Glynn, P.D. v The Queen
[1985] FCA 531
•16 Aug 1985
53'
| IN THE FEDERAL COURT | ) | |
| OF AUSTRALIA | ) | |
| NORTHERN TERRITORY | ) | |
| DISTRICT REGISTRY | ) | |
| GENERAL DIVISION | ) | |
| ON APPEAL FROM THE SUPREME COURT | ||
| ||
| AUSTRALIA | ||
| B E T W E E N : PAUL DAMIEN GLYNN |
Applicant
and
| THE | O U E E N |
Respondent
| CORAM: | Bowen C.J. | , Fox and Toohey | JJ. |
| 16 August | 1985 |
M TEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
BOWEN C.J.
| I will | ask Mr. Justice | Toohey to give | the | first |
judgment.
TOOHEY J.
| Mr. Tiffin has said all that can be said | on behalf of |
the appellant, but in my view the appeal should be dismissed. The
appellant was convlcted on two counts, the first of fraudulently
| appropriating property contrary | to s.206 of the Criminal Law |
2 .
Consolidation Act, an offence that was particularlsed In these terms :
| "CThat he1 between | 1 May 1982 and 11 March 1983. at |
Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory of Australia,
| being | Director | a | of Home | Industrial | Hardware |
| Pty. Lmited, | did fraudulently take | or apply for his |
| own use or purpose and other than the use | or purpose of |
the said company's property, namely, a Freeway 24 foot
| Caravan, serial number FG224-25, the property | of the |
| sald Home Industrial Hardware Pty. Llmzted." |
| The second count was one of | falsifying company documents contrary |
| to 5.208 of the Crimlnal Law Consolldation | Act. | It was |
| particularised thus: |
"CThat he1 between 1 May 1982 and 6 February 1983 at Tennant Creek in the Northern Territory of Australla,
| being a director | of | Home Industrlal Hardware Pty. |
Limited, with intent to defraud, caused to be made
false entries In a book of account, namely a receipt
| book | belonging to the said Home Industrial Hardware |
| Pty. Llmlted. | " |
| Several grounds of appeal have been abandoned or | not argued and |
the appeal now focuses on the proposition that the trial judge
| erred | In a particular | direction | to | the | Jury. | The | passages |
complalned of appear on p.202 of the appeal book and In partlcular
in the following remarks by the trial judge.
| If the caravan was bousht | for Glynn In | the first |
place, and it was simply a matter of convenience that Home Industrlal Hardware bank account bank money was
| used. then Glynn owned | (sic) Home Industrlal Hardware |
| $6000 | straicrht away. | as soon as the cheque had been |
| drawn. | Now, there 1 s no evldence that thls | has ever |
| been repald, either by the loan account | - Glynn's loan |
| account to the company being debited, | or repaid In some |
| other way. |
3 .
/
Later his Honour said:
| You would think that | - although Glynn doesn't have |
| to prove anything if he doesn't want | to, it's up to the |
Crown to prove his guilt, as Mr Roberts quite fairly
| puts | to you - but you would think it would be In |
| Glynn's interest if there were any evidence at | all, |
| either of | a debit to his | loan account or a payment of |
$6000 in some other way to Home Industrial Hardware,
that this would have been produced for you."
| The remarks | of | the trial judge must of course be read In the |
context of his entire charge to the jury. So read, I am of the opinion that there was no misdirection. But even if one isolates
| the particular paragraphs complained of, I | am not persuaded that |
| there was | a misdirection by his Honour. His Honour made some |
| comments, perhaps | of a strong nature, but in | no way did they shift |
| the onus of proof from the | Crown to the appellant. Furthermore, |
there was nothing in the interview between the appellant and the
| investigating | pollce officer, | so far | as I am aware, or in any |
cross-examination of Crown witnesses, or in any evidence adduced on behalf of the appellant at the trial, that pointed to an issue
| that the $6000, being the purchase price paid for | the caravan. was |
| paid in reduction of the appellant's loan account wlth the company. |
mat the appellant complains of is essentially proof of
| a negative and of a failure by the Crown to prove | a negative and |
| a | matter very much within the knowledge of the appellant. In |
those circumstances his Honour's remarks were not inappropriate,
| nor did they constitute | a misdirection. |
4.
| Counsel for | the appellant submitted that the Crown had |
not established on the first count that, at the relevant time, the
| caravan was the property of the company and not | of the appellant. |
There was a further submission that by failing to adduce evldence
| of the state of the loan account the | Crown failed to establish |
fraudulent intent. But there was evidence that the caravan was
| the property of the company, evidence sufficient to | ~ustify | a |
reasonable jury reaching that conclusion. There was also evidence
| that Justified the jury finding | an intent to defraud. In the |
complete absence of any suggestion at the trial that there were
any relevant documents in existence or that the loan account had
| been reduced to offset money paid | on behalf of the appellant, | I am |
| of the opinion that there was evidence | on which the appellant |
might properly be convicted and that nothing said by the trial
judge misdirected the jury in its deliberations.
| For those reasons I am | of the oplnion that the appeal |
should be dismlssed. What I have said applies equally to the
| challenge | made | in | respect | of | the | convictlon | on | count | 1 |
and count 2 .
B O W C.J.
I agree.
I agree.
5.
BOWEN C.J.
The order of the court will be that the appeal be
dismissed.
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