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Xiao v Department of Internal Affairs [2019] NZCA 326; [2019] 3 NZLR 622 (23 July 2019)
Last Updated: 16 May 2021
For a Court ready (fee required) version please follow this link
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
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XIAOLAN XIAO Appellant
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AND
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DEPARTMENT OF INTERNAL AFFAIRS Respondent
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Hearing:
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1 July 2019
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Court:
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Courtney, Venning and Dunningham JJ
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Counsel:
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Appellant in person D G Johnstone for Respondent S M Hunter
counsel assisting
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Judgment:
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23 July 2019 at 3.30 pm
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JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
The appeal is
dismissed.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Courtney J)
Introduction
- [1] This appeal
concerns the application of the default judgment procedure under the High Court
Rules 2016 to proceedings in which
pecuniary penalties are sought.
- [2] In September
2016 the Department of Internal Affairs (DIA) obtained judgment by default
against Ping An Finance (Group) New Zealand
Ltd (Ping An) and its sole
shareholder and director Xiaolan
Xiao.[1] The judgment followed a
formal proof hearing before Toogood J. The Judge held that Ping An had
committed five civil liability acts
under the Anti-Money Laundering and
Countering Finance and Terrorism Act 2009 (AML/CFT Act) and imposed pecuniary
penalties on the
company totalling $5.29 million. The Judge also granted
injunctive relief, restraining both Ping An and Mr Xiao from carrying out
any
financial activities that would cause either to be deemed a financial
institution as defined by the AML/CFT Act.
- [3] More than a
year after the judgment was entered, Mr Xiao applied to set aside the judgment
in relation to both him and Ping An.
Ping An, which was by then in liquidation,
was not party to the application. Toogood J refused to set aside
the judgment.[2] Mr Xiao
appeals.[3]
- [4] Mr Xiao does
not challenge the Judge’s finding on liability. His appeal rests
primarily on the assertion that he should
have been notified of the date of the
formal proof hearing and served with the documents relied on to support the
claim so that he
and Ping An were apprised of the basis on which pecuniary
penalties were being sought, and given the opportunity to be heard on that
aspect.
- [5] Counsel
assisting the Court, Mr Hunter argued that:
(a) Rule 15.9,
which provides for judgment to be entered by default, does not provide adequate
protection of a defendant’s right
to natural justice, guaranteed by s
27(1) of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 (NZBORA) in cases where
pecuniary penalties
are sought; and
(b) the judgment should be set aside as having been obtained irregularly
because, in fixing the pecuniary penalties, the Judge relied
on information that
went beyond the pleadings.
Standing
- [6] Mr Xiao
appeals against the pecuniary penalties imposed on Ping An though he, himself,
is subject only to the injunctive relief.
Mr Hunter submitted, correctly, that a
non-party prejudiced by a judgment entered by default can apply to set aside
the judgment.[4] He argued that,
although the pecuniary penalties do not affect Mr Xiao, he is nevertheless
affected by the judgment because the
findings on which the pecuniary
penalty orders were made were, in part, based on findings of deliberate
misconduct by him which was
not pleaded and on which he had no opportunity to
comment.
- [7] In fact, the
Judge made very little comment about Mr Xiao personally. The pleaded acts
of civil liability, the findings of liability
and the determination of
the starting points for the pecuniary penalties were based on the conduct
of Ping An. Of course, that conduct
was effectively that of Mr Xiao, as the
sole shareholder and director, as the Judge noted when he commented that
“the widespread
and wholesale failure of Ping An to meet its obligations
must have occurred with the knowledge and support of Mr Xiao as an active
director and shareholder fully engaged in the day to day operation of the
business”.[5] But Mr
Xiao’s status in the company was pleaded and it must have been obvious to
him that the allegations of civil liability
acts were founded almost entirely on
his conduct.
- [8] It is,
however, true that the Judge uplifted the pecuniary penalties he considered
otherwise appropriate on the basis of misconduct
by Mr Xiao in relation to the
DIA investigation. This had not been pleaded and was contained in the affidavit
relied on by the DIA
at the formal proof stage. We accept that, from a
reputational perspective, Mr Xiao could claim to be affected in a way that
would
permit him to apply to set aside the judgment and appeal the dismissal of
that application.
