R v. Hargraves, Hargraves and Stoten

Case

[2008] QSC 267

23 October 2008

No judgment structure available for this case.

SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

CITATION:  R v Hargraves, Hargraves and Stoten [2008] QSC 267
PARTIES:  R
v
GLEN LUKE HARGRAVES
(first applicant)
ADAM JOHN HARGRAVES
(second applicant)
DANIEL ARAN STOTEN
(third applicant)
FILE NO/S:  Indictment No 418 of 2008
DIVISION:  Trial
PROCEEDING:  Criminal Application
COURT:  Supreme Court at Brisbane
DELIVERED ON:  23 October 2008
DELIVERED AT:  Brisbane
HEARING DATE:  23 October 2008
JUDGE:  Fryberg J
ORDER:  As per schedule

CATCHWORDS: 

Criminal law – Jurisdiction, practice and procedure – Other matters – Disclosure of documents by prosecution – Deemed possession – Requirements

Statutes – Acts of parliament – Interpretation – Particular words and phrases – Specific interpretations – “And” – Means “or”

Criminal Code 1899 (Qld) s 590AE
R v Rollason and Jenkins; Ex parte Attorney General [2008]
1 Qd R 85 referred to
COUNSEL:  First applicant: B Walker SC with CFC Wilson
Second and third applicants: M Byrne QC with A Gundelach
Respondent: A McSporran SC with C Toweel
SOLICITORS:  All applicants: Ryan and Boscher Lawyers
Respondent: Director of Public Prosecutions
(Commonwealth)

SCHEDULE

1

It is ordered that:

1.          The Crown provide to the legal representatives of the Applicant the following material:

A.         A complete copy of the transcripts of the evidence that Mr Phillip

Jepson Egglishaw provided to the Australian Crime Commission on the

following dates:  10
(a)  17 February 2004;
(b)  19 February 2004;
(c)  20 February 2004;
(d)  26 February 2004;
(e)  1 March 2004.
B. 
A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/003, namely the statement of Mr P J 20
Egglishaw referred to in the examination conducted at 2.20pm on
Friday the 20th of February 2004.

C.         A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/004, namely the folder of documents referred to and set out in Appendix “A” to statement of Mr P J Egglishaw referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 2.20pm on Friday the 20th February 2004.

D.
A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/006, namely the copy of document 30
cover of which reads “Strachans Tax Planning And Off-shore
Administration” 85 referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at
10.17am on Thursday the 26th of February 2004.

E.          A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/007, namely the Schedule headed: Geneva In-house Companies, updated 20/02/2004 referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 10.17am on Thursday the 26th of February 2004.

40

F.          A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/008, namely the file or documents 92 referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 10.17am on Thursday the 26th of February 2004.

G.         A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/009, namely the billing schedule 92 referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 10.17am on Thursday the 26th day of February 2004.

50

H.         A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/010, namely the Schedule of Stachans’ clients sorted under partners’ initials 95 referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 10.17am on Thursday the 26th of February 2004.

I.           A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/015, namely the bundle of documents, commencing with facsimile sheet signed off by Mr P. De Figueiredo,

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dated 12/07/1999, and three other related documents 111 referred to in

the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 10.17am on Thursday the 26th of 1
February 2004.

J.          A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/022, namely the Five – page spreadsheet headed: List of Files in Geneva referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 11.10am on Monday the 1st of March 2004.

K.
A copy of exhibit No. M04/0037/026, namely the copy of brochure titled Stachans Trust: A Simple Concepts referred to in the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 11.10am on Monday the 1st of March 2004. 10

L.          A copy of any other exhibit which was referred to or by the witness Mr P. J Egglishaw during the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 2.20pm on Friday the 20th February 2004.

M.
A copy of any other exhibit which was referred to or by the witness Mr 20
P. J Egglishaw during the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 10.17am on
Thursday the 26th of February 2004.

N.         A copy of any other exhibit which was referred to or by the witness Mr P. J Egglishaw during the examination of Mr Egglishaw at 11.10am on Monday the 1st of March 2004.

30

40

50

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SUPREME COURT OF QUEENSLAND

CRIMINAL JURISDICTION

[2008] QSC 267

FRYBERG J

Indictment No 418 of 2008 10
THE QUEEN
v.
GLENN LUKE HARGRAVES
ADAM JOHN HARGRAVES
DANIEL ARAN STOTEN
20
BRISBANE
..DATE 23/10/2008
PRE-TRIAL HEARING 30
EXTRACT OF PROCEEDINGS
40
50
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HIS HONOUR: The three accused in this case are presently

1

pending prosecution in this Court for conspiracy to defraud
the Commonwealth. The prosecutions arise out of an
investigation carried out by the Australian Crime Commission

under the name Operation Wickenby.

10

It is unnecessary for present purposes to describe the subject

matter of the investigation in great detail. It is sufficient

to say that it allegedly involved an investigation into a
scheme for procuring false invoices to be sent to Australian

taxpayers or a company with which they were associated to 20
inflate tax deductions and thereby procure the payment of less
tax than should have been paid.
The scheme that was promoted in order to bring about that
outcome was run by a firm based in Geneva named Strachans SA 30
and a principal associated with that firm was Philip Jepson
Egglishaw. Mr Egglishaw, when in Australia, was examined by
the Australian Crime Commission pursuant to the power which
the Commission has to carry out such an examination under
section 24A and 25A of the Australian Crime Commission Act 40
2002 of the Commonwealth. A transcript was made of the
evidence which was given.
The defence has sought disclosure by the prosecution of the
transcript of Mr Egglishaw's evidence. The evidence before me 50
discloses that the office of the Commonwealth Director of
Public Prosecutions sought that transcript from the Australian
Crime Commission and was given a version of it which has a
significant number of pages blacked out or redacted, as it was
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expressed during argument. 1

The applications which are before me today seek directions that the Crown provide to the legal representatives of the accused complete copies of the transcript and of the exhibits

10

referred to in the transcript.

