This Case
74 Comcare submitted that the Commonwealth's failure to follow its existing controls in its systems, procedures and supervision in order to address the known risk to the health and safety of its employees (Australian soldiers in the ADF) posed by live firing, an inherently risky activity, made the contravention a very serious one. Comcare reinforced this submission by emphasising that the incident occurred because of systemic failures at a number of levels, all of which went undetected. Comcare advocated a penalty which reflected the very serious nature of the contravention.
75 Comcare submitted that the failure on the part of the Commonwealth to ensure that those involved in the night exercise were appropriately briefed and qualified to perform the tasks being asked of them led to a state of affairs where live ammunition was fired through a penetrable barrier behind which a number of young soldiers had been positioned. Comcare submitted that the serious risk to the health and safety of the soldiers in question was not only foreseeable but actually foreseen. The Commonwealth had taken certain steps to minimise risk but those steps were inadequate. In particular, non-penetrable barriers should have been erected in order to ensure that, if, as happened, soldiers were positioned in the wrong place, no serious consequences would have followed. Next, the manual was deficient because it did not require that a risk management plan or risk assessment be developed and acted upon in relation to each separate training exercise. Comcare went on to submit that, notwithstanding that the Commonwealth should be assumed to be a responsible employer, there was a need for specific and general deterrence in the present case.
76 Comcare acknowledged that the Commonwealth has behaved impeccably in dealing with the matter, both during the investigation phase and subsequently in the litigation phase. As a matter of principle, those circumstances must count in favour of the Commonwealth. In addition, the Commonwealth has taken appropriate remedial measures since this incident and should be given credit for that circumstance as well.
77 Nonetheless, Comcare submitted that the Court should impose the maximum penalty.
78 The Commonwealth endeavoured to persuade the Court not to impose the maximum penalty. It accepted that the Court should impose a substantial penalty but it made detailed submissions in support of the proposition that the present case was not in the worst category. In those submissions, the Commonwealth argued:
(a) Training soldiers to fight effectively and safely is an inherently dangerous activity. The mere fact that live ammunition is used is not, of itself, a matter for criticism.
(b) The ADF took a number of reasonable steps to minimise the risk to its soldiers but, as matters transpired, they were inadequate.
(c) The relevant manual was not hopelessly deficient but rather inadequate in some respects. In addition, in some respects, the manual was not followed.
(d) Insufficient account is being taken by Comcare of the co-operation and contrition shown by the Commonwealth.
79 The Commonwealth addressed Comcare's submission that, given the number of past incidents involving the ADF soldiers, it should have been doubly vigilant. The Commonwealth submitted that this submission failed to allow for the scale and diversity of activities undertaken by the ADF and that little weight should be placed upon prior contraventions which, after all, were very few.
80 Both parties made detailed submissions as to the appropriate penalty.
81 The present case was heard before the Full Court handed down its decision in Director, Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (2015) 229 FCR 331 (Inspectorate v CFMEU). Had the present case been heard after that decision had been handed down, it would have been inappropriate for either party to have nominated a specific penalty.
82 In Tax Practitioners Board v HP Kolya Pty Ltd [2015] FCA 472 (Kolya), I considered the impact of Barbaro v The Queen (2014) 305 ALR 323 (Barbaro) and Inspectorate v CFMEU upon the civil penalty regime under consideration in that case. At [89]-[105], I said:
89 In Barbaro, the appellants, Messrs Barbaro and Zirilli, pleaded guilty to serious drug offences in the Supreme Court of Victoria. Before they pleaded guilty, there were discussions between the lawyers on both sides as to the range of sentences to which the offenders might be sentenced. The offenders were then sentenced. At the sentencing hearing, the trial judge refused to accept any submission from the prosecution or the defence as to the range of sentences that could be imposed upon the appellants. Leave to appeal was refused to Mr Barbaro. Mr Zirilli's appeal was dismissed. In the High Court, the appellants argued that the sentencing hearing before the trial judge was procedurally unfair because she had failed to take into account a relevant consideration, namely, the views of the parties as to the appropriate sentence.
