Section 31(4): Only the "Commission" and "False"?
14 On behalf of the Applicant it was contended that:
(i) s 31(4) did not confer any power to review a decision after the decision had been reviewed by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal;
or, in the alternative, and if s 31(4) did confer such a power, that:
(ii) the power which was conferred was confined to those circumstances in which there had been before the Commission evidence which was "false" - and there was no such evidence in the present proceedings.
Neither contention prevails.
15 In support of the former contention, reliance was placed upon s 31(4) being expressed in terms of "Where the Commission is satisfied". That provision, it was contended, necessarily excluded decisions which had been subsequently reviewed by the Tribunal. That provision, it was said, stood in contrast to s 31(6) which employed the statutory phraseology of "a matter that was not before the Commission, the Board or the Administrative Appeals Tribunal". Where a power of review was intended to be conferred even after Tribunal review, the contention was that the Parliamentary draftsman employed the language of s 31(6).
16 The argument, however, ignores the effect given to a decision of the Tribunal. Section 43(6) of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (Cth) provides as follows:
A decision of a person as varied by the Tribunal, or a decision made by the Tribunal in substitution for the decision of a person, shall, for all purposes (other than the purposes of applications to the Tribunal for a review or of appeals in accordance with section 44), be deemed to be a decision of that person and, upon the coming into operation of the decision of the Tribunal, unless the Tribunal otherwise orders, has effect, or shall be deemed to have had effect, on and from the day on which the decision under review has or had effect.
In the present context, a decision of the Tribunal is deemed to be a decision of the Commission "for all purposes". Where there has been a decision of the Commission which has been reviewed by the Tribunal, as in the present proceedings, the subsequent decision of the Tribunal is nevertheless "deemed" to be a decision of the Commission. Section 31(4), it is considered, thus includes both a decision of the Commission and a decision of the Commission as altered, varied or affirmed. The effect of s 43(6) of the 1975 Act cannot be confined to simply identifying the date from which a decision of the Tribunal is to take effect. To so construe s 43(6) is to give effect only to the latter part of the provision and is to ignore the "deeming" effect given to a Tribunal decision. To conclude that the power of review vested in "the Commission" by s 31(4) could not be exercised after review by the Tribunal would be to construe s 31(4) as excluding a power of review where there has been a decision which is deemed to be a decision of the Commission itself and deemed to be a decision of the Commission "for all purposes". A construction of a statutory provision which permits further administrative reconsideration subsequent to a Tribunal decision is not surprising: see, eg, Hanna v Australian Postal Corporation (1990) 12 AAR 511.
17 Irrespective of s 43(6) of the 1975 Act, however, it is further considered that the contrast in language relied upon by Mr Godwin as between s 31(4) and s 31(6) is misplaced. All that the language employed in s 31(6) prescribes are those circumstances in which the Commission may exercise the power there conferred. It may exercise those powers where it is "satisfied" that there is a "matter" that was not before any of the decision-making stages, be the decision one made by the Commission, the Board or the Tribunal. Such a provision provides little if any basis for confining the ambit of the power conferred by s 31(4). The difference in language as between s 34(4) and s 34(6) is not considered to be a sufficient basis to construe s 31(4) as imposing any constraint other than the one prescribed by the legislature, namely that the Commission be satisfied that evidence was "false in a material particular".
18 The construction of s 31(4) urged by Mr Godwin was also said to be implicitly supported by the administrative decision-making hierarchy proceeding from the Commission, thereafter to the Board, and finally to the Tribunal. It was understood that the submission advanced was that s 31(4) was to be confined to the initial repository of decision-making authority and not to be extended to decisions which had been exposed to further administrative review. Albeit in the context of s 31(6), the same argument has been rejected: Davis v Repatriation Commission (1997) 74 FCR 577. Sundberg J there observed:
The applicant's alternative argument took as its starting point the hierarchy of decision-making established by the Act. The hierarchy consists of the Commission as primary decision-maker, the Board as the second tier decision-maker, and the AAT as the third tier decision-maker and ultimate forum of merits review. It was said that the review mechanisms provided by s135 and s175 were intended to result in the final disposition of claims. It was submitted that while the word "matter" standing alone would receive a wide construction, in the context of the review provisions as a whole it must be limited to a degree which is necessary to achieve finality in the disposition of claims. If s31(6) is not limited in this manner, the Commission could review decisions of the Board or the Tribunal again and again on any pretext in defiance of the review hierarchy. The limitation contended for was not more precisely formulated than this, but was said to lead to the conclusion that a medical report which merely repeats and endorses the conclusions in other reports based on documented observations, and which contains no new observation, fact, cause, circumstance, information, opinion or contention, is not capable of being a matter which was not before the Board when the decision to grant the pension was made. It was accepted that a medical report which was brought into existence to take into account some change in the facts and circumstances, or facts or circumstances not previously disclosed, might be in a different position.
