The Minister Subpoena and the De Garis Subpoena
26 It is convenient to deal with the subpoenas addressed to the Minister and Mr De Garis together. The schedule of documents to each of those subpoenas (and the other subpoenas) is divided into numbered paragraphs. It is convenient to refer to each paragraph as a "category" with a corresponding number to the paragraph in question.
27 Mr De Garis was employed by the Minister over the relevant period through to about 25 October 2017. Subject to minor differences that were not suggested to be material, all of the categories of documents sought from Mr De Garis correspond with those sought of the Minister, namely, the Minister's categories 1-4 correspond with Mr De Garis' categories 1-4 and the Minister's category 6 corresponds with Mr De Garis' category 5. Communications involving Mr De Garis may well be caught in each of those categories in the Minister subpoena. Given that Mr De Garis is no longer in the Minister's employment, the apparent purpose of the subpoena directed to him is to capture any documents in the common categories that are in his possession or control and not that of the Minister.
28 As Mr De Garis adopted the Minister's submissions, his position is no different to that of the Minister. Unless otherwise stated, whilst I will now expressly address only the Minister subpoena, my reasons and determination in relation to each category in that subpoena are the same for the corresponding categories in the De Garis subpoena.
29 Document categories 1 and 2 concern communications between the Minister or her delegates, servants or agents and the Commissioner or the Commissioner's delegates, servants or agents. Category 1 seeks communications in relation to matters the subject of the investigation. Category 2 seeks documents relating to the investigations carried out or proposed to be carried out by the Commissioner into those matters and relating to the application for the warrants and the execution or proposed execution of the warrants. Each category is limited to records of communications made in the period 1 August 2017 and 31 October 2017.
30 The Minister (and Mr De Garis) accept that documents in categories 1 and 2 created between 1 August and 20 October 2017 have apparent relevance and are prepared to produce those documents. They oppose the production of documents created in the 10 day period between 21 and 31 October 2017. The Minister contended that to the extent that the subpoena seeks documents created after 20 October 2017, being the date upon which the decision to conduct the investigation was made, the subpoena should be set aside. In this respect, the Minister said that documents created by the Minister after the decision to investigate was made, cannot have impermissibly directed the decision to investigate or affected its purpose.
31 In response, the AWU contended that a communication that takes place after a decision has been made may reveal the purpose for which the decision was made, or the considerations that were taken into account in making that decision. The AWU pointed to the occurrence of significant events after 20 October 2017 in consequence of the decision, including the execution of the warrants and public attention given to that circumstance, as suggestive of the likelihood that communication between the Minister's office and the ROC may have occurred which may well touch upon the decision's purpose.
32 I accept that there is a reasonable basis for thinking that there may be documents created in the period 21 to 31 October 2017 that are of apparent relevance. The likelihood may well be small but the time period involved is short and the additional burden on the Minister is unlikely to be large. In those circumstances the balance of interests falls in favour of the documents being produced.
33 The Minister also took objection on the same basis to the production of documents in the period 21 to 31 October 2017 required by category 7. I reject that objection for the same reasons.
34 The challenge made to categories 1, 2 and 7 should be rejected.
35 I then turn to category 3 which concerns communication between the Minister, her delegates, servants or agents and the FWO, her delegates, servants or agents including Mr Lee. The Minister's objection based on forensic purpose and apparent relevance is that the decision to investigate cannot logically have been affected by matters not communicated between the Minister and the ROC. In response, the AWU contended that the Minister's submissions insufficiently appreciated the scheme of the RO Act and in particular that staff of the FWO including Mr Lee were involved in providing services to or otherwise assisting the ROC in relation to the subject matter of the documents called for by the subpoena. Accordingly, the AWU contended that the documents called for by category 3 stand in the same position as communications between the Minister's office and the ROC about those matters.
36 To that, the Minister responded that category 3 sought communications with all delegates, servants or agents of the FWO and was not confined to those persons who provided assistance to the ROC in the relevant period. Whilst it is understandable why the subpoena was framed broadly so as to capture all relevant communications between the Minister and all of the Fair Work Ombudsman's delegates, servants or agents, the AWU accepted that the communications it sought to obtain were those of the FWO and those delegates, servants or agents of the FWO who in the period 1 August 2017 to 31 October 2017 provided services to or otherwise assisted the ROC in relation to the subject matter of the documents called for by the subpoena.
