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Australian Competition & Consumer Commission v Jones (No 4) [2010] FCA 909 (17 August 2010)
Last Updated: 25 August 2010
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Australian Competition & Consumer
Commission v Jones (No 4) [2010] FCA 909
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Citation:
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Australian Competition & Consumer Commission v Jones (No 4) [2010] FCA
909
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Parties:
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AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION & CONSUMER
COMMISSION v DARRYL PETER JONES
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File number:
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QUD 54 of 2010
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Judge:
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LOGAN J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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CONTEMPT OF COURT – Where respondent
found guilty of contempts in respect of interlocutory orders – Sentence to
be imposed – Consideration
of the Court’s powers of punishment for
contempt – Consideration of the Court’s powers of punishment for
contempt
for breaches of interlocutory orders – Consideration of
Court’s powers to suspend sentences punishing contempts
Held: Court may impose sentences for contempts relating to
interlocutory orders and may order suspended sentences
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Brisbane
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Applicant:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Australian Government Solicitor
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Mr B Levet
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Kinghan & Associates
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION & CONSUMER
COMMISSIONApplicant
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AND:
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DARRYL PETER
JONESRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- In
respect of paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the Order made 17 August 2010 and subject to
paragraphs 6 and 8 of the Order made 17 August
2010 the Respondent be imprisoned
for a period of six months commencing today, with the first month being served
in any event, with
each period of imprisonment to be served concurrently.
- The
balance of the sentence referred to in paragraph 5 of the Order made 17 August
2010 will be suspended for the period referred
to below from execution upon the
basis that:
2.1 The Respondent not, whether by himself or his
servants or agents or otherwise howsoever, in trade or commerce, make any
representation
to the effect that the occurrence or growth of cancer or any
medical condition can be prevented or successfully treated by any means
whatsoever unless the Respondent:
2.1.1 first has obtained:
2.1.1.1 from a person then registered with a medical practitioners board to
practise medicine in Australia; or
2.1.1.2 from a professor, associate professor, reader, senior lecturer or
lecturer then teaching or researching in medicine at an
Australian
university;
written advice certifying that the proposed treatment is in the opinion of
that person supported by reliable scientific evidence or
expert medical opinion
and is believed to be effective and safe;
2.1.2 at the time of making the representation, prominently discloses details
of the said advice, including the name, qualifications
and position of the
person providing the said advice; and
2.1.3 retains a copy of the said advice and provides a copy of the same to
the applicant within 7 days of a him receiving the certificate.
2.2 The Respondent, at his own expense, cause a notice in the form of
Schedule A attached hereto to be published and to remain continuously
in place,
until further order, on the home page of the following websites:
2.2.1 www.darryljoneshealth.com.au;
2.2.2 any other website controlled, owned, operated or maintained by the
Respondent that, at the date of the principal application,
offers or promotes
goods or services associated with the treatment or prevention of cancer or any
other medical condition whatsoever;
and shall take all reasonable steps to ensure that such notice shall:
2.2.3 be a size that consists of at least 40% of the screen area;
2.2.4 be clearly viewable immediately on screen after the web page is
accessed;
2.2.5 not be blocked by a pop up blocker;
2.2.6 remain on screen until closed by the person accessing that website;
and
2.2.7 not require a further selection of hyperlinks or scrolling on the
screen to be seen.
- In
respect of paragraph 4 of the Order made 17 August 2010 the Respondent be
imprisoned for a period of one month commencing today
to be served concurrently
for the periods of imprisonment referred to in paragraph 1 of this Order.
- The
period of suspension of the periods of imprisonment referred to in paragraph 1
shall be the period of operation of the orders
made on 5 March 2010 and, upon
the expiry of that period, the obligation of the Respondent to serve the balance
of the periods of
imprisonment referred to in paragraph 1 shall cease.
- The
Respondent is to pay the Applicant’s costs of and incidental to the
application for contempt to be taxed and paid on an
indemnity basis.
