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In the matter of an application by Andrew Green for leave to issue a proceeding [2011] HCA 5 (25 March 2011)
Last Updated: 25 March 2011
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
HAYNE J
IN THE MATTER OF AN APPLICATION BY ANDREW GREEN FOR LEAVE TO ISSUE A
PROCEEDING
In the matter of an application by Andrew Green for leave to issue a
proceeding
[2011] HCA 5
25 March 2011
S88/2011
ORDER
Leave to issue the proposed proceeding is refused.
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
In the matter of an application by Andrew Green for leave to issue a
proceeding
High Court – Practice and procedure – Leave to issue proceeding
– Application for order to show cause against Federal
Court sitting as
Court of Disputed Returns – Applicant's electoral petition dismissed by
Court of Disputed Returns for failure
to sufficiently set out facts relied upon
to invalidate election as required by Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918
(Cth) ("Act"), ss 355(a) and 355(aa) – Whether application to show cause
raises "real question to be determined".
Administrative law – Electoral law – Electoral petitions –
Applicant's electoral petition alleged contraventions
of ss 184(1), 326(1)(c)
and 327(1) of Act and error by Divisional Returning Officer invalidated election
– Whether conclusion of Court of Disputed Returns that electoral
petition
does not sufficiently set out facts relied upon to invalidate election as
required by ss 355(a) and 355(aa) of Act attended by doubt.
Constitutional law (Cth) – Section 368 of Act provides that decisions of
Court of Disputed Returns shall not be questioned in any way – Applicant
contends s 368 of Act invalid – Whether question of validity
arises.
Words and phrases – "real question to be determined".
Constitution, s 75(v).
Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 (Cth), ss 184(1), 326(1)(c), 327(1),
352(1), 355(a), 355(aa), 358, 362, 368.
High Court Rules 2004, r 6.07.
- HAYNE J.
On 27 October 2010, the applicant (Mr Andrew Green) filed in this
Court, as the Court of Disputed Returns, an election petition
in relation to the
election held on 21 August 2010 for the Electoral Division of Lindsay.
Mr Green was a candidate at that election.
The first respondent to the
petition, Mr David Bradbury, was declared elected and the writ returned
accordingly. Mr Green's petition
sought an order declaring that certain
postal vote applications "were invalid and that any votes cast by such electors
were invalid",
an order declaring that Mr Bradbury was not duly elected,
and either an order for a recount of ballots with exceptions and exclusions,
or
an order declaring the election in the Division of Lindsay "absolutely
void".
- On
25 November 2010, Gummow J ordered that the petition be referred for
trial to the Federal Court of Australia, New South Wales
District Registry.
- In
the Federal Court, the third respondent to the petition, the Australian
Electoral Commission ("the AEC"), moved for dismissal
of the petition on the
basis that, under s 358(1) of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918
(Cth) ("the Act"), no proceedings may be had on the petition because it did
not:
"(a) set out the facts relied on to invalidate the election or return as
required by s 355(a); and/or
(b) set out those facts with sufficient [particularity] to identify the specific
matter or matters on which the Petitioner relies
as justifying the grant of
relief as required by s 355(aa) of the Act".
- On
3 February 2011, Emmett J made orders that no proceedings be had on
the petition and that the petition be dismissed. Written
reasons for judgment
were published on 9 February
2011[1].
- Mr Green
then sought to begin fresh proceedings in this Court. He sought to have issued
an application for an order to show cause
in which the Judges of the Federal
Court of Australia would be named as first defendant, Mr Bradbury as second
defendant, and the
AEC as third defendant. On 16 February 2011,
Heydon J directed the Registrar, pursuant to r 6.07 of the High Court
Rules 2004, to refuse to issue or file the application for an order to show
cause without the leave of a Justice first had and obtained. Mr
Green now
seeks that leave.
Leave to issue a proceeding
- The
power to refuse leave to issue a proceeding is not to be exercised except in a
clear case. As Dixon J said in the well-known
passage of his reasons in
Dey v Victorian Railways
Commissioners[2]:
"A case must be very clear indeed to justify the summary intervention of the
court to prevent a plaintiff submitting his case for
determination in the
appointed manner by the court with or without a jury. The fact that a
transaction is intricate may not disentitle
the court to examine a cause of
action alleged to grow out of it for the purpose of seeing whether the
proceeding amounts to an abuse
of process or is vexatious. But once it appears
that there is a real question to be determined whether of fact or law and that
the
rights of the parties depend upon it, then it is not competent for the court
to dismiss the action as frivolous and vexatious and
an abuse of
process."
