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Andelman v Secretary, Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs [2011] FCA 299 (31 March 2011)
Last Updated: 31 March 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Andelman v Secretary, Department of
Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs [2011] FCA 299
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Citation:
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Andelman v Secretary, Department of Families, Housing, Community Services
and Indigenous Affairs [2011] FCA 299
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Appeal from:
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Andelman and Secretary, Department of Families, Housing, Community Services
and Indigenous Affairs (Administrative Appeals Tribunal, No. 2009/4180,
29 October 2010)
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Parties:
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MIKHAIL ANDELMAN v SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF
FAMILIES, HOUSING, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS
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File number(s):
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NSD 1580 of 2010
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Judge:
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JAGOT J
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – unrepresented
litigant – procedural fairness – whether application made for
reconstitution of Administrative
Appeals Tribunal under s 21A of
Administrative Appeal Tribunal Act 1975 – whether unrepresented applicant
had failed to
proceed with application as contemplated by s 42A(5) –
whether power to dismiss application under s 42A(5) available where
application
for recusal of sitting Tribunal member had been made and not determined –
whether exercise of discretion to dismiss
application resulted in denial of
natural justice – extent of Tribunal’s obligation to explain
procedures
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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GENERAL DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Appellant:
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Mr A Markus of Australian Government Solicitor
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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ON APPEAL FROM THE
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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MIKHAIL ANDELMANAppellant
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AND:
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SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF FAMILIES, HOUSING,
COMMUNITY SERVICES AND INDIGENOUS AFFAIRSRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal be dismissed.
- The
appellant pay the respondent’s costs of the appeal as agreed or taxed.
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
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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GENERAL DIVISION
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NSD 1580 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL
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BETWEEN:
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MIKHAIL ANDELMAN Appellant
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AND:
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SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF FAMILIES, HOUSING, COMMUNITY SERVICES AND
INDIGENOUS AFFAIRS Respondent
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JUDGE:
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JAGOT J
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DATE:
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31 MARCH 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
BACKGROUND
The appeal
- These
reasons for judgment concern an appeal against the order of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (the Tribunal) dismissing the appellant’s
application for review of a decision, made by Centrelink and affirmed by the
Social Security Appeals
Tribunal, to require the appellant to repay certain
amounts on account of overpayments of his old age pension.
- Under
s 44(1) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth)
(the AAT Act), a party to a proceeding before the Tribunal may appeal to
this Court on a question of law only.
The initial hearing of the appeal
- When
the matter first came before me for hearing on 31 January 2011 the appellant,
Mikhail Andelman, was unrepresented. He was assisted
by an interpreter in the
Russian language. Unsurprisingly, given his status as a layperson and the fact
that English is not his
native language, it was not apparent that Mr Andelman
understood that this Court’s jurisdiction was limited to deciding
questions
of law and did not enable a review of the merits of the decision
requiring him to repay part of his old age pension. However, the
submissions
for the respondent, the Secretary of the Department of Families, Housing,
Community Services and Indigenous Affairs (the Secretary), helpfully
identified the relevant statutory provisions and potential legal considerations
while maintaining (as appropriate in
the circumstances) that Mr Andelman’s
notice of appeal did not raise any question of law as required to enliven this
Court’s
jurisdiction. The Secretary’s submissions referred to a
letter written by Mr Andelman to the Tribunal on 8 October 2010 requesting
that
the Tribunal be reconstituted so that his matter could be heard by another
member of the Tribunal. The Secretary’s submissions
said
that:
The making of such an application, and the procedures for dealing with it, are
provided for in s 21A of the AAT Act.
- The
Secretary submitted, however, that Mr Andelman had abandoned his proceeding (in
circumstances explained further below) and thus
had also abandoned his
application under s 21A of the AAT Act. It followed, according to the
Secretary’s submissions,
that the Tribunal was empowered to make the order
it did on 29 October 2010, which was in these
terms:
As the Applicant has failed to proceed with this matter, pursuant to section
42A(5) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975, the application
for review is DISMISSED.
- Section
21A of the AAT is as follows:
(1AA) This section does not apply in relation to proceedings in the Security
Appeals Division.
(1) At any time during the hearing of a proceeding before the Tribunal (other
than a proceeding in which the Tribunal is constituted
by a presidential member
who is a Judge and 2 other members), a party to the proceeding may apply to the
Tribunal as constituted
for the purposes of the proceeding requesting that the
Tribunal be reconstituted for the purposes of the proceeding.
(2) Upon the making of an application under subsection (1), the Tribunal as
constituted for the purposes of the proceeding shall,
after receiving the
submissions made in support of the application and any submissions made in
opposition to the application, notify
the President of the making of the
application and give him or her particulars of those submissions.
(3) The President may, after taking the submissions into account, if he or she
considers that the matters to which the proceeding
relates are of such public
importance as to justify him or her in so doing, give a direction that the
Tribunal as constituted for
the purposes of the proceeding be reconstituted by:
(a) adding one or more members; or
(b) removing one or more members; or
(c) substituting one or more other members;
(or any combination of these).
(4) Where a direction is so given, the Tribunal as reconstituted in accordance
with the direction shall continue the proceeding and
may either:
(a) complete the proceeding; or
(b) at any time remit the proceeding to the Tribunal as previously constituted
for completion by the Tribunal as previously constituted.
- Section
42A(5) of the AAT Act is in these terms:
(5) If an applicant for a review of a decision fails within a reasonable time:
(a) to proceed with the application; or
(b) to comply with a direction by the Tribunal in relation to the application;
the Tribunal may dismiss the application without proceeding to review the
decision.
