Stewart v Australian Crime Commission
[2012] FCAFC 151
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia (Full Court)
Decision date
2012-10-29
Before
Bromberg JJ
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (11 paragraphs)
Introduction 1 The applicants in this application for leave to appeal are Anthony Stewart, John Cornell, Paul Hogan and Rimfire Films Pty Ltd. As I would grant leave to appeal, I will refer to them as the appellants. The respondent is the Australian Crime Commission. 2 The respondent wishes to inspect and use documents which have been either seized or produced or obtained pursuant to s 3E of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) ("Crimes Act") or ss 28 and 29 of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002 (Cth) ("Australian Crime Commission Act"). The documents relate to the affairs of one or more of the appellants and they were either seized, produced or obtained from various sources as follows (with the primary judge's description of the documents by reference to their source), the first appellant (Stewart Hardcopy Documents), Ernst & Young, Accountants (EY Hogan Documents), Recall Information Management Pty Ltd (Recall Documents), Mr John Gibb (Gibb Documents comprising Gibb Sealed Documents and Unsealed Gibb Documents) and certain discs containing copies of documents held in computer systems (Disc A, B and C Documents). The documents held on Disc C are not relevant on this application, nor is a sixth category of documents which the primary judge described as the EY Cornell Documents. 3 One or more of the appellants claimed legal professional privilege with respect to the documents. 4 On 13 January 2010 the respondent brought a proceeding in this Court pursuant to s 39B(1A) of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) and ss 21, 22, 23 and 32 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) seeking declarations that legal professional privilege did not attach to the documents and that it is entitled to inspect and use the documents. 5 Before the proceeding came on for hearing, each party made a number of concessions as to particular documents. The documents which were not the subject of a concession were copies of what the primary judge described as the disputed documents. Those documents were placed in seven lever-arch files behind individually numbered tabs and marked collectively as MFI 2. 6 At the request of the parties, the primary judge did not determine all the issues which were raised in relation to the appellants' claim of legal professional privilege. With the consent of the parties, the primary judge made the following order as to the nature of the questions to be determined at a trial before her: Pursuant to Order 29 rule 2 of the Federal Court Rules the following questions of fact and law be decided separately from any other question and before any trial in the proceedings: 2.1 which law or laws govern the determination of questions concerning the attraction of privilege for the documents identified by the applicant pursuant to direction 3 below ("Disputed Documents"); 2.2 whether the Disputed Documents are capable of attracting privilege, but for, and without any regard to be had to, any questions or issues relating to: 2.2.1 whether Disputed Documents were made or used in furtherance of an improper purpose; 2.2.2 whether privilege has been lost in the Disputed Documents through waiver or for any other reason. 7 The issues referred to in paragraphs 2.2.1 and 2.2.2 above, namely, the issues of improper purpose and waiver, were deferred to a later date to be considered in relation to the disputed documents that were found to be prima facie privileged in whole or part. 8 The appellants called three witnesses at the trial. The first appellant gave evidence. He was a qualified chartered accountant who during the period within which the documents were created, provided business advice to the other appellants. Mr Craig Emanuel gave evidence. He is an attorney-at-law in the United States and during the relevant period provided advice, including legal advice, to the second, third and fourth appellants. Finally, Professor David Alan Sklansky gave evidence. He is a law professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and he specialises in criminal law, criminal procedure and evidence law. He gave evidence about the law of legal professional privilege in the State of California. 9 The relevance of the law in California was that the appellants claimed that the status in terms of legal professional privilege of a number of the disputed documents was governed by the law of California. They claimed that those documents were protected under the law of California because they were: (1) prepared in California; (2) prepared by an attorney or attorneys admitted to practice in California and owing professional responsibilities to Californian Courts and under Californian law; (3) prepared pursuant to a retainer, the proper law in respect of which was Californian law; and (4) prepared to advise clients primarily on Californian law. 10 Although the primary judge did not expressly say so, she appears to have proceeded on the assumption that each of the claims in paragraphs (1), (2), (3) and (4) were correct as a matter of fact. 11 The primary judge inspected the disputed documents. The respondent did not have the disputed documents, except for a small number of documents that it had obtained in circumstances which it is not necessary to relate. These documents were the unsealed Gibb Documents. 12 On 30 January 2012 the primary judge delivered her reasons for judgment in relation to the separate questions (Australian Crime Commission v Stewart [2012] FCA 29). Her Honour made the following declarations: 1. The application of legal professional privilege to the documents contained in the files identified as MFI 2 and listed in the table identified as MFI 6 in this proceeding is to be determined in accordance with the law of Australia. 