Chief Executive Centrelink v The Aboriginal Community Benefit Fund Pty Ltd
[2016] FCAFC 153
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia (Full Court)
Decision date
2016-11-11
Before
Mortimer JJ, Perram J
Catchwords
- SOCIAL SECURITY - Centrepay service - automatic deduction of funeral insurance premiums from social security benefits - whether able to be terminated
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (18 paragraphs)
- Appeal allowed.
- The Appellant file and serve any written submission it wishes to make on costs within five business days, with the Respondents replying within a further five business days. Neither submission should exceed two pages. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
PERRAM J: 1 The issue on appeal concerns the meaning of Item 2 of Schedule 1 to the Human Services (Centrelink) Regulations 2011 (Cth) ('the Regulation'). Schedule 1 is a list of some services provided, loosely speaking, by Centrelink and Item 2 is the second item in the list. It is in these terms: 2. A service (known as Centrepay) of deducting an amount from a benefit payable to an individual and paying the amount directly to another person: (a) with the individual's consent, or as otherwise authorised or permitted by a law of the Commonwealth; and (b) consistently with arrangements between the Department and the other person. 2 Item 2 therefore specifies the 'Centrepay' service. A series of provisions in the Regulation and in the Human Services (Centrelink) Act 1997 (Cth) ('the Act') confer on the Chief Executive Centrelink ('the CEC') the function of providing the 'Centrepay' service described in Item 2. 3 The respondent Fund provides funeral benefit cover, principally to Indigenous persons. The CEC has provided the Centrepay service to the Fund in the past in respect of premiums due from customers who are in receipt of Centrelink benefits. In practice, this has meant that the premiums have been deducted directly out of the social security entitlements of the Fund's customers and paid directly to it. At all material times there was an 'arrangement' of the kind referred to in Item 2(b) in place between the Department and the Fund. On 1 July 2015, a Departmental official wrote to the Fund informing it that, subject to some presently immaterial grandfathering arrangements, the Centrepay service would no longer be available in respect of funeral insurance with effect from 31 August 2015. 4 The Fund's case at trial was that the power which had been exercised was a power to make an 'arrangement' of the kind referred to in Item 2(b). No express power to make such an arrangement, however, is conferred by the Regulation. Both parties accepted nevertheless that there was such a power impliedly conferred by Item 2(b) itself, or if that were not sufficient, by s 8(1)(d) of the Act, which confers on the CEC the function of 'doing anything incidental, conducive or related to the performance of any of his or her other functions.' On either view, the power to make arrangements is a statutory power to which s 33(1) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) applies. That provision is as follows: 33 Exercise of powers and performance of functions or duties Powers, functions and duties may be exercised or must be performed as the occasion requires (1) Where an Act confers a power or function or imposes a duty, then the power may be exercised and the function or duty must be performed from time to time as occasion requires. 5 The appeal was conducted on the basis that s 33(1) permits a statutory power not only to be re-exercised, but also to be re-exercised in such a way as to detract from, add to, vary or even revoke an earlier exercise of underlying power: see, in relation to the meaning of 'from time to time', the obiter remarks of Lord Penzance in Lawrie v Lees (1881) 7 App Cas 19 at 29-30, and in relation to the operation of s 33(1) or its various analogues, Parkes Rural Distributions Pty Ltd v Glasson (1986) 7 NSWLR 332 at 335-336 per Glass JA (Samuels and Priestley JJA agreeing); Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Kurtovic (1990) 21 FCR 193 at 218-219 per Gummow J (Ryan J agreeing). A narrower view was, perhaps, taken in Kabourakis v The Medical Practitioners Board of Victoria [2006] VSCA 301 at [84] per Nettle JA, but the narrower view in that case is not material to the situation in this case. Because it was not disputed in this case, it is not necessary to express any concluded views on the true operation of s 33(1). 6 Section 33(1) does not apply if the statute in question evinces a contrary intention: Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth), s 2(2). It was not suggested in this case that the Act did exhibit such a contrary intention. Thus, as a matter of power, there can be no question but that the CEC had the power to revoke an earlier arrangement made under Item 2(b) and replace it with a new one. The contrary was not submitted. 7 Mr Doyle QC who, with Mr Black of Counsel, appeared for the Fund, submitted that the decision made on 1 July 2015 to cease making the Centrepay service available in respect of funeral insurance was liable to be set aside because the decision-maker had taken into account an irrelevant consideration. The irrelevant consideration was the desire of the Department to ensure that the Centrepay service not be available for the payment of funeral insurance premiums. There is no doubt that this is exactly what the decision-maker intended, and hence that this was a matter which was taken into account. The debate therefore devolves only to the issue of whether it can be said that the consideration was irrelevant in the sense explained by Mason J in Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend Ltd (1986) 162 CLR 24 at 40; that is to say, that the matter was excluded by 'the subject-matter, scope and purpose of the statute'. 8 A desire to make the Centrepay service unavailable for funeral insurance was said to be alien to the power to make an arrangement referred to in Item 2(b) because it only authorised 'arrangements' and, as a matter of construction, an 'arrangement' was merely a facilitative instrument to give effect to Centrepay services already determined to be available. A power to make arrangements could not be used, on this view, to achieve the substantive outcome that the Centrepay service would not be provided to a particular person or in respect of a particular category of payment. 