The amended notice of appeal
- As
a consequence of the Secretary’s submissions (which characterised Mr
Andelman’s letter of 8 October 2010 as the making
of an application under
s 21A of the AAT Act), I decided that further assistance was required from
both parties on the relationship
between ss 21A and 42A(5) in order to
ascertain whether there was any question of law arising from the circumstances
in which
the Tribunal dismissed Mr Andelman’s application for review. I
therefore adjourned the hearing of the appeal on 31 January
2011 and, under
O 80 of the Federal Court Rules, referred Mr Andelman to the Registrar for
referral to a lawyer on the pro bono panel for legal assistance in relation to
the appeal.
Mr Pickles of counsel accepted the referral under O 80.
Thereafter, I made directions permitting the filing and service of
an amended
notice of appeal and further written submissions from both parties. The amended
notice of appeal, filed on 1 March 2011,
raised the following questions of
law:
- Whether
the Tribunal had power to dismiss the appellant’s application for review
pursuant to s 42A(5) of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (AAT
Act) whilst the appellant’s request for reconstitution of the Tribunal
remained undetermined.
- Whether
the Tribunal had power under s 42A(5) to dismiss the application at all in
the circumstances.
- Whether
the Tribunal failed to afford the appellant procedural fairness by dismissing
his application for review without first hearing
submissions and determining the
application for reconstitution of the Tribunal.
The reconvened hearing of the appeal
- At
the reconvened hearing on 22 March 2011, Mr Pickles appeared on behalf of Mr
Andelman and Mr Markus on behalf of the Secretary.
I wish to acknowledge their
valuable assistance in clarifying the issues to which this appeal gives rise.
In order to understand
those issues it is necessary to record in more detail the
events leading up to and the circumstances of the hearing before the Tribunal
on
29 October 2010.
The hearing before the Tribunal
- On
8 October 2010 Mr Andelman wrote to the Tribunal. Before writing that letter,
Mr Andelman had been informed by the Tribunal of
the Senior Member of the
Tribunal to whom his case had been allocated for hearing. Mr Andelman’s
letter identified the Senior
Member by name, and referred to another case of Mr
Andelman’s which had been heard by that Senior Member in 2006. According
to Mr Andelman, the earlier decision of the Senior Member was wrong. Mr
Andelman expressed a concern about the Senior Member’s
alleged lack of
knowledge. He also said that when he saw the Senior Member he felt
uncomfortable. The letter concluded with a request
that another member of the
Tribunal hear his case.
- At
the hearing on 29 October 2010, the same Senior Member presided. Mr Andelman
appeared assisted by an interpreter. Ms Harlock
appeared for the Secretary. A
transcript of the hearing is available. After the interpreter was sworn in the
transcript records
that:
THIS TRANSCRIPT IS ONLY OF PROCEEDINGS IN THE ENGLISH
LANGUAGE
- The
hearing proceeded as follows:
MR ALLEN: Now, Ms Harlock, you’re appearing for the respondent.
MS R. HARLOCK: Yes, I am, Senior Member.
MR ALLEN: Very well. Mr Andelman.
MR M. ANDELMAN: Yes. I don’t like this hearing.
MR ALLEN: Yes.
MR ANDELMAN: Because I don’t like your decision.
MR ALEN: Yes.
MR ANDELMAN: Because I was last time and you abused me very hard. You make me
very big problem. And when I take it your decision
to Bondi Junction –
your own decision the customer officer take the decision like this one, put it
in the rubbish. They said
“you silly – this man is a silly man. He
don’t complete the kind of knowledge in Centrelink law.” And he
fixes my pension and rent assistance.
MR ALLEN: Very well. And who is this Centrelink officer?
MR ANDELMAN: The centre – Borsat Selden.
MR ALLEN: What?
MR ANDELMAN: You want his name?
MR ALLEN: Yes.
MR ANDELMAN: Borsat Selden.
MR ALLEN: Selden?
MR ANDELMAN: Yes. That’s it. This what I do want today you make a
decision, because I know you not have knowledge in Centrelink
law, I think that
I have to take knowledge twice more for you. This what I don’t want you
at this hearing.
MR ALLEN: Well, I know you have written to the tribunal, Mr Andelman.
MR ALLEN: Yes.
MR ALLEN: And a copy of that letter we’ll mark as exhibit A1.
EXHIBIT #A1 COPY OF LETTER FROM MIKHAIL ABDELMAN TO THE TRIBUNAL
MR ALLEN: Ms Harlock, have you seen the letter?
MS HARLOCK: No, I haven’t.
MR ALLEN: I’ll pass it down to you.
MR ANDELMAN: No, I was here 8 October.
MR ALLEN: Yes.
MR ANDELMAN: I made this application for witness for Carmel Wright.
MR ALLEN: Yes.
MR ANDELMAN: With Ms Isenberg, and I asked a very simple question:
Ms Isenberg, you want the court ..... She don’t answer
because here
nobody want to talk. Here, everybody want own your life. Nobody want listen at
all. This case anyway cannot exist
because I like Carmel Wright will be here.
If she not here I want you answer me all these question about social security
law.
MR ALLEN: Mr Andelman, the possibility does exist that I should disqualify
myself from hearing this matter if you - - -
MR ANDELMAN: No, no, sorry. I feel very sick when I see you. And I am
terrible sick and I cannot see your face and I cannot talk
with you. This when
I start now jumping and I feel very bad and I am sorry, I cannot participate in
this case. I’m sorry.