No evidence has been put before me to suggest that the evidence is not relevant to the prosecution of the three accused. That is so notwithstanding that there is on behalf

20

of the Crown an affidavit of Duncan Jeffrey Brown, an
investigator with the Australian Crime Commission who is

currently the case officer in relation to the matter.

I would infer that if the material in the blacked out passages

30

and the missing exhibits were irrelevant, Mr Brown would know

about it and would have given evidence to that effect.

It is also reasonable to conclude from the terms of section

25A(6) that the evidence which was given was relevant to the

40

investigation which was being carried out. The present
prosecutions are based on, among other things, that

investigation.

The applications are resisted on one ground only. That ground

50

is that the unblacked-out transcript and the exhibits are not
in the possession of the prosecution within the meaning of
section 590AE of the Criminal Code. That section defines the

meaning of "possession of the prosecution".

1-6 60

It begins with the proposition in subsection (1) that a thing
is in the possession of the prosecution only if the thing is
in the possession of the prosecution under subsection (2) or
subsection (3). Subsection (2) provides the thing is in the

possession of the prosecution if it is in the possession of 10
the arresting officer or a person appearing for the
prosecution.
The arresting officer is the police officer who arrested the
accused, or another police officer that the Commissioner or a 20
delegate of the Commissioner designates as the arresting
officer.
In the present case, the arresting officer has ceased to be
seconded to the Australian Crime Commission and returned to 30
the Australia Federal Police sometime in 2006. It is common
ground that the documents being sought are not in his
possession.
It is also common ground that they are not in the possession 40
of a person appearing for the prosecution. Subsection (2),
therefore, does not apply.
Subsection 590AE(3) provides: 
"A thing is also in the possession for the prosecution 50
if -
(a) the thing is in the possession of -

(i) for a prosecution conducted by the director of
public prosecutions - the director; or
(ii) for a prosecution conducted by the police

service - the police service; and

(b) the arresting officer or a person appearing for the

prosecution -

1-7 60

(i) is aware of the existence of the thing; and

(ii)is, or would be, able to locate the thing 1
without unreasonable effort."

It is common ground that the present prosecution is being
conducted by the director of public prosecutions not

necessarily within the meaning of the Code but for practical 10
purposes within that meaning mutardis mutandis as picked up by
the Judiciary Act in applying the Queensland provisions to a
Commonwealth prosecution. I hope I may be forgiven,
therefore, for saying perhaps somewhat elliptically and
shorthandedly that the prosecution is being conducted by the 20
director of public prosecutions.
However, it is at least proved and probably, I think, is
common ground that the director of public prosecutions does
not have possession of the requested documents. 30
It is also admitted by the Crown that a person appearing for
the prosecution is aware of the existence of these documents
and is or would be able to locate them without unreasonable
effort. In other words, the elements of subsection 3(b) are 40
satisfied.
The question that is in issue between the parties is whether a
thing is within the possession of the prosecution when either
paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) is satisfied or only when both 50
of those paragraphs are satisfied.
Putting it in the more traditional, if somewhat inaccurate way
of expressing the matter, does "and" at the end of
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subparagraph (a) mean "or"?

1

In support of the proposition that it did, Mr Walker SC and Mr

Byrne QC for the applicants submitted that the word did mean
"or". They pointed to the disclosure obligation set out in

section 590AB(1) as governing the approach which should be 10
taken to the case and to the decision of the Court of Appeal
in The Queen v. Rollason (2008) 1 QdR 85 as supporting an
interpretation of chapter division 3 generous to the accused.
They also referred to the point that it would make no sense to 20
construe subsection (3) otherwise because to do so would mean
that paragraph 3(a)(1) would cover virtually the same ground
as part of subsection (2) and to the fact that the adding of a
requirement to satisfy paragraph (b) to the requirement for
the director to be in possession of the thing under paragraph 30
(a) would serve little purpose and would leave the provisions
open to abuse.
In response, Mr MacSporran SC for the Crown submitted that the
word "and" should be given its ordinary conjunctive meaning. 40

He submitted that the examples of duplication relied on by the applicants were marginal cases and that in most cases the interpretation for which he contended would be a practical interpretation.

50

In support of his submission it can also be said that the Parliament has used the word "or" within subparagraph (a) when it plainly meant "or", and within subparagraph (b) it has used the word "and" when it plainly meant "and".

1-9 60

I accept the attractiveness of the semantic reasoning and the argument put forward by Mr MacSporran. It is a large thing for the Court to do to find that words in an Act of Parliament do not bear their ordinary meaning; but the fact is that for a

10

long time, probably hundreds of years, Courts have been
reading "and" to mean "or" where the context plainly requires

that to be done.

In my judgment, Mr Walker's submissions were correct. The

20

Act, it seems to me, clearly requires that paragraph (a) or paragraph (b) be satisfied in order for a thing to be in the possession of the prosecution but does not require both to be satisfied.

30

The submissions about impracticability if the opposite meaning is adopted are, in my view, powerful and the approach which should be taken is indicated by section 590AB(1) and by the decision in Rollason.

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I therefore think that the applications of the accused should succeed.

...

HIS HONOUR: The application by the ACC is dismissed, costs

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are reserved.

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