brings about a situation where the charge relates to two different conspiracies.
35 The first broad area argued by Mr Richter is a conceptual one. But I do not think the conceptual argument has been placed on a sound basis. The first analogy Mr Richter advanced was that of a charge of murder. In relation to such a charge a jury might be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that an accused had the requisite intention to sustain a conviction for murder where there was, for example, either an intention to kill or an intention to cause grievous bodily harm. However, he argued - no doubt correctly -that a charge of conspiracy to murder could only be founded on the basis of an agreement between one or more persons to kill the victim. If the agreement was simply to cause grievous bodily harm to the intended victim, this could not sustain a charge of conspiracy to kill.
36 This argument is plainly correct so far as it goes. But it cannot, in my opinion, aid in relation to the present problem. Like so many arguments by analogy, it is in truth a misleading analogy. The only intention that will sustain a conviction for conspiracy to murder is the intent to kill because the conspiracy is to bring about the death of the victim. An intent to inflict grievous bodily harm, as a matter of logic, does not reflect the consequence intended. However, in the present case the intention in the offence of conspiracy to defraud is the intention to place the property of the Commonwealth in jeopardy. This is clear from the authorities I will later discuss. A better analogy, in my view, albeit perhaps an imperfect one, is the illustration of an agreement between one or more persons to kill a third party either by means of shooting or stabbing to death. This illustration provides an example of but one conspiracy even though two possible methods of death are contemplated. An intention to deprive the Commonwealth of income tax or at least the opportunity to obtain income tax is, as a matter of logic and of expression, an apt method of describing an intention to place the property of the Commonwealth in jeopardy. There is however but one conspiracy not two.
37 Secondly, Mr Richter sought to draw conceptual comfort from the distinction purportedly made by Simpson J in Petroulias. That case, however, turned upon the manner in which the charge had been framed at committal. Her Honour held, as I have indicated earlier, that the particular form of the charge required proof of the avoidance of tax. That is an understandable conclusion having regard to the form of the charge. But it does not at all follow where a charge of conspiracy to defraud is brought that the existence of an intention to deprive the Commonwealth of income tax or at least the opportunity to obtain income tax posits the existence of two separate agreements. I do not understand Simpson J's decision as bearing on that issue at all. Nor do I consider that the point involved in her decision necessarily involved the proposition and corollary at the core of Mr Richter's dichotomy between deprivation and imperilment.
38 There is a second basis which compellingly refutes Mr Richter's argument. This relates to the decision of the High Court in Peters v The Queen (1998) 192 CLR 493. In that case, the appellant, a solicitor, stood trial in the County Court of Victoria on charges of conspiracy to defraud the Commonwealth. There was also a charge of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice but there was in an acquittal on that charge. The appellant however, was convicted of conspiracy to defraud. His appeal against conviction was dismissed by the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria as was his appeal to the High Court.
39 The particular charge of conspiracy to defraud arose out of a number of sham transactions created to disguise the assessable income of the appellant's co-conspirator. The appellant's case before the jury was that he was not party not any agreement to conceal the income by the sham transactions but was, as he claimed, merely acting as the solicitor in the transactions.
40 The precise issue which arose on the appeal related to the directions given by the trial judge. He had given directions in line with the decision of the English Court of Appeal in R v Ghosh (1982) QB 1053. The jury were instructed that they had to be satisfied that what the appellant agreed to do was dishonest by the current standards of ordinary and reasonable honest people and, if it was, the appellant must have realised he was dishonest by those standards. The point of contention in the various Courts of Appeal was that the trial judge misdirected the jury as to the test of dishonesty. The joint judgment of Toohey and Gaudron JJ (with whom Kirby J agreed) concluded that in the case of conspiracy to defraud it will ordinarily be sufficient for a judge to direct a jury as to the facts they must find if the agreed means are to be categorised as dishonest. Alternatively, it will be sufficient to instruct the jury that, if satisfied as to those facts, they will be satisfied that the agreed means were dishonest. Their Honours thought that it was only in the borderline case that it would be necessary for the question whether the means were to be so categorised to be left to the jury. It was in this area only that their Honours differed from the approach taken by McHugh J and Gummow J [para 34 at page 510].
41 McHugh J (with whom Gummow J agreed) did not consider that there was any need for the trial judge to have directed the jury that they had to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that what was intended to be done was dishonest according to the standard of ordinary reasonable honest people in the community and that the accused knew that what was intended was dishonest by those standards. This direction was unduly favourable to the appellant. His Honour however agreed that dishonestly per se was not a separate element of the crime of conspiracy to defraud.
42 It will be seen accordingly, that the joint judgment and that of Justice Kirby carried the day on the point. In the event, however, the appellant, as I have said, was unsuccessful.
