I think the civil/criminal
distinction can be somewhat circular, amounting to little more than a question
of whether (in England & Wales) it falls within the purview of the
DPP/Crown Prosecution Service or whether it is described as an “offence”. The
European Convention on Human Rights takes a much more purposive approach to the
definition of criminal, which has been held to include various categories of
(for example) tax surcharges (ie penalties). Contempt of court is another good
example of a regime that is not “criminal” stricto sensu (particularly civil
contempt, but even “criminal contempt” falls wholly outwith the criminal
justice system) – but that is definitely a criminal offence for the purposes of
Art 6 of the ECHR.
Best wishes
Nick
Dr Nicholas Hoggard, Lawyer
Homeland Security Group | Home Office
Law Commission | Ministry of Justice
Mobile: 07706 716 099
Email: nicholas.hoggard@lawcommission.gov.uk
nicholas.hoggard@homeoffice.gov.uk
Dear Jeannie,
And what exactly would
constitute a civil penalty under the UK DPA 2018? I am not sure I follow where
you are going with this example…
Best wishes,
Václav
Eg the Data Protection Act
2018.
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Although perhaps not as widespread as in Australia,
doesn’t the UK also have civil penalties, without the usual protections of the
criminal law?
Not that I favour the regime…
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ie a punitive sanction without any of the procedural protections of the
criminal law, but with a different label?
It does, Matthew, but this is not a criminal remedy under the ACL,
rather it's a civil penalty.
Does s.224 not permit
the imposition of “pecuniary penalties” for breach of s.21, as a provision of
Part 2-2?
Matthew Hoyle
Barrister
One Essex Court
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Rest
assured there is no criminal liability for unconscionable conduct under the
Australian Consumer Law, only civil liability.
(The
statutory prohibition on unconscionable conduct is closest to undue influence
element of aggressive commercial practices in s 7 of the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008.)
.
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Thanks Neil. Even by
the standards of consumer statutes, criminal and civil liability by reference
to “unconscionability” is pretty radical! Our legislation is slightly more
specific, prohibiting “misleading” and “aggressive” practices.
On the “knowingly
concerned” element, one might compare it to the English decision on unlawful
means conspiracy in Racing Partnership [2020] EWCA Civ 1300. The CA, relying on
both civil and criminal cases, held that it was not necessary for the defendants
to know the means they had agreed to deploy were unlawful in order for them to
be liable, provided they know all the facts which make the acts unlawful. There
is also no defence of honestly believing (eg based on legal advice) that the
steps you have agreed to take are lawful.
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Dear Colleagues;
I thought some might be
interested in this decision from the High Court of Australia today: Productivity
Partners Pty Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission; Wills v
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2024] HCA 27 (14 August
2024) http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdoc/au/cases/cth/HCA/2024/27.html
.
The issues concern a
statutory prohibition on unconscionable conduct (s 21 of the Australian
Consumer Law("ACL") provides that persons must not, in trade or
commerce, in connection with supply of services, "engage in conduct that
is, in all the circumstances, unconscionable"), and the accessory
liability of a director/manager where a company is found to have engaged in
such conduct. The facts involve an education provider in effect deliberately
taking on students who it knew would probably not succeed, for the purpose of
getting funding for those students.
There are a number of
different decisions from members of the court on these issues (apart from a
joint judgment from Gageler CJ and Jagot J, all the other 5 members of the
court write separately), which range over how to define “unconscionable” in
terms of social norms, to the extent of the knowledge required for a company
officer to be an accessory, and issues around how a “system” may be
unconscionable. The work of colleague Elise Bant is extensively cited, and
other ODG colleagues Rachel Leow and Jeannie-Marie Paterson also are mentioned.
For my part I found of
particular interest the reference of Steward J to the historical origins of
equity’s standards in the background of Christianity – see para [297], while
acknowledging of course that “religious-based concepts of conscience have since
the seventeenth century been
replaced with
particular written rules, based on precedent” ([300]). I discuss the background
of the Western legal system in the Christian world-view in my course on “Law
and Religion”.
That to one side, there
are lots of interesting things in the judgments about how to apply a statutory
standard of unconscionability in the modern world.
Regards
Neil
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