The appeal from the Tribunal's finding as to jurisdiction (NSD 1617 of 2013)
50 Once again, no questions (or purported questions) of law were identified in the notice of appeal. The grounds were described in the following terms (without alteration):
I hope in deciding dispute of the court has to objective according to the Court's Jurisdiction, promptly, courteously and effectively and in so doing to interpret the statutory Law and develop the general Law of Commonwealth, so as to fulfil the role of a Court in exercising the Judicial Power of the Commonwealth under the Constitution.
51 In substance, Ms Arifin's complaint was that the Tribunal failed to consider the merits of her claim for compensation. She was disturbed that the case only took an hour to be heard and that she was asked no questions about the matters she had raised in the material she submitted in support of her claim. She submitted that before dismissing her claim on the basis that it had no jurisdiction, the Tribunal should have contacted all the people against whom she had a grievance as outlined in that material in order to investigate whether or not her grievances were well-founded. As she put it "the Tribunal have to - they really have to look into what has happened and all the explanations about this matter of what has happened to me". Each of the grounds relied upon under the ADJR Act was invoked to support this basic point.
52 Ms Arifin referred to natural justice. Natural justice is the right to a fair hearing. It has two limbs: the right to be heard before an adverse decision is made and the right to a hearing before an impartial tribunal. Ms Arifin submitted that "the Tribunal has failed to use its power in relation to natural justice to continue with the hearing". But the sole purpose of the hearing was to hear argument about whether the Tribunal had jurisdiction. There is transcript of this hearing. That transcript discloses that the senior member made the purpose of the hearing very clear to Ms Arifin and that she understood what the senior member said to her. The transcript also shows that Ms Arifin was given a full and fair opportunity to be heard on the question of jurisdiction. I accept, as Ms Arifin submitted, that she was not given an opportunity to be heard in relation to the substance of her claims. But unless the Tribunal had jurisdiction to award her compensation, there was no point to such an inquiry.
53 In her written submissions Ms Arifin contended that there was an appearance of bias but did not elaborate on the submission at any point. The test for apprehended bias in relation to proceedings in a court is whether a fair-minded lay observer might reasonably apprehend that the judge might not bring an impartial and unprejudiced mind to the resolution of the question it is called upon to decide: Johnson v Johnson (2000) 201 CLR 488 at [11]. The test in an administrative tribunal, like the Tribunal, is no different: Mellor v Australian Postal Corporation (2010) 51 AAR 498; [2010] AATA 288; (per Downes J); Re Refugee Review Tribunal; Ex parte H (2001) 179 ALR 425; [2001] HCA 28. As the High Court said in Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy (2000) 205 CLR 337 at 345 and stressed in Michael Wilson & Partners Limited v Nicholls (2011) 244 CLR 427 at [63], two steps are required. First, it is necessary to identify what might lead the Tribunal to decide a case other than on its legal and factual merits. Second, "there must be an articulation of the logical connection between that matter and the feared deviation from the course of deciding the case on its merits" (Michael Wilson & Partners Limited v Nicholls at [63]). Ms Arifin did not indicate what it was that might lead the Tribunal to decide her case other than on its legal merits (the question of its factual merits being irrelevant at this point). She merely asserted that there was an appearance of bias. That is not good enough.
54 There is no error in the AAT's decision that it lacked the jurisdiction to award compensation for disability discrimination. The Tribunal was correct for the reasons that it gave.
55 Ms Arifin submitted, however, that her claim was not confined to disability discrimination.
56 That much is undoubtedly true. Her claim for compensation is wide ranging. In a document entitled "appeal for claiming of compensation" which was filed with the Tribunal on 11 April 2013 she made numerous complaints going back to 1998. She complained that she had been unfairly terminated from her employment in 1998. She complained that various vehicles she had were struck and damaged by strangers. She complained that she had been assaulted. She complained of a dispute with her neighbours. She complained that the police had incarcerated her husband and taken her daughter away. She complained that the "RTA" had suspended her licence for no reason and that it had also suspended her husband's licence. She complained about staff at the health fund, NIB. She complained about numerous public utility companies hitting the family with excessive bills. She complained of problems with her internet connection. She complained of negligence on the part of a number of doctors and of fraud by one of them with whose diagnosis she vehemently disagrees. She also complained about Centrelink's failure to backdate her pension.
57 Ms Arifin claimed that the Secretary is liable to compensate her for this conduct "because this is all related and this is the government - the Australian Government".
58 The Tribunal was well aware of the breadth of Ms Arifin's complaints but the transcript of the hearing clearly shows why it referred to compensation for disability discrimination. That was because, as Ms Arifin acknowledged during oral argument, when the senior member sought clarification as to the basis for her claim she submitted that the Disability Discrimination Act was the source of her entitlement:
SENIOR MEMBER: Am I right that the treatment that you say those agencies have given you has been to do with a range of things, including how you have been death with by mental health authorities for things that have happened to do with the police, to do with your employment - a whole range of things that have affected your life?
