You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
High Court of Australia >>
2009 >>
[2009] HCA 7
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Parker v Comptroller-General of Customs [2009] HCA 7 (12 February 2009)
Last Updated: 12 February 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FRENCH CJ,
GUMMOW, HAYNE, HEYDON AND KIEFEL JJ
STEPHEN EDWARD PARKER APPELLANT
AND
COMPTROLLER-GENERAL OF CUSTOMS RESPONDENT
Parker v Comptroller-General of Customs [2009] HCA 7
12 February 2009
S317/2008
ORDER
Appeal dismissed with costs.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of New South Wales
Representation
J T Gleeson SC with M J Darke and D A Lloyd for the appellant (instructed by
Yeldham Price O'Brien Lusk)
D J Fagan SC with G M Elliott for the respondent (instructed by Australian
Government Solicitor)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Parker v Comptroller-General of Customs
Practice and procedure – Appeals – Procedural fairness –
Respondent issued a warrant under s 214 of Customs Act 1901 (Cth)
authorising seizure of documents relating to single bottle of brandy –
Officers of respondent seized documents relating
to "other goods" imported
within previous five years – District Court decided in In the matter of
the appeal of Lawrence Charles O'Neill (unreported, District Court of New
South Wales, 18 August 1988) that warrants issued under s 214 did not
permit seizure
of five year documents – Court of Appeal decided
O'Neill "mistaken" without affording appellant opportunity to make
submissions – Whether appellant denied procedural fairness
in Court
of Appeal – Scope of principles respecting procedural fairness in curial
proceedings – Whether appellate court
required to afford parties
opportunity to be heard on non-binding decision.
Practice and procedure – Appeals – Procedural fairness – Court
of Appeal went on to decide appeal on footing O'Neill correct –
Whether lack of opportunity to make submissions with respect to O'Neill
caused prejudice to appellant and affected outcome in Court of
Appeal.
Evidence – Illegally or improperly obtained evidence – Evidence
Act 1995 (NSW) ("Evidence Act"), s 138 – Respondent admitted
condition precedent to execution of warrant not satisfied – Whether wilful
disregard of Act in
execution of warrant – Whether additional fact of
seizure of five year documents relevant to exercise of discretion under
s 138.
Practice and procedure – Appeals – Procedural fairness –
Function of appellate court upon review of exercise by
trial judge of discretion
under s 138 of Evidence Act.
Words and phrases – "procedural fairness", "relating to the goods", "the
goods".
Customs Act 1901 (Cth), s 214, Sched V.
Evidence Act 1995 (NSW), s 138.
FRENCH CJ.
Introduction
- On
30 July 1992 the Comptroller-General of Customs commenced proceedings in
the Supreme Court of New South Wales against the
appellant, Stephen Edward
Parker, two companies, Lawpark Pty Ltd ("Lawpark") and Breven Pty Ltd ("Breven")
and another individual,
Gary Thomas Lawler. The proceedings arose, inter alia,
out of alleged offences against the Customs Act 1901 (Cth) ("the Customs
Act") involving unauthorised movement of goods from a bond warehouse and the
evasion of duty payable under the Customs Act. The offences were said to have
been committed between 1 August 1987 and 31 May 1990.
- The
background to the charges against Mr Parker was an inquiry undertaken
between 1987 and 1989 by officers of the Australian
Customs Service ("Customs")
into suspected contraventions of the Spirits Act 1906 (Cth) ("the Spirits
Act") and the Customs Act. The investigators formed the opinion that some
importers of brandy had, before bottling and selling the imported product, been
mixing it with a grain-based alcohol, produced in Australia, on which duty had
not been paid. The primary targets of the inquiry
were Lawpark, which imported
and distributed spirits, Kingswood Distillery Pty Ltd ("Kingswood Distillery"),
which manufactured and
processed spirits in Australia, and Breven, which owned a
bond store where imported spirits were warehoused without incurring any
liability to pay duty. Mr Parker was a director and shareholder of Lawpark
and Breven.
- On
6 March 1990, Customs officers went to a number of premises and, relying
upon notices to produce issued under s 214
of the Customs Act and
reg 171 of the Customs Regulations, required the production of books and
documents. They took the view that the requirements
were not met. They then
undertook compulsory searches and seizures relying upon warrants issued under
s 214. Following examination
of the documents obtained from their searches
a number of charges were laid under the Customs Act including those against
Mr Parker. Those against Mr Parker related to the unauthorised
removal of imported Scotch whisky
from the Breven warehouse and the evasion of
duty payable in relation to the whisky.
- The
proceedings against Mr Parker came on for hearing in the Supreme Court of
New South Wales in April 2005. By then he was
the only remaining defendant.
The extraordinary delay was in part the result of a stay of proceedings ordered
on 10 June 1994.
By the time of the trial the Spirits Act and the
provisions of the Customs Act under which the documents had been seized had been
repealed. Proceedings against each of the other defendants had been
concluded.
- The
Comptroller-General[1]
sought orders that Mr Parker be convicted of offences contrary to
s 33(1) and s 234(1)(a) of the Customs Act. He also sought
orders for the recovery of penalties and for the payment of unpaid
duty[2]. He made
an averment of all pleaded facts under s 255 of the Customs Act.
Mr Parker did not give evidence himself and did not adduce evidence in his
defence.
- The
Comptroller-General tendered a body of documentary evidence at the trial. The
documents had been seized from Lawpark's premises
at Wetherill Park in New South
Wales. Their admissibility was challenged under s 138 of the Evidence
Act 1995 (NSW) ("the Evidence Act") on the basis that they had been obtained
improperly and/or in contravention of an Australian law. It was said, inter
alia, that
the statutory power to search for and seize the relevant documents
had not been enlivened because a condition precedent to the exercise
of the
power, namely the existence of a valid notice to produce issued under s 214
of the Customs Act, had not been satisfied.
- A
deficiency in the notice to produce was conceded by the Comptroller-General in
his defence. The concession was that the notice
was so imprecisely worded that
the person required to produce documents pursuant to it would not be able to
know the extent of the
documents to which it applied. The trial judge,
Simpson J, also found, in a separate ruling, that the range of documents
seized
went well beyond what would have been authorised by s 214 of
the Customs Act even if the notice had been valid. That construction was
based upon O'Neill, a judgment of the District Court of New South Wales
given in 1988[3].
- Although
the seizure was therefore accepted as unlawful, Simpson J admitted the
evidence. Section 138 allows the admission
of evidence obtained improperly
or in contravention of an Australian law if "the desirability of admitting the
evidence outweighs
the undesirability of admitting evidence that has been
obtained in the way in which the evidence was obtained". Her Honour published
her reasons for that ruling on 8 May 2006, on the same day in which
she delivered her judgment in the case.
- Her
Honour made 14 orders of conviction, the first of which related to the offence
of moving goods subject to the control of Customs
without authorisation under
the Customs Act. The other 13 related to evading duty payable on various
quantities of alcohol. Her Honour stood the matter over for further
consideration
as to the consequences of those orders. Subsequently she ordered
that Mr Parker pay a penalty of 3.25 times the amount of the
duty evaded.
This was a figure in excess of $10 million. She imposed a penalty of $12,000 in
relation to the offence of unauthorised
movement of goods. Mr Parker was
required to pay the costs of the
proceedings[4].
- Mr Parker
filed a notice of appeal in the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of New
South Wales on 5 June 2006. An amended
notice was filed on
19 March 2007. He sought to appeal from both the interlocutory ruling
and the final judgment. The
notice of appeal in the Court of Appeal raised a
large number of grounds. Those ultimately pressed focussed on the admission of
the documents seized from Lawpark's premises on 6 March 1990.
- The
appeal was heard on 16 and 17 October 2007 and dismissed on 6 December
2007. Basten JA, with whom Mason P
and Tobias JA agreed,
delivered the judgment of the Court of
Appeal[5].
In the course of the judgment, the Court held that O'Neill had been
wrongly decided and that s 214 did not bear the construction, favourable to
Mr Parker, that had been adopted by
the trial judge. On
13 June 2008, Mr Parker was granted special leave to appeal to this
Court limited to the ground that the Court of Appeal
had denied him procedural
fairness by finding against him without notice of its intention to depart
from O'Neill. The Comptroller-General by notice of contention sought to
maintain the correctness of the Court of Appeal's construction of
s 214.
- The
Court of Appeal was correct in its construction of s 214. It should,
however, have given notice to Mr Parker of its
intention to consider that
question. In the event, Mr Parker was not deprived of the
possibility of a successful outcome. There was no practical unfairness:
"Fairness is not an abstract concept. It is essentially practical. Whether one
talks in terms of procedural fairness or natural
justice, the concern of the law
is to avoid practical
injustice."[6]
The appeal should be dismissed with costs.
The statutory framework – the Customs Act
- As
at 6 March 1990 s 214 of the Customs Act provided:
"(1) Whenever information in writing has been given on oath to the Collector
that goods have been unlawfully imported exported undervalued
or entered or
illegally dealt with, or that it is intended to unlawfully import export
undervalue enter or illegally deal with any
goods, or whenever any goods have
been seized or detained, the owner shall immediately upon being required so to
do by the Collector
produce and hand over to him all books and documents
relating to the goods so imported exported entered seized or detained
undervalued
or illegally dealt with, or intended to be unlawfully imported
exported undervalued entered or illegally dealt with, and of all other
goods
imported or exported by him at any time within the period of 5 years immediately
preceding such request seizure or detention,
and shall also produce for the
inspection of the Collector or such other officer as he may authorize for that
purpose and allow such
Collector or officer to make copies of or extracts from
all books or documents of any kind whatsoever wherein any entry or memorandum
appears in any way relating to any such goods.
Penalty: $1,000.
(2) For the purposes of this section, the Comptroller or the Collector of
Customs for a State or Territory may issue to any officer
of Customs or officer
of police a Customs Warrant, in accordance with the form in Schedule V,
marked with a Customs stamp.
...
(3) If any person fails to comply with a requirement by the Collector under this
section, an officer of Customs or officer of police,
having with him a Customs
Warrant in the form of Schedule V hereto, may, at any time of the day or night,
break open and enter into
any house, premises or place in which any books or
documents relating to the goods are or are supposed to be, and search
–
(a) the house, premises or place;
(b) any person therein or thereon; and
(c) any chests, trunks or packages therein or thereon,
and take possession of, remove and impound any of those books and documents
which are found."
- Schedule
V to the Customs Act was in the following terms:
"SCHEDULE V
THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
Customs Warrant
To
WHEREAS information in writing has been given on oath to me that goods have
been unlawfully imported, exported, undervalued or entered
or illegally dealt
with or that it is intended to unlawfully import, export, undervalue or enter or
illegally deal with goods, (or
Whereas goods have been seized or detained)
You are hereby authorized, in the event of failing to comply immediately
with any requirement made in pursuance of section
two hundred and fourteen of
the Customs Act 1901-1923, to enter into, at any time of the day or
night, and search, any house premises or place in which any books or documents
relating
to the goods are or are supposed to be; and to break open any such
house premises or place and search any person therein or thereon
and any chests
trunks or packages therein or thereon; and to take possession of, remove and
impound any of those books and documents
which are found: And for so doing this
shall be your sufficient warrant.
This warrant has force throughout
This warrant shall remain in force for a period of one month from the date
thereof unless revoked before the expiration of that
period.
Dated this day of 19 .
(CUSTOMS STAMP) (Signature)"
- The
term "produce documents" was defined in s 4 of the Customs Act thus:
"'Produce documents' means that the person on whom the obligation to produce
documents is cast shall to the best of his power produce
to the Collector all
documents relating to the subject matter
mentioned."
- Section
214 conditioned the obligation to produce documents on the making of a
requirement by the Collector. It did not prescribe
that such requirements
should be effected or accompanied by the tender of a notice to produce.
Nevertheless, reg 171 of the
Customs Regulations provided that a notice to
produce documents under s 214 should be in accordance with Form 61,
contained
in Sched 1 to the Regulations. Nothing turns on the content of
the form. Regulation 171 may be seen as mandating a written
notice to
produce as the means of making the requirement contemplated by
s 214(1).
- The
Customs Act was largely drafted by the first Comptroller-General of Customs, Sir
Harry Wollaston, and was modelled on the Customs Act 1890
(Vic)[7] and the
Customs Consolidation Act 1853
(UK)[8], later
incorporated into the Customs Consolidation Act 1876
(UK)[9]. The
Customs Consolidation Act 1876 made provision for search and seizure of
goods pursuant to writs of assistance issued by the Court of
Exchequer[10]
or warrants issued by Justices of the
Peace[11].
There appears to have been no general provision for requiring production or
authorising seizure of documents relating to suspect
goods.
- A
precursor of s 214 was enacted as s 22 of the Customs Act 1896
(Vic) by way of amendment to the 1890 Act. It conferred power on the Collector
of Customs and officers of Customs to require
production of, and to seize,
documents relating to unlawfully imported or entered articles and goods seized
or detained under any
Customs Act. The power was conditioned by an information
on oath sworn before the Collector. There was no provision in that section
for
notice of a requirement to produce documents. The power to seize documents was
not conditioned upon non-compliance with the
request to produce nor upon the
existence of a warrant. The power extended to documents relating to articles
and goods imported
or seized and detained within six years immediately preceding
the requirement for production.
- Section
214 of the Customs Act, as enacted in 1901, imposed an obligation to produce
documents on the requirement of the Collector.
It did not include a power of
search and seizure. The Collector was, however, given power under s 215 to
impound or retain
documents presented in connection with any entry or required
to be produced under the Customs Act. There was also separate provision
for the
issue of writs of assistance and customs warrants modelled on the UK
legislation[12].
- In
1923, s 214 was amended by adding s 214(2) and
(3)[13]. The
new sub-sections remained in substantially the same form up to the time relating
to these proceedings. In the Second Reading
Speech the Minister for Trade and
Customs described the amending legislation as "purely a formal measure"
involving no
"principle"[14].
Section 255 was enacted at the same time and was the focus of the parliamentary
debate.
