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Pickering, in the matter of Pickering [2009] FCA 809 (3 August 2009)
Last Updated: 7 August 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Pickering, in the matter of Pickering
[2009] FCA 809
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE - whether Court should
direct Registrar to issue applications lodged by the applicant – proposed
applications frivolous, vexatious
and if permitted to issue would constitute an
abuse of process of the Court – no direction ordered - application
dismissed.
Constitution
Federal Court Rules
O1 r 4, O 46 r 7, O 46 r 7(2), O 46 r 7A, O 46 r 7A(1), O 46 r
7A(2)
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s
24(1)(a)
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth)
Bizuneh v Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCAFC 42; (2003) 128 FCR 353
Gallo v
Dawson (1988) 82 ALR 401
Letts v Commonwealth (1985) 8 FCR
585
Manolakis v District Registrar, South Australia District Registry,
Federal Court of Australia [2008] FCAFC 162; (2008) 170 FCR 426
Paramasivam v Randwick
City Council [2005] FCA 369
Pickering v Centrelink [2008] FCA
561
Pickering v Chief Executive Officer of Centrelink [2006] FCA
477
Pickering v Commonwealth [2007] FCA 1253
IN THE MATTER OF JEFFERY JOHN PICKERING; JEFFERY
JOHN PICKERING
WAD 95 of 2009
BARKER J
3 AUGUST 2009
PERTH
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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IN THE MATTER OF JEFFERY JOHN PICKERING; JEFFERY
JOHN PICKERINGApplicant
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
application made by Mr Pickering pursuant to O 46, r 7(2), that directions be
given to the Registrar to issue two originating
applications lodged with the
Western Australia District Registry of the Court on 19 May 2009, is
dismissed.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in
Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be
located using eSearch on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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WESTERN AUSTRALIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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WAD 95 of 2009
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EX PARTE:
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IN THE MATTER OF JEFFERY JOHN PICKERING; JEFFERY JOHN
PICKERING Applicant
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JUDGE:
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BARKER J
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DATE:
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3 AUGUST 2009
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PLACE:
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PERTH
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
APPLICATION FOR DIRECTIONS UNDER O 46, R 7(2)
- On
20 May 2009, a Deputy District Registrar of the Federal Court of Australia in
the Perth Registry, exercising the powers of a registrar
under O 1, r 4 of the
Federal Court Rules (Cth) (Rules) decided that two proposed originating
applications lodged with the Western Australia District Registry of the Court
by
Jeffery John Pickering should not be issued, as they appeared to be an abuse of
process of the Court, frivolous and/or vexatious.
- The
Deputy District Registrar's decision was made pursuant to O 46, r 7A(1) of the
Rules.
- The
Deputy District Registrar communicated this decision to Mr Pickering by letter
dated 20 May 2009.
- Mr
Pickering then made ex parte application pursuant to O 46, r 7(2) for the Court
to give directions to the Deputy District Registrar
to issue the proposed
applications.
THE PROPOSED APPLICATIONS
- In
the first proposed application, Mr Pickering proposed to sue Centrelink for
$514,000.00. In the second, he proposed to sue a
Judge of the Federal Court of
Australia for damages in the sum of $5.4 million.
THE ISSUE
- The
issue now before the Court is whether either of the two proposed applications
should be the subject of a direction by the Court
to a registrar to issue the
application to commence the proceeding.
COURT’S FUNCTION UNDER O 46, R 7(2)
- Order
46, r 7 provides as follows:
7 Operation of registries
(1) Subject to these Rules and the direction of the Court or a Judge, the
Registrar of the Court may give a direction as to the operation
of any
Registry.
(2) A person may apply to the Court ex parte for a
direction to the Registrar that he do any act which he is bound or entitled to
do and has refused to do.
- A
general question arises whether the Court, when it deals with an application
made under r 7(2) is engaged in the exercise
of judicial power or
administrative power, and whether the decision is amenable to appeal; and
whether any other person should be
given notice of the hearing and the
opportunity to appear and make representations to the Court.
