The cases
18 In Allan v Transurban City Link Ltd (2001) 75 ALJR 1551, the High Court was concerned with the Development Allowance Authority Act 1992 (Cth) (the "Authority Act") which provided the framework for an infrastructure borrowing tax incentive scheme. The Development Allowance Authority (the "DAA") had power to grant infrastructure borrowing certificates which were part of the process for obtaining the relevant incentives. The Authority Act permitted a person affected by a reviewable decision to apply for reconsideration of it. The DAA issued a certificate, and the appellant sought reconsideration of its decision to do so. The DAA held that he was not relevantly affected. He applied to the AAT for review, again unsuccessfully. After unsuccessful proceedings in this Court, the appellant was given leave to appeal to the High Court, but the appeal was unsuccessful.
19 At [15] - [17], the majority (Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, Gummow, Hayne and Callinan JJ) observed:
[15] The expression "affected by" and cognate terms appear in a range of laws of the Commonwealth. This is not the occasion for a disquisition on that topic. It is necessary to answer the questions posed above in respect of s 119(1) of the Authority Act by reference to the subject, scope and purpose of that statute, rather than by the application of concepts derived from decisions under the general law respecting what has come to be known as "standing". "Standing" is a metaphor to describe the interest required, apart from a cause of action as understood at common law, to obtain various common law, equitable and constitutional remedies.
[16] In Re McHattan v Collector of Customs (NSW), Brennan J stated that '[a]cross the pool of sundry interests, the ripples of affection may widely extend.' However, as Davies J pointed out in Alphapharm Pty Ltd v SmithKline Beecham (Aust) Pty Ltd, Brennan J "did not propose that any ripple of affection would be sufficient to support an interest". A particular statute may establish a regime which specifically provides for its own measure of judicial review on the application of persons meeting criteria specified in that statute. The present case involves such a statute. The starting point, as indicated by several authorities in the Full Court of the Federal Court, is the construction of the Authority Act with regard to its subject, scope and purpose.
[17] Transurban correctly submitted that the phrase in s 119(1) of the Authority Act "who was affected by a reviewable decision" has an ambulatory operation. What serves to identify a person as one affected by a reviewable decision will vary having regard to the nature of the reviewable decision itself. …
20 I will return to Allan at a later stage. The decisions of Full Courts of this Court to which the High Court referred in [16] of Allan were Alphapharm Pty Ltd v SmithKline Beecham (Aust) Pty Ltd (1994) 49 FCR 250 at 261 and 272; Edwards v Australian Securities Commission (1997) 72 FCR 350 at 367 - 369; and Byron Environment Centre Inc v Arakwal People (1997) 78 FCR 1 at 4 - 5 and 34 - 37. Alphapharm and Edwards are of particular relevance for present purposes. In Alphapharm the Full Court was concerned with a ministerial decision made pursuant to the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 (Cth) to register a generic brand of medication. A competing manufacturer applied to the Minister to reconsider the decision, claiming to be a person whose interests were affected by the decision. The Act authorized such an application by a person so affected. The question was whether or not the competitor met that test. Davies J referred (at 260) to an earlier decision of the Full Court in US Tobacco Co v Minister for Consumer Affairs (1988) 20 FCR 520 at 529, where the Court said:
The nature of the interest required in a particular case will be influenced by the subject matter and content of the decision under review.
21 His Honour then continued:
This must be so with respect to the phrase "interests are affected", when used in a statute which provides for the administrative review of an administrative decision. In such an event, the review, which forms part of the process of administrative decision-making, is provided to promote the achievement of the objects of the statute. The term "aggrieved", when used in the context of judicial review, may have a different connotation, for the object of judicial review is to ensure that the law is observed.
22 Gummow J said (at 272):
Like the expression "a person aggrieved", the phrase "a person whose interests are affected by the decision" and cognate terms, appear in a variety of statutes as the identification of the persons who are given standing to seek administrative or judicial review. The day is long gone when there was any general presumption that in such statutes the "interest" concerned must be proprietary or even legal or equitable in nature, or that the affectation be of a nature as understood in private law. However, it is important not to draw from what was said in any particular decision by way of identification of that which did or did not amount to a sufficient affectation of an interest any general proposition which may be translated to the instant dispute. In each case, the content of the terms "affect" and "interest" are to be seen in the light of the scope and purpose of the particular statute in issue.
…
It is vital to approach the issues on the present appeal upon a review of the scope and purpose of the Act.