- In
1975 the Law Reform Commission recommended repeal of s 214 and its
replacement with a less draconian
alternative[15].
The recommendation was not implemented. In 1992 the Commission again considered
s 214 describing it as "very
unsatisfactory"[16].
Nobody, including Customs, supported its retention. The Commission recommended
its repeal and substitution with a power of search
and seizure upon a warrant
issued by a judicial
officer[17].
- Section
214 and Sched V were repealed with effect from 1 July 1995 by the
Customs, Excise and Bounty Legislation Amendment Act 1995 (Cth) ss 2(5)
and 6 and Sched 4, Items 44 and 67.
- Section
255 of the Customs Act, as at 6 March 1990, provided in sub-s (1):
"In any Customs prosecution the averment of the prosecutor or plaintiff
contained in the information, complaint, declaration or
claim shall be prima
facie evidence of the matter or matters
averred."[18]
- The
section was confined in its application to matters of
fact[19] and
did not operate to increase or diminish the probative value of any evidence
given by
witnesses[20].
It did not apply to an averment of the intent of the
defendant[21].
The statutory framework – the Evidence Act,
s 138
- As
at 12 April 2005, the date of the trial, and subsequently, s 138 was
in the following terms:
"(1) Evidence that was obtained:
(a) improperly or in contravention of an Australian law; or
(b) in consequence of an impropriety or of a contravention of an Australian
law;
is not to be admitted unless the desirability of admitting the evidence
outweighs the undesirability of admitting evidence that
has been obtained in the
way in which the evidence was obtained.
...
(3) Without limiting the matters that the court may take into account under
subsection (1), it is to take into account:
(a) the probative value of the evidence; and
(b) the importance of the evidence in the proceeding; and
(c) the nature of the relevant offence, cause of action or defence and the
nature of the subject-matter of the proceeding; and
(d) the gravity of the impropriety or contravention; and
(e) whether the impropriety or contravention was deliberate or reckless;
and
(f) whether the impropriety or contravention was contrary to or inconsistent
with a right of a person recognised by the International
Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights; and
(g) whether any other proceeding (whether or not in a court) has been or is
likely to be taken in relation to the impropriety or
contravention; and
(h) the difficulty (if any) of obtaining the evidence without impropriety or
contravention of an Australian law."
- The
term "Australian law" is defined in the Dictionary to the Evidence Act as
a "law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory". The word "law" is defined
in cl 9 of Pt 2 of the Dictionary:
"(1) A reference in this Act to a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory
or a foreign country is a reference to a law (whether
written or unwritten) of
or in force in that place.
(2) A reference in this Act to an Australian law is a reference to an Australian
law (whether written or unwritten) of or in force
in
Australia."
There is no definition of "impropriety" or "contravention" in the
Act.
- Section 138
was one of the provisions of what became the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) and
the New South Wales Evidence Act recommended by the Law Reform Commission
in its Report No 38, published in 1987. The proposed cl 119, as it was
numbered in
the draft Act, was explained by the
Commission[22]:
"This clause provides a discretionary exclusion for evidence obtained
improperly, unlawfully or in consequence of an impropriety
or breach of the law.
It applies in both civil and criminal trials. It reflects, with some
modifications, the present exclusionary
discretion known as the rule in
Bunning v Cross. The main difference is the placing of the onus of proof
on the party seeking to have the illegally or improperly obtained evidence
admitted."
- The
party seeking to exclude the evidence has the burden of showing that the
conditions for its exclusion are satisfied, namely that
it was obtained
improperly or in contravention of an Australian law. The burden then falls upon
the party seeking the admission
of the evidence to persuade the court that it
should be admitted. There is thus a two stage
process[23].
The party seeking admission of the evidence has the burden of proof of facts
relevant to matters weighing in favour of admission.
It also has the burden of
persuading the court that the desirability of admitting the evidence outweighs
the undesirability of admitting
evidence obtained in the way in which it was
obtained.
- The
meanings to be accorded to the terms "improperly", "impropriety" and
"contravention" in s 138 were not illuminated by the
Law Reform Commission
report. The relevant ordinary meanings of "improper" include "not in accordance
with truth, fact, reason or
rule; abnormal, irregular; incorrect, inaccurate,
erroneous,
wrong"[24].
"Contravention" refers to "[t]he action of contravening or going counter to;
violation, infringement,
transgression"[25].
- Without
essaying an exhaustive definition, the core meaning of "contravention" involves
disobedience of a command expressed in a
rule of law which may be statutory or
non-statutory. It involves doing that which is forbidden by law or failing to
do that which
is required by law to be done. Mere failure to satisfy a
condition necessary for the exercise of a statutory power is not a
contravention.
Nor would such a failure readily be characterised as
"impropriety" although that word does cover a wider range of conduct than the
word "contravention".
The pleadings
- The
proceedings brought by the Comptroller-General were conducted on pleadings. The
final form of the statement of claim was one
re-amended pursuant to leave
granted on 16 May 2003. It alleged, inter alia, that 92,632.3 litres of alcohol
liquid ("LALs") of
Scotch whisky imported into Australia by Lawpark and stored
at the Breven warehouse was removed without authority under the Customs
Act and
delivered for home consumption.
- Mr
Parker was said to have been an owner of the whisky within the meaning of
s 4 of the Customs Act. He, or someone else on
behalf of Breven and acting
with his knowledge, was said to have removed the whisky, falsely recorded repack
dockets and created
false continuing permissions. Customs duty of $3,113,371.60
was said to have been payable by Mr Parker in respect of the whisky.
- The
Comptroller-General alleged that Mr Parker had committed some 13 breaches of
s 234(1)(a) of the Customs Act by the evasion
of duty in respect of various
quantities of the Scotch whisky in issue. One breach of s 33(1) was
alleged in respect of the
removal of the whisky without authority. The breaches
were alleged to have occurred over different periods between 1 August
1987
and 31 May 1990. The statement of claim then pleaded:
"AND THE PLAINTIFF pursuant to and to the extent provided by s 255 of the
Customs Act avers that all matters and facts specified
herein are true and
correct."
- In
his defence to the re-amended statement of claim Mr Parker denied the
central allegations against him including the unauthorised
removal of the Scotch
whisky from the warehouse and the evasion of duty. He also pleaded an estoppel
based upon an alleged payment
accepted in full satisfaction of the duty claimed
and associated representations by the Comptroller-General. The defence went on
to plead the inadmissibility of documentary evidence to be relied upon by the
Comptroller-General. It alleged that documents, including
bond input records,
bond output records and the Bond Register relating to Breven's premises were
taken by the Comptroller-General
on or about 6 March 1990. It alleged that
the notice to produce under s 214 was not valid, that the Sched V
warrant
was not issued or executed according to law, that the documents taken
were unlawfully obtained and that they should not be received
in evidence.
- The
Comptroller-General filed a reply dated 8 December 2003 admitting that "the
section 214 notice it served on ... Lawpark
Pty Ltd was invalid" but
asserting that "the notice was not intentionally invalid". He also admitted
that because of the invalidity
of the notice "the warrants that were executed on
the basis of a failure to comply with that notice were not properly executed
according
to law".
- The
basis of the invalidity alleged by Mr Parker in his defence was not spelt
out in that pleading. Nor was the basis of the
admission in the
Comptroller-General's reply.
- The
admissibility of the documents had been agitated in an extended voir dire
hearing in cognate proceedings in the Supreme Court
of New South Wales in March
1996 involving Kingswood
Distillery[26].
Sully J had admitted the documents under s 138 albeit it had been admitted
that the notice to produce was impermissibly vague.
It seems that the pleading
of matters going to admissibility in the defence and reply was designed to
narrow the debate on that
question by putting on record the
Comptroller-General's concession as to the invalidity of the notice.
- The
Comptroller-General submitted in this Court that the concession which he made at
first instance was that the s 214 notice
"gave insufficient description of
the goods in respect of which documents were to be produced". The correctness
of O'Neill was not conceded and it was disputed that the execution of the
warrant involved a "second 'contravention of an Australian law'" insofar
as the
documents seized went beyond those relating to goods specified in the notice to
produce. As appears later in these reasons, the implied proposition that
"a second contravention" could be identified on the basis that the
seizure was
beyond power even if the notice had been sufficient, is not to be accepted.
- The
Comptroller-General pleaded reliance upon s 138 of the Evidence Act in support
of the admissibility of the documents notwithstanding the unlawfulness of their
seizure. He referred to the decision
given by Sully J in the proceedings
against Kingswood Distillery on 15 March
1996[27]. In
that case the court had admitted the documents and information into
evidence.
The information – 16 January 1990
- The
information which grounded the notice to produce and the Sched V warrant
was sworn on 16 January 1990 by an officer of Customs.
He said that on 4 May
1989 a Customs officer in Brisbane had purchased two bottles labelled as French
Brandy, the contents of one
of which was found to have been adulterated. The
labels also stated that the brandy had been imported by Lawpark. According to
the information the false description of the content of the bottles was
"contrary to subsection 9(1)(b) of the Spirits Act 1906".
Therefore, it was alleged "Lawpark Pty Ltd have illegally dealt with goods,
being the contents of the bottle". As is apparent,
the false labelling of the
brandy was not connected in any way with the offences ultimately alleged against
Mr Parker.
The notice to produce – 1 March 1990
- On
the strength of the information a notice was signed on 1 March 1990 by the
Collector of Customs for New South Wales. It
was in the following terms:
"TO: LAWPARK PTY LTD
4 BLACKSTONE STREET
WETHERILL PARK NSW
Whereas information in writing has been given on oath that goods, to wit one
bottle of spirits labelled as 'Cheval Napoleon Old French
Brandy', have by you
been illegally dealt with on or before the thirty-first day of October 1988.
Now, therefore, I, the Collector of Customs for the State of New South Wales, by
virtue of the powers conferred upon me by the Customs Act 1901, do hereby
require you to produce and hand over to JAMES MICHAEL MUTTON an officer of
Customs duly authorized by me on my behalf
to receive the same, all books and
documents relating to such goods and relating to all other goods imported by you
at any time within
the period of five years immediately preceding this request,
and I further require you to produce for the inspection of the said
JAMES
MICHAEL MUTTON an officer of Customs duly authorized by me for that purpose or
such other Officer as I may authorize for the
purpose, and allow such Officer to
make copies of or extracts from all books or documents of any kind whatsoever
wherein any entry
or memorandum appears in any way relating to any such goods."
The Sched V warrant – 1 March 1990
- Contemporaneously
with the issue of the notice to produce, the Collector signed a Sched V
warrant in the following terms:
"TO: James Michael MUTTON
Officer of Customs.
WHEREAS: information in writing has been given on oath to me that goods had
been illegally dealt with.
You are hereby authorized in the event of LAWPARK PTY LTD failing to comply
immediately with any requirement made in pursuance of
section two hundred and
fourteen of the Customs Act 1901, to enter into, at any time of the day
or night, and search, any house premises or place in which any books or
documents relating
to the goods are or are supposed to be; and to break open any
such house premises or place and search any person therein or thereon
and any
chests trunks or packages therein or thereon; and to take possession of, remove
and impound any of those books and documents
which are found: And for so doing
this shall be your sufficient warrant.
This warrant has force throughout the state of New South Wales.
This warrant shall remain in force for a period of one month from the date
thereof unless revoked before the expiration of that period.
Dated this 1st day of March 1990."
The O'Neill judgment
- Before
turning to the judgment of the primary judge dealing with the admissibility of
the documents seized under the Sched V
warrant, it is necessary to refer
briefly to the O'Neill judgment given by Dunford DCJ in the District
Court of New South Wales on 18 August 1988. In that case the admissibility
of documents seized under s 214 of the Customs Act was in issue.
- Dunford DCJ
held that upon its proper construction s 214(3), authorising search and
seizure of documents upon failure to
comply with a s 214(1) requirement,
only extended to documents relating to the goods on which that requirement was
based. That
is to say only the goods which were the subject of the information
could be seized or detained. The authority under s 214(3)
did not extend
to documents relating to the wider class of goods imported within five years
prior to the date of requirement to produce.
A similar view of the operation of
s 214(3) was taken by two judges of the Federal Court in 1991 and
1993[28].
- There
was evidence before the primary judge of advice sought and received by the
Collector of Customs which had touched upon the
O'Neill decision. On
31 July 1989 an officer of the Australian Government Solicitor ("AGS")
provided a written advice to the Collector
that the interpretation of s 214
by Dunford DCJ was correct. On 11 August 1989 another officer of AGS
advised the Collector,
in writing, that the interpretation was incorrect and
that s 214(3) authorised seizure of documents including five year
documents.
- On
7 September 1989 a Regional Manager (NSW) of Customs wrote to AGS seeking advice
about the use of s 214 powers in relation,
inter alia, to Kingswood
Distillery and Breven. AGS sought advice from Mr Rowling of counsel. On 27
October 1989 Mr Rowling
produced a written advice raising doubts about
whether s 214 would authorise the requirement for production of five year
documents
where the illegal dealing with goods relied upon was an illegal
dealing under the Spirits Act. He did not in terms address the construction
of
s 214(3). Although he referred to O'Neill, he did so on another
point.
Challenge to admissibility before the trial judge
- Counsel
for Mr Parker identified in writing before the primary judge seven heads of
illegality in relation to the challenged evidence.
In the fifth head he alleged
that documents had been seized which did not relate to the bottle of brandy
identified in each of the
notices to produce.
- Counsel
for the Comptroller-General made clear at the hearing that the
Comptroller-General conceded that the notice to produce "did
not specify
particular goods with sufficient particularity to enable the recipient
reasonably to identify documents which would relate
thereto." He also made
clear that he did not concede the correctness of O'Neill.
- In
written submissions dated 18 April 2005 on the voir dire, counsel for Mr Parker
relied upon the judgment of Heerey J in Challenge Plastics Pty Ltd v
Collector of
Customs[29].
