Failing to investigate Mr Myatt's complaint and failing to charge Ms D
86 The first part of Mr Myatt's allegation involves the proposition that if the same complaint had been made by a woman, or a person without a psychiatric impairment, S/C Watt would have investigated the complaint and charged Ms D with unlawful stalking.
87 A fundamental strand of Mr Myatt's allegation is that he made a "complaint" to S/C Watts, which S/C Watts then failed to investigate. Mr Myatt seems to use "complaint" to refer to an allegation of unlawful stalking which he expressly or impliedly asked S/C Watts to investigate. However, Mr Myatt's evidence is that he ended his interview with S/C Watts "before he took any complaint". On Mr Myatt's own evidence, he did not request that S/C Watts investigate his allegation. The first aspect of the second allegation has no reasonable prospect of success for this reason.
88 However, Mr Myatt says that he later emailed S/C Watts encouraging him to progress his complaint. I will proceed on the assumption that Mr Myatt did request that S/C Watts investigate Ms D for unlawful stalking.
89 Mr Myatt says that he had told S/C Watts about the September 1999 telephone call from Ms D and the reasons why he considered that Ms D had unlawfully stalked him. Mr Myatt's evidence is that Ms D's telephone call in September 1999 was at about 3 am or 4 am, and this was "unequivocally romantic conduct to me." All he says about the content of the telephone call is that "She simply wanted to engage in a conversation…of no import whatsoever". Therefore, Mr Myatt's apprehension that Ms D was engaging in "romantic conduct" towards him seems not to have come from anything that Ms D said, but the fact that the telephone call was at 3 am or 4 am.
90 There had also been a number of telephone conversations between Mr Myatt and Ms D in the weeks leading up to September 1999, but Mr Myatt made no complaint about Ms D's conduct during those conversations. Therefore, Mr Myatt's complaint to S/C Watts that Ms D had unlawfully stalked him could only have been on the basis that she made a single telephone call to him at 3 am or 4 am some 3½ years earlier in which she said nothing of any import, but which he perceived to be a romantic overture; and that he suffered a severe nervous breakdown as a result.
91 Section 359E(1) of the Criminal Code 1899 (Qld) provides "A person who unlawfully stalks another person is guilty of a crime".
92 In September 1999, s 359B of the Criminal Code defined "unlawful stalking" as follows:
359B What is unlawful stalking
Unlawful stalking is conduct -
(a) intentionally directed at a person (the stalked person);
and
(b) engaged in on any 1 occasion if the conduct is protracted or on more than 1 occasion; and
(c) consisting of 1 or more acts of the following, or a similar, type -
…
(ii) contacting a person in any way, including, for example, by telephone, mail, fax, email or through the use of any technology;
…
(d) that -
(i) would cause the stalked person apprehension or fear, reasonably arising in all the circumstances, of violence to, or against property of, the stalked person or another person; or
(ii) causes detriment, reasonably arising in all the circumstances, to the stalked person or another person.
93 The expression "detriment" is defined in s 359A of the Criminal Code to include "serious mental, psychological or emotional harm". The word "circumstances" is defined to include the alleged stalker's circumstances and the circumstances of the stalked person known, foreseen or reasonably foreseeable by the alleged stalker.
94 In R v Armstrong [2015] QCA 189, McMurdo J (with whom Holmes CJ and Lyons J agreed), explained at [17] that for s 359B(d)(ii) of the Criminal Code, the jury has to be "satisfied of the truth in substance of the complainant's evidence about the consequences of the appellant's conduct and that these were reasonable reactions by the complainant to that conduct".
95 Mr Myatt's complaint of unlawful stalking against Ms D must rely on s 359B(d)(ii) of the Criminal Code. It must be to the effect that Ms D's telephone call caused him detriment, namely serious mental, psychological or emotional harm, and the detriment was one "reasonably arising in all the circumstances."
96 The expression "reasonably arising in all of the circumstances" requires consideration of whether the alleged conduct would cause serious mental, psychological or emotional harm to a reasonable person in all the circumstances. The circumstances include the circumstances of the stalked person which the alleged stalker knew or foresaw or should have foreseen. Mr Myatt claims that he was particularly vulnerable to psychological or emotional harm because of his feelings of guilt stemming from his relationship with Ms D in circumstances where he had lied to and betrayed his previous girlfriend. However, the evidence does not indicate that at the time she made the September 1999 telephone call Ms D was aware of Mr Myatt's feelings of guilt, or was, or should have been, aware of any mental, psychological or emotional vulnerability on the part of Mr Myatt. In the circumstances, the reasonable person to be considered is one of ordinary mental, psychological or emotional fortitude.
97 The issue is whether a reasonable person would have reacted in the way Mr Myatt did. The telephone call from Ms D was innocuous. Mr Myatt seems to have leapt to the conclusion that the fact that the telephone call was in the early hours of the morning meant that Ms D telephoned because she had some romantic interest in him. It is well within the realms of ordinary human behaviour that friends, particularly young people, sometimes inconsiderately telephone each other at odd hours, perhaps because they exuberant, or simply have an impulse to talk to a friend (and it is also necessary to bear in mind the two hour time difference between Queensland and Western Australia). Mr Myatt's claim that Ms D's innocuous telephone call at 3 am or 4 am indicated some romantic interest in him is narcissistic and bizarre. Even if the fact that Ms D telephoned him obliquely indicated some romantic interest, it cannot be supposed that any reasonable person would suffer severe mental, psychological or emotional harm as a result.
