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Welker & Ors v Rinehart & Anor (No 5) [2012] NSWSC 45 (2 February 2012)
Last Updated: 13 February 2012
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Case Title:
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Welker & Ors v Rinehart & Anor (No 5)
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Medium Neutral Citation:
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Hearing Date(s):
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Decision Date:
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Jurisdiction:
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Equity Division - Duty List
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Before:
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Decision:
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See paragraphs 22 and 23 of this judgment.
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Catchwords:
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PROCEDURE - suppression orders - order necessary
to protect the safety of any person - threat to safety allegedly because of
increased
media interest in litigation - Interim suppression orders
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Legislation Cited:
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Cases Cited:
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Hogan v Australian Crime Commission [2010] HCA
21Rinehart v Welker [2011] NSWCA 425 Rinehart v Welker [2012] NSWCA
1 Welker & Ors v Rinehart [2011] NSWSC 1094Welker & Ors v
Rinehart (No 2) [2011] NSWSC 1238
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Texts Cited:
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Procedural and other rulings
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Parties:
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Hope Rinehart Welker (First Plaintiff) John
Langely Hancock (Second Plaintiff) Bianca Hope Rinehart (Third
Plaintiff) Gina Hope Rinehart (First Defendant) Ginia Hope Frances
Rinehart (Second Defendant) Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Fairfax
Media Publications Pty Ltd, Nationwide News Pty Ltd (Media Interests)
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Representation
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Mr D F C Thomas (Plaintiffs) Mr M Walton SC
(First Defendant) Mr F Kunc SC (Second Defendant) Mr A T S Dawson / Ms F T
Roughley (Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Fairfax Media Publications Pty
Ltd, Nationwide News Pty Ltd)
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- Solicitors:
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Johnson Winter & Slattery
(Plaintiffs) Corrs Chambers Westgarth (First Defendant) Gadens (Second
Defendant) Addisons (Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Fairfax Media
Publications Pty Ltd, Nationwide News Pty Ltd)
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File number(s):
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Publication Restriction:
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EX TEMPORE
JUDGMENT
- Before
dealing with the application currently before me I should say something about
the history of these proceedings.
- The
substantive proceedings concern a family trust of which Mrs Gina Rinehart is
currently the trustee. The parties to the proceedings
are Mrs Rinehart and her 4
children. The substantive relief sought in the proceedings is sought by 3 of the
children (the plaintiffs
in these proceedings) and opposed by Mrs Rinehart and
her youngest daughter, Ms Ginia Rinehart (the defendants).
- The
proceedings, which are still before the court, were initially heard by Brereton
J on 13 September 2011. Brereton J delivered a
judgment (see Welker & Ors
v Rinehart [2011] NSWSC 1094) in which his Honour made a suppression order
under the Court Suppression and Non-Publication Act 2010 (NSW) (the
Act ) in respect of the material before him on the ground set out
in s 8(1)(a) of that Act - that is, on the ground that the order was
necessary
to prevent prejudice to the proper administration of justice. On 7 October 2011,
Brereton J also refused to stay these
proceedings (see Welker & Ors v
Rinehart (No 2) [2011] NSWSC 1238).
- Brereton
J's refusal to stay these proceedings is the subject of an application for leave
to appeal. In connection with that application,
on 31 October 2011, Tobias AJA
made an order in the following terms:
Pursuant to s.7 of the Court Suppression and Non-publication Orders Act 2010
(NSW) (Act), and on the grounds referred to in s 8(1)(a),
a suppression order is
made prohibiting the disclosure by publication or otherwise of any information
as to the relief claimed or
any pleading, the Summary of Argument, submissions,
the draft Notice of Appeal, evidence or argument filed, read or given in these
proceedings, and including the contents of the red book, blue book, black book
and orange book but not including the Summons seeking
Leave to Appeal or the
pronounced or published judgment of Tobias AJA.
The suppression order made by Brereton J was discharged.