…
Also, that you say there was medical negligence concerning your baby. What I want to understand, Ms Arifin, is looking at what you have said I cannot see where there is a decision that the law says this tribunal can review. I can see things have happened that you are most unhappy about and you disagree with, but when I look at the Tribunal's jurisdiction list I cannot see any legislation that gives the Tribunal power to review those kinds of matters. So what I want to ask you, Ms Arifin, is why do you say the Tribunal has got the power to review these things?
APPLICANT: I was convinced that the Tribunal has - had the power to exercise the power because this had something to do with disability discrimination which has happened to me.
…
SENIOR MEMBER: [T]his is not every decision made about compensation but generally some decisions concerning workers compensation, some decisions concerning taxation, some decisions concerning pensions paid to veterans … And there are others, but they are the main part of the decisions that the Tribunal will review.
APPLICANT: Yes, but Disability Discrimination Act 1992, "DDA". Came into effect on 1 March 1993.
59 The senior member then explained to Ms Arifin that if she had a complaint of disability discrimination she could make it to the Human Rights Commission but there was nothing the Tribunal could do about it. Ms Arifin appeared to have some trouble coming to terms with this proposition, ultimately accepting it, but at the same time pleading with the Tribunal to help her:
APPLICANT: Yes, in view of the explanation - your explanation - I realise that the Tribunal doesn't have any jurisdiction to review the decision. But can't the Tribunal do something to help me in view of this Disability Discrimination Act 1992?
SENIOR MEMBER: No. That's the answer, no. I know that sounds harsh but, no, we haven't got the power.
APPLICANT: Is it not power, this legislation?
60 In these circumstances the Tribunal cannot be criticised for focussing on the Disability Discrimination Act.
61 Regardless, as the Tribunal pointed out, there is a more fundamental reason why the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain Ms Arifin's application. Although she filed an application for review, the application failed to disclose the decision to be reviewed, the date of the decision or the identity of the decision-maker. The narrative "claim", which accompanied it, did not do so either. The Tribunal does not have an unlimited jurisdiction to investigate injustice wherever it may occur. Its jurisdiction is confined by the terms of the AAT Act. Section 25 relevantly provides:
25 Tribunal may review certain decisions
Enactment may provide for applications for review of decisions
(1) An enactment may provide that applications may be made to the Tribunal:
(a) for review of decisions made in the exercise of powers conferred by that enactment; or
(b) for the review of decisions made in the exercise of powers conferred, or that may be conferred, by another enactment having effect under that enactment.
…
Tribunal's power to review decisions
(4) The Tribunal has power to review any decision in respect of which application is made to it under any enactment.
62 In other words, the Tribunal has power to review a decision and then only in cases where an enactment provides for an application to be made to the Tribunal (Re Qantas Airways Ltd and Deputy Commissioner of Taxation (Western Australia) (1979) 2 ALD 291 ("Qantas Airways") at 292 per Davies J). "Enactment" is defined in s 3 of the AAT Act to mean an Act (which is a reference to an Act of the Commonwealth Parliament), an Ordinance of a Territory other than the Northern Territory or the Australian Capital Territory, or an instrument made under an Act or such an Ordinance. For example, in the case the subject of the first appeal the Tribunal had jurisdiction because the Administration Act provided (in s 179) that applications could be made to the Tribunal for review of a decision of the SSAT. In this second matter, the Tribunal was not invited to review any decision under any relevant enactment. Unless an enactment empowers the making of the application to the Tribunal, the application is not made under an enactment and the Tribunal has no jurisdiction: Qantas Airways at 293. Neither in the Tribunal nor in this Court did Ms Arifin refer to such an enactment. The Tribunal was not entitled to inquire into the treatment of which she complained. It follows that it committed no error in failing to do so.
63 In an attachment to her notice of appeal and in her written submissions Ms Arifin referred to a decision to refuse her compensation made by a legal officer in the People and Customer Compensation Legal Branch of the Department of Human Services. That decision appears to have been made on 10 July 2013, five days before the hearing in the Tribunal. I was not taken to any enactment conferring on the Tribunal a power to review such a decision. In any event, there is nothing to suggest that the Tribunal was asked to review this decision, nor indeed that it was even informed of this decision. In fact, it appears that Ms Arifin, herself, was not aware the decision had been made until after the Tribunal hearing. Ms Arifin expressed her disappointment with that decision in the written submissions filed in this appeal and attacked the decision as a breach of natural justice which should be reviewed under ss 3, 5, 6 and 7 of the ADJR Act. But no application was made under the ADJR Act or otherwise for a review of that decision either to this Court or to the Tribunal. Consequently, for present purposes the decision is entirely irrelevant.
64 For completeness, I should add that Ms Arifin also complained of decisions of the Victims Compensation Tribunal of New South Wales, the Health Care Complaints Commission of New South Wales and the Supreme Court of New South Wales (striking out a statement of claim she filed in 2012), citing various provisions of the ADJR Act. Further, she complained that she had received no response to complaints that she had made to former Prime Ministers Gillard and Rudd. None of these matters was reviewable in the Tribunal.
65 For all these reasons the Tribunal was correct to dismiss the claim for want of jurisdiction and both the appeal from this decision and the application under the ADJR Act must be dismissed.