The default judgment
The proceedings against Ping An and Mr Xiao
- [9] Ping An
carried on a financial services business, which it described as “changing
foreign currency”. For most of
the relevant time it was a registered
financial service provider under the Financial Service Providers (Registration
and Dispute
Resolution) Act 2008. It was subject to the requirements of the
AML/CFT Act, which was enacted for the purposes of detecting, deterring
and
preventing money laundering and the financing of terrorism through the financial
system. These, relevantly, included the obligations
of conducting customer
due diligence, monitoring accounts and transactions, reporting suspicious
activity and maintaining records,
including sufficient records to enable
transactions to be reconstructed.
- [10] The DIA
investigated Ping An over a 12 month period. The company had undertaken more
than 500 transactions involving the transfer
of sums over $50,000. It had been
the subject of numerous suspicious transaction reports by other reporting
entities in relation
to transactions exceeding $31 million in total. Ping An
itself had never submitted a suspicious transaction report.
- [11] In 2016 the
DIA applied to commence proceedings against Ping An and Mr Xiao by way of
originating application. The application
and an affidavit in support (sworn by
a DIA officer, Mr Milnes) were served on Ping An and Mr
Xiao.[6] Mr Xiao appeared in person
at the hearing of the application. Ping An was not represented. Downs J
declined the application on
the basis that an originating application was not
appropriate given the potential
penalties.[7]
- [12] The DIA
then commenced proceedings by way of statement of claim. The statement of
claim and notice of proceeding were served
on Ping An and Mr Xiao on 18 January
2017. They were in the usual form, including the advice that each had 25
working days to file
a statement of defence and that if they failed to do so
“the plaintiff may at once proceed to judgment on the plaintiff’s
claim and judgment may be given in your absence”.
- [13] The
statement of claim alleged five breaches of obligations imposed on reporting
entities under the AML/CFT Act, namely failure
to conduct customer due
diligence,[8] failure to monitor
accounts (including identity
checks),[9] failure to keep proper
records,[10] and failure to report
suspicious transactions.[11] The
prayer for relief sought “a pecuniary penalty pursuant to s 90(1) of the
Act in such sum as this honourable Court considers
just”. The DIA
also sought injunctive relief and costs against both defendants.
- [14] Neither
Ping An nor Mr Xiao filed a statement of defence. The DIA filed a memorandum
dated 3 March 2017 requesting that the
proceedings be listed for formal proof
under r 15.9 of the High Court Rules. The memorandum was filed by email and
copied to Mr
Xiao using a gmail address that he had previously
used.[12]
- [15] A formal
proof hearing was scheduled for 12 April 2017. That date was not required to
be, and was not, notified to Ping An or
Mr
Xiao.[13] At the hearing the DIA
relied on the same affidavit that Mr Milnes had provided in relation to the
originating application together
with a supplementary affidavit by Mr Milnes.
The default judgment
- [16] In his
decision Toogood J reviewed the legislative framework under which
the proceedings were brought, including the availability
of maximum
penalties for civil liability acts.
- [17] In relation
to the alleged failure to conduct customer due diligence the Judge held that, by
virtue of the amounts, frequency
and timing of the transactions relied on by the
DIA, Ping An should have realised that the transactions were either complex or
unusually
large for the purposes of s 22 of the AML/CFT Act, thereby requiring
“enhanced” customer due
diligence.[14] He concluded that
there had been widespread failure by Ping An to conduct customer due diligence
as required.[15]
- [18] In relation
to the alleged failure to adequately monitor accounts and transactions the Judge
found that there were 122 customers
with whom Ping An was in a business
relationship that required it to undertake account monitoring to identify
whether grounds existed
for reporting a suspicious transaction. He concluded
that the paucity of records made it clear that Ping An never reviewed the
account
activity, transaction behaviour or customer information for those 122
customers.[16]
- [19] In relation
to the allegation of entering into or continuing a business relationship with a
person who had failed to produce
or provide satisfactory evidence of identity
the Judge held that the 122 customers with whom or with which Ping An had
entered into
or continued business relationships had failed to produce
satisfactory evidence of
identity.[17]
- [20] In relation
to the alleged failure to keep records, required by s
49(1),[18] the Judge found
that, overall, Ping An had failed to keep appropriate records for 1,588
transactions which totalled $105,413,026.44
and had failed to keep records for
the identity and verification of 362 customers and records of the
establishment and continuation
of 122 business
relationships.[19]
- [21] In relation
to the alleged failure to report suspicious transactions, the Judge considered
the requisite mental element in some
detail, concluding that it was an objective
test.[20] He concluded that 173
transactions undertaken by Ping An during the relevant period were
objectively suspicious and required the
filing of a suspicious transaction
report, which it had not done.[21]
He also commented that “Mr Xiao and Ms Xu were directly involved in
activities giving rise to suspicion, leading to an inference
that they may well
have been parties to wilful money
laundering”.[22]
- [22] In
considering the appropriate penalties in respect of each of the proven civil
liability acts, the Judge identified the relevant
factors to take into account.
