(b) Service of notices under the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth)
69The defendant sought an adjournment so that notices could be served under s 78B Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) to give notice to the Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth and of the States of the nature of the matter which would be contained in the proposed Further Amended Defence, namely that the provisions of ss 175 and 177 ITAA 1936 are invalid under the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act ("the Constitution").
70Section 78B Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) provides:
"Notice to Attorneys-General
(1) Where a cause pending in a federal court including the High Court or in a court of a State or Territory involves a matter arising under the Constitution or involving its interpretation, it is the duty of the court not to proceed in the cause unless and until the court is satisfied that notice of the cause, specifying the nature of the matter has been given to the Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth and of the States, and a reasonable time has elapsed since the giving of the notice for consideration by the Attorneys-General, of the question of intervention in the proceedings or removal of the cause to the High Court.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), a court in which a cause referred to in that subsection is pending:
(a) may adjourn the proceedings in the cause for such time as it thinks necessary and may make such order as to costs in relation to such an adjournment as it thinks fit;
(b) may direct a party to give notice in accordance with that subsection; and
(c) may continue to hear evidence and argument concerning matters severable from any matter arising under the Constitution or involving its interpretation.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), a notice in respect of a cause:
(a) shall be taken to have been given to an Attorney-General if steps have been taken that, in the opinion of the court, could reasonably be expected to cause the matters to be notified to be brought to the attention of that Attorney-General; and
(b) is not required to be given to the Attorney-General of the Commonwealth if he or she or the Commonwealth is a party to the cause and is not required to be given to the Attorney-General of a State if he or she or the State is a party to the cause.
(4) The Attorney-General may authorize the payment by the Commonwealth to a party of an amount in respect of costs arising out of the adjournment of a cause by reason of this section.
(5) Nothing in subsection (1) prevents a court from proceeding without delay to hear and determine proceedings, so far as they relate to the grant of urgent relief of an interlocutory nature, where the court thinks it necessary in the interests of justice to do so."
71The constitutional issue is based upon Commissioner of Taxation v Futuris Corp Ltd (2008) 237 CLR 146 ("Futuris") at [122]-[131] where Kirby J made the following obiter remarks:
"[122] Matters not in issue: Before discussing the outstanding issues, it is appropriate to note two particular questions which, although contingently presented, were not part of the record:
(1) The constitutional validity issue: Whether, to the extent the Commissioner needed to rely upon them, ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act are invalid under the Constitution. This potential issue might arise on the basis that the provisions attempt to render unexaminable by the courts an administrative decision by a federal official imposing a tax, or to render such a decision examinable only under conditions that are inconsistent with the proper application of s 75(v) of the Constitution (and its counterpart, s 39B(1) of the Judiciary Act).
(2) The jurisdictional error issue: Whether, to attract relief under s 75(v) of the Constitution (or s 39B(1) of the Judiciary Act), the applicant must show more than legal error (here, the Commissioner making a legally flawed assessment under the Act) and must demonstrate that any such error took the Commissioner outside his lawful jurisdiction and power.
[123] Neither party raised the foregoing constitutional questions in written or oral submissions. No notices were given as required under the Judiciary Act. However, where fundamental questions as to the operation of the Constitution are necessarily raised in judicial proceedings, it is sometimes essential, subject to procedural fairness, for a court to address the questions even though the parties have elected not to do so.
[124] Paying proper regard to the fundamental principle of the rule of law and to the role of s 75(v) of the Constitution (and s 39B(1) of the Judiciary Act) in defending its objectives, the constitutional validity of ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act may be in doubt. Given recent explanations of the meaning, purpose and application of s 75(v) of the Constitution, it is questionable whether the Federal Parliament could lawfully provide that the "validity of any assessment shall not be affected by reason that any of the provisions of this Act have not been complied with".
[125] The validity of an assessment (like any other legislative, executive or judicial act of a Commonwealth officer) can only be finally determined by a court, not by parliamentary fiat nor by administrative action. Moreover, the effect of non-compliance with a provision of the Act must surely depend upon the particular terms of that provision; the nature, extent and purpose of any non-compliance; and whether in law the non-compliance affects (or does not affect) the validity of what has been done or omitted.
[126] In the generality of its language, s 175 of the Act may be an over-broad provision which could not successfully breathe validity into a purported "assessment" that was not in law an "assessment" as contemplated by the Act. This appears to have been acknowledged by this Court, at least so far as this Court has accepted the disqualifying consequences of assessments that are tentative or provisional, or made with a lack of good faith. In such cases (and, as I am inclined to believe, others) a document that purports to be an "assessment" under the Act, if fundamentally flawed, is not a statutory "assessment" at all. Section 175 could not then, as the case authorities say, "touch it".
