Jack v Alexander

Case

[2008] QDC 64

5/03/2008

No judgment structure available for this case.

[2008] QDC 64

DISTRICT COURT
APPELLATE JURISDICTION

JUDGE ROBIN QC

Appeal No 324 of 2007

DAVID BRUCE JACK Appellant
and
ROSS ALEXANDER Respondent
CAIRNS
..DATE 05/03/2008
JUDGMENT
HIS HONOUR: This is an appeal against refusal of an Acting 1

Magistrate to grant a permanent stay of a prosecution against Mr Jack. That happened on the 31st of October 2007 and is a penultimate stage, this appeal being, for the moment, the last in a long saga, which I will attempt to summarise in a

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chronology shortly.

It is common ground at the Bar table that section 222 of the Justices Act 1886 can accommodate appeals in relation to the granting or refusal of a permanent stay of a prosecution. As

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it happens, I have had occasion recently to consider the
leading authorities in relation to that topic in a matter of

Lucy v. OCC Holdings Pty Ltd [2008] QDC 04.

It is accepted that the Court has jurisdiction to grant a stay

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of a prosecution and broadly on the basis that it should not
allow its processes to be used in inappropriate ways. The
leading authority is probably Williams v. Spautz (1992) 174
CLR 509, which considered in some detail the earlier High

Court authority of Jago v. District Court (NSW) (1989) 168 CLR

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23.

Mr Bradshaw for the applicant relied on comments in the judgment of Gaudron J in Jago, in particular at paragraphs 7 and 8 where her Honour said, omitting references to authority:

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"The power of a Court to control its own process and
proceedings is such that its exercise is not restricted
to defined and closed categories, but may be exercised as
and when the administration of justice demands. The
terms frivolous, vexations and oppressive, when used in

relation to civil proceedings, sometimes serve to signify

2 JUDGMENT 60
that the proceedings are an abuse of process, such that 1
in the interests of the administration of justice, they
should attract the grant of a permanent stay, but the
terms vexatious and oppressive may also import a
consideration of the justice or fairness of the
proceeding, those terms signifying an appropriate context
proceedings which 'seriously and unfairly burdensome,
prejudicial or damaging' or 'productive of serious and
unjustified trouble and harassment'".

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At paragraph 17 her Honour noted that:

"The features which attend the criminal process enable
the general considerations to be refined somewhat in
their application to a grant of a permanent stay of

criminal proceedings."

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One particular feature relevant to criminal proceedings is
that the question whether an indictment should be presented is
and always has been seen as involving the exercise of an
independent discretion inhering in and prosecution

authorities, which discretion is not reviewable by the Courts. 30
Paragraph 18 her Honour said: 

"Another feature attending criminal proceedings and
relevant to the grant of a permanent stay thereof is that
a trial Judge, by reason of the duty to ensure the
fairness of a trial, has a number of discretionary powers

which may be exercised in the course of a trial, 40
including the power to reject evidence which is
technically admissible, but which would operate unfairly
against the accused. The exercise of the power to reject
evidence, either alone or in combination with the trial
Judge's other powers to control criminal proceedings,
will often suffice to remedy any feature of the

proceedings which might otherwise render them unjust or unfair. The existence and availability of these powers when considered in the light of the necessarily limited scope of the power to grant a permanent stay served to

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indicate that a Court should have regard to the existence
of all its various powers and should only grant a
permanent stay, satisfied that no other means is
available to remedy that feature which, if unremedied,
would render the proceedings so seriously defective,
whether by reason of unfairness, injustice or otherwise
goes to demand a grant of a permanent stay".
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Ms Growden, resisting the appeal, referred to another passage in Jago in a judgment of Brennan J at paragraph 24, to the effect that:

"The purpose of criminal proceedings, generally speaking, 10
is to hear and determine finally whether the accused has
engaged in conduct which amounts to an offence and on

that account is deserving of punishment. When criminal process is used only for that purpose and is capable of serving that purpose, there is no abuse of process.