In addition to the matters set out at s 90(4), the Judge identified three
further factors, namely,
the degree to which the conduct was initiated or
condoned by officers or senior management of the company, whether steps had been
taken to ensure compliance with the act including policies and steps to educate
officers and employees and whether there had been
full and frank disclosure and
cooperation with the Department, the Judge regarded Ping An’s
breaches as being at the “higher
end of non-compliance” with the
Act’s requirements, describing its non-compliance as amounting “to a
calculated
and contemptuous disregard for the AML/CFT
requirements”.[23]
- [23] The Judge
then proceeded to fix pecuniary penalties in respect of each of the civil
liability acts. In relation to the failure
to conduct customer due diligence,
which carried a maximum penalty of $2 million for each civil liability act, the
Judge imposed
a penalty of $1.3 million, which he considered necessary “to
mark the extent of the breach of a fundamentally important AML/CFT
requirement
and to act as a
deterrent”.[24] In relation
to the failure to adequately monitor accounts, which the Judge considered
overlapped with the failure to report suspicious
transactions, and which carried
a maximum penalty of $1 million, he took a starting point of
$500,000.[25] In relation to
entering into or continuing a business relationship with a person who had not
produced or provided satisfactory evidence
of identity, which overlapped with
the customer due diligence obligation and failure to keep records, and carried a
maximum penalty
of $1 million, the Judge took a starting point of
$500,000.[26] In relation to
the failure to keep records, which carried a maximum penalty of $2 million,
the Judge took a starting point of $1
million to recognise the degree of overlap
with other obligations such as the failure to carry out customer due
diligence.[27] Finally, in relation
to the failure to report suspicious transactions, for which no maximum penalty
was specified, the Judge determined
that a notional ceiling of $2 million would
be appropriate and took a starting point of $1.3
million.[28]
- [24] The Judge
then turned to consider aggravating and mitigating factors. It is at this point
in the assessment that the Judge explicitly
took into account conduct by
Mr Xiao. On the issue of full and frank disclosure and cooperation with
the DIA in its investigation
the Judge observed that “Ping An and Mr Xiao,
however, did not simply fail to cooperate; they provided misleading information
to the Department ...”.[29]
The Judge then said:
[124] The attempts by Mr Xiao to mislead
the Department in its investigation accentuate Ping An’s non-compliance
and further
heightens the seriousness of the contraventions. Such efforts
to frustrate the AML/CFT supervisors in their enforcement role must
be met with
a stern rebuke from the Court.
[125] Mr Xiao and Ping An are not charged with misleading the Department as
the AML/CFT supervisor, which is a separate offence under
s 103 of the Act,
but the misleading behaviour warrants an uplift of 15 per cent from the starting
point in each category of non-compliance.
As indicated below ... the efforts to
mislead are also relevant to the application for an injunction restraining them
from participating
in the industry.
- [25] Finally, in
relation to the injunctive relief, the Judge considered that, in light of Ping
An’s repeated contraventions
of the Act, if an injunction was not granted
it was likely to engage in similar financial activity in such a way to
contravene the
Act. Then, in relation to Mr Xiao, the Judge
said:
[135] Mr Xiao has also demonstrated a complete disregard for
the Act’s requirements, if not a wilful intention to flout them.
His
failures as a director and manager of the business led directly to the scale and
severity of Ping An’s breaches. Moreover,
his misleading behaviour during
the course of the Department’s investigation indicates a strong
probability that if he is not
restrained from engaging in financial activities,
Mr Xiao will continue to ignore obligations under the Act to which any other
entity
in which he is involved, in any capacity, may be subject. ...
The application to set aside the default judgment
- [26] In October
2017 Mr Xiao filed an application to set aside the default judgment. The
application was supported by affidavits filed
subsequently, dated 22 November
2017, 14 December 2017 and 15 February 2018. He asserted that there had been a
miscarriage of justice
because his failure to appear at the formal proof hearing
was excusable, that there was a substantial defence and that the DIA’s
“methodology and proceeding was cavalier”. He said that he was
unaware of the hearing date and not familiar with the
procedure. His affidavits
did not, however, provide any detail as to what matters he or Ping An would have
raised by way of defence
or in relation to penalty. Mr Xiao appeared at the
hearing of the application and was cross-examined.
