Consideration
37When the matter first came before me on 15 May 2011 an indictment with 41 counts was presented. The transcript page 1 records:
"HIS HONOUR: 41 counts?
CROWN PROSECUTOR: 41 counts, your Honour, and my friends--
HIS HONOUR: Why is that? I know nothing about this trial.
CROWN PROSECUTOR: Yes, your Honour.
HIS HONOUR: It automatically puts the Crown at a disadvantage"
38The Crown chose to charge as a count almost every transaction said to found the two principle conspiracies. They, as I anticipated, set themselves up to fail on at least some of the counts charged. Counts 22, 24, 25, 27, 28, 30, 31 and 33 were based on invoices which they should have known were forgeries and could not have originated directly from the Henderson's who were not in Australia at the time they were generated. To rely on Weissman to support these charges knowing who he was, what he had done, and what he said at committal put the prosecution at risk.
39However, transfers from FCL to CBH, which founded counts 9, 12, 13, 15, 18 and 19, were supported by documents held both by Kearns (Ex 52) and the Henderson's (Ex 65).
40In addition, while Hanby's documents were clearly bogus and he was a liar, the Henderson's were working with him and he with them. His company, BCT, did transfer $481,000 to FCL of the $520,000, which came from Az-Ben and of which BCT/Hanby retained the not insubstantial sum of $39,000. A solid reason for the Henderson's and he to fallout.
41Similarly, while Weissman may have forged FCL invoices, his companies relying on invoices such as those from BCT, transferred $1,912,000 to FCL of which only $937,911 went to CBH and Wills. Money from FCL went to benefit the Henderson's or companies associated with them such as International Scanners and to pay their debt to I.D. Ware Italy (Ex 46).
42The Crown could reasonably rely on FCL receipt of this money to ask the jury to infer that the lies and forgeries were not directed at the Henderson's and that they well knew FCL was being used as a conduit.
43The documents in Ex 65 went to supporting the Crown contentions, that the Henderson's were not simply compliant in a joint venture to market APOS 2000 internationally but were well aware of the source of the funds, the reason why such funds in such large amounts were paid and the need to hide the transactions from discovery by Woolworths.
44While it can be presumed the Crown knew of the difficulties calling co-offenders or co-conspirators would cause their case, and the difficulties with corroborating their assertions, it was not unreasonable to do so. Nor was it unreasonable to allow, for the possibility some of what they said would be accepted and some rejected by the jury.
45Exhibit 65 in particular, and the transactions noted in Ex 46 relating to FCL and Marco Polo, did corroborate much of what Kearns said Mr and Mrs Henderson were aware of. And, the evidence did allow the Crown to rely on the co-conspirator's rule and section 87 Evidence Act 1995 in its case against Mr and Mrs Henderson.
46The prosecution however could never have proved count 38, which was discontinued. While an inference could be drawn that Mr Henderson was the source of the name, "Robert Daly", there was simply not evidence he made the statement relied on to found the charge. This count however occupied very little court time.
47Count 11 however, which was also discontinued, depended on the availability of a witness whose absence through illness and inability to participate in close circuit TV evidence the Crown could not reasonably predict.
48As to the remaining counts, the defence skilfully ran their defence on the basis that the juries rejection of Weissman, Kearns and Hanby as witnesses of truth meant they had to reject the Crown case as a whole. That the jury would accept that reasoning and find the accused not guilty could not be reasonably predicted because the Crown case did not depend on these witnesses alone. The Crown case was supported by independent financial records, documents in the possession for the Hendersons and some incriminating passages captured on the Listening Devices and Telephone Intercepts.
49The Crown overreached unnecessarily so far as the allegations concerning SRT's direct dealing with Woolworth's MIS department are concerned. The defence were properly able to exploit this to their advantage. It is clear that the informal nature of Wills' dealings with suppliers generated suspicion when things went wrong but that his actions were also tolerated by Woolworths when things went well. With the exception of count 21 there was little evidence to support anything other than suspicion these direct dealings between SRT and Woolworths were irregular and a wealth of evidence from Woolworths' and SRT staff that they were not.
50In brief, the following additional matters seem decisive so far as the principle counts are concerned:
(1)There were documents supporting the existence of a conspiracy to defraud Woolworths, including Kearns reporting to the Hendersons about transfers from Wills used to set up the BVI companies.
(2)So far as Count 21 (Mrs Henderson only) is concerned the offence was well supported by documents indicating the money had its genesis in funds sent by Woolworths to SRT and then back to Wills. The jury not being able to agree so far as Mrs Henderson is concerned can only be regarded as merciful.
(3)The Henderson's received over $900,000 of the money forwarded to Finnigan via BCT or International Retail Systems Ltd (IRS).
(4)The Henderson's received over $500,000 of the money forwarded to Finnigan via Advance Retail Technology Ltd (ART) after it had been paid by NCR.
(5)This money from both sources was out of all proportion to the work done by SRT and the Hendersons on the APOS and other projects.
(6)Documents held by the Hendersons supported the Crown contentions.