- In
this regard, guidance may be obtained from decisions of the Court concerning the
power of the Registrar under O 46, r 7A(1), to
refuse to accept a document
because it appears on its face to be an abuse of process, and that of the Court
to give directions in
relation thereto under O 46, r 7(2).
- In
Bizuneh v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous
Affairs [2003] FCAFC 42; (2003) 128 FCR 353, the appellant appealed against the direction of
the Court made under O 46, r 7A that the Registrar refuse to accept an
application
as an "originating document". The Full Court (Lee, Whitlam and
Jacobson JJ) said that no judicial act is carried out by the Registrar
under r
7A, and so far as the direction of the Court is concerned it is "administrative
in character" (at 357). The Court explained
at 357:
Rule 7A provides for a judge to act in aid of administration of the Court.
There is no application to the Court by motion or otherwise
and no requirement
for a party to be heard. It involves determination of administrative
obligations with respect to documents presented
to a Registrar having regard to
the character of the documents on their face.
- Consequently,
the Court concluded (at 357) that a direction under O 46, r 7A is not a judgment
able to be subject to appeal by a
person whose document has been rejected by the
Registrar pursuant to the direction.
- It
should be noted that in Paramasivam v Randwick City Council [2005] FCA
369 Sackville J doubted the correctness of the Full Court's statement that a
direction given by the Court was not a judicial act, and
referred to the
decision of Toohey J in Letts v Commonwealth (1985) 8 FCR 585. However,
His Honour accepted there was a serious question whether such a direction by the
Court would constitute a "judgment" for
the purpose of appeal or leave to appeal
under the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) (Federal Court Act)
and Rules. Nonetheless, Sackville J considered himself bound by the decision of
the Full Court.
- In
Manolakis v District Registrar, South Australia District Registry, Federal
Court of Australia [2008] FCAFC 162; (2008) 170 FCR 426, another Full Court considered that it
should now be accepted that a direction by the Court under O 46, r 7A is not a
judgment from
which an appeal may be brought pursuant to s 24(1)(a) of the
Federal Court Act.
- The
Full Court (Gray, Branson and Besanko JJ) stated (at
[19]):
In our view, where a registrar is directed by a judge pursuant to O 46, r 7A(2)
not to accept the document for filing, the conduct
of the registrar undertaken
in compliance with the judge's direction is not open to review under s 35A(5) of
the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth). We take this view for two
reasons. First, the registrar is obliged to act in accordance with the direction
of the judge. For
this reason the person seeking to file the document is
aggrieved not by the conduct of the registrar but rather by the direction
given
by the judge (see Letts v Commonwealth 8 FCR at 587). Secondly, s 35A(2)
authorises a party to a proceeding to apply to the Court for review of the
exercise of a registrar of any of the powers of the Court
under s 35A(1). Where
it is an originating process that is not accepted for filing the person
concerned will not be a party to any proceeding at
the relevant time. Even where
this issue does not arise, the authority vested in a registrar by O 46, r 7A to
refuse to accept a
document, whether pursuant to a direction of a judge or of
his or her own motion under O 46, r 7A(1), is not a power of the Court
under s
35A(1). None of the powers identified in s 35A(1)(a) to (g) relates to the
acceptance of documents for filing. Nor does any of the powers prescribed by O
46, r 7AA (see s 35A(1)(h)).
- The
Full Court added, by way of observation at [22] that the better view is probably
that the decision of a judge to issue a direction
under O 46, r 7A(2) is
amenable to judicial review, including judicial review pursuant to the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth). However, the
reaching of a concluded view on that question was not required and the Court
said it was "best left for another
day when the issue directly falls for
consideration".
- In
my view, these authorities directly bear on the nature of an application made
under O 46, r 7(2), where a person applies to the
Court ex parte for a direction
to the registrar. It seems to me that the same principles enunciated in the two
Full Court decisions
apply with equal force to the Court's function under r 7.