90 In the High Court, the majority (French CJ, Hayne, Kiefel and Bell JJ) held that the appellants' arguments depended upon two flawed premises. The first was that the prosecution is permitted (or required) to submit to a sentencing judge its view of what are the bounds of the range of sentences which may be imposed on an offender. The second was that that premise is a submission of law (see the remarks of the majority at 325 [6]).
91 At 325 [7]-[8], the majority said:
7. The prosecution's statement of what are the bounds of the available range of sentences is a statement of opinion. Its expression advances no proposition of law or fact which a sentencing judge may properly take into account in finding the relevant facts, deciding the applicable principles of law or applying those principles to the facts to yield the sentence to be imposed. That being so, the prosecution is not required, and should not be permitted, to make such a statement of bounds to a sentencing judge.
8 Because the premises for the applicants' arguments are wrong, the appeals must fail. Before examining the premises further, however, it is necessary to say something about the facts.
92 At 327-328 [20]-[23], the majority explained that, in Victoria, in criminal matters, as a result of the decision in R v MacNeil-Brown (2008) 20 VR 677 (MacNeil-Brown), a practice had developed in that State of a sentencing judge asking Counsel for the prosecution to make a submission as to the "available range" of sentences. The majority in the High Court considered this practice to be wrong in principle. They held that MacNeil-Brown should be overruled. The majority specifically held that that practice should cease.
93 At 328-332 [24]-[43], the majority gave their reasons for the conclusions to which they had come. In those paragraphs, the majority explained that the use of the expression "an available range" in respect of a sentence for a criminal offence is apt to mislead. At 329 [28] in particular, the Court said that a conclusion that an error has (or has not) been made in a sentence neither permits nor requires setting the bounds of the range of sentences within which the sentence should (or could) have fallen. The correct principle is that a sentence may be set aside if it is manifestly excessive or manifestly inadequate. In that event, the discretion to sentence must be re-exercised.
94 At 329 [29], the majority said:
The practice countenanced by MacNeil-Brown assumes that the prosecution's proffering a statement of the bounds of the available range of sentences will assist the sentencing judge to come to a fair and proper result. That assumption depends upon the prosecution determining the supposed range dispassionately. It depends upon the prosecution acting not only fairly (as it must) but in the role which Buchanan JA rightly described (MacNeil-Brown at [128]) as that of "a surrogate judge". That is not the role of the prosecution.
95 The majority went on to emphasise the need for sentences to be imposed dispassionately. They emphasised that the role of the prosecution and the role of the judge in the sentencing process is not the same. At 330 [33], the majority said:
… If a judge sentences within the range which has been suggested by the prosecution, the statement of that range may well be seen as suggesting that the sentencing judge has been swayed by the prosecution's view of what punishment should be imposed. By contrast, if the sentencing judge fixes a sentence outside the suggested range, appeal against sentence seems well nigh inevitable.
96 The focus of the majority judgment at 330-331 [34]-[40] was on the actual sentence itself. In my view, the majority held that it was permissible for the parties to address the Court on the relevant sentencing principles and on comparable sentences. The prohibition articulated by the majority is confined to the prosecution's suggesting a particular sentence. In particular, at 331 [38] and [40], the majority said:
38. If a sentencing judge is properly informed about the parties' submissions about what facts should be found, the relevant sentencing principles and comparable sentences, the judge will have all the information which is necessary to decide what sentence should be passed without any need for the prosecution to proffer its view about available range. If the judge is not sufficiently informed about what facts may or should be found, about the relevant principles or about comparable sentences, the prosecution's proffering a range may help the sentencing judge avoid imposing a sentence which the prosecution can later say was manifestly inadequate. But it will not do anything to help the judge avoid specific error; it will not necessarily help the judge avoid imposing a sentence which the offender will later allege to be manifestly excessive. Most importantly, it will not assist the judge in carrying out the sentencing task in accordance with proper principle (cf Wong (2001) 207 CLR 584 at 611 [75]; Markarian v The Queen (2005) 228 CLR 357 at 373 375 [37]; [2005] HCA 25; Muldrock v The Queen (2011) 244 CLR 120 at 128 [18]; [2011] HCA 39; Munda v Western Australia (2013) 87 ALJR 1035 at 1046 [59]; 302 ALR 207 at 219; [2013] HCA 38).