- The
time for compliance with paragraph 3 of the Interlocutory Orders be extended for
a period of two months from the date of this
Order.
THE COURT
FURTHER ORDERS THAT:
- Leave
to dispense with any Notice of Motion for a stay of the Orders made today be
given.
8 Upon Mr Jones undertaking in writing to:
8.1 file an appeal against the convictions made by Order of His Honour
Justice Logan on 17 August 2010, by no later than close of
business on 20 August
2010;
8.2 prosecute the appeal diligently;
8.3 attend and surrender himself into the custody of the Court upon the
hearing of the appeal and further to abide the orders of the
Court on the
hearing of the appeal and its subsequent determination or further earlier
order;
the operation of the orders for imprisonment made today be stayed pending the
hearing and determination of any appeal against the
orders made today or further
earlier order.
9 Each party has liberty to apply in respect of the
stay.
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 Federal Law
Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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QUD 54 of 2010
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BETWEEN:
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AUSTRALIAN COMPETITION & CONSUMER
COMMISSION Applicant
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AND:
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DARRYL PETER JONES Respondent
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JUDGE:
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LOGAN J
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DATE:
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17 AUGUST 2010
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PLACE:
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BRISBANE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Background
- Orders
made by judges of this Court are not aspirational statements. The role of
courts exercising the judicial power of the Commonwealth
is to preserve the rule
of law within the Commonwealth. An order made by a superior court which may be
breached or ignored with
impunity is, in effect, no order at all. There is,
therefore, a very singular consideration which arises where a contempt
constituted
by a breach of a court order has been found. That consideration is
no less than the maintenance of the rule of law in our society.
That is no less
the case when the order concerned is not a final order in a proceeding but, as
in this case, an interlocutory order,
an order which necessarily entails in its
making no final conclusion as to where the merits of the case may ultimately
lie.
- The
reasons why I made orders on 5 March 2010 are apparent from the reasons for
judgment which I gave that day (see Australian Competition & Consumer
Commission v Jones [2010] FCA 105). Those orders, unless and until set
aside, had to be obeyed by Mr Jones. He was perfectly entitled to seek to
challenge those orders,
and did so. As it happened, that challenge was
unsuccessful (see Jones v Australian Competition & Consumer Commission
[2010] FCA 481). However, even while that challenge was subsisting and as
yet undetermined, while those orders were in place they had to be obeyed.
- In
this case, for reasons which I have given in the judgment which I delivered
earlier today (see Australian Competition & Consumer Commission v
Jones (No 3) [2010] FCA 908, particular orders made on 5 March 2010,
extended materially on 14 April 2010, were not obeyed by Mr
Jones.
General Sentencing Considerations?
- In
the reasons for judgment which I delivered earlier today I made reference to the
rationale for the law of contempt as it has been
stated in cases of high
authority. I shall not repeat those particular statements now. When it comes
to deciding a penalty to impose
in respect of a contempt, a number of
considerations intrude. These are helpfully gathered in a judgment of Spender J
in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v World Netsafe Pty Ltd
[2003] FCA 1501; (2003) 133 FCR 279, where, at [16], his Honour
stated:
Considerations which are relevant in deciding what is the appropriate penalty
include:
(a) The relative seriousness of the contempt, which is determined by the extent
to which the contemnor appreciated that a contempt
was being committed:
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Info4PC.com Pty Ltd
[2002] FCA 949; (2002) 121 FCR 24.
(b) Whether the contemnor subjectively intended to disobey the order:
Attorney-General v Times Newspapers Ltd [1992] 1 AC 191; Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission v Hughes [2001] FCA 38; [2001] ATPR 41-807; and
Info4PCCom.
(c) The importance of bringing home to the contemnor the seriousness of the
contempt: Hughes; Info4PCCom.