- Various
media interests made an application to the Court of Appeal to review the
decision of Tobias AJA and, on 19 December 2011,
Bathurst CJ, McColl and Young
JJA made an order discharging that order. However, the order discharging the
suppression order has
been stayed, most recently by the High Court on 2 February
2012. The position is now that the order made by Tobias AJA will continue
at
least until the hearing of the special leave application relating to the
discharge of that order, which is due to be heard on
9 March 2012.
- In
the meantime, on 1 February 2012, Mrs Rinehart made an application before me for
a further order under s 7 of the Act in respect
of the material that is the
subject of the order made by Tobias AJA on the ground set out in s 8(1)(c) -
that is, on the ground that
the order is necessary to protect the safety of a
person or persons. That application was supported by two affidavits which were
read on the application. One of those affidavits was sworn by Mr Paul McCann,
who is a partner of Corrs Chambers Westgarth and who
acts for Mrs Rinehart. The
other affidavit was sworn by Mr Michael Humphreys, who is the Managing Director
of Control Risks Australia
Pacific, which is a company that provides security
advice, among other things, to clients. I refused to make any ex parte orders
at
that time, but gave leave to serve the application on short notice and directed
that the application be made returnable today.
- At
the time the affidavits were read on 1 February 2012, Mr Walton SC, who appears
on behalf of Mrs Rinehart, says that he was proceeding
on the assumption that
the orders made by Tobias AJA applied equally to those affidavits and the other
material put before the court
at that time. A dispute has arisen in relation to
that question and, as a consequence, Mr Walton now seeks a further order under
the Act relating to the motion that came before me yesterday and the material
filed in support of that motion. That application is
supported by Mr Kunc SC who
appears for Ms Ginia Rinehart. It is opposed by Mr Thomas who represents the
plaintiffs in these proceedings
and also by Mr Dawson who represents various
media interests.
- One
thing I should make clear in relation to this judgment is that it is not
concerned with the scope of Tobias AJA's order, which
remains in force. The only
question before me is whether it is appropriate to make some additional order
relating, as I have said,
to the material which has so far been filed in support
of the motion seeking an order under s 7 of the Act on the ground set out
in s
8(1)(c).
- Mr
Walton puts the application for an additional order on two bases. The principal
basis is said to be s 10 of the Act, although Mr
Walton also relies on s 7 and
the ground set out in s 8(1)(c).
- Section
10 of the Act provides:
(1) If an application is made to a court for a suppression order or
non-publication order, the court may, without determining the
merits of the
application, make the order as an interim order to have effect, subject to
revocation by the court, until the application
is determined.
(2) If an order is made as an interim order, the court must determine the
application as a matter of urgency.
- I
am not prepared to treat the current application as an application under s 10.
Section 10 has been included in the Act to cater
for the possibility that it is
not possible to hear argument in relation to whether a suppression or
non-publication order should
be made. In those circumstances, s 10 gives the
court power to make an interim order that should last only for so long as is
necessary
in order for the court to hear argument on the merits.
- I
do not think that is the current situation. I have heard arguments on the merits
and both Mr Walton and Mr Kunc have made it clear
that the basis on which they
say an order ought to be made is the ground set out in s 8(1)(c).
- I
do not think it is necessary for me in the context of this application to set
out the applicable principles in any detail. They
were most recently summarised
by the Court of Appeal in this matter both in the decision delivered by Beazley
JA on 21 December 2011
( Rinehart v Welker [2011] NSWCA 425) and a
decision delivered by Bathurst CJ, McColl JA and Young JA on 13 January 2012 (
Rinehart v Welker [2012] NSWCA 1).
- It
is sufficient to note two points. The first is that s 6 of the Act provides:
In deciding whether to make a suppression order or non-publication order, a
court must take into account that a primary objective
of the administration of
justice is to safeguard the public interest in open justice.
It is necessary for the court to bear in mind that section in determining
what to do.
