Pub Charity Inc v Department of Internal Affairs

Case

[2013] NZHC 1160

21 May 2013

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND WELLINGTON REGISTRY

CIV-2012-485-705 [2013] NZHC 1160

UNDER  the Judicature Amendment Act 1972, Part

30 of the High Court Rules, and the
Declaratory Judgments Act 1908

IN THE MATTER OF     an application for judicial review and/or for a declaratory judgment

BETWEEN  PUB CHARITY INC Plaintiff

ANDTHE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS

Defendant

Hearing:         14 May 2013

Counsel:         FMR Cooke and M S Smith for Plaintiff

K M Muller and A B Sintenie for Defendant

Judgment:      21 May 2013

In accordance with r 11.5 I direct that the delivery time of this judgment is 3.00 pm on the 21st day of May 2013.

RESERVED JUDGMENT OF MACKENZIE J

[1]      This is an application by the defendant for particular discovery against the plaintiff.

[2]      The Secretary for Internal Affairs, the Chief Executive of the defendant, has statutory functions under the Gambling Act 2003 (the Act).  These proceedings are

PUB CHARITY INC V THE DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS HC WN CIV-2012-485-705 [21 May

2013]

concerned with actions taken in the exercise of those functions.  I therefore refer to the defendant, for convenience, as “the Secretary”.

[3]      The plaintiff (Pub Charity) is the holder of a class 4 operator’s licence under the Act.   On 2 July 2010, the Secretary gave notice under s 59 of the Act of a proposal to suspend that licence.   The notice advised that an audit report had identified   two   reserves   in   the   financial   statements   for   the   year   ended

30 September 2006 of $11.8 million and $6.6 million respectively, and asserted that those funds had been accumulated in breach of reg 11 of the Gambling (Class 4 Net Proceeds) Regulations 2004 (the Regulations), and contrary to a condition of Pub Charity’s  operator’s  licence.    Pub  Charity  disputed  the  notice,  and  exchanges between the parties culminated in the issuing of this proceeding in April 2012.

[4]      The essence of Pub Charity’s contention, as stated in the original statement of claim, was that the amount in the two reserves, totalling $18.4 million, was not funds available for immediate distribution in terms of the Regulations because:

(a)      the expense incurred in purchasing machines had to be deducted from this amount and was therefore not cash able to be distributed;  and

(b)part of the amount was distributed after the end of the 2006 financial year in accordance with the Regulations.

[5]      The original statement of claim sought, under the Declaratory Judgments

Act 1908, the following declarations:

(a)       that the plaintiff is compliant with the requirements of reg 11 of the

Regulations;  and

(b)that the plaintiff has distributed all or nearly all of the net proceeds from the class 4 gambling during its financial year or within three months after the end of its financial year.

[6]      The  defendant  issued  a  notice  requiring  further  particulars.    It  sought particulars of the expense incurred in the purchase of gaming machines, and of the

amount distributed after the end of the 2006 financial year.  The requested particulars were  not  provided.    Instead,  in  November 2012  Pub  Charity  filed  an  amended statement  of  claim.     That  statement  of  claim  essentially  repeated  the  earlier pleadings, and sought the same relief.  It differed from the original in that the figures were altered to reflect the accounts for the 2011 financial year.  Those figures were not pleaded in a way which gave the particulars which had been requested.   In a subsequent case management memorandum, counsel for the defendant expressed the view that  the amended  statement  of claim  “appears to  change the focus  of the proceeding very substantially”.  The memorandum signalled an intention to apply for particular discovery.

[7]      In  February 2013,  new  counsel  instructed  by  Pub  Charity  filed  a  third amended statement of claim.[1]   That statement of claim is more detailed.  It no longer seeks declarations that Pub Charity had complied with its obligations.  It says:

[1] There is no second amended statement of claim.

16.      Two issues of dispute have arisen between the Department and Pub

Charity in this respect:

16.1First  whether  the  cost  to  Class  4  operators  of  acquiring gambling equipment is to be deducted from gross proceeds for the purpose of determining “net proceeds”?

