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Jarra Creek Central Packing Shed Pty Ltd v Amcor Limited [2009] FCA 60 (6 February 2009)
Last Updated: 27 February 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Jarra Creek Central Packing Shed Pty Ltd
v Amcor Limited [2009] FCA 60
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – discovery
– form of orders for further discovery of documents and computer codes
– level of discovery which should be
made
Jarra Creek Central Packing Shed v Amcor
Limited (2007) FCA 1559
JARRA CREEK CENTRAL PACKING SHED PTY LTD (ACN 085
691 425) v AMCOR LIMITED (ACN 000 017 372), AMCOR PACKAGING (AUSTRALIA) PTY
LIMITED
(ACN 004 2775 165), FIBRE CONTAINERS (QUEENSLAND) PTY LIMITED (ACN 051
607 517), VISY BOARD PTY LTD (ACN 005 787 913), VISY INDUSTRIES
HOLDINGS PTY LTD
(ACN 005 787 968) and VISY INDUSTRIES (AUSTRALIA) PTY LTD (ACN 004 337
615)
NSD 702 of 2006
TAMBERLIN J
6 FEBRUARY 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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JARRA CREEK CENTRAL PACKING SHED PTY LTD (ACN
085 691 425)Applicant
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AND:
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AMCOR LIMITED (ACN 000 017 372)First
Respondent/First First Cross-Claimant and Fourth Cross-Respondent
AMCOR PACKAGING (AUSTRALIA) PTY LIMITED (ACN 004 2775
165) Second Respondent/Second Cross-Claimant and Fifth
Cross-Respondent
FIBRE CONTAINERS (QUEENSLAND) PTY LIMITED (ACN 051 607
517) Third Respondent/Third Cross-Claimant and Sixth
Cross-Respondent
VISY BOARD PTY LTD (ACN 005 787 913) Fourth Respondent/Fourth
Cross-Claimant and First Cross-Respondent
VISY INDUSTRIES HOLDINGS PTY LTD (ACN 005 787 968) Fifth
Respondent Fifth Cross-Claimant and Second Cross-Respondent
VISY INDUSTRIES (AUSTRALIA) PTY LTD (ACN 004 337 615) Sixth
Respondent/Sixth Cross-Claimant and Third Cross-Respondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
parties bring in Short Minutes of Order to give effect to these reasons on a
date to be fixed with the associate.
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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NSD 702 of 2006
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BETWEEN:
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JARRA CREEK CENTRAL PACKING SHED PTY
LTD (ACN 085 691 425)
Applicant
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AND:
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AMCOR LIMITED (ACN 000 017 372)
First Respondent/First First Cross-Claimant and Fourth Cross-Respondent
AMCOR PACKAGING (AUSTRALIA)
PTY LIMITED (ACN 004 2775 165)
Second Respondent/Second Cross-Claimant and Fifth Cross-Respondent
FIBRE CONTAINERS (QUEENSLAND)
PTY LIMITED (ACN 051 607 517)
Third Respondent/Third Cross-Claimant and Sixth Cross-Respondent
VISY BOARD PTY LTD (ACN 005 787 913)
Fourth Respondent/Fourth Cross-Claimant and First Cross-Respondent
VISY INDUSTRIES HOLDINGS PTY LTD (ACN 005 787 968)
Fifth Respondent
Fifth Cross-Claimant and Second Cross-Respondent
VISY INDUSTRIES (AUSTRALIA) PTY LTD (ACN 004 337 615)
Sixth Respondent/Sixth Cross-Claimant
and Third Cross-Respondent
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JUDGE:
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TAMBERLIN J
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DATE:
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6 FEBRUARY 2009
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- These
reasons concern an application for further discovery by Jarra Creek Central
Packing Shed (Jarra Creek), which is opposed by
the respondents. For the
purposes of the Judgement, the first, second and third respondents will be
referred to as the Amcor Parties,
and the fourth, fifth and sixth respondents as
the Visy respondents.