He referred also to the judgment of Davies J in Ace Custom Services
Pty Ltd v Collector of Customs
(NSW)[30]
and to O'Neill. This was in support of his contention that the only
seizure authorised was of documents relating to the specified bottle of French
brandy. He also submitted that Customs had failed to properly educate its
officers about s 214. Although they had copies of
O'Neill they did
not understand its principle. No evidence had been offered to explain why the
officers were not made aware of the principle
in the case.
The decision of the primary judge on admissibility of the
documents
- On
8 May 2006 the primary judge published her judgment convicting
Mr Parker of the offences the subject of this
appeal[31]. On
the same day she published her reasons for ruling on the admissibility of the
documentary material which had been seized by
the Customs officers. The
challenge had been heard over five days of a voir dire hearing. Her
Honour had ruled at the time that the evidence should be
admitted[32].
- Her
Honour observed that the Comptroller-General had conceded "that there was an
irregularity in the manner in which the evidence
under consideration was
obtained" and that to make sense of the concession, the "irregularity" had to be
taken to amount to at least
an impropriety for the purposes of
s 138[33].
The concession was "not as extensive as the irregularities contended for on
behalf of the
defendant"[34].
The impropriety conceded was "the lack of proper identification of
'the goods' said to have been illegally dealt
with"[35].
- Her
Honour adopted the construction placed on s 214(3) by Dunford DCJ in
O'Neill and held that the documents seized "went well beyond those
relating to any single bottle of brandy mentioned in the Notice to
Produce"[36].
Their seizure was "at the very least an
impropriety"[37].
She added that it could properly be called "a contravention of an Australian
law"[38]
although she did not say of what law. All of this, according to her Honour, was
"within the concession made on behalf of the
plaintiff"[39].
This was not correct. The concession clearly did not extend to the narrow
construction of s 214(3) reflected in the O'Neill decision.
- Her
Honour acknowledged that at the relevant time there was a degree of controversy
in Customs about what was authorised by s 214.
However, that controversy
centred on the words "illegally dealt with" in s 214(1) and whether they
covered illegal dealing
under statutes (such as the Spirits Act) other than the
Customs Act. Her Honour formed the view that such illegality was covered by
s 214 but did not regard it as necessary to resolve the constructional
question. She referred to Mr Rowling's advice which focussed on the
illegal dealing question. She said that it should have
been disclosed to the
then Collector before he issued the notice to produce and the warrant.
Non-disclosure, however, was not brought
about by any dishonourable or dishonest
motives on the part of the relevant officers.
- Her
Honour referred specifically to the allegation that documents unconnected with
French brandy had been seized. This, she said,
was covered by her earlier
acceptance of O'Neill's case. The fact that documents "extraneous to
those authorised to be taken by the warrant were in fact taken" came about
because of
a "lack of understanding of the complexities, and, indeed, anomalies,
of s 214, and not by reason of any ill will, collateral
purpose or mala
fides on the part of any Customs
officer"[40].
- Turning
to s 138 of the Evidence Act, her Honour said that she was satisfied that
the impropriety in the collection of the evidence was not such as should result
in the
exclusion of the evidence. She
said[41]:
"The offences alleged against the defendant are serious, and the evidence is
important. I am not in a position to judge at this
stage its probative value,
except to repeat that, as I understand it, the evidence so obtained amounts
virtually to the whole of
the prosecution
case."
The decision of the primary judge as to liability
- Two
defences raised at trial were that the prosecution was statute barred and that
the Comptroller-General was estopped from pursuing
the claim. After rejecting
those defences in her substantive judgment her Honour turned to other issues.
She said that it was common
ground that the applicable standard of proof was the
criminal standard and that it was necessary for the Comptroller-General to prove
each of the offences beyond reasonable
doubt[42].
Without reference to the averment, she undertook a consideration of the evidence
and, in particular, an expert report by a chartered
accountant, Ms Tamara
Lindsay, which was based upon an examination and analysis of the documents which
had been seized.
- At
pars 120 to 123 of her reasons for judgment, her Honour identified "two
short routes" to the conclusion that the Comptroller-General
had established the
facts pleaded in respect of each offence. The first was to be found in the
averment.
- Referring
to s 255(3) her Honour said that the prosecution evidence would not gain any
strength from an averment where rebuttal evidence
was called. She then
said[43]:
"But in this case no evidence was given in rebuttal of any of the essential
features of the Comptroller's case. In saying this I
have not overlooked the
extensive cross-examination of a number of witnesses, most particularly Ms
Lindsay [the chartered accountant].
But scrutiny of that cross-examination
reveals that no evidence was elicited that had the effect of rebutting any of
her conclusions.
I will deal shortly with the nature of the cross-examination
of Ms Lindsay. I have concluded that the averment alone is sufficient
to found
a conclusion that all factual matters pleaded in the Re-amended Statement of
Claim have been proved. (There remains, of
course, a further step: it is
necessary to consider whether those facts are sufficient to (and if so, do in
fact) establish to the
requisite standard, the commission of the offences
charged.)"
- Her
Honour considered Ms Lindsay's evidence and accepted her conclusions. They
supported convictions for all the alleged offences
against s 234(1)(a).
Her Honour was also satisfied, beyond reasonable doubt, that an incorrect record
of movement purportedly
done pursuant to a continuing permission was done
deliberately and with dishonest intent and was done by Mr Parker himself.
The case presented to the Court of Appeal
- There
were numerous grounds of appeal against her Honour's decision to admit the
challenged documents in evidence. Most are not
relevant for present purposes
save for the contention that she should have found that the Customs officers
were not properly trained
in their powers under s 214 (grounds 22-23).
That failure was advanced as a matter going to the balancing exercise under
s 138. Her Honour, it was said, should have found that Customs knew of and
had a copy of the O'Neill decision and was aware of its significance.
She should have found that Customs knew and believed that if its officers "did
not comply
with the matters raised in the decision in In the Matter of
O'Neill" then submissions in future litigation that a failure to follow
correct procedure under s 214 was an honest mistake or done
in ignorance of
the legislative provisions, would not persuade a court to refrain from excluding
evidence obtained illegally. Her
Honour, it was said, should have found that
Customs failed to properly educate its officers in respect of s 214
notwithstanding
that Customs expressly believed that a failure to follow correct
procedure would probably result in the exclusion of illegally obtained
evidence.
- The
alleged failure of Customs to educate its officers in respect of s 214 was
relevant in the appeal only on the assumption
that the construction of
s 214(3) adopted in O'Neill was correct.
- The
written submissions filed on behalf of Mr Parker in the Court of Appeal
referred to the concession made by the Comptroller-General
as to the inadequacy
of the notices to produce. O'Neill was raised in the context of
the failure to train and educate officers about that decision. Her Honour, it
was said, had failed
to give consideration to the seriousness of the illegal
conduct for the purposes of s 138(3)(d), to the failure of Customs to
ensure proper training and education of its officers relevant to
s 138(3)(e) and to other matters which spoke against the exercise of the
discretion to admit the documents.
- The
Comptroller-General conceded that her Honour had made no finding on the training
and education question. He agreed, however,
that her findings concerning lack
of awareness of the O'Neill decision adequately exposed why it was not
highlighted in training.
- As
appears from the preceding the correctness of the O'Neill decision was
not in issue.
- Counsel
for Mr Parker in the Court of Appeal made it clear that he regarded the
conceded inadequacy of the notice as a basis
for vitiating the entire production
requirement. That is to say, although he did not say it in terms, he did not
need the O'Neill point to invalidate the seizure. He did endeavour to
invoke the O'Neill construction as a basis for treating the impropriety
associated with the seizure of the documents as somehow aggravated. But that
was related to the training and education point. Counsel for the
Comptroller-General made clear to the Court of Appeal that the
Comptroller-General had not conceded the correctness
of O'Neill before
Simpson J and had maintained it was wrong. He said in oral argument
in the Court of Appeal, however, that the Comptroller-General was content to
support her Honour's judgment
on the grounds on which it was based.
The judgment of the Court of Appeal
- Basten JA
first considered the proper construction of s 214 of the Customs Act. His
Honour disagreed with the conclusion reached by Dunford DCJ in
O'Neill. He
said[44]:
"The purpose of subs (3) is to ensure that, absent voluntary compliance, the
warrant will permit a search by officers to obtain books
or documents falling
within the requirement which have not been supplied. To construe the category
of books and documents in subs
(3) as more limited than the books and documents
referred to in subs (1) would be to defeat the purpose of subs (3) in
circumstances
where only a handful of the documents the subject of the
requirement had been provided, but subs (3) was found to be restricted to
that
very handful."
He held that Simpson J had been mistaken in accepting the construction adopted
in O'Neill.
- Basten JA
then considered the operation of s 138 and turned to the circumstances in
which it was contended that the section
was engaged. He rejected contentions
advanced on behalf of Mr Parker that:
- The
choice of s 214 as the preferred method of obtaining documents rather than
proceeding under s 10 of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) and obtaining a
search warrant for particular documents or things was improper.
- The
s 214 notice was issued for an improper purpose, namely to trigger the
entitlement to execute a Sched V warrant, rather
than to obtain the
production of the documents.
A third basis for the alleged inadmissibility of the documents was that the
notice was "hopelessly imprecise as to the goods in
question"[45].
His Honour observed that this element of invalidity was accepted by the
Comptroller-General for the purposes of the proceedings
and was sufficient to
attract the application of s 138 of the Evidence Act.
- His
Honour rejected the argument that even assuming the notice had been valid
Mr Parker had not failed to comply with its requirement.
Also rejected was
the complaint that the primary judge had not addressed the alleged failure to
train and educate Customs officers
about the scope of a search and seizure under
s 214. This was a contention made on the assumption that O'Neill
was correctly decided. As to that, Basten JA
said[46]:
"As noted above, a proper consideration of s 214 does not support the view
expressed in O'Neill's case that the search permitted in execution of the
warrant did not entitle customs officers to locate and seize documents in
relation
to goods imported or exported during the previous 5 years. However,
the comptroller did not dispute the correctness of O'Neill's case but
rather relied upon the fact that Mr Swinton, who was the solicitor primarily
responsible for legal advice in relation to
the operation had failed to grasp
the significance of the reference to O'Neill's case in counsel's advice.
Accordingly, the complaint that the trial judge failed to address the issue must
be addressed on that basis." (emphasis
added)
- His
Honour found the complaint that this challenge was not addressed in the trial
judge's reasons was factually correct. However,
given the way in which it was
presented in submissions, this was understandable. In the event, his Honour
rejected the complaint
on its merits on the basis that the Customs officers had
"plausible legal advice" supportive of their
position[47].
- His
Honour then considered the factors identified in s 138(3). On the facts of
the case he held that the evidence was correctly admitted.
Grounds of appeal
- The
single ground of appeal in this case is that:
"The Court of Appeal erred in denying procedural fairness to the Appellant by
overturning a finding made by the trial Judge in the
Appellant's favour, based
on the correctness of the judgment in the matter of the appeal of Lawrence
Charles O'Neill (unreported, NSWDC 18 August 1988), without the
Respondent seeking such an outcome or the Court of Appeal giving notice it was
considering it, and therefore without the Appellant having a proper opportunity
to make submissions in support of the finding."
Notice of contention
- A
notice of contention filed on behalf of the Comptroller-General asserted:
"In the event that this Court finds that the Court of Appeal erred in law by
failing to afford the appellant procedural fairness
when it found that the judge
deciding In the matter of O'Neill (unrep, NSWDC, 18 August 1988) was
'mistaken' in his interpretation of s 214 of the Customs Act 1901, then the
respondent gives notice that it will contend that the Court of Appeal's
construction of s 214 as set out in [49]-[53]
and [109] of its reasons for
judgment is correct."
The construction of s 214
- Although
the proper construction of s 214 is no longer a matter of general
importance, as the section has been repealed, it
was raised in the notice of
contention and is relevant to the disposition of this case.
- Section
214(1) imposed obligations on the owner of goods referred to in an information
given under the section. It imposed a like
obligation in respect of goods which
have been seized or detained. The relevant element of the obligation,
ungrammatically framed,
was to produce and hand over to the Collector "all books
and documents relating to the goods ... and of all other goods imported
or
exported by him at any time within the period of 5 years immediately preceding
such request".
- Section
214(3) conferred a power of search and seizure in respect of books and documents
upon an officer of Customs where two necessary
conditions had been met. Those
conditions were:
- A
person had failed to comply with a requirement by the Collector under the
section; ie under s 214(1).
- An
officer of Customs or an officer of police had with him a customs warrant in the
form of Sched V.
Where both of these conditions were fulfilled the officer was empowered to break
open and enter "any house, premises or place in
which any books or documents
relating to the goods are or are supposed to be" (emphasis added) and
remove "any of those books and documents which are found". The question is
whether
"the goods" were those referred to in the information or whether they
extended to goods imported within five years immediately preceding
the
requirement made under s 214(1). In considering that question, it is
necessary to have regard to the form of the warrant
set out in Sched V to
the Act. Schedule V was part of the Act and not a species of delegated
legislation. It was, however,
ancillary to the substantive provisions of
s 214.
- Schedule
V provided for a warrant issued under s 214(2) to state that it authorises
its holder to take possession of, remove
and impound books and documents
relating to the goods the subject of the information. There was no ambiguity in
its wording which
would extend its coverage to books and documents relating to
other goods imported within five years immediately preceding the making
of a
requirement under s 214(1). There was therefore a limitation on the range
of documents covered by a Sched V warrant
which did not apply to the range
of documents the subject of the obligation imposed by s 214(1).
- How
then was s 214(3) to be read? It was that sub-section, not the warrant,
which was the source of the power to break open
and enter into premises and to
take possession of and remove books and documents found therein. The officer
exercising that power
was required, as a condition of the power, to have the
warrant with him or her. There was no express obligation to show the warrant
to
any person. Although there was reference in the proceedings to "executing" the
warrant, it is not clear what that means in this
context. In my opinion,
s 214(3) could be read widely as extending to books and documents relating
to the full range of goods
referred to in s 214(1). It could also be read
narrowly as confined to books and documents relating to the goods referred to
in
the information.