I must leave, because if I stay another 10 minutes
ambulance must pick me up. I’m sorry.
MR ALLEN: Mr. Andelman.
MR ANDELMAN: Yes.
MR ALLEN: So far - - -
MR ANDELMAN: You can make a decision without me. I know you’d make a
decision your application is successful. I know 100
per cent. I know you
acknowledge. In this case I don’t want you make a decision.
MR ALLEN: Well - - -
MR ANDELMAN: I – under human rights, I have choice.
MR ALLEN: Mr Andelman.
MR ANDELMAN: Yes.
MR ALLEN: I must be very – I must caution you. If you abandon this
hearing now - - -
MR ANDELMAN: Yes. I not abandon. I like this hearing, but I don’t like
you.
MR ALLEN: Well, that is not a good enough reason to - - -
MR ANDELMAN: But I make this reason – I tell the reason is because you
abused me last time. You don’t listen last time
to me, what I want to
say. You put me in witness box like a slave. You don’t let me tell one
word. You can reach a short-term
solution like last case. When I have a
witness and I want ask the witness question, you only just told me, “I
will make a
decision and I don’t care what your witness will have
said.” You breached the law. I have a right to have my witness
and my
witness must be given evidence. Sorry. You can make a decision without
me.
MR ALLEN: Well, Mr Andelman, I must - - -
MR ANDELMAN: Yes. I am sorry. I cannot see you face and I don’t care
what you make a decision.
MR ALLEN: Very well.
MR ANDELMAN: You make a decision without me. I was here on 8 October and I
still not have decision what Ms Isenberg make it, why
she refuse Carmel Wright
to come to this case. Sorry.
MR ALLEN: Ms Harlock, the matter, I think, is now dismissed. The applicant has
withdrawn from the hearing.
MS HARLOCK: He certainly has withdrawn from the hearing,
yes.
- After
some further discussion with Ms Harlock the Senior Member
said:
... [Mr Andelman] has certain problems with me hearing the matter. But at this
stage, I do not regard him as having made out a case
that I am biased. He
certainly didn’t like the last decision I made, but that’s - -
-
- Thereafter
the Senior Member said:
Right. Well, as I said, the applicant has withdrawn from the hearing, so the
decision under review is taken to be affirmed.
- The
Senior Member did not provide reasons for the decision. Subsequently the
Tribunal issued an order dismissing the application
for review in the terms set
out above.
THE STATUTORY SCHEME IN MORE DETAIL
- Section
2A of the AAT Act specifies that:
In carrying out its functions, the Tribunal must pursue the objective of
providing a mechanism of review that is fair, just, economical,
informal and
quick.
- Part
III of the AAT Act regulates the organisation of the Tribunal including, in Div
3, its constitution and reconstitution. Division
3 contains s 20B, under
which the President of the Tribunal may give directions as to the persons who
are to constitute the
Tribunal for the purpose of a particular proceeding.
Section 21, quoted above, is also in Div 3 of Pt III of the AAT Act. By
s 23B
the President must have regard to certain matters when giving a
direction as to who will constitute the Tribunal.
- Part
IV of the AAT Act concerns the Tribunal’s review functions. In short,
under s 25(4), the Tribunal has power to review
any decision in respect of
which application is made to it under any enactment. Section 33(1) governs the
review process as follows:
(1) In a proceeding before the Tribunal:
(a) the procedure of the Tribunal is, subject to this Act and the regulations
and to any other enactment, within the discretion of
the Tribunal;
(b) the proceeding shall be conducted with as little formality and technicality,
and with as much expedition, as the requirements
of this Act and of every other
relevant enactment and a proper consideration of the matters before the Tribunal
permit; and
(c) the Tribunal is not bound by the rules of evidence but may inform itself on
any matter in such manner as it thinks appropriate.
- Various
provisions of the AAT Act enable the Tribunal to dismiss proceedings without
carrying out or completing a review. These
include dismissal by consent
(s 42A(1)), dismissal after notice in writing of discontinuance or
withdrawal (s 42A(1A)),
dismissal if a party fails to appear
(s 42A(2)), dismissal if the decision is not reviewable (s 42A(4)),
and dismissal
for failure within a reasonable time to proceed with an
application or comply with a direction (s 42A(5)). As noted, in the
present case the Tribunal dismissed Mr Andelman’s application under
s 42A(5)(a) (for failure to proceed within a reasonable
time with the
application). Sections 42A(6)-(10) are relevant to dismissal on this basis.
They provide as follows:
(6) If, under this Act, the Tribunal dismisses an application or an application
is dismissed on its behalf, the proceeding to which
the application relates,
unless it is reinstated under subsection (9) or (10), is taken to be concluded.
(7) Before exercising its powers under subsection (2), the Tribunal must be
satisfied that appropriate notice was given to the person
who failed to appear
of the time and place of the directions hearing, conference, mediation or
hearing, as the case may be.
(8) If the Tribunal, under subsection (2), has dismissed an application (other
than an application in respect of a proceeding in
which an order has been made
under subsection 41(2)), the person who made the application may, within 28 days
after receiving notification
that the application has been dismissed, apply to
the Tribunal for reinstatement of the application.
(9) If it considers it appropriate to do so, the Tribunal may reinstate the
application and give such directions as appear to it
to be appropriate in the
circumstances.
(10) If it appears to the Tribunal that an application has been dismissed in
error, the Tribunal may, on the application of a party
to the proceeding or on
its own initiative, reinstate the application and give such directions as appear
to it to be appropriate
in the circumstances.