- [27] Toogood J
stated the relevant test by which an application to set aside a default judgment
was to be considered, namely whether
it is just in all the circumstances to do
so; the ultimate issue was whether there was a possible miscarriage of justice
if the judgment
was allowed to
stand.[30] He identified as
relevant considerations whether the failure to appear was excusable, whether
there was a substantial ground of
defence and whether there would be irreparable
injury to the party that had obtained the judgment if the judgment was set
aside.[31]
- [28] The Judge
then reviewed Mr Xiao’s grounds of application and his evidence. He noted
that Mr Xiao had read and understood
the notice of proceeding which advised him
of the consequences of not filing a statement of defence and considered that
Mr Xiao did
not misunderstand those
consequences.[32] He noted that Mr
Xiao had communicated with the DIA’s solicitors following receipt of the
notice of proceeding and statement
of claim asking for advice and information
about legal representation, which he was
given.[33]
- [29] The Judge
held that Mr Xiao did receive the email of 3 March 2017 which signalled that the
DIA had applied to obtain judgment
by
default.[34] However he did not
regard that issue as relevant because the DIA was not obliged to notify Mr Xiao
of the request for a formal proof
hearing in any
event.[35]
- [30] The Judge
refused the application solely on the ground that there was no basis on which to
find that Mr Xiao had a substantial
defence:[36]
Most
significantly, Mr Xiao has not provided any evidence or reasoned grounds to
support a challenge to the findings in the judgment.
He has said only that the
Department’s methodology and proceeding was cavalier and that he had a
substantial defence.
... Nothing in the material presented by Mr Xiao in support of the
application to set this judgment aside goes anywhere near persuading
me that
judgment by default ought not to have been entered.
Appeal
- [31] Mr
Xiao’s case on appeal is that pecuniary penalties are properly viewed as
akin to a criminal sanction because their potentially
draconian effects are
punitive in substance. Therefore, natural justice requires greater protection
than the civil procedure rules
provide. Specifically, defendants ought to be
notified of the formal proof hearing date and served with the material relied on
to
set the pecuniary penalty so they have the opportunity to be heard on
penalty. This could be achieved by serving an amended pleading,
affidavits and
submissions on penalty.
- [32] Alternatively,
it is said that Ping An and Mr Xiao should have had the benefit of such
notification in the particular circumstances
of this case; the Judge’s
finding of misconduct by Mr Xiao, which resulted in a 15% uplift of the penalty,
was based on conduct
not signalled in DIA’s pleadings and instead on
evidence not provided to Mr Xiao and on counsel’s submissions.
Because
Mr Xiao did not have the opportunity to be heard on penalty, the
judgment should be regarded as irregularly obtained and should be
set aside as
of right.
- [33] Although Mr
Xiao had advanced his application to set aside the default judgment on the basis
that he should have been advised
of the formal proof hearing date, the more
sophisticated arguments now being advanced were not put to the
Judge.
Are the current procedural rules adequate?
- [34] A central
aspect of natural justice is the right to be heard. Mr Hunter relied on the
statement by Elias J (as she then was)
in Ali v Deportation Review
Authority:[37]
Fundamental
to the principles of natural justice is the requirement that where the
circumstances of decision making require that someone
affected by it be given an
opportunity to be heard, that person must have reasonable opportunity to present
his case and reasonable
notice of the case he has to meet. The more significant
the decision the higher the standards of disclosure and fair treatment.
- [35] The
question in this case is whether the current rules of procedure governing
default judgment provide defendants faced with
a claim for pecuniary penalties
an adequate opportunity to be heard. Rule 15.9 of the High Court Rules sets out
the procedure for
obtaining judgment by default by formal proof where the
claim is other than a liquidated
demand.[38] Proceedings in which
pecuniary penalties are sought are not specifically mentioned but it is not in
dispute that the High Court
Rules apply to such cases.
[39]
- [36] Rule 15.9
provides that:
(1) This rule applies if, or to the extent that, the
defendant does not file a statement of defence within the number of working
days
required by the notice of proceeding, and the plaintiff seeks judgment by
default for other than a liquidated demand.
(2) The proceeding must be listed for formal proof and no notice is required
to be given to the defendant.
(3) After a proceeding is listed for a formal proof hearing, no statement of
defence may be filed without the leave of a Judge granted
on the ground
that there will or may be a miscarriage of justice if judgment by default is
entered, and on such terms as to time
or otherwise as the Judge thinks just.