- Each
reading gives rise to an anomaly. On a wide reading there was an inconsistency
between the scope of s 214(1) and the terms
of the Sched V warrant, the
existence of which was a condition of the seizure power. On a narrow reading
there would have been
an apparently inexplicable inconsistency between
s 214(1) and s 214(3).
- The
legislative history is of limited assistance. The Customs Act was partly
modelled upon the Customs Act 1890 (Vic) as amended by the Customs Act
1896 (Vic). The latter Act incorporated a comprehensive power under
s 22 to require production and to seize documents relating to
suspect goods
and goods imported up to six years before the production request. No equivalent
seizure power was included in the
1901 Act, presumably on the basis that writs
of assistance and customs warrants, otherwise provided for, could be used where
seizure
was necessary. The question is whether s 214(3) brought into the
Customs Act, in 1923, a power of seizure narrower than the
power of production
conferred by s 214(1). In this respect the Second Reading Speech is of no
assistance.
- The
constructional choice invites consideration of the following matters:
- The
legislative antecedents of the Customs Act, reflected in the Customs Act
1890 (Vic) as amended by the Customs Act 1896 (Vic), made the seizure
power and the production obligation congruent.
- There
was no apparent policy reason for making the seizure power under s 214(3)
significantly narrower than the production obligation
under s 214(1).
- The
terms of s 214(3) were consistent with a seizure power that was congruent
with the production obligation.
- Schedule
V, which would support a narrower reading, did not of itself confer any power or
obligation. It was an ancillary provision
giving content to the condition upon
which the seizure power under s 214(3) could be exercised by specifying the
form of the
necessary warrant.
- Section
214(3) authorised the doing of that which would otherwise be unlawful or
tortious. That consideration favours a narrower
reading to the extent that such
a reading is open.
- Notwithstanding
the significance of the last-mentioned consideration, which was referred to by
Heerey J in Challenge
Plastics[48],
the better approach is that which maintains consistency between the substantive
provisions, ss 214(1) and 214(3). Their construction
cannot be governed by
the terms of what is essentially a form of warrant in Sched V.
Section 214(3) provided the coercive
support immediately available in the
event of non-compliance with a requirement made under s 214(1). To give
effect to it requires
the wider reading of s 214(3). On that basis the
construction adopted by the District Court of New South Wales in O'Neill
was incorrect and that adopted by the Court of Appeal in the present case was
correct. Absent such a reading, there was no mechanism
within the section to
give effect to the objective, reflected in s 214(1), of obtaining access to
documents including the five
year documents.
Contentions and conclusions
- The
Comptroller-General conceded the invalidity of the notice to produce on the
basis that it did no more than identify the relevant
goods as a bottle of
spirits labelled "Cheval Napoleon Old French Brandy", a description which, it
was accepted, was so vague as
to make it impossible to identify books and
documents relating to those goods. Basten JA accepted the concession as a
basis
for invalidity. His Honour
said[49]:
"Such a notice was incapable of being complied with; Mr Parker could not
reasonably have been expected to locate the relevant documents,
because the
notice was hopelessly imprecise as to the goods in question. The notice was
therefore invalid. That element of invalidity
was accepted by the comptroller
for the purposes of the proceedings and was sufficient in itself to invoke the
operation of s 138 of the Evidence Act, as recognised by her Honour at
[22]."
- The
conceded deficiency meant that there was never any relevant obligation on
Lawpark to produce documents of any kind under s 214(1).
There could not
therefore be a failure to comply with the requirement by Customs officers under
the section. A necessary condition
for the exercise of the power under
s 214(3) was therefore not met. It followed that there was no power
conferred on the Customs
officers by s 214(3) to take possession of and
remove any books or documents from Lawpark's premises.
- Simpson
J at first instance accepted the concession that the notice did not properly
identify the goods. By following O'Neill she also effectively found a
second basis for concluding that the seizure of the five year documents was
beyond power.
- It
was submitted for Mr Parker that the correctness of the trial judge's adoption
of O'Neill was not put in issue before the Court of Appeal. There was no
notice of contention. That submission may be accepted. Indeed in
the course of
argument in the Court of Appeal, counsel for the Comptroller-General,
Mr Fagan SC, told the Court that his client
was "content to support her
Honour's judgment on the grounds upon which it was expressed". And
further:
"Customs has been content to proceed on the basis that if her Honour was right
and accepting that her Honour was right about O'Neill's case then this
was another point of illegality but for the reasons that her Honour gave the
proper exercise of discretion under s 138 the evidence would nevertheless
be received [sic]."
To the extent that the Court of Appeal rested its decision upon the view that
O'Neill was wrongly decided, it did so without prior warning to
Mr Parker. This was a matter going to the proper construction of
s 214(3)
which had not been in issue before the Court of Appeal. On the
other hand, I agree with the point made by Gummow, Hayne and
Kiefel JJ[50].
A court is not necessarily obliged to identify to the parties or their legal
representatives, from among prior non-authoritative
decisions, those which it
may decide not to follow. What is essential is that the parties to proceedings
be given an opportunity to be heard on all the issues in the case. Where
a proposition of law is not in contest, the court should not decide
the case on
the basis of a departure from that proposition without notice to the parties.
In this case, the Court of Appeal should have given the parties notice of
its intention to consider O'Neill and an opportunity to make submissions
about it.
- It
was submitted for Mr Parker, in effect, that the inadequacy of the notice
to produce, conceded by the Comptroller-General, simply meant that the
seizure of the books and documents was improper. It was further submitted that
the asserted want of statutory
power based on O'Neill to seize books and
documents other than those relating to goods specified in the notice would have
rendered the seizure a "contravention
of an Australian law" for the purposes of
s 138. That submission cannot be accepted. On the view taken by
Simpson J the seizure of the books and documents was not authorised
by
s 214(3). The same result followed from the narrower basis upon which the
Court of Appeal found a want of power to seize
the documents.
- Whether
O'Neill was right or wrong about s 214, there was no relevant
impropriety or contravention of Australian law antecedent to the obtaining
of
the documents. There was an absence of statutory power to make the seizure.
The character of the seizure of the five year documents
was the same regardless
of the circumstance that led to the conclusion that there was no power to do it.
The seizure was no doubt tortious. It may well have contravened some
other statute. The documents were obtained "improperly" for
the purposes of
s 138(1) and their seizure was probably in contravention of an Australian
law or laws. But even accepting the hypothesis that there were
two bases for
saying the officers lacked the power to do what they did, there was thereby no
additional antecedent or concurrent
impropriety or contravention.
Whether there was a denial of procedural fairness
- Basten
JA noted in his judgment that the Comptroller-General did not dispute the
correctness of O'Neill. He also observed that the Comptroller-General
proceeded upon the basis that the solicitor responsible for legal advice in
relation
to the Customs operation had failed to grasp the significance of a
reference to O'Neill's case in counsel's advice.
- His
Honour spent some time in his reasons for judgment on the correctness of
O'Neill and the proper construction of s 214(3). There were
however critical parts of his reasoning which appeared to rely solely upon the
conceded deficiency in the notice and therefore did not turn upon the
correctness of O'Neill and the construction of s 214(3). He
said[51]:
"In the result, the unlawfulness of the conduct of customs officers turned on
the failure adequately to identify the bottle of brandy
said to have been
illegally dealt with pursuant to the Spirits Act. There was no evidence to
indicate that it would not have been
relatively easy to comply with that
obligation of specificity. However, the fact that it was not done was not due
to deliberate
cutting of corners or disregard of the legal requirements. On one
view, the error arose from a failure to reproduce in the notice
requiring
production of documents the detailed information supplied on oath for the
purposes of s 214(1)."
On the other hand, his Honour did refer to the breadth of the power under s 214
in a way which was consistent with his construction
of it. He said,
inter alia[52]:
"The seriousness of the intrusion on the rights of Lawpark and apparently
Breven, through the seizure of their documents, flowed
from the extraordinary
breadth of the power conferred by s 214. The seriousness of the
consequence for the affected businesses
of an unlawful exercise of the power
warranted careful scrutiny of the conduct of customs: however, it did not turn
genuine attempts
at compliance into deliberate disregard or reckless
indifference."
- Assuming,
without deciding, that the Court of Appeal acted upon the construction of
s 214(3) adopted by Basten JA, there
is a question whether
Mr Parker was lulled into a false sense of security because of the
want of any challenge to the O'Neill construction. Could he have
approached the case any differently if he had been put on notice of such a
challenge? The answer to
that question depends upon whether there was an
argument that he could have put against admission of the evidence pursuant to
s 138, on the
basis of the deficiency in the notice to produce, which he
did not put because of the assumption that the narrow construction of
s 214(3) was not in dispute. Counsel for Mr Parker contended, in the
course of argument in this Court, that, had the correctness
of O'Neill
been agitated in the Court of Appeal, Mr Parker could have argued that
even if O'Neill were wrong the Sched V warrant was far too narrow to
justify the search that took place. That proposition treated the warrant
as a
source of the seizure power. On the correct construction of s 214 the
existence of the warrant was a necessary condition
of that power. It did not
define its extent. The hypothetical argument would not have succeeded.
- No
other alternative argument that could have been put is apparent. In the
circumstances there was no relevant unfairness. The
course taken by the Court
of Appeal did not deny the appellant an opportunity to put argument that
could have made a difference to the
outcome[53].
He has, of course, been heard in this Court on the question of the correctness
of the O'Neill decision and the proper construction of s 214.
Conclusion
- For
the preceding reasons, the appeal should be dismissed with costs.
- GUMMOW,
HAYNE AND KIEFEL JJ. The respondent, as Comptroller-General of Customs,
formerly had the general administration of the Customs Act 1901 (Cth)
("the
Act")[54]. The
term "Collector", which will appear in these reasons, is used to identify any of
the principal officers previously described
in s 8. This litigation
comes before this Court on appeal from the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court
of New South
Wales[55]
(Mason P, Tobias and Basten JJA), which dismissed an appeal from the
decision of a judge of the Supreme
Court[56]
(Simpson J). The critical events began some 20 years ago. In that
interval there have been various changes to the Act and to other relevant
legislation.
The nature of the proceedings
- The
Supreme Court exercised federal jurisdiction. The applicable statutory law of
evidence, however, was not to be found in the
Evidence Act 1995 (Cth).
The effect of ss 4 and 8 of that statute was that in the Supreme Court
s 79 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) fully operated and "picked
up" New South Wales law, including the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW) ("the
Evidence Act").
- The
proceedings in the Supreme Court were "Customs prosecutions" for the purposes of
Pt XIV of the Act and were instituted in the Supreme Court by the
respondent as provided by par (a) of s 245(1) of the Act. The nature
of proceedings under Pt XIV was considered by this Court in Chief
Executive Officer of Customs v Labrador Liquor Wholesale Pty
Ltd[57].
In the present case, Basten JA (with whose reasons Mason P and
Tobias JA agreed) held that the Act required that the proceedings be
commenced and conducted by a process which, for the purposes of the organisation
of the business
of the Supreme Court, gave rise to an appeal to the Court of
Appeal rather than the Court of Criminal
Appeal[58]. In
this Court no challenge was made to that conclusion.
The investigation by ACS
- Officers
of Customs ("the ACS") had investigated over several years, beginning in 1987,
suspected contraventions of the Act and of the Spirits Act 1906 (Cth)
("the Spirits
Act")[59].
Section 4 of the Spirits Act incorporated various provisions of the Act,
including those of Pt XII with respect to the
powers of the ACS and of
Pt XIII providing for penalties.
- The
appellant was a director and shareholder of Lawpark Pty Ltd ("Lawpark") and
Breven Pty Ltd ("Breven"). Lawpark imported and
distributed alcoholic spirits
for human consumption and Breven held a warehouse licence issued under Pt V
of the Act and conducted
a bond store where imported spirits might be warehoused
without incurring a liability to pay duty under the Act. The warehouse licence
contained a condition requiring Breven to retain for five years records relating
to goods lawfully removed from the warehouse. A
third company, Kingswood
Distillery Pty Limited ("Kingswood"), made and processed spirits in Australia.
By March 1990 officers
of the ACS had formed the view that the three
companies were participants in a scheme whereby, prior to bottling and sale in
Australia,
imported spirits had been adulterated or "extended" by the addition
of locally produced grain-based alcohol.
- The
ACS then considered the use of legislative authority to obtain by compulsion
documents in the possession of relevant parties.
In that regard, provision was
apparently made both by s 10 of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) and by
s 214 of the Act. It was decided to rely upon
s 214[60].
- The
focus of the appeal to the Court of Appeal was upon the admission into evidence
at the trial of documents seized by officers
of the ACS on 6 March 1990 in
the purported execution of a warrant issued under s 214. The appellant
unsuccessfully submitted
that Simpson J had erred in exercising the power
conferred by s 138 of the Evidence Act in favour of admission of the
evidence.
The section 214 instruments
- The
provenance of s 214 is traced by the Chief Justice in his reasons. As
enacted in 1901, what later became sub-s (1)
of s 214 had been the
whole of s 214. Section 214(1) created an offence. The commission of
the offence was conditioned
upon failure to comply with a requirement of the
Collector to "produce and hand over" certain books and documents, and to produce
certain books and documents for inspection and permit the making of copies or
extracts from them. The Collector was authorised to
impose the requirement just
described:
"[w]henever information in writing has been given on oath to the Collector that
goods have been ... illegally dealt with, or that
it is intended to ...
illegally deal with any goods, or whenever any goods have been seized or
detained".
- On
16 January 1990 an officer of the ACS swore what was identified as
"Section 214 Information" ("the Information"). This
was to the effect
that, upon analysis, a bottle of "Cheval Napoleon Old French Brandy" purchased
from an identified retailer in Queensland
and labelled "Imported by Lawpark Pty
Ltd ... Product of France. 37.0% A/V", had been shown to contain spirit which
was the product
of either or both grain and molasses rather than spirit wholly
produced from grapes. Section 9(b) of the Spirits Act made it
an offence
to describe as brandy any spirit not wholly distilled from wine produced from
grapes or grape products. The Information
concluded that, within the meaning of
s 214(1) of the Act, Lawpark had "illegally dealt with" goods being the
contents of the
bottle.