9 I would accept this argument. Neither the Act nor the Regulation defines an arrangement, but the word itself does appear in two other locations in the Regulation. Reg 10(3)(e) provides that a particular function includes 'making arrangements for health assessments and other assistance in relation to health care'. 10 In addition, Item 3 of Schedule 1 also uses 'arrangement' in an identical fashion to the way it is used in Item 2 (and therefore does not advance matters very far). These references are, however, sufficient to indicate that the word 'arrangements' does not mean a subordinate executive instrument such as the Administrative Arrangements Order by which portfolio responsibility for legislation is assigned to particular Ministers. Although not common, an exercise of a legislative or executive power resulting in an instrument containing prescriptions and called an arrangement is not unknown: see e.g. s 6(1) of the Coal Acquisition Act 1981 (NSW) ('The Governor may by order make arrangements…'). I mention these matters because it is clear that this is not what the drafter had in mind in Item 2 of Schedule 1. 11 The word therefore bears its ordinary meaning. The online Oxford English Dictionary contains a number of definitions of 'arrangement', the seventh of which is as follows: 7. Disposition of measures for the accomplishment of a purpose; preparations for successful performance. 1786 E. BURKE Articles of Charge against W. Hastings III, in Wks. XI. 432 Arrangements with the Rajah..for the better government and management of his Zemindary. 1837 W. C. MACREADY Reminisc. II. 82 With the latter I made arrangements about ballet, &c. 1854 THACKERAY Newcomes I. xxvi. 252 His own arrangements were made in another quarter. 1855 MACAULAY Hist. Eng. IV. xxii. 713 Donelagh made the arrangements for the flight. ' 12 This seems to me most closely to correspond to the use of the word in Item 2. The online Macquarie Dictionary does not appear to have an equivalent definition. The closest would be definition 5: '(usually plural) preparatory measure; previous plan; preparation.' 13 However, I do not think that that definition quite captures the meaning set out in the quotes in the OED definition, which appear to have an additional sense of the measures being directed to a purpose. I do not doubt that the word 'arrangements' has just such a meaning in Australian English (cf. 'he made arrangements to disinherit his heir'). 14 It seems to me therefore that the 'arrangements' in Item 2 are a set of measures whose end is the achievement of some purpose. In the case of Item 2, the purpose to be achieved is the provision of the Centrepay service. 15 If that be so, then the power to make arrangements under Item 2(b) is only a power to assist in the accomplishment of the purpose of providing the Centrepay service. Whatever that embraces - and it may embrace much - it does not take in a measure to prevent the delivery of the Centrepay service. Perhaps put another way, whatever the arrangement does it must facilitate, not wholly prevent, the provision of the service. 16 This does not mean that the CEC has no power to decide not to provide the Centrepay service with respect to particular third parties or in respect of particular kinds of payments. The power to provide the service flows from Item 2, reg 11(1) and s 8(1), which together confer on the CEC a 'function', inter alia, of providing the Centrepay service in Item 2 to non-governmental organisations. Section 8(1) of the Act provides: 8 Functions of Chief Executive Centrelink Functions - general (1) The Chief Executive Centrelink has the following functions: (a) the service delivery functions mentioned in section 8A; (b) any functions conferred on the Chief Executive Centrelink under any other Act; (ba) any functions that are prescribed by the regulations; (d) doing anything incidental, conducive or related to the performance of any of his or her other functions. 17 Regulation 11(1) then provides: 11 Function of providing specified services (1) A prescribed function is to provide a service specified in Schedule 1 (a specified service) to any of the following: (a) a Commonwealth body; (b) a State or Territory body; (c) a local government body; (d) a non-government organisation. 18 So the full structure is that s 8(1)(ba) gives the CEC functions prescribed by the regulations; reg 11(1) prescribes the functions set out in the schedule to the Regulation; and Item 2 of the Schedule contains the Centrepay service. The CEC, therefore, has the function of providing the Centrepay service. 19 In the context of 'functions', it should be noted that s 3 of the Act (which deals with definitions) makes plain that a 'function' includes a power. It is clear, to my mind, that the CEC has a discretion under s 8(1) as to whether he provides the Centrepay service at all, or if provided, to whom, or in respect of what payments. 20 In this case, it would therefore be within the CEC's power under s 8(1) to decide that the Department would no longer provide the Centrepay service in relation to funeral insurance premiums to a particular non-government organisation. This would be an exercise of power to provide the Centrepay service under s 8(1) (combined with s 33(1)), and not the power to make arrangements under Item 2(b). 21 What follows from this is that no decision to excise funeral insurance from the Centrepay service can have been made under Item 2, which would authorise no such decision. This has the immediate consequence that the Fund's irrelevant consideration argument based, as it is, on an assumption that the source of the power was Item 2, must also fail. 22 Griffiths J and I, however, are in agreement that the actual source of power for a decision to excise funeral insurance from the Centrepay service is s 8(1) of the Act. His Honour has explained how the letter of 1 July 2015 from Mr Anderson is properly to be seen as an exercise of that power. I respectfully agree with that conclusion, and also with his analysis of the legal issues arising from that letter. I also agree with his Honour's conclusion on the Fund's notice of contention. 23 The result of these conclusions is that the appeal must be allowed. My tentative view is that there should be no costs order either on this appeal or at trial. However, the parties have not been heard on this. The course I would favour is that the appellant should put on any written submission it wishes to make on costs within five business days, with the Fund replying within a further five business days. Neither submission should exceed two pages. I certify that the preceding twenty-three (23) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Perram.