(4) The plaintiff must, before or at the formal proof hearing, file
affidavit evidence establishing, to a Judge’s satisfaction,
each cause of
action relied on and, if damages are sought, providing sufficient information to
enable the Judge to calculate and
fix the
damages.[[40]]
(5) If the Judge before or at the formal proof hearing considers that any
deponent of an affidavit filed under subclause (4) should
attend to give
additional evidence, the Judge may direct accordingly and adjourn
the hearing for that purpose.
- [37] Rule 15.10
makes provision for judgments obtained by default to be set
aside:
Any judgment obtained by default under rule 15.7, 15.8, or
15.9 may be set aside or varied by the courts on such terms as it thinks
just,
if it appears to the court that there has been, or may have been, a
miscarriage of justice.
- [38] In arguing
that these rules are insufficient to protect defendants facing pecuniary
penalties, Mr Hunter pointed to additional
procedural safeguards of the kind
provided in the Australian cases Australian Communications and Media
Authority v Mobilegate Ltd (No.
4)[41] and Australian
Competition and Consumer Commission v Yellow Page Marketing BV (No.
2).[42] Mr Hunter
submitted that in both cases the Australian Judges had been careful to
analyse the fairness of the procedural steps taken,
which included notifying the
defendants of the claims against them and the hearing dates.
- [39] In
Mobilegate pecuniary penalties were imposed in respect of contraventions
of the Spam Act 2003 by way of a default judgment. Mr Hunter drew our attention
to the Judge’s reference to directions previously given requiring
the
applicant to serve on the respondents written submissions together with
affidavits to be relied on in respect of penalty. In
Yellow Page
Marketing pecuniary penalties were imposed pursuant to the Trade Practices
Act 1974 by default. The Judge noted that the respondents had been served with
the notices of motion seeking leave to file an amended application.
- [40] We note,
however, that order 35A of the Federal Court Rules 1979, which applied to both
the Yellow Page and Mobilegate cases and provided for default
judgment where a defendant was in procedural default, do not include a specific
procedure in relation
to the setting down of formal proof hearings. We infer
that the directions given in each of those cases were ones required by the
courts in the particular cases. Such directions could be made in New
Zealand under r 1.4(4) if a judge considered it necessary.
We therefore do not
see these cases as assisting Mr Hunter’s argument that, as a general
proposition, greater procedural protections
are available in Australia than
here.
- [41] Nor do we
consider that greater procedural protections are necessary in New Zealand.
We accept that pecuniary penalties may be
punitive in substance.
Those imposed under the AML/CFT are imposed primarily for the purposes of
deterrence and denunciation. That
does not, however, mean that different
procedural rules should apply to such claims as opposed to other forms of civil
proceedings.
- [42] A defendant
who fails to take steps to defend a proceeding will have been served with a
statement of claim that satisfies the
pleading requirements set out in
pt 5 sub-pt 4 of the High Court Rules, including identifying the distinct
causes of action and
facts relied on for
it[43] and specifying the relief
sought.[44] A defendant served with
proceedings brought under the AML/CFT Act is taken to know that pecuniary
penalties of up to $1 million
and $2 million for each civil liability act could
be imposed.
- [43] The
defendant will also have been served with a notice of proceeding stating the
consequences of not filing a statement of defence
from which the defendant will
know that if steps are not taken the plaintiff may obtain judgment by default
without further notice
to the defendant. At the formal proof hearing, a judge
must be satisfied by affidavit evidence of each cause of action relied on
and
sufficient information must be provided to allow the Judge to calculate and fix
damages.[45] If a judge is not
satisfied, the deponent can be required to give further evidence. If prejudice
does result such that a miscarriage
of justice occurs or is likely to occur, the
position can be rectified by an application to vary or set aside under s
15.10.[46]
- [44] Rules 15.9
and 15.10 therefore operate in tandem to provide an effective procedure that
caters fairly for the interests of both
parties. Plaintiffs are provided with a
mechanism for proving claims where a defendant has failed to take any step to
defend the
claim. Defendants have the protection to being able to apply to set
aside or vary the judgment in the event of a miscarriage of justice.
We
consider that this regime provides adequate protection and do not see any need
to require service of evidence and submissions
relating to penalty prior to a
formal proof hearing. To the contrary, adding a requirement for the service of
further documents
before a plaintiff can proceed to judgment would simply
increase the cost to the plaintiff and cause further delay, especially where
service is difficult (for example where a defendant has gone overseas).
Moreover, such a requirement would also conflict with r
6.20 which sets out that
a party who does not provide an address for service does not have an entitlement
to be served with further
documents.
