Adams and MacDonald
40 The ABCC relied heavily on the decision of the Full Court in Adams in support of his submissions in the present case.
41 At first instance in the case the Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate sought declarations that each of the employees (except two) had contravened s 417(1) and s 421(1) of the FW Act by engaging in industrial action. The primary Judge noted that in the conduct of the proceeding to hearing, each of those employees against whom the Director sought relief claimed a penalty privilege, and, subject to very limited admissions, denied allegations made by the Director. At the hearing, the Director adduced evidence from various witnesses, and contended that this evidence proved that each of the employees engaged in unauthorised industrial action for the purposes of the FW Act, and that there was no relevant defence to the proceeding so that the contraventions had been established.
42 His Honour noted that none of the employees chose to go into evidence following the closure of the Director's case, but rather submitted that the contraventions alleged against them had not been proven. His Honour continued:
12. In particular, the respondents contend that:
• for the purposes of the s 421(1) contravention proceeding, the final FWC order is defective for enforcement purposes, especially because there is no evidence that each of subparas (a), (b) and (c) of [5.1] of the order, requiring its service, have been satisfied; and further, that the proceeding cannot succeed because it has not been proved that the respondents had knowledge either of the order (or its substance) or the consequences of noncompliance with the order, each of which they contend needs to be proved before contravention can be found against them;
• the action alleged against them does not constitute "industrial action", as the action alleged does not have the requisite "industrial character";
• further, on the evidence, for the purposes of the FW Act and the final FWC order, Crown, the employer of the respondents, authorised or agreed to the relevant actions; and
• in any event, the evidentiary case advanced by the Director was insufficient to prove, and the documentary materials referred to above do not adequately prove, the case against them.
43 His Honour said:
15. In these circumstances, the questions that require resolution in this proceeding may be stated as follows:
(1) As to the s 417(1) contravention proceeding:
(a) Has the Director proved that each of the respondents, on 28 February 2013, engaged in "industrial action", as defined by the FW Act?
(b) If so, did their employer, Crown, authorise or agree to their actions?
(2) In relation to the s 421(1) contravention proceeding:
(a) Has the Director proved that each of the respondents, on 28 February 2013, engaged in "industrial action" for the purposes of the final FWC order?
(b) If so, did their employer, Crown, authorise or agree to their actions?
(c) If not, has the Director proved, as alleged, that the final FWC order was served in accordance with [5] of the order?
(d) If not, is the failure to prove service in accordance with [5] of the order fatal to the maintenance of the s 421(1) contravention proceeding?
(e) If not, is the Director required to prove that each of the respondents had knowledge of the final FWC order, or its substance, and the consequences of noncompliance with it, in order to succeed on the s 421(1) contravention proceeding?
(f) If so, has the Director proved such knowledge on the part of each of the respondents?
44 His Honour then proceeded to consider each of those issues, and concluded that each of the relevant employees had contravened s 417(1) but not s 421(1) of the FW Act.
45 The employees appealed on grounds being:
1. The learned Judge erred at paragraphs [50]-[56] in construing section 19(2)(a) of the [Fair Work Act] as placing a burden upon a [appellant] employee to establish that an employer had provided authorisation or agreement.
2. The learned Judge erred at paragraphs [16]-[56] by failing to give individual consideration to what the admissible evidence for the section 417(1) contravention was as against each of the 74 individual [appellants].
3. The learned Judge erred in finding that [Fair Work] had proven each individual [appellant] had contravened section 417(1) of the [Fair Work Act] in circumstances where there was insufficient admissible evidence to do so.
4. In the alternative, if the Full Court is satisfied that there was sufficient evidence to conclude that any of the appellants did attend a political rally on 28 February 2013, the learned Judge erred at paragraph [35] in concluding that attending a political rally that did not concern issues between an employer and employees would constitute "industrial action" within the meaning of section 19 of the [Fair Work Act].
46 In respect of the conduct of the proceedings the Full Court observed:
43. It is fair to observe that the appellants made little attempt, before or at the trial, to identify their respective defences. They seem to have believed that the so-called "penalty privilege" excused them from compliance with the pleading rules of this Court, and that they might simply raise issues at trial which Fair Work was then obliged to prove or disprove. In the past there may have been pecuniary penalty proceedings in which such an approach was permitted. However one wonders about its appropriateness in view of the decision of the High Court in The Commonwealth v Director of Fair Work Building Industrial Inspectorate [2015] HCA 46; (2015) 258 CLR 482 at [53].