- In
this matter, however, it is also important to recognise that the ultimate
purpose of the proceeding which the applicant seeks
leave to issue in this Court
is to permit prosecution of an election petition seeking to overturn the result
of the election for
the Division of Lindsay. And the whole structure and
content of the provisions made by the Act for the hearing and determination of
election petitions bespeaks the intention of the Act that such decisions be made
"as quickly as is reasonable in the
circumstances"[3].
- This
being so, it is right that close and detailed consideration be given to the
proposed process in order to determine whether it
reveals a real question to be
tried. That will require some detailed examination of the petition that was
dismissed by Emmett J.
The proposed application for an order to show cause
- The
application which Mr Green now seeks leave to issue differs from the
application initially submitted for issue, by adding a claim
for a declaration
that s 368 of the Act "is invalid to the extent that it inhibits or
restricts the exercise of jurisdiction" by this Court in respect of the relief
otherwise
sought in the application. That other relief is, in effect,
certiorari to quash the orders of the Federal Court made on 3 February
2011, mandamus directed to the Federal Court to hear and determine
Mr Green's election petition, and declarations: first, that the
Federal
Court "has not exercised its jurisdiction properly or at all" to try the
petition and, second, that the order made on 3 February
2011 "is not an
order of the Court of Disputed Returns" within s 369 of the Act.
- The
grounds on which the relief is claimed are set out in 14 paragraphs of which the
first three are introductory. It is as well,
however, to set out the remaining
paragraphs of the grounds, which are to be read as alleging jurisdictional
errors by Emmett J:
"4. That the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns
erred in law and exceeded or failed to exercise
jurisdiction in dismissing the
Petition and holding that the statement of facts in the Petition did not conform
to s 355(a) or s 355(aa) of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 with
respect to setting out facts relied on in respect of contravention by the Second
Defendant of s 327, and in particular:
(a) erred in holding that the Petition ought, and did not 'state facts as to
when, where, and how the alleged representations' in
paragraph 21 were made;
(b) erred in holding that the Petition ought, and did not 'state any facts that
would establish that any of the representations was
false';
(c) erred in holding that the Petition ought, and did not 'suggest that any of
the electors in question was prevented from
voting'.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and exceeded or failed to exercise jurisdiction
in dismissing the Petition
and holding that the statement of facts in the Petition did not set out facts
relied on to invalidate
the election on account of the error of or omission by
an officer within the meaning of Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 s 365,
notwithstanding that the Petition asserted the following facts - the issue by
the DRO of postal ballots in Lindsay to applicants
for postal votes on an
embellished form which was not the approved form under s 184(1); that such
form did not contain the declaration of the applicant for a postal vote as being
a person enrolled to vote in the election
required by s 184(1)(a) and the
Act generally; nor was it authenticated as required by s 328; nor was it
made to the DRO as required by s 184(2) but made to Mr Bradbury's
office where with his authority the form was altered contrary to ss 197 and
219 before lodgement; and that the DRO in error upon receipt of the invalid
applications issued postal ballots to applicants when the
DRO had no statutory
authority to do so under s 188(1) rendering all such postal votes invalid
and disenfranchising electors.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and exceeded or failed to exercise jurisdiction
in dismissing the Petition
and holding that in respect of polling officer error under s 365 the
Petition must, but did not, set out 'facts that could support the conclusion
that the result of the election was affected' and
also must, but did not, set
out facts which 'would indicate that there is a real chance that the result of
the election would be
different'.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and failed to exercise its jurisdiction
in not holding that s 360(3)
was a discrete power to declare an election absolutely void on the ground of
illegal practice committed by the successful candidate
falling outside one or
both grounds specified in s 362(3) and which facts the Petition set
out.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and failed to exercise its jurisdiction
in not considering properly or at
all whether the Second Defendant had contravened or been concerned in
contraventions of Part XV [ss 183, 184, 188, 197] and ss 328 and
329.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and exceeded or failed to exercise jurisdiction