(d) Whether the contemnor has offered any explanation or apology for his
conduct: Gallagher v Durack [1983] HCA 2; (1983) 152 CLR 238, per Gibbs CJ, Mason,
Wilson and Brennan JJ at 245.
(e) An acknowledgment by the contemnor that a contempt was committed may be a
mitigating factor: Matthews.
Reference might also
usefully be made to considerations listed by Palmer J in Australian
Securities and Investments Commission v Michalik (No 2) [2004] NSWSC 1260; (2004) 62 NSWLR 335
at [29]. In Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Globex Systems
Pty Ltd (2005) FCA 550 at [59] and [60] it was observed that a contempt may
be technical where the contemnor has taken all reasonable steps to comply with
the Court’s
orders, notwithstanding which an unintentional breach has
occurred, or it may be willful, where the breach is something more than
casual,
accidental or unintentional.
Relative Seriousness of contempts found
- In
this case, though Mr Jones’ position was that particular breaches which I
have found occurred were unintended, that is not
the conclusion which I have
reached, for reasons given earlier today. Each of the contempts which I have
found to have been proved
I am satisfied was a deliberate contempt. Of those,
and as was frankly acknowledged on behalf of the Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission (ACCC), that related to the failure to provide the list with
all of the attendant information requirements is
the least serious of the
charges that I have found to have been proved. In making that observation I do
not wish to be regarded
as diminishing the seriousness of a failure to take
fully and seriously the obligation entailed by the orders which I made on 5
March
2010 in relation to the provision of a list with particular information to
the ACCC. It is just that, in a relative sense, it is
less serious than the
other two internet site related breaches.
- A
particular motivation in terms of the balance of convenience for the making of
the orders on 5 March 2010 was the protection of
the public in relation to a
matter of public health importance, pending the hearing and determination of the
substantive proceeding
brought by the ACCC. It was then, and remains, a matter
of concern to me that those in our community who are afflicted with cancer,
or
whose loved ones are so afflicted, not be placed in a position where, in
desperation, they take a particular course of conduct
based on representations
that are not backed by particular medical or other scientific opinion. That
sentiment is clear enough in
terms of the orders that I made on 5 March 2010
regulating, pending trial or further earlier order, the type of conduct in which
Mr Jones could engage. It was not the purpose of those orders to forbid him
from making particular representations, but rather to
forbid that without a
particular medical or other scientific foundation.
- In
two instances, one based on the Darryl Jones Health Resolution Centre (DJHRC)
website, the other on the Fellowship of Faith, Hope
and Healing (the Fellowship)
website, that particular regulation has been breached. Given that that conduct
touches on a matter
of public health, I regard it as very serious indeed. It
remains serious irrespective of what might be the ultimate outcome of the
substantive proceeding brought by the ACCC.
Background to Mr Jones’ conduct in contempt
- There
is a background to Mr Jones’ conduct, the subject of the contempt
proceeding, which, whilst the ACCC did not lead it
in terms of whether or not
the charges laid were proved, is relevant in relation to sentencing. That
conduct is related in an affidavit
of Mr Dallas which was read on the sentencing
proceeding. It transpires that, in September last year, before the institution
of
the present proceeding, Mr Jones came to send to the Australian Government
Solicitor (AGS) a letter responsive to earlier dealings
between him and the
ACCC. The letter is entitled “Re Cancer Cure Claims”. Materially
in that he states:
I will not, without giving 14 days prior written notice to the ACCC, make or
cause or permit to be made any representations to the
effect that the health
resolution program:
(1) Can cure cancer or reverse, stop or slow it progress;
(2) Will prolong the life of a person suffering cancer;
(3) Is supported by empirical scientific evidence;
(4) Is supported by generally accepted medical opinion;
(5) Can or will if used by a person who has cancer, cure that person’s
cancer or reverse, stop or slow its progress;
(6) Can or will, if used by a person who has cancer, prolong that person’s
life;
(7) Any other representation to the same purport or effect as any of the
representations referred to in paragraphs (1) to (5) above;
(8) Any other representations to the same purport or effect as any of the
representations referred to in paragraph (3) above.
