Hooke v Bux Global Limited
[2018] FCA 1038
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2018-07-11
Before
Murphy JJ, Banks-Smith J, Colvin J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
- By no later than 4.00 pm on 12 July 2018, the defendant do deliver to the Perth Registry copies of the documents numbered 7(a) to (k) (inclusive) (but excluding 7(d)) in the Table attached to the affidavit of Tharun Kuppanda sworn 26 June 2018.
- The documents be delivered in a sealed envelope marked as confidential for the attention of the Associate to Justice Banks-Smith, to be opened only by Justice Banks-Smith and a note to the effect that the documents are provided for the purposes of orders made in these proceedings dated 11 July 2018.
- The question whether the documents may be withheld from disclosure on the basis that they are subject to legal professional privilege be determined by Justice Banks-Smith on the papers.
- The defendant do pay the plaintiffs' costs of the application for orders requiring the delivery of the documents to the Court in order to make a determination whether they are subject to legal professional privilege, such costs to be assessed if not agreed. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
COLVIN J: 1 The plaintiffs dispute the claim by the defendant, Bux Global Limited, to legal professional privilege to 12 documents. One is a draft prospectus, and the other 11 are email communications in which one of the participants was K&L Gates, the solicitors for Bux Global. 2 The plaintiffs seek an order that the defendant do deliver to the Court copies of the documents so they may be inspected and the Court may make a determination as to whether the documents are subject to legal professional privilege. It is the position of Bux Global that if the documents are to be inspected then the inspection should be undertaken by another judge of this Court in circumstances where the matter is listed for hearing before me later this year. 3 The power of the Court to inspect documents for the purpose of assisting in determining whether there is a valid claim to privilege was considered in Grant v Downs [1976] HCA 63; (1976) 135 CLR 674 at 689 where Stephen, Mason and Murphy JJ stated: It is for the party claiming privilege to show that the documents for which the claim is made are privileged. He may succeed in achieving this objective by pointing to the nature of the documents or by evidence describing the circumstances in which they were brought into existence. But it should not be thought that the privilege is necessarily or conclusively established by resort to any verbal formula or ritual. The court has power to examine the documents for itself, a power which has perhaps been exercised too sparingly in the past, springing possibly from a misplaced reluctance to go behind the formal claim of privilege. It should not be forgotten that in many instances the character of the documents the subject of the claim will illuminate the purpose for which they were brought into existence. 4 Whilst the ultimate legal onus remains on the party claiming privilege, an evidential onus may be cast upon the party seeking inspection if the claim for privilege is 'apparently proper'. What is required to establish a claim to privilege will vary depending upon the nature of the document and the particular ground. The description of a document as a confidential communication from a lawyer to the client would be capable of sustaining a claim for privilege in the absence of other evidence. However, a bare assertion of a claim to privilege in respect of a document the character of which had no apparent connection with giving or receiving legal advice or actual or anticipated litigation will not be sufficient: as to these matters see Carey v Korda [2012] WASCA 228; (2012) 45 WAR 181 where Murphy JA reviewed the relevant principles. 5 As the claim to privilege the subject of the present application has been raised as part of the pre-trial disclosure process, the merits of the claim are to be determined according to common law principles rather than by reference to the provisions in the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth): Esso Australia Resources Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) [1999] HCA 67; (1999) 201 CLR 49 at [17]-[28], [64]. 6 As to the adjudication of claims to legal professional privilege, I gratefully adopt the review of the principles to be applied in the recent decision by Thawley J in Kenquist Nominees Pty Ltd v Campbell (No 5) [2018] FCA 853 at [10]-[20]. 7 The question for me on the present application is whether there is doubt as to the claim for privilege and whether assessment of the merits of the claim would be aided by requiring Bux Global to produce the relevant documents for inspection by a judge of this Court who would then adjudicate the privilege claim.