information and belief, the
steps which had been taken to consider the email issue. My order did not
require an affidavit from a
person other than Mr Price. My reasons for making
the orders of 30 September 2009 appeared at [6] of Betfair (No 6), in
which I said:
At this stage, however, I do not think that I can say that there are grounds for
believing that the documents have not been discovered
within the meaning of O 15
r 11 of the Federal Court Rules. I do, however, propose to direct that
the first respondent, within seven days, provide an affidavit explaining the
processes and
steps by which it has approached the discovery of Mr
V’Landys’ emails. Once that affidavit has been provided it will
be
possible to ascertain whether the process of discovery has gone awry or
not.
- I
made similar remarks in relation to Mr Poole.
- In
light of that, I do not understand the basis for Betfair’s present
application. No doubt it might have been useful to Betfair
if Orders 1 and 2
had in fact provided for a direct affidavit to be provided rather than merely
being couched, as it was, in general
terms but, couched as it is, that order did
not require that the affidavit be by way of direct evidence.
- Betfair
has not applied to vary the orders I made on 30 September 2009. In those
circumstances, I do not think that the present
application has any basis.
- The
motion is dismissed with costs.
I certify that the preceding twenty-one (21)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Perram.
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Associate:
Dated: 11 November 2009
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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Mr A. Robetson SC and Ms K. Morgan
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Gilbert + Tobin
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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Mr S. Kerr SC and Mr S. Robertson
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Solicitor for the Respondents:
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Yeldham Price O'Brien Lusk
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2009/1349.html