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Warnock and Comcare [2009] AATA 20 (13 January 2009)
Last Updated: 14 January 2009
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
ORDER AND REASONS FOR ORDER [2009] AATA 20
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No 2008/3693
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GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION
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Re
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Applicant
Respondent
ORDER
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Tribunal
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Senior Member Bernard J McCabe
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Date 13 January 2009
Place Brisbane
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Order
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The Tribunal refuses to grant the application
for stay.
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.......................[Sgd].......................
Senior Member
CATCHWORDS
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Application for
stay of decision – Calculation of normal weekly earnings – Stay not
appropriate
for purpose of securing the effectiveness of the hearing and
determination of application for review – Application for stay
refused
Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth) ss 41(2), 42D
Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 (Cth) s 14
Re Repatriation Commission and Delkou [1985] AATA 297; (1985) 8 ALD
454
Re Labrador Liquor Wholesale Pty Ltd and CEO of Customs [2006] AATA
485; (2006) 90 ALD 761
Australian Securities and Investments Commission v PTLZ [2008] FCAFC
164
REASONS FOR ORDER
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Senior Member Bernard J McCabe
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- Mr
Shaun Warnock, the applicant, is a former employee of the Australian Federal
Police (“the AFP”). Comcare, the respondent,
accepted liability to
pay compensation in respect of a health work-related condition pursuant to s 14
of the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 in August 2006.
Comcare subsequently determined on 5 December 2006 that the amount of
compensation for incapacity should be reduced
because of its view of what Mr
Warnock would have earned by way of overtime if he remained at work with the
AFP. The amount of overtime
is relevant to calculating the amount of his normal
weekly earnings.
- The
argument about what Mr Warnock would have earned by way of overtime appears to
lie at the heart of these proceedings. It is essentially
a question of fact. It
will be necessary for me to hear from Mr Warnock and officers from the AFP so I
can form a view as to what
he would have earned if he remained. That task is
properly undertaken at a hearing.
- Mr
Warnock has asked for a stay of the determination dated 5 December 2006
(affirmed in the reviewable decision of 14 December 2007)
to reduce his
incapacity payments. He says his financial circumstances are such that he can
only survive in business if he receives
the money Comcare would have paid but
for the decision under review. I declined to make an order pursuant to s 41(2)
of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (“the AAT
Act”) prior to Christmas. In oral reasons given at the time, I indicated I
was concerned that Comcare would
not be able to recover the money if Mr Warnock
were unsuccessful. I was also satisfied that the best way forward was to bring
the
matter on for hearing as soon as possible. I was told there would be no
difficulty in doing so. But some of the witnesses are not
available. The matter
will now not be ready for a hearing until early February. Mr Warnock has renewed
his application for an order
under s 41(2) of the AAT Act.
- The
principles governing the exercise of the stay power have been discussed in a
number of cases, including Re Repatriation Commission and Delkou [1985]
AATA 297; (1985) 8 ALD 454 and Re Labrador Liquor Wholesale Pty Ltd and CEO
of Customs [2006] AATA 485; (2006) 90 ALD 761. Ultimately, though, the
question can only be resolved with reference to the words of s 41(2): see
Australian Securities and Investments Commission v PTLZ [2008] FCAFC 164
at [34] per North and Downes JJ. That provision says the power to make an order
staying the operation or implementation of a decision is
available where the
Tribunal:
is of the opinion that it is desirable to do so after taking into account the
interests of any persons who may be affected by the
review, [to] make
such order or orders staying or otherwise affecting the operation or
implementation of the decision ... as the Tribunal considers
appropriate for the
purpose of securing the effectiveness of the hearing and determination of the
application for review.
- It
follows I must consider the interests of the parties and perhaps the larger
public interest. I turn first to consider Mr Warnock’s
interests. Mr
Warnock took leave from the AFP in November 2005 and left the AFP altogether
some 11 months later. He decided to become
a macadamia farmer. To that end, he
leased a farm. He acquired plant and equipment. He has a number of commitments
that he must
meet each month in order to stay in business. He described those
commitments in his statement dated 9 January 2009.