23 After a detailed analysis of the Act, his Honour said at 279 - 280:
… However, here the immediate issue is one of standing under s 60 to seek reconsideration of an initial decision under s 25 … . In answering that question, the registration system provided for in Pt 3 is of central importance.
There is no requirement for the provision of an opportunity to any third parties to be heard upon an application for registration. Reasons are required only where the decision is not to register … . Nor is there a requirement that a decision … to register goods be published generally. I have referred to other provisions which provide for notification of decisions in the Gazette; see also s 60(2)(a) which gives to a person whose interests are affected by a decision particulars of which are so notified in the Gazette, 90 days thereafter to request reconsideration. …
Further, an interpretation of the legislation which treated a third party as a person interested in, in the sense of opposed to, a grant of registration would not sit well with that object of the legislation which is concerned with the timely availability of therapeutic goods, after evaluation by an expert body and pursuant to a "complex and delicate administrative scheme" … . If such a third party could intervene, the application might be made within 90 days after the decision first came to the notice of the complainant … . At that time, as is the position in the present case, entry on the Register may have been effected pursuant to the favourable decision under s 25 and trading commenced by the sponsor. As I have also indicated, the interposition at that stage of a review procedure with the substitution of the decision to refuse registration could have the effect of rendering unlawful activities by the sponsor which, at the time in which they were engaged, did not contravene the prohibition … . Finally, the legislation contains elaborate provisions for cancellation of a registration. Those provisions do not operate other than prospectively.
24 I have referred in detail to the facts of the case as outlined by his Honour because there are obvious parallels between that case and the present.
25 In Edwards the Full Court was concerned with a decision of the Australian Securities Commission to register a company as a foreign company under the Corporations Law. Persons who were opposed to the company in litigation applied to the Tribunal for review of that decision. They claimed that their interests were affected by the decision for the purposes of s 27 of the AAT Act. The application was refused upon the basis that their interests were not so affected. R D Nicholson J (with whom Lee and Carr JJ agreed) referred to US Tobacco and Alphapharm and said (referring to Alphapharm) at 368:
His Honour (Gummow J) concluded where the initial decision was not to register or to register with conditions, the applicant would be a person whose 'interests are affected' within the meaning of s 60. However, where there had been an initial decision to register which had been acted upon by the effecting of registration, the operation of the (relevant legislation) upon the steps leading up to registration was spent. His third conclusion was the scope and purpose of the legislation in the above situation did not allow of third parties as persons who have an interest affected by the initial decision to grant registration and who may seek reconsideration and reversal of it under s 60. …
The statutory regime in Alphapharm as reviewed by Gummow J bears many similarities to the one under consideration in this case. The regime resulted in criminal penalties being imposed for non-compliance with s 343. The regime did not require third parties to be heard on the application for registration. There was no requirement to give reasons (except under the Therapeutic Goods Act where there may be a refusal). There is also no requirement that the decision be published generally.
26 His Honour then went on to consider certain other aspects of the legislation, drawing further parallels with Alphapharm and concluding that the appellant's interests were not relevantly affected. Alphapharm differed from Edwards in that in Alphapharm the Court was concerned with a review process prescribed by an Act other than the AAT Act, although a similar test for "standing" was prescribed. In Edwards, however, the review procedure prescribed by the AAT Act had been adopted for the purposes of the Corporations Law. Nonetheless, in both cases, the Court looked to the "subject, scope and purpose" of the legislation authorizing the decision in question in order to identify the content of the test of affectation of interest. In other words, Edwards demonstrates that the phrase "whose interests are affected" in s 27 of the AAT Act may have an ambulatory effect, dependent upon the terms of any legislation which may adopt the review procedure there prescribed. The review process under consideration in Allan was, as in Alphapharm, prescribed by the statute authorizing the relevant decision, but both Alphapharm and Edwards were apparently approved.
27 In Allan, the majority, in considering the Authority Act, observed:
[31] Notice of a refusal, but not of a grant, must set out the reasons for the decision. This suggests that where, as here, the decision is one to grant, the legislation treats that as the end of the matter, save for the potential operation of the variation and cancellation provisions. …
[32] Further, there is no provision for the giving of notice to the public or to any person other than the applicant. This, in turn, throws light upon the apparently unfixed operation of the temporal requirement of s 119(1)(a). This requires that the person affected by a reviewable decision make the request for reconsideration within the period of 21 days after the date on which the decision first comes to the attention of that person. Paragraph (a) has a sensible operation if, with respect to a decision under Ch 3, the persons affected by the decision are those to whom the written notice must be given.