[sic]
- What
I take from this particular letter is that Mr Jones was then well aware of the
intensity of scrutiny of his conduct by the ACCC.
It remains to be seen whether
or not the later instituted proceeding by the ACCC has any substantive merit. I
do not regard the
conduct alleged in that proceeding as proved. All that I make
of the letter is that there is a history of interest by the ACCC well
known to
Mr Jones in his conduct. To me it is an aggravating factor that in the face of
a knowledge of that interest, evident by
the response in the letter quoted,
nonetheless he has engaged in conduct in respect of each of the DJHRC website
and the Fellowship
website which amounts to a breach of court
orders.
Is desperation mitigation?
- There
were very able submissions made on behalf of Mr Jones as to another context in
which one might view those two website-related
behaviours. That was in effect
that his conduct related to desperation, having regard to the impact of
interlocutory orders made
on 5 March on his then existing business. I accept
that a sequel to those orders was that it became necessary for Mr Jones to wind
up, in effect, the business which he had hitherto been conducting. I accept
further that in so doing there was a financial sequel
and an adverse financial
sequel at that. It seems, and I accept, that he, as a consequence, had to
relinquish a residence and also
an investment property. I infer from the
submissions made to me that the income stream from the business was used to
service mortgage
debts in respect of each of those properties and that so doing
became either impossible or at least impractical once the business
came to be
wound up.
- There
may be other considerations in respect of unrelated proceedings which also
intrude on Mr Jones’ predicament. I do not
have details of these, but
merely note that it is not only the phenomenon of the proceeding instituted by
the ACCC which is relevant
to the situation in which Mr Jones finds himself at
present. I accept, though, that the ACCC’s proceeding have had a very
real impact on his financial situation. Accepting that does not amount to
condonation of the deliberate breach of court orders,
particularly when those
orders, as must have been known to Mr Jones by his presence in court on 5 March
2010, which have a public
health-related motivation.
Mr Jones’ Antecedents
- Mr
Jones comes to court as a person without prior convictions. He has led a life
of some 55 years’ duration without prior
convictions. He has six adult
children. He is not presently employed and his source of income at present is a
form of allowance
from the Commonwealth known as “Newstart
Allowance”.
- I
was informed, as with other matters concerning his antecedents without
objection, that he has minimal savings. Three of his adult
daughters had
hitherto been living with him at his North Coast residence. A sequel to his
having to relinquish that residence has
been that those daughters have had to
find alternative accommodation. There is, therefore, as part of the impact of
the proceeding,
a degree of separation of familial bonds. I take that into
account.
- I
was informed that Mr Jones has, since relinquishing his residence, led something
of an itinerant lifestyle, relying on the charity
of some of his former clients
or fellow believers. That charity has on occasion, though, not been sufficient
to provide him always
with a roof over his head. He has been forced, so I was
informed, to sleep in his car on occasion. That car is an old Holden which
is
not owned by him outright.
- Mr
Jones also faces debts of an unspecified nature in relation to his former
business. I was informed that those debts are such
that, taken in conjunction
with the income which he presently receives, he should be regarded as insolvent.
He has not as yet either
filed a debtor’s petition or otherwise been made
bankrupt. I accept, though, that he does not have the capacity to pay a fine.
Sentencing Powers
- The
powers that this Court has in respect of contempts that are proven have been
considered in a number of cases. Drummond J gave
a succinct summary of powers
which the court has in his judgment in Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission v Goldstar Corporation Pty Ltd [1998] FCA 1441 at p 2, where his
Honour noted that he had power, in addition to the power to impose a sentence of
imprisonment for contempt, to
suspend any such sentence on conditions. His
Honour continued:
In Lee v Walker, [1985] 1 All ER 781 the English Court of Appeal affirmed
the existence of the longstanding inherent or common law power, as it is
sometimes described,
of the English High Court to suspend committal orders made
in respect of contempts and to suspend those committal orders on conditions.
