THE CENTRAL ISSUE
24 At the interlocutory hearing before the primary judge, the arguments focussed on whether the evidence the Commissioner was seeking to tender will be used 'to prove the existence of a fact that was at issue in that proceeding' (i.e. in the Criminal Proceeding). If the Commissioner's proposed evidence answers this description, the applicants say it should be excluded by s 91. Although both parties accept that the exception in s 92(2) does not apply, the applicants say that exception is relevant to the proper construction of s 91(1).
25 The Commissioner's argument, (which the primary judge accepted at [26] of his Honour's reasons), is that the conviction in the Criminal Proceeding was not a fact at issue in the Criminal Proceeding, so evidence is admissible to prove that Mr Gould was convicted.
26 In the Evidence Act the expressions 'fact in issue' and 'fact at issue' are not defined. The applicants contend that the cases indicate that both expressions extend to, and include, the ultimate issue of guilt in a criminal trial: Marsh v The Queen [2015] NSWCCA 154 per Harrison J (at [50] and [56]), R v Eastman (No 21) [2017] ACTSC 255 per Kellam AJ (at [84] and [86]-[87]), R v Petroulias [2005] NSWCCA 75; (2005) 62 NSWLR 663 per Spigelman CJ and Hunt AJA (at [28]) and Mason P (at [134]). In Smith v Queen [2001] HCA 50; (2001) 206 CLR 650, their Honours Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, Gummow and Hayne JJ said (at [7]):
In determining relevance, it is fundamentally important to identify what are the issues at the trial. On a criminal trial the ultimate issues will be expressed in terms of the elements of the offence with which the accused stands charged. They will, therefore, be issues about the facts which constitute those elements. Behind those ultimate issues there will often be many issues about facts relevant to facts in issue. In proceedings in which the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW) applies, as it did here, the question of relevance must be answered by applying Pt 3.1 of the Act and s 55 in particular. Thus, the question is whether the evidence, if it were accepted, could rationally affect (directly or indirectly) the assessment by the tribunal of fact, here the jury, of the probability of the existence of a fact in issue in the proceeding.
(Emphasis added, citations omitted.)
27 The applicants contend that this view of 'fact in issue' and s 91(1) is supported by the decision of Brereton J in Re HIH Insurance Ltd (in liq) [2015] NSWSC 790 where his Honour said (at [55] and [58]-[59]):
55 These issues were addressed by the Australian Law Reform Commission in its "Interim Report: Evidence" (ALRC 26), which culminated in the Evidence Acts of 1995. A part of that report was directed specifically to the rule in Hollington v Hewthorn. The report deals with convictions, acquittals and civil judgments. The result is the regime now to be found in ss 91, 92 and 93 of the (NSW) Evidence Act 1995. Essentially, the Law Reform Commission recommended that convictions should be admissible, but only in proceedings to which the person convicted, or that person's privy, was a party. That recommendation was based on what was thought to be the relatively high probative value of a conviction, but recognised that it was merely evidence and neither conclusive nor gave rise to any presumption of correctness.
…
58 I am of course not concerned in this case with the admissibility of a civil judgment, but I have referred to that passage because, in the context in which it appears in the Law Reform Commission's report, it makes clear that the intent of s 91 was to address not what are sometimes conventionally, but not entirely accurately, described as judgments - being reasons for judgment or remarks on sentence - but the formal record of a judgment of the Court in a civil proceeding, analogous to the formal conviction or acquittal in a criminal proceeding. Thus what s 91 is addressing is the formal record of conviction, the formal record of acquittal or the formal judgment or order disposing of a case in a civil case. It is not addressing the reasons for judgment, the findings of fact made by a judge in the course of coming to the final conclusion, nor the remarks on sentence, all of which remain no more than the opinion of the judge.
59 As Hunt AJA explained in the Court of Appeal in Ainsworth v Burden [2005] NSWCA 174, there may be some cases in which, quite apart from establishing the facts found in it, reasons for judgment might be admissible. But s 91 is an exclusionary provision, not a facultative provision. It does not make admissible anything that was not formerly admissible at common law. At least so far as they deal with matters of fact, reasons for judgment and remarks on sentence are inadmissible hearsay or opinion, excluded by the rule in Hollington v Hewthorn and not made admissible by s 91. For that reason, I must respectfully disagree with the views of Button J in R v Jacobs (No 5) [2013] NSWSC 946, [23], where his Honour appears to have held that remarks on sentence are findings of fact admissible to prove facts that were not in issue in the criminal proceedings. The view that reasons for judgment or remarks on sentence are not admissible to prove the facts that they find is supported by the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of New South Wales v Livanes [2012] NSWSC 325, [9]-[10].
