Grounds 2 and 3: Finding not open for determination; wrong test applied
22 Although as I have explained, the language of these grounds may not be entirely appropriate, Mr Shaw's argument made his point clear. He contends the primary judge's task on the Trustee's objection to the Notices to Produce was to determine if the documents he sought were irrelevant, or whether there was some other reason the Trustee should not have to produce them. He contends he wanted production of these documents to resist the vexatious litigant application and to advance his argument about the Trustee lacking authority to commence and continue the vexatious litigant application.
23 In that situation, he contends it was not open to the primary judge to actually determine his any aspect of his December 2022 application. Yet, he contends, that is what her Honour did.
24 I consider Mr Shaw is correct.
25 At [23], the primary judge stated:
Mr Shaw submitted that the question whether actions taken by staff of the Australian Financial Security Authority (AFSA) in initiating and conducting the substantive proceeding against him were valid and authorised, was fundamental to his application.
26 Mr Shaw agrees this is an accurate summary of his contention. At [24], the primary judge finds that it is "difficult to identify how these documents sought by Mr Shaw are relevant to the substantive proceedings". At [25], her Honour makes the observation about similar challenges in other proceedings. At [26], her Honour notes the Trustee was prepared to produce some of the documents. Then at [27]-[28], the primary judge concludes:
In my view the documents sought in the 1st Notice to Produce at [1], [2] and [5] are irrelevant. While the Official Trustee is content to produce them to Mr Shaw, I am not prepared to order compliance by the Official Trustee in respect of these paragraphs of the 1st Notice to Produce.
In relation to documents sought by the respondent in para [3] of the 1st Notice to Produce and para [1] of the 2nd Notice to Produce, I am not prepared to order compliance. The respondent has sought copies of any email or document indicating or confirming that proceedings VID361 of 2021 were commenced with the authority of the Official Trustee, or identifying the name and/or public service grade of authorising AFSA public servants. However as the applicant submitted, the proceedings against the respondent were plainly commenced with the authority of the Official Trustee. In this respect I also note the affidavit of Ms Meghan Sullivan, a lawyer in the employ of Harris Carlson Lawyers, solicitors for the Official Trustee, filed 2 July 2021, who deposed that she has the care and conduct of this matter on behalf of the Official Trustee. To the extent that the present litigation is conducted by the lawyers for the Official Trustee, in his name, and were instructed by the Official Trustee to act, I am satisfied that the proceedings were commenced with authority, and that production of documents confirming that authority would be a fishing exercise and an abuse of process.
(Emphasis added.)
27 The primary judge reiterates the nature of this finding later in her reasons at [36]:
I have already observed that the material before the Court supports a finding that the proceedings against Mr Shaw were properly instituted by the Official Trustee through its lawyers.
28 Before me it was agreed between the parties, by reference to the transcript of the hearing on 14 March 2022, that although Mr Shaw's December 2022 application was listed for hearing on 14 March 2023, the primary judge adjourned that hearing and only decided the Trustee's objection to the Notices to Produce. As counsel for the Trustee observed before me, all the documents for the December 2022 application hearing had been filed. But that application was not heard and determined. That is because her Honour correctly recognised she needed first to decide the objection to the Notices to Produce.
29 Yet in the passages above, the primary judge did determine the very aspect of Mr Shaw's December 2022 application for which he sought the production of documents. Her Honour finds, "I am satisfied that the proceedings were commenced with authority". That is, in my opinion, a final determination of Mr Shaw's argument on authority. Properly, counsel for the Trustee did not seriously contest that proposition. He did submit the finding was necessary to determine relevance. I do not agree. They are different tasks, the question of relevance being far more confined.
30 With respect, her Honour went beyond a consideration of the relevance of the documents, in the sense of whether they might tend to prove or disprove Mr Shaw's contentions about authority. Her Honour decided the authority point itself, against Mr Shaw. This was an error of the kind that meets the tests in House v The King [1936] HCA 40; 55 CLR 499.
31 To the extent grounds 2 and 3 cover this argument, Mr Shaw has demonstrated her Honour's orders are affected by substantial doubt. Indeed, he has demonstrated, in my respectful opinion, an error by her Honour in not restricting herself to an assessment of relevance, and instead going on to decide the very argument Mr Shaw wished to have the documents to advance. I am also satisfied that there would be a substantial injustice to Mr Shaw if leave were not granted, because he should have access to those documents he sought to use to make his contentions about lack of authority in the Trustee. It is for another Judge to determine how probative those documents are of his authority contentions, or whether his contentions themselves have any legal merit.
32 In making these findings, I am not critical of her Honour. Mr Shaw's contentions on this matter were mixed up with many other contentions that had no merit. A perspective of hindsight can often make a point look clearer than I am confident it might have seemed before the primary judge when she issued her decision.