DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS FOR WESTERN AUSTRALIA
[2023] WASC 254
JURISDICTION : SUPREME COURT OF WESTERN AUSTRALIA
IN CHAMBERS
CITATION: DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS FOR WESTERN AUSTRALIA [2023] WASC 254
CORAM: ARCHER J
HEARD: 26 JUNE 2023
DELIVERED : 26 JUNE 2023
FILE NO/S: CPCA 15 of 2023
EX PARTE
DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS FOR WESTERN AUSTRALIA
Plaintiff
Catchwords:
Criminal property confiscation - Freezing notices - No objection filed - Application for declaration of confiscation
Legislation:
Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 (WA)
Result:
Declaration of confiscation made
Category: B
Representation:
Counsel:
| Plaintiff | : | I S Jones |
Solicitors:
| Plaintiff | : | Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) |
Case(s) referred to in decision(s):
Advanced Mining & Civil Pty Ltd v Wescat Plant Hire Pty Ltd [2016] WASC 413
Campana v The State of Western Australia [2008] WASC 230
Centurion Trust Company Ltd v The Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) [2010] WASCA 133; (2010) 201 A Crim R 324
Ex parte Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) [2021] WASC 398
First International Merchant Bank Holdings Ltd v The State of Western Australia [No 2] [2020] WASC 395
Freeth as Executor of the Estate of Gerard V Brewer v O'Donnell [2021] WASC 393
Ranford v The State of Western Australia [2015] WASC 45
The Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) v White [2010] WASCA 47
Whittle v The State of Western Australia [2012] WASC 244
ARCHER J:
(This judgment was delivered extemporaneously on 26 June 2023 and has been edited to correct matters of grammar, add headings, and include complete references.)
Introduction
In this action, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) seeks a declaration that particular property has been confiscated. The property is the subject of a freezing notice and no objection to confiscation of the property was filed within the prescribed time. For the reasons that follow, the declaration should be made.
Legal framework[1]
Requirements of a freezing notice
[1] This section largely reproduces what I have written in other judgments: see, for example, Ex parte Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) [2021] WASC 398 [2] ‑ [12] and [17] - [20].
Relevantly to this case, a freezing notice for property may be issued if there are reasonable grounds for suspecting that the property is crime‑used or crime‑derived.[2]
[2] Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 (WA) s 34(2) (Confiscation Act).
Section 36 of the Criminal Property Confiscation Act 2000 (WA) (Confiscation Act) sets out the service, notification and filing requirements of freezing notices.
A freezing notice must be served on any person from whom the property covered by the notice was taken. It must also be served on any other person who, to the knowledge of the applicant for the notice, is, or may be, or claims to be, an interested party.[3]
[3] Confiscation Act s 36(1). An 'interested party' is defined in the Glossary to the Confiscation Act as a person who has an interest in the property that would enable the person to succeed on an objection to confiscation.
A person served with a freezing notice under s 36 must give a statutory declaration advising, in effect, of any other persons who may be an interested party.[4] Section 36(4) requires, in effect, that the freezing notice be served on any such identified interested party.
[4] Confiscation Act s 37.
By s 36(6)(a), the applicant must also file the freezing notice in the court specified in the notice.[5]
[5] Confiscation Act s 36(6).
A freezing notice for property other than registerable real property comes into force when the notice is issued.[6]
Confiscation under a freezing notice where no objection filed
[6] Confiscation Act s 39(1).
Section 30 of the Confiscation Act provides:
30.Declarations of confiscation, applying for and making
(1)The DPP or the CCC may apply to the court for a declaration that property has been confiscated.
(2)On considering an application, if the court finds that the property described in the application has been confiscated under section 6, 7 or 8, the court must make a declaration to that effect.
The DPP contends that the property was confiscated by the operation of s 7(1) of the Confiscation Act. Section 7 applies to property that has been frozen pursuant to a freezing notice or freezing order where the basis, or one of the bases, upon which the notice or order was made was that there were reasonable grounds for suspecting that the property was crime‑used or crime‑derived.[7]
[7] Centurion Trust Company Ltd v The Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) [2010] WASCA 133; (2010) 201 A Crim R 324 (Centurion Trust) [112], [217] - [242] and [255] ‑ [256] (Buss JA, as his Honour then was, with whom Owen JA agreed [74]). See also The Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) v White [2010] WASCA 47 [50] (McLure P, with whom Owen JA and Buss JA, as his Honour then was, agreed).
