Civil Law
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This case note outlines Geoffrey Rush’s successful defamation action against Nationwide News over articles alleging inappropriate behaviour during a theatre production. The Federal Court found the publications conveyed defamatory imputations, rejected the truth defence, and awarded record damages. The case highlights how defamation law protects reputation, the limits of media reporting, and the role of the courts in ensuring fair and responsible journalism.
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This case note outlines how Queensland courts assess negligence, using a the case of Thistle Co of Australia Pty Ltd v Bretz to show how duty of care, breach and foreseeable harm are applied in practice.
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This case note outlines how the court found an employer negligent after a worker was seriously injured by a runaway street‑sweeper. The employer knew of earlier similar incidents but failed to improve training or safety systems. The Court held the worker was not contributorily negligent, as her instinctive attempt to prevent harm to others was reasonable in an emergency.
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This case note outlines Bruce Lehrmann’s defamation action against media outlets over reporting of an alleged sexual assault. It explains the court’s assessment of credibility, the application of the “substantial truth” defence and how the judgment illustrates the balance between protecting reputation and allowing public‑interest journalism. The case highlights how defamation law operates when serious allegations intersect with political and media scrutiny.
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This resource examines key defamation cases involving the public‑interest defence, showing how courts decide whether reporting on matters of public concern is protected. It explains the elements of the defence, how courts weigh responsible journalism against reputational harm, and why the defence is important for transparency, accountability and informed public debate.
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This case note explains the defamation proceedings brought by Ben Roberts‑Smith against major media outlets over reporting that included allegations of murder and war crimes. It emphasises that the case was not a criminal trial, but a civil defamation action in which the court assessed whether the publishers could prove their allegations were substantially true. The resource outlines the court’s findings, the legal standards applied and the significance of the case for public‑interest journalism, accountability and the role of the courts in testing serious allegations.
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This case note summarises concerns raised about the Commonwealth’s handling of the Brittany Higgins settlement, focusing on whether the government complied with the Legal Services Directions 2017 and whether the circumstances could amount to corrupt conduct under the National Anti‑Corruption Commission (NACC) framework.
Higgins Settlement: Legal Services Directions and the NACC
Higgins Settlement
On Tuesday 13th December 2022, a financial settlement was made between Brittany Higgins and the federal government based upon her claims she was not supported by Senator Reynolds or Michaelia Cash after the alleged sexual assault by Bruce Lehrmann.
The Australian newspaper reported on 15 December 2022 that: “The Albanese government muzzled former Liberal minister Linda Reynolds in her defence against Brittany Higgins’ multimillion-dollar lawsuit, threatening to tear up an agreement to pay her legal fees and any costs awarded unless she agreed not to attend a mediation. … Senator Reynolds was therefore unable to dispute any of Ms Higgins’ allegations about a failure to support her or properly investigate the incident, some of which were contested at Mr Lehrmann’s trial.”
In response, Chris Merritt, Vice President of the Rule of Law Institute of Australia has written: ‘It is difficult to see how the Higgins settlement complies with the longstanding rules governing the way the federal government is supposed to deal with monetary claims (ie the Legal Services Directions). It is also difficult to see how those responsible for this settlement could not perceive that outlaying taxpayers’ money in breach of those rules might trigger the interest of regulators – including the National Anti-Corruption Commission.”
Legal Services Directions
The rules governing financial settlements and claims against the government are outline in the Legal Services Handbook.
These Directions provide a framework for the conduct of the Commonwealth’s legal affairs to ensure transparency and accountability. They enable the Attorney General to ‘protect the legal interest in the Commonwealth in relation to the delivery of legal services.’ (Explanatory Memorandum, Judiciary Amendment Bill 1998 (Cth), 8.)
Appendix C- Handling Monetary Claims of the Legal Services Directions 2017 outline the policy concerning the handling of monetary claims against the Commonwealth and contains the following clauses:
Criteria for settlement
2. Monetary claims covered by this policy are to be settled in accordance with legal principle and practice, whatever the amount of the claim or proposed settlement. A settlement on the basis of legal principle and practice requires the existence of at least a meaningful prospect of liability being established. In particular, settlement is not to be effected merely because of the cost of defending what is clearly a spurious claim. If there is a meaningful prospect of liability, the factors to be taken into account in assessing a fair settlement amount include:
(a) the prospects of the claim succeeding in court
(b) the costs of continuing to defend or pursue the claim, and
(c) any prejudice to Government in continuing to defend or pursue the claim (eg a risk of disclosing confidential government information).
3. Settlements for amounts not exceeding $100,000 may be approved by the accountable authority of the non‑corporate Commonwealth entity, or the accountable authority’s delegate, on the basis of a common sense view that the settlement is in accordance with legal principle and practice. However, if a claim, together with any related
4. Major claims may only be settled if:
(a) written advice is received from AGS or a legal adviser external to the entity that the settlement is in accordance with legal principle and practice, and
(b) the accountable authority (or delegate) agrees with the settlement.