- By
these provisions the Tribunal may reinstate an application dismissed under
s 42A(2) for failure to appear on application
by the party concerned
(ss 42A(8) and (9)). However, where an application has been dismissed under
s 42A(5), the Tribunal
may reinstate the application only if it appears to
the Tribunal that the application has been dismissed in error (s 42A(10)).
- Under
s 43(1), for the purpose of reviewing a decision, the Tribunal may exercise
all the powers and discretions that are conferred
by any relevant enactment on
the person who made the decision. The Tribunal must make a decision in writing
which affirms, varies
or sets aside the decision under review. Under
s 43(2) the Tribunal is to give reasons for a decision under s 43(1)
orally
or in writing. By contrast, no reasons are required to be given for a
decision to dismiss a proceeding under s 42A (as no review
takes place and so s
43(2) does not apply).
APPLICABLE PRINCIPLES
- Mr
Andelman was not represented before the Tribunal. Accordingly, the observations
in Minogue v Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission (1999) 84 FCR
438; [1999] FCA 85 (Minogue) are relevant,
namely:
[26] Unrepresented litigants present difficult issues for courts and for
individual Judges. As the majority observed in Cachia v Hanes [1994] HCA 14; (1994) 179
CLR 403 at 415:
Whilst the right of a litigant to appear in person is fundamental, it would be
disregarding the obvious to fail to recognise that
the presence of litigants in
person in increasing numbers is creating a problem for the
courts.
Increasing attention is being devoted to the policy issues created by the
increasing numbers of litigants in person. See, for example,
Australian Law
Reform Commission, The Unrepresented Party (Background Paper 4, December
1996).
[27] In Neil v
Nott [1994] HCA 23; (1994) 121 ALR 148, the High Court considered whether [sic] the trial
judge's exercise of discretion to refuse an extension of time for lodging an
application
for maintenance and support under the Administration and Probate
Act 1958 (Vic). The Court observed (at 150) that
a
frequent consequence of self-representation is that the court must assume the
burden of endeavouring to ascertain the rights of parties
which are obfuscated
by their own advocacy.
In Abram v Bank of New Zealand [1996] ATPR 41-507, at 42-347, a Full
Federal Court, faced with an unrepresented litigant's claim that the trial judge
had not given him appropriate
assistance to present his case, made this
comment:
What a judge must do to assist a litigant in person depends on the litigant, the
nature of the case, and the litigant's intelligence
and understanding of the
case.
We respectfully agree with this observation. Because the duty of the judge
varies according to the factors identified by the Full
Court in Abram,
the duty to assist an unrepresented accused in criminal proceedings is likely to
be more extensive than that imposed on a judge
hearing civil proceedings in
which one or more of the parties are not legally represented: cf MacPherson v
The Queen [1981] HCA 46; (1981) 147 CLR 512; DA Ipp, Judicial Intervention in the Trial
Process (1995) 69 ALJ 365 at 369-370.
[28] The general principles governing the role of the judge in civil proceedings
involving an unrepresented litigant have been stated
in Rajski v Scitec
Corporation Pty Ltd [(unreported, NSWCA, Kirby, Samuels and Mahoney JJ, 16
June 1986)]. Samuels JA said this (at 14):
In my view, the advice and assistance which a litigant in person ought to
receive from the court should be limited to that which
is necessary to diminish,
so far as this is possible, the disadvantage which he or she will ordinarily
suffer when faced by a lawyer,
and to prevent destruction from the traps which
our adversary procedure offers to the unwary and untutored. But the court should
be astute to see that it does not extend its auxiliary role so as to confer upon
a litigant in person a positive advantage over the
represented opponent... At
all events, the absence of legal representation on one side ought not to induce
a court to deprive the
other side of one jot of its lawful entitlement... An
unrepresented party is as much subject to the rules as any other litigant.
The
court must be patient in explaining them and may be lenient in the standard of
compliance which it exacts. But it must see that
the rules are obeyed, subject
to any proper exceptions. To do otherwise, or to regard a litigant in person as
enjoying a privileged
status, would be quite unfair to the represented
opponent.
Mahoney JA made the following observation (at 27):
Where a party appears in person, he will ordinarily be at a disadvantage. That
does not mean that the court will give to the other
party less than he is
entitled to. Nor will it confer upon the party in person advantages which, if he
were represented, he would
not have. But the court will, I think, be careful to
examine what is put to it by a party in person to ensure that he has not,
because
of the lack of legal skill, failed to claim rights or to put forward
arguments which otherwise he might have
done.
These comments have been referred to with approval in subsequent cases: see
In the Marriage of Johnson (1997) 139 FLR 384 (Fam Ct/FC) at 406 (and
cases cited there); Morton v Vouris (1996) 21 ACSR 497 at 513-514 per
Sackville J. There is nothing in Neil v Nott inconsistent with what was
said in Rajski v Scitec Corporation.
[29] A trial Judge often faces something of a dilemma. While he or she may be
bound to provide some advice and assistance to an unrepresented
litigant, the
authorities make it clear that the Judge should not intervene to such an extent
that he or she cannot maintain a position
of neutrality in the litigation:
Burwood Municipal Council v Harvey (1995) 86 LGERA 389 (NSW CA) at 397
per Kirby P. However, the boundaries of legitimate intervention are flexible and
will be influenced by the need for
intervention to ensure a fair and just trial:
Panagopoulos v Southern Healthcare Network [(unreported, VSC, Smith J, 15
September 1997)] at 6.