- Acting
upon that Information, on 1 March 1990 the Collector for New South Wales
issued two instruments. The first, addressed
to Lawpark, was headed "Notice to
Produce Documents" ("the Notice to Produce") and required Lawpark to produce and
hand over:
"all books and documents relating to [one bottle of spirits labelled as 'Cheval
Napoleon Old French Brandy'] and relating to all other goods imported by you
at any time within the period of five years immediately preceding this
request". (emphasis added)
- It
is important to note immediately that in the Court of Appeal, Basten JA
referred to this limited identification of the one
bottle, and went
on[61]:
"Such a notice was incapable of being complied with; Mr Parker could not
reasonably have been expected to locate the relevant
documents, because the
notice was hopelessly imprecise as to the goods in question. The notice was
therefore invalid. That element
of invalidity was accepted by the [respondent]
for the purposes of the proceedings and was sufficient in itself to invoke the
operation
of s 138 of the Evidence Act, as recognised by her Honour ...
The fact that the request for production of documents was invalid, meant that
there could be no valid trigger engaging the power
to execute the warrant. To
that extent, the search and seizure which followed were also invalid. However,
the appellant separately
asserted that there had been no failure to comply with
the request, even assuming it were valid, so as to engage the power to execute
the warrant, thereby constituting a separate complaint of improper or unlawful
conduct."
This second complaint was concerned with the seizure of what in these reasons
will be identified as the "five year documents".
- The
second instrument issued on 1 March 1990 to Lawpark was to be used if there
was an inadequate response to the Notice to
Produce. It was headed:
"SCHEDULE V
THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
Customs Warrant" (italics in
original)
and addressed to a named officer of the ACS ("the Warrant").
- The
immediate source of the power of the Collector to issue the Warrant was
s 214(2). This stated:
"For the purposes of this section, the Comptroller or the Collector of Customs
for a State or Territory may issue to any officer
of Customs or officer of
police a Customs Warrant, in accordance with the form in Schedule V, marked
with a Customs stamp."
Provision to this effect had been introduced by the Customs Act 1923
(Cth) ("the 1923
Act")[62].
That statute also introduced s 214(3) and Sched V, and amended the
averment provision of s 255, to which reference
will be
made[63].
- Section 214(3)
conferred authority for the commission of acts which at common law might be
tortious, and actionable in trespass,
detinue and
conversion[64].
It provided:
"If any person fails to comply with a requirement by the Collector under this
section, an officer of Customs or officer of police,
having with him a Customs
Warrant in the form of Schedule V hereto, may, at any time of the day or
night, break open and enter
into any house, premises or place in which any books
or documents relating to the goods are or are supposed to be, and search:
(a) the house, premises or place;
(b) any person therein or thereon; and
(c) any chests, trunks or packages therein or thereon;
and take possession of, remove and impound any of those books and documents
which are found."
Schedule V stated, so far as material:
"WHEREAS information in writing has been given on oath to me that goods have
been unlawfully imported, exported, undervalued or
entered or illegally dealt
with or that it is intended to unlawfully import, export, undervalue or enter or
illegally deal with goods,
(or
Whereas goods have been seized or detained)
You are hereby authorized, in the event of ......... failing to comply
immediately with any requirement made in pursuance of section
two hundred and
fourteen of [the Act], to enter into, at any time of the day or night, and
search, any house premises or place in
which any books or documents relating
to the goods are or are supposed to be; and to break open any such house
premises or place and search any person therein or thereon and any chests
trunks
or packages therein or thereon; and to take possession of, remove and impound
any of those books and documents which are found:
And for so doing this shall
be your sufficient warrant." (emphasis added)
- The
Warrant issued in respect of Lawpark followed the form of Sched V. It did
not follow the terms of the Notice to Produce,
which included the words "and
relating to all other goods imported by you at any time within the period of
five years". However,
in the events that happened, officers of the ACS acted as
if the Warrant had expressly so provided.
- The
Notice to Produce was served on the appellant on 6 March 1990 at the
premises of Lawpark (and, it would appear, of Breven)
at Wetherill Park in New
South
Wales[65]. The
principal officer of the ACS in attendance formed the view that there had been
no proper compliance and the Warrant was then
"executed". On its face the
Warrant did not authorise the seizure of "five year documents" and was thus in
terms much narrower than
those of the Notice to Produce. Nevertheless, a large
number of documents was taken from the Wetherill Park premises and elsewhere,
placed in boxes and sealed.
The course of proceedings in the Supreme Court
- By
statement of claim filed in the Common Law Division of the Supreme Court on
30 July 1992 and amended on four occasions, the
respondent sought
convictions of the appellant (who was one of four defendants) of one offence
against s 33(1) of the Act, and
13 offences against s 234(1)(a) of the
Act, an order for recovery of penalties and an order for payment of unpaid duty.
Section 33(1)
made it an offence for a person, except as authorised by the
Act, to move, alter or interfere with goods subject to the control of
the
Customs. Section 234(1)(a) made it an offence to evade payment of any duty
which was payable. The appellant was alleged
to have committed the offences on
various dates between 1 August 1987 and 31 May 1990.
- The
statement of claim as amended included an averment that, to the extent provided
by s 255 of the Act, all matters and facts
specified in the statement of
claim were true and correct. Section 144 of the Excise Act 1901
(Cth) is in similar terms to s 255. In Chief Executive Officer of
Customs v El
Hajje[66],
this Court held that the averment provisions of s 144 did not distinguish
between the ultimate fact or facts in issue and other facts. However, the
respondent accepted that an offence
contrary to par (a) of s 234(1)
carried a mental element of "blameworthy act or
omission"[67].
The provisions of s 255 do not apply to an averment of the intent of the
defendant (s 255(4)). Hence the importance
of the seized documents in
establishing the case against the appellant.
- In
circumstances which were not explored in the present appeal, a stay of the
Supreme Court proceeding was ordered on 10 June
1994. Thereafter, the stay
was lifted and the proceedings against the other three defendants were brought
to a conclusion. The
proceeding against the appellant came on for trial before
Simpson J, sitting without a jury. In the reply the respondent had
admitted that the Notice to Produce was invalid and that documents including
bond input and output records and the Bond Register
relating to the premises at
Wetherill Park were not lawfully obtained pursuant to s 214 of the Act.
However, the invalidity
was said not to be "intentional" and the admission was
confined at trial to the lack of proper identification of the one bottle in
the
Notice to Produce. The admission did not extend to the appellant's complaint
respecting the "five year documents".
112 The appellant objected to virtually all of the evidence upon which (with
the benefit of the averment provision in s 255
of the Act) the respondent
proposed to prove the offences against the appellant. The appellant contended
that the evidence had been
obtained either or both "improperly" and "in
contravention of an Australian law" and relied upon s 138 of the Evidence
Act. The phrase "an Australian law" is so defined in the Evidence Act as to
include both the common law and a law of the Commonwealth. In determining
whether, in the terms of s 138(1), the desirability of admitting the
evidence in question outweighs the undesirability of doing so, the court is to
take into account
the various matters in pars (a)-(h) of
s 138(3)[68].
- After
a lengthy voir dire hearing Simpson J ruled that the evidence in question
would be admitted and then proceeded with the
trial. On 8 May 2006, her
Honour delivered two sets of reasons. The first contained her reasons for the
ruling on
evidence[69]
and the other comprised the reasons for judgment that the 14 offences
alleged against the appellant had been
proved[70].
- There
was then a further hearing on the question of penalty and on 30 November
2006 Simpson J delivered reasons for judgment
on that
subject[71].
Her Honour noted that the duty evaded had been in excess of $3 million and
described the evasion offences under s 234 of the
Act as of a systematic
and calculated nature, leading to the conclusion that the penalty in respect of
each offence was to be 3.25
times the amount of the duty
evaded[72].
- In
the concluding paragraphs of her reasons for the ruling on evidence,
Simpson J stated:
"[Section] 138 of the Evidence Act requires, in effect, a balancing of a
number of matters. One of these is the nature of the offences and subject
matter of the proceedings
in which the evidence is sought to be tendered;
against that has to be weighed, inter alia, the gravity of the
impropriety or contravention, whether it was deliberate or reckless, and the
extent (if any) of the intrusion
into the rights of individuals.
As I have made clear, I am satisfied that the impropriety in the collection of
the evidence was not such as should be met with exclusion
of the evidence so
obtained. The offences alleged against the [appellant] are serious, and the
evidence is important. I am not
in a position to judge at this stage its
probative value, except to repeat that, as I understand it, the evidence so
obtained amounts
virtually to the whole of the prosecution
case."
- What
her Honour said in the last sentence with respect to the probative value of the
evidence must be read with her conclusions in
her trial judgment. There,
Simpson J (i) noted that no evidence had been given in rebuttal "of
any of the essential features
of the Comptroller's case", (ii) concluded
that the s 255 averment alone was sufficient to found a conclusion that
"all
factual matters" pleaded by the Comptroller were proved, and
(iii) turned to consider whether the requisite standard of proof
beyond
reasonable doubt had been
met[73].
- Her
Honour was assisted by the report and analysis of the seized documentation which
had been prepared by a chartered accountant,
Ms Tamara Lindsay. She had
been extensively cross-examined by counsel for the appellant, but, in the
result, Simpson J
relied upon the conclusions stated in the report, saying
that the methodology employed in the report had not been undermined in any
way.
The Court of Appeal
- The
appellant appealed to the Court of Appeal seeking orders setting aside the
convictions recorded on 8 May 2006 of the offences
against ss 33 and
234 of the Act, and the penalties, fines and orders imposed and made on
30 November 2006. Each of the
grounds of appeal pressed at the hearing
related to the first decision of
Simpson J[74].
The Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal with costs on 6 December 2007.
- Much
of the argument in this Court has turned upon the significance of the alleged
defect in process with respect to the seizure
of "five year documents" and upon
the construction of s 214 and Sched V of the Act. In that regard, on
18 August
1988, Dunford DCJ had delivered his judgment in In the
matter of the appeal of Lawrence Charles
O'Neill[75],
and in the course of his reasons had said:
"Schedule [V] authorises the seizure of documents relating to 'the goods',
and the only goods referred to in the warrant are
the goods which are the
subject of an information on oath or the goods that have been seized or
detained. I note that sub-ss (2)
and (3) [of s 214] and
Schedule [V] were all inserted in the Act at the same time, namely by [the
1923 Act], and there
is no direct reference in any of them to what might be
called the five year documents, although the provision relating to the five
year
documents [has] been in sub-s (1) since the original enactment of the
statute in 1901. It seems to me that sub-ss (2)
and (3) should be
construed so as to be compatible and consistent particularly as a search warrant
constitutes a grave interference
with a citizen's right to privacy.
Moreover, in the usual course of events, once a warrant had issued, it is the
terms of the warrant which (subject to the relevant
statute) defines what might
be seized. I am satisfied that on the proper construction of
Schedule [V] only the goods the
subject of the information on oath or the
goods seized or detained are authorised to be taken, and accordingly I hold that
if the
execution of the warrant was valid, the only documents authorised to be
seized were those relating to the goods detained, that is
relating to
shipment 1 and not those relating to any other importation within the
previous five years."
- In
the Court of Appeal, Basten JA considered in detail the questions of
construction of the Act and concluded that, whilst Simpson J
had accepted
the decision in O'Neill, in his view the construction adopted in
O'Neill "was
mistaken"[76].
However, Basten JA went on to conclude that the challenges by the appellant
to the judgment of Simpson J should be rejected
and the appeal
dismissed[77].
The appeal to this Court
- It
is important to note that the grant of special leave to appeal to this Court is
limited to the following ground:
"The Court of Appeal erred in denying procedural fairness to the [a]ppellant by
overturning a finding made by the trial [j]udge in
the [a]ppellant's favour,
based on the correctness of the judgment [in O'Neill], without the
[r]espondent seeking such an outcome or the Court of Appeal giving notice it was
considering it, and therefore without
the [a]ppellant having a proper
opportunity to make submissions in support of the finding."
- The
appellant complains in this Court that without hearing the parties the Court of
Appeal rejected the authority of O'Neill and thereby allegedly undermined
his submissions respecting the unlawful or improper seizure of the "five year
documents". Reserved
reasons were delivered and orders pronounced without
counsel having had the opportunity to question what was said respecting
O'Neill in those reasons. The appellant further submits that this denial
of procedural fairness deprived him of the possibility of a successful
outcome
in the Court of Appeal. The appellant refers in that regard to the well known
statement of principle in Stead v State Government Insurance
Commission[78],
since applied in Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex parte
Aala[79].
- The
appellant seeks remitter to the Court of Appeal to rehear those of its grounds
of appeal to that Court which assert error by
the primary judge in her ruling
under s 138 of the Evidence Act.
- The
respondent submits that the Court of Appeal correctly differed from the
interpretation given to s 214 of the Act in O'Neill. In the
alternative, the respondent submits that the Court of Appeal nevertheless
decided the appeal on the footing that O'Neill was correctly decided and
that the result is that there was no prejudice to the appellant on that account.
That alternative submission
should be accepted and for this and other reasons
the appeal should be dismissed.
Conclusions
- When
considering whether O'Neill had been correctly decided, the Court of
Appeal did not refer to the further decision in Challenge Plastics Pty Ltd v
Collector of
Customs[80].
There, in 1993, Heerey J had held that s 214(3) of the Act
authorised only the seizure of documents relating to the
goods the subject of
the information given to the Collector under s 214(1), and did not
authorise the seizure of documents relating
to goods imported or exported within
the previous five years.
- The
relevant provisions have since been repealed. At this distance, the Court of
Appeal should have been slow to depart from what
was decided by the Federal
Court, even if it had entertained doubts on the subject. However, without
reaching any conclusion, we
approach this appeal on the footing, favourable to
the appellant, that the Court of Appeal should not have cast any doubt upon
O'Neill.
- Nevertheless,
O'Neill does not supply the proper commencement point for the resolution
of the appeal to this Court. The seizure of the five year documents
was
unlawful because it was not authorised. It was not authorised because, as the
respondent had formally admitted in the pleadings,
a necessary condition
precedent to the execution of the Warrant (failure to comply with the Notice to
Produce) was not satisfied.