[127] The questions that follow this logic are:
(1) What other relevant grounds of invalidity would take a purported assessment outside the power of assessment given to the Commissioner by the Act; and
(2) What then is the purpose and valid effect of ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act given that when validity matters most, namely where it is in doubt, such provisions may not in law stand against the irremovable facility of judicial review guaranteed by the Constitution?
[128] To answer these questions, and to confine ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act to an ambit regarded as tolerable when measured against the provisions of the Constitution, this Court has propounded a discrimen of "jurisdictional error". Thus, ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act will not prevent a judicial determination of invalidity where the making of an assessment involves "jurisdictional error". They may prevent such a determination where the error, even if one of law, is a "non-jurisdictional error". The former type of "error" takes the decision-maker outside or beyond the available jurisdiction or power. The latter is an error made within jurisdiction, and accordingly the decision-maker would still be competent to make it. Protective, privative-type provisions such as ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act are then enlivened and take effect.
[129] I have previously criticised the so-called "jurisdictional error" category despite the support it derives from the current doctrine of this Court. The classification is conclusory. It is very difficult to define and to apply. In recent years it has been substantially discarded by English legal doctrine. Jurisdictional error is nearly impossible to explain to lay people even though the Constitution (including the central provisions in s 75(v)) belongs to them. Most non-lawyers would regard it as a lawyer's fancy.
[130] Whatever the position may have been under the "prerogative" writs before and at 1901, there is no reason why the constitutional idea sustaining the writs expressed in s 75(v) (and s 39B(1) of the Judiciary Act) should not evolve into a broader concept of "legal error". Since 1901, the remedies referred to in s 75(v) have themselves evolved so that we now recognise the discretionary character of all the constitutional remedies. We should likewise accept a parallel evolution and simplification of the grounds for the named constitutional relief. There are few, if any, strict constitutionalist originalists in Australia today.
[131] Because of the state of the record and the arguments of the parties in this appeal, it is appropriate for me to put each of the foregoing constitutional questions to one side. They will not completely go away and the future will look after them. I therefore return to the issues that remain outstanding upon the record and within the current doctrine of "jurisdictional error" and hence to the operation of ss 175 and 177(1) of the Act as interpreted consistently with that doctrine."
72A similar application was brought in Deputy Commissioner of Taxation v Haritos [2010] VSC 275 ("Haritos"). In that case, the taxpayer made a challenge under the Constitution pleading, inter alia, that the provisions of ss 175 and 177 of the ITAA 1936 were invalid under the Constitution, and relying upon the obiter statements of Kirby J in Futuris.
73Mukhtar AsJ summarised the judgment of the majority in Futuris (which his Honour noted also incidentally dealt with the constitutional issue) and the obiter remarks of Kirby J in Futuris as follows (at [13]-[14]):
"[13] For the Commissioner, it was submitted that the High Court's decision in Commissioner of Taxation v Futuris Corporation Ltd authoritatively, and resoundingly, disposes of the issues against the taxpayer. The judgment of the majority in Futuris stands for or affirms the following propositions, which I think also incidentally deal with the Constitutional points remaining in the defence:
(a) The Commissioner has the general administration of the ITAA, and under s 166 makes an assessment from the returns, and from any other information in his possession. An assessment by the Commissioner identifies the completion of the process by which the provisions of the ITAA relating to liability to tax are given concrete application in a particular case with the consequence that a specified amount of money will become due and payable as the proper tax in that case.
(b) The provisions of Pt IVC of the Administration Act set up a regime for the making of taxation objections, and review, and appeals to the Federal Court. Section 177 of the ITAA operates to change what would otherwise be the operation of the relevant laws of evidence. The presence of Pt IVC means section 177 meets the requirement of the Constitution that a tax may not be made incontestable because to do so would place beyond examination the limits upon legislative power.
(c) When s 175 is read with s 177, the result is that the validity of an assessment is not affected by failure to comply with any provisions of the Act. But a taxpayer with a grievance may object to the assessment in the manner set out in Pt IVC. The effect of s 175 is that errors in the process of assessment do not go to jurisdiction.
(d) There are two situations that may attract a remedy for jurisdictional error. First, s 175 only operates where there has been what answers the statutory description of an "assessment". A tentative or provisional assessment does not answer to that description. Secondly, conscious maladministration of the assessment process may also not produce an "assessment".