- In
Jeray v Blue Mountains City Council (No 2) [2010] NSWCA 367
(Jeray) the New South Wales Court of Appeal, dealing with a trial
judge’s alleged denial of procedural fairness to an unrepresented
litigant, also made observations relevant to the present case. At [6]-[12]
Allsop P said:
[6] At the root of procedural fairness is the provision of a fair hearing to a
litigant and the basal notion that the litigant has
understood the proceedings
before him or her and has had an adequate opportunity given to him or her,
considering his or her attributes,
qualities and deficiencies which render the
litigant more or less able to vindicate his or her rights in court. A sharp line
between
rules and consequences cannot be drawn in this respect. Analogies of the
rules of the game and how the game is played may be helpful
at one level, but
ultimately each circumstance has to be analysed and evaluated to see whether, in
a human context, a fair hearing
has been provided.
[7] More than a few litigants appear for themselves. Subject to any lawful
procedure of a court, that is their right. Their right
is to approach the
judicial branch of government for the vindication of rights, private and public.
This is an essential Constitutional
aspect of our society. It is necessary to
recognise that however easier [sic] it may make it to have the assistance of
skilled professional
lawyers assisting the court (and if I may respectfully say
so, of the character we have had provided to us today) it is the litigant
and
his or her rights that are the subject of
vindication.
[8] Litigants reflect the community in general. They come in a variety of forms.
Those who seek to represent themselves are one of
those types of litigants.
Litigants who represent themselves may do so for many reasons: lack of funds,
inability to obtain assistance,
for whatever reason, a personal desire to
participate. The reason does not matter. One consequence of people appearing for
themselves
is that they suffer the dual strain of being both litigant and
advocate. All who have undertaken the strain of advocacy understand
the strains
involved in one task. The combined role must be doubly
stressful.
[9] None of the above is to underestimate the ability of some litigants in
person and, I emphasise at this point that I am not referring
to Mr Jeray, to
manipulate the legal system for ulterior motives, often to the great cost and
strain of their opponent parties and
to the system of justice itself. Litigation
almost always has at least two sides and to indulge any whim of a litigant in
person
in an expensive, stressful and complex undertaking that is litigation is
a step that is unwise. To indulge unthinkingly any whim
of a litigant in person
can cause great hardship to parties who oppose to
them.
[10] The balance of fairness, procedural rigour and wise and practical
indulgence in managing litigation by a judge is no simple
task. Too indulgent an
attitude to a litigant in person will unfairly burden the other side. An absence
of proper regard for the
needs of the litigant in person may cause
injustice.
[11] The balance can be a fine one. Sometimes the difference is one of
evaluative assessment about which minds can differ. Though
the ultimate question
of whether a tribunal has afforded procedural fairness is a judgment of the
satisfaction of an essential legal
and Constitutional standard, it is decided
principally by reference to a factual evaluation of a normative consideration of
fairness
in the judicial process. It is unnecessary to consider further any
philosophical or legal consideration as to the character of the
judgment or
evaluation involved.
[12] It is of course necessary to have regard not to what a judge might
advisedly do best to exemplify judicial practice, but rather
the question is
what a judge must do to provide a fair hearing and equal
justice.
- Allsop
P (with whom MacFarlan JA agreed) found that, in all of the circumstances of
that case, the trial judge did not afford Mr
Jeray procedural fairness. At
[30]-[31] Allsop P concluded:
[30] However difficult and obstinate Mr Jeray may have appeared to the learned
primary judge, I am of the view that he did not have
sufficient [sic] explained
to him for it to be concluded legitimately that he had a fair hearing on the
fourth day.
[31] This is not to require perfection; it is not a call to pander to every whim
of a litigant in person. Rather in my view it is
an assessment of the evaluative
conception of fairness in the circumstances of this
case.
- According
to Macfarlan JA at [37]:
Fairness to the appellant required that he be told what the judge considered to
be the effect of his conduct and of the consequences
to the appellant of him
discontinuing the proceedings.
- In
his dissenting judgment Young JA referred to another decision of the New South
Wales Court of Appeal at [54] as follows:
[54] As to this, the respondents accept that in fulfilling the basic obligation
to ensure a fair trial, additional obligations may
fall upon a judge where there
is a litigant in person. Indeed, the respondent’s counsel accepted that
the law in this respect
was appropriately stated by Justice Basten with whom
Justices Hodgson and Bell agreed, in Jae Kyung Lee v Bob Chae-Sang Cha
[2008] NSWCA 13 [48]. Justice Basten said:
The relevant principles, if they can be so described, derive from the obligation
of a trial judge to take appropriate steps to ensure
that a party appearing
unrepresented has sufficient information about the practice and procedure of the
Court as is reasonably practicable
for the purpose of ensuring a fair
trial.
- Although
Minogue and Jeray concerned the obligations of judges, the
Tribunal is equally bound to afford those appearing before it procedural
fairness. Accordingly,
the observations in each case relating to unrepresented
litigants are apt to apply to the Tribunal in the exercise of its review
functions.
SECTION 21A OF THE AAT ACT
- Mr
Markus acknowledged that an application for reconstitution made before a hearing
could be treated as continuing in certain circumstances.
Accordingly, Mr
Andelman’s letter of 8 October 2010, if it otherwise constituted an
application under s 21A of the AAT
Act, could satisfy the requirement of
s 21A that the application be made at “any time during the
hearing”. Mr Markus
submitted, however, that there was a real question
whether Mr Andelman’s letter of 8 October 2010 was an application within
the meaning of s 21A at all. Mr Markus referred to two decisions of the
President of the AAT, Downes J, dealing with s 21A
(Kowalski and
Repatriation Commission [2009] AATA 807 (Kowalski) and
Mellor and Australian Postal Corporation [2010] AATA 288
(Mellor)). In Mellor, in which more detailed reasons are
given than in Kowalski, Downes J dealt with an application under
s 21A and made the following
observations:
[10] The application was made under s 21A of the [AAT] Act. That section was
inserted in the [AAT] Act in 1977, relatively shortly
after the tribunal was
established. Prior to that time a presidential member was required to preside at
a hearing of the tribunal.