Although it's not possible to state exhaustively all the
categories of abuse of process, it would generally be
found in the use of criminal proceedings inconsistently
with some aspect of its true purpose, whether relating to
the hearing and determination, its finality, the reason 20
for examining the accused's conduct or the exoneration of
the accused from liability to punishment for the conduct
alleged against him. When process is abused, the
unfairness against which a litigant is entitled to
protection is his subjection to process which is not
intended to serve or which is not capable of serving its
true purpose."
If anything, Williams v. Spautz serves to extend the 30
understanding of the availability of this common law based (or
inherent) jurisdiction of the courts. The headnote of
Williams v. Spautz contains the following:
"A lecturer commenced an action against a university for 40
wrongful dismissal. The lecturer later laid informations
against various officers of the university, alleging a
number of offences, including criminal conspiracy to
defame and conspiracy to injure him without justification
and by illegal means. On the application of some of
those persons for declaration is that particular
prosecutions were an abuse of process, the Judge found
that the lecturer's predominant purpose instituting and
maintaining the criminal proceedings was to exert
pressure upon the university to reinstate him and/or to 50
agree to a favourable settlement of the case for wrongful
dismissal. He made the declarations and stayed the
prosecutions permanently."
4 JUDGMENT 60
It was held by Mason CJ, Brennan JJ, Dawson, Toohey and McHugh 1
JJ, Deane and Gaudron JJ dissenting that:

"The prosecutions were an abuse of process and were

properly stayed."

Per Mason CJ, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ: 10

1. "The power to stay proceedings extends to the prevention

of an abuse of process resulting in oppression, even if the moving party has or must be assumed to have a prima facie case.

2. Proceedings are brought for an improper purpose and thus

constitute an abuse of process where the purpose of

bringing them is not to prosecute them to a conclusion, 20
but to use them as a means of obtaining some advantage
for which they are not designed or some collateral
advantage beyond what the law offers. An improper act by
the party instituting the proceedings is not an essential
ingredient in the concept of abuse of process".

Per Mason CJ, Dawson, Toohey and McHugh JJ:

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1. "Where a stay is sought to stop a prosecution which has been instituted and maintained for an improper purpose, it is not necessary for the Court to satisfy itself that

an unfair trial will ensue unless the prosecution is
stopped. A stay may be granted where, even if the trial
is fair, the proceedings have been brought for an

improper purpose and hence are an abuse of process.

2. The improper purpose need not be the sole purpose of the 40

moving party, so long as it is his predominant purpose".

The headnote goes on, I shall not read more. Mr Bradshaw
faces the difficult task of bringing his client's prosecution

within the category of abuse of process, as explained in the 50
cases I have mentioned.
5 JUDGMENT 60
It is undoubtedly the case that, from Mr Jack's point of view, 1
a series of actions having an appearance of oppressiveness
have been brought against him by police. It is common ground
that all of those matters have their genesis in a belief,
which seems to be attributed to a police officer called

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Millward, in particular (he being seen as the inspiration for everything that has happened), a belief that Mr Jack in contravention of the Drugs Misuse Act revealed the identity of a police informer. That informer was assisting police by providing to them information about the banking and postal

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transactions of persons of interest to the police, that
information coming to his attention in the course of his
employment. It is information which one might ordinarily

think would be kept confidential.

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Mr Bradshaw has stated from the Bar table, without any challenge from Ms Growden, that there is a protocol ordinarily observed when police seek information from banking and postal authorities, which, for all I know, may be a common occurrence, further, that the protocol was not observed here.

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6 JUDGMENT 60

05032008 D.1 T(4)3/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)

A brief chronology of events, for which I have to take sole 1

2000 when Mr Jack applied for and obtained authority under the

responsibility as one was not provided, goes back to January conditions provided by law; those, in the interests of

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community safety, are onerous - as they should be.

The licence which was the result identified his residence and also the Commonwealth Bank at Kowanyama as the storage address for the weapons. It appears there have been changes to his

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residential address from time to time, which have been
appropriately recorded by police.

On the 5th and 6th of October 2005 Mr Jack got direct from a fellow employee in the combined bank/post office operation,

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where he and others are employed to conduct relevant business
activities for the local Council, that the fellow employee was
giving information to the police in connection with suspected

drug transactions of at least one identified person.

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On the 12th of October 2005 Mr Jack generated an interoffice memo to his superior in the Council, Mr Japp, with regard to the fellow employee's supposed activities, which concerned him

as a breach of a customer confidentiality.

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From between about the 28th of October 2005 and the 5th of
December 2005 Mr Jack was away from Kowanyama on leave.
During that period on the 13th of November 2005 a warrant was
obtained from a Magistrate in relation to an offence under
05032008 D.1 T(4)3/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)
7 JUDGMENT 60
"section 119 Drugs Misuse Act 1986 Protection of Informers 1

that, on a date unknown at Kowanyama in the State of identity of an informant to another."