(e) An amended assessment is not to be treated as tentative or provisional simply because it might be the subject of a compensatory adjustment in the future or may not entirely survive a proceeding under Pt IVC. An assessment may be tentative or provisional where it is self-described as such or it fails to specify the amount of the taxable income which has been assessed and the tax payable.
(f) The notion of conscious maladministration arises as s 175 should be construed to not bring within the jurisdiction of the Commissioner an assessment which is made with a deliberate failure to comply with the provisions of the Act. That is, it does not encompass deliberate failures to administer the law according to its terms. Such a failure is a manifestation of jurisdictional error. But allegations that statutory powers have been exercised corruptly or with deliberate disregard of the scope of those powers are not likely to be made or upheld.
[14] Justice Kirby in Futuris did not regard the categories of jurisdictional error as confined to the two situations as posited by the majority of the court. His Honour, adopted some Australian academic thinking to include a category of "acting on the mistaken assumption or opinion as to the existence of a certain event, occurrence or fact ... or other requirement, when the act makes the validity of the decision-maker's acts contingent on the actual or objective existence of those things, rather than on the decision-maker's subjective opinion." As his Honour's views went beyond the decision of the majority, those views cannot be regarded as enlarging the content of the law."
74Although notices were served upon the Attorneys-General of the Commonwealth, the States, the Northern Territory and the ACT, the court was informed by counsel that no Attorney-General has chosen to intervene (at [5]). Nor was there any application for removal to the High Court of Australia under s 40 Judiciary Act.
75In Haritos, the defendant had at least set out in his defence the basis upon which there was a challenge under the Constitution. Not only has the defendant in these proceedings failed the plead the defence, he has come to court on the day of the hearing, in circumstances where he and those who are advising him had been alive to this issue for approximately five months and asks the court to vacate the trial date.
76In the course of oral argument I was referred to AON Risk Services, supra, particularly at [102], [105] and [106] as follows:
"[102] The objectives stated in r 21 do not require that every application for amendment should be refused because it involves the waste of some costs and some degree of delay, as it inevitably will. Factors such as the nature and importance of the amendment to the party applying cannot be overlooked. Whilst r 21 assumes some ill-effects will flow from the fact of a delay, that will not prevent the parties dealing with its particular effects in their case in more detail. It is the extent of the delay and the costs associated with it, together with the prejudice which might reasonably be assumed to follow and that which is shown, which are to be weighed against the grant of permission to a party to alter its case. Much may depend upon the point the litigation has reached relative to a trial when the application to amend is made. There may be cases where it may properly be concluded that a party has had sufficient opportunity to plead their case and that it is too late for a further amendment, having regard to the other party and other litigants awaiting trial dates. Rule 21 makes it plain that the extent and the effect of delay and costs are to be regarded as important considerations in the exercise of the court's discretion. Invariably the exercise of that discretion will require an explanation to be given where there is delay in applying for amendment.
...
[105] The primary judge was in error in failing to recognise the extent of the new claims and the effect that amendment would have upon Aon. His Honour was in error in failing to recognise the extent to which the objectives of r 21 would not be met if the amendments were allowed. The known ill-effects of a delayed determination, which informed the purposes and objectives of the Rule, were present. Rule 502(1) read with r 21 did not provide an unfettered discretion to grant leave to amend. The objectives of r 21 were to be pursued in the exercise of the power conferred by r 502(1). The fact that ANU's new claims were arguable was not itself sufficient to permit amendment and could not prevail over the objectives of r 21. A "just" resolution of the proceedings between ANU and Aon required those objectives to be taken into account.
[106] Given the requirements of the Rule and the effects associated with delay, it was incumbent upon ANU to tender an explanation as to why the matter had been allowed to proceed to trial in its existing form. It needed to explain why it was seeking leave to amend at the time of the trial, when the two insurer's defences had identified the issue central to the claim it sought to bring against Aon more than 12 months earlier. None was given. His Honour was in error in accepting that ANU had provided a satisfactory explanation. The statements made by counsel foreshadowing leave to amend were not evidence. The ANU's solicitor's later affidavit did not support them. In addition to the defences, the letters written by Chubb in 2003 showed that ANU was told of the importance of the valuation of the property to the insurers long before the receipt of more recent documentation. ANU's solicitor did not suggest that the defences, raising the same matter in connection with the misrepresentations, were misunderstood in their potential relevance to Aon. He did not say that ANU was first alerted to Aon's possible involvement as a result of what was said in mediation."
