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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Supreme Court of Ireland Decisions >> Murphy v. Flood [1999] IESC 60; [2000] 2 ILRM 112 (22nd July, 1999)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1999/60.html
Cite as: [1999] IESC 60, [2000] 2 ILRM 112

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Murphy v. Flood [1999] IESC 60; [2000] 2 ILRM 112 (22nd July, 1999)

THE SUPREME COURT
HAMILTON C.J.
DENHAM J.
BARRINGTON J.
KEANE J.
LYNCH J.

148/99

BETWEEN:
MICHAEL FACHTNA MURPHY, CHIEF BUREAU
OFFICER CRIMINAL ASSETS BUREAU
Applicant
and

MR. JUSTICE FEARGUS FLOOD, THE SOLE MEMBER
OF THE TRIBUNAL OF INQUIRY INTO CERTAIN
PLANNING MATTERS AND PAYMENTS
Respondent
and

THE ATTORNEY GENERAL ACTING IN THE
PUBLIC INTEREST and GEORGE REDMOND
Notice Parties
Judgment of the Court delivered on the 22nd day of July 1999 by Hamilton C.J.
________________________________________________
(2)

1. This is an appeal brought by the Applicant herein, Det. Supt. Michael Fachtna Murphy, the Chief Bureau Officer, Criminal Assets Bureau (hereinafter referred to as the Appellant) against the judgment of McCracken J. delivered on the 1st July 1999 and the Order made in pursuance thereof on that date, whereby he dismissed the Motion issued on behalf of the Appellant which sought against the Respondent;


(1) An Order of Prohibition directed against the Respondent herein prohibiting him from taking any further steps to require the Applicant to produce or furnish documents pursuant to a Summons issued by order of the Respondent on the 13th day of April 1999 and a decision of the Respondent’s made on the 23rd day of April 1999 rejecting the Applicant’s claim of privilege in respect of the furnishing of the said documents.

(2) An Order or Orders of Certiorari quashing the said Decision of the 23rd day of April 1999 and/or the Summons of the 19th day of April 1999 as may be appropriate.

(3) A Declaration that the decision of the Respondent made on the 23rd day of April 1999 was made ultra vires and in excess of the powers of the Respondent.

________________________________________________
(3)

(4) A Declaration that the decision of the Respondent made on the 23rd day of April 1999 was made in breach of the provisions of the Constitution of Ireland 1937 and in particular of Article 34.1 thereof.

(5) A Declaration that the decision of the Respondent made on the 23rd day of April 1999 is null, void and of no legal effect by virtue of having been made in breach of the principles of natural and constitutional justice and in particular in breach of the principle of nemo judex in causa sua.

(6) A Declaration that the furnishing of the said documents of which the Respondent requires production is covered by the privilege claimed by the Applicant or, alternatively, an Order of Mandamus directing the Respondent to invoke the statutory procedures provided for by Section 4 of the Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) (Amendment) Act 1997 in order to have the issue of the said privilege determined by this Honorable Court.

2. By order of the High Court Geoghegan J. made on the 4th day of May 1999 the Appellant had been given leave to apply by way of an application for judicial review for the aforesaid reliefs.


3. The said order further provided that the Appellant do serve an Originating Notice of Motion returnable before the Court on Monday the 10th


________________________________________________
(4)

day of May 1999 on the Respondent and on George Redmond and on the Chief State Solicitor on behalf of the Attorney General acting in the public interest.

4. The grounds upon which the said liberty was granted were set forth in paragraph (B) of the Statement required to Ground Application for Judicial Review and verified by the affidavit of the Appellant sworn on the 4th day of May 1999.


5. In accordance with the terms of the said order, the motion was issued and served. On the 7th day of May 1999 a Notice of Opposition was filed on behalf of the Attorney General and on the 10th day of May 1999 a Statement of Grounds of Opposition was filed on behalf of the Respondent.


6. The facts which led to the said application and on which it was based are set forth in the aforesaid affidavit of the Appellant and in the judgment of the learned High Court Judge and may be briefly summarised as follows:-


(1) The Respondent, Mr. Justice Flood, is the sole Member of the Tribunal of Inquiry into Certain Planning Matters and Payments, such Tribunal of Inquiry having been established by order of the Minister for the Environment and Local Government made on the 4th day of November

________________________________________________
(5)

1997 pursuant to a resolution of Dáil Éireann passed on 7th day of October 1997 and of Seanad Éireann passed on 8th day of October 1997. Inter alia, the Order provided that the Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) Acts 1921 and 1979 should apply to the Tribunal.

(2) The Terms of Reference of the said Tribunal are not an issue in this case and need not be set forth herein.

(3) In the course of its inquiries into the aforesaid matters and in exercise of the powers conferred on it by the 1921 Act and the 1979 Act, the Respondent made Orders dated respectively the 26th day of January 1999 and the 19th day of February, 1999, requiring one George Redmond, a Notice Party herein, to make discovery on oath of all documents in his possession relevant to the subject matter of the inquiry.

