Discussion
60 The essential question which arises is whether the first of the requirements as stated in Rule 7.23(1)(a) has been satisfied. That is to say, has Mr Higgins satisfied the Court that he reasonably believes that he may have the right to obtain relief from the Court?
61 What is required in the present case is that Mr Higgins must have an objectively reasonable belief that he may have a right to obtain an order against the Commissioner under s 39B of the Judiciary Act setting aside the assessments by reason of conscious maladministration by officers of the ATO using the s 59 documents to raise the assessments.
62 Thus, the cause of action which underlies the necessary belief is one which has, as an essential element, actual bad faith by officers of the Commonwealth in raising the assessments. There must be a belief that the relevant officers deliberately engaged in conduct that affected the integrity of the assessment process: Futuris at [25], [60]; Denlay at [76], [79].
63 The evidence on which Mr Higgins relied to satisfy the requirement of an objectively reasonable belief that he may have such a cause of action was drawn largely from the transcript of the cross-examination of Mr Shepherdson.
64 The relevant matters are set out in some detail in the written submissions of counsel for Mr Higgins and in particular, in their written submissions in reply. I do not propose to repeat them.
65 In my opinion, the highest that the evidence rises is to establish that Mr Shepherdson had the s 59 documents available before he interviewed Mr Higgins in relation to the s 264 notices in September 2007 and February 2008 and that he had read the documents by that time. He acknowledged that he had the documents available before the second interview on 20 February 2008 and he asked Mr Higgins about Strachans during that interview.
66 Mr Shepherdson had sought from Mr Higgins in the s 264 notices in June 2007 documents concerning Mr Egglishaw and Strachans. This also supports the inference that Mr Shepherdson had read the s 59 documents before the interviews took place in September 2007 and February 2008.
67 But a further step is needed to give rise to the necessary objective belief that the s 59 documents were deliberately used in a way which destroyed the integrity of the assessments.
68 Something more than suspicion or conjecture is required. What is required is some fact or matter that inclines the mind toward assenting to, rather than rejecting the proposition that the s 59 documents were misused in that way, even though the circumstances may leave something to surmise or conjecture: Rabo at [26(d)]; John Holland Services Pty Ltd v Terranora Group Management Pty Ltd [2004] FCA 679 at [14], [16]-[17] (Emmett J).
69 In my opinion, the seriousness of the underlying allegation, namely that statutory powers have been deliberately misused, must be borne in mind when determining whether Mr Higgins has established that he holds the necessary objectively reasonable belief.
70 The effect of the submission put by counsel for Mr Higgins was that it is sufficient that Mr Shepherdson knew the content of the s 59 documents when he caused the ATO to issue the assessments to Arabella. In my opinion, there is sufficient evidence at this stage to establish that Mr Shepherdson had that knowledge.
71 Counsel for Mr Higgins then submitted that it is not possible to isolate hermetically the "substantive issue" from the pejorative effect of the s 59 documents as Mr Shepherdson sought to do when he was cross-examined in the AAT.
72 Counsel went on to submit that even if it were possible to do so, it is implausible that the s 59 documents did not have an effect on the substantive issue, namely whether the inter-company loan was made and the purpose of that loan. They pointed to the remarks of Brennan J in Kioa v West (1985) 159 CLR 550 at 629 ("Kioa") to the effect that it is impossible for the repository of a power to shut information "of that kind" out of his or her mind so as to reach a decision without reference to it.
73 But the remarks of Brennan J were made in discussing the obligation of a decision-maker to give an opportunity to a person likely to be affected by an exercise of power to address relevant matters adverse to his or her interests which the repository of the power proposes to take into account: see Kioa at 628-629.
74 I accept that the possession of adverse information creates a risk that the decision-maker will advert to it, whether subconsciously or perhaps otherwise. However, in the present case I do not consider that Mr Shepherdson's knowledge of the content of the s 59 documents provides a tangible basis for establishing the necessary objective belief.
75 The Reasons for Decision, which were apparently prepared by Mr Shepherdson, show that the critical factors which resulted in the issue of the tax assessments to Arabella were the absence of any documentary records to support the existence of the loan and the absence of any explanation of the commercial purpose for which the alleged loan was made.
76 I was not taken to anything in the s 59 documents to suggest that the content of those documents could have had any bearing on the decision to raise the assessments. In my opinion, it was necessary, at very least, for Mr Higgins to be able to point to the possibility of some causal nexus between the content of the s 59 documents and the process by which the assessments were produced in order to have a starting point for the serious allegation that would constitute the subject matter of the alleged cause of action.
77 No such causal nexus was revealed. All that is left in my view is assertion or suspicion. That is not sufficient to provide a basis for an order for preliminary discovery.
78 Indeed, this is borne out by the submissions made on behalf of Mr Higgins in support of the order. They submitted that if the assessments issued to Arabella were based on the s 59 documents obtained as a result of a breach of the strict quarantining provisions of the Australian Crime Commission Act, then it is likely that the assessments were affected by conscious maladministration. They went on to submit that the documents sought by way of preliminary discovery may, if they exist, establish the chain of custody of the documents which, if not properly adhered to, is likely to establish conscious maladministration.
79 These submissions were properly made and I do not criticise counsel for doing so. But they show the absence of any suggestion of a causal nexus between the s 59 documents and the assessments. They also reveal that Mr Higgins has no reasonable cause to believe that one of the necessary elements of the suggested cause of action, namely bad faith and deliberate misuse of the s 59 documents to subvert the assessments, exists.