After more than half a decade, a Tasmanian ferry operator and a former Australian polo captain have been ordered to pay thousands of dollars in fines in relation to the deaths of 16 polo ponies.
Key points:
- The magistrate said ferry operator TT-Line was strictly liable for checking on the welfare of the ponies and "it simply did nothing to comply with that requirement"
- Sixteen out of 18 ponies died while being transported on the Spirit of Tasmania ferry in January 2018
- TT-Line was fined $75,000, while former Australian polo captain Andrew Williams was fined $15,000 for his part
Sixteen of the 18 polo ponies were found dead in the converted refrigeration trailer they were travelling in, after the Spirit of Tasmania ferry docked in Melbourne in January 2018.
The ponies had been in Tasmania's north competing in a polo event at Barnbougle.
Polo captain Andrew Williams pleaded guilty to 17 counts of breaching the animal welfare act in July 2022.
The case against Williams ran alongside but separate from the case against ferry operator TT-Line, which was found to have breached animal welfare laws in October last year.
In the Burnie Magistrates Court, Magistrate Leanne Topfer ordered TT-Line to pay a $75,000 fine, while Williams was fined $15,000.
Convictions were recorded on all charges against both parties.
In handing down the long-awaited sentences, Magistrate Topfer told the court TT-Line was strictly liable for checking on the welfare of the ponies and "it simply did nothing to comply with that requirement".
Lawyers for the company had argued against a conviction being recorded, saying it would "plainly affect TT-Line's reputation".
"I give little weight to these submissions," Magistrate Topfer told the court.
"As the effect on the horses was so profound, I consider it appropriate to record convictions."
She also said the significant legal expense of successive appeals would have cost the taxpayer, saying as a government-funded company, its only two stakeholders were the state treasurer and the state infrastructure minister.
Williams 'failed in his duty'
Magistrate Topfer looked favourably upon Williams's early guilty plea, saying it showed "real utility" and noted the lengthy delays in the case were not his doing.
However, she found the trailer the 49-year-old was using to transport the ponies had "inadequate size, allocation and placement of ventilation".
Magistrate Topfer also told the court Williams failed to check on the horses for an hour after disembarking.
"You failed in your duty to those horses," she said.
She accepted that Williams was remorseful and "devastated" over the incident — his first animal welfare offence in an otherwise "excellent" record, having worked with horses all his life.
Sentencing delayed multiple times
This is the third time the matter has been listed for sentence, as the case itself drags into its fifth year.
Magistrate Topfer did not proceed to sentence at the start of February as planned because a significant issue had arisen from a report provided by Mr Williams's lawyers.
The court heard the report, from a veterinary surgeon with more than 40 years' experience, stated the truck's ramp should have been lowered to allow for greater ventilation.
Magistrate Topfer told the court she could not sentence Williams and TT-Line on separate sets of facts, so she would not sentence either until all parties had fully considered the report.
Another appearance in mid-February also did not proceed to sentence.