In
Morris v Crown Office [1972] 2 QB 114, the Master of the Rolls at 125
also discussed the common law power of the English High Court to postpone such a
sentence, to bind
over the contemnor to be of good behaviour and in other ways
to suspend the operation of a sentence of imprisonment for
contempt.
In AMIEU v Mudginberri Station Pty Ltd [1986] HCA 46; (1986) 161 CLR 98 at 114, in a
joint judgment of the Chief Justice and Mason, Wilson and Deane JJ, their
Honours referred to the wide-range of remedies
available to courts, including
this Court, to deal with persons in contempt of court, including contempt
constituted by failure to
comply with court orders. In
Macleod’s case, I considered that the AMIEU case, read with
the English authorities, demonstrated that the powers of this Court in respect
of punishment for contempt are wide
and in appropriate cases authorise the
imposition of consecutive sentences of imprisonment. For the same reasons,
I consider
that this Court’s power to punish for contempt includes power
to suspend on condition any sentence of imprisonment that it
might impose in
respect of contempt.
Appropriate Penalty
- Irrespective
of Mr Jones’ capacity to pay, I do not regard the present as a case where
a fine either by itself, or in addition
to any other order, would be
appropriate. That is so, particularly in relation to the two contempts
involving internet websites.
I regard these as contempts of such a gravity in
the circumstances as requiring, both for general and specific deterrence
purposes,
the imposition of a period of imprisonment.
- The
question becomes whether to suspend a sentence of imprisonment? The power so to
do is clear. That power was acknowledged on
behalf of the ACCC, and also in the
submissions made on behalf of Mr Jones.
- For
the ACCC, it was submitted that there was a range of imprisonment penalties that
was between six to nine months. It was submitted
that, against that range, a
suspension after serving one to three months would be appropriate. I note that
in the Goldstar case, Drummond J, by reference to his earlier judgment in
McLeod (No 3), was of the opinion that, in recent times, and that is now
a decade ago, that there existed a pattern of sentences in respect of
persons
guilty of serious contempts of court constituted by breaching court orders or
undertakings, being a pattern of orders for
imprisonment from two to six
months.
- The
ACCC supplemented its oral submissions with a schedule of comparative penalty
cases. I have directed that this schedule be placed
on the court file. I have
taken into account this schedule. It is possible to range more widely, but
ultimately, in my opinion,
to no more beneficial effect in terms of sentence
comparatives. That is so because, when all is said and done, each particular
case,
perhaps tritely, turns on its own singular facts. What I mean by that,
particularly in this context, is that unlike as in the case
with respect is some
federal criminal offences, and many state criminal offences, where the frequency
of their commission and the
circumstances of their commission are such that one
can discern a pattern of sentences it does not seem to me that there is any such
benefit to be gained in this case by resort to comparatives. There is truly, in
my opinion, in respect of the conduct which is the
subject of contempt findings
that I have made today, no pattern. All that I derive from the comparatives
provided is that it is
appropriate in respect of serious contempts for the power
of imprisonment to be exercised.
- The
length of imprisonment then depends wholly upon the circumstances of the
particular contempt. So, too, does the occasion for
whether the undoubted power
to suspend for a period imprisonment which has been ordered should be exercised.
- It
was put on behalf of Mr Jones that that suspension power should be exercised in
a way that led to either imprisonment for the
rising of the Court, in effect, no
imprisonment at all, or suspension, such that a warrant was, as in
Goldstar, left to lie in the registry, and so that the practical effect
of the court order was wholly to suspend a period of imprisonment.
- I
acknowledge that these are options in theory, but they do not, in my opinion,
meet the gravity of the particular circumstances
of the breaches which I have
found.
- In
taking into account then the imprisonment which I believe I am duty bound to
order in the circumstances of this case, there is
though a relevant
consideration highlighted neatly in the submissions made on behalf of Mr Jones.