Plainly r 7(2) is designed to enable the Court to give appropriate directions
to
the registrar in aid of the administration of the Court. In that regard there
is no "judgment" for the purposes of the Federal
Court Act and Rules.
- It
also follows that there is no obligation on the Court in dealing with an
application under O 46, r 7, to give any person, other
than the applicant
perhaps, notice of the application or to require the Registrar whose decision
is under effective review to appear
or make submissions to the Court. The
Registrar who refused to issue the process in the first instance, in a case such
as the present,
is not in any relevant sense a "party" to the application for a
direction. However, I do not consider that the Court would be precluded
from
providing another person the opportunity to appear in an appropriate case.
- In
this case I did not consider it necessary to give notice to the prospective
respondents of Mr Pickering's applications or to require
the Deputy District
Registrar to appear before the Court. I did, however, following hearing from
Mr Pickering, request the
Australian Government Solicitor (AGS) to provide
a copy of the release referred to by Mr Pickering in his submissions. The
AGS subsequently provided a copy of the release to Mr Pickering and he then
provided a copy to the Court.
- Of
course, in most cases involving the refusal of an originating document, if any
person who may have been considered interested
later becomes a party to any
proceeding that results from a direction of the Court, that person as a party to
that proceeding will
have all the rights of a party to apply to dismiss the
proceeding and exercise other rights they have as a party to a
proceeding.
PRIOR PROCEEDINGS COMMENCED BY MR PICKERING
- It
is relevant to note certain prior proceedings commenced by Mr Pickering. These
are relevant to the matters that Mr Pickering
would like to litigate.
- In
Pickering v Chief Executive Officer of Centrelink [2006] FCA 477 the
Court, in proceeding WAD 254 of 2005 (the 2005 Centrelink proceedings),
dismissed an application brought by the respondent for
summary dismissal of Mr
Pickering's application by which he sought compensation of $520,000.00 in
respect of his allegation that
"I had a job to go to. Centrelink refused to help
me get a job". The Court found at [21] that there were "potential causes of
action"
available to the applicant which could arguably be brought within the
jurisdiction of the Court.
- Relevantly
to the first of the current proposed applications, Mr Pickering achieved some
success in the proceeding, in that following
mediation in the proceeding on
8 June 2006, Centrelink agreed to pay him $6,000.00, but only did so
after he agreed to
sign the release referred to above in respect of the balance
of the claim of $514,000.00. On 21 June 2006, the proceeding
was
dismissed by consent.
- In
Pickering v Commonwealth [2007] FCA 1253 the Court, in proceeding WAD 226
of 2006 (the 2006 DEWR proceeding), dismissed a separate proceeding in which
Mr Pickering sought
damages from the respondent (identified in his
application as the Department of Employment and Workplace Relations) in the sum
of
$520,000.00, because the Department "refused to help him get a job in
Albany". The Court found it did not have jurisdiction to entertain
the
application (at [9-13]), and that there was no reasonable prospect of the
applicant successfully prosecuting his claim for damages
(at [14-17]). However
the Court said that, if it had found that it had jurisdiction to deal with the
application, it would not have
dismissed the application on the basis that there
was no factual foundation to the claim (at [18-25]). Rather the disputed
factual
matters would need to be determined by the Court following a trial.
- Each
of these two proceedings involve the thwarted desire of Mr Pickering to travel
from Perth to Albany to obtain work.
- In
Pickering v Centrelink [2008] FCA 561, in proceeding WAD 45 of 2008 (the
2008 Centrelink proceeding), the Court (on 18 April 2008) dismissed Mr
Pickering's application
by which he claimed damages of $2.7 million from
Centrelink for "all the stress, aggravation, stupidity and time in jail that
Centrelink
has put me through for not doing their job in the first place". The
Court held at [15] that the application as formulated did not
disclose a cause
of action for damages and, even if it did, there is no private right to damages
arising from the exercise of administrative
powers when there is statutory right
of review of such exercise. The Court also held at [20] that even if the
application were to
disclose a cause of action for damages it would have no
reasonable prospect of success in the light of established authority. The
Court
further held at [23]-[25] that it did not have jurisdiction to entertain the
claim. Finally, the Court considered at [26]-[28]
that the application should
be dismissed because it was a "frivolous" proceeding, in the sense that despite
whatever attempts were
made to discern a cause of action it was still not
arguable; and because it was without substance, or groundless or fanciful.