(7)Evidence of Kearns and Hanby was supported by these documents.
(8)The documents also indicated far more conclusively than anything said by Weissman that there was a clandestine arrangement for those involved in the APOS contract to share in the proceeds and that those proceeds were inflated by Wills.
(9)While in part exculpatory, the Listening Devices and Telephone Intercepts also carried incriminating comments and a jury could well have accepted the Crown proposition that many conversations were staged.
(10)The Henderson's sought to benefit from the international marketing of APOS and their dealings with Wills. The funding for these arrangements came from Weissman companies after payments from Woolworths had been received by them. Given the initial Az-Ben / Woolworths APOS 2000 proposals required initial funding from the Henderson's of £50,000, the substantial sums used for the proposed international joint venture could only have come from payments made by Woolworths to Weissman.
(11)The prosecution was well supported by the police investigation and the work of Mr Fogarty. Respected and articulate witnesses who were not criminally involved were available to support the Crown case. Documents and financial records provided a sound basis for a case to found all the necessary elements of both conspiracies.
51It is trite to say the Crown do not have to prove every asserted fact. Here they clearly overreached. Their principle case was presented in an incoherent manner. The Crown, fortuitously for the defence, opened too broadly and then focussed to narrowly on the award of the APOS 2000 contracts as a foundation for the conspiracy in Count 1 and the subsequent payments to Wills. (See my Judgment of Wednesday 8 August 2012 on Variation of Particulars).
52Another disadvantage of the Crown case at trial was the narrowness of the particulars provided for Count 1. The conspiracy particularised was that Mr Wills used his position at Woolworths to influence both the award of contracts to Az-Ben and SRT, and to decide the quantity of equipment required from SRT, and was to, and did, receive a substantial reward over 3.5 million for doing so.
53The jury, I suspect, gave each of the accused the benefit of the doubt so far as the Az-Ben contract was concerned because they could not accept to the required high standard that the initial decision to award the APOS contract was corrupt, and so far as the SRT matters were concerned, that there was anything untoward with the work done by SRT for Woolworths.
54During the trial the Crown sought to rely on another conspiracy or variation of the Count 1 conspiracy which had not been particularised, but after discussion and being referred by me to Gerakiteys v The Queen (1984) 153 CLR 317, R v Saffron (1988) 17 NSWLR 395, R v Mok (1987) 27 A Crim R 437 and Clause 21 of the 3rd Schedule to the Criminal Procedure Act 1986, that application was withdrawn.
55Had the Crown used the information they had to particularise Count 1 in slightly broader terms to include the continuation of the existing contracts with Weissman's companies, of whom Peter Henderson was an agent and Mrs Henderson intimately involved in managing her husbands and their joint business dealings, the outcome based on all the evidence called at trial may well have been different.
56This raises a question: should costs be allowed where the prosecution mistakenly failed to run a case which was supported by sound evidence? If the principle count, as particularised by the prosecution, was not reasonable to run, but it would have been reasonable to allege a slightly broader conspiracy, should the defendant get a double benefit of both acquittal and costs because a Crown case, which was available on the facts, was not run? I think not. Costs should not be awarded if the Crown chose, whether reasonably or not, not to prosecute to the full extend available to them on the known facts.
57Much court time was spent, and some wasted, on examining the direct relationship between the Henderson's company SRT and Woolworths. A suspicion was raised that these dealings were also subject to "kickbacks' however with the exception of counts 21 and 22 no direct evidence to support these assertions was called. The circumstantial case relying on SRT's services to Woolworths this was not strong. In fact the bulk of the evidence available to the Crown before trial or led at trial established that SRT provided services to Woolworths for which they were properly compensated.
58It was, in my view necessary, for the Crown to raise the Henderson's and SRT's business relationship with Woolworths' MIS and Mr Wills. It was not necessary to allege every contractual relationship was suspect, particularly the MacLiquor and Sidewalk Sales matters. It was however reasonable to raise matters relating to counts 21 and 22 and matters concerning the supply by SRT of the RF guns, as they were contemporaneous with the APOS 2000 transactions and noted in bank transfers and other documents.
59If, as I have found, the Crown should not reasonably have prosecuted relying on the SRT / Woolworths contracts alone and so called over ordering, are the two defendants/ applicants entitled to costs for the additional time and effort involved in defending the portion of the allegations which were over particularised?
60The test in s 3 relates to the institution of proceedings not to the evidence called to support the charges. As the institution of the proceedings themselves was reasonable, additional wasted costs arising from calling unnecessary additional evidence could not of themselves be subject to an order pursuant to the Act.
61Some jurors obviously felt Mrs Henderson deserved the benefit of the doubt on counts 2 and 21 despite the evidence to the contrary. Perhaps they felt that her eagerness to be involved in what was a potential money maker was exploited by others but this display of mercy does not excuse my assessment of the reasonableness of prosecuting her for her actions in dealing with her husband, Wills, Kearns and Hanby regarding transfers of money as evidenced not just by the witnesses testimony but by documents in her possession.