Grounds 2, 3 and 6: The findings that the parties had sexual intercourse
22 Grounds 2, 3 and 6 relate to the finding that the first respondent and the appellant had sexual intercourse on four occasions. The appellant contends that the primary judge erred:
(a) by failing to properly assess the cross-examination of the first respondent as to the non-availability of the opportunity for sexual intercourse on the dates and times alleged;
(b) in finding that the first act of sexual intercourse occurred prior to 19 November 2009; and
(c) because the finding that sexual intercourse occurred on four occasions was against the weight of the evidence.
23 The first respondent gave evidence that he had sexual intercourse with the appellant:
(a) at his home after work in early to mid November 2009 (before the 19th);
(b) at his home after work in November 2009 about a week after the first occasion (but before the 27th of that month);
(c) at the Crown Towers Hotel in Melbourne on the morning of Sunday, 29 November 2009; and
(d) at the appellant's home after work in mid December 2009 (after the 12th).
24 The appellant strenuously denied that she had ever had sexual intercourse with the first respondent. As we have already said, Mr Heywood-Smith sought to prove through cross examination of the first respondent, particularly by reference to the detailed telephone and text records in evidence, that there was no opportunity for them to have had sexual intercourse as alleged.
25 His Honour considered, and we agree, that there could be no nuance about whether or not the appellant and the first respondent engaged in sexual intercourse. Either it occurred or did not. Because of the direct conflict between the evidence of the appellant and the first respondent, and the absence of testimony from any other witness going directly to the question, the primary judge's task in determining whether they had engaged in sexual intercourse on four occasions was difficult. In reaching a finding on this question his Honour correctly determined that he was required to make an overall assessment of the reliability of the evidence of the parties.
26 The appellant strongly argues that we must reach our own conclusions as to whose account should be preferred in relation to the central issue of whether or not sexual intercourse occurred as alleged. We were taken in detail to the evidence before the primary judge, and urged to hold that his Honour's finding in this regard was wrong. Mr Heywoood-Smith referred in particular to Warren v Coombes (1979) 142 CLR 531 at 551 where Gibbs ACJ, Jacobs and Murphy JJ observed:
Shortly expressed, the established principles are, we think, that in general an appellate court is in as good a position as the trial judge to decide on the proper inference to be drawn from facts which are indisputed or which, having been disputed, are established by the findings of the trial judge. In deciding what is the proper inference to be drawn, the appellate court will give respect and weight to the conclusion of the trial judge, but, once having reached its own conclusion, will not shrink from giving effect to it.
While we have not had the opportunity to observe the witnesses over a six day period and listen to their evidence, Warren v Coombes makes clear that this does not mean that we should shrink from correcting the decision of the primary judge, if we consider it to be wrong.
27 However, the authorities set a high bar for an appellant in a case such as this where the evidence is diametrically opposed, and the primary judge was required to determine the question by reference to the parties' comparative credibility. In Devries v Australian National Railways Commission (1993) 177 CLR 472 at 479 the majority observed, per Brennan, Gaudron and McHugh JJ:
More than once in recent years, this Court has pointed out that a finding of fact by a trial judge, based on the credibility of a witness, is not to be set aside because an appellate court thinks that the probabilities of the case are against - even strongly against - that finding of fact (Brunskill v Sovereign Marine & General Insurance Co Ltd (1985) 50 ALJR 842; Jones v Hyde (1989) 63 ALJR 349; Abalos v Australian Postal Commission (1990) 171 CLR 167). If the trial judge's finding depends to any substantial degree on the credibility of the witness, the finding must stand unless it can be shown that the trial judge "has failed to use or has palpably misused his advantage" (SS Hontestroom v SS Sagaporack [1927] AC 37 at 47) or has acted on evidence which was "inconsistent with facts incontrovertibly established by the evidence" or which was "glaringly improbable"( Brunskill at 844)
28 Later, in Fox v Percy (2003) 214 CLR 118 at 127-129 [26]-[31] a majority comprised of Gleeson CJ, Gummow and Kirby JJ reiterated that, ordinarily, a finding of fact by a trial judge, based on the credibility of a witness, should only be set aside upon appeal where incontrovertible facts or uncontested testimony demonstrate that the judge's conclusions are erroneous, or where it is concluded that the decision that the trial was clearly improbable or contrary to compelling inferences in the case. Even so, as their Honours noted, an appeal court such as this must perform its appellate function of rehearing in accordance with the requirements of the applicable statute (here s 27 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth)).
29 In this case the primary judge's rejection of the appellant's evidence that she did not engage in sexual intercourse with the first respondent is a quintessential credit finding. His Honour held at [36] that "generally speaking I would not accept much of Ms Kraus' evidence on contentious issues" and he preferred the evidence of the first respondent on this central question. His Honour plainly made an assessment of the comparative credibility of the appellant and the first respondent having regard to the plausibility and probabilities of their evidence in light of the other evidence.