And that condition precedent could never have been
met because of the deficiency in the Notice to Produce at the initial stage of
the procedures under s 214. What then is the significance of the seizure
of the five year documents under colour of that Warrant?
- This
is not an appeal where the alleged error is said to appear in the decision of
the primary judge, sitting without a jury, and
the intermediate appellate court
allegedly erred in the exercise of its appellate function in failing to
recognise and correct that
error. The appellant's complaint in this Court fixes
upon the manner of disposition of the intermediate appeal and upon what is
said
to have been a denial of procedural fairness at that stage.
- The
task entrusted to the Court of Appeal by s 75A of the Supreme Court
Act 1970 (NSW) included the making of the orders which ought to have been
made by Simpson J, after the Court of Appeal had conducted
a "real review"
of the reasons of her
Honour[81].
If, upon such a review, the Court of Appeal had been obliged to decide that
there had been no appealable error in the conclusion
of the primary judge
respecting the application of s 138 of the Evidence Act, then there can be
no occasion for this Court to make an order returning the matter to the Court of
Appeal for a further hearing
on that subject. Such an outcome would illustrate
the proposition that not every departure from the rules of procedural fairness
at a trial or an intermediate appeal will entitle the aggrieved party to an
appellate
remedy[82].
- Basten JA
considered the operation of the factors in s 138(3) in that portion of his
reasons headed "Application of discretion to admit
evidence"[83].
His Honour (i) with respect to the phrase "the gravity of the impropriety
or contravention" in par (d) of s 138(3), emphasised the major
invasion of rights by the seizure of a large volume of documents without consent
and without the authority
of a valid warrant, (ii) said that the case for
rejection of the evidence "would be strong, if not overwhelming" if there also
had been "wilful disregard" of the requirements of the Act by the relevant
officers of the ACS, but (iii) upheld the conclusion
of Simpson J that
there had been no such "wilful disregard" and that genuine attempts at
compliance with the law were not deliberate
disregard of it or reckless
indifference to
it[84].
- Basten JA
also noted that the trial judge had correctly considered the evidence in the
five year documents to be both critical
to establishing the case against the
appellant and compelling. (This may undervalue the importance of the s 255
averment.)
His Honour also stressed both that the unlawfulness involved in the
seizure did not diminish the probative value of the evidence
and, with reference
to the phrase "the nature of the relevant offence" in par (c) of
s 138(3), that the serious nature
of the offences involved "a deliberate
flouting of the revenue laws for commercial benefit over a considerable
period"[85].
Hence, in the view of Basten JA, the forensic background to the
(unsuccessful) exertions of the appellant at trial to establish
not only
illegality but wilful disregard or at least indifference to the requirements of
s 214.
- His
Honour
concluded[86]:
"The appellant also criticised her Honour's reasons in that they failed
explicitly to weigh the mandatory factors set out in s 138(3).
On a
reading of her Honour's reasons, the criticism appeared to have force. However,
once the real issues in the case were identified,
it is clear that these issues
were addressed. Some of the mandatory considerations (such as breach of the
ICCPR and the possibility
or absence of disciplinary action) simply did not
arise on the case as presented at trial. Even if there were deficiencies in the
reasons with respect to the balancing exercise required by s 138(3), once
the relevant factual basis was accepted, the balancing
exercise could as well be
undertaken by this court on a rehearing as by the trial judge. That exercise
has now been completed.
A challenge to the inadequacy of her Honour's reasons
in that respect was beside the point."
- In
this chain of reasoning no part was played by the earlier expression of opinion
by Basten JA respecting the correctness of
the interpretation of the Act in
O'Neill. Under the heading "Failure to train and educate officers", his
Honour
said[87]:
"As noted above, a proper consideration of s 214 does not support the view
expressed in O'Neill's case that the search permitted in execution of the
[W]arrant did not entitle [ACS] officers to locate and seize documents in
relation
to goods imported or exported during the previous 5 years.
However, the [respondent] did not dispute the correctness of O'Neill's
case but rather relied upon the fact that Mr Swinton, who was the
solicitor primarily responsible for legal advice in relation
to the operation
had failed to grasp the significance of the reference to O'Neill's case
in counsel's advice. Accordingly, the complaint that the trial judge failed to
address the issue must be addressed on that
basis."
After detailed consideration of the evidence, Basten JA
concluded[88]:
"[I]t is clear that [the ACS] did not ignore the decision in O'Neill but
obtained their own advice in relation to it. As Dunford DCJ himself
explained in his reasons, there were cogent arguments
for both the broader and
the narrower view of the power. [The ACS] obtained advice from the [Australian
Government Solicitor] favouring
the broader view, which advice was neither
clearly mistaken, nor based on any misunderstanding of the statutory provision
in question,
nor of the principles of statutory construction. In any case where
the scope of a statutory power is doubtful, [a body] which adopts
a broader
rather than a narrower view may later be found to have exceeded its authority.
However, at least in the present circumstances,
there was no deliberate or
reckless disregard of an established constraint on power, nor can [the ACS]
fairly be criticised for not
adhering to the narrower view and directing its
officers accordingly. It had plausible legal advice supportive of its position.
It did not act improperly, for the purposes of s 138, in failing to
instruct its officers to operate otherwise."
- The
significance of that statement for the appeal to this Court is as follows. The
respondent is correct in the submission that
the Court of Appeal decided the
appeal before it on the footing, accepted by the respondent, that O'Neill
was correct. The respondent had admitted, and there was therefore no issue at
trial, that the documents that had been seized were
not lawfully obtained
pursuant to s 214 of the Act. The central issue had been whether there had
been culpable failure by the
ACS to adapt its procedures to give effect to
O'Neill. On that issue the appellant failed in the Court of Appeal.
Once this is appreciated, the respondent has a good answer to the limited
ground
on which special leave to appeal was granted by this Court.
- However,
before parting with the appeal several further points should be made or
repeated.
- The
first concerns the emphasis sought by the appellant to be given in this Court to
the further or additional "illegality" respecting
the seizure of the five year
documents, contrary to the reasoning in O'Neill. The gravity of the
conduct of the officers of the ACS was in the commission of the tortious acts
without the answer provided by
a valid warrant. But this was not in deliberate
or reckless disregard of the requirements of the Act. Further, the "illegality"
was "complete" without any separate and distinct complaint respecting the five
year documents and the significance of O'Neill.
- The
second matter concerns the scope of the principles respecting procedural
fairness in curial proceedings. The content of the
requirement of procedural
fairness at appellate level, as elsewhere, cannot be surveyed in metes and
bounds. But this litigation
illustrates a point of general importance,
habitually assumed without elaboration. It is that consideration by a court of
the weight
to be given to decisions that are not authoritative (because made by
courts lower in the hierarchy) does not necessarily attract
an obligation to
invite submissions by the legal representatives of the parties directed
specifically to those decisions. To extend
that invitation on occasion may be
prudent, but it is not always mandated by the requirements of procedural
fairness and, as the
decision of this Court in Australian Securities
Commission v Marlborough Gold Mines
Ltd[89]
illustrates, it may be necessary to consider more than the dictates of
procedural fairness. But what is required is that the parties
are given a
sufficient opportunity to be heard on the issues in the case and those issues
will not often be defined in a way that
requires specific identification of
particular, but non-binding, previous decisions.
- In
this case there was no issue about whether the Warrant permitted search for, or
seizure of, the five year documents. It was admitted
that it did not. The
issue that was litigated about O'Neill was not whether it was correctly
decided, it was what the ACS had done in response to O'Neill. The
decision by the Court of Appeal to examine the correctness of O'Neill
without inviting the parties to make submissions about the point was not a
denial of procedural fairness.
Order
- The
appeal should be dismissed with costs.
- HEYDON
J. The background is set out
above[90].
Simpson J's voir dire judgment referred to the notice to produce dated 1 March
1990 as "the Notice to Produce" and to the warrant
dated 1 March 1990 as "the
Customs Warrant". The same abbreviations will be employed below.
Simpson J's approach to admissibility
- The
information referred to in the Notice to Produce alleged that Lawpark Pty Ltd
had illegally dealt with goods, namely the brandy
in a particular bottle. The
Notice to Produce required Lawpark Pty Ltd to produce all books and documents
relating to (a) that bottle
of brandy and (b) all other goods imported within
the previous five years. The Customs Warrant purportedly authorised search for
and seizure of all books and documents within categories (a) and (b). Many
documents within category (b) were seized and tendered.
Simpson J held that
those documents were admissible under s 138 of the Evidence Act. But she did
hold that they had been obtained "improperly" in two respects.
- The
first impropriety. Simpson J considered that the Notice to Produce
failed to satisfy the requirement of s
214(1)[91] of
the Customs Act that the notice to produce "all books and documents relating to"
the bottle of brandy referred to in the information
must identify it with
sufficient clarity to enable the recipient to comply. She held that that was an
impropriety within the meaning
of
s 138[92].
This holding has, correctly, not been
challenged[93].
- The
second impropriety. Further, the seizure of documents in category
(b) was, in Simpson J's opinion, at least an
impropriety[94].
She took that view because that seizure was not permitted by the Customs
Warrant: the Customs Warrant was a warrant in the same
form as Sched V to the
Customs Act, and she considered the range of documents capable of being obtained
under the s 214(3) power
and the Sched V warrant referred to in it to be
narrower than the range of documents which a notice to produce under s 214(1)
created
an obligation to produce.
- It
may be that Simpson J viewed the decisive question in relation to the second
impropriety in some places as being the construction
of Sched V and in others as
being the construction of s 214(3). If she did, it was understandable.
Section 214(3) read by
itself suggested that it was the source of power to
enter, search and seize. But it did make possession of a Sched V warrant
mandatory,
and the language of the Sched V warrant suggested that it was the
source of power to enter, search and seize ("You are hereby authorized
... And
... this shall be your sufficient warrant"). However, nothing turns on whether
or not Simpson J took this view. Whatever
the true construction of
s 214(3) and Sched V, the selected construction of one in turn
affected the other, and had to
be congruent with it.
- Simpson
J's conclusion that the second impropriety had taken place would only hold good
if the reasoning in Re
O'Neill[95],
with which Simpson J agreed, was correct. For in Re O'Neill Dunford DCJ
held that while s 214(1) permitted the Collector to require the production of
books and documents relating to two categories
of goods (the goods which the
information in writing alleged had been dealt with, and other goods imported or
exported in the previous
five years), s 214(3), and the Customs Warrant in
the form of Sched V, permitted seizure only of the first category of documents,
not the second.
The appellant's criticism of the Court of Appeal's
reasoning
- The
appellant's submissions depend on the interrelationship between three parts of
the Court of Appeal's judgment. In the first,
the "Re O'Neill section",
it held that decision to be wrong. In the second, the "failure to train
section", it said that for the purpose of concluding
whether there had been an
impropriety arising from the respondent's failure properly to train and educate
customs officers about
Re O'Neill it would assume the correctness of that
case. In the third, the "s 138(3) section", it applied the factors listed
in s 138(3)
to the first impropriety, but, according to the appellant, not
the second.
- Counsel
for the appellant told the Court of Appeal that he relied on the excessive width
of the search as "a further impropriety",
ie a second impropriety. Counsel for
the respondent correctly told the Court of Appeal that there was no notice of
contention that
Re O'Neill was wrong, and said: "accepting that her
Honour was right about [Re O'Neill] then this was another point of
illegality". The Court of Appeal noted that the respondent did not dispute the
correctness of Re O'Neill, and said in the "failure to train section"
that Simpson J's reasoning on that subject "must be addressed on that
basis."[96]
"That basis" involved assuming that Re O'Neill was correct, and that
Simpson J was correct to find the second impropriety. But, said the appellant
in this Court, when the Court
of Appeal in the "s 138(3) section" dealt with a
different topic – Simpson J's application of s 138(3) – it
failed
to do so "on that basis", ie on the basis that there were two
improprieties, not one. It did so because in the "Re O'Neill section" it
held that case to be wrong without having been invited by the respondent to do
so and without notice to the
parties[97].
If it were wrong, there was no second impropriety. Hence the appellant
contended that he had been denied procedural fairness.
Did the Court of Appeal deny the appellant procedural
fairness?
- The
wisdom of uttering dicta on a point not argued where those dicta do not affect
the outcome as, by definition, they cannot if
they are only dicta, may sometimes
be questioned. That is partly because the absence of contested argument
significantly weakens
the future value of the dicta, and there can be other
objections. But it is not necessarily a denial of procedural fairness for
a
court to utter dicta on a point not argued. That was so in relation to the
"Re O'Neill section". Procedural fairness was only denied when in the
"s 138(3) section" the Court of Appeal applied its opinion stated
in the
"Re O'Neill section" that the case was wrong – if it did. Did
it?
- The
respondent's first contention. The respondent submitted that the remarks of
the Court of Appeal about Re O'Neill were a "digression" and "not
necessary because Customs had accepted through counsel that [the respondent was]
prepared to conduct
the case on the basis that [Re] O'Neill was
right." The respondent's first contention was that the only significance of
Re O'Neill lay in an argument by the appellant that there had been a
failure by Customs to train its officers about the effect of Re O'Neill.
While Simpson J found that the relevant officers had little understanding or
awareness of what was disclosed by Re O'Neill, she did not find that this
was the result of inadequate education and training, and found that the officers
had not acted with ill-will,
for a collateral purpose or in bad faith. The
respondent submitted that the "failure to train" case run at trial was run again
in
the Court of Appeal, but only on the basis that it revealed a "disturbing"
but non-reckless state of affairs. The respondent submitted
that the key
passage in the Court of Appeal's reasons was in the "failure to train
section"[98],
and that the balance of the Court of Appeal's reasoning in that section, which
concluded that there was no impropriety in that regard,
rested on an assumption
that Re O'Neill was correct.
- Crucial
to the respondent's first contention is the proposition that the appellant
only relied on Re O'Neill in the Court of Appeal to support the
"failure to train" case. That proposition is not correct. The matter was put
more broadly
before Simpson
J[99].