43 The approach taken by Toohey and Gaudron JJ was endorsed in the later decision of Spies v The Queen (2000) 201 CLR 603 at 603.1; (see also R v Iannelli (2003) 56 NSWLR 247).
44 The matters at issue in Peters required the High Court to examine carefully the ingredients in a charge of conspiracy to defraud.
45 The joint judgment of Toohey and Gaudron JJ addressed the issue of dishonesty generally in its criminal context. Their Honours concluded that there were both incongruities and practical difficulties with the Ghosh test. Further, their Honours considered that the question as to the nature of the directions which should have been given to the jury in the instant trial with respect to dishonesty was to be answered by reference to the elements of the offence of conspiracy to defraud and the issues which arose at trial. Their Honours noted that in R v Scott (1975) AC 819 Viscount Dilhorne had said: -
"To defraud ordinarily means …to deprive a person dishonestly of something which is his or something to which he is or would or might but for the perpetration of the fraud be entitled."
46 Their Honours noted in relation to this statement, at para 21: -
"The clear focus of that statement is that, for an agreement to constitute a conspiracy to defraud, it must be an agreement to bring about a result by dishonest means - means which, as that case decides, do not necessarily involve deception."
47 The joint judgment then continued in its analysis of the question as to whether dishonesty is or is not a separate and distinct element of the offence of conspiracy to defraud and whether it must be proved as such. In conducting this analysis their Honours made a number of general observations about the elements of the offence of fraud and those elements in the context of conspiracy to defraud. At para 26 their Honours said: -
"Another matter which should be noted is that it is misleading to speak in terms of the purpose of a conspiracy to defraud, particularly as the purpose of the conspirators may be quite different from the fraud perpetrated. The purpose of conspirators is usually to obtain some financial advantage; the fraud, on the other hand, is in depriving others of their property or of the opportunity to protect their interests. And, as it is pointed out in Archbold , the conspirators may never intend or, even, foresee the probability that others will suffer economic loss. Rather, they may genuinely believe that there will be no loss because their venture will be brought to a successful financial conclusion to the advantage of all concerned, even those whose interests have been put at risk."
48 Their Honours then examined the statement by the Model Criminal Code Officers Committee which had contended that dishonesty was an essential element of conspiracy to defraud. The joint judgment noted two difficulties in relation to the views which had been expressed. In relation to the second of these, their Honours (at para 30) said: -
"The second difficulty with the statement of the Model Criminal Code Officers that it is too broad to define conspiracy to defraud by reference to an intention to inflict economic loss or to imperil the economic interests of others is that it tends to assume that fraud does not involve an element of dishonesty over and above the use of dishonest means. As has already been pointed out, there are difficulties in attempting an exhaustive statement of what is involved in the notion of defrauding or in the offence of conspiracy to defraud. Ordinarily, however, fraud involves the intentional creation of a situation in which one person deprives another of money or property or puts the money or property of that other person at risk or prejudicially affects that person in relation to 'some lawful right, interest, opportunity or advantage', knowing that he or she as no right to deprive that person of that money or property or to prejudice his or her interests." (Footnotes omitted)
49 Finally, their Honours said at para 33: -
"As already explained, 'dishonesty' does not appear in the statute establishing the offence of conspiracy to defraud the Commonwealth. But when properly analysed, the offence of conspiracy to defraud involves dishonesty at two levels. First, it involves an agreement to use dishonest means. Ordinarily, the means will be dishonest if they assert as true something which is false and which is known to be false or not believed to be true or if they are means which the conspirators know they have no right to use or do not believe they have any right to use the means in question. And quite apart from dishonest means, the offence involves an agreement to bring about a situation prejudicing or imperilling existing legal rights or interests of others. That, too, is dishonest by ordinary standards. If those matters are properly explained to a jury, further direction that the accused must have acted dishonestly is superfluous."