- The
principal question raised on this application is the level of discovery which
should be made in this matter. Jarra Creek in its
Amended Notion of Motion
(filed on 10 December 2008) first seeks general discovery of all documents
related to the effect of the
Visy respondents’ conduct on the prices of
Cardboard Fibre Products (CFP) supplied by them in Australia, and the alleged
loss
and damage suffered by Jarra Creek and group members for a period between 1
January 1998 to 1 May 2006 to the extent that such documents
have not already
been discovered by the Visy respondents.
- Secondly,
and in the alternative, a more specific order is sought seeking discovery and
production of a Logistics Database referred
to in an affidavit of Mr Zwier,
filed on behalf of the Visy respondents in this matter, as well as discovery of
other electronic
records so far as they contain data of CFP sales, and
production data, and also information relating to Pulp Paper Products (PPP),
as
to sales and production data at a low level of particularity, together with
details of sales/price, costs of production and production
data for the products
at customer level. In addition, the order seeks any hard copy documents created
between 1 January 1998 and
December 2004 recording costs of production at the
customer and product level.
- In
substance, the dispute between the parties concerns the appropriate
particularity and detail at which discovery should be made.
I have made
previous orders for discovery in this matter on 19 November 2007: see Jarra
Creek Central Packing Shed v Amcor Limited (2007) FCA 1559, which sets out
the general background. The Visy respondents contend that nothing material has
changed since those orders and that
there is no need for further orders of
discovery because the present application seeks documents that were sought but
not ordered
to be produced on the previous application. The Visy respondents
also say that, although after the making of the previous orders
the applicant
amended its pleading, in respect of the essential allegation for discovery
purposes, there has been no significant
change.
- It
is submitted for Jarra Creek that the court should note that since the earlier
discovery order the Amcor respondents have agreed
to provide documentation at a
far greater level of specificity than in the original orders and further that
there is additional material
from Professor Rubinfeld (of 19 Nov ember 2008), an
economic expert, retained on behalf of Jarra Creek, to the effect that in order
to determine whether the alleged cartel arrangement can be properly the subject
of an expert opinion, it is necessary to have discovery
in relation to the
sales/price, costs of production and production data at the production facility
level. Also, in order to construct
a proper economic model, and conduct a
detailed analysis of conditions conducive to cartel formation and quantify the
effect on market
process, Professor Rubinfeld considers that is necessary to
obtain sales/price, costs of production and production data at customer
level
and product level.
- Professor
Rubinfeld has read and refers to an affidavit of Ms Rebecca Gilsenan (Ms
Gilsenan), the solicitor acting for Jarra Creek,
dated 9 December 2008, which
sets out inconsistencies and gaps in the material produced on behalf of the Visy
respondents and notes
that some of this discovered material also refers to low
level specific data known to exist from documents discovered and information
given to her. This detailed affidavit was not the subject of challenge or cross
examination as to the factual material stated in
it.
- The
evidence discloses that there has been substantial discovery to date. For
example, Visy has discovered 15,572 documents. Of these,
4,730 are financial
documents or reports and 2973 are classified as spreadsheets, tables and lists.
In summary, Ms Gilsenan says
that the financial data discovered by Visy is
aggregated at the level of production facility which would allow Jarra Creek to
calculate
the difference between costs and sales prices on average for all, but
not each, of the customers of a particular facility, but that
the coverage is
incomplete and it would be necessary to make assumptions. She states that she
does not have sufficient data at customer
and product levels to allow the Jarra
Creek’s representatives to ascertain the process by customer or product or
by classes
of customer or product. The material presently furnished is at a
high level of generality and Ms Gilsenan says that while she has
some low level
data of a specific nature, it is restricted to particular customers or limited
time periods, and there is not enough
to determine net pricing even for those
customers. The existence of some low level data reinforces the view that such
data exists
and this is confirmed by evidence from the Visy respondents.
