Cheney v Mid North Coast Local Health District
[2014] NSWCATAD 220
At a glance
Source factsCourt
NCAT Administrative and Equal Opportunity
Decision date
2014-12-12
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
reasons for decision 1Mr Cheney is an inmate at Junee Correctional Centre. He was convicted of various crimes of which some of the evidence and related information pertaining to the victim are the subject of his application for government information. 2On 5 July 2012 Mr Cheney applied to the Mid North Coast Local Health District (the Agency) under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 (the GIPA Act) for copies of: Records and reports of the alleged sexual assault of 'X.X. Yyyyyy' on 8 December 1993 / Hastings District Hospital File 11-99-11 1993. (now known as Port Macquarie Base Hospital NSW). 3A large number of specific records were referred to in an attachment to the application. These records related to the evidence gathering process and records by Police and Health, records relating to the treatment of the victim of the assault, including a large number of specified documents concerning medical procedures as part of that treatment. In addition documents related to police and forensic reports in connection with the matter were sought by the Applicant. 4The Agency identified seven documents as being within scope of the request. In its decision of 27 July 2012 the Agency decided to withhold access to all seven documents. On 15 August 2012 Mr Cheney sought a review of that decision by the Information Commissioner as a reviewable decision under section 80 (d) of the GIPA Act. 5The (Information Commissioner) review was conducted in the absence of an internal review by the Agency, and as such was reviewed in accordance with the provisions of section 89 (2) of the GIPA Act, which permitted an external review by the Information Commissioner in the absence of an internal review, if the applicant was the aggrieved access applicant. There is however some correspondence to indicate that there was some confusion as to whether the initial application to the Agency was a review, (as per Agency correspondence dated 9 July 2012). However, correspondence the following day clarified that the 5 July 2012 application was a fresh application. 6The Information Commissioner issued a report on 25 June 2013 that made findings and recommendations. The Commissioner was not satisfied that the Agency had adequately dealt with Mr Cheney's application, in that they had not adequately applied the public interest test to the information identified as being within scope, and had not met the provisions of section 61 of the GIPA Act in respect to its reasons for decision. 7On 4 July 2013 (following the Information Commissioner's Report) the Agency commenced an internal review of their earlier decision. On 17 July 2013 the Agency completed its review and identified 9 Documents in its schedule to the review. The Agency determined to withhold all of the documents and outlined the provisions under section 14 of the GIPA Act and the provisions of other legislation for refusing access to the documents. 8On 20 August 2013 Mr Cheney lodged an Application for a review of a reviewable decision with the Administrative Decisions Tribunal (ADT) under the provisions of section 100 of the GIPA Act. That review was of a decision to provide access or to refuse access to information in response to an access application in accordance with section 80 (d) of the GIPA Act. I take the view that the application to the Tribunal was lodged within the time specified by section 101(2) of the GIPA Act, having regard to the date of the Agency review decision being posted on or after 17 July 2013, with service effected in accordance with the Evidence Act 1995 making the application within time. In any event nothing has been raised by the parties on this issue. 9The Tribunal's function on review under s 63 of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 is to make the correct and preferable decision having regard to the material before it before it, and any applicable written or unwritten law. It is well established that in considering an application for review the Tribunal is not constrained to have regard only to the material that was before the agency, but may have regard to any relevant material before it at the time of the review: Drake v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs [1979] AATA 179; (1979) 46 FLR 409. 10The matter was listed for a number of Planning Meetings in the latter half of 2013, whereby the parties and Tribunal clarified the issues that remained in dispute, and set out a timetable for submissions and the filing of material in respect of the future conduct of the proceedings (a hearing or determination on the papers). 11At a Planning Meeting on 11 December 2013 a direction was made that: The matter is to be determined on the papers. 12This matter was commenced in the General Division of the Administrative Decisions Tribunal ("the ADT") pursuant to the Administrative Decision Tribunal Act 1997 ("the ADT Act"). On 1 January 2014, the ADT was abolished and its functions were taken over by the Civil and Administrative Tribunal of New South Wales ('NCAT'). The present decision is therefore a decision of NCAT. However, because the proceedings to which it relates are 'part heard proceedings' as defined in clause 6(1) of Schedule 1 of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2013, they are to be determined as if that Act had not been enacted (see clause 7(3)(b) of that Schedule). 13The GIPA Act objects are set out in section 3 of the Act. 3 Object of Act (1) In order to maintain and advance a system of responsible and representative democratic Government that is open, accountable, fair and effective, the object of this Act is to open government information to the public by: (a) authorising and encouraging the proactive public release of government information by agencies, and (b) giving members of the public an enforceable right to access government information, and (c) providing that access to government information is restricted only when there is an overriding public interest against disclosure. (2) It is the intention of Parliament: (a) that this Act be interpreted and applied so as to further the object of this Act, and (b) that the discretions conferred by this Act be exercised, as far as possible, so as to facilitate and encourage, promptly and at the lowest reasonable cost, access to government information. 14In addition the long title of the Act provides that it is: An Act to facilitate public access to government information. 15Section 14 of the GIPA Act provides the circumstances whereby public interest considerations against disclosure of government information may be applied. Relevant to this application, the Agency relied on the provisions outlined below (being public interest considerations) against disclosure of some of the information. Relevantly section 14 and the Table provides (inter alia): 14 Public interest considerations against disclosure (1) It is to be conclusively presumed that there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of any of the government information described in Schedule 1. (2) The public interest considerations listed in the Table to this section are the only other considerations that may be taken into account under this Act as public interest considerations against disclosure for the purpose of determining whether there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of government information. (3) The Information Commissioner can issue guidelines about public interest considerations against the disclosure of government information, for the assistance of agencies, but cannot add to the list of considerations in the Table to this section. (4) The Information Commissioner must consult with the Privacy Commissioner before issuing any guideline about a privacy-related public interest consideration (being a public interest consideration referred to in clause 3 (a) or (b) of the Table to this section). 16In refusing access to the information the Agency relied upon and applied significant weight to the following 'public interest considerations' as listed in the Table to section 14 of the GIPA Act. 1 Responsible and effective government There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects (whether in a particular case or generally): (a) (d) prejudice the supply to an agency of confidential information that facilitates the effective exercise of that agency's functions, (e) (g) (g) found an action against an agency for breach of confidence or otherwise result in the disclosure of information provided to an agency in confidence, 2 Law enforcement and security There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects (whether in a particular case or generally): (a) (a) reveal or tend to reveal the identity of an informant or prejudice the future supply of information from an informant, (b) (d) .................... (d) endanger, or prejudice any system or procedure for protecting, the life, health or safety of any person, (e) ................... 3 Individual rights, judicial processes and natural justice There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects: (a) (a) reveal an individual's personal information, (b) (b) contravene an information protection principle under the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 or a Health Privacy Principle under the Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002, (c) .................... (g) (g) in the case of the disclosure of personal information about a child-the disclosure of information that it would not be in the best interests of the child to have disclosed.