It was put that, though the mitigation
attendant necessarily in a plea of guilty
was not present, there nonetheless had been a demonstrable cooperation with the
administration
of justice in terms of the way in which the defence was
conducted. That was that the ACCC’s case had not been the subject
of
particular challenge on cross-examination to a very large extent indeed. In
other words, whilst there had been particular submissions
on matters of law put,
and whilst Mr Jones had given evidence and submissions were made on the strength
of that, the ACCC’s
witnesses, either those who gave evidence by affidavit
or, in Mr Greenwood’s case, orally, had not been the subject of
cross-examination.
- The
point of that submission was that the course taken by Mr Jones had led to a
great saving in terms of court time. I am prepared
to accept that the way in
which the defence was conducted did result in a saving of court time. It did
not, of course, result in
obviating the need for the ACCC to go to the extent of
proving its case by affidavit evidence. Nonetheless, I do take the conduct
of
the defence into account as a mitigating factor.
- There
has also been, again highlighted in the submissions made on behalf of Mr Jones,
a degree, perhaps a slight degree, but it is
a degree which I acknowledge, of
cooperation, in the sense that there were particular acknowledgments of conduct,
albeit coupled
with a particular reservation in respect of alleged unintended
transgression. That particular reservation though carried with it,
if the ACCC
did not, as it patently did not accept it, a need for the ACCC to lead a very
considerable body of evidence.
- One
issue which was canvassed in submissions, in the context of the making of an
order wholly or partly suspending the period of
imprisonment, was the duration
of any suspension. Unlike other cases where a contempt has occurred after
making of final orders,
this is a case where the contempts which have been
proved relate to an interlocutory order. Neither counsel was able to direct me
to a particular example of a suspension of imprisonment which had occurred in
the context of a breach of interlocutory orders, nor
have my own researches
revealed such a case.
- In
terms of principle, it seems to me that any suspension of imprisonment for
breach of an interlocutory order ought not run for
longer than the duration of
that order. Were the duration of suspension longer, it would intrude upon final
orders, if they come
to be made. It seems to me that any question of whether a
final order is breached and, if so, the penalty ought to be judged by
reference
to that final order, rather than additionally by the triggering of an earlier,
interlocutory order related, suspended sentence.
That is not to say that, were
a final order breached, it would not be relevant to take into account that
someone had already been
convicted of an earlier contempt constituted by a
breach of an interlocutory order, just that the interlocutory order related
sentence
ought to be regarded as self contained. I particularly hold that view
because it is yet to be determined in this proceeding whether
or not Mr Jones
has engaged in the conduct alleged in the substantive proceeding.
- It
is possible to find examples, and Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission v Levi (No 3) [2008] ATPR 42-257 is one, of cases where
conditions have been imposed in respect of a suspension which relate to
particular conduct. Here, there are
subsisting orders in respect of conduct;
orders that have been breached. The only condition that I have in mind would
relate to
the existing orders themselves. In other words, whilst I can see a
need to replicate these conditions, I do not propose to go outside
the existing
conditions by imposing fresh conditions which would travel to conduct which
might become the subject of a separate interlocutory
application in respect of
separate conduct.
- Other
conditions which other judges have been disposed to make have related to not
breaching the terms of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) generally.
That though, in my opinion, is more appropriate in respect of a suspension of
final orders.
- The
questions then become, having regard to the matters I have mentioned, what
particular period of imprisonment ought to be imposed,
and whether or not the
period of imprisonment should be suspended in whole or in part, and, if
suspended, then on conditions that
I have mentioned?
Sentences
- The
view I have reached is that, in respect of each of the internet related
contempts, there ought to be imposed, and I do impose,
a period of imprisonment
of six months.
- In
respect of the breach constituted by the failure to provide a list, I order that
Mr Jones be imprisoned for one month.
- Each
of those periods of imprisonment is to be served concurrently.