- In
the 2008 Centrelink proceeding, it is relevant to note that the application read
as follows:
CENTERLINK (sic) HAS REFUSED TO ALLOW ME TO SPEAK TO THE AUTORIZE (sic) REVIEW
OFFICER REGUARDING (sic) BEING BANNED FROM CENTERLINK
(sic) THIS HAS BEEN
GOING ON SINCE THE 1ST NOVEMBER 2007. SINCE 1975
I HAVE BEEN ARGUING WITH CENTERLINK (sic) ABOUT THEIR DUTIES AND OBLIGATION TO
ME. IT HAS GOT
TO THE SUITATION (sic) THAT THE CENTERLINK (sic)
PHYSCHIRIST (sic) PETER CLARKE BELIEVES I AM MENTALLY UNSTABLE. NOW I
CANNOT
TALK TO ANYONE WITHOUT THREATENING TO KILL EVEN THE POLICE HAVE TOLD ME I
AM MENTAL. THEREFOR (sic) BECAUSE OF CENTERLINK (sic)
AND BEING IN JAIL AT
TIMES I AM NOW SUEING (sic) CENTERLINK (sic) FOR $2,700,000 FOR ALL THE STRESS
AGREVATION (sic) STUPIDITY AND
TIME IN JAIL THAT CENTERLINK (sic) HAS PUT ME
THROUGH FOR NOT DOING THEIR JOB IN THE FIRST PLACE
WHY $2,700,000 I DON’T KNOW ITS THE NUMBER THAT JUMPS INTO MY
HEAD.
THE FIRST PROPOSED APPLICATION – FURTHER PROPOSED PROCEEDING AGAINST
CENTRELINK
- In
this proposed application Mr Pickering would seek damages of $514,000.00 against
Centrelink for alleged duress in relation to
settlement of previous proceedings
between the parties.
- The
proposed application (without correction to the text)
states
I AM SUEING FOR THE OTHER $514,000 DOLLARS THAT I FIRST SUED THEM OVER BECAUSE
CENTRELINK FORCED ME IN TO SIGNING A DOCUMENT THAT
STATED I WOULD OR COULD NOT
SUE CENTRELINK ON ANYTHING AGAIN. THEY CLEARLY SAIN THAT UNLESS I SIGNED THE
DOCUMENT I WOULD NOT GET
THE $6,000 WE AGREED ON AT THE MEDIATION. ON THE 26
JUNE 2006 AT 10.00AM. I HAD NO WORRIES ABOUT THE $6,000 BUT NOW FIND THAT I
CANNOT
SUE CENTRELINK ABOUT ANYTHING BECAUSE OF THIS DOCUMENT. WHAT CENTRELINK
HAS DONE IS AGAINST THE LAW AND BECAUSE I HAD NO LEGAL ADVICE
OR KNOWLEDGE OF
WHAT IS LEGAL AND WHAT IS NOT I AM NOT ALLOWED TO CHALLENGE CENTRELINK THROUGH
THE "AUTHORISED REVIEW OFFICER" A.R.O.
THAT IS CENTRELINK'S OWN COURT "SO TO
SPEAK" INSTEAD OF GOING TO THE FEDERAL COURT ITS HANDLED IN HOUSE BY CENTRELINK
THERE WAS NO
DEAL IN THE MEDIATION ON 26 JUNE 2006 THAT STATED I HAD TO SIGN A
DOCUMENT FOR CENTRELINK TO SAY I WOULD NOT SEE THEM AGAIN.