Section 7 provides:
7.When frozen property is confiscated automatically
(1)Frozen property is confiscated if an objection to the confiscation of the property is not filed on or before the 28th day after the service cut off date for the property.
…
(3)However, property frozen under a freezing notice is not confiscated under subsection (1) or (2) until the freezing notice is filed in accordance with section 36(6)(a).
'Frozen property' is property subject to a freezing notice or freezing order.[8] Any income or other property derived from the property while a freezing notice is in force is taken to be part of the property.[9]
[8] The word 'frozen' is defined in the Glossary to the Confiscation Act to mean, in relation to property and in relation to a freezing notice or freezing order, 'subject to the freezing notice or freezing order'.
[9] Confiscation Act s 34(7).
The 'service cut off date', in relation to property frozen under a freezing notice, is defined as the date of the last day on which a copy of the freezing notice was served on anyone under s 36(4) of the Confiscation Act.[10]
[10] Confiscation Act s 150(a).
Where a statutory declaration does not identify any interested parties, no one will be served under s 36(4). In First International Merchant Bank Holdings Ltd v The State of Western Australia [No 2],[11] I explained why I consider that, in such circumstances, the 'service cut off date' means the last date on which the freezing notice was served on any person.
[11] First International Merchant Bank Holdings Ltd v The State of Western Australia [No 2] [2020] WASC 395 [13] ‑ [22].
As the application under s 30 was brought by the DPP, and as the court is required to be satisfied that the property has been confiscated, the DPP bears the onus of proving that the property was confiscated.[12] The DPP must prove it on the balance of probabilities.[13]
[12] Campana v The State of Western Australia [2008] WASC 230[40].
[13] Confiscation Act s 102(2)(d).
To establish that the property was confiscated under s 7(1), the DPP must prove that:
1.the property was frozen under a freezing notice where the basis, or one of the bases, upon which the notice was made was that there were reasonable grounds for suspecting that the property was crime‑used or crime‑derived;[14]
2.the service requirements having been met,[15] an objection to the confiscation of the property was not filed on or before the 28th day after the 'service cut off date' for the property;[16] and
3.the freezing notice was filed in accordance with s 36(6)(a).[17]
[14] Centurion Trust [112], [217] - [242] and [255] ‑ [256] (Buss JA, as his Honour then was, with whom Owen JA agreed [74]). See also The Director of Public Prosecutions (WA) v White [50] (McLure P, with whom Owen JA and Buss JA, as his Honour then was, agreed).
[15] As to this being a condition, see, in an analogous context, Freeth as Executor of the Estate of Gerard V Brewer v O'Donnell [2021] WASC 393 [55] ‑ [65].
[16] Confiscation Act s 7(1).
[17] Confiscation Act s 7(3).
If each of these matters is proved, then, pursuant to s 7 of the Confiscation Act, the property was automatically confiscated the day after the service cut off date or, if later, the date upon which the freezing notice was filed in accordance with s 36(6)(a).
In the absence of any third party interest, nothing else must be established before the court is compelled to make a declaration under s 30.[18]
[18] See Whittle v The State of Western Australia [2012] WASC 244 [36] and [40] and Ranford v The State of Western Australia [2015] WASC 45 [22] (see also [25]).
Evidence
The DPP tendered three affidavits, each filed on 28 March 2023. The deponents were:
1.Sean Busby, a Detective Senior Constable;
2.Valentin Charles Hubert Carraz, a paralegal employed in the Confiscations Team of the Office of the DPP; and
3.Sarah Louise Beveridge, a paralegal employed in the Proceeds of Crime Squad of the Western Australia Police Force.
The evidence proved the following.
On 12 May 2022, freezing notice WAPFN220060 (the Freezing Notice) was issued under s 34(2) of the Confiscation Act in respect of property suspected on reasonable grounds to be crime‑used or crime‑derived.
