VICTORIA VAYSMAN
20 Seven charges of contempt of Court were found proven against Victoria Vaysman. The terms of those charges are recorded in Deckers (No 6) at [49]. The substance of the charges may be summarised as follows:
· Charge 7 - On 4 January 2004 Ms Vaysman sold six pairs of counterfeit boots thereby contravening orders made by the Court on 23 December 2003.
· Charge 11 - At various times since December 2003 Ms Vaysman advertised, promoted and offered for sale counterfeit footwear through an internet website controlled by her. In doing so she contravened the orders made on 23 December 2003.
· Charge 12 - In or about January and February 2004 Ms Vaysman represented to another person that sheepskin footwear products sold by her to that person were genuine Ugg products made by the Applicant. In doing so she also contravened the 23 December 2003 orders.
· Charge 14 - In February 2004 Ms Vaysman took various steps to obstruct the execution of search orders made by the Court on 10 February 2004.
· Charge 23 - Between January and March 2006 Ms Vaysman recruited, instructed and assisted various persons to act as her agents in promoting, advertising, offering for sale and selling on the internet counterfeit footwear. In doing so she contravened consent orders made by the Court on 12 March 2004.
· Charge 25 - In about December 2005 Ms Vaysman represented to one of the persons she had recruited to market counterfeit footwear that the counterfeit products were manufactured, advertised and promoted with the sponsorship or approval of the Applicant. She did so in contravention of the orders made on 12 March 2004.
· Charge 26 - Between July 2005 and December 2007 Ms Vaysman offered counterfeit footwear for sale. In doing so she again contravened the orders made in March 2004.
Ms Vaysman admitted that the total value of the sales covered by Charges 23 and 26 was in the vicinity of $300,000.
21 Ms Vaysman admitted all of the charges save for Charge 14. She admitted Charge 14 but only to the extent that she had refused to provide the password to an e-mail account used for marketing counterfeit footwear. She acknowledged her contravening conduct in an agreed statement of facts. In doing so she relieved the Applicant of the need to obtain and lead evidence supporting the charges.
22 On 7 May 2010 Ms Vaysman filed an affidavit in which she appeared to resile from some or all of the factual admissions which she had earlier made. She claimed that she had "not had proper legal representation" at the trial of the contempt charges. She also claimed that one of those representing her "did not take diligent care". She said that she "felt very rushed" while considering a draft of the statement of facts before she agreed to it. She went on:
"But I did not feel relaxed and when I don't feel relaxed I make mistakes. Thus I believe I may have misread some parts of what the Applicant wrote in the Statements of Facts and Agreed [sic] to something that I should not have agreed to. I felt very flustered."
She concluded this section of her affidavit with a further attack on counsel. She said:
"I believe that if punishment is thrust upon me, injustice will be done. As my pro-bono lawyer did not take sufficient care when representing me. He just wanted to get this case over and done with. I was told by another lawyer that [counsel] was upset that he wasn't being paid for his time. And when he signed up for this case, he did not realise how big the case was and how much information he had to read."
23 The affidavit may fairly be understood as an attempt to argue that some of the charges against her should not have been admitted and found to have been proven. This impression is confirmed by her later contention that she had "admitted all of my wrong doings in the Statement of Facts and that I am genuinely sorry for what I did. And I may have admitted to something that I may not have done in the Agreed Statement of Facts."
24 Ms Vaysman did, however, accept that she had, to some extent, acted wrongly. Interspersed at later points in her affidavit were statements that:
· "I know what I did was wrong but I believe that I have already been punished enough in the last 2 years. I have stayed out of trouble and plan to do so."
· "I am sorry and remorseful for my past actions. I have learnt from my mistakes and I just want to do the right thing and move on with my life."
· "I am truly sorry and remorseful for what I did. And I won't do it again. I promise."
