Besson v Repatriation Commission
[2014] FCA 881
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2014-08-22
Before
Rangiah J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 The applicant has applied for an extension of time to file a notice of appeal pursuant to r 36.05 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth). 2 The applicant wishes to appeal from a judgment of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia dismissing the applicant's appeal from a decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal ("the Tribunal"). The Tribunal affirmed a decision of the Veterans' Review Board which confirmed that the Commonwealth was not liable to pay a pension to the applicant. 3 The applicant has Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder ("PTSD"). He claims that his condition is related to his war service. He was a member of the crew of HMAS Sydney, which was steaming through Indonesian waters on 15 June 1964. An announcement over the ship's public address system summoned all hands to action stations and directed that all hatches be closed. The applicant was just about to climb up an access ladder when a hatch was slammed down above him. He remained cowering at the bottom of the ladder until the all clear was given. He says he assumed the crew were all about to die because the ship must have been under attack. He alleges that his PTSD arose as a result of this event. 4 The Tribunal decided that while the applicant genuinely believed his life was in danger, the facts did not answer the description of a "life-threatening event" in the relevant Statement of Principles. His application was unsuccessful for that reason. 5 Section 13(1) of the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986 (Cth) ("the VEA") provides that the Commonwealth is liable to pay a pension to a veteran where that veteran has become incapacitated from a war-caused disease. The disease is taken to be "war-caused" under s 9(1) of the VEA if the disease arose out of or is attributable to any eligible war service rendered by the veteran. 6 A claim for eligibility for a pension is determined by reference to s 120 and s 120A of the VEA. Those provisions state, relevantly: 120 Standard of proof (1) Where a claim under Part II for a pension in respect of the incapacity from injury or disease of a veteran, or of the death of a veteran, relates to the operational service rendered by the veteran, the Commission shall determine that the injury was a war-caused injury, that the disease was a war-caused disease or that the death of the veteran was war-caused, as the case may be, unless it is satisfied, beyond reasonable doubt, that there is no sufficient ground for making that determination. … (3) In applying subsection (1) or (2) in respect of the incapacity of a person from injury or disease, or in respect of the death of a person, related to service rendered by the person, the Commission shall be satisfied, beyond reasonable doubt, that there is no sufficient ground for determining: … (b) that the disease was a war-caused disease or a defence-caused disease; … as the case may be, if the Commission, after consideration of the whole of the material before it, is of the opinion that the material before it does not raise a reasonable hypothesis connecting the injury, disease or death with the circumstances of the particular service rendered by the person. 120A Reasonableness of hypothesis to be assessed by reference to Statement of Principles … (3) For the purposes of subsection 120(3), a hypothesis connecting an injury suffered by a person, a disease contracted by a person or the death of a person with the circumstances of any particular service rendered by the person is reasonable only if there is in force: (a) a Statement of Principles determined under subsection 196B(2) or (11); … that upholds the hypothesis. 7 The Tribunal applied Statement of Principles No 5 of 2008, which provides: Factors that must be related to service 5. Subject to clause 7, at least one of the factors set out in clause 6 must be related to the relevant service rendered by the person. Factors 6. The factor that must as a minimum exist before it can be said that a reasonable hypothesis has been raised connecting posttraumatic stress disorder or death from posttraumatic stress disorder with the circumstances of a person's relevant service is: (a) experiencing a category 1A stressor before the clinical onset of posttraumatic stress disorder; … Other definitions 9. For the purposes of this Statement of Principles: "a category 1A stressor" means one or more of the following severe traumatic events: (a) experiencing a life-threatening event; 8 In Repatriation Commission v Deledio (1998) 83 FCR 82 at 97-98 ("Deledio"), the Full Court of the Federal Court outlined a four step process which the Tribunal should undertake when applying s 120 and s 120A. The steps are: 1. The Tribunal must consider all the material which is before it and determine whether that material points to a hypothesis connecting the injury, disease or death with the circumstances of the particular service rendered by the person. No question of fact finding arises at this stage. If no such hypothesis arises, the application must fail. 2. If the material does raise such a hypothesis, the Tribunal must then ascertain whether there is in force an SoP determined by the Authority