in dismissing the Petition
and holding that in contravention of s 355(a) and s 355(aa) of the
Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 the Petition made 'no allegation as to
Mr Bradbury's majority' nor 'that the allegedly invalid votes were cast in
favour of Mr Bradbury'
and in finding without a trial that 'In any event,
the 2504 electors in fact voted'.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and exceeded or failed to exercise jurisdiction
in dismissing the Petition
and holding that the Petition ought set out facts which would otherwise involve
a breach of the secrecy
of the ballot in contravention of the Act, and a
significant principle flowing from a relevant historical constitutional
development under the Australian Constitution [cf Rowe v Electoral Commissioner
[2010] HCA 46 at [118]] and accepted electoral law and practice.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law in not following or applying properly or
at all this Court's decisions
in:
(a) [Moloney v McEacharn [1904] HCA 3; (1904) 1 CLR 77] with respect to the legal
significance of contraventions of electoral requirements of form in relation to
postal
voting applications, and of the resulting affectation of the
election;
(b) [Cole v Lacey [1965] HCA 11; (1965) 112 CLR 45 at 48] with respect to the
requirement of a specific allegation in the case of polling officer error or
omission
that the result of the election was affected including the specifying
of the winning margin and the voting intention of the disenfranchised
electors;
(c) [Webster v Deahm [1993] HCA 38; (1993) 67 ALJR 781 at 782] and cases that have
applied it in this Honourable Court with respect to the requirements of a
specific
assertion as to affectation required by s 362(3) and
365.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred in
law and failed to exercise jurisdiction in failing
to order pursuant to
s 360 as sought by the Plaintiff production of documents from the
possession and custody of the Second and Third
Defendants which proved the facts
relied on by the Petitioner in the Petition and the invalidity of the election
or return.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred by
referring in and attaching to the published
written Reasons Schedule 2
which was a document not in evidence, and was not a document referred to in the
Oral Reasons delivered
on 3 February 2010; the only particulars relied on
by the Plaintiff at the hearing were those attached to the letter of particulars
furnished by Mr Bell solicitor for the Petitioner responding to the request
for particulars of the Third Defendant which letter was
received in
evidence.
- That
the Federal Court of Australia sitting as the Court of Disputed Returns erred by
concluding that the Petition in its present
form does not comply with
s 355(a) and s 355(aa) of the Commonwealth Electoral Act
1918."
Relevant provisions of the Act
- Section 355
of the Act provides (so far as presently relevant) that:
"Subject to section 357, every petition disputing an election or return in
this Part called the petition shall:
(a) set out the facts relied on to invalidate the election or return;
(aa) subject to subsection 358(2), set out those facts with sufficient
particularity to identify the specific matter or matters on which the petitioner
relies as justifying
the grant of relief".
- The
general qualification in the chapeau to s 355 (by reference to s 357)
may be put aside from consideration. Section 357 relates to petitions of
the AEC. The qualification to s 355(aa) about particularity (by reference
to s 358(2)) recognises that the Court of Disputed Returns may relieve
against a failure to give sufficient particulars, but s 358(3) provides
that the Court shall not grant that relief unless satisfied that:
"(a) in spite of the failure of the petition to comply with
paragraph 355(aa), the petition sufficiently identifies the specific
matters on which the petitioner relies; and
(b) the grant of relief would not unreasonably prejudice the interests of
another party to the petition."
The reasons of Emmett J
- In
his reasons for judgment for dismissing the petition, Emmett J
concluded[4]
"that the petition in its present form does not comply with s 355(a) or
s 355(aa)" of the Act. He further
decided[5] that
"there is no dispensation under s 358(2) that could overcome the
deficiencies in complying with s 355(a)". The reasoning which
Emmett J stated as leading to that conclusion can be summarised as
follows:
(a) The AEC contended that the petition alleged that there had been "illegal
practice" (defined in s 352(1) as a contravention of the Act or regulations
made under the Act) or "undue influence" (defined, again in s 352(1), as "a
contravention of section 327 of this
Act[[6]] or
section 28 of the Crimes Act
1914")[7],
but that the petition did not set out facts sufficient to invalidate the
election on either of those bases and therefore failed
to meet the requirement
of s 355(a).
(b) The Act distinguishes, in s 362, between bribery and undue influence,
on the one hand, and illegal practice other than bribery or undue influence, on
the
other[8].