30 The appellant's task before us is to establish that his Honour's finding that the parties had engaged in sexual intercourse was inconsistent with facts incontrovertibly established, glaringly improbable or contrary to compelling inferences in the case or that there is some other basis on which that finding was erroneous. Mr Heywood-Smith seeks to demonstrate - by reference to the detailed telephone and text records in evidence - that it was impossible or at least highly improbable that there was any opportunity for the first respondent to have sexual intercourse with the appellant on the first, second and fourth of these occasions. (No such argument was made about the third occasion which was alleged to have occurred on Sunday, 29 November 2009, as they were staying together in a suite at a hotel.) The appellant argues that on the first, second and fourth occasions the telephone and text records indicate that the first respondent could not have been with her at the claimed location at the time claimed with sufficient time for sexual intercourse to occur. We were taken at length to the text and telephone records in an attempt to sustain this argument.
31 We do not accept this submission. Without now revisiting the minutiae of the telephone and text records, it is apparent that there were sufficient windows or opportunities for sexual intercourse to have happened on each of the three occasions in question. Although the opportunities were relatively confined, there is nothing in the records to which we were taken which precluded the possibility of sexual intercourse having occurred within the range of dates and times alleged. In short, the appellant failed to establish that there was no possibility of sexual intercourse occurring as alleged.
32 In our view the appellant also failed to establish that the primary judge's finding was glaringly improbable, or even establish that it was against the weight of the evidence.
33 The appellant provided a detailed statement and chronology to the respondents in about June 2010 which she says, and we accept, put the first respondent on notice as to her claims. Mr Heywood-Smith argues that, despite the detail in her statement and the length of time before the first respondent eventually gave evidence, the first respondent was unable to offer a detailed or convincing account as to when the claimed sexual intercourse had occurred, and was unable to even specify a fixed date for three of the claimed occasions. He contends that various aspects of the first respondent's account are improbable, lack credibility and should not be accepted.
34 In contrast Mr Heywood-Smith submits the appellant's evidence was consistent and credible, and corroborated by her detailed statement prepared before she had legal advice. He points, amongst other things, to the fact that:
(a) there is nothing in the appellant's detailed statement to contradict her evidence on this issue;
(b) despite the extensive number of text messages in evidence there is no indication in those messages of sexual intercourse ever having occurred;
(c) despite numerous photographs in evidence there are none of the appellant in the nude or kissing the first respondent; and
(d) on the first respondent's own version he did not have sexual intercourse with the appellant after mid-December 2009.
He submits that the finding that sexual intercourse occurred is inconsistent or incongruous when viewed against the findings on various other issues, and that the appellant's evidence should be preferred.
35 We do not accept this submission. His Honour sets out many findings which operate to support his rejection of the appellant's account. These include the following:
(a) Until shortly prior to the termination of employment the appellant made no report or complaint of inappropriate behaviour by the first respondent, even to her friends or her boyfriend, in circumstances where she might readily have done so;
(b) On several identified occasions the appellant was able to refuse the first respondent's advances, which indicated that she did not feel compelled to acquiesce to his requests or expectations to the extent that she had sought to convey in her evidence;
(c) The numerous text messages between the parties did not suggest that the appellant was discomforted by the degree of intimacy offered by the first respondent. Her text messages showed that she was responsive, chatty, and informative and had no apparent desire to curb the level of communication or its content. The text messaging between them revealed a closer relationship than one between and employer and employee, or even between co-workers;
(d) The appellant's account of the trip to Melbourne to stay with the first respondent in Crown Towers Hotel from 27 to 29 November 2009 was implausible. On her evidence the first respondent had inappropriately booked a suite with only one bed, on the night of 27 November had entered a spa with her while nude and massaged her over her objection, and had then entered the shower while she was showering and soaped her over her objection. Her evidence was that she objected to and was revolted by this conduct, but she felt trapped and powerless. However, this was inconsistent with photographic and video evidence showing that she walked around their hotel suite in underwear and allowed the first respondent to take photographs and videos of her, including posing for the photographs, without any signs of distress or discomfort;
(e) On 28 November 2009 (the day after conduct by the first respondent which on the appellant's account was very inappropriate) she went shopping with him and he bought her a friendship ring costing $1,200. She expressed concerns about the ring because of its cost rather than because he wanted to purchase it for her. She had it resized and returned later that day to pick it up;
(f) The appellant complained of the first respondent touching her even more inappropriately when they were in bed on the morning of 29 November 2009, saying that she reacted very negatively and felt violated. However, and inconsistently, she then went shopping with him and went on a horse and carriage ride. A text message she sent to him the following day, and the bantering tone to the text messages between them over the following few days, were also inconsistent with her claimed reaction to his conduct on the morning of 29 November and his conduct overall on the Melbourne trip. In these few days he also sent the appellant some extremely crude photographs by text and she did not object or comment on their crudeness;
(g) The next weekend the appellant agreed to go on a day trip with the first respondent to Parrawirra Recreation Park and into the Barossa Resort and Winery, which was at least curious having regard to her claimed reaction to his inappropriate conduct on the morning of 29 November;
(h) On 13 December 2009 the appellant texted the first respondent to advise that she had broken up with her boyfriend and asking to be picked up for work the following day. In response to a request that he might telephone her she responded "up to U Hun";
(i) The appellant went with the first respondent on a holiday to Tasmania in early January 2010. Although by then she had resumed her relationship with her boyfriend she falsely described it to the boyfriend as a work trip in which others from work were also participating; and
(j) The appellant went with the first respondent on a trip to Sydney on 12 to 13 February 2010. Her text messages reveal that she knew that they would again be sleeping together in a shared hotel room, which they did. She again allowed the first respondent to take photographs of her, including one in which she poses seductively on the bed, which is inconsistent with her having been an unwilling participant in the conduct.