37 I accept that, with that limitation, the AWU has a legitimate forensic purpose and that the documents in this category have apparent relevance. To apply that limitation, I propose to excuse compliance by the Minister with the requirements of category 3 but only insofar as it relates to documents recording communications made between the Minister, her delegates, servants or agents and the delegates, servants or agents of the FWO who were not, in the period 1 August 2017 to 31 October 2017, involved in providing services or other assistance to the ROC in relation to the subject matter of the documents called for by category 3. For clarity, the limitation I intend to impose is not intended to exclude from production communications with Mr Lee.
38 Category 4 concerns communication between the Minister, her delegates, servants or agents and the AFP in the period 1 August 2017 to 31 October 2017 about the investigation and the application for and execution of the warrants. Category 6 concerns communications between the Minister, her delegates, servants or agents and any print, television, internet or other media organisation, their servants or agents about the investigation and the application for and execution of the warrants. Category 5 concerns what may be regarded as internal communications between the Minister, her delegates, servants or agents and any officers, employees or agents of the Commonwealth Department of Employment in the same period. The topics it relates to are the donations, the investigations carried out by the Commissioner in relation to the donations and the application for and execution of the warrants. Like category 5, category 8 also concerns internal communications between the Minister and, in this instance, persons who may be more directly involved in assisting her, her own delegates, servants or agents. The topics raised concern the donations, the referral made by the Minister to the Commissioner, investigations carried out by the Commissioner as well as the application for and execution of the warrants.
39 The Minister's challenge to each of categories 4, 5, 6 and 8 is based on a lack of legitimate forensic purpose and apparent relevance. The Minister accepts that the documents sought may be probative of the Minister's purpose including whether the Minister sought to derive political advantage from the investigation and the execution of the warrants. However, Senior Counsel for the Minister contended that the purpose of the Minister could only be relevant to the decision to investigate insofar as it was found in communications to the ROC.
40 The substantive response of the AWU to that contention was that knowledge of the nature and extent of the Minister's purpose was necessary to provide a context in which the communications between the Minister and the ROC could be properly interpreted. It was suggested that in circumstances where communications between the Minister and the ROC may have been guarded or disguised, a proper understanding of the Minister's purpose may be necessary to resolve any ambiguity in the content of those communications.
41 I need not resolve at this juncture whether these categories seek documents which are of apparent relevance. Whilst the Minister may have an interest in the outcome of this proceeding, she is not a party to it and ought not be burdened with making substantial enquiries in the search for documents unless and until it is apparent that the documents sought may be of assistance to the AWU's case. While such documents may well provide the interpretive assistance which the AWU contended they may, that will not be known until the primary documents, the communications between the Minister and the ROC, are produced and inspected. In those circumstances, the balance of the competing interests favours the subpoena directed to the Minister being set aside in relation to categories 4, 5, 6 and 8.
42 Should it be necessary, the AWU will have liberty to seek production of the documents sought under those categories (as well as the corresponding categories in the De Garis subpoena) once what I have called the primary documents are produced and inspected.
43 The remaining three categories in the Minister subpoena concern an offer of engagement or employment within the Minister's office made to Mr Lee and any later decision to defer, suspend or withdraw it. The same categories of documents are sought from Mr Lee and also from the FWO. It is convenient that I give my reasons for refusing to set aside the Minister subpoena in relation to those categories in the reasons that follow.
44 Lastly, I need not deal further with any contention based on oppression as the Minister did not ultimately press oppression as a separate basis for setting aside any category of the subpoena.
45 In sum, the Minister subpoena will be set aside in relation to categories 4, 5, 6 and 8 and the De Garis subpoena will be set aside in relation to categories 4 and 5. The burden of category 3 of the Minister subpoena and category 3 of the De Garis subpoena will be clarified to exclude communications with persons who were not involved in providing assistance to the ROC. Otherwise, the applications to set aside these subpoenas will be dismissed.