The amendments in 1977 permitted the tribunal to be
constituted in a number of ways and a number of these without a presidential
member presiding.
[11] Section 21A operates on matters where the hearing has commenced. It permits
a party to “apply to the tribunal as constituted...
requesting that the
tribunal be reconstituted...”. The tribunal hears the application and
then, pursuant to section 21A(2),
notifies “the President of the making of
the application and give[s] him or her particulars of [the] submissions.”
Section
21A(3) confers a discretion on the president “after taking the
submissions into account” to reconstitute the tribunal
“if he or she
considers that the matters to which the proceeding relates are of such public
importance as to justify him or
her in so doing.”
[12] The plain meaning of these words is that the president can only
reconstitute the tribunal, under this subsection, in the circumstance
that I
have just quoted. There is nothing which suggests that the president can
reconstitute the tribunal for any other reason. It
is true that this limitation
on the power is not introduced until the section refers to the powers of the
president, but that limitation
must be read back into the earlier subsections
and must there qualify the circumstances in which the application can be made. I
do
not think it is necessary to look outside the [AAT] Act to come to this
conclusion. However, the conclusion is confirmed from the
second reading speech
of Mr Ellicott QC, the then Attorney-General, on introducing the relevant bill
in the Parliament on 28 April
1977.
[13] It follows that the tribunal can only reconstitute the panel for the
hearing of this matter under s 21A where it is determined
that the proceeding
relates to matters of such public importance as justify that course. In my
opinion, there are no circumstances
of sufficient public importance to justify
me in reconstituting the tribunal.
- In
the same matter, at [15]-[17], Downes J noted
that:
[15] So it is not appropriate to reconstitute the tribunal under s 21A. That is
not, however, an end of the matter. The tribunal
is plainly bound by the rules
of natural justice. This is tacitly recognised by s 14 of the [AAT] Act relating
to the interests of
members and by other sections. However, it does not depend
upon recognition in the [AAT] Act and many judicial decisions establish
the
proposition that the tribunal is bound by the rules of natural justice. One of
those rules is, of course, the rule relating to
apprehended bias.
[16] It is usually appropriate for the tribunal, as constituted for a hearing,
to determine itself an application to the tribunal
that one or more of the
members comprising the tribunal for a hearing should be recused on the basis of
apprehended bias. It is not,
for reasons I have given, appropriate for such an
application to be made under s 21A, but an application based on the rules of
natural
justice can simply be made directly to the tribunal as constituted to
hear the matter.
[17] It follows that the ordinary and appropriate course, in my view, would have
been for the application under s 21A to have been
rejected, but for Dr Alexander
to have entertained an application on the broad grounds of the rules of natural
justice. However,
that did not happen and the matter, through the s 21A
application, came before me.
- Despite
Mr Pickles’ cogent submissions to the contrary, I am persuaded that Mr
Markus is correct in his submissions that the
member of the Tribunal to whom an
application for reconstitution is made must be entitled (and bound), in the
first instance, to
determine whether the application engages s 21A of the
AAT Act all. This is not to say that the member may undertake the exercise
of
consideration which is vested in the President by s 21A(3) of the AAT Act.
If an application has been made under s 21A(1),
and submissions made as
required by s 21A(2), then it is a matter for the President alone to
determine whether the matters to
which the proceedings relate are of such public
importance as to justify a direction for the reconstitution of the Tribunal
under
s 21A(3). The President’s function under s 21A(3),
however, is not usurped by the Tribunal determining for itself
whether or not an
application has been made to it under s 21A(1). Indeed, the Tribunal must
be bound to determine that for
itself in order to discharge its functions under
s 21A(2).
- The
reasoning in Mellor reflects not only this practical and legal reality
(that an application under s 21A can only be made to the Tribunal during
the hearing), but also the reality that s 21A (a specific statutory regime
for reconstitution of the Tribunal in circumstances
where the President
considers that the matters to which the proceeding relates are of such public
importance to justify the giving
of a direction for the Tribunal to be
reconstituted) operates against the background of the common law principles of
natural justice
by which the Tribunal is bound. As Downes J said, one of the
key elements of natural justice is the rule against bias. Ordinarily,
an
application that a decision-maker disqualify himself or herself on the ground of
bias (apprehended or actual) must be made in
the first instance by the
decision-maker in question. Section 21A is not a substitute for the ordinary
common law position. The
section has a limited operation. The touchstone of it
operation is that the matters to which the proceeding relates be matters which
the President might consider of such public importance as to justify the giving
of a direction for reconstitution of the Tribunal.
Accordingly, if a party
requests reconstitution of the Tribunal merely on the ground of bias (actual or
apprehended) then, in the
ordinary course, the Tribunal would be entitled to
treat that application as one based on the common law principles by which the
Tribunal is bound and not as an application under s 21A of the AAT Act.
Nothing in such an application, in the ordinary course,
would engage the
provisions of s 21A. This conclusion is consistent with the recent
decision of Downes J in Kowalski and Repatriation Commission [2011] AATA
197.
- Mr
Andelman’s application that another member of the Tribunal hear his case
did not purport to be an application under s 21A(1)
of the AAT Act.