50 The judgment of McHugh J contains an extremely thorough analysis of the offence of conspiracy to defraud both historically and conceptually. One particular matter analysed by McHugh J was the difficult area of intention in cases of conspiracy to defraud where relevant harm is suffered only by a person whose person or interests were not the object of the agreement. His Honour concluded (at para 69) that, although, it would be wrong to impute a constructive intention to defendants charged with conspiracy, it may nevertheless have been the situation that they intended to defraud a person even though that person or his or her interests were not the object of the conspiracy. At para 68 his Honour had said: -
"But this statement, although correct so far as it goes, overlooks the fact that a jury could find that the X company must inevitably have suffered loss or been prejudiced by the conspiracy and that the defendants knew it. It is no misuse of language in that context to say that the defendants intended to cause damage to the X company. At all events, a jury could find from those facts that the defendants intended to cause harm to the X company. No doubt when a person intends to do something, ordinarily he or she acts in order to bring about the occurrence of that thing. But a person may intend to do something even though it is the last thing that he or she wishes to bring about. Intention in this context is broader than a person's inclination to act to achieve a result that he or she believes is desirable. If a person does something that is virtually certain to result in another event occurring and knows that event is certain or is virtually certain to occur, for legal purposes at least he or she intends it to occur." (footnotes omitted)
51 McHugh J then went to examine the history of the crime of conspiracy to defraud and to examine its elements. At paras 73 and 74, McHugh J said: -
"73. Although most cases of conspiracy to defraud involve an agreement to use dishonest means which has the effect of inflicting economic loss on a third party, the infliction of such loss is not an essential element of the offence. It is sufficient that the conspirators intended to obtain some advantage for themselves by putting another persons property at risk or depriving another person of a lawful opportunity to obtain or protect property . (Underlining added).
74. Thus, in most cases, a conspiracy to defraud arises when two or more persons agree to use dishonest means with the intention of obtaining, making use of or prejudicing another persons economic right or interest or inducing another person to act or refrain from acting to his or her economic detriment…But in the vast majority of cases, conspiracies to defraud concern rights or interests having an economic value."
52 His Honour then undertook an examination of the mental element in the crime of conspiracy to defraud. Again, his Honour was examining this in the light of the question whether dishonesty and knowledge of dishonesty were or were not elements of the offence. At para 79, McHugh J noted that proof of a conscious design on the point of the conspirators to use dishonest means is essential to proving the change. McHugh J said however, at para 84: -
"In most cases of conspiracy to defraud, to prove dishonest means the Crown will have to establish that the defendants intended to prejudice another person's right or interest or performance of public duty by:
· making or taking advantage of representations or promises which they knew were false or would not be carried out;
· concealing facts which they had a duty to disclose; or
· engaging in conduct which they had no right to engage in."
53 And at para 85 McHugh J concluded: -
"It follows that the mental element of the crime of conspiracy to defraud is the intention to prejudice the interests of a third person by the use of means that are dishonest."
54 McHugh J then examined the trial judge's directions in the appeal before the High Court. During the course of this examination, his Honour said (at para 88): -
"The case for the prosecution was the appellant agreed with Spong and others to conceal the correct amount of Spong's income by sham mortgage transactions and that they intended by those means to deprive the Commissioner of Taxation of the tax payable on that income or alternatively to make it difficult for the Commissioner to determine the taxable income of Spong. Proof of those facts constituted a conspiracy to defraud the Commonwealth, and the trial judge was bound to tell the jury that the offence was made out if those facts were proved."
55 McHugh J in fact formulated a direction he thought appropriate. It included the following direction: -
"Third, in entering into the agreement they intended to prevent the Commissioner from collecting the tax that was or might be payable on those monies or alternatively they intended to make it more difficult for the Commissioner to determine the taxable income of Spong."
56 His Honour found that the directions which the trial judge had given were in fact unduly favourable to the appellant and that therefore the fact that the jury had been directed in accordance with Ghosh constituted, in the end, no miscarriage of justice.
57 A reading of the various passages which I have set out in detail above, and indeed a consideration of the principles revealed by those passages, persuades me that the form of the particulars in the present matter does not introduce duplicity. Indeed, the method of statement of those particulars precisely accords with the identification of an essential ingredient in the charge of conspiracy to defraud. As McHugh J observed at para 90 of Peters, the trial judge in that case should have directed the jury that they could find the accused guilty if the prosecution had established beyond reasonable doubt that the accused, and at least one other of the parties to the alleged agreement, intended to deprive the Commissioner of the income tax payable on monies earned by Mr Spong or to prejudice the collection of that income tax by using sham transactions to conceal Spong's ownership of the money.
58 Of course, it is highly improbable that conspirators proposing to conceal the existence of income from the Commissioner of Taxation would sit down and discuss whether their intention was one that might be described either in terms of deprivation or imperilment. That is very much the point of the observations contained in para 26 of the joint judgment in Peters; and of McHugh J's remarks at para 68. On the other hand, the proper classification which may flow from an examination of all that co-conspirators do in furtherance of the agreement representing the conspiracy may be capable of satisfying a jury beyond reasonable doubt that the relevant intention involved in the use of the dishonest means may be properly stated, in the broader context, as one which had the object of depriving the Commonwealth of income tax or at least the opportunity to obtain income tax. This is particularly so in the case of concealment by the removal of cash from retail takings, the creation of false records and the distribution of cash monies to or for the benefit of the co-conspirators.
