ABRAHAM J:
1 These proceedings stem from the applicant's receipt of various Centrelink benefits, the decision by the respondent to cancel those benefits, and a subsequent debt that was raised for the recovery of certain moneys previously paid. This is an appeal pursuant to section 44(1) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth) (AAT Act) from a second level decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (the Tribunal) made on 27 March 2019 in which the Tribunal ordered the decision under review be set aside and the matter be remitted to the Secretary with the direction that the raising of the debts be reconsidered in line with its reasons: Chen and Secretary, Department of Social Services [2019] AATA 560 (AAT2).
2 The applicant was unrepresented in these proceedings, as before the Tribunal. Although in this Court the applicant had the assistance of an interpreter, the applicant sought little resort to that assistance. The applicant was again advised of the desirability of her obtaining some legal assistance, as she had been in the Tribunal. For completeness I note that at the commencement of the hearing an individual in his capacity as her friend, explained very briefly on the applicant's behalf, what the applicant said she wanted to achieve at the hearing. Having done so he left the hearing shortly thereafter.
3 As explained in further detail below, the applicant relied upon 11 affidavits filed prior to, and after the hearing, in support of her appeal (which are in addition to the affidavits filed in respect to the interlocutory application). The affidavits are very extensive in content. A number of affidavits were filed in breach of the orders made on 29 May 2019 for the filing of material for the hearing of this appeal.
4 The affidavits attach, amongst other things, forms and documents from Centrelink and elsewhere, photos (including of bank records), text messages, emails and letter/notes some from the applicant, others apparently by persons described as witnesses (some of which are pleas from them that the applicant's debt be waived), and financial records (e.g. bills). Included also are copies of the AAT2 judgment and the written submission of the respondent, each with handwritten comments, apparently by the applicant, addressing many aspects of the documents. Some of the material in the affidavits post-dates the cancellation of the applicant's benefits and the judgment under appeal. Some of the material was not before the Tribunal. At the hearing of the application, at the request of the Court, the respondent provided a schedule which identified what, of the affidavit material, was before the Tribunal.
5 The applicant made oral submissions, a good deal of which were not directed to the decision of the Tribunal, but rather, the applicant's story about how she found herself before this Court, complaints against Centrelink, and her current situation in life. The applicant's submissions included that the real estate assets and the money in her bank accounts were not hers, but trust property, to which she has no access. Much of the submission was, in effect, a plea that she was correctly entitled to Centrelink and any debt ought to be waived. The applicant submitted that she came to this country to help people in society and claimed she is entitled to substantial compensation (millions of dollars) for the conduct of Centrelink. The description by the Tribunal of the applicant's evidence before it, largely reflects her conduct on this appeal: see Chen and Secretary, Department of Social Services [2019] AATA 560 at [3]-[4].
6 I am conscious of the difficulties faced by an unrepresented applicant when attempting to file appropriate documents and in making submissions. I have taken that into account when considering the grounds of appeal and the manner in which the applicant made submissions in support of those grounds.
7 For the reasons below the appeal is refused.
Procedural history
8 These proceedings stem from the applicant's receipt of various Centrelink benefits, the decision by the respondent to cancel those benefits, and a subsequent debt that was raised for the recovery of certain moneys previously paid.
9 From 11 October 1999 to 18 August 2006, the applicant received the Newstart Allowance (NSA) under the Social Security Act 1991 (Cth) (SS Act). The NSA is payable subject to a means test (an asset and income test) in accordance with sections 643 and 1068 of the SS Act.
10 On 19 August 2006, the applicant was granted a DSP under the SS Act on the basis that she was suffering from a mental health condition. The DSP is also subject to a means test in accordance with sections 117 and 1064 of the SS Act. Ms Chen was paid the DSP until 2 March 2018.
11 From 17 January 2017 to 1 December 2017, and from 2 December 2017 to 2 February 2018, the applicant was paid the Pensioner Education Supplement (PES) under the SS Act, which is also subject to a means test, with initial eligibility being dependent upon qualification for either the NSA or DSP at first instance, in accordance with section 1061PA of the SS Act.
