Appeal hearing - CTFM v
ICV
The
appeal was heard in August 2006 by the Court of Appeal. The decision was
announced on 14 December 2006.
14 December 2006 -
'Catch the Fire' Appeal allowed!
The Court of Appeal (Supreme Court) of Victoria has ALLOWED the appeal sought
by Catch The Fire Ministries, Pastor Danny Nalliah and Pastor Daniel Scot.
All three justices - Nettle, Ashley and Neave - agreed that the appeal should
be allowed. In particular, the argument that the Tribunal had wrongly
interpreted Section 8 of the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act, the basic
section that sets out the offence of religious vilification was successful.
The Court gave orders that the Tribunal orders re 'penalties'
(advertisement, not saying similar things) be set aside, and that the matter be
sent back to VCAT to be heard by a different judge with no new evidence. The
Court also ordered that the costs relating to the previous Tribunal hearing and
the next one be decided by the Member who hears it. The Court ordered that
the Islamic Council of Victoria pay half of the costs incurred by Catch the Fire
Ministries and the pastors in conducting the appeal.
Pastor Danny Nalliah and Pastor Daniel Scot welcomed the decision, as the
statements made by the Justices show that the decision by Judge Higgins was
flawed. However, the process is far from over!
Click here
to read the FULL decision.
Click here for more details and
a report on the decision.
Click here
for Catch the Fire Ministries Media Release.
Media: Court
orders vilification retrial The Age, Barney Zwartz, Religion
Editor, December 14, 2006
Church
race case back to tribunal Herald Sun, AAP, December 14,
2006
_______________
23 August 2006 -
Appeal on religious vilification case The appeal against the finding of Judge Higgins against
Catch the Fire Ministries for 'religious vilification' was heard in the Court of
Appeal (Supreme Court) on Monday and Tuesday 21-22
August.
Justices Ashley, Nettle and Neave heard the appeal. They
reserved their decision and this may not be given for some months. The appeal hearing was reported in The Age following both
days with some startling revelations.
Full report on hearing is
BELOW!
Media reports from The
Age: Religion in the dock
The Age, Tuesday 22 August 2006.
Questions over ruling on Muslims The Age, 23 August
2006.
Andrew Bolt on the religious vilification appeal Andrew Bolt has written another excellent
article exposing the flaws in the religious vilification laws. He analyses the
comments reported as made by the ICV barristers during the appeal....
A MUST
read!
A
very scary laugh Herald Sun, Andrew Bolt, August 25,
2006 ANDREW Bolt writes: He quoted the Koran in a way that caused
laughter and we all know how dangerous laughing Christians are, don't
we? Let a top lawyer -- Debbie Mortimer, SC -- demonstrate why you
should laugh at the Bracks Government's vilification laws. Or, perhaps, why
you should fear them instead. Click the title of the article to read
it
all.....
Overview of the appeal hearing:
On the first day
there was the contention by the Islamic Council barrister Mr Brind
Woinarski QC that the Act does cover the vilification of religion and that if
one vilifies Islam then one automatically vilifies Muslims. The following day
was the claim by ICV barrister Ms Debbie Mortimer SC that truth is not a
defence under the Act and is irrelevant! Also of note was the statement by the State Solicitor General that
'reasonable' means balanced or not 'one-sided' and that an agreement after questioning
that a 'one-sided presentation' would put the speaker within Section 8 of the
Act - on questioning by the justices she said that it then depends on HOW you
say it as to whether it incites hatred! Most
revealing!
The
Catch the Fire Ministries barrister Mr Cameron McCauley SC put five main
arguments - on the overall construction and wording of the Act; the specific
wording of Section 8 especially that religion is not covered, only the 'person'
by 'on the grounds of'; the exemption in Section 11 not being properly
interpreted by Judge Higgins and that he did not properly consider the 'genuine
religious purpose; the constitutional matter of limiting speech on government
and political matters and that the orders prohibiting the pastors from speaking
on matters with the 'same or similar effect' were too
wide.
The full report as sent on
the E-News list is below.
Report sent on E-News: (23 August
2006)
Catch
the Fire Ministries - Report on appeal
Overview and Summary On Monday and Tuesday (21-22 August)
the Court of Appeal of the Supreme Court of Victoria heard the appeal
by Catch The Fire Ministries against the verdict of Judge Higgins
made in the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal.
Judge Higgins found that Catch the Fire Ministries, Pastor Danny Nalliah and
Pastor Daniel Scot had breached the Racial and Religious Tolerance Act and
'vilified' Muslims, "inciting hatred against, serious contempt for, or revulsion
or severe ridicule of them. He also found that they did not qualify
for an exemption because they did not act "reasonably" and in
"good faith" for a "genuine religious purpose". This decision was
announced on 17 Dec 2004 and the penalty on 22 June 2005. (see
references and links below)
Three justices sat as the Court of Appeal - Justice Geoffrey
Nettle, Justice David Ashley and Justice Marcia Neave.
Prior to the appeal the justices had read the full decision and all
the important documents and listened to the tapes of the seminar given
by Pastor Scot.
During the hearing, Mr Cameron
McCauley
SC
represented Catch the Fire Ministries, Mr Brind Woinarski QC and Ms
Debbie Mortimer SC represented the Islamic Council of Victoria and
Solicitor-General Ms Pamela Tate represented the Victorian Attorney General
Hon Rob Hulls as the government intervened in the case regarding the
constitutional validity of the RRTA.