59 Moreover, as Mr Game SC pointed out the characterisation of the charge in the present matter is similar to the characterisation of the charge in both Peters; and in Caratti v R (2000) WASCA 279.
60 In Caratti, the appellant was convicted of one count of conspiracy in an indictment which alleged that he and others had conspired to defraud the Commonwealth, contrary to s 86A of the Crimes Act 1914. The trial judge had provided the jury with a written direction regarding the elements of the offence of conspiracy to defraud the Commonwealth. One of those directions was in the following terms: -
"3. The agreement must have been one to dishonestly deprive the Commonwealth of or to jeopardise the Commonwealth's entitlement to group tax instalments."
61 Malcolm CJ with whom Kennedy and Anderson JJA agreed found (at para 107) that the trial judge had properly direct the jury regarding the necessary elements of the offence of conspiracy to defraud. Malcolm CJ made express reference to the written directions which had been provided to the jury.
62 Thus, it will be seen that a particularisation of the relevant intention, as an essential element of the offence, expressed in terms similar to that criticised in the present matter passed muster in both Peters and Caratti.
63 The reasons, in my view, why the arguments of Mr Richter ought not to be accepted extend to all the matters I have discussed. But the principal criticism of his analysis, I would respectfully suggest, is that it confuses, on the one hand, the conspirators subjective intentions, express or implied, to be gleaned from the terms of their agreement; and the effect of the agreement, on the other hand, as to whether the alleged use of the dishonest means reveals an intention of prejudicing or imperilling existing legal rights or interests.
64 The distinction between the two situations may be seen from a careful appreciation of the Crown case in the present matter. The Crown case is that the existence of an agreement may be inferred from the conduct of the conspirators over a significant period of time. No doubt, it may be inferred that, according to the Crown case, the conspirators simply intended to have a considerable sum of money available to themselves which would not have been available had it been processed through the taxation system as and when the income should have been declared. The intention of the conspirators, in this subjective sense, was to make available for the benefit of each other a considerable sum of money which otherwise would not have available. Secondly, it was part and parcel of the agreement, according to the Crown case, that the intention of the conspirators might be achieved by a concealment of the true amount of the cash earned from the businesses owned by RYF and On Fovo. The concealment, which is to be inferred from the whole of the circumstances, was the dishonest means agreed between the parties to bring about the desired result of making available to them a considerable sum of money which would not otherwise have been available to them, had it been declared through the taxation system as and when it fell due to be so declared.
65 It is not as if the conspirators would have met, for example, in a coffee shop in Double Bay and asked themselves whether the agreement they were in the process of formulating was an agreement to actually deprive the Commonwealth; or whether it was an agreement merely to imperil the Commonwealth. It would be ludicrous to suggest that this was the likely content of any discussion between the alleged conspirators. Their agreement, as I understand the Crown case, if the prosecution can establish that case beyond reasonable doubt, is that they wanted to keep the income out of the taxation system altogether; and agreed to do so by concealing the bulk of the cash receipts from the business and by not declaring the income at the relevant time. As the years passed, and the duration of the alleged conspiracy extended significantly, there is no surprise in the allegation made in the Crown case that the conspirators made use of the money so secreted for a number of purposes beneficial to their respective financial well-being. All this, is merely illustrative of the conspirators' subjective intentions in carrying out the actions they allegedly did.
66 On the other hand, the Crown must prove as the necessary mental element of the crime of conspiracy to defraud that there was the intention to prejudice the interests of a third person by the use of means that were dishonest. This intention is not the subjective intention of the parties but one that is spelt out from their actions and in particular from the dishonest means they have chosen to fulfil their agreement. Once that is appreciated, it explains perfectly adequately that the expression of the intention - an essential ingredient in the Crown case - as an intention by the dishonest means of concealment and its consequential actions "to deprive the Commonwealth of income tax or at least the opportunity to obtain income tax in relation to the unbanked cash" - is but the one intention and not two. Relevantly, the Crown must prove that there was an agreement between the conspirators to conceal the true amount of the income of the relevant businesses and that those conspirators intended by such means ("concealing facts which they had a duty to disclose") to deprive the Commissioner of the tax payable on that income or alternatively, to make it difficult for the Commissioner to determine the true taxable income. The Crown case is that there was but one agreement and that the alleged dishonest means and their implementation demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt the requisite mental element of the charge, namely the intention to prejudice legal rights or interests. The expression of that intention in the manner stated in the particulars does not result, in my view, in any duplicity. It remains but one intention and does not become two.
67 Moreover, it could not, in my view, be said that the provision of the particulars in the way they have been presented results in any unfairness or prejudice to the accused. The Crown case has been very extensively particularised and described in a manner which would not leave the accused in any doubt as to the case each is required to meet.