25 At the time at which Ms Vaysman affirmed this affidavit she was not legally represented. Shortly before the hearing on penalty Ms Vaysman sought and obtained legally aided representation. On the morning of the hearing she affirmed a further affidavit.
26 In this later affidavit she withdrew her criticism of counsel and praised their work. She said that she "did not intentionally mean to hurt them or criticise them." Ms Vaysman also offered apologies to those who had been hurt by her "wrongful behaviour." She apologised to the people whom she had recruited to market the counterfeit products on e-Bay for having deceived them and caused them financial loss. She also apologised to those who had purchased the counterfeit products believing that they were genuine Ugg Australia footwear. She said that she "would like to one day set up a repayment plan of sort (sic), (when I am able to afford it) to pay back all the customers that did not receive their merchandise or who were not fully satisfied with their merchandise." She went on to apologise "from the bottom of my heart to the court for wasting everybody's time and spending huge amounts of money on this case."
27 Ms Vaysman was at pains to say that she had "truly changed" her attitude and had also changed her behaviour. She expressed regret about what she had done and promised "that I will never do anything like this again." She said that she had been "delusional and misguided and thus did not think through the consequences of my wrongful actions" and that she was "sincerely remorseful".
28 In both her affidavits Ms Vaysman stressed the adverse impact any sentence of imprisonment would have on her four year old daughter. Her daughter's father has no contact with the family and Ms Vaysman is unaware of his whereabouts. She asserted that her parents suffered from medical conditions which would render them unable to cope with caring for her daughter on a full time basis. They would not be able to take her to kindergarten and to other social activities outside the home. Ms Vaysman also relied on a report from a child psychologist who expressed the opinion that, if Ms Vaysman were to be imprisoned, her daughter "may not understand why she needs to be separated from her mother and this may affect her relationship with her mother." There may also be an effect on the daughter's ability to relate to other people. Separation from her mother "could be detrimental to the child's well being."
29 Both affidavits also dealt with Ms Vaysman's financial position. Her principal source of income at the present time is Family Benefit payments made by Centrelink. She has about $1,000 in a bank account. She does not own any real property. In her first affidavit she said that she had given most of the $300,000 which she derived from the sales of counterfeit footwear to her brother "to help with his construction of the house at 303 Balaclava Road, Caulfield …". She no longer had any of the balance of the $300,000. In her second affidavit she described the $300,000 as being "just turnover". The profit was only about one third of the sales and this amounted to about $33,000 per year over two to three years. This, she said, was "why I have no money left." She did not attempt to explain the apparent inconsistency with her earlier claim to have given "most of the $300,000" to her brother.
30 Ms Vaysman said that she "would most likely not be able to pay" any fine imposed by the Court and that, if she became bankrupt, this would severely hamper her efforts to get her "life back together and build a future for [her] daughter."
31 In written submissions counsel for Ms Vaysman accepted that her contemptuous conduct warranted the imposition of a term of imprisonment. He submitted, however, that in all of the circumstances, any term of imprisonment imposed should be wholly suspended. He identified the following considerations which, he contended, weighed in favour of a suspended sentence:
· Ms Vaysman had not previously been found guilty of contempt of Court;
· Ms Vaysman had substantially admitted the conduct constituting each of the offences with which she stood charged;
· She was remorseful and had apologised for her misconduct;
· Both Ms Vaysman and her family had been financially devastated by legal proceedings brought by the Applicant;
· The proceedings had been "hanging over" Ms Vaysman for two and a half years; and
· She had a very young child for whom she is the sole carer and no alternative carer is available.
32 In the course of an oral plea, counsel for Ms Vaysman advised the Court that she was 38 years old, having been born on 4 September 1971. In her late 20's she had a relationship break up with led to depression. After the first restraining orders had been made by the Court in 2003 Ms Vaysman could have opted out of participation in what was described as "the family business". She did not do so because, after the orders had been made, a family meeting took place during which it was decided that those involved would continue to manufacture the counterfeit footwear. She and other members of the family regarded it as "unfair" that they were being prevented by Court order from doing what they and, they believed, others had been doing for many years. Ms Vaysman made a conscious choice not to opt out because to do so would have involved turning her back on her family.