Further, Simpson J approached the matter more broadly. She saw the search as
being illegal because the power to search under s
214(3) was narrow. And in the
Court of Appeal counsel for the appellant supported Simpson J's
approach[100].
In the absence of any specific challenge to her approach by the respondent in
the Court of Appeal, and of any specific indication
by the Court of Appeal that
that approach was not accepted, the appellant was entitled to assume that
Simpson J's view of the matter
would stand, and would be taken into account by
the Court of Appeal in the "s 138(3) section".
- The
respondent's second contention. The second contention of the respondent was
that having stated in the "failure to train section" that the correctness of
Re O'Neill was assumed, the Court of Appeal continued to make that
assumption in the "s 138(3) section". That contention is crucial because,
if it is correct, there was no want of procedural fairness. It is not correct.
The question is a question of construction of the
reasons for judgment.
Properly construed, they falsify the respondent's contention. They are
appropriately lengthy, detailed, thoughtful
and complex. Although the Court of
Appeal did note that the parties conducted the appeal on the assumption that
Re O'Neill was right, it appears, with respect, in the course of
preparing its reasons over time, inadvertently to have overlooked the fact
that
no hearing had been given on the question whether Re O'Neill was wrong,
and to have taken into account its view, expressed in the "Re O'Neill
section", that that case was wrong in deciding the appeal in defiance of the
parties' assumption. That is so for reasons correctly
stated by the appellant
as follows.
- First,
the Court of Appeal said in the "s 138(3)
section"[101]:
"In the result, the unlawfulness of the conduct of customs officers turned
on the failure adequately to identify the bottle of brandy said to have been
illegally dealt with pursuant to the Spirits Act. There
was no evidence to
indicate that it would not have been relatively easy to comply with that
obligation of specificity. However, the fact that it was not done
was not due to deliberate cutting of corners or disregard of the legal
requirements. On one view, the error arose from a failure to reproduce
in the notice requiring production of documents the detailed information
supplied on oath
for the purposes of s 214(1)." (emphasis
added)
The conduct of the customs officers was unlawful because it involved trespasses
to land and goods. To say that "unlawfulness ...
turned on" the failure of
identification – the first impropriety – is to say that the failure
of identification was a
necessary condition of unlawfulness. The same
conclusion flows from the reference to only one "obligation", one breach and one
"error".
Yet on Simpson J's approach, based on the correctness of Re
O'Neill, "unlawfulness" also flowed independently from the second
impropriety – the seizure of documents other than those relating
to the
bottle of brandy alleged to have been illegally dealt with. The correctness of
Simpson J's conclusion that there were two
improprieties was conceded by the
respondent in the Court of Appeal. There were two reasons for the conclusion of
"unlawfulness".
Either reason was a sufficient condition for that conclusion.
To say, as the Court of Appeal did, that "the unlawfulness" turned
on only the
first reason is to deny the existence of the second. Hence the Court of
Appeal's language indicates that it was not
relying on Simpson J's second
impropriety and was assuming not that Re O'Neill was correct, but that it
was wrong.
- Secondly,
this is confirmed by another passage in the "s 138(3)
section"[102]:
"The seriousness of the intrusion on the rights of Lawpark ... through the
seizure of [its] documents, flowed from the extraordinary
breadth of the power
conferred by s 214."
This assertion that s 214(3) confers an extraordinarily broad power to search
and seize is inconsistent with Re O'Neill. It recognised only a narrow
power.
- Thirdly,
before the "s 138(3) section" the Court of Appeal had concluded in the "Re
O'Neill section" that only the first impropriety had taken
place[103].
It had not adopted Simpson J's conclusion that there had been a second
impropriety. It had not referred to it at all. It had
not noted that no second
impropriety could be found unless Re O'Neill were correct. It had not
said at the end of the "Re O'Neill section" that that opinion would be
put aside in view of the contrary assumption on which the parties had conducted
the case in the
Court of Appeal. At one point in the "failure to train section"
it did say: "the complaint that the trial judge failed to address
the issue
must be addressed on that
basis."[104]
By "basis" it meant "the assumption that Re O'Neill is correct". By
"issue" it meant the issue whether there had been a "failure to train and
educate customs officers". In other words,
the assumption being made by the
Court of Appeal that Re O'Neill was correct was being made only for the
purpose of deciding the issue of a "failure to train and educate officers". It
was not being
made in relation to the issues examined in the "s 138(3) section"
after the failure to train issue had been dealt with. The respondent
contended
that the adoption of a "basis" that Re O'Neill was correct, contrary to
the reasoned views of the Court of Appeal developed at some length in the "Re
O'Neill
section"[105],
applied not only in the "failure to train section" but also in the "s 138(3)
section". The better reading is that propounded by
the appellant.
- The
respondent's third contention. The respondent relied on a passage in the "s
138(3) section" quoted
above[106]
which speaks of "the seizure of a large volume of documents without consent and
without the authority of a valid warrant". But it
does not identify why the
Customs Warrant lacked validity. It is silent on whether the Court of Appeal
had in mind the second of
the improprieties identified by Simpson J as well as
the first. The passage is thus neutral on the question of whether the Court
of
Appeal was there assuming that Re O'Neill was correct.
- It
follows that the appellant was denied procedural fairness. For this appeal to
succeed, all the appellant needs to show is that
that denial deprived him of the
possibility of a successful outcome. Conversely, the respondent must show that
to remit the matter
to the Court of Appeal would be futile because this course
would inevitably result in its making the same orders. To that end the
respondent raised three points.
Was it inevitable that the Court of Appeal would have overruled Re
O'Neill even if the appellant had been heard on the
question?
- The
respondent submitted that the appellant's loss of an opportunity to argue that
Re O'Neill was correct was immaterial, because Re O'Neill was
plainly wrong.
- The
primary events took place nearly 20 years ago. The legislative language
considered in Re O'Neill was repealed more than 13 years ago. The
correctness of Re O'Neill is thus, for all purposes other than the
justice of the way the appellant was treated, a subject of no more than purely
antiquarian
interest. In all these circumstances it is desirable in this
dissenting judgment merely to record the opinion that it is strongly
arguable
that Dunford DCJ decided Re O'Neill correctly, that Simpson J was correct
to agree with his decision, and that Davies J and Heerey J were also
correct to reach
the same conclusion. It would be surprising, and not
creditable to the state of our judicature, if a view stated in 1988 by a future
Supreme Court
judge[107]
after due consideration, arrived at independently in 1991, albeit without
argument from counsel, by one Federal Court judge (Davies
J)[108],
followed in 1993 by another (Heerey
J)[109] after
taking into account the prior authorities, and shared by another Supreme Court
judge in 2006 after those three authorities
were cited to her, was not
sufficiently arguable to escape the censure of being plainly wrong. Heerey J's
primary point about s 214
has considerable
force[110]:
"It is one thing to impute to Parliament an intention that such a power can be
exercised when the documents relate to particular
goods which have been
identified by information on oath as being the subject of dealings or possible
dealings in breach of the Act.
It is a very different thing to contemplate
forceful removal of documents relating to any goods imported or exported over a
period
of five years. While the statute clearly gives the Collector the power
to require the handing over of documents in the latter category,
it does not ...
authorise the further and serious step of seizure and
removal."
Three further points may be made. First, to require occupiers of premises to
respond to notices to produce by conducting their own
searches, not only for
documents relating to goods referred to in an information but also for documents
relating to other goods imported
or exported in the previous five years, is less
onerous than permitting officers of the government to conduct searches for the
latter
category of documents. Searches conducted by occupiers, informed by
knowledge of their own record-keeping systems, are likely not
to be unduly
disruptive. But searches for the same wide classes of documents conducted by
government officers may be very deleterious
to the preservation of any order in
the arrangements for keeping records in the premises searched and therefore
damaging to the future
conduct of the occupiers' businesses. Secondly, exercise
of the right to search and seize conferred by s 214(3) may affect
persons
other than the person who has failed to comply with s 214(1). And,
thirdly, contrary to what the Court of Appeal
said[111],
since the person on whom the notice to produce is served under s 214(1)
will not necessarily be the same person as the person
present when the search
takes place under s 214(3), it does not follow that the latter person will be
aware of the scope of the requirement
in the notice to produce. Thus a
construction which would permit searches under s 214(3) as extensive as the
reach of the notice
to produce under s 214(1) is a construction which would
call, it is strongly arguable, for clearer words than those in s 214(3).
The
common law right to be free of searches and seizures not supported by a valid
warrant or other lawful justification is a fundamental
one.
- Since
it is strongly arguable that Re O'Neill was correctly decided, and it is
at least clear that it is not plainly wrong, it cannot be said that remitter of
the matter to the
Court of Appeal for rehearing would be futile on the ground
that the same outcome in that Court would be inevitable. To say that
would be
to deprive the appellant, and indeed the respondent as well, of the normal
entitlement of litigants in intermediate appellate
courts in this country to
have their appeals considered by way of genuine rehearing. When an ultimate
appellate court is asked to
overturn a previously settled line of authority in
lower courts, it usually regards itself as assisted in deciding whether to do
so
by the opinions, enunciated after contested argument, of the intermediate
appellate court from which the appeal to the ultimate
appellate court is
brought. There are no such opinions available to this Court in this appeal.
Was any non-compliance with the warrant immaterial?
- The
respondent submitted that the Court of Appeal had unquestionably considered the
appellant's claim to have the evidence excluded
on the basis that the entire
seizure was the result of trespasses committed because the first impropriety, in
rendering the Notice
to Produce invalid, negated a precondition to the legality
of the search. The respondent submitted that the effect of the second
impropriety in tainting the legality of the search could not improve that claim.
The search "does not get any more unlawful by being
unlawful for two reasons."
The second impropriety might make the "character of the illegality" wider "and
more colourful", but the
second impropriety was directed only to the issue
concerning the failure to train and educate officers, which was "fully agitated
and fully considered".
- So
far as these submissions rest on the proposition that the appellant's
submissions to the Court of Appeal about the undue width
of the search went only
to the "failure to train and educate" issue, they repeat an identical submission
rejected
above[112].
So far as these submissions discount the significance of any second impropriety,
they must be rejected.
- The
appellant drew attention to an allusion to s 138(3)(h) by the Court of Appeal in
relation to the s 214(1) requirement that the
goods be properly specified in the
Notice to
Produce[113]:
"There was no evidence to indicate that it would not have been relatively easy
to comply with that obligation of
specificity."[114]
The next sentence referred to s
138(3)(e)[115]:
"However, the fact that it was not done was not due to deliberate cutting of
corners or disregard of the legal requirements." The
appellant then
submitted:
"[H]ad [the Court of Appeal] accepted that the Customs Warrant only authorised
the seizure of documents relating to the bottle of
brandy said to have been
unlawfully dealt with in the Information, then the discretion under section 138
would have had to be exercised
in circumstances where: (i) Customs generally,
including the Chief Inspector to whom a relevant Customs officer reported and
from
whom that officer took instructions, knew there was a decision of a Court
exercising federal jurisdiction (namely [Re O'Neill]) that the Customs
Warrant was so
limited;[116]
(ii) that decision, which was the only decision directly on the point, was
correct; (iii) there was no decision to contrary effect
and Customs had no
reason to doubt the correctness of the decision other than the latter advice
from the Australian Government
Solicitor;[117]
and (iv) accordingly, it was open to infer that Customs had decided to flout the
Court's decision and to prefer the advice from the
Australian Government
Solicitor, well knowing that in doing so its conduct might (indeed, in all
likelihood would) be found to have been unlawful ... [T]hose
circumstances amount to compelling reasons for concluding that the seizure of
the documents
... was a contravention of an Australian law which was at least
reckless,[118]
if not deliberate, within the meaning of section 138(3)(e)." (emphasis in
original; one footnote omitted)
The respondent did not deal with these points about s 138(3)(e) directly. While
strictly speaking s 138 does not create a discretion,
the passage affords
grounds for concluding that the failure of the Court of Appeal to inform the
appellant of its attitude to Re O'Neill was not an immaterial error. The
prospects of persuading the Court of Appeal to exclude the evidence are not
contemptible. If Re O'Neill were correct, there were two improprieties,
not one. The second was independent of the first. The quality of the second
impropriety
may have made it more vulnerable to an adverse s 138(3)(e) analysis
than the first. In addition, the second impropriety may also
have been more
vulnerable to adverse analysis under s 138(3)(d) and (h).
- It
does not matter whether the present proceedings are analysed as only involving
impropriety at the moment when the documents were
obtained by the searches and
seizures which took place, or whether there was impropriety earlier. What does
matter is that even
if the only impropriety was to be found in the searches and
seizures themselves, there were, consistently with the approach of Simpson
J and
the parties in the Court of Appeal, two distinct reasons for concluding that the
searches and seizures were improper or in
contravention of law. Once that
conclusion had been reached, and the Court of Appeal moved on to apply
s 138(3), the factors
there set out had to be evaluated in relation to each
reason. It was possible that had evaluation been conducted in relation to
the
second reason, it might have turned out differently from the way the evaluation
in relation to the first alone did.
- The
need to consider the operation of s 138(3) in relation to every reason why there
is an impropriety or a contravention of Australian
law may be illustrated by a
search for documents purportedly pursuant to s 214(3) involving the following
events before and during
the search:
(a) an occupier of premises failed to comply with a notice to produce which did
not sufficiently identify the documents to which
the goods relate (because the
relevant identification was omitted from the document as typed by reason of a
mechanical failure not
noticed by the Collector, who was under pressure to issue
it urgently in order to ensure preservation of the documents);
(b) the customs warrant required by s 214(3) was issued, but was stolen by a
third party without the knowledge of the officer of
Customs who was in charge of
the search just before that officer entered the premises; and
(c) a person assisting the officer to carry out the search, after becoming
frustrated by an inability to find any documents, obtained
knowledge of their
location after inflicting physical violence for that purpose on the occupiers of
the premises.