77The relevant principles in relation to the circumstances in which a court should adjourn a hearing by reason of a challenge to legislation, particularly legislation of longstanding, was dealt with in MRTA of WA Inc v Tsakisiris [2007] WAIRComm 1121 at [63], Ritter AP (with whom Smith SC and Harrison C agreed) observed:
"[63] The issue of vacating a trial date pending the determination of an appeal in another case was recently considered by the New South Wales Court of Appeal in City of Sydney Council v Satara [2007] NSWCA 148. When asked by me, Mr Howlett did not submit there were any errors of law in the reasons of McColl JA (with whom Beazley JA and Tobias JA agreed). It is accepted that the decision is not on all fours with the present case. The court was there dealing with an appeal against an adjournment granted on the basis of an application for special leave to appeal to the High Court in another case which, if special leave was granted, could have an impact upon the relevant law. The general observations of McColl JA are however of assistance. I extract the following five important observations by McColl JA in City of Sydney Council:-
(a) An appeal court will only interfere with a decision to grant or refuse an adjournment in exceptional cases and then only where the discretion has been exercised on a wrong principle or resulted in serious injustice; citing Meggitt Overseas Ltd & Others v Grdovic (1998) 43 NSWLR 527 at 528. ([18]).
(b) The court should deal with the law as it is, rather than speculate about changes in the law; citing Starke J in Ramsay v Aberfoyle Manufacturing Co (Australia) Pty Ltd [1935] HCA 75; (1935) 54 CLR 230 at 253 and other authorities. ([19], [20]).
(c) It is not "ordinarily sufficient to show that an appeal yet to be heard in another case may reach a legal conclusion which could support the claim made by the party seeking the adjournment"; quoting with approval the reasons of Ormiston JA (with whom Callaway JA agreed) in Geelong Football Club Ltd v Clifford [2002] VSCA 212 at paragraph [6]. ([30]).
(d) There were no black and white rules preventing adjournments in appropriate circumstances and in a civil case involving some technical rule of law or the disputed meaning of a particular section, "where the hearing and the resolution of the case will directly depend on the outcome of an appeal in a test case" it would be preferable to await the expected outcome; quoting Ormiston JA again at paragraph [6]. ([30]).
(e) Possible changes in the law are too speculative and it is ordinarily rare that one can foresee that a decision on appeal will necessarily apply although in some circumstances it might be open to a trial judge to adjourn the hearing of a case pending the outcome of an appeal yet to be heard in another case (quoting Ormiston JA in Geelong Football Club at paragraph [7] and citing Meggitt. ([30], [32])."
78The fact that a party asserts that a matter arises under the Constitution or involves its interpretation is not, without more, a basis for vacating or adjourning a trial out of abundance of caution. In Sagacious Legal Pty Ltd v Wesfarmers General Insurance Ltd (No 3) [2010] FCA 428, Rares J at [13] and [14] noted:
"[13] Having now had the benefit of argument by the parties and time to reflect on it, I am satisfied that in truth no matter arises under the Constitution, or involves its interpretation, the subject of the s 78B notice in any event. And, that the position of counsel at the time the hearing commenced was correct. Notices were served out of an abundance of caution, as is often the case: see for example the remarks of Priestley JA in State Bank of New South Wales v Commonwealth Savings Bank of Australia (1986) 4 NSWLR 549 at 560G-561A. As Burchett J said in Amrit Lal Narain v Parnell (1986) 9 FCR 479 at 489, s 78B only operates when the circumstances that it postulates are made to appear to the Court. The section does not operate simply because a party asserts those circumstances, nor does it operate merely because the Court acts out of an abundance of caution in seeking to ensure that the trial does not miscarry for failure to give a notice in case it were required.
[14] The reason s 78B(2)(c) was introduced into the Judiciary Act, is likely to have been due to some remarks made by Fitzgerald J in Capelvenere v Omega Development Corporation Pty Limited (1983) 5 ATPR 40-386 at 44,546 to which French J referred to in Australian Competition Consumer Commission v CG Berbatis Holdings Pty Limited [1999] FCA 1151; (1999) 95 FCR 292 at 297 [13]. The second reading speech of the Minister introducing the amendments to the Judiciary Act, inserting s 78B(2)(c), observed that the amendment would achieve improved operation of that section. As French J observed, the section does not impose a duty on the Court not to proceed pending the issue of the notice no matter how trivial, unarguable or concluded the constitutional point might be: Berbatis 95 FCR at 297 [14]."
79Taking all of the above, and ss 56 - 62 Civil Procedure Act 2005 (NSW) into account, the application for adjournment to serve notices for an unpleaded defence is refused. This brings me to the issue of whether the defendant should be granted leave to file a further amended defence.