2. The documents in Annexure A to the reasons for judgment and described in Column 4 under the heading "Conclusion" as being "prima facie privileged" are determined to be capable of attracting legal professional privilege subject to questions or issues relating to: (a) whether such documents were made or used in furtherance of an improper purpose; or (b) whether privilege in those documents has been lost through waiver or for any other reasons. 3. The documents listed in Annexure A to the reasons for judgment and described in column 4 as being "not privileged" are not capable of attracting legal professional privilege. 13 The primary judge's reasons contain three major conclusions. First, her Honour decided that in relation to the "Californian" documents no choice of law issue, or issue as to the possible application of the law of California, arose. The lex causae or law of the cause was Australian law. Secondly, her Honour decided that in the event that she was wrong in reaching her first conclusion, the governing choice of law rule directed attention to the law of the forum, that is, Australian law. Thirdly, having regard to the principles of legal professional privilege in Australian law and having inspected the documents, her Honour set out in Annexure A to her reasons her conclusions with respect to the disputed documents and whether they were capable of attracting legal professional privilege. In addition to her conclusions on that matter (that is, prima facie privileged or not privileged) her Honour included in Annexure A a column entitled "Comment" in which she set out brief comments explaining her ruling. She said that those comments were to be read in conjunction with her reasons. In view of her conclusions with respect to the first two matters, her Honour did not find it necessary to consider Professor Sklansky's evidence, or to make any findings as to the law of California. 14 The appellants have applied for leave to appeal and they have lodged a draft Notice of Appeal. The grounds of appeal in the draft notice are as follows: 1. Her Honour erred in finding the documents listed in Annexures A and B to this Notice of Appeal were not capable of attracting legal professional privilege. 2. Further to Ground 1, her Honour erred in declaring that the application of legal professional privilege to the documents listed in Annexure A to this Notice of Appeal is to be determined in accordance with the law of Australia. 3. Further to Grounds 1 and 2 above, her Honour erred at J [45] when she held that no choice of law issue arose in relation to the documents listed in Annexure A to this Notice of Appeal in determining the question of legal professional privilege. 4. Further to Grounds 1 to 3 above, her Honour erred at J [66] when she held that even if a choice of law issue arose in relation to the documents listed in Annexure A to this Notice of Appeal then the relevant law to be applied is the law of the forum. 5. Further to Grounds 1 to 4 above, her Honour should have held that the choice of law rules for Australia directed that the question of whether the documents listed in Annexure A to this Notice of Appeal were capable of attracting legal professional privilege should be determined in accordance with the laws of California, United States of America for one or more of the following reasons: a. The documents were prepared in California; b. The documents were prepared by an attorney or attorneys admitted to practise in California and owing professional responsibilities to Californian Courts and under Californian law; c. The documents were prepared pursuant to a retainer, the proper law in respect of which was Californian law; d. The documents were prepared to advise clients primarily on Californian law. 6. Further to Ground 1, even if her Honour was right to hold that the application of legal professional privilege to the documents listed in Annexure A to this Notice of Appeal is to be determined in accordance with the laws of Australia her Honour erred in failing properly to consider the type and nature of legal advice provided under Californian law in the context of the communications when her Honour was evaluating the dominant purpose of the communications. 15 These proposed grounds of appeal may be related to the three major conclusions referred to above. Ground 1 is a general ground related to all three conclusions. Ground 2 is a general ground related to the first two conclusions. Ground 3 is related to the first conclusion and grounds 4 and 5 are related to the second conclusion. Ground 6 is related to the third conclusion. 16 Annexure A to the draft Notice of Appeal lists by number 184 documents and Annexure B lists by number 11 documents. With respect to the documents listed in Annexure A to the draft Notice of Appeal, the appellants' principal contention is that whether they are protected by legal professional privilege is to be determined by reference to the law of California rather than the law of Australia. If that contention succeeds then the matter will have to be remitted to a judge of this Court for findings to be made about the principles of Californian law and the application of those principles to the documents. If the contention is rejected, the appellants nevertheless argue that the primary judge erred in concluding that the documents were not capable of attracting legal professional privilege by reference to Australian law. To that end, the appellants did not put all 184 documents before this Court. They put 32 documents before the Court and submitted that the Court's rulings as to those documents was likely to provide the necessary guidance with respect to the other documents. 17 With respect to the documents listed in Annexure B to the draft Notice of Appeal, the appellants accept that whether they are protected by legal professional privilege is to be determined by reference to Australian law. They contend that her Honour erred in deciding that those documents were not capable of attracting legal professional privilege.