The test of apparent relevance
14 The power conferred by r 24.15 of the Federal Court Rules may be exercised where (inter alia) the documents sought to be produced have no "apparent relevance" to the issues to be decided.
15 For present purposes it is unnecessary to canvass in any great detail the test to be applied where an alleged lack of relevance is the basis for an application. In Wong v Sklavos [2014] FCAFC 120, (2014) 319 ALR 378 at 381 to 382 Jacobson, White and Gleeson JJ there expressed the test as follows:
Apparent Relevance
[12] Although the parties referred to several authorities concerning the requirement for subpoenaed documents to have apparent relevance to an issue in a proceeding, in our opinion, the applicable principles are well established. The party issuing a subpoena bears the onus of demonstrating that the subpoena has a legitimate forensic purpose in relation to the issues in the proceedings ... A subpoena may be set aside if it requires the production of documents which do not have apparent relevance to the issues arising on the pleadings ... Other cases have used different terminology, but with essentially the same effect, for example, by requiring that, viewed realistically, the documents sought have a bearing on an issue which is not unreal, fanciful or speculative … or that the material sought is reasonably likely to add in some way to the relevant evidence in the case … or that it be "on the cards" that the documents sought will materially assist the party at whose request the subpoena has been issued ...
The principles there set forth have since been repeatedly applied: e.g., BGC (Australia) Pty Ltd v Fremantle Port Authority [2014] FCA 1083 at [18] per Siopis J; Perazzoli v BankSA [2015] FCA 373 at [17] per White J; Kenquist Nominees Pty Ltd v Campbell [2016] FCA 354 at [17] per Yates J; Kennedy v Secretary, Department of Industry [2016] FCA 485 at [58] per Flick J. Other authorities have expressed much the same principle by asking whether evidence "will throw light on an issue" or is it "on the cards" that relevant evidence will be adduced: Spencer v Commonwealth of Australia [2014] FCA 1234 at [16] per Mortimer J.
16 Placed at the forefront of the application to have both subpoenas set aside, and in support of a submission that even the proposed revised form of subpoenas falls foul of these principles, is the submission made by Senior Counsel for the Applicants that the documents sought to be produced have no "apparent relevance" to the issues to be resolved.
17 Of immediate relevance to the principal proceeding brought by the Applicants against Arup is the Applicants' contention that they suffered loss because, in reliance on Arup's representations, they borrowed monies from the Banks. It is the character of the representations made by Arup, and the reliance placed by the Applicants upon those representations, which is of central relevance to the principal proceeding.
18 Of no "apparent relevance" - at least according to the submission of the Applicants - is the consideration given by the Banks to the risks involved or their own assessments of those risks.
19 So much, it is understood, was accepted by Senior Counsel on behalf of Arup. According to Arup, it was not so much the internal assessments or deliberations of the Banks which attracted its interest; what was of "apparent relevance", as submitted on behalf of Arup, were the documents provided by the Applicants to the Banks and the information (even if not in the form of documents) submitted by the Applicants to the Banks. Each of the documents in categories [2], [4] and [6], it was submitted on behalf of Arup, would in turn expose the information provided by the Applicants to the Banks.
20 As categories [2], [4] and [6] are drafted, the submission advanced on behalf of the Applicants is accepted. It matters not whether the category of documents be described by reference to:
due diligence reports;
credit committee reports; or
minutes of credit committee or due diligence meetings.
Whatever the description, each category of documents relates back to internal deliberations or consideration given by the Banks to the Project and are not focussed upon or confined to the documents or information forwarded to the Banks by the Applicants. Although the attempt by Arup to seek the production of those documents which are most likely to record the documents or information communicated to the Banks by the Applicants, that is not what categories [2], [4] and [6] seek to do. Although more of an assertion than a statement of fact, it may presently be assumed that it "is likely that the Banks communicated with the Applicants in relation to these matters" and that it "is likely that in conducting their due diligence, the Banks considered the assumptions undertaking [sic] the Project, including the traffic forecasts prepared by Arup". This may or may not be correct.
