You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Administrative Appeals Tribunal of Australia >>
2011 >>
[2011] AATA 569
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Help]
Taylor and Secretary, Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations [2011] AATA 569 (4 August 2011)
Last Updated: 18 August 2011
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
DECISION AND REASONS FOR DECISION [2011] AATA 569
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No 2010/4701
|
GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION
|
|
|
Re
|
|
Applicant
|
And
|
Secretary, Department of
Education, Employment and Workplace Relations
|
Respondent
DECISION
|
Tribunal
|
Senior Member Jill Toohey
|
Date of decision 4 August 2011
Date of written reasons 18 August 2011
Place Sydney
|
Decision
|
The decision under review is affirmed.
|
|
|
................[sgd]..............................
Senior Member
CATCHWORDS
SOCIAL SECURITY – ABSTUDY – whether
applicant overpaid – whether special circumstances – decision under
review
affirmed.
Social Security Act 1991, ss 1236, 1237
REASONS FOR DECISION
|
|
Senior Member Jill Toohey
|
|
Background
|
|
- Mr
Robert Taylor seeks review of a decision that he was overpaid ABSTUDY and must
repay $3,324.03. A hearing was to be held at the
Dubbo Courthouse on 4 August
2011 but Mr Taylor did not attend. When the Tribunal telephoned his
grandmother, with whom he lives,
to ask if he would be attending, she advised
that he was away for work. After talking with her, I decided to make a decision
based
on the documents before the Tribunal and submissions by the respondent,
whose representative attended the hearing. These written
reasons reflect the
reasons given orally at the hearing.
Mr Taylor’s
application for ABSTUDY
- In
March 2008, Mr Taylor was 16 years old. He was in Year 10 at Dubbo Christian
School and working part-time at Woolworths.
- On
19 March 2008, Mr Taylor and his grandmother went to the Centrelink office in
Dubbo to lodge a claim for ABSTUDY. It appears they
were given some help to
complete the form. It shows that Mr Taylor was earning $160.00 a week. A
handwritten note on the form records
“Have put in my resignation &
will finish up this week”.
- Because
it appeared he would have no income from employment from the end of the
following week, Mr Taylor was granted the maximum
rate of ABSTUDY of $194.50 a
fortnight from 13 March 2008.
- In
fact, Mr Taylor did not resign from Woolworths but continued to work part-time.
As he was earning more than the allowable amount
each week, he ended up being
overpaid ABSTUDY by $3,324.03 for the period 25 September 2008 to 5 May 2010.
- Mr
Taylor and his grandmother say that neither of them made the note on the
application form that he would be resigning, and that
it was wrong. They say he
always planned to keep working part-time and neither of them would have told the
Centrelink officer that
he would be resigning.
- It
is not clear how the note came to be written. I accept what Mr Taylor and his
grandmother say but, clearly, somewhere along the
way, communication became
confused.
- Neither
Mr Taylor nor his grandmother realised he was being overpaid until he was at
Centrelink on 15 April 2010 and discussed his
payment with an officer there.
- Mr
Taylor agrees that he received regular letters from Centrelink about his payment
which asked him to advise if his income changed.
He agrees that his income
increased over time as his hours varied. He acknowledges that he should have
read the letters, but he
did not.
- Mr
Taylor and his grandmother say that Centrelink had made an error by incorrectly
recording that he would be resigning from work.
However, they do not dispute,
in the end, that he has been overpaid. He is currently repaying the debt at
$37.00 each fortnight.
Is there any reason Mr Taylor should not
have to repay the debt?
- The
Social Security Act 1991 provides that, depending on the circumstances, a
person may not have to repay some or all of a debt.
- In
some cases, a debt may be written off, meaning it will not be recovered at this
time but may be recovered in future if circumstances
change: s 1236. None of
the provisions for writing off a debt apply to Mr Taylor.
- A
debt must be waived if the overpayment was due solely to administrative
error and was received in good faith: s 1237 A(1). I accept that Mr Taylor
received the ABSTUDY payment in good faith but I am not satisfied that the
overpayment was due solely
to an administrative error by Centrelink.
- A
debt may be waived if there are special circumstances: s 1237 AAD.
However, Mr Taylor does not argue that there are any special circumstances which
mean he should not have to repay the debt.
He has been repaying it and will
continue to do so.
- Taking
all of these matters into account, I affirm the decision under review.
I certify that the 15 preceding paragraphs are a true copy of the
reasons for the decision herein of Senior Member Jill Toohey
Signed:
...............[sgd].................................................................
Diana Weston, Associate
Date of Hearing 4 August 2011
Date of Decision 4 August 2011
Date of Written Reasons 18 August 2011
Applicant Self-represented
Solicitor for the Respondent Ms R de
Hosson
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/AATA/2011/569.html