36 We do not accept that the appellant's account in which she denies that she had sexual intercourse with the first respondent is more compelling and must be preferred to the account offered by the first respondent. In reaching a view as to which party's evidence to prefer his Honour was faced with a difficult task. The authorities such as Devries and Fox v Percy are clear that, in the absence of material which powerfully indicates that a primary judge's credit findings are wrong, the finding should not be interfered with on appeal. The evidence for the appellant fell well short of being a powerful indication. In our view there was a firm basis for his Honour's findings.
37 The appellant also seeks to rely on the failure of the first respondent to produce telephone records showing the places from where he sent text messages. As we have already said, it appears that there was some confusion around this issue, but the appellant had the onus of proof. If the records were important it was for her solicitors to subpoena them. This is particularly so when the respondents' solicitors had advised well before the resumption of the trial on 11 October 2011 that they would not be able to produce the records.
38 In relation to these grounds of appeal the appellant also complains of a breach of the rule in Browne v Dunn (1893) 6 R 67. That case was dealt with by Parker J in Williams v Dawson [2000] WASCA 205 at [31] where his Honour said the following:
In Browne v Dunn Lord Herschell LC said at 70, 71:
Now, my Lords, I cannot help saying that it seems to me to be absolutely essential to the proper conduct of a cause, where it is intended to suggest that a witness is not speaking the truth on a particular point, to direct his attention to the fact by some questions put in cross-examination showing that that imputation is intended to be made, and not to take his evidence and pass it by as a matter altogether unchallenged, and then, when it is impossible for him to explain, as perhaps he might have been able to do if such questions had been put to him, the circumstances which it is suggested indicate that the story he tells ought not to be believed, to argue that he is a witness unworthy of credit. My Lords, I have always understood that if you intend to impeach a witness you are bound, whilst he is in the box, to give him an opportunity of making any explanation which is open to him; and, as it seems to me, that is not only a rule of professional practice or in the conduct of a case, but is essential to fair play and fair dealing with witnesses.
His Lordship continued later at 71:
All I am saying is that it will not do to impeach the credibility of a witness upon a matter on which he has not had an opportunity of giving an explanation by reason of their having been no suggestion whatever in the course of the case that his story is not accepted.
This last observation is to be understood in the light of clear passages at 71 of the reasons that there is no obligation to raise by way of cross-examination such matters where the witness has had notice beforehand that there is an intention to impeach his credibility. In the same decision Lord Halsbury said at 76 - 77:
To my mind nothing would be more absolutely unjust than not to cross-examine witnesses upon evidence which they have given, so as to give them notice, and to give them an opportunity of explanation, and an opportunity very often to defend their own character, and, not having given them such an opportunity, to ask the jury afterwards to disbelieve what they have said, although not one question has been directed either to their credit or to the accuracy of the facts they have deposed to.
39 In Allied Pastoral Holdings Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Taxation [1983] 1 NSWLR 1 at 16 Hunt J observed:
It has in my experience always been a rule of professional practice that, unless notice has already clearly been given of the cross-examiner's intention to rely upon such matters, it is necessary to put to an opponent's witness in cross-examination, the nature of the case upon which it is proposed to rely in contradiction of his evidence, particularly where that case relies upon inferences to be drawn from other evidence in the proceedings. Such a rule of practice is necessary both to give the witness the opportunity to deal with that other evidence, or the inferences to be drawn from it, and to allow the other party the opportunity to call evidence either to corroborate that explanation or to contradict the inference sought to be drawn. That rule of practice follows from what I have always believed to be the rules of conduct which are essential to fair play at the trial and which are generally regarded as being established by the decision of the House of Lords in Browne v Dunn ...
