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High Court of Australia |
LANYON PTY. LTD. v. THE COMMONWEALTH. [1974] HCA 11; (1974) 129 CLR 650
Evidence
High Court of Australia.
Menzies J.(1)
CATCHWORDS
Evidence - Subpoena duces tecum - Privilege - Documents in possession of Commonwealth - Cabinet papers and documents preparatory to cabinet's decision - Claim of privilege - Opinion of Minister that in public interest the documents ought not to be produced - Whether Court should inspect documents to satisfy itself upon claim to privilege.
HEARING
Sydney, 1974, April 4. 4:4:1974DECISION
April 4."Some time ago you left with me a document described as
'A proposal for development presented by Lanyon Pty.
Limited to the Federal Government'. I understand that you
wished me to examine this document with a view to stating
the Commonwealth's attitude to the proposals set out therein.
The document has been carefully examined. However, it
has been decided that any development of the area involved
will be by the Commonwealth.
I must therefore advise you that the Government has
decided that the freehold land in the area should be acquired
by the Commonwealth under the Lands Acquisition Act.
Having regard to the requirements under that Act I am
forwarding herewith a Notice to Treat." (at p652)
2. The decision so conveyed was, it appears, a cabinet decision which
involved policy considerations including the question whether
or not private
development of freehold land in the Australian Capital Territory for sale in
subdivision should be permitted. (at
p652)
3. The plaintiff seeks the production of the documents which came into
existence in the course of the examination of its request
leading to the
decision already stated, including all minutes of cabinet and of committees
and sub-committees of cabinet. (at p652)
4. Three subpoenas have been issued:
1. to the Minister, the Department of the Capital Territory, seeking copies
and originals of all correspondence, reports and documents
and all minutes of
cabinet and committees and sub-committees of cabinet relating to the proposal
which the plaintiff submitted;
2. to the secretary of the cabinet seeking the production of the same
documents as in 1;
3. to the National Capital Development Commission seeking copies and
originals of all correspondence, reports, documents and minutes
relating to
the proposed development. (at p653)
5. To each subpoena a claim for Crown privilege has been made, supported as
to the first subpoena by an affidavit of the Minister
of State for the Capital
Territory, as to the second by an affidavit of the secretary to cabinet, and
as to the third by the Minister
of State for Urban and Regional Development to
whom the administration of the National Capital Development Commission Act is
committed.
In each case it has been sworn that it is the opinion of the
deponent that on grounds of public interest the documents sought ought
not to
be produced. (at p653)
6. The central problem is, as I see it, whether I should - without
examination of the documents covered by the subpoenas - uphold
the claim for
privilege for documents of a particular class or classes which may be
described as documents brought into existence
within government departments
and instrumentalities for consideration in formulating a submission to cabinet
and recording the decision
of cabinet, its committees or sub-committees
thereon. (at p653)
7. I have decided that I should. (at p653)
8. The basis upon which I do so may not be precisely that taken in the
affidavits claiming privilege. It is that the governmental
process directed
to obtaining a cabinet decision upon a matter of policy and cabinet's decision
upon that matter should not, in the
public interest, be disclosed by the
production of cabinet papers including what I would describe as papers which
have been brought
into existence within the governmental organization for the
purpose of preparing a submission to cabinet. Such papers belong to
a class
of documents that, in my opinion, are of a nature that ought not to be
examined by the Court, except, it may be, in very
special circumstances.
There are no such circumstances here. (at p653)
9. Accordingly, I uphold the claim for privilege.
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