- [45] Notably,
the adequacy of procedural protections in cases in which pecuniary penalties are
sought was considered by the Law
Commission.[47] Acknowledging that
the rules of civil procedure were not designed for cases in which pecuniary
penalties were sought, the Law Commission
nevertheless did not consider it
necessary to recommend changes to the procedural rules to accommodate pecuniary
penalty regimes:
[12.14] The Law Commission does not consider that
pecuniary penalty proceedings should take place within the criminal jurisdiction
of the courts. At present, the alternative that presents itself is the civil
jurisdiction, which brings with it the rules of civil
evidence and procedure.
But those rules of evidence and procedure were not designed with a State imposed
penalty in mind. Pecuniary
penalties therefore differ from the forms of
proceeding for which the rules are most apt.
[12.15] Having said this, where pecuniary penalty cases are concerned, we are
not aware of the courts encountering particular difficulties
or raising
particular objections when applying civil procedural rules. Submitters did not
raise any specific concerns in this area,
nor has our subsequent consultation.
We have no evidence of substantive unfairness having occurred, or of particular
concern on
the part of those involved in pecuniary penalty proceedings about the
way the courts are handling them.
(Footnote omitted).
- [46] The Law
Commission also noted the effect of r 1.4(4) (to which we referred earlier)
which allows the court either on application
or on its own initiative to
“give any directions it thinks just”. It
concluded:
[12.16] This rule arguably provides judges with
sufficient scope to depart from particular High Court Rules where, given the
nature
of the proceedings, they will lead to unfairness. On balance, then, we
propose that the civil rules of evidence and procedure should
continue to
apply.
- [47] We
accordingly reject Mr Hunter’s argument that greater procedural
protections are required for cases involving pecuniary
penalties or that such
further protections were required in the particular circumstances of this case.
Was the default judgment obtained irregularly?
- [48] Mr Hunter
argued that the judgment obtained in this case offended the rule that a
plaintiff cannot go beyond its pleading when
obtaining formal proof because
the level of pecuniary penalty being sought was not indicated in the
statement of claim the DIA ought
not have been able to proceed to a hearing on
penalty. He relied on the decision in Richmond v Heskett Holdings
Ltd, a claim for damages under the Fair Trading Act 1986 in which
the statement of claim stated that the amount of the loss would be
specified
when once a valuation was
available.[48] Formal proof was
obtained on the basis of a valuation but without the valuation being provided to
the defendant beforehand. Penlington
J noted that a plaintiff seeking
judgment by default is entitled to such relief as is claimed in his statement of
claim and incidental
thereto but could not go beyond his
pleadings.[49]
- [49] The
statement in Richmond is uncontroversial but the present case is not
comparable to Richmond because the DIA was not required to prove what
level of penalty should be imposed. The purpose of pleadings is to inform the
opposing
party and the court of the essential basis for the claim or defence and
the necessary elements of it.[50]
There are specific requirements in relation to the pleading of the relief
sought, including the requirement that where the recovery
of a money sum is
sought the amount must be stated as precisely as
possible[51] and where special
damages are sought the amount must be
stated.[52] But where a pecuniary
penalty is sought under the AML/CFT Act it is for the Judge to set the
penalty based on his or her own assessment
of the
evidence.[53] We agree with the
submission made by Mr Johnstone, for the DIA that requiring plaintiff to plead
that a certain penalty should be
imposed would be inappropriate because it would
risk appearing to hamper a judge’s assessment.
- [50] Nor do we
consider that there is any basis for finding that Mr Milnes’ affidavits
should have been served prior to the
formal proof hearing. The DIA submitted
Mr Milnes’ affidavit in support of the application for default
judgment. It was entitled
to do so. Neither the affidavit evidence, nor the
findings based on it could fairly be described as going beyond the case
signalled
by the pleadings. As we have observed already, a defendant served with
a claim for pecuniary penalty under the AML/CFT Act is taken
to know
the potential exposure.
- [51] For these
reasons we do not accept that the judgment was irregularly obtained. In any
event, even an irregularly obtained judgment
will not inevitably be set aside.
The approach to judgments irregularly obtained was discussed by this Court in
EA v Rennie Cox Lawyers, which concerned a default judgment in respect of
legal fees.[54] The judgment had
been obtained on the basis of an application to extend time to apply for
applying for judgment by default where
the underlying proceeding had been deemed
discontinued under the District Court Rules as they then stood, without serving
the application.[55] Gilbert J,
giving the judgment for the Court said:
[20] In summary, where a
judgment has been irregularly obtained, there will almost always be a
miscarriage of justice such that the
judgment should be set aside without
considering the merits. However, that is not an inflexible rule that must be
applied in every
case, regardless of the circumstances. There may be cases where
the irregularity in obtaining the judgment was so minor and inconsequential
that
it could not have caused prejudice and there is no arguable defence. If the
court can safely conclude that there is no risk
of a miscarriage of justice it
might properly decline to set aside the judgment.
