Chivers v Breinl
[1994] QCA 469
•15/09/1994
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL [1994] QCA 469
| SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND | C.A. No. 335 of 1994 |
| Brisbane | |
| BeforeFitzgerald P. Davies J.A. Pincus J.A. | |
| [Chivers v. Breinl] |
WAYNE PATRICK CHIVERS
v.
JOHN ALEXANDER BREINL (Appellant)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT - THE COURT
Judgment delivered 27/10/94
The appellant has appealed against his conviction in the
Magistrates Court at Cairns on 7 July 1994 on one count of
unlawful possession of a dangerous drug, namely cannabis sativa,
on 23 March 1994.
On that day, a police officer spoke to the appellant at Rusty's
Bazaar, Cairns. The appellant denied that he was in possession
of cannabis. The police officer found cannabis sativa in plastic bags in a brown leather bag that was in the possession
of the appellant. The appellant was charged that day.
The only witness at the trial, apart from the police officer,
was the appellant, who raised the possibility that he had been "framed up ... because of someone's vendetta ...". At one point, at least, there was also a contention that the appellant had a justification for possessing cannabis sativa, but no legal justification emerged.
Not surprisingly, the magistrate convicted the appellant, a
conviction was recorded, and the appellant was fined $300, in default imprisonment for ten days, and allowed four months to
pay.
The appellant did not appeal within time, but was allowed an
extension of time within which to proceed, subject to a condition restricting the appeal to ground 6, which was expressed in the following terms:
"The magistrate erred and abused my Human Rights in that he did not allow me an adjournment pending the result of my application for Legal Aid."
The appellant did not appear at the hearing of the appeal, but
sent written submissions by facsimile.
Prior to the trial, the appellant had made an application for
legal aid, apparently with the assistance of a solicitor, which
was refused, as was an appeal from that decision. The solicitors, on the appellant's behalf, then requested that his application be reviewed in accordance with the provisions of s. 37 of the Legal Aid Act 1978 (as amended). It is not clear when
the various contacts between the appellant (or his solicitors)
and the Legal Aid Office (Queensland) to that point had occurred. But, on 7 July 1994, the Legal Aid Office wrote to the solicitors stating that the next meeting of the Review Committee would be held on Wednesday, 13 July 1994. It seems
that that letter was received by the solicitors on 11 July.
Meanwhile, the Magistrates Court hearing had proceeded on 7
July, that date having been allocated at an earlier time. The
appellant, who was unrepresented, was refused an adjournment. The nub of the appellant's complaint before this Court appears
to be that he was proceeding in accordance with the statutory
scheme for legal aid, and that the hearing should not have been conducted until he had exhausted his recourse to the legal aid process, particularly because of cll. 3(b) and (d) of Art. 14 of
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, which
is Sch. 2 to the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
Act 1986 (Cwth). Those clauses are in the following terms: "3. In the determination of any criminal charge against
him, everyone shall be entitled to the following
minimum guarantees, in full equality:
...
(b)to have adequate time and facilities for the preparation
of his defence and to communicate with counsel
of his own choosing;
...
(d)to be tried in his presence, and to defend himself in
person or through legal assistance of his own choosing; to be informed, if he does not have legal assistance, of his rights; and to have legal assistance assigned to him, in any case where the interests of justice so require, and without payment by him in any such case if he does not have sufficient means to pay for it;
..."
The Covenant is not directly applicable: Dietrich v. R. (1992)
177 C.L.R. 292. Further, the majority decision in Dietrich does not determine that the appellant is automatically entitled to a new trial. That result would follow from Dietrich only if, in all the circumstances, the appellant's trial was unfair - assuming, of course, that the trial was one of a "serious offence".
There is an obligation on the Legal Aid Office to process
applications for aid efficiently and expeditiously, taking into account any hearing date which has been allocated by a court. But, there are no indications that that obligation was not
fulfilled in this instance.
Similarly, while courts are understandably reluctant to grant
unnecessary adjournments, which delay other litigants and waste public funds, it may some times be necessary to grant an
adjournment to an unrepresented person whose legal aid application has not been finalised. Each case will depend on its own circumstances, and an unrepresented litigant may need to
be assisted to put the material information before the court.
It is not clear what information was available to the
magistrate, and certainly not demonstrated that his refusal of
an adjournment was mistaken.
We have identified nothing unfair in the appellant's trial, and
it seems obvious from the evidence that he was correctly
convicted.
The appeal is accordingly dismissed.
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL
| SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND | C.A. No. 335 of 1994 |
| Brisbane | |
| [Chivers v. Breinl] |
WAYNE PATRICK CHIVERS
v.
JOHN ALEXANDER BREINL (Appellant)
FITZGERALD P.
DAVIES J.A. PINCUS J.A.
Judgment delivered 27/10/94
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
APPEAL AGAINST CONVICTION DISMISSED.
CATCHWORDS:CRIMINAL LAW - CONDUCT OF DEFENCE - LEGAL REPRESENTATION - appellant sought adjournment to await review of refusal to grant legal aid - Magistrate refused to allow adjournment - appellant following statutory scheme for legal aid - claimed refusal breached cll. 3(b) and (d) International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights - whether the hearing of the matter at that time was unfair to the appellant
Dietrich v R (1992) 177 CLR 292
Counsel:No appearance for the Appellant
Mr D Meredith for the Crown
Solicitors:No appearance for the Appellant
Director of Prosecutions for the Crown
Hearing Date:19 October 1994
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