(4) On the 19th day of February 1999 the said Notice Party was arrested by officers of the Criminal Assets Bureau in the exercise of Garda Functions and certain materials was seized by the said officers from the Notice Party.

(5) On the same date, the 19th February, the Notice Party’s dwelling house and premises were searched by Bureau Officers pursuant to a search warrant and further material was seized.

(6) By letter dated the 22nd day of February, the Solicitor acting on behalf of the Respondent requested the Appellant to furnish copies of all

________________________________________________
(6)

documents seized from the Notice Party and furnished a written consent from the Notice Party to the production thereof.

(7) By letters dated the 1st and 24th day of March 1999 the Appellant refused the Respondent’s request.

(8) While the Appellant refused to make available to the Respondent copies of the said documents, an inventory of all material seized was prepared and furnished to the Notice Party and he was further furnished either personally or through his Solicitor with copies of all documents to which he was legally entitled.

(9) At a public sitting of the Tribunal of Inquiry it was stated on behalf of the Notice Party, George Redmond, that he was unable to comply with the Orders of Discovery made by the Respondent because the relevant documents had been seized by the Appellant.

(10) On the 13th day of April 1999 a Summons was issued by the Respondent directed to the Appellant to attend at the sitting of the Tribunal on Friday, the 16th day of April 1999 at 10.00 a.m. and “there and then to produce and furnish to the Tribunal copies of the documents set out in the schedule attached” to the said Summons.

(11) The copies of the documents sought thereby consisted of the material seized from the Notice Party, Mr. George Redmond, on the 19th February 1999 and from his dwelling house on that date.
________________________________________________
(7)

(12) In accordance with the terms of the said Summons, the Appellant attended at a public sitting of the Tribunal on the 16th day of April 1999 and claimed privilege in respect of the said documents.

(13) The matter was adjourned for legal argument to the 19th day of April 1999.

(14) The only submission made to the Respondent on this issue by Counsel on behalf of the Appellant was that the Respondent had no jurisdiction to rule on the question of privilege once it had been raised on behalf of the Appellant, as the determination of such issue constituted the administration on justice and as such could only be determined by a Court validly constituted by the Constitution.

(15) On the 23rd day of April 1999 the Respondent ruled that he had jurisdiction to determine the issue of whether the Appellant was entitled to privilege in respect of the said documents and rejected the Appellant’s claim to such privilege.

(16) It is this decision or ruling of the Respondent that the Appellant sought and seeks to have quashed on the ground that he had no jurisdiction to make such ruling as it involved the administration of justice.

7. The learned trial judge stated in the course of his judgment that:-


________________________________________________
(8)

“Accordingly, I would hold that the Tribunal has the jurisdiction to make a decision on whether documents are privileged. However, having read the transcript of what transpired in the present case, when the Applicant specifically restricted his arguments to the question of jurisdiction, it seems to me that he did not have an opportunity to put forward the substantive arguments in favour of privilege. Of course, that he did not do so was a matter of his own choosing, but I think he was entitled to take the course he took, and it follows that the decision of the Tribunal as to privilege was made without hearing the full arguments of the Applicant. It should also be noted that the Applicant declined to give any evidence as to a factual background for his contentions, and again I think he must be given an opportunity to do so. Were it otherwise, I think that the procedures of the Tribunal could be said to offend natural justice.

Accordingly, I would set aside the decision of the Tribunal in so far as it ruled that the documents are not privileged, but I would uphold the decision that the Tribunal itself has jurisdiction to determine the dispute. Accordingly, the matter should be reconsidered by the Tribunal having heard further arguments, and

________________________________________________
(9)

if necessary, evidence from the parties. I will discuss the form of the Order with Counsel.”

8. Having formed the conclusion that the Respondent had jurisdiction to determine the claim for privilege, the learned trial judge did not deal with the issue as to whether the documents were privileged or not but referred that issue to the Respondent, who he had held to have jurisdiction in the matter.


9. The Appellant has appealed against the finding by the learned trial judge and the only issue which is before this court is as to whether the learned High Court judge was correct in holding that the Respondent had jurisdiction to decide on whether the documents in question were privileged. It is urged on behalf of the Appellant that where, as here, the claim of privilege is grounded on the public interest in the detection, investigation and prosecution of crime, the only bodies capable of resolving the issue as to whether that public interest must yield to the admitted public interest in the full investigation of the matters within the remit of the Tribunal are the courts established under the Constitution. The resolution of such an issue, it is said, constitutes the administration of justice and, accordingly, its purported resolution by the sole member would violate Article 34.1 of the Constitution.


________________________________________________
(10)

10. It was further contended that, since there existed what was described as a dispute” between the Respondent and the Applicants as to whether the latter were legally obliged to produce the documents in question to the Tribunal, the adjudication by the sole member of that dispute would violate the maxim nemo judex in causa sua , since he clearly had an interest, albeit not a personal one, in the resolution of the issue.


