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Federal Privacy Commissioner of Australia Cases |
Last Updated: 1 May 2006
Case Citation:
H v Chartered Accountant [2006] PrivCmrA
7
Subject Heading:
Improper disclosure of Tax File Number
information.
Law:
Section 17 and section 49 of the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth),
guideline 2.4 in the Tax File Number Guidelines 1992
Facts:
A chartered accountant was appointed administrator of a
company in liquidation. The chartered accountant wrote to over one hundred
employees of the company regarding their employee entitlement claims. Included
in the correspondence to the employees was a complete
list of each
employees’ superannuation claims and their Tax File Number information.
The complainant, an employee of the company in liquidation, wrote to the
chartered accountant expressing concern, amongst other things,
with the fact
that their Tax File Number had been disclosed to other employees. The chartered
accountant responded stating that
the Tax File Number information and other
information were sent to employees in error. The chartered accountant
apologised for any
inconvenience caused as a result of the incident. The
chartered accountant also provided an explanation of the events leading up
to
the disclosure, advising that the list was generated in response to a request
from the Australian Taxation Office for the employees’
superannuation and
Tax File Number information. The chartered accountant advised it had
inadvertently included the list intended
for the Australian Taxation Office with
the correspondence to the employees. The complainant was not satisfied that the
chartered
accountant was taking the matter sufficiently seriously and wrote to
the Privacy Commissioner seeking assistance and the imposition
of
‘sanctions’ against the chartered accountant.
Issues:
Section 17 of the Privacy Act provides that the
Commissioner shall issue Guidelines concerning the proper handling of Tax File
Number information. Those Guidelines
were issued in 1988. Paragraph 2.4
of the Tax File Number Guidelines requires that Tax File Number recipients only
use or disclose
Tax File Number information as authorised by taxation,
assistance agency or superannuation law. In this case it did not appear that
the disclosure of the complainant’s Tax File Number information to other
employees was done so in accordance with the Tax File
Number Guidelines.
Section 49 of the Privacy Act provides that if in the course of an
investigation the Commissioner forms the view that a Tax File Number offence may
have been committed,
the Commissioner shall discontinue the investigation and
refer the matter to the Australian Federal Police or the Director of Public
Prosecutions.[1] The Commissioner
therefore needed to consider whether the disclosures of Tax File Number
information constituted a possible Tax
File Number offence.
Outcome:
In the course of the investigation, the Commissioner
formed the view that the disclosures might constitute a Tax File Number offence.
The Commissioner advised the parties of this and referred the matter to the
Australian Federal Police. The investigation was then
discontinued but
recommenced on advice from the Australian Federal Police that it would not
institute proceedings for an offence
in view of the nature of the alleged
offence and its general impact.
The Commissioner then recommenced the
investigation and decided that the chartered accountant had not satisfied the
requirements of
paragraph 2.4 of the Tax File Number Guidelines.
The
Commissioner asked the chartered accountant to consider the sufficiency of the
steps it had taken to address the inappropriate
disclosure of Tax File Number
information, and asked what steps it would take to ensure that such disclosures
would not occur in
future.
In consultation with the Commissioner the
chartered accountant agreed to take a number of steps to resolve the matter.
These included
contacting the Australian Taxation Office to coordinate a process
for employees to apply for a new Tax File Number if they wished
to, writing to
the complainant and all affected employees apologising for the disclosure of
their Tax File Numbers and advising them
of the process to obtain a new Tax File
Number, reminding the chartered accountant’s staff of their obligations
under the Tax
File Number Guidelines, and instituting Guidelines for the
handling of outgoing mail to help prevent such an occurrence happening
in the
future.
The complainant remained dissatisfied with the outcome of the
complaint. However, the complainant’s proposed remedy, which
was the
imposition of sanctions on the chartered accountant, was beyond the
Commissioner’s powers. The Commissioner subsequently
closed the complaint
under section 41(2)(a) of the Privacy Act on the grounds that the chartered
accountant had adequately dealt with the complaint.
OFFICE OF THE PRIVACY COMMISSIONER
April 2006
[1] A Tax File Number offence means an offence against section 8WA or 8WB of the Taxation Administration Act 1953 or section 6 of the Crimes Act 1914 or section 11.1, 11.4 or 11.5 of the Criminal Code.
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/PrivCmrA/2006/7.html