The conspiracy claim
59 Like fraud, conspiracy is not an allegation that should lightly be made: Hughes v Western Australian Cricket Association Inc (1986) 69 ALR 660 at 700 (Toohey J).
60 Conspiracy is the agreement of two or more persons to do an unlawful act, or to do a lawful act by unlawful means. Historically, there are two kinds of conspiracy, the elements of which are distinct:
(1) an 'unlawful means' conspiracy in which the participants combine together to perform acts which are themselves unlawful; and
(2) a combination to perform acts which, although not themselves unlawful, are done with the sole or predominant purpose of injuring the claimant.
See Bullen & Leake & Jacob's Precedents of Pleadings, Vol 2, 15th edn, Sweet & Maxwell, London, 2004, at [50-01]; McKellar v Container Terminal Management Services Ltd (supra) at [135] - [154].
61 Bullen & Leake identifies the necessary elements in an action in conspiracy at [50-01.1]:
'The claimant must plead and prove the following necessary elements:
(i) a combination or agreement between two or more individuals (required for both types of conspiracy);
(ii) an intent to injure (required for both types of conspiracy but must be shown as the sole or predominant purpose for type (2) above);
(iii) pursuant to which combination or agreement and with that intention certain acts were carried out;
(iv) resulting loss and damage to the claimant.'
62 A conspiracy can be proved without evidence of an express agreement. A court is entitled to have regard to the overt acts pleaded, and to infer from those acts that there was an express agreement to further the common object of the combination. All of those said to be parties to the conspiracy should be sufficiently aware of the surrounding circumstance, and share the same object, for it properly to be said that they are acting in concert.
63 'Unlawful means' includes crimes and tort and breaches of statutory provisions: Trindade & Cane, The Law of Torts in Australia, 3rd edn, Oxford University Press, Melbourne, 1999at p 230. A person is using unlawful means if they are doing an act which they are not at liberty to commit: Dresna Pty Ltd v Misu Nominees Pty Ltd [2004] FCAFC 169. It is not open to a party to plead as an alternative to a substantive cause of action already pleaded the tort of conspiracy to commit the substantive wrong, nor can there be a common law conspiracy to contravene the TPA outside the form of conspiracy expressly provided for in s 75B(1)(d) of the TPA: McKellar (supra) at [195] and [197]. But the first respondent has not taken any objection to the ASC on this account, hence these matters can be put to one side.
64 The tort requires an intention to injure. As Kiefel and Jacobson JJ observed in Dresna Pty Ltd v Misu Nominees Pty Ltd (supra, at [7]) an agreement to do an unlawful act that results in damage to another party is not the same as a conspiracy to injure that party. In order to prove a conspiracy a claimant must show that the wrongful act complained of was done with a design of injuring the claimant and that it did so. According to their Honours, a conspiracy could be directed not only at a particular individual, but also at a class, in the sense of all members of the class. Their Honours went on to say (at [123]) that the test for an action in conspiracy is: 'what was the object of those combining when they acted as they did'. They must have acted in order that, not with the result that, the claimant should suffer damage.
65 The ASC pleads the conspiracy claim as follows:
'69. In or about August 2004, the First, Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth and/or Tenth Respondents, or any two or more of them, combined to commit an unlawful act or acts with the intention of harming the trade to the First to One Hundred and Fourth Applicants and/or the persons represented by the First Applicant.
Particulars of unlawful acts
(a) Threatening to publish defamation;
(b) Threatening to publish injurious falsehoods;
(c) Threatening to publish false and misleading statements;
(d) Publishing defamatory statements;
(e) Publishing injurious falsehoods;
(f) Publishing false and misleading statements;
(g) intimidation;
(h) interference with contractual relations;
(i) trespass;
(j) conduct in breach of Section 45D and Section 45DB of the Trade Practices Act and section 45D of the Competition Code;
(k) conduct in breach of Section 51AA of the Trade Practices Act.
70. In the alternative to the preceding paragraph, in or about August 2004, the First, Second, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Ninth and Tenth Respondents, or any two or more of them, combined to commit an act with the intention of harming the First to One Hundred and Fourth Applicants and/or the persons represented by the First Applicant.
Particulars of act
Persuading potential purchasers to boycott goods manufactured with their products.
71. The Applicants have suffered injury, loss and damage as a consequence of the Respondents' said conduct.'
66 The deficiencies in these paragraphs identified by counsel for the first respondent are as follows:
(a) the use of 'and/or' on the first line of par 69 potentially renders the entire allegation meaningless;
(b) further, the use of those words creates multiple possible combinations of persons involved in the alleged concerted act. The allegation in that form is embarrassing;
(c) the persons who are said to have been the object of the conspiracy are not clearly identified, with the paragraph allowing for the focus to be on any one of the named applicants or the unnamed 'represented' parties;
(d) no acts are pleaded. The 'particulars' are meaningless and embarrassing; and
(e) the alternative claim is equally vague and devoid of factual content. There is no specification of the 'particulars of fact'.
67 The first respondent also submits that having regard to the fact that some or all of the named applicants may not have been the object of the conspiracy, the present allegation that all applicants have suffered injury, loss and damage is unsustainable. Further, there is no particularisation of the alleged loss and damage suffered by each of the named applicants.
68 In my opinion, the pleading of each of the conspiracy claims is deficient in the following respects:
(a) it fails to identify clearly the object or objects of the conspiracy. The objects are said to be the first to 104th applicants and/or the persons represented by AWIL (some 30,000 Australian wool growers). If the objects of the conspiracy were all Australian wool growers, a question may arise as to whether such a conspiracy would be sufficiently targeted to be actionable at the suit of these particular claimants. A pleading of a single conspiracy, the objects of which may be 104 people or 30,104 people is embarrassing as a conspiracy takes its shape and scope from its objects, and a conspiracy defined in that way is shapeless;
(b) it fails to plead the primary facts on which the conclusion of combination is based;
(c) it fails to plead the overt acts which were carried out pursuant to the combination with the intention of injuring the claimant;
(d) assuming the overt acts are the pleaded conduct, further facts need to be pleaded so as to show how that particular conduct is capable of injuring all of the applicants. The linkage referred to earlier in these reasons is not there; and
(e) the ASC par 70 fails to plead that the conspirators had the sole or dominant intention of injuring the applicants.
69 The ASC should be struck out insofar as it pleads a claim for damages for conspiracy, with liberty to replead.