- I
accept Mr Warnock is experiencing financial difficulty and may experience
prejudice if his income from Comcare is not increased.
He does not make enough
money from his fledgling farming operation to meet all of his financial
obligations. He says the money he
receives from Comcare helps him to survive
until the farm becomes a going concern. If the farm is a success, he adds, he
will be
able to end his reliance on compensation payments. He argues that
keeping alive his hopes of making the farm a success is in everybody’s
interests, including the interests of Comcare.
- Ms
Dole, for Comcare, questioned whether Mr Warnock’s statement of 9 January
2009 established that his situation was as dire
as he claimed. I am satisfied
his statement makes it clear that he needs additional income in order to meet
his obligations. If he
can get money from Comcare in the short term, so much the
better for him. If he cannot meet his obligations, including his lease
and
mortgage payments, he will presumably have difficulty remaining in business.
- Mr
Warnock’s financial difficulties inevitably mean he will have problems
repaying any lump sum amount that he receives from
Comcare in the event he is
unsuccessful in his substantive application. The risk of that outcome might be
reduced if a stay order
applied prospectively so that Comcare was not required
to pay the applicant any arrears that would be payable but for the decision
under review.
- Both
of the parties have made claims about the public interest. Comcare says the
public interest is served by ensuring that compensation
payments are directed to
those who are entitled to them. Mr Warnock’s argument is essentially the
same, albeit that the parties
disagree about the amount of the entitlement in
this case.
- The
question of whether or not a stay order is appropriate depends in part on
whether the applicant has reasonable prospects of success
in his substantive
application. It would not be appropriate to order a stay if the applicant has a
hopeless case. I am not satisfied
that is the situation here. There does appear
to be a factual dispute that can only be resolved by weighing up the evidence at
a
hearing.
- The
obstacle to making an order in this case is the requirement that the stay power
be exercised “for the purpose of securing
the effectiveness of the hearing
and determination of the application for review”: s 41(2) of the AAT Act.
While I accept ordering
a stay would relieve the applicant’s financial
burden while the substantive application is before the Tribunal, Comcare has
pointed out that the question of whether or not Mr Warnock remains in business
as a macadamia farmer need not affect the outcome
of the case. While I accept Mr
Warnock’s claim that the application is motivated at first instance by a
desire to sustain his
farming enterprise and secure his financial future, the
hearing will not be rendered pointless or even more difficult if the Tribunal
declines to make a stay order.
- I
am conscious Mr Warnock is experiencing a good deal of stress. He is angry with
Comcare and the AFP. He points out that he may have
some difficulty paying a
lawyer to represent him in the future, although the Tribunal is used to dealing
with unrepresented applicants
and would make allowance for that fact if it came
to pass. I am required to apply the law set out in s 41(2) of the AAT Act. That
provision does not contemplate a stay order being made purely to relieve
hardship or distress. I cannot justify making an order under
that provision in
the circumstances of this case. I remain of the view that the best course is to
bring the matter on for a hearing
as quickly as possible.
- Finally,
Mr Warnock also asked the Tribunal for an order remitting the matter to the
respondent for reconsideration pursuant to s
42D of the AAT Act. I have decided
that is not the appropriate course in the circumstances. The Tribunal is ready
and able to deal
with the matter as soon as the parties are ready. I do not see
any advantage in sending the matter back to Comcare at this point.
I
certify that the 13 preceding paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for the
decision herein of Senior Member Bernard J McCabe
Signed:..................................[Sgd]............................................
Michael Buckingham, Associate
Dates of Hearing 9 and 12 January 2009
Date of Order 13 January 2009
The applicant
was self-represented
Solicitor for the respondent Sparke Helmore Lawyers
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