The property specified in the Freezing Notice was various amounts of cash totalling $2,890,590. The cash was found by the police on 1 September 2021 during the search of a Prime Mover with trailer registration YV01EA on Eyre Highway, Eucla. The cash was subsequently deposited into the Commonwealth Bank of Australia Western Australia Police Force Seized Moneys Trust Account.
I will refer to this cash as 'the Property'.
The court specified in the Freezing Notice was the Supreme Court. A copy of the Freezing Notice was filed with this Court, as required by s 36(6)(a) of the Confiscation Act, on 17 May 2022.
A copy of the Freezing Notice was served on the person from whom the Property was taken, on 1 June 2022.
A copy of the Freezing Notice was also served on five other people and a company. The company was served because it was the business used for the delivery of the Property. One person was served because DNA found on the Property was identified as being his and because, during an interview with WA Police officers, he stated the frozen Property was his. I will refer to this person as 'JS'. Another was served because he was named as the addressee for delivery of the Property. The other three were served because they were identified as being part of an established criminal network that included JS.
Of the individuals:
1.one was served on 16 May 2022;
2.one was served on 23 May 2022;
3.two were served on 27 May 2022; and
4.one was served on 7 July 2022.
A copy of the Freezing Notice was sent to the company by pre‑paid registered post on 16 May 2022. It is unnecessary to consider the date on which it could be inferred that the company would have received its copy of the Freezing Notice after it had been posted. This is because a director of the company made a statutory declaration in relation to the Freezing Notice on 26 May 2022, proving that the Freezing Notice had been received before that date.[19]
[19] And see Advanced Mining & Civil Pty Ltd v Wescat Plant Hire Pty Ltd [2016] WASC 413 [58] ‑ [60].
In his statutory declaration, the director said that neither the company nor any of its directors were interested parties or were aware of any person who might be an interested party.
Of the six individuals served with a copy of the Freezing Notice, only one filed a statutory declaration. I will refer to this person as 'PM'. In his statutory declaration, PM said that he had no interest in the Property and he did not identify any other person who may have had an interest in the Property.
The applicant for the Freezing Notice (being Detective Senior Constable Busby) deposed, in effect, that he was not aware of any person other than those seven who was, or may have been, or may have claimed to have been, an interested party. In the circumstances surrounding the seizure of the Property, there is no reason to doubt this.
As the only statutory declarations filed did not identify any other interested parties, the service cut off date was the date on which the last person was served. This was 7 July 2022.
The 28th day after that date was 4 August 2022. No objection was filed on or before 4 August 2022, or indeed at any time.
The Freezing Notice has not been cancelled or set aside.
Ex parte application
The DPP made the application ex parte, as permitted by O 81FA r 2(1) of the Rules of the Supreme Court 1971 (WA). In its helpful and detailed written submissions, the DPP submitted that it was appropriate to deal with the matter ex parte because all interested parties have been served with the Freezing Notice and no objection to the confiscation of the frozen property has been filed.
I accept this submission. There is nothing to indicate the identity of any other person who might have an interest in the Property. In those circumstances, it is entirely appropriate to deal with the matter ex parte.
Conclusion
The Freezing Notice was issued on the Property on the basis that there were reasonable grounds for suspecting that the Property was crime‑used or crime‑derived.
The DPP satisfied its service and notice obligations under s 36 of the Confiscation Act. A copy of the Freezing Notice was served on the person from whom the Property was taken and on each other person who, to the knowledge of the applicant for the Freezing Notice, was, or may have been, or may have claimed to have been, an interested party. A copy of the Freezing Notice was also filed with this Court.
An objection to the confiscation of the Property was not filed on or before 4 August 2022, being the 28th day after the service cut off date.
It follows that the Property, including any interest that has accrued on it, was confiscated on 5 August 2022.
Nothing else must be established before the court is compelled to make a declaration under s 30. I am therefore required to declare that the Property was confiscated.
Orders
I will make orders in terms of the Minute of Proposed Declaration filed 23 June 2023.
I certify that the preceding paragraph(s) comprise the reasons for decision of the Supreme Court of Western Australia.
NL
Associate to the Judge
10 JULY 2023
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