…
40 The setting of bounds to the available range of sentences in a particular case must, however, be distinguished from the proper and ordinary use of sentencing statistics and other material indicating what sentences have been imposed in other (more or less) comparable cases. Consistency of sentencing is important. But the consistency that is sought is consistency in the application of relevant legal principles, not numerical equivalence (Hili (2010) 242 CLR 520 at 535 [48] [49]).
97 At 332 [42]-[43], the majority held that the proffering of a sentencing range by the prosecution was a statement of opinion not a submission of law.
98 At 332-333 [44]-[49], the majority held that there was no want of procedural fairness and no other unfairness in the sentencing judge's refusal to receive submissions as to the range of appropriate sentences.
99 Justice Gageler joined in the orders which the majority held should be made. However, his Honour took a different view as to the status of a submission proffered by the prosecution in relation to sentence. His Honour held that such a submission is a submission of law and not merely a statement of opinion. His Honour went on to hold that the prosecution had a duty to assist the Court to avoid appealable error by making a submission as to the range of appropriate sentences if the sentencing court requests such assistance or if the prosecution thinks that there is a significant risk that the Court will impose an appealable sentence in the absence of such a submission. His Honour also held that the Court is not obliged to accept the submission and is required to give effect to its own conclusion as to the appropriate sentence.
100 In Inspectorate v CFMEU, the ratio of the Full Court was that the reasoning in Barbaro applies to proceedings for the imposition of a civil pecuniary penalty where the parties have agreed upon the penalties and, pursuant to that agreement, where the parties make joint submissions to the Court as to the appropriate penalties or range of possible penalties.
101 However, in Inspectorate v CFMEU, the Full Court went further and expressed the view that the reasoning of the majority of the High Court in Barbaro inevitably leads to the conclusion that it is not permissible for the regulatory authority in civil pecuniary penalty cases to make a submission to the Court identifying a range of penalties, nominating specific penalties or urging the adoption of agreed penalties. At [239]-[243], the Full Court said:
239 We accept that in the short term, there may be inconvenience and perhaps increased expense to regulators and respondents in cases where agreed penalties, or agreed ranges have already been identified. We do not expect that such additional cost will be significant. We have already said much about why we consider that the decision in Barbaro should inform our approach to the agreed statement. Primarily, we consider that the sentencing process, and that in which a pecuniary penalty is imposed are very similar in nature. In particular, both address punishment by the State, and both require an assessment of a wide range of considerations which interact in complex ways. Hence each involves the instinctive synthesis to which we have referred. We consider that the concerns identified in Barbaro are relevant to the pecuniary penalty process. The impermissible expression of an opinion as to the amount of the penalty reflects a well-established limitation upon the ambit of a party's right to make submissions. Further, the difficulty in understanding the method by which any such opinion is formed is as real in pecuniary penalty cases as it is in criminal sentencing, as is the risk that such opinions may compromise the sentencing process and/or create a public perception of such compromise.
240 Insofar as concerns submissions as to the range within which the penalty should fall, it is equally as inappropriate in pecuniary penalty cases as in criminal sentencing. The High Court has made it clear that statutory discretions are not to be limited other than by reference to the relevant statute. It is difficult to identify any other statutory discretion conferred upon a court which has been limited in the way in which the decisions in NW Frozen Foods and Mobil have limited the discretion to fix a pecuniary penalty. When examined, the historical basis for that limitation is not grounded in principle.
241 As to an agreed penalty, we have previously indicated that any admission of liability may be a relevant consideration in sentencing or imposing a pecuniary penalty. Willingness to submit to the imposition of a substantial penalty may also be relevant in that way. However, even if the offender nominates a substantial figure as the penalty to which it will submit, the Court must still fix the appropriate penalty, taking into account such contrition as well as all other relevant considerations. As we have said, any such agreement is no more than an expression of a shared opinion, and therefore inadmissible. As we have also said, the amount of the agreed penalty may simply reflect the point at which each party considers that it is in its interest to agree. In either case, the agreed amount offers no assistance in fixing the amount of the appropriate penalty.