- It
will immediately be appreciated that "the other" $514,000.00 is a reference to
the initial claim made in the 2005 Centrelink
proceeding for $520,000.00, less
the $6000.00 settlement received following mediation in that proceeding.
- Not
unreasonably or surprisingly, Mr Pickering was required to give Centrelink a
release from liability or claim for the balance
of the $520,000.00 claim before
the $6,000.00 agreed settlement was paid to him. He duly gave that release.
However, notwithstanding
that Mr Pickering received the $6000.00 settlement he
now wishes to 'sue' Centrelink for the balance of what he considers is due
and
owing to him, namely, $514,000.00.
- The
release, which Mr Pickering had not kept a copy of, but after the hearing of
this matter obtained a copy from the AGS and provided
it to the Court, provides
as follows:
RECITALS
- Mr
Pickering is a customer of Centrelink.
- On 12
September 2005 Mr Pickering filed an application in the Federal Court of
Australia, File No. WAD 254 OF 2005 in which Centrelink
was named as the
respondent. On 4 November 2005 his Honour Justice Siopis ordered that the name
of the respondent be amended to
read The Chief Executive Officer of
Centrelink.
- In
the application, Mr Pickering stated 'I had a job to go to and Centrelink
refused to help me get a job'.
- Centrelink
denies that it or any of its employees refused to help Mr Pickering get a
job.
- The
CEO of Centrelink and Mr Pickering have agreed to settle the application on the
terms set out herein.
THIS DEED WITNESSES AS FOLLOWS
- Forthwith
upon executing this Deed, Mr Pickering shall sign a consent order to effect the
dismissal of the application.
- Mr
Pickering and The CEO of Centrelink agree to bear their own costs in relation to
the application.
- Within
14 days of the date of this Deed, Centrelink will pay to Mr Pickering the sum of
$6,000 in full and final settlement of any
and all claims, costs, expenses or
other matter of whatsoever nature and howsoever arising that Mr Pickering
has or may have
against Centrelink, The CEO of Centrelink and/or any employee of
Centrelink in any way relating to or in connection with the application.
- In
consideration of the aforesaid payment by Centrelink, Mr Pickering, to the
extent permitted by law, releases and discharges Centrelink
and the employees of
Centrelink absolutely from all and any liability in respect of any action,
demand, claim or proceeding made,
or which (but for this Deed) might be made,
against the same or any of them in any jurisdiction in respect of, relating to,
or in
connection with the application.
This Deed may be pleaded in bar to any action or proceeding of the kind referred
to in this clause.
- (1) All
information exchanged by Mr Pickering and Centrelink during the course of
negotiations leading to the signing of this Deed:
(i) has been disclosed on a 'without prejudice' basis; and
(ii) is confidential as between Mr Pickering and Centrelink and shall not be
disclosed to any third party.
and
(2) Neither Mr Pickering nor Centrelink shall publish or disseminate information
as to the fact of settlement or as to the terms
of this settlement to any person
without the written consent of the other party.
- The
previous clause 5 does not apply if the information:
(i) is disclosed to a party's employees, accountants, insurers or legal advisors
in connection with the Application or this Deed;
or
(ii) is disclosed to the Australian Taxation Office or any public authority by
compulsion of law; or
(iii) is known to the public (other than as a result of a breach of confidence
by the person releasing the information); or
(iv) is disclosed for the purposes of enforcing this Deed; or
(v) is disclosed for the purpose of satisfying a request for information from a
Commonwealth Minister or Commonwealth Parliament.
- Nothing
in this Deed is intended to or shall be construed as an admission of any
liability or wrongdoing whatsoever by Centrelink
or any employee of
Centrelink.
- Each
party must execute and do all acts and things necessary or desirable to
implement and give full effect to the provisions and
purpose of this Deed.
- Each
party is responsible for its own legal and other costs and expenses in relation
to this Deed.
- Centrelink
will pay stamp duty on this Deed.