33 Counsel advised the Court that Ms Vaysman's total weekly income, including Centrelink and Child Support Payments was in the order of $500.
34 Counsel relied on a number of character references provided by professional friends of Ms Vaysman. They spoke well of her and made observations about the impact the legal proceeding had had on her. They considered it unlikely that she would re-offend.
35 Counsel submitted that prison would weigh more heavily on Ms Vaysman than it would on someone who went there in "more common place circumstances."
36 Counsel for the Applicant submitted that a penalty of two years imprisonment with one year suspended would be an appropriate penalty for Ms Vaysman.
37 Counsel on both sides were, in my view, correct to submit that Ms Vaysman's conduct warranted the imposition of a custodial sentence. She made a conscious decision to involve herself in the "family business" notwithstanding her knowledge that the Court had made orders which prevented the sale and distribution of counterfeit footwear. She may have done so, in part, because of a misguided sense of family loyalty. She was, however, also motivated by a desire to participate in the financial benefits which were derived from what became a lucrative enterprise. Ms Vaysman played a key role in the business procuring sales through the internet and recruiting a number of other people also to undertake this work.
38 I have no doubt that Ms Vaysman is much chastened by her experience as a Respondent in the principal proceeding and in defending the contempt charges which were preferred against her. With hindsight she clearly regrets having chosen to disregard orders made by the Court. While not unmindful of her expressions of remorse and her promises not to re-offend, I am far from persuaded that she appreciates and accepts the gravity of her misconduct. Ms Vaysman appeared before the Court on a number of occasions during the interlocutory stages of the principal proceeding. More than once she expressed the view that the Applicant was persecuting her family and interfering with their ability to make an honest living. More than a hint of this attitude persisted, even after Ms Vaysman acknowledged that she had committed contempt of Court. In the affidavit which she affirmed on 7 May 2010 she professed concern about her "poor dad" having lost "his business that he was so tirelessly building for the last 30 years." She said that this had occurred "because of one stupid mistake." She did not identify what that one mistake was. As can be seen from Deckers (No 6) and Deckers (No 7), her father was guilty of multiple contraventions of Court orders over a period of two years. Ms Vaysman appears unable to comprehend that Mr Vaysman's predicament was caused by his deliberate and repeated attempts to develop his business by doing things which he well knew were prohibited by Court order. More significantly, she was personally and actively involved, for over four years, in the marketing of the counterfeit footwear which her father was manufacturing.
39 A second cause for scepticism is provided by other parts of her May affidavit. Despite having signed an agreed statement of facts in which she effectively admitted the charges which had been laid against her, she could not bring herself to acknowledge fully the responsibility which she bore for her conduct. Her instinctive and untutored reaction to the Applicant's reliance on her admissions was to suggest that her legal advisers had acted unprofessionally and so induced her into making admissions which should not have been made. No attempt was made to identify any particular facts contained in the statement which were not correct. Although, having received further legal advice, she withdrew her allegations against counsel, the strong impression remains that she retains the view that she and her family are being victimised for doing something they were entitled to do.
40 It is, I think, more likely that Ms Vaysman's expressions of contrition flow from the realisation that her conduct has placed her at risk of imprisonment and from her concern that her imprisonment might have an adverse impact on her and her daughter.
41 I have not overlooked the belated apologies which Ms Vaysman has extended to those who have suffered as a result of her activities and to the Court. No such apologies were offered in Ms Vaysman's first affidavit which was made on 7 May 2010. The absence of such apologies was noted in written submissions, filed on behalf of the Applicant on 14 May 2010, which were served on Ms Vaysman. The apologies which were contained in the affidavit which she affirmed on the day of the hearing on penalty would seem to have been prompted by the earlier omission being brought to her attention by counsel for the Applicant.