44. On appeal the appellants again took a very liberal approach to the issues. Indeed, even in submissions in reply, senior counsel seemed to consider that he was at liberty to pursue new grounds of appeal. He was invited to apply for an appropriate amendment to the notice of appeal, but he did not accept that invitation. Fair Work seems to have taken an indulgent approach to such conduct.
47 The Full Court gave detailed consideration to the construction of ss 417 and 19 of the FW Act, and materially at [98] noted the assertion of the employees that the primary Judge had erroneously placed a burden on them to establish authorization or agreement. At [99] the Full Court noted that the Director had pleaded that the industrial action was not authorized or agreed to by the employer, and to that plea the employees had pleaded that they claimed penalty privilege and did not admit it. Their Honours noted that the Federal Court Rules require respondents to specifically admit or deny every allegation of act in an applicant's pleading, and at [100] that as a general proposition the privilege against self-exposure to a penalty could not be abrogated by a rule or order of Court. Their Honours then at [101] noted the decision in Police Service Board v Morris [1985] HCA 9; (1985) 156 CLR 397, where the High Court found that the relevant legislation and regulations evinced an intention that the privilege be abrogated. At [102] their Honours continued:
102. The relevant regulation related only to disobeying a lawful order. Much that was said about the special position of the police force would equally apply to the judicial system. Following the adoption of Pt VB of the Federal Court Act, one might well argue that facilitation of the just resolution of disputes may necessitate a rule which compels the advance identification of any defence, to that extent abrogating the right to decline to expose oneself to a penalty. Indeed, the Court of Appeal of New South Wales has said as much in MacDonald v Australian Securities and Investments Commission [2007] NSWCA 304; (2007) 73 NSWLR 612. In that case, after an examination of the cases, Mason P said at [71]-[74]:
71 In my opinion, these principles mean that the claimant should not be compelled to include in his Defence any information that may have the tendency to expose him directly or indirectly to the penalties being sought by ASIC.
72 To draw the line conceptually at this point will not relieve the claimant from compliance with UCPR rr 14.14 and 15.1 so far as disclosing in his pleading his intention to invoke the statutory defences or any other "positive" defence, regardless of where the onus lies in establishing that defence. Not every form of affirmative defence has the requisite tendency. I see nothing wrong with a pleading in the following form:
If, which is denied, the matters alleged in para X constitute a contravention of sY of the Corporations Law, the defendant says that the matters alleged by ASIC also establish that the claimant relied upon information or professional or expert advice (etc) / acted honestly (etc). The defendant reserves the right to advance in his case additional material in support of his defence, the details whereof will be disclosed by amending this paragraph after the close of ASIC's case.
See also Laws v Australian Broadcasting Tribunal [1990] HCA 31; (1990) 170 CLR 70 at 86, Bridal Fashions at 117.
73 In the Matter of Water Wheel Mills Pty Ltd (Victorian Supreme Court, Mandie J, 22 June 2001, unreported) involved a civil penalty claim under the Corporations Law. Mandie J declined to order a defence to be filed going beyond one indicating the matters admitted, denied or not admitted. His Honour was not persuaded to follow Bridal Fashions. He considered that any meaningful pleading of affirmative allegations by way of defence might expose the defendants to a civil penalty or put the plaintiff upon notice of a train of enquiry which might expose the defendants to a civil penalty.
74 I respectfully disagree. In my view, the Rules ought to be departed from no more than is necessary to give effect to the privilege. The pleading mechanism I have suggested would require the claimant to invoke from the outset any relevant defence or statutory ground of dispensation; and it would require him to identify any parts of ASIC's own allegations intended to be relied upon in that regard. There would also be a framework that defines the legal issues throughout the trial against which rulings as to admissibility could be made (at least in some circumstances). If and to the extent that the claimant exercised his right to plead and particularise in the manner indicated and not to waive his privilege by venturing further, there will still be the likelihood of ASIC's evidentiary case being split more than it otherwise might be, but at least this consequence would be reduced to a minimum.