28 The applicants say this passage clearly indicates that s 91 is directed to the exclusion of evidence going even to the bare fact of conviction, such as the formal record or certificate of a conviction.
29 It is further submitted that, in cases where evidence of a conviction has been admitted under the exception in s 92(2), courts have considered its probative significance to be limited. A conviction that is proved by way of a s 178 certificate has been held to be evidence only of the bare fact the relevant person has been found guilty of the offence: see Chevalley and Another v Industrial Court New South Wales and Others [2011] NSWCA 357; (2011) 82 NSWLR 634 per Bathurst CJ (at [58]), Batey v Potts [2004] NSWSC 606; (2004) 61 NSWLR 274 per Gzell J (at [13]) and Josifoski Velevski [2013] NSWSC 1103 per Kunc J (at [25]). At the outer limit, it has at most been used as non-specific evidence that the factual elements of the offence occurred as historical fact: The Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of New South Wales v Sukkar [2007] NSWCA 341 per Hodgson JA (at [9]). These cases are said to indicate that a conviction only evidences the elements of the offence at a high level of generality and a conviction that is proved under s 92(2) cannot be evidence of the detailed facts of the criminal case or evidence of what the accused person 'actually did': Prothonotary of the Supreme Court of New South Wales v Livanes [2012] NSWCA 325 per McColl JA (at [9]-[10]).
30 The applicants also raise a number of constructional points directed to the interpretation and operation of s 91 and s 92 which may be summarised as follows:
(1) Section 91 appears under the heading 'Exclusion of evidence of judgments and convictions'. They argue that as a matter of first impression, it would be a strange outcome if a statutory provision titled 'Exclusion of evidence ... of convictions' allows a s 178 certificate or court order to be used to prove a person has been convicted of a crime. When a s 178 certificate or court order is used to prove a person has been found guilty at the end of a criminal trial, it is put to a very specific probative use. It is used as evidence of conviction. There is a difference between using a s 178 certificate as evidence a person has been convicted and using it to prove other matters. The heading to s 91 indicates it is the former that is impermissible under s 91 (the heading argument).
(2) Section 92(2) purports to deal with evidence that is probative of criminal convictions, and to set out criteria that must be satisfied if such evidence is to be received in a civil trial. The intent of s 92(2) can only be achieved if s 91 has the prima facie effect of excluding such evidence; if s 91 does not have this prima facie effect, there is no necessity to consider whether the criteria in s 92(2) are satisfied. The language of s 92(2) warrants close attention. Section 92(2) applies to 'civil proceedings' and it applies to evidence that a person 'has been convicted of a criminal offence'. The text of s 92(2) does not refer to evidence probative of other matters. In other words, if evidence is tendered in a civil proceeding for the purpose of showing a person has been convicted of an offence, this is the scenario that most clearly falls within the s 92(2) exemption (provided the person is a party), and the conviction is not of the kinds described at s 92(2)(a)-(c).
31 The applicants argue that the conclusion reached by the primary judge runs counter to the scheme of the legislation. The applicants contend that his Honour held that s 91 lets in evidence that proves a person has been convicted, yet the heading in s 91 refers to the exclusion of evidence of convictions and the text of s 92(2), with its reference to evidence that a person 'has been convicted of an offence' indicates that evidence proving a criminal conviction can only be received in a civil trial if the conviction was of 'a party, or a person through or under whom a party claims', and the conviction is not described by any of s 92(2)(a)-(c).
32 There is no dispute that evidence showing Mr Gould has been found guilty of attempting to pervert the course of justice is 'evidence of the decision … in an Australian or overseas proceeding'. It is the second part of s 91(1) that is presently relevant. The Commissioner succeeded before his Honour by arguing that Mr Gould's conviction would not be tendered in the instant case to prove a fact that was in issue in the Criminal Proceeding.