16.2Second what is the correct way of accounting for the costs of acquiring gambling equipment in a Class 4 operator’s calculation of net proceeds?

[8]      The relief sought by Pub Charity is in these terms:

1.a  declaration  that  the  cost  to  a  Class  4  operator  of  acquiring gambling equipment used in the relevant gaming conducted by the operator is to be deducted from gross proceeds for the purpose of determining   “net   proceeds”   under   the   Act   and   associated Regulations;

2.a declaration that a Class 4 operator is to account for the cost to the operator of acquiring gambling equipment by including the full purchase price of the equipment in the calculation of net proceeds for  the  year  in  which  the  equipment  is  acquired,  rather  than amortising the equipment on a useful life basis;

3.a  declaration  that  when  the  operator  later  sells  the  gambling equipment it has purchased, the proceeds from sale of the equipment become part of the gross proceeds in the year of sale;

4.a declaration that the calculation of net proceeds should not include any depreciation charged;

5.        an order setting aside the Department’s proposal to suspend.

[9]      Following the filing of the third amended statement of claim, the Secretary has filed the present application for particular discovery of the following categories of documents:

1.Data, work papers, ledger sheets, calculations, board papers, reports and  other  documents  held  by  the  applicant  which  relate  to  its accounts and the legal issue of whether the proposal to suspend is invalid.

2.Data, work papers, ledger sheets, calculations, board papers, reports and  other  documents  held  by  the  applicant’s  accountants  and auditors which relate to its accounts and the legal issue of whether the proposal to suspend is invalid.

3.Board papers, reports and other documents held by the applicant relating  to  accounting  treatment  of  the  capital  cost  of  gambling assets purchased in each year ended 30 September 2004, 2005, 2006 and 2007.

4.Documents held by the plaintiff’s accountants and auditors relating to accounting treatment of the capital cost of gambling assets purchased in each year ended 30 September 2004, 2005, 2006 and

2007.

[10]     I have briefly described the somewhat tortuous procedural path which this proceeding has followed.   The changes to the statement of claim have in some respect widened, and in other respects narrowed, the proceeding.  The relief pleaded in the original and first amended statements of claim was the making of declarations which, according to the heading of the pleadings, were sought under the Declaratory Judgments Act.   In the third amended statement of claim, the declarations are not sought  only under the  Declaratory Judgments Act.   The Judicature Amendment Act 1972 and Part 30 of the High Court Rules are also relied on.  The wider relief available under the Judicature Amendment Act arguably widens the proceeding. However, the declarations originally sought were wider in scope than the sort of declaration described in s 3 of the Declaratory Judgments Act.  The declarations 1 to

4 sought in the third amended statement of claim are narrower, and might fall within s 3.  In that respect, the proceeding has been narrowed.

[11]     I consider that, despite the widening of the statutory basis for the relief sought, the subject matter of this proceeding, as now framed in the third amended statement of claim, is narrower than it was in the earlier pleadings.  The proceeding seeks declarations on what are, on their face, questions of law.  The essence of the question, as it is framed in the declarations sought, is whether, in calculating net proceeds from class 4 gambling, the cost of the gambling equipment used is to be accounted for:

(a)       as an expense when the equipment is acquired;  or

(b)as a capital item, to be amortised as an expense over time by an allowance for depreciation.

[12]     The answer to that question seems likely to depend on the construction of the relevant statute and regulations, and so to involve questions of law.

[13]     Declarations 1 to 4 are framed in a general way.  They are not specific to Pub Charity.   They do not require any determination of facts specific to Pub Charity’s situation.   There are paragraphs in the statement of claim which assert that Pub Charity has deducted the cost of acquiring gambling equipment in the year in which it has been obtained, and has not subsequently claimed depreciation.   These paragraphs are, in their context, explanatory of the background to the issues.  They are not, as I read them, assertions raising a disputed factual issue to be resolved at trial.   It appears that factual findings on them will not be required to answer the questions in declarations 1 to 4.