12 This litigation arose in the context of five original decisions made by officers of the Department of Human Services (the Department), as follows:
(1) on 15 March 2018, a decision to cancel the applicant's DSP with effect from that day;
(2) on 16 March 2018, a decision made to raise a debt against the applicant for overpayment of the PES for the period 17 January 2017 to 1 December 2017, amounting to $1,421.81;
(3) on 16 March 2018, a decision made to raise a debt against the applicant for overpayment of the PES for the period 2 December 2017 to 2 February 2018, amounting to $280.80 (being a total PES debt of $1,702.61);
(4) on 19 March 2018, a decision made to raise a debt against the applicant for overpayment of the NSA for the period 11 October 1999 to 18 August 2006, amounting to $66,494.77; and
(5) on 19 March 2018, a decision made to raise another debt against the applicant for overpayment of the DSP for the period 19 August 2006 to 2 March 2018, amounting to $259,671.67.
13 On 2 July 2018, an Authorised Review Officer (ARO) undertook an internal review of the five original decisions, under sections 126 and 235 of the Social Security (Administration) Act 1999 (Cth) (Administration Act). The ARO affirmed the decisions in (1), (2) and (3) above; varied the debt in decision (4) above to $66,020.98; and varied the debt in decision (5) above to $256,924.56.
14 On 29 August 2018, the Tribunal undertaking a first level review (AAT1), under section 142 of the Administration Act and section 25 of the AAT Act, affirmed the ARO's decisions.
15 On 20 December 2018, the Tribunal undertaking the second level review (AAT2) stayed the AAT1's decision under section 41(2) of the AAT Act. The decision of the AAT2 in relation to the issue of stay, Chen and Secretary, Department of Social Services [2018] AATA 4672 at [60], was as follows:
The Tribunal grants the Applicant's request for a stay of the decision of the Social Services and Child Support Division of the Tribunal of 29 August 2018 in respect to the cancellation of the Applicant's DSP. It is ordered that any DSP arrears are to be paid to the Applicant from the original cancellation date of 15 March 2018 and ongoing payments of DSP are to be paid to the Applicant from the next day on which social security benefits are paid up until the decision of the Tribunal on the substantive application comes into operation.
16 As a result of that decision, the applicant's DSP payments were reinstated, together with a back payment of the DSP to 15 March 2018.
17 On 27 March 2019, the AAT2 set aside the AAT1's decision, and remitted the matter to the Secretary with the direction that the matter of raising any debts against the applicant prior to 18 May 2010 be reconsidered in line with the reasons of the AAT2. The AAT2 did so under section 179 of the Administration Act and section 25 of the AAT Act. The AAT2's decision on 27 March 2019, which is the subject of the applicant's substantive appeal to this Court, was as follows at [139]:
Pursuant to section 43(1)(c)(ii) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 the decision under review is set aside and remitted to the Secretary with the direction that the matter of the raising of any debts against the Applicant prior to 18 May 2010 be reconsidered in line with the reasons of the Tribunal.
18 It is this decision of the AAT2 which is the subject of the proceedings in this Court. The appeal against this decision was filed on 24 April 2019.
19 According to the respondent's written submissions made on an earlier stay application, on 2 April 2019, a Departmental officer made the decision to cancel the applicant's DSP with effect from 15 March 2018, and made the following decisions to raise the debts against the applicant for:
(1) overpayment of the PES for the period 17 January 2017 to 1 December 2017, amounting to $1,421.81;
(2) overpayment of the PES for the period 2 December 2017 to 2 February 2018, amounting to $280.80 (being a total PES debt of $1,702.61);
(3) overpayment of the NSA for the period 11 October 1999 to 18 August 2006, amounting to $66,020.98;
(4) overpayment of the DSP for the period 19 August 2006 to 2 March 2018, amounting to $256,924.56; and
(5) overpayment of the DSP from 15 March 2018 to 29 March 2019, a further debt amounting to $28,209.51.
20 On 3 April 2019, the respondent informed the applicant of these decisions, and on 9 July 2019, the total of the applicant's debts to the Commonwealth was $352,109.14.
21 On 13 June 2019, the applicant applied for an order staying the decision which is the subject of this appeal to enable her DSP to be reinstated so that it could continue to be paid pending the outcome of the appeal. That application was refused on 29 July 2019: Chen v Secretary, Department of Social Services [2019] FCA 1155.
22 The applicant sought leave to appeal from that decision, which was refused on 25 September 2019: Chen v Secretary, Department of Social Services [2019] FCA 1595.
Preliminary issue
23 In the applicant's affidavit affirmed on 15 August 2019 she stated that it had been suggested to her by two of her witnesses that "we would like to have [a] new judge" for the hearing of her case on 1 October 2019.