The justices questioned each of these as they made their presentation to
the Court.
The hearing concluded on Tuesday at around 4.15 pm.
The justices reserved their decision.
It is unclear when the decision will be announced - it could be up to
3 months (but possibly as soon as one month).
The hearing
Catch The Fire Ministries, Pastors Nalliah and Scot. Mr
Cameron McCauley SC, the barrister for Catch the Fire Ministries, took
most of Monday presenting the case for the appeal by CTFM.
The appeal to the Court of Appeal can only be made on errors in law, not on
errors of fact. This means that sections of Judge Higgins' ruling
which are believed to be inaccurate cannot be redressed or appealed.
Five areas of argument were presented to the Court.
Firstly, Mr McCauley considered the construction of the
Act and the interpretation of its wording and purpose. In this Mr McCauley
claimed that the Act refers to the vilification of persons, not of belief
systems or religions. He noted that vilifying conduct needs to be extreme
behaviour and that vilifying conduct may be lawful when assessed against the
exemptions.
The full Act - Click here.
Secondly the wording of the parts of Section 8 of the
RRTA, the part that prohibits incitement on the grounds of a person's religious
belief, was challenged.
Section 8 - click here.
In Section 8, he specifically looked at the meaning of 'on the grounds' of',
'engage in conduct that incites', the meaning of "hatred against...." and
which legal authorities and cases provided the appropriate 'test' for deciding
if vilification occurred. He maintained that Judge Higgins had used an
inappropriate test.
Thirdly, he looked at the construction of the exemption
in Section 11, especially the words 'reasonably' and 'in good faith'. He put
that these can only be assessed in relation to the actual 'genuine religious
purpose' and that because Judge Higgins had considered 'reasonably' and 'in good
faith' separately to the actual 'purpose' that this decision
and approach was invalid.
Fourthly the constitutional validity of the Act, in
restricting communication on government and political matters, was
challenged.
Finally the nature of the orders made by the Tribunal was
challenged. These orders required the pastors to place advertisements in
newspapers and also made an injunction that prohibited the pastors from making
statements to the same or similar effect as those the judge found breached the
Act (as specified in his decision). It was claimed that this was much too broad
and restrictive on the pastors in what they could actually say.
ICV Following this the Islamic Council of Victoria
spoke, objecting to each of the arguments made by CTFM.
The ICV barrister Brind Woinarski, in addressing the issue of whether
the Act prohibits vilification of religions made the statement that appeared in
The Age...
"If one vilifies Islam, one is by necessary consequence vilifying
people who hold that religious belief," Brind
Woinarski,
QC
, told the
court.
The assertion that religion itself was covered by Section 8 of the
Act brought lively questioning from the justices, and this was repeated
when the Solicitor General made similar assertions.
At times the questioning of each speaker was intense. Although I was there
and took detailed notes, I do not intend to comment much on the questioning
process!
The ICV maintained that the Act was appropriate and that it had been
properly interpreted by Judge Higgins, including Section 8 and Section 11 for
the exemption.
Reasonableness - There was some discussion about
'reasonableness' with a suggestion that this should mean balanced - or not
one-sided.
Some of the ministers present at the hearing felt that this would have many
of them standing in the dock, as it is impossible for a minister to present both
sides of a debate or principle as one might expect in an academic
lecture.....
Regarding the orders, Ms Mortimer SC maintained again that Judge Higgins
had made the right decision and that the orders were appropriate.
At one point, when she said 'Truth is irrelevant' the gallery made a loud
noise (shock?) and was told to be quiet. She maintained it was how it was said
and to what audience that needed to be considered.
From The Age article today:
Justice Geoffrey Nettle said: "Surely that can't justify restraining them
from saying something that said by anyone else would be legal? In the case of
the newsletter, for example, Pastor Nalliah says many churches have closed down.
What's wrong with saying that?" Ms Mortimer replied: "The tribunal has found
there is something wrong with saying it. Truth is not a defence, it's irrelevant
to contravention of the act."
Victorian Government Solicitor-General Pamela Tate mostly
made a presentation on the constitutional question, claiming that the Act was
valid and that the the implied right to freedom of political
communication in the federal constitution (as established by High Court
decisions) did not apply in this instance since the matters did not
qualify as 'political. Some question followed by the justices as to the
nature of political discussion and the development of policy and public debate
being part of 'political speech'.
Some discussion of 'reasonableness' was also given, with a suggestion of
various approaches that could be taken.
Regarding 'reasonableness', again discussion ensued, with the SG maintaining
that 'reasonable' should mean balanced. Justice Nettle asked if there could be
cases that were unbalanced but 'reasonable' and she said she knew of no such
cases. She said it was up to the 'reasonable person' to decide the test.
However she was then asked if an 'unbalanced' presentation could get
'relief' under the religious purpose exemption and she that the meaning of
'reasonable' could change... depending on the case!
Some discussion was also held on whether the Act covers comment on
the secular activities of people who may have a particular religion.
The Solicitor General maintained that, even if the Court believed that the
approach taken by the tribunal in this case was wrong and ruled that the
Tribunal was in error, the Court should rule to maintain the validity of
the Act.
References: Click on the
following to obtain the court decisions in each instance. Decision:
Penalty:
Author: Jenny Stokes | Modified: 14 December 2006 |