5. If a non‑corporate Commonwealth entity considers that a claim raises exceptional
circumstances which justify a departure from the normal mechanism for settling a claim, it is to refer the matter to OLSC. The Attorney‑General may permit a departure from the normal policy, but may impose different or additional conditions as the basis for doing so.
In his article, Chris Merritt outlined that if Reynolds was prevented from testing the allegations against her and if this hobbled the ability of government officials to properly defend the public finances of the Commonwealth of Australia, then “the issue that needs to be resolved is whether this undermined the ability of government officials to discharge their duty under Appendix C of the Legal Services Directions to deal with the Higgins claim in accordance with legal principle and practice.”
The two major questions regarding the Higgins settlement in respect of the Legal Services Directions are:
1. Was the claim settled in accords with section 4 for Major Claims? “The Legal Services Directions state that the government needed to obtain a legal opinion that the settlement is in accord with legal principle and practice. (section 4(a))
So does such an opinion exist? If it does, who wrote it and how did the author conclude – based on facts that were not properly tested – that the Higgins claim had a meaningful prospect of success in a court of law? If no lawyer was willing to provide such an opinion, the rules have a loophole that would still permit a payout – but only if there had been direct involvement by the Attorney-General. (section 5) First there would need to be a declaration that the Higgins mediation involved “exceptional circumstances” and Dreyfus would then need to agree that the normal criteria for settlements should not apply in this particular case. So somewhere in the bureaucracy there is either a legal opinion by a courageous lawyer who drew upon untested claims, or a document in which Dreyfus states that the normal rules should not apply to Higgins.”
2. Was there a meaningful prospect of liability being established?
In his article titled ‘The Model Litigant Principle: Can the AGS stay competitive’,
Barry Leader wrote:
“the community expects the Commonwealth to deal properly with taxpayers’ money and, in particular, not to spend it without due cause and due process. Not all demands made on the Commonwealth should be met. The Commonwealth is also expected to act consistently in its handling of claims. … Clearly, the model litigant principle requires fairness. Conversely, it does not preclude firmness – taxpayers’ money should not be expended improperly, and the Commonwealth’s legitimate interests should be protected… As to firmness, the Commonwealth should not cave in to spurious or vexatious claims; or take a ‘soft’ approach. Instead, it should appropriately test all claims; rely on legal professional privilege where appropriate; make public interest privilege claims objecting to disclosure of information; seek security for costs where appropriate (in one case the Commonwealth obtained an order for $4 million security for costs); oppose oppressive subpoenas/discovery; seek to strike out untenable claims; and act properly to protect the Commonwealth’s interests.”
This concept of firmness is included within the Legal Services directions that state a settlement based on legal principle and practice “requires the existence of at least a meaningful prospect of liability being established” against the Commonwealth.
In his article, Chris Merritt then concludes “what needs to be resolved is whether the exclusion of Reynolds from the mediation left the officials running that process with a misleading impression of the strength of Higgins’ case. Did the financial coercion against Reynolds adversely affect the ability of those officials
to defend the financial interests of the Commonwealth? These matters can only be decided by an independent investigation – preferably in private.
National Anti-Corruption Commission (NACC)
The NACC legislation defines corruption as a breach of public trust, abuse of office or any conduct that could adversely affect the honest or impartial exercise of a public official’s powers or duties.
8 Meaning of corrupt conduct
(1) Each of the following is corrupt conduct:
(a) any conduct of any person (whether or not a public official) that adversely affects, or that could adversely affect, either directly or indirectly:
(i) the honest or impartial exercise of any public official’s powers as a public
official; or
(ii) the honest or impartial performance of any public official’s functions or duties
as a public official;
(b) any conduct of a public official that constitutes or involves a breach of public trust;
(c) any conduct of a public official that constitutes, involves or is engaged in for the purpose of abuse of the person’s office as a public official;
(d) any conduct of a public official, or former public official, that constitutes or involves the misuse of information or documents acquired in the person’s capacity as a public official
The explanatory memorandum for the bill says corrupt conduct must be capable of adversely affecting the probity of a public official’s conduct and not merely its efficacy. In the case of the Higgins settlement, the handing out of public money may be considered as falling under the definition of corrupt conduct where “persons unknown decided to use their control of public money to ensure the officials running the mediation were presented with an incomplete version of reality that had not been thoroughly tested.”
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This case note outlines Bruce Lehrmann’s defamation action against media outlets over reporting of an alleged sexual assault. It explains the court’s assessment of credibility, the application of the “substantial truth” defence and how the judgment illustrates the balance between protecting reputation and allowing public‑interest journalism. The case highlights how defamation law operates when serious allegations intersect with political and media scrutiny.
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