42 The most difficult issue which confronts me in determining appropriate penalties for the various contempts committed by Ms Vaysman relates to the impact any term of imprisonment is likely to have on her daughter.
43 The imprisonment of any person who has responsibility for the care of children or infirm relatives is inevitably going to have the potential to cause hardship to others. Although the probable effect of a sentence of imprisonment on a dependant is a matter calling for consideration in the exercise of the sentencing discretion, save in truly exceptional circumstances this is a consideration which does not weigh heavily in determining the length of a sentence: see R v Spiers (1983) 34 SASR 546. Such exceptional circumstances may be found to exist where the imprisonment of a parent leaves a child without parental care: see, for example, R v Sinclair (1990) 51 ACrimR 418 at 431-2. Even then, the result may not be that the parent is spared imprisonment but that the length of the sentence which would otherwise be imposed is reduced: see generally, Fox and Freiberg, Sentencing (2nd ed, 1999) at 342-4.
44 In order to establish the existence of exceptional hardship a defendant must adduce "cogent evidence … to establish that his imprisonment would impose exceptional hardship upon his family … or that his imprisonment would effectively deprive his children of parental care": Mawson v Nayda (1995) 5 NTLR 56 at 57 (per Kearney J). Ms Vaysman's evidence satisfied me that it is unlikely that her daughter's father would be available or willing to care for their daughter during any period in which she was imprisoned. She has, from time to time, left her daughter in the care of her parents but not for protracted periods. Were they to have to undertake full time care of the daughter for any significant length of time this would place a strain on all concerned because of her parents' health problems and language difficulties. The daughter's kindergarten attendance and social activities could well be disrupted. Ms Vaysman's parents have not given evidence that they are unable or unwilling to care for her daughter should the need arise. The psychological evidence which Ms Vaysman produced was guarded and went no further than raising the possibility of her daughter being prejudicially affected by any prolonged separation. The psychologist's opinion was based on one session with Ms Vaysman's daughter shortly before the penalty hearing.
45 I am not satisfied that Ms Vaysman has adduced cogent evidence that her daughter would be deprived of appropriate care were Ms Vaysman to be imprisoned. I do not, however, ignore the possibility that, if called upon to provide care for a lengthy period, her parents' capacity to provide adequate care may diminish. As a result, I consider it appropriate to accord some weight to Ms Vaysman's daughter's circumstances in determining the appropriate penalties.
46 Although Ms Vaysman was not the person who was principally responsible for the manufacturing and marketing of the counterfeit footwear, she played a key role in assisting her brother by making the arrangements for internet sales of the footwear. She did so well knowing that she was contravening orders which had been made by the Court and which she chose deliberately to ignore. Again, therefore, both specific and general deterrence are raised as important sentencing considerations.
47 The two most serious charges preferred against Ms Vaysman are Charges 23 and 26 which deal with her engaging in selling counterfeit footwear and recruiting others to do so. Both of these contempts, in my opinion, warrant nothing less than a sentence of imprisonment. The term of imprisonment should, in each case, be one year. The sentences should be served concurrently.
48 On the other charges I impose the following penalties with each sentence to be served concurrently with each other sentence, including those imposed in relation to Charges 23 and 26:
· Charge 7 - Three months imprisonment.
· Charge 11 - Six months imprisonment.
· Charge 12 - Seven days imprisonment.
· Charge 14 - 14 days imprisonment.
· Charge 25 - Seven days imprisonment.
49 Having regard to the potentially adverse impact of a long period of imprisonment on Ms Vaysman's daughter I will require that Ms Vaysman serve two months imprisonment and suspend from execution the remaining period of the sentence. Whilst I consider that Ms Vaysman is genuinely concerned about her daughter's welfare she cannot escape an otherwise deserved sentence of imprisonment for conduct she deliberately engaged in during the girl's formative years.