(c) If the Court finds that a successful candidate has committed, or attempted
to commit, bribery or undue influence, the election
must be declared void under
s 362(1)[9].
(d) The Court must not declare that a person has not been duly elected, or
declare an election void on the ground of any illegal
practice other than
bribery or corruption, unless satisfied that the result of the election was
likely to be affected and that it is just that the candidate should be
declared not to be duly elected or that the election should be declared
void[10].
(e) The petition alleged that Mr Bradbury contravened s 326(1)(c) of
the Act (a contravention constituting a form of bribery) by receiving a benefit
(constituted by a saving in printing costs and the use of
an electorate office)
on the understanding that his opposition to other candidates in the election
would be influenced or
altered[11].
But the particulars given of that allegation were, in effect, that electors, not
Mr Bradbury, would be
influenced[12].
Thus, Emmett J
concluded[13],
the allegation of bribery failed to set out facts that satisfy
s 355(a).
(f) The petition alleged undue influence in a number of different ways, but only
one (particularised as a series of representations
that were erroneous,
misleading, or likely to mislead) was said to constitute a contravention of the
relevant provision of the Act
(s 327)[14].
(g) In respect of the allegation of contravention of s 327, Emmett J
concluded that, although general allegations were made that false
representations were made in connection with postal vote
applications, which
hindered or interfered with the right or duty of the persons who made the
applications to vote at the
election[15]:
(i) the petition stated no facts showing the falsity of the representations, or
that they were misleading or were likely to
mislead[16];
(ii) the petition stated no fact to support the assertion that Mr Bradbury
intended to mislead postal vote
applicants[17];
and
(iii) the petition alleged no fact to show that, even if the alleged
representations were made, and were false or misleading, their
making hindered
or interfered with electors voting, or voting for their preferred
candidate[18].
(h) Finally, if the petition set out facts capable of constituting illegal
practice (and it did not) it was necessary that the petition
also set out facts
that, if proved, would show that the result of the election was likely affected
by those
practices[19].
All that the petition alleged was that 2504 persons had sent Mr Bradbury a
postal vote application and had, as a consequence, submitted
a postal vote. How
or why that was likely to have affected the result of the election was not
identified in the
petition[20],
though additional material filed by Mr Green in connection with the motion
to dismiss the petition showed that Mr Bradbury's winning
margin of 1026
votes was less than the number of votes alleged to be
invalid[21].
Submissions in support of leave to issue
- In
support of the application for leave to issue the application for an order to
show cause, Mr Green's solicitor exhibited to an
affidavit written
submissions of counsel. The central submission made was that "the petition
sufficiently set out the grounds relied
on to invalidate the election". More
particularly, it was submitted that the petition sufficiently alleged
contravention of s 184 of the Act, contravention of s 327, and errors
or omissions by the Divisional Returning Officer ("the DRO").
- The
written submissions stated that Mr Green "does not seek to pursue
paragraphs 25, 26, 27 and 28 [of the petition] and the reference
in paragraph 30
to paragraphs 26, 27 and 28". That is, Mr Green no longer seeks to
pursue allegations, made in the petition and
considered in detail by
Emmett J, that there was a contravention of s 326(1)(c) of the Act (a
form of bribery).
- It
is convenient to consider the three forms of allegation that were pressed
(contravention of s 184, contravention of s 327 and errors or
omissions by the DRO) in that order.
Section 184
- The
allegation of a contravention of s 184 of the Act was introduced in the
petition by several prefatory allegations:
"5. On 2 June 2010 the assistant electoral commissioner Ms Marie
Neilson on behalf of the AEC and pursuant to section 184(1) of the Act
revoked the previous approved form for postal vote applications made under Part
XV of the Act form EF 048 1/1020 [(sic) 1/2010] and made approved form EF 048
5/2010 which was duly gazetted in the Commonwealth Government Gazette
No 23
of 2010 on 16 June 2010 [referred to as the approved
form].
- On
17 July 2010 the First Respondent by her [(sic) his] servants or agents
forwarded by post or hand delivery to every residence in
the electoral division
of Lindsay with a view to electors in Lindsay receiving reading and being
influenced by electoral matter entitled
'To the
Householder':
Particulars
(a) Postal Voting Information for the electorate of Lindsay described as
'Important';
(b) A postal voting 'Hotline' which gave as the telephone number the electorate
office of the MHR for Lindsay;
(c) A simplified pictorial diagram of how to apply for a postal vote in 4 easy
steps;
(d) An adaptation of the approved form in duplicate;
(e) The Petitioner will after discovery and interrogatories contend that the
electoral matter included the Commonwealth coat of arms
as occurred in similar
material issued by or for other seats held in NSW by the Second Respondent or
its candidates.
