Submissions of the Crown
34 The Crown submits that the circumstances of the present case disclose a procedural irregularity in the conduct of the trial but not such as to constitute a nullity. It is submitted that care ought be taken in the use of the term "nullity" and, in this respect, reference is made to the decision of the Court of Criminal Appeal in Swansson v R [2007] NSWCCA 67.
35 With respect to R v Brown & Tran, the Crown emphasises that the Court held that the factual circumstances were not caught by s.73(b) of the Act. Sperling J observed, at 279 [57], that the statutory exemption in s.73(b) was confined to omissions, errors and irregularities concerning the contents of documents of a specified kind but did "not cover mistakes in relation to mandatory processes required by the legislation". His Honour referred, at 279 [58], to s.18 Juries Act 1974 (UK) and continued at [59]:
" If the legislature of New South Wales had intended so wide an exemption, covering mandatory processes as well as documentation, that could readily have been enacted with clarity. The United Kingdom model existed in 1977. Instead, the legislature of this state chose to use imprecise language, leaving it to context to define the ambit of the provision. Without clear words to the contrary, such as have been used in the United Kingdom legislation, I would assume that it was not intended by the legislature here to exempt non-compliance with fundamental, mandatory provisions of the legislation of the kind involved in the present case, where the composition of the jury has been affected by error."
36 The Crown submits that s.73(a) does relate expressly to the process in s.19 whereby the trial should commence with twelve jurors empanelled in accordance with the Act. It is submitted that insertion of these clear words in s.73(a) discloses a statutory intention to, in the words of Sperling J at 279 [59], "exempt non-compliance with fundamental, mandatory provisions of the legislation of the kind involved in the present case, where the composition of the jury has been affected by error."
37 According to the Crown submission, not only does s.73(a) operate to maintain a verdict given by a jury which has included a disqualified person or persons, but the existence of s.73(a) in the Act discloses a statutory purpose which is relevant to the present case where discovery is made of the presence of a disqualified juror before verdict. Applying the well known principles in Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355 at 388 [91] and 390 [93], the Crown submits that the use of the mandatory-directory dichotomy ought be placed to one side, with a better test for determining the issue of validity being to ask whether it was a purpose of the legislation that an act done in breach of the provision should be invalid.
38 Given the presence of s.73(a) in the Act, the Crown submits that a statutory intention is disclosed whereby the commencement of a criminal trial with a jury comprising twelve persons, one or more of whom are disqualified persons under s.6(a) of the Act, does not render the trial a nullity. A verdict returned by such a jury is valid.
39 In the event that this state of affairs is discovered before verdict, the Crown submits that s.22 of the Act is available, as part of the statutory scheme, to remove the disqualified person and permit the trial to continue with a jury constituted in accordance with the Act. The Crown submits that, to approach the matter in accordance with the Accused's submissions would create an artificial distinction between events in the trial before and after verdict. The Crown submits that, if the Accused's construction is correct, all steps taken during the course of the trial, including the swearing of witnesses, the issue of certificates under s.128 Evidence Act 1995 and other steps which form part of the trial process would be nullities. On this approach, for example, a prosecution for perjury could not be brought against a witness who had given false evidence at the trial. The Crown submits that such a result injects an element of uncertainty, if not absurdity, into the process which is not consistent with a sensible construction of ss.6, 19, 22 and 73 of the Act.
40 With respect to the concept of "nullity", the Crown referred to Swansson v R where Spigelman CJ said at [60] - [61]:
"As noted above, the judgments in Crane and Munday v Gill , reflecting a number of authorities, assert that a criminal trial that has been conducted in contravention of the rule of criminal procedure here under consideration is a "nullity". Notwithstanding the force of these remarks, in my opinion, this Court should not proceed on the basis that the cases are authority for the proposition that a trial conducted in breach of this rule is to be treated as if there had not been a trial at all. Rather, the position is that there has not been a trial in accordance with law.
The use of terminology such as "nullity" and, in the administrative law context, the cognate distinction between "void" and "voidable" decisions, where appearing in judgments, must be approached with some caution. (See generally FC Hutley "The Cult of Nullification in English Law" (1978) 52 ALJ 8.)"
41 Later, Spigelman CJ said at [78]:
"In view of their express reliance on Crane , in my opinion, their Honours were not using the terminology of "nullity" in the sense that there has not been a trial at all but, as I have noted at [60] above, that there has not been a trial in accordance with law."
42 The Crown refers to other passages in Swansson v R where the term "nullity" is to be understood as the consequence where a court in which the proceeding takes place is, for some reason, devoid of jurisdiction. See the judgment of McClellan CJ at CL at [86] - [94] and Simpson J at [163] - [164], [172] - [173]. The Crown submits that the issue in Swansson v R involved an absence of jurisdiction resulting from a departure from the "one indictment, one jury" rule. In the present case, the Crown submits that the Court has jurisdiction, and that the defect concerning the absent juror does not go to jurisdiction. Accordingly, the Crown submits that the term "nullity" is not apt to this case, nor was it apt (in the Swansson v R sense) to the facts of R v Brown & Tran.
43 The Crown submits that the power under s.22 is available to the Court to remedy the present defect by discharging the absent juror and to permit the trial to continue according to law.