Nothing in the letter of 8 October 2010, or in Mr Andelman’s reference to
it during the hearing on 29 October
2010, indicated any attempt to make an
application under the scheme established by s 21A. For these reasons the
Tribunal had
no obligation receive submissions and notify the President of the
making of an application under s 21A(2). It is true that
the transcript
does not suggest that the Tribunal turned its mind to the question whether or
not there was any such application.
But this is immaterial. There was no such
application and, as such, the Tribunal had no obligations either under or in
connection
with s 21A of the AAT Act.
- In
any event, and as Mr Markus also submitted, the question whether the Tribunal
had before it an application under s 21A of
the AAT Act is not
determinative. An application under s 21A, like any other application, can
be withdrawn or discontinued.
In the present case the real question is whether,
in the circumstances of the case, the Tribunal was able to dismiss the
proceeding
under s 42A(5). This involves two sub-questions. The first is
whether the factual conditions of s 42A(5) were satisfied.
The second is
whether the circumstances were such as to make dismissal of the proceeding under
s 42A(5) a breach of the Tribunal’s
obligation, in accordance with
the laws of natural justice, to give Mr Andelman a fair
hearing.
DISMISSAL UNDER S 42A(5) OF THE AAT ACT
Submissions for Mr Andelman
- The
submissions for Mr Andelman (other than those relating to s 21A of the AAT
Act, discussed above) may be summarised as follows:
– (i) Mr Andelman
did not fail to proceed with the application, (ii) to the contrary, the
transcript discloses that
Mr Andelman wished to proceed with the application but
simply felt unable to do so before the Senior Member, (iii) accordingly,
the factual pre-conditions to an exercise of power under s 42A(5) did not
exist, (iv) alternatively, the Tribunal was bound
to hear submissions and
determine Mr Andelman’s application for another member of the Tribunal to
hear his case before exercising
any power under s 42A(5), and (v) by
analogy to Jeray, exercising the power under s 42A(5) in all the
relevant circumstances involved a breach of the Tribunal’s obligation
to
give Mr Andelman a fair hearing because the Tribunal wrongly assumed that Mr
Andelman wished to abandon the hearing and did not
explain to Mr Andelman the
relevant procedures for the determination of his application for another member
of the Tribunal to hear
his case before Mr Andelman left the hearing. According
to these submissions, the hearing before the Tribunal effectively miscarried
at
the outset. It was not made clear to Mr Andelman that the Tribunal as currently
constituted had to deal with his application
for another member of the Tribunal
to hear his case in the first instance. It was wrongly put to Mr Andelman that
he was abandoning
the hearing when he was not. The Tribunal gave no practical
assistance to Mr Andelman. The Tribunal did not warn Mr Andelman of
the
consequences of leaving the hearing, and the fact that Mr Andelman did so is
immaterial in any event: even if he had sat there
and refused to participate
further, the same position would have resulted. In the circumstances in which
it found itself after Mr
Andelman had left the hearing the Tribunal was bound
not to exercise any power of dismissal under s 42A(5), as to do so would
amount to a breach of the requirements of procedural fairness. Rather, the
Tribunal was required to determine the extant application
for another member of
the Tribunal to hear Mr Andelman’s case and to notify Mr Andelman of that
decision before any determination
could be made in relation to his substantive
application for review.
Discussion
- The
decision in Jeray reflects the concern of the common law to ensure that a
party to a dispute resolved through a judicial or quasi-judicial determination
receives a fair hearing. In the ordinary course, a fair hearing is a hearing on
the merits of the substantive dispute. The provisions
of s 42A of the AAT
Act implicitly recognise that, in some circumstances, resolution following a
hearing on the merits of the
substantive dispute is not always feasible. The
proceeding, in such cases, may be determined by the other courses of action for
which the section provides. The mere fact that action is taken under one of
those provisions does not, however, immunise the action
against judicial review
for breach of the requirements of natural justice.
- The
reasoning in Jeray discloses also that the question whether obligations
of procedural fairness have been fulfilled or contravened involves a close
consideration
of the facts of the particular case. Of particular importance is
the observation of Allsop P at [12] that it is “necessary
to have regard
not to what a judge might advisedly do best to exemplify judicial practice, but
rather... [to] what a judge must do
to provide a fair hearing and equal
justice.”
- On
close consideration of the facts of the present case, I am satisfied that the
power under s 42A(5) of the AAT Act was available
to the Tribunal.
Furthermore, I am not persuaded that the requirements of procedural fairness
precluded the Tribunal from exericisng
this power in all of the circumstances
which confronted it on 29 October 2010.
- In
reaching this conclusion I have given full weight to Mr Andelman’s lack of
legal representation, age (he is in receipt of
an old age pension), difficulties
with the English language (he speaks and understands some English but it is
clearly not his first
language), and emotional state (he appeared from the
transcript to have been in emotional distress at the Tribunal hearing and
exhibited
similar distress in the course of the appeal before this Court). All
of these factors indicate that Mr Andelman needed substantial
help from the
Tribunal in order to understand its procedures and to enable him to obtain a
fair hearing. The conclusion which I
have drawn is that nothing the Tribunal
did operated to deprive Mr Andelman of the help he required. To the contrary,
by his own
conduct, Mr Andelman disabled the Tribunal from providing him with
any explanation of its procedures or with any assistance so as
to ensure a fair
hearing of his application for review on its merits.