- [52] Ultimately,
this appeal must turn on whether Mr Xiao can show a miscarriage of justice as a
result of the judgment being entered.
This requires him to demonstrate that, had
he been given the opportunity to be heard at the formal proof hearing, the
outcome would
likely have been different. However, as Mr Hunter acknowledged,
Mr Xiao made no attempt to explain what evidence he might have adduced
(had
leave been given to do so) or what submissions might have been made that could
have resulted in a different outcome.
- [53] It was not
suggested by either Mr Xiao or Mr Hunter that any difference in liability could
have been achieved. However, Mr Hunter
submitted that it could not confidently
be said that the penalty would have been the same, had the defendants been
represented at
the formal proof hearing. To illustrate and support this
submission he pointed to Powell J’s decision in Department of Internal
Affairs v Qian Duoduo (QDD) as an example of the difference representation
at the penalty stage could result
in.[56]
- [54] It will be
recalled that the DIA’s application for leave to begin proceedings by
originating application was brought against
both Qian Duoduo Ltd (QDD) and Ping
An. In September 2018, more than a year after the default judgment had been
entered against Ping
An, QDD acknowledged similar breaches of the AML/CTF Act to
those committed by Ping An. Powell J imposed penalties totalling $356,000.
- [55] The
circumstances in which these penalties were imposed were rather different to the
present case. In our view QDD is not a helpful comparator. QDD had
acknowledged its breaches and the penalty hearing proceeded on the basis of an
agreed statement
of facts with additional evidence and cross-examination of both
DIA staff and the director and sole shareholder of QDD. In QDD the
company had sought professional advice as to its obligations and the Judge found
that the company had not intended to breach
the AML/CTF Act. The Judge also
concluded that the nature and extent of QDD’s civil liability acts
cumulatively stood at the
lower end of the spectrum. It is true that QDD
was also found to have misled the DIA during its investigation. However, since
that
conduct did not affect the nature and extent of the civil liability
acts committed by QDD and QDD had co-operated with the DIA in
relation to the
proceedings themselves the Judge imposed a modest ($25,000) uplift overall. We
are therefore not persuaded that
representation alone accounted for the
difference in outcomes.
- [56] Mr Hunter
also submitted that a point accepted by Powell J, that lack of compliance with
the AML/CFT regime was not used a selling
point and QDD’s customers were
unaware of it, could equally have been made for Ping An. It is not, however,
apparent the extent
to which this factor influenced the level of the penalty. In
any event, there was no evidence from Mr Xiao to support the assertion
that
Ping An would have been in a position to make the same submission.
- [57] Mr
Xiao’s application to set aside the judgment failed because Mr Xiao did
not provide any evidence, nor point to any ground
on which the claim might have
been defended so as to lead to a different outcome. It is reasonable to expect
that if such material
existed, it would have been advanced in this appeal.
However, nothing has been advanced on which we could conclude that, even if
Mr
Xiao had been present at the formal proof hearing, the outcome would have been
any different. As a result, Mr Xiao cannot show
either a miscarriage of
justice or the risk thereof.
Result
- [58] The appeal
is dismissed.
Solicitors:
Meredith Connell, Auckland
for the Respondent
[1] Department of Internal
Affairs v Ping An Finance (Group) New Zealand Co Ltd [2017] NZHC 2363,
[2018] 2 NZLR 552 [Liability judgment].
[2] Department of Internal
Affairs v Ping An Finance (Group) New Zealand Ltd [2018] NZHC 530 [Set aside
judgment].
[3] Mr Xiao appeared in person in
support of his appeal. He had filed written submissions which he supplemented
orally with the assistance
of an interpreter. Mr Hunter appeared as counsel
assisting the court. Since Mr Hunter dealt in detail with the central legal
issues
our references to submissions made by or on behalf of Mr Xiao include
those made by Mr Hunter.
[4] Argyle Estates Ltd v Bowen
Group Ltd (2003) 17 PRNZ 57 (HC) at [6]..
[5] Liability judgment, above n 1,
at [120].
[6] The application also related
to proceedings that the DIA wished to bring against another, unrelated,
registered financial services
provider, Qian Duoduo Ltd.