- As
to the internet related breaches, I order that each of those be suspended after
Mr Jones has served one month’s imprisonment.
The suspension will be on
terms which replicate the terms of para 1 and para 2 of the orders that were
made on 5 March 2010. The
orders of imprisonment will take effect on and from
today.
- I
have considered whether to make a condition in respect of the Fellowship
website, but in the end, have decided that it is likely,
in light of the orders
made today, that there will not be a repetition by Mr Jones warranting the
making of a discrete condition.
And in any event, the “or otherwise
howsoever” quality of para 1 ought to be pellucidly clear by now to Mr
Jones.
Costs
- There
remains a question in relation to costs. It is apparent from the cases that the
usual order in respect of a contempt application
in respect of costs is to order
that the costs be paid by the respondent contemnor on an indemnity basis. It
was not submitted otherwise
on behalf of Mr Jones, although his particular
financial circumstances were noted. That is not, in my opinion, a basis for
declining
to make a costs order on the application of the ACCC to which the ACCC
would otherwise be entitled.
- I
have taken into account, in relation to costs, whether there ought to be some
discounting, if only on a robust percentage basis,
referable to particular
charges in respect of which the ACCC did not succeed. On balance though, the
case has not been elongated
at all by the ACCC’s failure to succeed in
respect of each of its charges. Further, there was, as I have indicated earlier
today, a basis upon which they might reasonably have been brought, even though I
have not regarded them as proved beyond reasonable
doubt.
- In
the circumstances, the order that I make in respect of costs is that Mr Jones
pay the ACCC’s costs of and incidental to
the application for contempt, to
be taxed and paid on an indemnity basis.
Remand
- Mr
Jones will be remanded in custody for the present to await the formal drawing up
of the warrant for committal.
Application for Stay
- The
orders that I make in respect of the stay application, and I expressly dispense
with a need for any written notice of motion
in that regard, are that upon Mr
Jones undertaking in writing to attend and surrender himself into the custody of
the Court upon
the hearing of the appeal, and further to abide the orders of the
court on the hearing of the appeal and its subsequent determination,
or further
earlier order, I stay the operation of the order of imprisonment made today.
The result of that will be that Mr Jones
will have to attend at the hearing of
the appeal, and then his subsequent disposition will be by the order of the
Court that hears
the appeal, or such further earlier order as the Court might
make. I further order that each party have liberty to apply in respect
of that
suspension.
- Pending
the execution of the undertaking, I will order that Mr Jones remain in the
custody of the Court, and that he attend, in company
with the officers of the
Australian Federal Police (present in Court), at Level 6 of the Court, and
remain there until such time
as he has executed the undertaking that I have
required of him.
|
I certify that the preceding forty-two (42) numbered paragraphs are a true
copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable
Justice Logan.
|
Associate:
Dated: 25 August 2010
SCHEDULE A
COURT RESTRAINS TEMPORARILY DARRYL JONES FROM MAKING CANCER TREATMENT CLAIMS
The
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has instituted proceedings
in the Federal Court of Australia against Darryl
Jones alleging that certain of
his representations are misleading or deceptive under the Trade Practices Act
1974 (the TPA).
On 5 March 2010 the Federal Court of Australia issued interim injunctions in
relation to cancer treatment claims promoted by Mr Jones
under The Darryl Jones
Health Resolution Centre Program.
Those injunctions can be found at
www.fedcourt.gov.au/ecourt/ecourt_esearch_slide2.html and remain in effect until
such time as the
Court makes further orders.
Those injunctions restrain Mr Jones, until further order of the Court, from
making any claims that treatments can prevent the occurrence
or treat the growth
of cancer or any medical condition unless he has first obtained written medical
or scientific advice to support
that claim.
The ACCC urges anyone who is suffering from cancer, or who wishes to take
steps to prevent it, to seek advice from a suitably qualified
medical
practitioner.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2010/909.html