48 Their Honours continued:
104. To the extent that the decision relies upon New South Wales legislation and rules, there appears to be little difference between the position in that State and that which prevails in this Court. It is important to note that at [72], Mason P made it clear that when he spoke of a "defence", he included statutory defences and any other "positive" defence, regardless of where the onus might be in establishing that defence. Much of his Honour's reasoning seems to have been based on the simple proposition that pleading the facts necessary to establish a defence (or raise it) will not necessarily amount to exposure to the risk of incurring a penalty.
105. We have little doubt that for the appellants to rely upon alleged authorization or agreement, is to advance a "positive" defence which, according to the decision in MacDonald, should have been pleaded. We would say the same about a claim of illness, that a particular appellant was unable to access the site or that such an employee was "off", if that term meant anything more than that he was engaging in industrial action. However it is not necessary for us to decide this matter. Fair Work seems to have been content to conduct the case on the basis that the appellants were not obliged to plead these matters. Rather, it asserted that the appellants had not satisfied evidential burdens concerning them.
49 In this context it is also helpful to examine more closely the decision in MacDonald.
50 In MacDonald, ASIC had commenced civil proceedings against a number of natural persons and trading corporations seeking (inter alia) declarations of contraventions of the Corporations Law and the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), and pecuniary penalties pursuant to s 1317G of the Corporations Act 2001. In the Court of Appeal the question at issue was the Court's power to order the filing of a defence that was pleaded and particularised in accordance with the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005.
51 The majority judgment was delivered by Mason P (Giles JA agreeing).
52 At first instance the claimant contended that to require him to file any defence would contravene the privilege available to natural defendants in civil penalty proceedings.
53 As Mason P explained:
41….The proposition was advanced in absolute terms: no Defence should be ordered to be filed, now or at any stage of the proceedings.
54 The primary Judge ordered the defendants to file and serve unverified defences. The claimant sought leave to challenge those orders, and the Court of Appeal heard full argument as on an appeal. During the course of the appeal the claimant withdrew the absolute proposition advanced below, accepting that the claimant could be required at that stage of the proceedings to file a defence indicating the extent to which ASIC's allegations were admitted, denied or not admitted. Mason P observed at [45] that this concession was properly made.
55 Mason P observed:
48 A defendant may in a pleading deny or not admit particular allegations, or plead limitation or other statutory defences, without in any way self-incriminating or exposing him or herself to a civil penalty. A defendant may choose to admit particular allegations, thereby shortening the trial and/or reducing the risk of an adverse costs order.
56 At [53] Mason P noted the direction then sought by the claimant, namely:
…that the requirements of Rule 14.14 and Rule 15.1 of UCPR be dispensed with; that his Defence be limited to identifying which paragraphs of the Further Amended Statement of Claim are admitted, not admitted and denied respectively; and that liberty be reserved to him to file an Amended Defence, pleading any additional facts not already traversed in the pleadings, after ASIC has closed its case.
57 His Honour did not accept that the claimant's privilege went so far as to require such a blanket dispensation from the rules of pleading. Given the terms of s1317L of the Corporations Act, his Honour considered (at [54]) that dispensation should only go so far as is necessary to serve the privilege and the interests it protected. Section 1317L provides:
Civil evidence and procedure rules for declarations of contravention and civil penalty orders
The Court must apply the rules of evidence and procedure for civil matters when hearing proceedings for:
(a) a declaration of contravention; or
(b) a pecuniary penalty order.
58 Mason P observed that the primary Judge had followed the decision of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Western Australia in Bridal Fashions, where the Full Court found that in the context of civil penalty proceedings under the Customs Act 1901 (Cth) that the privilege against self-exposure to a penalty was available to natural defendants, it had not been abrogated by the Customs Act, but nonetheless the privilege had no practical application in the pleading of a defence to a statement of claim in a Customs prosecution.
59 Mason P referred to Silvestri at 251 [17] where Gyles J had said:
A personal respondent to a penalty proceeding is entitled to put the applicant to proof of its case. Such a respondent cannot be forced to make an admission and no solicitor acting for that person can be held responsible for not ensuring that a party plead in a way which goes further than this. In other words, such a respondent can decline to admit matters alleged against it. To the extent that the rules of pleading require to be modified to enable this to take place, that will be done. There is no occasion, however, for relieving respondents of a duty to plead. Even in a criminal trial, a defendant pleads guilty or not guilty. The issue would arise in a case where a personal respondent proposes to rely upon a positive defence. Penalty proceeding or not, means must be found to advise the applicant and the court of any positive defence so that the trial can be properly prepared and conducted. It is at that point that there may be a debate as to the appropriate course, which may involve a closer examination of the decisions in Bridal Fashions and Hadgkiss. That has not yet arisen here. Directions can be sought if and when it does.