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Details of evidence that might be seized under the warrant
were, "(1) Any records, including electronic records, relating
to a letter purported to be written by David Bruce Jack to the
Kowanyama Community Council containing information relating

Todd Anthony Holford; (2) Typed letter from David Bruce Jack

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to the Kowanyama Council containing information relating to
Todd Anthony Holford; (3) Computers, notes, diaries or
documentation that may relate to information regarding Todd

Anthony Holford."

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The premises were raided while Mr Jack was still on leave, although police had the consideration to invite the person to look out for Mr Jack's interests. I am not surprised to hear from Mr Bradshaw that it was highly upsetting to Mr Jack to have strangers entering his premises, going through his

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personal belongings and the like. None of us would welcome
intrusion of that kind. It may be that some of the property,

such as the computer, is still to be returned.

The police effecting the raid noted that no weapons were found

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in the house. Certain observations were apparently made by
those who troubled to go to the relevant part of the premises
that there was no, or there might have been no, appropriate
05032008 D.1 T(4)3/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)
8 JUDGMENT 60
bolted down receptacle for keeping weapons in the house as the 1
Act and/or Regulations required there.

By the 8th of December 2006, and probably some time in the month before, police knew from Holford, if not otherwise, that

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Mr Jack's weapons were stored at the bank premises. I confess to some confusion as to whether there is any distinction between the bank premises and the post office premises, which are certainly in the same building. They may be separate areas. I would be surprised if anything turns on whether

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storage was supposed to be occurring at the bank or at the
post office.

It appears Holford had indicated that he was concerned about the presence of weapons in the workplace. The storage

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arrangements were that the bolts had been removed and kept in
a locked safe, the three rifles themselves being kept in a

cardboard box or boxes nearby.

The material available to the Court tends to suggest that that

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was out of view of the public. Differing views are attributed
to different police officers as to whether the whole
arrangement could be regarded as one big locked storage, or

not.

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9 JUDGMENT 60

05032008 D.1 T(4)4/CG(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)

In December 2005 police prepared a Bench charge sheet in 1
respect of an offence under section 60, subsection (2) of the
Weapons Act 1990 "That between the 28th day of October 2005
and the 5th day of December 2005 at Kowanyama", et cetera,
"Jack, being the registered owner of firearms (described then

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in detail) failed to ensure that storage facilities for the
firearms were available at the place shown in the firearms
register as the place where the firearms were generally kept,

namely Koltmomun Street, Kowanyama."

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The date on that document appears to be 28 December 2005. The Court in 2005, as confirmed by the identifying numbers imprinted on it under the bar code at the top which relate to the year 2005. I am indebted to Registry staff who have

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looked out that document at my request.

On the 20th of January 2006, another Bench charge sheet was generated regarding an offence under section 60, subsection (1) of the Weapons Act, relating to the same charge period and

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to Kowanyama, this one charging that "David Bruce Jack, who was in possession of a weapon, namely three rifles, did not securely store such weapon in the way prescribed under section
60 of the Weapons Regulation 1996 when such weapon was not in

his physical possession."

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Whereas the earlier charge relates to facilities available for storage at the residence, identified as the place where the firearms were generally kept, the later charge relates to 05032008 D.1 T(4)4/CG(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)

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JUDGMENT

60

arrangements for the actual storage in the charge period of 1
the three rifles at the bank. I confess to some
mystification, given that the original license conditions
referred to the bank being the place for storage but, of
course, it is possible that those arrangements changed since

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2000.

For present purposes, I accept that the second charge was generated after Sergeant Alexander, who has some responsibility for both, learned that Mr Jack was going to

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contest the first one. On the 18th of April 2007, Mr Jack was
convicted in Kowanyama Magistrates Court of an offence under
section 60, subsection (2). No conviction was recorded. He
was fined $75. The Magistrate accepted that she should not

hear the other charge, if only on the basis that, on a

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conflict of evidence, she had preferred police evidence to Mr
Jack's.

On the 10th of August 2007, Judge Dodds allowed an appeal against that conviction. His Honour considered that the

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charge had not been proved to the requisite standard of proof. What it seemed to come down to was conflicting inferences that might be drawn about what storage facilities might have been
available on the site at an earlier time. The police had

insufficient evidence of actual observations of what lockable,

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bolted down facilities were there in the charge period.

On the 31st of October 2007, as I have already indicated, the
Magistrate refused a permanent stay as sought of the section
05032008 D.1 T(4)4/CG(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)
11 JUDGMENT 60
60, subsection (1) charge. Because of failures of technology, 1
the Court hears no transcript of the proceeding is available,
nor any reasons the Acting Magistrate gave. It is a difficult
task to have to reconstruct, from the outlines of argument
presented to him, what occurred, but perhaps none of that

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matters greatly.