21 As drafted, categories [2], [4] and [6] seek the production of documents which record the internal deliberations of the Banks or consideration given by the Banks to the Project. Although those documents may well in turn expose documents or information communicated to the Banks by the Applicants, as drafted the two subpoenas seek the production of either documents having no "apparent relevance" to the centrally relevant issues dividing the parties to the proceeding or documents having such marginal "apparent relevance" that those paragraphs should be set aside.
22 A proposal to narrow categories [2] and [4] to "draft or final" reports and to delete a separate category of "all drafts", with respect, fails to adequately address the underlying lack of "apparent relevance" of either a "draft" or a "final" document.
23 In the absence of any confining of the documents sought to be produced by categories [2], [4] and [6] to such consideration or deliberations as were directed to any documents or information communicated by the Applicants to the Banks, those paragraphs as drafted go far beyond that which can properly be regarded as a matter having any "apparent relevance" to the issues dividing the parties.
24 The documents sought in category [7] of the subpoenas attract different considerations. Each of the named persons is either an officer or employee of one of the Banks. Category [7] thus seeks those documents held by the respective Bank which evidence communications between the named officers or employees of the Bank, and the Applicants, Cross-Respondents, or any one of them. In the 25 July 2016 letter, the solicitors for Arup thus maintained (for example):
Documents produced on discovery show that the Banks engaged in sensitivity testing of the work completed by Arup. Documents have also been produced that indicate that the Banks considered the reports prepared by Arup, and that they raised queries about the assumptions used by Arup in their report. Such documents indicate that the Banks generated (and/or were provided with) material that tested the representations made by Arup. Accordingly, the documents sought in this category are relevant to whether the representations made by Arup were reasonable.
It is accepted that the documents sought in category [7] may thus expose an analysis undertaken by the Banks of documents or information communicated to the Banks by the Applicants. That confined category of documents, it has been concluded, does have some "apparent relevance" to the issues to be resolved in the principal proceeding and, in particular, have some "apparent relevance" to such reliance as the Applicants may have placed on Arup's representations and the reasonableness of any such reliance. It is further concluded that it is no sufficient answer to requiring such documents to be produced that the same documents may already have been produced on discovery. The suggested categories of discovery relied upon by the Applicants in their written and oral submissions may not have been drafted sufficiently widely to capture the documents now sought by category [7].
25 But, to the extent that Arup separately contends (for example) that it is to be "expected" that "due diligence reports" prepared by the Banks "will identify any independent analysis of the representations made by Arup that are alleged to have been misleading or deceptive" so that any such "analysis will be relevant to whether Arup had reasonable grounds for making the representations", the submission is rejected either because:
any question whether there are "reasonable grounds for making the representations" will be a question to be resolved by the Court by reference to such evidence as is considered admissible and probative and not by an assessment made by the Banks - any "independent analysis" undertaken by the Banks certainly does not have an immediate relevance to that question and, more importantly, does not have any "apparent relevance"; and/or
any subpoena seeking the production of such documents as may exist and which may contain any such "independent analysis" is in the nature of a fishing exercise, albeit an exercise which it may well be accepted will yield a decent "haul" of documents. It is the very fact, of course, that there could be no discovery by the Applicants of the internal documents of the Banks that occasions the pursuit by Arup of these internally generated documents.
In reaching these conclusions care must be taken to ensure that the test being applied is at this stage one of considering the "apparent relevance" of the documents sought to be produced as opposed to a test which (in one way or another) seeks to consider whether the documents produced may ultimately be admissible in the proceeding. "Apparent relevance does not require that the documents themselves be directly admissible": Sklavos v Australasian College of Dermatologists [2014] FCA 476 at [8] per Jagot J. It was this decision of her Honour which was affirmed on appeal by Jacobson, White and Gleeson JJ in Wong v Sklavos [2014] FCAFC 120, (2014) 319 ALR 378.
26 The documents described in category [7], nevertheless, retain some residual "apparent relevance".
27 A submission that category [7] should be confined to a period commencing in December 2007, rather than July 2007, is rejected.
28 A proposal to narrow the category of documents in paragraph [7] to a consideration of the traffic forecasting by Arup, as opposed to the more generally expressed category as drafted, is also rejected.