[7] Department of Internal
Affairs v Qian Duoduo Ltd [2016] NZHC 2544.
[8] Anti-Money laundering and
Countering Financing of Terrorism Act 2009, s 78(a) [AML/CFT Act].
[9] Sections 78(b) and 78(c).
[10] Section 78(e).
[11] Sections 39A–48C, and
78(da).
[12] In the High Court, and
before us, Mr Xiao maintained that he did not receive that email.
However, in the application to set aside
the default judgment, Toogood J
found as a fact that Mr Xiao did receive the email. We have seen nothing
that would justify interfering
with that finding. However, nothing actually
turns on whether Mr Xiao received the email or not.
[13] High Court Rules 2016, r
15.9(2) states that upon a request for judgment by default other than a
liquidated demand the proceeding
“must be listed for formal proof and no
notice is required to be given to the defendant”.
[14] Liability judgment, above n
1, at [35].
[15] At [41].
[16] At [49].
[17] At [52].
[18] At [54], the Judge
described this section as a “cornerstone provision”. It requires
reporting entities to keep detailed
transaction, identity and verification
records for customers with whom they have business relationships.
[19] Liability judgment, above n
1, at [59].
[20] At [72].
[21] At [77].
[22] At [117].
[23] At [104] and [106].
[24] At [113].
[25] At [114].
[26] At [115].
[27] At [116].
[28] At [117].
[29] At [123].
[30] Set aside judgment, above n
2, at [7] citing KBR MacKinder Ltd v Fine Art Productions Ltd HC
Wellington A372/85, 17 April 1986.
[31] Set aside judgment, above n
2, at [7] citing Russell v Cox [1983] NZLR 654 (CA); and Norwich
Winterthur Insurance (NZ) Ltd v Erikson CA370/91, 2 October 1992.
[32] Set aside judgment, above n
2, at [13].
[33] At [14].
[34] At [20].
[35] At [22].
[36] At [23]–[24].
[37] Ali v Deportation Review
Authority [1997] NZAR 208 (HC) at 220. See also Dotcom v The United
States of America [2014] NZSC 24, [2014] 1 NZLR 355 at [118].
[38] There are separate High
Court Rules for judgment by default in cases of liquidated demand (r 15.7) and
demand for the recovery of
land or chattels (r 15.8).
[39] In Chief Executive of
the Department of Internal Affairs v Mansfield [2013] NZHC 2064 Wylie J
considered the issue in relation to pecuniary penalties under the Unsolicited
Electronic Messages Act 2007 and held that
there was no reason in principle or
as a matter of law that pecuniary penalties under that Act could not be imposed
by formal proof,
a conclusion reinforced by a provision (which the AML/CTF Act
does not contain) specifying that the usual rules of court apply.
[40] As noted earlier, there is
no specific reference in r 15.9 to pecuniary penalties. Although it would be
preferable for the rule
to do so, the context allows the reference to damages to
be treated as encompassing pecuniary penalties.
[41] Australian
Communications and Media Authority v Mobilegate Limited (No. 4) (2009) FCA
1225, [2009] 180 FCR 467.
[42] Australian Competition
and Consumer Commission v Yellow Page Marketing BV (No. 2) [2011] FCA 352,
(2011) 195 FCR 1.
[43] High Court Rules, r
5.17.
[44] Rule 5.31.
[45] Rule 15.9(4). We note that
“damages” is inapt to include pecuniary penalty awards but, by
analogy, r 15.9(4) can be
taken to apply to such claims. This aspect of r 15.9
could benefit from clarification.
[46] In this case the judgment
by default reserved leave to Ping An and Mr Xiao to apply for cancellation or
variation of the injunctive
relief granted.
[47] Law Commission Pecuniary
Penalties: Guidance for Legislative Design (NZLC R133, 2014).
[48] Richmond v Heskett
Holdings Ltd (1995) 8 PRNZ 533 (HC) at 535.
[49] At 536.
[50] Reay v
Attorney-General [2016] NZCA 519, [2016] NZAR 1672 at [16].
[51] High Court Rules, r
5.32
[52] Rule 5.33.
[53] AML/CFT Act, s 90.
[54] EA v Rennie Cox Lawyers
[2018] NZCA 33, [2018] 3 NZLR 202.
[55] In addition, the plaintiff
had sought judgment without disclosing correspondence showing the debt to be
disputed.
[56] Department of Internal
Affairs v Qian Duoduo Ltd [2018] NZHC 1887.
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