60 At [59] Mason P noted that ASIC had submitted there should be no relaxation of the pleading rules. Further:
59…To require a full pleading does not require the defendant to assist ASIC in its claim for penalties, it merely ensures that the defendant gives timely notice of any positive case he proposes to advance whether by reliance upon evidence tendered by the plaintiff, cross-examination of the plaintiff's witnesses, or (in due course) tendering evidence of his own. Without full pleadings the trial may be prolonged because the defendant could scarcely complain that ASIC was splitting its case if it tendered in reply evidence responsive to material first foreshadowed and revealed in the defence case.
61 At [66] Mason P noted that a defendant is entitled to be protected against both direct and indirect self-incrimination - accordingly the privilege also protects against the compelled disclosure of information that may set in train a process which may lead to incrimination or may lead to the discovery of real evidence of an incriminating character. After examining relevant authorities his Honour concluded:
71 In my opinion, these principles mean that the claimant should not be compelled to include in his Defence any information that may have the tendency to expose him directly or indirectly to the penalties being sought by ASIC.
62 His Honour then continued with the observations cited by the Full Court in Adams, granted leave, and allowed the appeal in part.
63 The reasons of Spigelman CJ in MacDonald departed from those of Mason P and Giles JA. At [10] his Honour noted that an issue to be determined was whether the penalty privilege was engaged by reason of the requirement to identify matters set out in r 14.14(2) and r 15.1 of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules. Rule 14.14(2) provides:
(2) In a defence or subsequent pleading, a party must plead specifically any matter--
(a) that, if not pleaded specifically, may take the opposite party by surprise, or
(b) that the party alleges makes any claim, defence or other case of the opposite party not maintainable, or
(c) that raises matters of fact not arising out of the preceding pleading.
64 Rule 15.1 provides:
(1) Subject to this Part, a pleading must give such particulars of any claim, defence or other matter pleaded by the party as are necessary to enable the opposite party to identify the case that the pleading requires him or her to meet.
65 His Honour noted that the test was whether there was a likelihood, or a non-fanciful risk that, either directly or derivatively, compliance could assist the regulator establish any part of its case which could result in the imposition of a penalty.
66 In particular I note the concluding observations of his Honour following his Honour's examination of Bridal Fashions:
27 The Respondent submitted that the reasons of Young CJ in Eq should be understood as an application of part of the reasoning of the Full Court. In that case the Full Court was concerned with s255 of the Customs Act 1901 (Cth), which provided that averments in an information had to be treated as prima facie evidence of the matters averred. The Court said at 516 to 517:
"In practice, however, the practical effect of s255(1) is that a defendant will ordinarily be required to raise an affirmative allegation in its defence. With pleading the facts and circumstances of an affirmative case the defendant will not be able to tender positive exculpatory evidence ... The defendant could readily plead an affirmative case by averring, for example: 'if (which is denied or not admitted) the alleged fact was as pleaded in para X of the Statement of Claim, the defendant says ...' Should the defendant plead an affirmative case on this basis it would not thereby incriminate itself. On the contrary, the purpose of the affirmative case would be to set up a defence against the case brought against him by the prosecution."
28. In my opinion this passage in the joint judgment does not cover the circumstances of the present case. The requirements of r 14.14(2) and r 15.1(1) do not permit the Appellant only to plead in the manner set out by the Full Court. These rules require the Appellant to make positive assertions of fact, and to provide particulars thereof, going well beyond simply an acceptance that: if, which is denied or not admitted, the facts and matters in the Statement of Claim should be accepted, etc. Indeed this is the very purpose of r 14.14(2)(a) and (c).
29. Mason P is of the view that a pleading and particulars should be ordered which identifies allegations in the Statement of Claim which, if established, would be relied upon by the Appellant in its case under one of the exculpatory provisions. His Honour sets out a form of pleading at [72] which is directed to s189 but can be adapted to other exculpatory provisions. Like the formulation from Bridal Fashions this suggested pleading refers only to matters alleged in the Statement of Claim.
30. On this basis r 14.14(2)(c) referring to facts not alleged in the pleading has no application. Similarly, I do not see how the obligation to give particulars "necessary to enable (ASIC) to identify the [Appellant's] case" within s15.1(1) would apply. The scope of the pleading envisaged by Mason P appears to me to be confined to the "surprise" factor in r 14.14(2)(a).