11. The status in law of tribunals established by a resolution of both Houses of the Oireachtas pursuant to the Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) Acts, 1921 to 1998 has been made clear in recent decisions of this court, viz. Goodman International v. Mr. Justice Hamilton [1992] 2 IR 542 and Charles J Haughey v. Mr. Justice Moriarty , unreported, judgment delivered the 28th July 1998[eIWLR_1056].


12. A tribunal so established is not conducting a trial: it is merely conducting an inquiry. It follows that findings, rulings and decisions made by the Tribunal acting pursuant to the resolutions by which it was established and within the statutory framework by which its proceedings are governed do not constitute the administration of justice within the meaning of Article 34.1.


________________________________________________
(11)

13. Section 1 of the Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) Act 1921 vests in the Respondent:


“... all such powers, rights, and privileges as are vested in the High Court ... on the occasion of an action in respect of.... [t]he compelling of the production of documents.”

Section 4 of the Tribunals of Inquiry (Evidence) (Amendment) Act 1979 provides that

“A tribunal may make such orders as it considers necessary for the purposes of its functions, and it shall have, in relation to their making, all such powers, rights and privileges as are vested in the High Court or a judge of that Court in respect of the making of orders.”

14. Any person who is required by the Tribunal to produce documents in his possession or procurement may claim that some or all of the documents in question are privileged. That is the claim made by the Appellants in the present case. Where such a claim is made in the course of proceedings in the High Court, it must be decided by the court and, for that purpose, the court may find it necessary to examine the documents in question. It is beyond argument that


________________________________________________
(12)

the provisions which I have cited similarly empower the Respondent to adjudicate on any claim of privilege so made to him.

15. It is indeed conceded on behalf of the Appellant that, in general, the Respondent is entitled to make such rulings. It is argued, however, that the ruling which he proposes to make in the present case is one that can only be made by the High Court or this Court. Where an agency established by statute, such as the Appellant, claims that the disclosure of documents would be contrary to the public interest, such a claim, it is urged, can only be adjudicated upon by the courts. That, it is said, is the effect of the decisions of this court in Murphy v. Dublin Corporation [1972] IR 215 and Ambiorix Limited v. Minister for the Environment [1992] 1 IR 277 .


16. The proposition of law established by those authorities is clear and fundamental. Where, in the course of proceedings in any court, a claim is made on behalf of the executive that the production of documents would be contrary to the public interest, it is for the court alone to determine whether that claim should be upheld. A conflict which arises in the course of proceedings in any court between the public interest in the administration of justice and the public interest that may be affected by the production of particular documents can only be resolved by the court which is hearing the proceedings.


________________________________________________
(13)

17. That is not the position in this case. There are no proceedings in being before a court in which the executive are claiming the right not to produce documents. The Appellant is in no different position from any other person or body lawfully required to attend before the Tribunal or produce documents in their possession or procurement to the Tribunal and the authorities relied on are not relevant to the exercise by the Tribunal of its jurisdiction.


18. As was pointed out by this Court in Charles J Haughey .v. Mr. Justice Moriarty , [eIWLR_1056] [ a tribunal such as this must observe fair procedures and respect the constitutional rights of persons and bodies, such as the Appellants, who are affected by its proceedings. Thus, although no appeal lies from any ruling the Respondent may make in this or any other matter, any infringement of fair procedures or constitutional rights may be corrected in judicial review proceedings in the High Court.


19. As to the second proposition relied on on behalf of the Appellant - that the procedure adopted by the Respondent is in breach of the maxim nemo judex in causa sua, - it is hardly appropriate to describe the Respondent as being in a “dispute” with the Appellant. He has exercised the powers vested in him by the Oireachtas for the purpose of the inquiry which he has been required to conduct by the two Houses and the Appellants have sought to resist the exercise of the powers on the ground of privilege. The decision as to whether


________________________________________________
(14)

such a claim is well founded is not in any sense the resolution of a “dispute” between the Tribunal and any other party and the same could be said of the many other rulings which a tribunal of this nature may be required to make in the course of its lengthy proceedings.

20. The object of the maxim is to ensure that in judicial and quasi-judicial proceedings, decisions are not made by persons who could be perceived as having an interest in the decision, subject to certain qualifications in the case of quasi- judicial tribunals, the membership of which may necessarily include persons who might be regarded as having an interest in the decision. In that sense, the Respondent has no interest whatever in the decision. The fact that the nature of a ruling made by him on a matter in dispute during the course of the proceedings of the Tribunal may facilitate the inquiry which he is conducting does not render the making of the decision subject to the application of the maxim: if it did, every such ruling made during the course of such an inquiry could be challenged by a person claiming to be aggrieved by it in judicial review proceedings in the High Court and the operations of such tribunals, established to deal with matters of importance to the public on an urgent basis, would be rendered even more lengthy, cumbersome and expensive than they sometimes necessarily are. That cannot have been the intention of the legislature.


________________________________________________
(15)

21. It follows that the learned High Court judge was correct in holding that the Respondent had jurisdiction to decide on whether the documents in question were privileged and that the appeal should be dismissed.


© 1999 Irish Supreme Court


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IESC/1999/60.html