You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
High Court of Australia >>
2011 >>
[2011] HCA 54
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Roadshow Films Pty Ltd v iiNet Limited [2011] HCA 54 (30 November 2011)
Last Updated: 27 January 2012
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, CRENNAN AND KIEFEL JJ
ROADSHOW FILMS PTY LTD & ORS APPELLANTS
AND
IINET LIMITED RESPONDENT
Roadshow Films Pty Ltd v iiNet Limited [2011] HCA 54
30 November 2011
S288/2011
ORDER
- The
summons for intervention by the Australian Recording Industry Association
Limited be dismissed.
- The
summons for leave to be heard as amicus curiae by the Media, Entertainment and
Arts Alliance and the Screen Actors Guild be dismissed.
- Leave
be given to the Australasian Performing Right Association Limited to be heard as
amicus curiae only to the extent that its submissions
do not duplicate the
submissions of a party.
- The
summons for leave to be heard as amicus curiae by the Australian Privacy
Foundation be dismissed.
- Leave
be granted to the Communications Alliance Limited to be heard as amicus curiae
only to the extent that its submissions do not
duplicate the submissions of a
party.
- The
summons for intervention and for leave to be heard as amicus curiae by the
Australian Digital Alliance Ltd be dismissed.
On appeal from the Federal Court of Australia
Representation
A J L Bannon SC with J M Hennessy SC and C Dimitriadis for the appellants
(instructed by Gilbert + Tobin Lawyers)
R Cobden SC with R P L Lancaster SC and C J Burgess for the respondent
(instructed by Herbert Geer Lawyers)
Interveners
M J Leeming SC seeking leave to appear as amicus curiae on behalf of the
Australasian Performing Right Association Limited (instructed
by Banki Haddock
Fiora)
C A Moore SC seeking leave to intervene on behalf of the Australian Recording
Industry Association Limited (instructed by Allens
Arthur Robinson
Lawyers)
M R Hall seeking leave to appear as amicus curiae on behalf of the Media,
Entertainment and Arts Alliance and Screen Actors Guild
(instructed by Banki
Haddock Fiora)
E J C Heerey seeking leave to intervene or to appear as amicus curiae on behalf
of the Australian Digital Alliance Ltd (instructed
by Australian Digital
Alliance Ltd)
P W Flynn seeking leave to intervene or to appear as amicus curiae on behalf of
the Communications Alliance Limited (instructed by
Carwardine Legal
Solicitors)
No appearance for the Australian Privacy Foundation seeking leave to appear as
amicus curiae
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Roadshow Films Pty Ltd v iiNet Limited
High Court of Australia – Appellate jurisdiction – Procedure –
Interveners and amicus curiae – Whether leave
should be granted.
Words and phrases – "Court significantly assisted", "interests directly
affected".
- FRENCH
CJ, GUMMOW, HAYNE, CRENNAN AND KIEFEL JJ. There are before the Court six
summonses. The Australian Recording Industry Association
Limited ("ARIA") seeks
leave to intervene to make submissions to the Court in support of the appeal.
The Media, Entertainment and
Arts Alliance, jointly with the Screen Actors Guild
("the Guild"), applies for leave to intervene as an amicus curiae. So, too,
do
the Australasian Performing Right Association Limited ("APRA") and the
Australian Privacy Foundation ("the Privacy Foundation").
The Communications
Alliance Limited ("the Communications Alliance") and the Australian Digital
Alliance Ltd ("the Digital Alliance")
each seeks leave to be heard as amicus
curiae and, alternatively, leave to intervene.
- In
determining whether to allow a non-party intervention the following
considerations, reflected in the observations of Brennan CJ
in Levy v
Victoria[1],
are relevant. A non-party whose interests would be directly affected by a
decision in the proceeding, that is one who would be
bound by the decision, is
entitled to intervene to protect the interest likely to be affected. A
non-party whose legal interest,
for example, in other pending litigation is
likely to be affected substantially by the outcome of the proceedings in this
Court will
satisfy a precondition for leave to intervene. Intervention will not
ordinarily be supported by an indirect or contingent affection
of legal
interests following from the extra-curial operation of the principles enunciated
in the decision of the Court or their effect
upon future litigation.
- Where
a person having the necessary legal interest can show that the parties to the
particular proceedings may not present fully
the submissions on a particular
issue, being submissions which the Court should have to assist it to reach a
correct determination,
the Court may exercise its jurisdiction by granting leave
to intervene, albeit subject to such limitations and conditions as to costs
as
between all parties as it sees fit to impose.
- The
grant of leave for a person to be heard as an amicus curiae is not dependent
upon the same conditions in relation to legal interest
as the grant of leave to
intervene. The Court will need to be satisfied, however, that it will be
significantly assisted by the
submissions of the amicus and that any costs to
the parties or any delay consequent on agreeing to hear the amicus is not
disproportionate
to the expected assistance.
- None
of the applicants for leave to intervene demonstrates that any identified legal
interest of that applicant will be directly
affected by the outcome of this
case. It follows that none of those applicants shows that it has a right to
intervene in these proceedings.
- In
considering whether any applicant should have leave to intervene in order to
make submissions or to make submissions as amicus
curiae, it is necessary to
consider not only whether some legal interests of the applicant may be
indirectly affected but also, and
in this case critically, whether the applicant
will make submissions which the Court should have to assist it to reach a
correct
determination. Ordinarily then, in cases like the present where the
parties are large organisations represented by experienced lawyers,
applications
for leave to intervene or to make submissions as amicus curiae should seldom be
necessary or appropriate and if such
applications are made it would ordinarily
be expected that the applicant will identify with some particularity what it is
that the
applicant seeks to add to the arguments that the parties will
advance.
- In
this case, the Court is of the opinion that:
- The
summons for intervention by ARIA should be dismissed on the basis that its legal
interests and those of its non-party members
are not directly affected by these
proceedings and that the matters it seeks to raise in these proceedings are
unlikely to add to
the submissions made by the parties.
- The
summons for leave to be heard as amicus curiae filed by the Media, Entertainment
and Arts Alliance and the Guild should be dismissed
on the basis that the
matters they seek to raise are unlikely to add to the submissions made by the
parties.
- Leave
should be given to APRA to be heard as an amicus curiae on the basis that its
submissions may assist the Court in respect of
matters not fully argued in the
parties' submissions.
- The
summons for leave to be heard as an amicus curiae by the Privacy Foundation
should be dismissed on the basis that its submissions
are not sufficiently
relevant to the matters which the Court has to decide.
- Leave
should be given to the Communications Alliance to be heard as an amicus curiae
on the basis that its submissions may assist
the Court in respect of matters not
fully covered in the parties' submissions.
- The
summons for intervention and for leave to be heard as amicus curiae by the
Digital Alliance should be dismissed on the basis that
its legal interests and
those of its non-party members are not directly affected by these proceedings
and that the matters it seeks
to raise in these proceedings are unlikely to add
to the submissions made by the parties.
The applicants that have leave to be heard have leave only to the extent that
the submissions of the applicant do not duplicate the
submissions of a
party.
[1] (1997) 189 CLR 579 at 600-605;
[1997] HCA 31.
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2011/54.html