(f) Part of the form was perforated.
[the whole is referred to as the adapted ALP form]
- Delivered
with each adapted ALP form was a pre-addressed pre-paid envelope containing the
address of the federal electorate office
of the MHR for Lindsay [the
envelope].
Invalid Votes/illegal practice
- Between
about 19 July 2010 and 19 August 2010 2504 persons who had received
the adapted ALP form influenced thereby apparently completed
one of the
duplicate sections of the form and then entrusted the application to the First
Respondent by either forwarding the said
section or the adapted ALP form to the
electorate office of the MHR for Lindsay in the envelope.
- At
the electorate office under the direction of the First Respondent or her [(sic)
his] servants or agents the ALP adapted form was
removed from the envelope, the
identity of the applicant recorded, and one portion of the duplicate section of
the form removed by
tearing the section from the ALP adapted form and collating
same into a bundle.
- Every
few days after 19 July 2010 the First Respondent her [(sic) his] servants
or agents delivered that part of the adapted ALP form
which contained one of the
duplicate sections to the DRO [referred to as the altered ALP form] and thereby
and purportedly on behalf
of the applicants named on each altered ALP form
applied for a postal vote in writing to the DRO."
Standing alone, these paragraphs of the petition alleged no contravention of
s 184 and the written submissions filed on behalf of Mr Green did not
suggest they did.
- Rather,
it was asserted, both in the petition and in the written submissions in support
of the grant of leave to issue the proceeding,
that the applications for a
postal vote the subject of Mr Green's petition were not in the approved
form referred to in s 184. More particularly, it was asserted in the
petition that the disputed forms were not in the approved form because they
contained
no "declaration duly attested that each applicant was an elector,
whether in the Division of Lindsay or for the Senate of New South
Wales or at
all, as required by the Act section 184(1)(a)".
- It
is evident, from a document tendered in support of the application for leave to
issue the proceeding as a copy of the disputed
application form, that the
disputed application form substantially followed the form approved under the Act
for use at the 2010 federal election. As was expressly permitted by
s 184AA(1) of the Act, the form was physically attached to, or formed part
of, other written material issued by another person or organisation.
- It
is important to identify what is meant when it is said that the form
substantially followed the approved form. Two differences can be
identified between the approved form and what is tendered in evidence as a copy
of the disputed form. First, under the heading "Eligibility for early voting",
the disputed form said that:
"You are eligible to vote before election day if, on election day, you can't get
to a polling place because you:
...
. are in prison or otherwise
detained".
The approved form gave as the relevant criterion being "in prison serving a
sentence of less than three years or otherwise detained".
- The
second difference is that at the foot of the approved form there is printed, in
very small type, "EF048 05/2010" whereas on the
disputed form there appears, in
equally small type, "EF048 01/2010".
- The
better view of the petition may be that it alleged no more than that there was a
contravention of s 184 because the disputed form contained no declaration
that the applicant for a postal vote was an elector. If that is how the
petition
should be read, it discloses no arguable contravention of
s 184(1). Neither the approved form nor the disputed form provided for any
express declaration in the terms alleged. Both forms required
an applicant to
declare only that he or she was "entitled to apply for a postal vote". The
instructions on the form in each case
asked applicants to "read the information
on eligibility before you sign this declaration" and warned that there is a
penalty for
making a false statement.
- Read
in the context of the whole form, which included, in each case, not only the
instructions referred to above, but also a requirement
to state the applicant's
"enrolled address", the declaration to be made in the disputed form (as it was
in the approved form) –
that the applicant was "entitled to apply for a
postal vote" – was, as s 184(1)(a) required, "a declaration by the
applicant that he or she is an elector entitled to apply for a postal vote". It
is not arguable
that there was a contravention of s 184(1) on this
account.
- If,
however, the petition is to be read as alleging contravention of s 184 on
account of either of the two differences between the two forms that have been
identified, it still disclosed no case fit to go
to trial.