- This
Deed shall be binding upon Mr Pickering, Centrelink and their respective
successors and/or permitted assignees.
- If
any part of this Deed is void or unenforceable, then that part will be severed
from this Deed so all part that are not void or
unenforceable remain in full
force and effect and are unaffected by that severance.
- For
all purposes this deed shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the
laws of the State of Western Australia and, where
applicable, the laws of the
Commonwealth of Australia, for the time being in force.
- This
deed may be executed in any number of counterparts and all of these counterparts
taken together constitute one and the same instrument.
- In
my view, a proceeding such as that now proposed by Mr Pickering cannot possibly
succeed in light of the release. There is no
arguable ground that the release
is not enforceable.
- As
the Court explained in Pickering v Centrelink [2008] FCA 561 at [27], by
reference to precedent authority, where a matter is without substance or
groundless or fanciful it may be considered "frivolous"
or "vexatious" and so
constitute "an abuse of process" of the Court.
- The
proposed application by Mr Pickering against Centrelink is simply a renewed
attempt by Mr Pickering to pursue his original $520,000.00
claim against
Centrelink, a claim he has already compromised and received a $6,000.00 pay-out
for. Plainly Mr Pickering no longer
has any rights of action against Centrelink
in respect of the sum of $514,000.00.
- In
that sense, the proposed proceeding is frivolous and vexatious, and would be an
abuse of process of the Court if it were allowed
to be issued.
- Further,
so little detail of the statutory basis of the proposed claim against Centrelink
is provided in the proposed application
that the application should, for this
additional reason be considered unreasonably vague and an abuse of process.
- For
these reasons I decline to make the direction to the Deputy District Registrar
requested by Mr Pickering, to cause the issue
of his proposed application
against Centrelink.
THE SECOND PROPOSED APPLICATION – PROPOSED PROCEEDING AGAINST FEDERAL
COURT JUDGE
- So
far as the proposed application against a Federal Court Judge is concerned,
claiming damages of $5.4 million, this action too,
in my view, is frivolous,
vexatious and if permitted to issue would constitute an abuse of process of the
Court.
- The
proposed application does not specify how damages in that sum have been
calculated. It perhaps, not coincidentally, is twice
the $2.7 million claim
made against Centrelink in the 2008 Centrelink proceedings dismissed by the
Federal Court Judge on 18 April
2008.
- The
action proposed would be a private damages claim against a Federal Court Judge
concerning his conduct in the performance of his
duties as a Federal Judge under
Chapter III of the Australian Constitution. Such an action is not
competent. Judges of the status of a Federal Court Judge is not liable to be
sued in respect of acts done
in the performance of his or her judicial duties:
Gallo v Dawson (1988) 82 ALR 401.
- Further,
it is doubted that this Court has jurisdiction to entertain a damages claim, for
the reasons concerning the Court's limited
jurisdiction to entertain such
private damages claims as explained in Pickering v Commonwealth [2007]
FCA 1253 and Pickering v Centrelink [2008] FCA 561.
- Moreover,
there is no factual basis to support the very serious allegations that the
proceeding, if issued, would make. Mr Pickering
asserts that the Judge in the
course of dealing with his matter on 18 April 2008, made comments that he
considers were "lies". A
perusal of the reasons for decision dismissing the
application and the transcript of the proceedings in Court on 18 April 2008
discloses
no such thing.
- At
the hearing before me, Mr Pickering explained the nature of his
grievance:
MR PICKERING: It's all written in the application.
HIS HONOUR: But he made a decision in the court that you don't like. That's
the basis, isn't it?
MR PICKERING: No. He made a decision based on the fact that he lied to the
Centrelink and the court about what happened.
HIS HONOUR: Who did?
MR PICKERING: [The Judge]
HIS HONOUR: [The Judge] made a decision in the court following submission and
ruled you didn't have a case.