- Secondly,
s 8(1)(c) makes it clear that an order should only be made under s 7 if the
court is satisfied that the order is necessary
to protect the safety of any
person. As the courts have made clear, "necessary" is a strong word and it means
something more than
desirable or reasonable. For example, in Hogan v
Australian Crime Commission [2010] HCA 21, French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Heydon
and Kiefel JJ considered a similarly worded provision in s 50 of the Federal
Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) and observed at [31]:
It is insufficient that the making or continuation of an order under s 50
appears to the Federal Court to be convenient, reasonable or sensible, or to
serve some notion of the public interest, still less
that, as the result of some
'balancing exercise', the order appears to have one or more of those
characteristics.
These observations apply equally to s 8(1)(c) of the Act currently under
consideration.
- Three
submissions in effect are made in support of the order that is now sought. The
first is essentially a submission that, if these
proceedings receive publicity
and in particular if the application before me receives publicity, then that is
likely to or at least
may attract the attention of persons who could constitute
a threat to the parties to the litigation. The other two submissions are
directed more specifically to the contents of the two affidavits which were read
in support of the application.
- So
far as the first submission is concerned, I do not think that Mrs Rinehart has
established that a suppression order in relation
to the current application is
necessary to protect the safety of any of the persons who are a party to this
litigation. There can
be no doubt that there is considerable media interest in
this litigation and from the parties' point of view the publication of it
may
attract unwelcome comment or attention. However, I think the same is true of any
of the conduct that those parties may engage
in and I do not think that that
alone is sufficient to establish that it is necessary to protect the safety of
those persons to make
a suppression or non-publication order. Mr Walton does not
point to any specific threat that publication of this application is said
to
give rise. It would follow from Mr Walton's submission that a suppression or
non-publication order would be justified on the ground
set out in s 8(1)(c) in
respect of any proceedings involving a person with a significant public profile.
That, it seems to me, cannot
be correct.
- So
far as the affidavit of Mr McCann is concerned, it does two broad things. First,
it attaches some material which is available in
the public domain concerning one
or more of the parties to these proceedings. Secondly, it attaches some
correspondence between the
parties in which one or more of them express concern
about their personal security having regard to the publicity the case has
attracted.
In my opinion, there is nothing in that material of which it could be
said that suppression or non-publication is necessary, in the
relevant sense, to
protect the safety of those persons.
- I
find it very difficult to see how suppression of material which is already in
the public domain could be necessary to protect the
safety of any person. As to
the emails, they simply express a general concern and again I do not see how
suppression of those emails
is necessary to protect the safety of their authors.
It is noteworthy that the plaintiffs in these proceedings, whose safety it is
said is at risk, resist any order under s 7.
- That
leaves the affidavit of Mr Humphreys. That affidavit attaches a report prepared
by Mr Humphreys in which he purports to compare
the current risks that the
parties to these proceedings face with the risks that they would face if the
material which is currently
the subject of Tobias AJA's orders became public.
- Again,
I do not see how publication of that report creates a particular risk to the
parties to this litigation and there is nothing
in the report which explains why
that would be the case. The essential point of the report is that the more
publicity the parties
to these proceedings receive, the greater the risk that
they will attract attention from undesirable people in the community and
as a
result the greater the risk they face to their safety. But put like that, the
submission seems to me to be no different from
the first way in which Mr Walton
put his argument in support of the current application and for the reasons I
have given I do not
accept that submission.
- It
follows from what I have said that I am not prepared to make orders in terms of
either those sought by Mrs Rinehart or Ms Ginia
Rinehart. There is, however, one
exception to that. In my opinion, an order should be made under s 7 on the
ground set out in s 8(1)(c)
that there be no publication of any information
which would identify where any of the parties to these proceedings reside or how
they can be contacted. An order in those terms is consistent with the protocol
adopted by the court in dealing with the personal
information of any party to
court proceedings.
- I
will hear the parties on the precise form of the order that should be made but I
should make it clear that an order should also
be made in this respect under s
11 so that the order applies anywhere in the Commonwealth.
**********
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