Australian Postal Corporation v Stephens
[2011] FCA 992
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2011-08-19
Before
Ms J, Rares J
Catchwords
- Number of paragraphs: 19
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (4 paragraphs)
The applicant's argument in support of leave to appeal 8 Leave to appeal is not sought in this matter in respect of a matter of practice and procedure. Rather, it is sought on a substantive basis. Australia Post seeks to challenge a liability finding arising out of the conduct of one supervisor occurring on one day in January 2010. 9 During the course of his cogent and helpful submissions, counsel for Australia Post suggested that his Honour made a number of arguable factual errors. The way in which his Honour reasoned and the application of the presumption in s 361 would necessarily be at the centre of the proposed appeal. 10 Given the stage at which the proceedings currently are, I do not consider it necessary or desirable to canvas the various arguments which Australia Post advanced to challenge his Honour's findings of fact. Nor do I consider it necessary to determine whether his Honour's decision is attended with sufficient doubt to warrant the grant of leave, because I am not satisfied that any substantial injustice will result from a refusal of leave to appeal in the circumstances of this particular case. 11 Decisions concerning the application of civil or pecuniary penalties are always civil proceedings conducted in the civil jurisdiction of the courts. They have been so for centuries: see the analysis by Weinberg, Bennett JJ and myself in Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union of Australia v Australian Competition Consumer Commission (2007) 162 FCR 466 at 477-479 [19]-[28]. 12 Australia Post argued that it would suffer substantial injustice if it were made to face a hearing on penalty in circumstances where it may ultimately succeed in demonstrating that his Honour erred in fact finding leading to his decision to find one or both of the contraventions. It also argued that contrition was a relevant factor in the determination of what, if any, penalty ought be imposed upon it and that it was appropriate for the appeal to be instituted prior to the determination of penalty in circumstances where it anticipated Mr Stephens would argue that, because Australia Post wished to challenge his Honour's findings against it, it showed a lack of contrition.