- No
direct and express reference was made in the petition, in the written
submissions or, so far as the reasons of Emmett J reveal,
in the
proceedings in the Federal Court to either of the differences that have been
identified. (All that was said in the petition
was, in effect, that the
disputed form did not state accurately the qualifications for eligibility for a
postal vote.) No fact was
alleged in the petition, and no argument was advanced
in support of the application for leave to issue, that would show how, or why,
stating (in effect) that any person in prison (as distinct from those
prisoners serving a sentence of less than three years) was eligible for a postal
vote had
any effect on the outcome of the election which it is sought to
dispute. If, as Mr Green contended in the petition, none of the
disputed
postal votes should have been counted, no fact was alleged, as required by
ss 355(a) and 362(3), that showed that the result of the election was
likely to be affected, or that it would be just that Mr Bradbury should be
declared
not to be duly elected or that the election should be declared void.
For these reasons and for the reasons given by Emmett J it
follows that,
even if the petition is read as making the point now under consideration, the
petition disclosed no case fit to go
to trial. And any complaint about the
difference between reference numbers printed at the foot of the form should for
the same reasons
be dismissed from further consideration.
Section 327
- Mr Green
submitted that the petition alleged, in par 21, matters which fall within
the provisions of s 327(1) concerning undue influence. It will be recalled
that Emmett J
concluded[22]
that, although the petition made general allegations that false representations
were made in connection with postal vote applications
which hindered or
interfered with the right or duty of the persons who made the applications to
vote at the election, those allegations
were not stated in sufficient detail to
meet the requirements of s 355(a) or s 355(aa). The particulars given
in the petition of the allegation of contravention of s 327(1) were:
"(a) The First Respondent represented to the householders and electors of
Lindsay that the adapted ALP form was an approved form
of application for a
postal vote which was in error and misleading or deceptive or confusing and
likely to mislead or deceive the
recipient of the said electoral material;
(b) The First Respondent represented to the householders and electors of Lindsay
that the adapted ALP form was an effectual form
of application for a valid
postal vote which was in error and misleading or deceptive or confusing and
likely to mislead or deceive
the recipient of the said electoral material;
(c) The First Respondent represented to the applicants for a postal vote
receiving the ALP form that in the circumstances in which
it was issued that the
adapted ALP form was issued with the approval of the Commonwealth or was an
official document in relation
to postal voting and the election in Lindsay or
that the First Respondent was properly affiliated with or associated with the
Commonwealth
and/or the AEC which was in error and misleading or deceptive and
confusing or likely to mislead or deceive the recipient of the
said electoral
material;
(d) The First Respondent represented to the applicants for a postal vote
receiving the adapted ALP form that the First Respondent
had the right to the
use of the Commonwealth coat of arms which official marks were not approved for
use by the First Respondent
in the election campaign in Lindsay by the grantor
of the said coat of arms or by any protocol of the Commonwealth or at all such
that the use of the said official marks and coat of arms was misleading or
deceptive and confusing or likely to mislead or deceive
the recipient of the
said electoral material;
(e) The First Respondent represented to the householders and electors of Lindsay
that the information provided to electors by the
'Voting Hotline' was as equally
independent and informative and accurate as that of the AEC, which was confusing
in the context of
the electoral material and the misuse of the approved form in
the adapted ALP form and which was in error and misleading or deceptive
or
likely to mislead or deceive the recipient of the said electoral material;
(f) The First Respondent represented to the householders and electors of Lindsay
that the First Respondent was lawfully entitled
to use the electorate office
facilities as the First Respondent's campaign office and the office contact
details and facilities as
a 'Voting Hotline' and that the electoral material
including the adapted ALP form and envelope were properly and lawfully funded
publicly or paid for by the Commonwealth which was in error or confusing and
misleading or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive
the recipient of the
said electoral material;
(g) The First Respondent represented to the householders and electors of Lindsay
that an application for a postal vote entrusted
to the First Respondent or a
communication made to the MHR for Lindsay's electorate office would be treated
as if it were received
by the AEC which was in error or confusing and misleading
or deceptive or likely to mislead or deceive the recipient of the said
electoral
material.
(h) The First Respondent misrepresented to the electors the grounds of
eligibility for obtaining a postal vote and the entitlement
to obtain a postal
vote in the adapted ALP form.
