Henderson v Taylor
[2006] QCA 393
•11/10/2006
SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND
CITATION: Henderson v Taylor, Information Commissioner of Queensland [2006] QCA 393 PARTIES: PAUL DAVID HENDERSON (appellant/applicant) v
CATHI TAYLOR (AKA CATHERINE MARY
TAYLOR), INFORMATION COMMISSIONER
QUEENSLAND(first respondent) RACHEL ELIZABETH JEAN MOSS (second respondent) FILE NO/S: Appeal No 3458 of 2006
SC No 6205 of 2005DIVISION: Court of Appeal PROCEEDING: Miscellaneous Application - Civil ORIGINATING
COURT:Supreme Court at Brisbane DELIVERED EX TEMPORE ON: 11 October 2006 DELIVERED AT: Brisbane HEARING DATE: 11 October 2006 JUDGES: Mackenzie, Philippides and Philip McMurdo JJ
Separate reasons for judgment of each member of the Court,
each concurring as to the order madeORDER: Application for adjournment dismissed CATCHWORDS:
APPEAL AND NEW TRIAL – APPEAL – PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – QUEENSLAND – HEARING OF APPEAL – the appellant/applicant applies to vacate today’s date for the hearing of this appeal on a number of grounds – whether today’s date for the hearing of the appeal should be
vacated COUNSEL: The appellant/applicant appeared on his own behalf
T J Bradley for the first respondentSOLICITORS: The appellant/applicant appeared on his own behalf
Nicol Robinson Halletts for the first respondent
McMURDO J: The appellant applies to vacate today as the date
for the hearing of his appeal upon on a number of bases which
I can hope can be fairly summarised within these reasons.
One submission which he makes is that having regard to the
other matters which have been listed for hearing today,
relevant to his appeal, he has been in something of a state of
confusion as to whether he should prepare for the hearing of
this appeal today. And, as I understand what he has said, he
has been under some difficulty in preparing for the hearing of
the appeal. As to that argument it does not seem to me that
the other matters which have been listed today associated with
this appeal should have presented any difficulty for him,
either in knowing that he had to argue his appeal today or in
being ready to argue it.
The other arguments which he advances to vacate today as the
date for hearing, broadly speaking, concern his desire to make
further enquiries with a view to obtaining better evidence
than he was able to put before the learned primary judge. In
particular, he has identified two lines of enquiry. One of
them he says has been inspired by documents which he has
recently obtained from the Queensland Police Service and which
he has put before us. They consist of emails sent within the
Police Service relevant to the complaint made by the
respondent to this appeal of the event of the appellant going
to her house endeavouring to serve the originating application
upon her. He described this material, that is the recently
obtained emails from the Police Service, as being in the
nature of a 'smoking gun' and he says that has inspired him to
pursue further enquiries which he has not had time to pursue
in the last few weeks.
As I see that matter however, those inquiries must necessarily
be unproductive because they could only go to prove or further
prove a fact which is already clear and, which it appears to
me, was clear to the learned primary judge, which is that the
first respondent did complain to the Police Service of his
attempt to serve her with the application at her residence.
Moreover, it was already clear in my view that the essence of
that complaint, whether the complaint was justified or not,
was that there was something in the nature of stalking or
intimidation involved in the appellant's conduct.
That is a matter which does not seem to me to have been in
controversy in the hearing which is the subject of this appeal
and so there is no point in vacating today's hearing to enable
him to make that further enquiry. The other line of enquiry
he wishes to pursue, broadly speaking, concerns the
circumstances by which ultimately the hearing of his
application for contempt occurred as it did on the 30th of
March last. He complains that it should not have gone ahead
on that day. That is a complaint he put to the learned
primary judge. He asked for an adjournment on that date and
that adjournment was refused. His complaint, he should have
been given an adjournment, is a ground of this appeal.
That complaint which involves, of course, a challenge to the
exercise of a discretionary power, must be upon the basis of
the material which the learned primary Judge had. It does not
seem to me to be relevant for him to pursue that line of
enquiry as to how the matter was listed for the 30th of March
as it was. He is able to agitate that ground of appeal, of
not granting of an adjournment, within this appeal.
As I see it then, from the various matters which he has argued
both in writing and orally this morning, he has demonstrated
no good reason why the hearing of this appeal should not occur
today.
MACKENZIE J: I agree.
PHILIPPIDES J: I also agree.
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