31. As presently advised, I do not see that there would be any practical significance to such a pleading. Notwithstanding the fact that the Court has, unusually, made orders with respect to case management of a trial, they remain interlocutory directions and can be amended by the judge managing the case or conducting the trial. If a matter of practical significance emerges this issue can be re-agitated.
67 In relation to these authorities I make the following observations.
68 First, the comments of the Full Court in Adams were clearly obiter. The Full Court noted that they were not required to decide the relevant point.
69 Second, the comments of the Full Court in Adams were made in circumstances where, at the closure of the Director's case, no amended defence was filed by the employees, but nonetheless the employees identified for consideration such issues as specific authorization by the employer, and the primary Judge went on to decide those new issues without amendment to the pleadings. This approach was the subject of specific criticism by the Full Court, in particular the "liberal" approach by Counsel for the employees to issues in the proceedings outside the pleadings and the indulgence granted by the Director to the employees in respect of their conduct of the case. In this respect the issues before the Court in that case were quite different from those before Finkelstein J in ASIC v Mining Projects, or currently before me. To that extent I do not consider that Adams is authority for the proposition advanced by the ABCC in the case before me.
70 Third, the decision of Finkelstein J in ASIC v Mining Project was not cited by the Full Court in Adams notwithstanding that it appears (from subsequent citations in the Federal Court, other jurisdictions, and such learned texts as Heydon J D, Cross on Evidence (12th ed, LexisNexis Butterworths, 2020 at [25125]) to be the leading authority in respect of the proper approach by a defendant in filing any positive defence at the closure of the plaintiff's case in civil penalty proceedings. The fact that it was not identified as a relevant authority in Adams is perhaps not surprising in circumstances where the issue the subject of decision in ASIC v Mining Project had not arisen in the primary proceedings in Adams or indeed in the grounds of appeal before the Full Court in Adams.
71 Fourth, the High Court in the Agreed Penalties Case at [53] observed as follows:
Civil penalty proceedings are civil proceedings and therefore an adversarial contest in which the issues and scope of possible relief are largely framed and limited as the parties may choose, the standard of proof is upon the balance of probabilities and the respondent is denied most of the procedural protections of an accused in criminal proceedings.
(footnote omitted)
72 This observation is certainly correct, and uncontroversial. I am unable to identify any way in which it can be seen to undermine a claim to the privilege against self-exposure to penalty in civil penalty proceedings. The fact that the approach to agreement on penalties in civil proceedings may, following the Agreed Penalties Case, have departed from the approach in criminal proceedings, is in my view irrelevant. The privilege against self-exposure to penalty stands on its own, as a legal principle of long standing. As Burchett J observed in a five-member Full Court in Trade Practices Commission v Abbco Ice Works Pty Limited [1994] FCA 1279; (1994) 52 FCR 96:
17. The accuracy, as a matter of history, of the view accepted by McHugh J that the privilege against self-exposure to a penalty "was not invented by the Court of Chancery", its origin being in the common law, was strongly attacked at the hearing before us, with a wealth of citation of ancient authority. However, the point does not seem to me to be significant. Even if the privilege was in fact invented by the Court of Chancery, or if its origin is uncertain, it is plain from the citation which McHugh J makes from a judgment of Lord Hardwicke, and other judgments of that eminent Lord Chancellor are to like effect, that the development of the privilege into its mature form proceeded upon precisely the same principles as the development of the privilege against self-incrimination. The two marched in step and, as I shall show, were often, perhaps usually, treated as one. To the extent that an aversion to actions by common informers may have contributed to the growth of the equitable doctrine, leading Courts of Chancery to restrict discovery proceedings, it should be said that this is hardly a basis upon which a modern court would ground a refusal to countenance assisting an action brought to recover a penalty imposed by the Parliament in the pursuit of national economic policies of high importance - particularly where such an action may only be maintained by the Minister or the Trade Practices Commission.
73 Fifth, I am not persuaded that either the Federal Court Rules or Part VB of the Federal Court Act abrogate the privilege against self-exposure to penalty in civil penalty proceedings.
74 The Federal Court Rules and Part VB are provisions of general application to all civil litigation in the Federal Court of Australia.