(i) As a consequence of each such representation and / or taken together the
electors and applicants were hindered or interfered
with the free exercise or
performance of political right or duty relevant to the
election."
- I
consider that the conclusions reached by Emmett J about the insufficiency
of the allegations of contravention of s 327(1) are not attended by doubt.
It is as well, however, to go on to make some further points about this aspect
of the petition.
- First,
to the extent that the particulars allege that the disputed forms of application
for postal vote were not in a form that complied
with s 184(1), I have already
rejected that allegation.
- Second,
to the extent that the particulars allege that there was some unauthorised use
of the Commonwealth coat of arms, it is enough
to notice that the form tendered
by Mr Green as a copy of the disputed forms of application does not bear
the Commonwealth coat of
arms.
- Third,
to the extent to which the particulars complain of material that was attached to
the disputed form of application (such as
reference to a "Voting Hotline"), it
is to be recalled that s 184AA expressly allows for an application for a
postal vote to be physically attached to or form part of other written material
issued
by any person or organisation.
- Fourth,
the form tendered as a copy of the disputed form does not, on its face, make any
of the several representations alleged.
- The
claim of contravention of s 327, as that claim is made and particularised
in the petition, is not arguable. As Emmett J rightly concluded, further
allegations of
fact would be necessary to reveal an arguable case. For the
reasons his Honour gave, it was, at the time of the proceedings before
Emmett J, too late to seek to add such allegations even if, contrary to the
fact, it had been argued or demonstrated that such allegations
were open.
Error or omission by the DRO
- Mr Green
submitted that the petition had alleged, in pars 11, 15, 17 and 19, errors
or omissions by the DRO. Each of those allegations
depended (in some cases
explicitly, in others implicitly) upon establishing that applications for postal
votes made on the disputed
forms were invalid. For the reasons already given,
that premise cannot be established.
Other proposed grounds
- No
written submission was advanced in support of either ground 12 or ground 13 in
the proposed application for an order to show cause.
If it is intended that
those grounds would be pressed, it is enough to say that the material filed
shows no arguable ground of jurisdictional
error by Emmett J.
- No
ground in the proposed application for an order to show cause deals expressly
with the question of the validity of s 368 of the
Act[23] which
it is now sought to agitate in this Court. In the written submissions, it was
said, in effect, that s 368 cannot oust this Court's jurisdiction under
s 75(v) of the Constitution. So much may readily be accepted. But if it
is, no question of the validity of s 368 would fall for consideration if
leave to issue
the proposed application were granted.
Conclusion and order
- Having
regard to what has been said about the petition, it is not arguable that
Emmett J made any of the errors alleged in the proposed
application for an
order to show cause that, if established, would be a jurisdictional error
entitling the applicant to relief of
the kind which he seeks to claim in this
Court. The question of validity of s 368 which the applicant now seeks to
raise would not
arise if leave to issue the application were granted. There
being no real question to be determined, leave to issue the proposed
application
is refused.
[1] Green v Bradbury [2011] FCA
71.
[2] [1949] HCA 1; (1949) 78 CLR 62 at 91; [1949] HCA
1.
[3] s 363A.
[4] [2011] FCA 71 at [64].
[5] [2011] FCA 71 at [64].
[6] Section 327(1) of the Act provides
that:
"A person shall not hinder or interfere with the free exercise or
performance, by any other person, of any political right or duty
that is
relevant to an election under this Act.
Penalty: $1000 or imprisonment for 6 months, or both."
[7] [2011] FCA 71 at [37].
[8] [2011] FCA 71 at [38].
[9] [2011] FCA 71 at [38].
[10] [2011] FCA 71 at [38].
[11] [2011] FCA 71 at [41],
[45].
[12] [2011] FCA 71 at [45]- [47].
[13] [2011] FCA 71 at [47].
[14] [2011] FCA 71 at [48],
[51].
[15] [2011] FCA 71 at [50].
[16] [2011] FCA 71 at [51].
[17] [2011] FCA 71 at [51].
[18] [2011] FCA 71 at [52].
[19] [2011] FCA 71 at [53].
[20] [2011] FCA 71 at [54]- [55].
[21] [2011] FCA 71 at [56].
[22] [2011] FCA 71 at [50].
[23] Section 368 provides:
"All decisions of the Court [of Disputed Returns] shall be final and conclusive
and without appeal, and shall not be questioned
in any way."
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