Ground 1 - the proper construction of s 124
26 Comcare submits that the Tribunal erred in deciding that s 37 of the 1971 Act applied to Mr Dalgleish's claim and contends that, properly construed, ss 124(1), (1A) and (2) of the SRC Act mean that:
(a) by virtue of ss 124(1A) and (2) an injury sustained prior to the commencement of the SRC Act on 1 December 1988 will only be compensable under the SRC Act if it was compensable under the relevant previous compensation statute (in the present case the 1971 Act); and
(b) so long as the relevant injury (suffered before 1 December 1988) was or would have been compensable under the relevant previous Act, by virtue of s 124(1) a person's entitlement to a particular type or kind of compensation arising after 1 December 1988 in respect of that compensable injury is to be determined by reference to the applicable provision of the SRC Act (and without recourse to the comparable provision (if any) in the relevant previous compensation statute).
27 Mr Dalgleish accepts that his entitlement to compensation for the cost of medical treatment in relation to the injuries he suffered in 1986 is not to be determined by reference to s 37 of the 1971 Act, and that since the commencement of the SRC Act on 1 December 1988, its provisions apply to all compensable injuries he previously suffered. He contends, however, that the Tribunal did not fall into any relevant legal error.
28 Although Mr Dalgleish concedes this central issue, Comcare submits that the Court should provide reasons regarding the proper construction of s 124. I accept that is appropriate in circumstances where the proper construction of s 124 is likely to arise in other cases.
29 Section 14 provides that "Comcare is liable to pay compensation in accordance with this Act, for an injury suffered by an employee if the injury results in death, incapacity for work or impairment". Such compensation potentially includes compensation for medical expenses which is governed by s 16, and aids and appliances (including their modification or alteration), which is governed by s 39.
30 Section 124 is a transitional provision dealing with the application of the SRC Act to injuries that occurred prior to the commencement of the Act on 1 December 1988. Because Mr Dalgleish's injuries were suffered in July 1986 it was necessary for the Tribunal to apply this section. It must be construed consistently with its text and statutory context and so as to give effect to the evident purpose of the legislature: Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355; [1998] HCA 28 (Project Blue Sky) at [69] and [79]; s 2(1) Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth); Lacey v Attorney-General (Qld) (2011) 242 CLR 573; [2011] HCA 10. The Court must strive to give meaning to every word of the provision: Solution 6 Holdings Ltd v Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales (2004) 60 NSWLR 558; [2004] NSWCA 200 at [74]. Where two constructions are open, a construction which avoids 'surplusage' is to be preferred: Project Blue Sky at [71].
31 As Comcare submits, Pt II of the SRC Act and in particular s 14 indicate that an entitlement to compensation under the SRC Act "in respect of an injury" refers to a general entitlement to compensation rather than entitlement to a specific head, type or amount of compensation.
32 The text and statutory context of subs 124(1), (1A) and (2) also indicate that they are intended to deal with a general entitlement to compensation under the SRC Act (that is, entitlement to any compensation). They operate to entitle and disentitle a person from compensation under the SRC Act if compensation was or was not payable in respect of that injury. They do not purport to entitle or disentitle a person in respect of particular types or heads of compensation by reference to corresponding types or kinds of compensation that were or were not payable under an earlier relevant compensation statute.
33 In contrast subs 124(3)-(9) deal with the entitlement to specific kinds (or heads) of compensation under the sections they mention, namely ss 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 24, 25 and 31. For example, s 124(4) provides that the amount of compensation for permanent impairment or death occurring before the commencing day is the amount payable under the 1971 Act or earlier statute. Section 124(7)) provides that the rate of compensation in respect of the death of an employee and the rate of compensation for incapacity, where the compensation relates to a period occurring before the commencing day, are in accordance with the earlier (repealed) compensation statutes. The effect of other subsections is to gear payments under the SRC Act to the relevant earlier compensation statute: Esber v the Commonwealth (1992) 174 CLR 430 (Esber) at 437 (Mason CJ, Deane, Toohey and Gaudron JJ).
34 If Parliament had intended s 124(1A) to create an entitlement to a particular type or kind of compensation by reference back to an earlier compensation statute it could have easily inserted the word "that" or "such" so that the subsection provided "a person is entitled to compensation under this Act in respect of an injury, loss or damage suffered before the commencing day if that compensation was payable in respect of that injury, loss or damage". Other parts of s 124 make use of such a device to make clear that a specific injury, impairment or death is being referred to. The absence of this device in s 124(1A) and (2) suggests the references are to a broad entitlement to compensation rather than a specific kind or type of compensation.
35 It is also noteworthy that, as initially enacted, the SRC Act did not include subs (1A). The effect of sections 124(1) and (2) was (and is) to ensure that the SRC Act applies in relation to any injury suffered whether before or after the commencement of the Act and to preclude any entitlement to compensation under the SRC Act in respect of injury loss or damage before 1 December 1988 if there was no entitlement under the relevant earlier compensation statute: Esber at 437; Schlenert v Australian and Overseas Telecommunications Corporation (1994) 49 FCR 139 (Schlenert) at 142 (Lockhart J).