75 The Federal Court Rules were enacted pursuant to s 59 of the Federal Court Act which relevantly provides in s 59(1) that:
(1) The Judges of the Court or a majority of them may make Rules of Court, not inconsistent with this Act, making provision for or in relation to the practice and procedure to be followed in the Court (including the practice and procedure to be followed in Registries of the Court) and for or in relation to all matters and things incidental to any such practice or procedure, or necessary or convenient to be prescribed for the conduct of any business of the Court.
76 The Explanatory Statement noted that the Federal Court Rules:
.. set out the practice and procedure requirements to be adopted by litigants and their legal representatives in all phases and for all types of proceedings in the Court and therefore provide the machinery for court processes. Although the new Rules are written in more modern and simpler language than the former Rules, the new Rules (like the former Rules) are based on long-existing and well-understood procedures for legal proceedings.
The new Rules do not substantially alter existing practice and procedure but rather explain it in a way that it can be more easily followed and applied. They do contain a number of new provisions and some innovative and streamlined procedural approaches. All provisions have been developed with ease of understanding in mind and so that, individually and collectively, the new Rules speak for themselves
77 Further, I note that Part VB was inserted into the Federal Court Act by the Access to Justice (Civil Litigation Reforms) Amendment Act 2009 (Cth), the General Outline of which is described by the Explanatory Memorandum to the relevant Bill in the following terms:
This Bill amends the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 to strengthen and clarify the case management powers of the Federal Court to ensure more efficient civil litigation. It also streamlines the appeals pathways for civil proceedings, and clarifies the powers of judicial officers of the federal courts, particularly the heads of each federal court.
A key objective of the reforms is to bring about a cultural change in the conduct of litigation so that, at the same time as resolving disputes justly, the following considerations are at the forefront:
• focussing the Court, parties and their lawyers' attention on resolving disputes as quickly and cheaply as possible
• reducing the costs of litigation
• allocating resources in proportion to the complexity of the issues in dispute
• avoiding unnecessary delays, and
• management of the Court's judicial and administrative resources as efficiently as possible.
78 Having regard to the objectives of the Federal Court Rules 2011 and Part VB as articulated in relevant explanatory documentation, it cannot be said that the intent of Parliament in enacting them was to abrogate such a long-standing rule as the privilege against self-exposure.
79 In this respect the general provisions of the Federal Court Rules and Part VB can in no way be compared with, for example, the regulations the subject of consideration by the High Court in Police Service Board v Morris, where the High Court found that application of the privilege would be inappropriate, and therefore the privilege was abrogated.
80 Sixth, there is no authority, in this Court or elsewhere, which supports the proposition that a respondent to civil penalty proceedings is entirely relieved of the obligation to file a defence to those proceedings. Indeed, this obligation was recognised by Finkelstein J in ASIC v Mining Projects at [13]. The respondent's defence as filed in answer to the statement of claim may simply be a denial of the allegations in the statement of claim, as has occurred in the proceedings before me.
81 Seventh, and notwithstanding the findings of the Court of Appeal in MacDonald, there is extensive authority (which I have endeavoured to set out in this judgment) that a respondent to civil penalty proceedings is neither obliged prior to the closure of the applicant's case to plead any positive defence it subsequently intends to run, nor is barred from so pleading after the closure of the applicant's case. As Finkelstein J pointed out in ASIC v Mining Projects, disclosing a positive case at the pleadings stage will often provide the plaintiff with an opportunity to follow leads and open up fresh fields of inquiry, a defendant cannot be required to provide information that may be the basis of an investigation that may lead to the discovery of real evidence, and if a defendant is required to plead a positive case there is a risk of that happening (see also Dunford J in Chief Executive Officer of Customs v Camile Trading Pty Ltd [2004] NSWSC 1256 at [32]).
82 To the extent that the decision of the Court of Appeal of New South Wales in MacDonald is authority to the contrary on this point, I respectfully decline to follow it.
83 Finally, I refer again to the decisions in this Court since ASIC v Mining Projects which have followed that case. In my view it is appropriate that I follow and apply the reasoning of Finkelstein J in that case, as well as the reasoning in those subsequent decisions.
84 It also follows that any questions put by Counsel for the Individual Respondents in cross-examination of witnesses called by the ABCC need not be referable only to the case as currently pleaded.
I certify that the preceding eighty-four (84) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment of the Honourable Justice Collier.