The seizure of the documents in this example is illegal. There are three
reasons for the illegality. It is insufficient simply
to say that once there is
an illegality the reasons for it do not matter. It is necessary to examine the
illegality in the light
of each of the reasons for its being an illegality. It
is likely that scrutiny of the first and second reasons would not result
in
inadmissibility: the conduct of the Collector was venial and the conduct of the
officer in charge of the search was innocent.
But scrutiny of the third reason
may point much more strongly to exclusion in view of the factors listed in
s 138(3)(d)-(f).
- In
the present proceedings, the Court of Appeal evaluated the first impropriety in
the light of the factors listed in s 138(3).
But the appellant has been
deprived of the opportunity of having the Court of Appeal evaluate the second
impropriety in the light
of those factors. If the matter is remitted to the
Court of Appeal with a view to reconsideration of whether the evidence is
admissible
and if that Court finds, after argument, that the second impropriety
existed, it will not inevitably follow that the evidence will
be held
admissible. Hence it is not futile to permit an evaluation of it which has not
yet taken place in that Court to take place.
Could the convictions be upheld on the averments alone?
- The
respondent submitted that it would be futile to allow the appeal, because the
evidence objected to was not a necessary step in
concluding that the appellant
was guilty. The respondent referred to Simpson J's statement that s 255 of the
Customs Act made the
respondent's averment in the Re-amended Statement of Claim
of all the allegations prima facie evidence of the matters averred. She
said
also that the appellant elicited no evidence in rebuttal, either directly or in
cross-examination of the respondent's witnesses.
She described this as one of
"two short routes to the conclusion that the Comptroller has established the
facts pleaded in respect
of each
offence."[119]
The respondent did acknowledge that "the process by which the primary facts
pleaded in the statement of claim and found proved by
averment culminate in
proof of the charges" was not "expressly exposed". But the respondent said that
that step "hardly needed to
be exposed", because if everything alleged in the
Re-amended Statement of Claim was accepted, Simpson J's conclusion of guilt
beyond
reasonable doubt must follow. The proposition should not prevent the
appeal from being allowed for the following reasons.
- First,
the trial was never conducted on the basis that the seized evidence was
unnecessary for the establishment of guilt, or on
the basis that the facts
averred would suffice to prove guilt. The respondent relied on the averment
merely as a supplementary mode
of proof, not as the sole mode. Secondly, in
moving from a conclusion that the factual matters pleaded had been "established"
or
"proved" – ie on the balance of probabilities – to a conclusion
that guilt was established beyond reasonable doubt, Simpson
J took into account
evidence based to some extent on the materials illegally seized. Hence, as a
matter of construction of her reasons,
she did not reach a conclusion of guilt
beyond reasonable doubt merely on the basis of the averments. Thirdly, the
respondent's
submission is inconsistent with the Court of Appeal's view that if
the seized evidence were inadmissible the convictions would have
to be set
aside[120].
Orders
- The
appeal should be allowed, the Court of Appeal's orders should be set aside, the
matter should be remitted to the Court of Appeal
for a rehearing of grounds 25
and 26 of the appellant's Amended Notice of Grounds of Appeal to that Court, and
the respondent should
pay the appellant's costs of the appeal to this Court.
The costs of the first hearing in the Court of Appeal should abide the outcome
of the second.
[1] By virtue of s 7 of the
Customs Act as it stood at the relevant date, the Comptroller-General is the
person who has general
administration of the Act. The "Collector" is any
principal officer of Customs or any officer "doing duty in the matter in
relation
to which the expression is used" (s 8(1)(a)). A Collector of
Customs for a State or Territory is the principal officer of Customs
for all or
part of that State or Territory (s 8(1)(b)). After the Customs, Excise
and Bounty Legislation Amendment Act 1995 (Cth) the term
"Comptroller-General" refers to the Chief Executive Officer of Customs
(s 18). The "Collector" refers to the Chief Executive Officer, the
Regional Director for a State or Territory, or any officer doing duty
in the
relevant matter. These reasons use the terms "Comptroller-General" and
"Collector" as they applied before the 1995 amendments.
[2] For the history and nature of
customs prosecutions and the standard of proof where penalties are claimed see
Chief Executive Officer of Customs v Labrador Liquor Wholesale Pty Ltd
[2003] HCA 49; (2003) 216 CLR 161 at 192-198 [101]- [113] per Hayne J; [2003] HCA
49.
[3] In the matter of Lawrence
Charles O'Neill unreported, District Court of New South Wales, 18 August
1988.
[4] Comptroller-General of Customs
v Parker [No 3] [2006] NSWSC 1269.
[5] Parker v Comptroller-General of
Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574.
[6] Re Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs; Ex parte Lam [2003] HCA 6; (2003) 214 CLR 1 at 14
[37] per Gleeson CJ; [2003] HCA 6.
[7] Cooper, Customs and Excise Law,
(1984) at 8 [115].
[8] 16 & 17 Vict c 107.
[9] 39 & 40 Vict c 36.
[10] 39 & 40 Vict c 36,
s 204.
[11] 39 & 40 Vict c 36,
s 205.
[12] Customs Act, ss 198, 199 and
Scheds III, IV.
[13] Customs Act 1923
(Cth).
[14] Australia, House of
Representatives, Parliamentary Debates (Hansard), 13 July 1923 at
1109-1110.
[15] Australia, Law Reform
Commission, Criminal Investigation, Report No 2, (1975) at 211 (Appendix
C).
[16] Australia, Law Reform
Commission, Customs and Excise, Report No 60, (1992), vol II at
70-71 [7.4].
[17] Australia, Law Reform
Commission, Customs and Excise, Report No 60, (1992), vol II at 22 [3.4],
70-71 [7.4].
[18] A similar provision, s 144
of the Excise Act 1901 (Cth), was discussed in Chief Executive
Officer of Customs v El Hajje [2005] HCA 35; (2005) 224 CLR 159 at 172-174 [34]- [39];
[2005] HCA 35.
[19] Section 255(2)(b).
[20] Section 255(3).
[21] Section 255(4)(a).
[22] Australia, Law Reform
Commission, Evidence, Report No 38, (1987) at 243.
[23] Employment Advocate v
Williamson [2001] FCA 1164; (2001) 111 FCR 20 at 43-44 [78] per Branson J.
[24] The Oxford English
Dictionary, 2nd ed (1989), vol VII at 747.
[25] The Oxford English
Dictionary, 2nd ed (1989), vol III at 847.
[26] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Kingswood Distillery Pty Ltd unreported, Supreme Court of New
South Wales, 15 March 1996.
[27] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Kingswood Distillery Pty Ltd unreported, Supreme Court of New
South Wales, 15 March 1996.
[28] Ace Custom Services Pty Ltd
v Collector of Customs (NSW) (1991) 31 FCR 576 at 584-585 per
Davies J; Challenge Plastics Pty Ltd v Collector of Customs [1993] FCA 247; (1993)
42 FCR 397 at 400-401 per Heerey J.
[29] [1993] FCA 247; (1993) 42 FCR 397.
[30] (1991) 31 FCR 576.
[31] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 390; (2006) 200 FLR 44.
[32] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387.
[33] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [3], [22].
[34] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [3].
[35] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [22].
[36] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [26].
[37] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [26].
[38] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [26].
[39] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [27].
[40] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [39].
[41] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387 at [42].
[42] In accordance with Chief
Executive Officer of Customs v Labrador Liquor Wholesale Pty Ltd [2003] HCA 49; (2003) 216
CLR 161.
[43] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 390; (2006) 200 FLR 44 at 65-66 [123].
[44] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 587
[49].
[45] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 597
[90].
[46] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 601
[109].
[47] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 603
[118].
[48] [1993] FCA 247; (1993) 42 FCR 397 at 401.
[49] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 597
[90].
[50] At [137].
[51] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 604
[124].
[52] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 604
[122].
[53] Stead v State Government
Insurance Commission [1986] HCA 54; (1986) 161 CLR 141 at 145; [1986] HCA 54.
[54] Section 7. This was
amended in 1995 to provide for responsibility to rest with the Chief Executive
Officer of Customs.
[55] Parker v Comptroller-General
of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574.
[56] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387.
[57] (2003) 216 CLR 161; [2003]
HCA 49.
[58] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at
583-584.
[59] Repealed by the Excise Laws
Amendment (Fuel Tax Reform and Other Measures) Act 2006 (Cth),
Sched 2.
[60] Section 214 since has been
repealed by the Customs, Excise and Bounty Legislation Amendment Act 1995
(Cth), Sched 4, Item 44. The appropriate form of the Act for the
purposes of this appeal is in Reprint No 7 of 31 July
1990.
[61] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574
at 597.
[62] Section 31.
[63] By ss 31, 41 and 35
respectively.
[64] Also, s 215 empowered the
Collector to impound or retain any document required to be produced under the
Act.
[65] A second "Notice to Produce
Documents" was served at premises occupied by Kingswood, but the appellant made
no challenge with respect
to what occurred at the Kingswood premises.
[66] (2005) 224 CLR 159;
[2005] HCA 35.
[67] cf Denver Chemical
Manufacturing Co v Commissioner of Taxation (NSW) [1949] HCA 25; (1949) 79 CLR 296
at 313; [1949] HCA 25.
[68] Paragraphs (a)-(h) read:
"(a) the probative value of the evidence, and
(b) the importance of the evidence in the proceeding, and
(c) the nature of the relevant offence, cause of action or defence and the
nature of the subject-matter of the proceeding, and
(d) the gravity of the impropriety or contravention, and
(e) whether the impropriety or contravention was deliberate or reckless,
and
(f) whether the impropriety or contravention was contrary to or inconsistent
with a right of a person recognised by the International Covenant on Civil
and Political Rights ['the ICCPR'], and
(g) whether any other proceeding (whether or not in a court) has been or is
likely to be taken in relation to the impropriety or
contravention, and
(h) the difficulty (if any) of obtaining the evidence without impropriety or
contravention of an Australian law."
[69] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 387.
[70] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 390; (2006) 200 FLR 44.
[71] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [No 3] [2006] NSWSC 1269.
[72] [2006] NSWSC 1269 at
[37].
[73] [2006] NSWSC 390; (2006) 200 FLR 44 at
65-66.
[74] [2006] NSWSC 387.
[75] Unreported, District Court of
New South Wales, 18 August 1988 at 12-13.
[76] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at
588.
[77] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at
605.
[78] [1986] HCA 54; (1986) 161 CLR 141 at 147;
[1986] HCA 54.
[79] [2000] HCA 57; (2000) 204 CLR 82 at
88-89 [4], 116-117 [80], 128 [122], 130-131 [131],
153-155 [211]; [2000] HCA 57.
[80] [1993] FCA 247; (1993) 42 FCR 397 at
400-401. See also the comment by Davies J in Ace Custom Services Pty
Ltd v Collector of Customs (NSW) (1991) 31 FCR 576 at 584-585.
[81] Fox v Percy [2003] HCA 22; (2003) 214
CLR 118 at 126-127 [25]; [2003] HCA 22.
[82] cf Stead v State Government
Insurance Commission [1986] HCA 54; (1986) 161 CLR 141 at 145.
[83] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574
at 603-605.
[84] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at
603-604.
[85] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574
at 604.
[86] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at
605.
[87] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574
at 601.
[88] [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at
603.
[89] (1993) 177 CLR 485; [1993]
HCA 15.
[90] [1]-[72] and [94]-[120].
[91] Section 214 as it stood at the
relevant time is set out at [13] above; see also [100].
[92] Section 138 is set out at [25]
above; see also [112].
[93] It was also arguably a
contravention of an Australian law rendering the Notice to Produce invalid, but
it is desirable not to determine
this point since the parties did not advance
submissions on it and it is not necessary to decide it. However, the respondent
admitted
on the pleadings that the Notice to Produce was not "valid".
[94] She also said that it was "a
contravention of an Australian law." That possibility may be noted without
adopting any position one
way or the other on its correctness.
[95] Unreported, District Court of
New South Wales, 18 August 1988.
[96] Parker v Comptroller-General
of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 601 [109], quoted above at [68] and
[133], and below at [154].
[97] Parker v Comptroller-General
of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 587-588 [50]- [53].
[98] See [68], [133] and [154]:
Parker v Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 601
[109].
[99] In oral argument it was
submitted: "It is clear, on all of the authorities, including the decision of
Dunford J ... that subsection
214(3) only permitted a seizure of documents
relating to those documents identified in the summons. In this case, it is
quite clear
that they did not seize documents in relation to the respective
bottles of brandy referred [to], but seized an enormous quantity
of material in
relation to all activities that had been going on for some time ... As a
consequence, the action in seizing all of
these documents ... is illegal." A
similar point was made in written submissions.
[100] See [147] above.
[101] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 604 [124].
[102] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 604 [122].
[103] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 597 [90].
[104] At [68] and [133]:
Parker v Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 601
[109].
[105] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 584-588 [43]- [53].
[106] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 603 [120].
[107] Dunford DCJ served on the
Supreme Court of New South Wales from 1993 until 2005.
[108] Ace Custom Services Pty
Ltd v Collector of Customs (New South Wales) (1991) 31 FCR 576 at
584-585.
[109] Challenge Plastics Pty
Ltd v Collector of Customs [1993] FCA 247; (1993) 42 FCR 397 at 400-401.
[110] Challenge Plastics Pty
Ltd v Collector of Customs [1993] FCA 247; (1993) 42 FCR 397 at 401.
[111] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 588 [51].
[112] Above at [150].
[113] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 604 [124].
[114] The question whether this
was not an impermissible reversal of the burden of demonstration established by
s 138(1) was not raised
by either party and may be put aside.
[115] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 604 [124].
[116] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 602-603
[114]- [117].
[117] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 603 [118].
[118] Director of Public
Prosecutions v Leonard (2001) 53 NSWLR 227 at 248-249 [103].
[119] Comptroller-General of
Customs v Parker [2006] NSWSC 390; (2006) 200 FLR 44 at 120 [65].
[120] Parker v
Comptroller-General of Customs [2007] NSWCA 348; (2007) 243 ALR 574 at 584 [40].
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/2009/7.html