24 While the applicant did not raise this at the hearing, I drew it to her attention, to which she stated:
The reason witness - it's not here, because they was worry about the judge was also being paid by the government for try to increase the income for the fraud team, and that make them very scare of judge has been brought by everyone. But I feel I want to come here to prove there is a god that can use your virtue to override their thinking.
25 It appeared from that that the applicant was not pursuing the request. Nonetheless, I told her I had considered the request but there was no proper basis for me not to proceed to hear the matter.
26 A judge has an obligation to sit unless reasonable apprehension of bias can be established: In Re JRL; Ex parte CJL [1986] HCA 39; (1986) 161 CLR 342 (In Re JRL; Ex parte CJL) at 352 per Mason J.
27 The test for determining whether a judge should disqualify himself or herself by reason of apprehended bias 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 the judge is required to decide": Johnson v Johnson [2000] HCA 48; (2000) 201 CLR 488 (Johnson v Johnson) at [11] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ, affirmed in Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy [2000] HCA 63; (2000) 205 CLR 337 and applied in Michael Wilson & Partners Ltd v Nicholls (2011) 244 CLR 427.
28 The fair-minded lay observer, is amongst other things: (1) taken to be reasonable: Johnson v Johnson at [12]; (2) does not make snap judgments: Johnson v Johnson at [12] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ; (3) knows commonplace things and is neither complacent or unduly sensitive or suspicious: Johnson v Johnson at [53] per Kirby J; (4) has knowledge of all the circumstances of the case: Livesey v The New South Wales Bar Association [1983] HCA 17; (1983) 151 CLR 288 at 293 - 294 per Mason, Murphy, Brennan, Deane and Dawson JJ, In Re JRL; Ex parte CJL at 355 per Mason J, 359 per Wilson J, 368 per Brennan J and 371 - 372 per Dawson J; (5) is an informed one, that is, they will have regard to the fact that a judicial officer's training, tradition and oath or affirmation equip the officer with the ability to discard the irrelevant, the immaterial and the prejudicial. Against that background, thus judges are expected to decide factual contests on the evidence: Johnson v Johnson at [12] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ.
29 Applying the relevant principles, there is no proper basis for me to disqualify myself from hearing and determining this case. My refusal of the applicant's application for a stay of proceedings is not a proper basis. A decision on an interlocutory matter is not unusual and that a judge has made a previous decision on issues in a matter does not "mean either that [the judge] will approach the [other] issues in that case otherwise than with an impartial and unprejudiced mind in the sense in which that expression is used in the authorities or that [the judge's] previous decisions provide an acceptable basis for inferring that there is a reasonable apprehension that [the judge] will approach the issues in this way": In Re JRL; Ex parte CJL at 352 per Mason J; Doggett v Commonwealth Bank of Australia [2019] FCAFC 19 per Kerr, Davies and Thawley JJ at [11].
Section 44 of the AAT Act
30 The appeal to this Court is limited; a party to a proceeding before the Tribunal may only appeal to this Court "on a question of law, from any decision of the Tribunal in that proceeding": s 44(1) of the AAT Act.
31 On 10 May 2019, a notice of objection to competency was filed by the respondent on the issue of whether the applicant's appeal was with respect to a "decision" within the meaning of s 44(1) on the basis that the AAT2's decision of 27 March 2019 was favourable to her as it set aside the AAT1's decision (and the applicant's debts) and remitted the matter to the Secretary, of the Department for reconsideration of her debts in line with the Tribunal's reasons.
Any decision
32 As to the meaning of the word "decision" in s 44(1), in the oft cited case of Collector of Customs (New South Wales) v Brian Lawlor Automotive Pty Ltd [1979] FCA 21; (1979) 24 ALR 307 (Lawlor), Bowen CJ relevantly said at 314 and 317:
In the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act a wide meaning is given to the word "decision" by s. 3(3). In s. 25 it appears to me that the word simply refers to a decision in fact made, regardless of whether or not it is a legally effective decision….
… The Act is clearly intended to give a person whose interests are affected by an administrative decision an effective appeal, free of technicalities, against that decision on questions of fact and of law: see ss 25, 27, 28, 31, 33, 42 and 44. [A restrictive] interpretation … would remove the most significant area involving questions of law from the jurisdiction of the Tribunal. It would render the appeal in many cases useless…..