under s 196B(2) or (11). If no such SoP is in force, the hypothesis will be taken not to be reasonable and, in consequence, the application must fail. 3. If an SoP is in force, the Tribunal must then form the opinion whether the hypothesis raised is a reasonable one. It will do so if the hypothesis fits, that is to say, is consistent with the "template" to be found in the SoP. The hypothesis raised before it must thus contain one or more of the factors which the Authority has determined to be the minimum which must exist, and be related to the person's service (as required by ss 196B(2)(d) and (e)). If the hypothesis does contain these factors, it could neither be said to be contrary to proved or known scientific facts, nor otherwise fanciful. If the hypothesis fails to fit within the template, it will be deemed not to be "reasonable" and the claim will fail. 4. The Tribunal must then proceed to consider under s 120(1) whether it is satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the death was not war-caused, or in the case of a claim for incapacity, that the incapacity did not arise from a war-caused injury. If not so satisfied, the claim must succeed. If the Tribunal is so satisfied, the claim must fail. It is only at this stage of the process that the Tribunal will be required to find facts from the material before it. In so doing, no question of onus of proof or the application of any presumption will be involved. 9 The Tribunal's reasons in the present case are, unfortunately, bereft of any reference to the legislation or to any of the authorities interpreting the legislation. However, it is common ground that the Tribunal purported to follow the four step process set out in Deledio. The Tribunal assumed that the first step should be decided in the applicant's favour and then decided the second step in the applicant's favour. It then considered the third step and said: 17. …In this claim, he must rely on the events he described meeting the definition of a category 1A event. In particular, he must satisfy the first limb of the definition which refers to "experiencing a life threatening event". 18. I have to be satisfied the applicant's story as it was told to me "fits" the definition. In making that assessment, I am required to apply what is inelegantly referred to as a "subjective/objective" test - that is, a test which refers to a person (the objective component) in the applicant's circumstances, which include his age, experience and some other matters. 19. The applicant was a young recruit with limited experience - although this was not his first voyage. He had already been exposed to the dangers of naval service (through his own experience, and through the experiences of people he knew, like those who had perished on the Voyager). I accept a person in the applicant's position would probably experience a degree of apprehension about the dangers that might lurk when a ship goes to action stations. I can even accept a sailor might feel more apprehensive when aboard an ageing vessel like the Sydney. They were cruising through potentially hostile waters, and potentially hostile vessels had been sighted in relatively close proximity earlier the same day. Even so, I am not persuaded a person in the applicant's position could be expected to react to an alarm as the applicant did. He seems to have leaped to the conclusion that the alarm meant the ship was likely to be sunk. There was no reason for him to form that view, and other sailors of his age or experience would merely have been anxious at what might eventuate rather than terrorised by their imaginings of a particular and dire outcome. … 21. I am satisfied that the applicant has PTSD but that it cannot be linked to his operational service because it does not meet the definition of a category 1A event in Statement of Principles No 5 of 2008. 10 Before the Federal Circuit Court, the applicant alleged that the Tribunal's decision contained three errors of law. The errors were said to be that the Tribunal failed to apply the required test of assessing the reasonableness of the hypothesis, that it took an incorrect approach in determining that there was no "life threatening event" for the purposes of the Statement of Principles and that it failed to properly apply the "subjective/objective test" required by the authorities. The Federal Circuit Court judge rejected each of these grounds. 11 The Federal Circuit Court dismissed the applicant's appeal on 6 February 2014. Rule 36.03 of the Federal Court Rules gave the applicant 21 days to file a notice of appeal against the judgment of the Federal Circuit Court. He failed to file a notice of appeal within the required time, but filed an application for an extension of time to appeal on 4 June 2014, pursuant to r 36.05 of the Federal Court Rules. The application was filed some 97 days outside the time limit. 12 The matters relevant to the exercise of the Court's discretion to grant an extension of time include: (a) whether the applicant has shown that there is an acceptable explanation for the delay; (b) whether the applicant took any other steps to assert his or her rights; (c) the length of the delay; (d) any prejudice to the respondent as a result of the delay; and (e) the merits of the proposed appeal. [Hunter Valley Developments Pty Ltd v Cohen (1984) 3 FCR 344 at 348-349; Jess v Scott (1986) 70 ALR 185 at 193-194]