From: Robert Stevens
<robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>
Sent: Wednesday 14 August 2024 12:29
To: Hoggard, Nicholas; Vaclav Janecek; Jeannie
Paterson; Jonathon Moore KC; Kayleen Manwaring; Matthew Hoyle; Neil Foster;
obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: RE: HCA on unconscionable conduct and
accessory liability
“Civil penalties” in the UK
(and presumably elsewhere) are a way of creating regulatory offences without
all the tiresome procedural and other protections for the accused that apply in
the criminal law. It is unsurprising that international courts look straight
through such re-labelling.
Governments, of course, are
very keen on them.
From: Hoggard, Nicholas
<Nicholas.Hoggard@lawcommission.gov.uk>
Sent: Wednesday, August 14, 2024 12:22 PM
To: Vaclav Janecek <dt21561@bristol.ac.uk>;
Jeannie Paterson <jeanniep@unimelb.edu.au>;
Jonathon Moore KC <jpmoore@vicbar.com.au>;
Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>;
Kayleen Manwaring <kayleen.manwaring@unsw.edu.au>;
Matthew Hoyle <MHoyle@oeclaw.co.uk>;
Neil Foster <neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au>;
obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: RE: HCA on unconscionable conduct and accessory liability
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
From: Vaclav Janecek
<vaclav.janecek@bristol.ac.uk>
Sent: 14 August 2024 12:20
To: Jeannie Paterson <jeanniep@unimelb.edu.au>;
Jonathon Moore KC <jpmoore@vicbar.com.au>;
Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>;
Kayleen Manwaring <kayleen.manwaring@unsw.edu.au>;
Matthew Hoyle <MHoyle@oeclaw.co.uk>;
Neil Foster <neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au>;
obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: RE: HCA on unconscionable conduct and accessory liability
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
From: Jeannie Paterson
<jeanniep@unimelb.edu.au>
Sent: Wednesday, August 14, 2024 12:15 PM
To: Jonathon Moore KC <jpmoore@vicbar.com.au>;
Robert Stevens <robert.stevens@law.ox.ac.uk>;
Kayleen Manwaring <kayleen.manwaring@unsw.edu.au>;
Matthew Hoyle <MHoyle@oeclaw.co.uk>;
Neil Foster <neil.foster@newcastle.edu.au>;
obligations@uwo.ca
Subject: Re: HCA on unconscionable conduct and accessory liability
Eg the Data Protection Act
2018.
Jeannie Marie Paterson | The
University of Melbourne
Professor of Law (Consumer Protection and Emerging Technology)
Fairness, Transparency and Coherence (FTC) in Consumer and Credit
Protection Project | Melbourne Law School
Director of the Centre for Artificial Intelligence and Digital Ethics |
Faculty of Engineering and Information Technology
The University of Melbourne
https://law.unimelb.edu.au/centres/caide
https://law.unimelb.edu.au/about/staff/jeannie-paterson
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