He added at 26:
I remain of the opinion that, unless notice has already clearly been given of the cross-examiner's intention to rely upon such matters, it is necessary to put to an opponent's witness in cross-examination the nature of the case upon which it is proposed to rely in contradiction of his evidence, particularly where that case relies upon inferences to be drawn from other evidence in the proceedings.
40 The appellant says, and we accept, that the detail surrounding the circumstances in which the claimed sexual intercourse occurred such as the exact dates and times, the method of intercourse used and the rooms in which it occurred were not put to her. Largely the details did not emerge until the first respondent's evidence, and even then the absence of some of the detail causes us some concern as to his credit. However, the rule in Browne v Dunn did not require the first respondent to put his allegations in chapter and verse to the appellant and she was not deprived of procedural fairness. The rule required the first respondent to put the appellant on notice as to the substance of his case - namely that he was in a relationship with her which included sexual intercourse. He did this from an early date in his written contentions. Some specific occasions were then put to her in cross examination. She strongly denied ever having had sexual intercourse with him and that was the contest between the parties.
41 The appellant also sought to rely on the rule in Jones v Dunkel (1959) 101 CLR 298 in relation to the failure of the first respondent to call his bookkeeper to give evidence.
42 The rule in Jones v Dunkel is often cited but frequently overstated or misstated. The proper understanding to the limits and application of the well known passage in that case was reinforced this year by the High Court in Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Hellicar (2012) 86 ALJR 522 at 554-555 [165]-[167]; 286 ALR 501 at 543-544. French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Heydon, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ said:
The cogency of proof
...
165. Disputed questions of fact must be decided by a court according to the evidence that the parties adduce, not according to some speculation about what other evidence might possibly have been led. Principles governing the onus and standard of proof must faithfully be applied. And there are cases where demonstration that other evidence could have been, but was not, called may properly be taken to account in determining whether a party has proved its case to the requisite standard.
…
166. Lord Mansfield's dictum in Blatch v Archer that "[i]t is certainly a maxim that all evidence is to be weighed according to the proof which it was in the power of one side to have produced, and in the power of the other to have contradicted" is not to be understood as countenancing any departure from any of these rules. Indeed, in Blatch v Archer itself, Lord Mansfield concluded that the maxim was not engaged for "it would have been very improper to have called" the person whose account of events was not available to the court.
167. This Court's decision in Jones v Dunkel is a particular and vivid example of the principles that govern how the demonstration that other evidence could have been called, but was not, may be used. The essential facts of the case, though well known, should be restated. The personal representative of a driver who had died in a collision with another vehicle brought an action for damages on her own behalf and on behalf of the deceased driver's dependants. The plaintiff's case depended upon demonstration that the other driver's negligence was a cause of the accident. The plaintiff sought to demonstrate negligence by having the tribunal of fact (in that case a jury) infer from facts concerning the road and the two vehicles involved that the collision had occurred when the defendant's vehicle was on the wrong side of the road. One of the defendants, the surviving driver, did not give evidence at the trial. The Court divided about whether the inference which the plaintiff sought to have the jury draw about where the collision occurred was an inference that was open on the evidence. But the Court held "that any inference favourable to the plaintiff for which there was ground in the evidence might be more confidently drawn when a person presumably able to put the true complexion on the facts relied on as the ground for the inference has not been called as a witness by the defendant and the evidence provides no sufficient explanation of his absence".
…
43 In a separate judgment in the same decision, Heydon J put it this way (86 ALJR at 566 [232]; 286 ALR at 558-559):
232. Secondly, the Court of Appeal accepted that its reasoning went "beyond Jones v Dunkel". Indeed, it agreed with the trial judge's conclusion that the rule in Jones v Dunkel did not apply. As the Court of Appeal said, two consequences can flow from the unexplained failure of a party to call a witness whom that party would be expected to call. One is that the trier of fact may infer that the evidence of the absent witness would not assist the case of that party. The other is that the trier of fact may draw an inference unfavourable to that party with greater confidence. But Jones v Dunkel does not enable the trier of fact to infer that the evidence of the absent witness would have been positively adverse to that party.
…
44 The first respondent's evidence was that he and the appellant had an argument whilst on the trip to Tasmania in early January 2010 because she wanted to take over the second respondent's bookkeeper's job. The appellant says this is untrue and argues that the bookkeeper should have been called by the first respondent, being in his camp. We do not agree. The rule in Jones v Dunkel is discretionary, that is, a failure to call a witness who might corroborate an account may give rise to an inference that the witness would be unlikely to support the account. There was no cogent suggestion as to how the bookkeeper's evidence, who was not present on the trip, could have assisted the primary judge in determining the reason for any fight. In any event the issue was far from significant in the primary judge's decision.
45 We can discern no appealable error in this finding by the primary judge.