- Mr
Leon Zwier (Mr Zwier), solicitor for the Visy respondents, has filed evidence in
this matter and in his Fourth Affidavit of 8 December
2008 he refers to the
earlier discovery decision over a year ago. In relation to Visy data concerning
CFP at the customer and product
level, Mr Zwier says that the Visy respondents
have in their possession a database known as the Logistics Database. This
Logistics
Database contains data relating to CFP supplied by Visy Board at an
account and product level from before 1 January 1998 to December
2008. A single
customer of Visy Board can have multiple accounts. Mr Zwier describes this
Logistics Database and its capacity to
produce reports in a number of different
formats. In paragraphs 22-28 of his affidavit he spells out further details of
the database
and points to the extremely large volume of documents arising from
the fact that at any given time between 1 January 1998 and 1 May
2005 Visy had
between approximately 5,000 and 7,000 different customers from time to time. The
Visy respondents had created a list
of all product lines sold in each calendar
year over a six year period which, if printed, would amount to over 22,400 pages
relating
to CFP sales price and production data at customer and product level.
- Mr
Zwier also refers to CFP cost data at customer and product level. In addition,
he refers to the volume of material in relation
to the discovery of financial
reports relating to PPP. He expresses the view of the Visy respondents that to
the extent that financial
information at the customer level is relevant to the
issues in the proceeding, it is in substance only relevant to the calculation
of
alleged loss or damage of individual customers who are group members, and that
the calculation of any loss or damage suffered
by individual customers who are
group members should await the determination of liability and other common
issues in the proceeding.
- Mr
Zwier says that if the Court proposes to order discovery in respect of the
alleged loss or damage suffered by individual customers
of Visy who are group
members, it would be necessary to identify which of its customers are group
members. That is to say, customers
who purchased and paid more than $100,000
for CFP in Australia in the period between 1 May 2000 and 2005.
- The
Visy respondents contend that the production of the material is not necessary at
this stage of the proceedings and that the degree
of detail extends to
particulars of damages or loss in relation to individual customers and that it
is not appropriate to provide
this material.
- Mr
Zwier submits that it is only appropriate that the Visy parties produce what
might be described as higher or general management
reports and financial
documents.
- In
this case the questions of liability and damages have not been split, and indeed
it may be very difficult to draw any clear line
between evidence necessary to
support the liability claim and evidence necessary to establish the liability
identity and quantity
of damage or loss suffered.
- I
am not persuaded that the production of documents at the higher generalised
level will suffice, particularly having regard to the
evidence of Mr Rubinfeld
filed since the earlier discovery order. In my view, the production of such
material is necessary to enable
Jarra Creek to properly prepare its case, having
regard to the data sought at the lower level of specific particularity. At this
lower level it is worth noting that the Amcor parties have agreed to make these
documents available. This fact, coupled with the
evidence of Professor Rubinfeld
and the unsatisfactory nature of the discovery to date, leads me to conclude
that orders substantially
in the form sought by Jarra Creek should be made.
Professor Rubinfeld in his latest report of 19 November 2008 also confirms the
importance of receiving data in an electronic form and in the same level of
detail as the original source data. Moreover, this matter
was commenced over
two years ago and it needs to progress in a timely way. This consideration
favours a comprehensive discovery order
rather than a series of separate
applications and arguments.
- In
this judgment I will not settle the final terms of the present discovery order
but I indicate that I decline to make the vague
general order as sought in the
Amended Notice of Motion in Prayer 1. I think an order along the lines of
Proposed Order 2(a) and
(b) of the Amended Notice of Motion of 10 December 2008
would be an appropriate next step. The Draft Data request on pages 81 and
82 to
the Affidavit of Ms Gilsenan points to the difficulties in framing a more
specific request for documents and indicates that,
in my view, more thought
needs to be given to the specific terms of the discovery having regard to these
reasons.
- I
therefore direct the parties to ring in Short Minutes to give effect to these
reasons. As to costs, if there is any dispute as
to these they can be resolved
when the matter comes back before the Court.
I certify that the preceding sixteen (16)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Tamberlin.
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Associate:
Dated: 6 February 2009
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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Counsel for the First, Second and Third Respondents:
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Mr R. Harris
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Counsel for the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Respondents:
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Mr M. H. O'Bryan
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