It is necessary to add to that chronology matters arising under the Drugs Misuse Act. Without going into the full details of it, Mr Jack ended up not facing the charge which

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underlay the search warrant, a feature which Mr Bradshaw
submits taints any evidence gathered or any charge arising in

consequence.

Mr Bradshaw tells the Court that he himself has been charged

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with similar wrong-doing under the Drugs Misuse Act on the
basis of a memorandum prepared by him in connection with his

work as counsel for Mr Jack which names the police informer.

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12 JUDGMENT 60

05032008 D.1 T(4)5/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)

He told me that on the 25th of March this year he will 1
appearing before Justice White in the Tribunal in connection
with that matter, which has the extra significance that it
would make him unavailable to represent Mr Jack on the date
presently fixed for the hearing of the remaining charge.

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Another detail omitted from the chronology concerns a charge under the Liquor Act in relation to a couple of bottles of alcohol located in the raid. One way or another that one has gone away as well. Mr Bradshaw suggested the bottles

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contained "home brew", which Mr Jack was entitled to produce
and/or have.

From Mr Jack's perspective, and, indeed, perhaps from the perspective of anyone hearing the above details, it might

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appear that some kind of campaign is being pursued against Mr
Jack to try to get him convicted of something.

Notwithstanding those observations, I am not persuaded that the present circumstances can be brought within Williams v

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Spautz. Although the authorities might well have determined to accept things as they lay after the 10th of August 2007, what they are seeking to do is pursue a charge which had been instituted on the 20th of January 2006, albeit not one judged worthy of pursuing at the end of the month before when the

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other Weapons Act charge was instituted.

This may say something about the police view of seriousness of
the charge. Any comment that I might have made during the
05032008 D.1 T(4)5/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)
13 JUDGMENT 60
hearing to suggest that the police may have shown inadequate 1
concern about keeping the weapons out of harm's way would be
inappropriate. On the 8th of December 2006 when police spoke
to Mr Jack, after having spoken to other people first, they
took the weapons into their custody for safe keeping.

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Mr Jack, the Court is pleased to hear, has, with some expedition, equipped himself with a proper lockable safe, which is at his residence. His version of the history of storage arrangements at times when he was on leave is that for

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some years the police were willing to store the weapons at the
station, acquiescing in his judgment that, for reasons of
possible access by children, it was not appropriate to leave
them unattended in his house. A change of command at the

station led to the police declining to provide that storage

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facility and to Mr Jack adopting the use of his workplace
which has been mentioned.

In reference to Williams v Spautz, this is a situation in which there would appear to be a prima facie case. The future

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may show whether fuller investigation of the circumstances
shows there is not a proper case at all. The charge has been
on foot for some time now, rather than being one only recently

thought about.

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It was Mr Jack's doing that the two charges got separated in the way that has happened. I am totally unable to identify this prosecution as one which the authorities are not bent on 05032008 D.1 T(4)5/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)

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JUDGMENT

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pursuing to this conclusion, which they hope will be a finding 1
of guilty.

The doctrine relating to permanent stays as appearing from cases such as Williams v Spautz does not seem to me to avail

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persons like Mr Jack, however genuine they may be, and however
justified they may be in thinking that they are being singled

out for prosecution to a possibly excessive degree.

The appeal fails.

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I might conclude by saying I agree with Mr Bradshaw that there is a serious question here of the best way to allocate limited public resources, whether in the police service, prosecution,

the DPP, or the courts. Historically, in any event, the local

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Council has, understandably, provided financial support for Mr
Jack's defence.

Much time, effort and money has already been expended on steps calculated to get Mr Jack convicted of something. The

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prospect still with some life in it - the subject of this
appeal - should it succeed might lead to a $75 fine with no
conviction recorded, if the immediate predecessor prosecution

is a guide.

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The community would expect those responsible for making decisions about what should happen now to consider how worthwhile the continuation of the prosecution is. 05032008 D.1 T(4)5/GRB(CNS) M/T CAIR3/2008 (Robin DCJ)

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JUDGMENT

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1

It is for the prosecutorial authorities to make the decision, not for the Court, given my view that the conditions for the extraordinary jurisdiction to permanently stay have not been established.

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...

HIS HONOUR: I am not going to order costs.

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Williams v Spautz [1992] HCA 34