MR PICKERING: He said that I never threatened Centrelink any time, yet I've got
police records and the court records from the Magistrate
Courts, District Court,
the police, that says I did. He said at no time have I done that. Then he
turned around and said that I
threatened Centrelink there and then on that day
when there was no threats at all made.
- Having
read the transcript of the proceeding on 18 April 2008, it seems to me that
Mr Pickering has misunderstood what the Judge
said or the context in which
His Honour said certain things in the course of delivering his ex tempore
judgment on that day. For
example, His Honour commenced the giving of short
reasons by observing as follows:
In the application Mr Pickering says:
Centrelink has refused to allow me to speak to the authorised review officer
regarding being banned from Centrelink. This has been
---
At this point Mr Pickering interjected to say:
They have a policy on that that says I'm allowed to go there, but they
refused to give me that right.
His Honour then continued:
He says this has been going on since 1 November 2007:
(His Honour
then quoted from Mr Pickering's application)
Since 1975 I have been arguing with Centrelink about their duties and
obligations to me. It has got to the situation that the Centrelink
psychiatrist
... believes I am mentally unstable. Now I cannot talk to anyone without
threatening to kill. Even the police have told
me I am mental. Therefore because
of Centrelink and being in jail at times, I am now suing Centrelink for
$2,700,000 for all the
stress, aggravation, stupidity and time in gaol that
Centrelink has put me through for not doing their job in the first place. Why
$2,700,000? I don't know. It's the number that jumps into my head.
- The
Judge then explained that a general claim for damages of $2.7 million could not
be made in this Court.
- Towards
the end of that hearing, when his application was dismissed, Mr Pickering was
obviously so unhappy that he made what sounded
like a threat. There is no need
to repeat here what he said. Having said what he said, Mr Pickering added:
"That's not a threat.
That's what happens. That's what could happen, you know?"
On that note the transcript and the proceeding before His Honour came
to an
end.
- Against
this background, it is clear Mr Pickering misapprehended what the Judge said and
ruled upon when he made a decision and gave
reasons for decision on 18 April
2008. Plainly the Judge acted at all times in the performance of his duties as
a Federal Court
Judge. He is not liable to be sued for so doing.
- Finally,
it must be observed that the terms of the proposed application against the
Federal Court Judge are lacking in any detail
sufficient to support such a
serious claim. For that reason, as well, the proposed application should be
considered vexatious and
an abuse of process.
- In
context, Mr Pickering’s proposed proceeding against the Federal Court
Judge can be seen to be the means of seeking some
sort of retribution against
the Judge for dismissing his application on 18 April 2008.
- For
these reasons I decline to give a direction to the Deputy District Registrar to
issue Mr Pickering's proposed application against
the Federal Court
Judge.
CONCLUSION
- If
Mr Pickering believes he has a genuine entitlement to commence proceedings
against either Centrelink or the Federal Court Judge
then he should take
appropriate legal advice from an experienced legal practitioner concerning the
nature of the causes of action,
whether he is entitled to commence and maintain
such causes of action, the appropriate jurisdiction in which to commence
proceedings
and the extent to which he might be considered to have reasonable
prospects of succeeding with such actions.
- The
background I have provided above to Mr Pickering's litigation in this Court
since 2006, goes to demonstrate that the proceedings
Mr Pickering now wants to
commence in this Court are misconceived and would constitute an abuse of process
of this Court if he were
to be permitted to issue such originating
applications.
- For
these reasons I decline to give any directions to the Registrar to issue either
of the proposed originating applications lodged
by Mr Pickering at the Western
Australia District Registry of the Federal Court of Australia on 19 May
2009.
- The
Court therefore formally orders that the application made by Mr Pickering
pursuant to O 46, r 7(2), that directions be given
to the Registrar to issue two
originating applications lodged with the Western Australia District Registry of
the Court on 19 May 2009,
is dismissed.
I certify that the preceding fifty-four (54)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Barker.
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Associate:
Dated: 3 August 2009
Counsel for the
Applicant:
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/FCA/2009/809.html