242 Finally, we do not dismiss the concerns of the regulators as to the importance of negotiations and agreements in the enforcement of the various statutes pursuant to which pecuniary penalties may be imposed. However we do not accept that the problem is as great as the regulators suggest. The adversarial system depends upon the capacity of professional advocates to explain the most complicated of legal and factual situations by reference to the evidence and the law. The issues to be ventilated in pecuniary penalty cases may be complex, but they are not amongst the most complex matters which this Court regularly considers. We expect that regulators and offenders will continue to seek to reach agreement as to factual matters and as to the application of the law. As to uncertainty of outcome, we consider it to be the inevitable consequence of entrusting the pecuniary penalty process to the judiciary. NW Frozen Foods and Mobil establish that it is for the Court to fix the penalty. That proposition has been constantly repeated in subsequent cases. In these proceedings, no party has suggested otherwise. Once that proposition is accepted, the only remaining question is as to the relevance, to the Court's consideration, of submissions as to ultimate penalty or range of penalties, or the fact of any agreement as to penalty. In Barbaro, the High Court held that statements as to ultimate outcome or range were merely expressions of opinion and therefore could not properly be advanced in submissions. There can be no justification for taking a different view in pecuniary penalty proceedings.
243 We appreciate that the views which we have expressed are inconsistent with the long established, although perhaps imprecise practice described in NW Frozen Foods and Mobil. We depart from that practice only because the decision in Barbaro, in our view, requires that we do so.
102 In Inspectorate v CFMEU, the Full Court sat in the original jurisdiction of the Court pursuant to a direction made by the Chief Justice under s 20(1A) of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth).
103 It may be thought that the Full Court's decision in Inspectorate v CFMEU is not binding upon single judges of this Court because the Full Court was exercising the original jurisdiction of the Court and not the appellate jurisdiction of the Court. I do not agree with that notion. I do not think that the status of the decision as a precedent is diminished or put into question at all by the circumstance that the Full Court was exercising the original jurisdiction of the Court. Quite clearly, the Full Court was appropriately constituted as a Full Court pursuant to s 20(1A) of the Federal Court Act and proceeded to deal with the matter accordingly. I see no reason why the decision should not be regarded as binding upon single judges of the Court.
104 That said, it is well to remember that, in Barbaro, the majority did not hold that parties were not permitted to make submissions directed to what facts should be found, to the relevant sentencing principles or to comparable sentences. The only matter which is subject to the prohibition articulated by the majority in Barbaro is the nomination of a specific penalty or sentence.
105 In the present case, as I have already indicated, I have read and considered the submissions made by both parties in respect of the relevant principles to be applied in respect of the imposition of the civil penalties called for in the present case as well as taken into account the material facts proven in evidence and the subject of submissions. I have also received submissions as to the appropriate penalties to be imposed. I wish to make it very clear that, in relation to all of these matters, I have made up my own mind and come to my own conclusions. In particular, in imposing the penalties which I have decided to impose, I have weighed the various relevant factors to which I have referred for myself. I have not been constrained in any way by the specific penalties nominated by the Board or the responsive submissions to the Board's nomination made by the respondents.
83 As was the case in Kolya, I wish to record that I have read and considered the Written Submissions made by both parties in respect of the relevant principles to be applied in respect of the imposition of the civil penalty called for in the present case as well as taken into account the material facts proven in evidence and the subject of submissions before me. I have also taken into account and thought carefully about the oral submissions made on behalf of both parties. As was the case in Kolya, I wish to make it very clear that, in relation to all of these matters, I have made up my own mind and come to my own conclusions. In particular, in imposing the penalty which I have decided to impose, I have weighed for myself the various relevant factors which were the subject of submissions from the parties. I have certainly not been constrained in any way by the specific penalties nominated by Comcare or by the Commonwealth.