36 Subsection (1A) was inserted into the SRC Act by s 16 of the Industrial Relations Legislation Amendment Act 1991 (Cth) to clarify the operation of s 124. The Explanatory Memorandum for that Act states:
The purpose of the proposed subsection is to remove any doubt that an employee continues to be entitled to compensation under the Act in respect of an injury, loss or damage suffered before the date of commencement of the Act (1 December 1988) if compensation was, or would have been payable in respect of that injury under the repealed legislation.
Subclause 2(2) provides that the amendments made by this clause and clause 14 are to be taken to have come into operation on 1 December 1988. This ensures that the position of employees who were receiving compensation immediately before the commencement of the CERC Act is more effectively preserved.
Having regard to its text, context and purpose subs (1A) does not alter the effect of subs (1) and (2) so that a person's entitlement to a particular type or kind of compensation is to be determined under a previous (repealed) compensation statute rather than under the SRC Act.
37 Relatedly, the words "loss or damage" in subs (1A) are not to be read as creating an entitlement under the SRC Act to recovery of losses suffered through medical expenses in respect of an injury, loss or damage suffered before 1 December 1988. As Comcare submits, reading the SRC Act as a whole it is clear that the words "loss or damage" in the composite phrase "injury, loss or damage" in ss 124(1), 1A and (2) refer to loss or damage to property. Broadly, there are two ways Comcare may be liable to compensate an employee: (a) where the employee suffers an injury (see for example ss 14, 16, 19, 24, 25 and 27); and (b) where the employee has an accident which does not cause injury to the employee but results in the loss of, or damage to, property used by the employee (see s 15). Other than compensation for loss of, or damage to, property under s 15, suffering a compensable injury is a necessary condition before any compensation is payable under the SRC Act.
38 A number of provisions of the SRC Act (see for example ss 46, 48, 51, 118 and 119) use a composite phrase such as "an injury to an employee or loss of, or damage to property used by an employee" and then subsequently use the phrase "injury, loss or damage" as a shorthand way of referring to the compensation payable in respect of an injury sustained by an employee or as a result of the loss of or damage to their property. This is further supported by the fact that the SRC Act does not generally use the words "loss" or "damage" to refer to types of compensation that can be awarded for the various types of economic or non-economic loss or damage an employee can suffer as a result of an injury. Rather, it uses words such as "cost" and "amount" (see for example ss 16, 18, 23(1), 29(1), 31, 39, 124(8).
39 The Court was not taken to any superior court judgement that has considered the application of s 124 to a claim seeking compensation for medical expenses or aids or appliances where the employee was injured before the commencing day. However, as noted above, obiter references in various cases confirm the construction of s 124 set out above: see Esber at 437; Schlenert at 142. In Brennan v Comcare (1994) 50 FCR 555 Gummow J said (at 562 and 564):
Part X of the 1988 Act, which includes s 124, provides comprehensive "transitional" provisions. The provisions are transitional in a particular way. They are not concerned with the preservation of the old legislation in respect of rights and liabilities accrued thereunder. Rather, they deal with the creation and substitution from their commencement of new rights in respect of past events…
…
The fundamental consideration is that the 1988 Act thus applies to an injury, loss or damage suffered by an employee before 1 December 1988 and that rights of recovery are conferred by these sub-sections. Each is expressed to be "subject to this Part". Whilst succeeding subsections of s 124 itself and other provisions of Part X (ss 123-139) limit or exclude what otherwise would be the rights of employees to compensation, they do not confer them.
40 Mr Dalgleish accepts that any entitlement he may have to compensation under ss 16 or 39 for medical treatment or for aids or appliances can only arise under the provisions of the SRC Act. It does not arise under s 37 of the 1971 Act as the Tribunal found. However, he submits that the Tribunal did not fall into any relevant legal error. He argues that while the Tribunal relied on the wrong Act, in substance it had considered the matters it was required to consider under ss 16 or s 39 of the SRC Act. He also submits that the evidence reviewed by the Tribunal amply satisfied the factual basis for its decision that the entitlement to compensation existed. He says it is sufficient that the Tribunal found that the neutral cushioning runners were an aid reasonably required as a result of his injury, and that the Court should not set aside the Tribunal decision. Instead, he says it is appropriate for the Court to vary the Tribunal's order so as to correctly identify the source of the entitlement to compensation as s 16 of the SRC Act, and otherwise leave the decision intact.
41 I do not accept Mr Dalgleish's submissions in this regard. For the Tribunal to decide that the use of cushioning runners fell within the definition of medical treatment in ss 16 and 4(1) of the SRC Act it was required to go further than merely deciding that they "are an aid reasonably required as a result of his injury".
42 Section 16 provides that, where an employee has suffered an injury out of or in the course of his or her employment, Comcare is liable to pay compensation in respect of the cost of "medical treatment", being treatment that it was reasonable for the employee to obtain in the circumstances. The meaning of "medical treatment" is exhaustively defined in s 4(1). The Tribunal's reasons do not show any consideration of which element or elements of the definition of "medical treatment" Mr Dalgleish satisfied or why. The Tribunal's reasons do not permit a conclusion that the Tribunal asked itself the correct questions or made the necessary findings before deciding that Comcare was liable to compensate Mr Dalgleish for the cost of the recommended shoes.
43 I consider the Tribunal misconstrued s 124 of the SRC Act and erred in concluding that Mr Dalgleish was entitled to compensation pursuant to s 37 of the 1971 Act. Ground 1 of the appeal is made out.