In the view which I take as to the meaning of s. 25 of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act, these questions do not need to be decided. As I have said, in my opinion an applicant to the Tribunal has standing and the Tribunal has jurisdiction provided there is a decision in fact and provided further that the decision purports to have been made in exercise of powers conferred by an enactment whether or not as a matter of law it was validly made and whether or not action on the basis there was power to make the decision was right or wrong.
33 There is a distinction between the decision and action taken upon it, with the decision itself being the important thing: Deputy Commissioner of Patents v Board of Control of Michigan Technological University [1979] FCA 84; (1979) 28 ALR 551 at [22] per Smithers J citing Lawlor at 335.
34 Despite the notice of objection to competency being filed, at the hearing the respondent conceded there was jurisdiction. The respondent accepted that according to the wide meaning attributed to the meaning of a "decision" in Lawlor, the AAT2's findings on 27 March 2019 satisfied the criteria of a "decision" for the purpose of the applicant's appeal.
35 The respondent submitted that the findings made by the AAT2 were expressly or implicitly that the applicant: (1) was the owner of six unencumbered investment properties from 5 February 1999 to 15 March 2018 (the relevant period); (2) was the account holder of approximately 51 bank accounts in Australia and overseas from time to time during the relevant period; (3) failed the assets tests for NSA, DSP and PES, with the result that she was not entitled to any of those payments during the relevant period; and (4) did not comply with her reporting obligations under the SS Act to report her true financial affairs to the Department during the relevant period, although she did not knowingly do so. Further, that 100% of the trust property in discretionary trusts controlled by the applicant was properly attributed to her under Part 3.18 of the SSA for the purpose of the assets tests and that the decision to cancel the applicant's DSP from 15 March 2018 was the correct and preferable decision.
On a question of law
36 Whether a notice of appeal contains a question of law is to be approached as a matter of substance and not form: Haritos v Commissioner of Taxation [2015] FCAFC 92; (2015) 233 FCR 315 (Haritos) at [62] per Allsop CJ, Kenny, Besanko, Robertson and Mortimer JJ. In cases of doubt, the Court will consider the notice of appeal in question, the alleged question or questions of law, the grounds raised, the statutory context, and the Tribunal's reasons for its decision, and having considered all those matters, satisfy itself that there is in fact a question of law: Haritos at [94]. That the applicant is unrepresented is a relevant matter to be taken into account: Lim v Secretary, Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations [2008] FCA 1058. In the present circumstances, the applicant's mental health issues are also a relevant matter to take into account.
37 What is "on a question of law" for the purposes of s 44 has been held to include: (1) whether the AAT has identified the relevant legal test; (2) whether the AAT has applied the correct test; (3) whether there is any evidence to support a finding of a particular fact; and (4) whether facts found fall within a statute properly construed: Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Trail Bros Steel and Plastics Pty Ltd [2010] FCAFC 94; (2010) 186 FCR 410 at [13] per Dowsett and Gordon JJ. Where an appeal lies "on a question of law", the subject matter of the appeal is the question or questions of law: Hussain v Minister for Foreign Affairs [2008] FCAFC 128; (2008) 169 FCR 241 at [31] per Weinberg, Bennett and Edmonds JJ citing Gummow J in TNT Skypak International (Aust) Pty Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1988] FCA 119; (1988) 82 ALR 175 at 178.
38 It is not a merits review, the merits of a review are for the Tribunal, not this Court: Kara v Comcare [2011] FCA 951 at [31] per Lander J citing Attorney-General for The State of New South Wales v Quin [1990] HCA 21; (1990) 170 CLR 1 at 35-36 per Brennan J; Evans v Secretary, Department of Social Services [2014] FCA 491 at [21] per Perry J.
39 Even if the Tribunal erred in its conclusions on the facts, such error does not in itself constitute an error of law: Australian Postal Corporation v Edwards [2014] FCA 1348 at [39] per Collier J. While a factual finding made without evidence to support it involves an error of law no such error arises if there is some evidence upon which a Tribunal may make a finding: Holland v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [1999] FCA 1125 at [7] per Lee J. The decision as to what evidence is to be accepted is a matter for the Tribunal and it is not the function of this Court when hearing an appeal, to review the Tribunal's factual findings and to substitute its view of the facts for those of the tribunal: Comcare v Moon [2003] FCA 569; (2003) 75 ALD 160 at [33] per Mansfield J.
40 The issue of if the questions raised in this case are questions of law is addressed below at [68].