Abstract
Civil penalties are a productof regulatory law and they fit uneasily within the civil-criminal procedural divide. Disputes about procedure in civil penalty litigation are frequently resolved by resort to criminal rather than civil analytical frameworks, due to conflation of the privilege against exposure to a penalty with the privelege against self-incrimination. Two recent cases, Macdonald v Australian Securities and Investments Commission [2007] NSWCA 304 and Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Mining Projects Group Ltd (2007) 164 FCR 32; [2007] FCA 1620 , regarding the proper ambit of disclosure in a defence, demonstrate the further embrace of the criminal model and the concomitant complication of the plaintiff's case. The area is ripe for law reform, though incremental change is difficult to achieve in case law, where judges focus upon the individual rights of the defendants. Instead, a paradigm shift is required which reconsiders the bifurcation of civil and criminal procedure to accommodate regulatory law and statutory remedies effectively.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 249-258 |
Journal | Company and Securities Law Journal |
Volume | 26 |
Publication status | Published - 2008 |