98 Mr Myatt has suggested that Ms D also unlawfully stalked him by procuring Mr A to make harassing telephone calls to him in August 2001 and April 2002. This suggestion has the appearance of being somewhat belated, and the evidence does not indicate that Mr Myatt told S/C Watts that Mr A's calls were part of his complaint of stalking. Even assuming that he did, that does not increase the strength of the complaint. There is no evidence that Ms D procured Mr A to make the calls. Mr Myatt does not detail the content of the calls, other than that Mr A said "[T]here are laws against that you know" and "You are a good looking guy" and "[L]eave [Ms D] alone". S/C Watts could not conclude from the information given by Mr Myatt that there was any realistic prospect that the elements of s 359B of the Criminal Code could be proven.
99 The QPS explained, most recently in its letter to the AHRC of 22 May 2014, that Mr Myatt's allegations against Ms D had been determined to be unsubstantiated. There was (and remains) no realistic prospect that a jury properly instructed could lawfully convict Ms D of unlawful stalking: see Doney v R (1991) 171 CLR 207 at 215, May v O'Sullivan (1955) 92 CLR 654 at 658-659. A judge would not allow the charge to go to a jury.
100 Officers of the QPS are not obliged to investigate a complaint or to charge a person merely because a complaint is made. Police officers retain a discretion as to whether to investigate and charge.
101 In R v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis; Ex parte Blackburn [1968] 2 QB 118, Lord Denning MR said at 136:
Although the chief officers of police are answerable to the law, there are many fields in which they have a discretion with which the law will not interfere. For instance, it is for the Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, or the chief constable, as the case may be, to decide in any particular case whether inquiries should be pursued, or whether an arrest should be made, or a prosecution brought.
102 In Hinchcliffe v Commissioner of Australia Federal Police (2001) 118 FCR 308, Kenny J at [35] noted that Australian courts have also accepted that a Police Commissioner has a broad discretion as to the manner in which he or she chooses to fulfil the responsibilities of office. Her Honour continued at [37]:
I accept that, where a member of the AFP receives a complaint from a member of the public, the member discharges his or her duty to enforce the law if:
(1) he or she gives due and proper consideration to the question whether and in what way an initial inquiry into the complaint should be made; and
(2) he or she acts appropriately upon the view which he or she has formed.
A range of matters may be pertinent to the member's consideration of the complaint, depending on the circumstances.
103 In Desai v Keelty, Commissioner, Australian Federal Police (2009) 180 FCR 559, Tracey J at [16] referred to the powers and duties imposed by common law on constables of a State. His Honour said at [18]:
[P]olicing powers carry with them a wide measure of discretion such that it usually cannot be asserted, as a matter of law, that a police officer is under any unqualified duty to exercise particular powers.
104 In O'Malley v Keelty (2005) 148 FCR 170, Magwick J said at [36]:
[A] court cannot and should not compel a police force to investigate every breach of the law. There are many mysteries in this world. Some of them involve possible commissions of crime. It is not, however, the responsibility of police officers to investigate all of them. Indeed, the role of the police is not to investigate whether, at large, there has been a breach of the law. Rather, their duty is to investigate whether there has been a breach of the law for which an identifiable person might be convicted if prosecuted.
(Emphasis added.)
105 In Scott v Northern Territory of Australia [2003] FCA 658, Magwick J said:
[69] [I]f there appears to be no serious prospect of obtaining a conviction, it may be a quite reasonable decision, even in a very serious case, by the relevant police officer(s) not to expend resources or further resources on an investigation.
…
[75] There is, however, as it seems to me, nothing unlawful in a police officer bona fide determining, where there is some proper material to support the view, that one or more crucial witnesses are unlikely to be believed by a jury, and on that account to cease an inquiry. It must happen frequently in police work. In the case of a very serious crime, such as the various applicants allege here, one would usually expect that such a determination would not be made without interviewing the witness(es) concerned. Nevertheless, unusual circumstances may exist such that a police officer might reasonably come to the view that the matter is not worth investigating further or taking to court.
106 Section 2.1 of the PSAA provides for the maintenance of a body of persons under the name and style "Queensland Police Service". Section 2.3 of the PSAA provides that the functions of the QPS include protection of people from commission of offences against the law, bringing offenders to justice and the upholding of the law generally.
107 Under s 3.2(2) of the PSAA, a non-commissioned officer or a constable has and may exercise the powers of a constable at common law or under any Act or law. Section 3.2(4) of the PSAA provides that the PSAA does not derogate from the powers, obligations and liabilities of a constable at common law. Nothing in the PSAA operates to remove the discretion of a police officer under common law as to whether and how to investigate a complaint and as to whether to lay charges.
108 After hearing Mr Myatt's allegations in the course of the interview in May 2003, S/C Watts apparently decided not to conduct any investigation, or any further investigation, of Mr Myatt's allegations of unlawful stalking against Ms D and decided not to charge her. S/C Watts had the benefit of Mr Myatt's explanation of why he contended that Ms D had unlawfully stalked him. It was not only entirely open to S/C Watts to not to investigate the complaint and not to charge Ms D, but that was the only sensible decision that he could have made. There was no realistic prospect of obtaining a conviction.
109 It is necessary to consider whether S/C Watts would have investigated and charged Ms D with unlawful stalking if the same complaint had been made by a woman or a person without a psychiatric impairment. Mr Myatt argues that the very fact that he was charged with unlawful stalking, whereas Ms D was not, proves his case. However, as I will discuss later, the allegations made by Ms D against Mr Myatt were quite different and the case against Mr Myatt was much stronger. There was a clear, obvious and reasonable basis for S/C Watts and S/C Wong to charge Mr Myatt, whereas there was no prospect that Ms D would be convicted if charged.
110 The evidence is not capable of allowing a trial judge to draw an inference that if the complaint made by Mr Myatt had been made by a woman, or a person without a psychiatric impairment, S/C Watts would have investigated the complaint and would have charged Ms D.