[14]     An important principle underlying the new discovery rules is that discovery must be proportionate to the subject matter of the proceeding.[2]     Because of the narrow scope of the declarations sought, I consider that the documents sought are not directly relevant and that discovery of them would not be proportionate to the subject

matter of this proceeding.  I set out my reasons for that conclusion.

[2] High Court Rules, r 8.2.

[15]     The declarations sought in 1 to 4 will not resolve all issues between the parties.   The answers will have to be applied to Pub Charity’s situation.   Factual findings specific to Pub Charity’s case will be required.   An examination of Pub Charity’s affairs will be needed to determine whether, having regard to the legal answers which the Court gives to the questions posed in this proceeding, Pub Charity’s treatment of its funds complies with the Regulations and its operator’s licence.  A detailed examination of Pub Charity’s records may be necessary for that purpose.

[16]     Pub  Charity  has  confined  the  scope  of  this  proceeding  to  the  general questions of law which it has identified.  For the purposes of this application, I must take the pleadings as they stand. Approaching the matter in that way, I consider:

(a)      that the discovery sought is not proportionate to the subject matter of this proceeding on the pleadings as they stand;  and

(b)that discovery which might subsequently become necessary to resolve the issues between the parties as a consequence of this proceeding should not be ordered at this stage.

[17]     A further relevant consideration is that the Secretary’s ability to obtain access to the documents which are now sought  does not depend only on an order for discovery.   Section 333  of the Act contains a power  to require information and documents for the exercise of the Secretary’s statutory functions.  The availability of that power weighs against the making of an order for discovery of documents which may be relevant, not to answering the questions posed, but to applying those answers to Pub Charity’s situation.

[18]     Ms Muller submits that reliance on s 333 is not appropriate, and an order for discovery is necessary, because there is a limit on the time for which information and documents  must  be  retained  by  the  holder  of  a  licence.    She  submits  that,  if discovery  is  not  ordered  now,  the  passage  of  time  before  this  proceeding  is determined may mean that documents which would now be available may have been destroyed.  I do not find that submission persuasive.  As I have said, after the legal

question is answered, there must be a factual investigation of what Pub Charity has done, so that the law as declared by the Court can be applied to it.  There is, on the face of s 333, no reason why the power to require information and documents for the purposes of that investigation could not be exercised now.  In applying the law to the facts as disclosed by the information and documents, the Secretary may need to await the decision of this Court on the issues posed in this proceeding.  That does not mean that the Secretary must await that decision before taking steps under s 333 to obtain the information and documents.

[19] In my discussion to this point, I have had regard only to the relief sought in declarations 1 to 4, set out at [8]. There is one aspect in which the prayer for relief goes beyond declarations as to the general legal position. That is the prayer in 5, for an order setting aside the proposal to suspend. It is not clear whether, if all or any of declarations 1 to 4 were made in the terms sought by Pub Charity, the proposal to suspend in the letter dated 2 July 2010 would necessarily be left without a sufficient foundation to remain in place. Therefore, the relief sought in 5 might not depend solely on the answers to 1 to 4. It is however clear from the statement of claim that the only basis upon which Pub Charity seeks to have the proposal to suspend set aside is the assertion that the proposal is based on a wrong legal interpretation on the issues raised by Pub Charity in this proceeding. The pleadings do not permit Pub Charity to rely on any considerations to support the relief sought at 5, other than those raised in the two issues identified and encapsulated in the declarations sought at 1 to 4. The references to the setting aside of the proposal to suspend in paragraphs 37 and 38 are similarly limited by the context of the pleadings. If the answers to 1 to 4 do not lead to the conclusion that the proposal to suspend cannot stand, then the relief sought at 5 would necessarily be refused. Therefore, the apparently wider relief sought at 5 does not extend the subject matter of this proceeding in a way which makes discovery of the categories of documents sought proportionate to this proceeding.

[20]     For these reasons, the application for particular discovery is dismissed.  Pub Charity is entitled to costs, on this application, which I fix on a 2B basis plus disbursements.

“A D MacKenzie J”

Solicitors:         Paul Cheng & Co, Wellington, for Plaintiff

Crown Law, Wellington, for Defendant


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