- The
facts of the present case are distinguishable from those in Jeray. As
the transcript discloses, Mr Andelman made his objection to the constitution of
the Tribunal immediately. The Tribunal (properly)
elicited Mr Andelman’s
reasons for wishing the Tribunal to be reconstituted. After Mr Andelman
explained his position the
Tribunal, again properly, referred to the letter of 8
October 2010 and made it an exhibit in the proceeding. Far from causing the
proceeding to miscarry, it was necessary and appropriate for the Tribunal to
ensure it had before it all material relevant to Mr
Andelman’s request for
another member to hear his review application. It was also necessary and
appropriate for the Tribunal
to ensure, as it did, that the Secretary’s
representative was aware of the contents of Mr Andelman’s letter. Those
preliminary
matters having been dealt with, the Senior Member began to explain
to Mr Andelman the procedures involved in an application for him
to disqualify
himself and for another member of the Tribunal to hear Mr Andelman’s case.
This is apparent from the Senior Member’s
words, “Mr Andelman, the
possibility does exist that I should disqualify myself from hearing this matter
if you...”.
The Senior Member was never able to complete this sentence
because Mr Andelman interrupted him. Mr Andelman’s interruption
was to
the effect that he could not participate in the case because seeing the Senior
Member made him feel seriously sick and he
had to leave. The balance of the
hearing consisted of the Senior Member making further attempts to explain
relevant procedures to
Mr Andelman but, on each occasion, being cut off by Mr
Andelman insisting that the Senior Member could make a decision without Mr
Andelman. The fact that, in the course of so doing, Mr Andelman also said,
“I not abandon. I like this hearing, but I don’t
like you”,
cannot be read in isolation but must be construed in the context of the hearing
as a whole. It was after making
this statement that Mr Andelman repeated
(twice) that the Tribunal could “make a decision without [him]” and
that he
did not care what decision the Tribunal made. Mr Andelman then acted
upon these latter statements by leaving the Tribunal hearing
altogether.
- At
that point, the Tribunal was confronted by circumstances in which the applicant
for review had left the hearing. Not unreasonably,
the Tribunal characterised
this as Mr Andelman having withdrawn from the hearing. In other words, on the
day and at the time the
matter was fixed for final hearing, and in circumstances
where the Secretary’s representative was in attendance for the purpose
of
that hearing, the Tribunal was left without an applicant for review to proceed
with the application. Moreover, the Tribunal was
entitled to infer (as I have
no doubt it did) that Mr Andelman was not likely to return to proceed with the
hearing at any time later
in the day. In these circumstances it was open to the
Tribunal to conclude that Mr Andelman had failed within a reasonable time
to
proceed with his application. The time to proceed with the application was the
hearing which had been fixed for 29 October 2010.
The application for another
member of the Tribunal to hear the case was part of that hearing (although it
was ancillary to the substantive
dispute). Mr Andelman left the hearing with a
clear indication that he had no intention of returning. That constituted a
failure
to proceed within the application (including the application for another
member of the Tribunal to hear the case) within a reasonable
time. As such, the
factual conditions of s 42A(5) were satisfied and the power of dismissal
under that section was available
to the Tribunal.
- Unlike
in Jeray, there was simply no opportunity under the circumstances
outlined above for the Tribunal to afford Mr Andelman any practical assistance.
On the two occasions the Tribunal sought to provide Mr Andelman with information
about the applicable procedures, as explained above,
it was prevented from doing
so by Mr Andelman’s own conduct. Having left the hearing, Mr Andelman
ensured that the Tribunal
had no opportunity to provide him with any explanation
of its processes at all. It was neither inappropriate nor impermissible for
the
Tribunal to attempt to advise Mr Andelman about the consequences of walking out
of the hearing. Nor was it impermissible for
the Tribunal to exercise its
powers under s 42A(5) of the AAT Act after Mr Andelman did so. It cannot
be the case that that
the Tribunal was precluded from exercising its powers
under s 42A(5) merely because Mr Andelman had applied for the Senior Member
to disqualify himself from hearing the application. First, Mr Andelman left the
hearing and thus could not be said to have continued
with his application for
disqualification. If it were otherwise then, as Mr Markus submitted, an
applicant for review would be vested
with a right to an adjournment after making
any such application merely by reason of leaving the hearing before the Tribunal
had
been afforded an opportunity to explain the consequences of doing so and the
processes available for the determination of the application.
Second, and in
any event, the transcript shows that the Senior Member was not persuaded that Mr
Andelman’s application could
succeed on the ground of apprehended bias.
Again as Mr Markus said, the transcript cannot be equated to reasons for a
decision.
As such, it does not matter that the Senior Member said “the
matter, I think, is now dismissed” before referring to
the application for
disqualification. Nor does it matter that the transcript does not disclose the
Tribunal’s consideration
of the discretionary factors weighing for and
against dismissal. It cannot be inferred from the transcript that the Tribunal
did
not appreciate the discretionary nature of the power it was exercising or
its consequences, or that it failed to take account of
any relevant
consideration in making its decision to dismiss Mr Andelman’s application.
The conclusion must be that the circumstances
of and reasons for the decision to
dismiss the proceeding under s 42A(5) were not such as to entail a breach of the
Tribunal’s
obligation to give Mr Andelman a fair hearing.
- For
these reasons, this is not a case where the dismissal of the proceeding under
s 42A(5) was beyond power or involved any
contravention of the requirements
of natural justice. Accordingly, the questions of law identified in the amended
notice of appeal
must be answered against Mr Andelman as follows:
- Question 1:
Does not arise.
- Question 2:
Yes.
- Question 3:
No.
I certify that the preceding forty-one (41)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Jagot.
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