I see no reason to limit the ordinary meaning of the words "any matter that affects the payment of a pension ..., being a matter that was not before the ... Board ... when the decision to grant the pension ... was made" in the manner contended for. The "hierarchy" argument, which purports to be based on the structure of the review provisions of the Act, ignores the fact that s31 itself contains no less than seven exceptions to the simple three tier structure on which the submission is based. Far from supporting the contention that s31(6) would, unless narrowed, permit the Commission to review decisions of the Board or Tribunal in defiance of the review hierarchy, a reading of the relevant parts of the Act as a whole shows that the three tier review structure contended for is simplistic. Not only does s31 provide a number of additional grounds of review, but decisions made pursuant to the section are themselves subject to review under s135(3).
…
The fact that s31(6) may be open to abuse (repeated reviews on any pretext), does not in my view require it to be read down. A capricious or unreasonable exercise of the power will be susceptible to review under s5 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act.
For present purposes there is not considered to be any relevant distinction as between s 31(4) and s 31(6).
19 The alternative submission advanced on behalf of s 31(4) should also be rejected. This alternative argument assumed that s 31(4) did confer a power upon the Commission to undertake a review - even after a Tribunal decision - but contended that there was no power to do so in the present proceedings because there was no evidence which was "false in a material particular". "False", it was contended, should be interpreted as meaning "deliberately untruthful".
20 There are at least two difficulties in acceding to this alternative submission.
21 First, the task of determining whether there was evidence which was "false in a material particular" is not a task entrusted to this Court; it is a task entrusted by the Commonwealth legislature to the Commission. Section 31(4) thus confers the power of review where "the Commission is satisfied that evidence before [it] when it made a decision was false in a material particular". Where a discretionary power is vested in the Commission in such terms, it matters not that others may have reached a different decision and may have done so reasonably, provided that there was some probative material available to support the decision in fact taken by the Commission: cf Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v Eshetu [1999] HCA 21 at [45] per Gleeson CJ and McHugh J, [147] per Gummow J, 197 CLR 611.
22 Second, there was indeed material available to the Commission upon which it could reach the state of satisfaction that evidence previously before it was "false in a material particular". The meaning of the term "false" depends upon the statutory context in which it is used. In some statutory contexts the term may mean "purposely or deliberately or intentionally untrue": see, eg, Murphy v Farmer (1988) 165 CLR 19. The term "false" in the present statutory context, however, is considered to mean "objectively incorrect": cf Musgrave v Martin [2003] FCA 920 at [105], 130 FCR 546 at 565 per Weinberg J. Where the 1986 Act seeks to impose a requirement that a "false" statement be made "intentionally", it so provides: see, eg, s 208.
23 Limited room for argument emerged as to whether the delegate had erred in the construction of the word "false" and whether he had erroneously construed the term as meaning "misleading". The letter enclosing the s 31 decision to Mr Godwin's solicitors thus referred to an earlier decision as having been made on the basis of "misleading information" and the s 31 decision itself refers to "material which was false and misleading within the terms of s.31(4)". Any ambiguity, however, as to the basis upon which the delegate proceeded is removed by his statement that he was:
… satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the event described by Mr. Godwin in his evidence to the Tribunal and the Board and in the histories he provided to various psychiatrists did not occur or did not occur in the manner described. …
This conclusion cannot be construed as anything other than a conclusion that the account given by the Applicant was "objectively incorrect".
24 This conclusion of the delegate, and his requisite state of "satisfaction", was able to be supported by the contents of the 2007 Writeway Research material. That material cannot be characterised as being merely equivocal as to whether the sampan incident occurred. To so characterise the material may have supported a submission that there was not now available to the Commission evidence upon which it could be satisfied that the earlier evidence was "false". Perhaps equivocation is exposed by the final paragraph of the 2007 report which stated:
… my research has not disclosed any evidence of a fishing boat being blown up as described by the Veteran in the extracts at paragraph 1 of this report. …
Whatever equivocation may be exposed by this statement, there is no such equivocation in earlier material set forth in the 2007 report which found (inter alia) that had such an incident occurred "it would almost certainly have been observed by a large number of people". The report thus stated:
… In addition to the personnel mentioned above, there were numerous other personnel who would have been in a position to witness a sampan being blown up by a patrol boat within sight of SYDNEY, particularly if their attention was drawn to it by the sound of machine gun fire. They included communications personnel on the bridge, the ship's Aviation Officer and his staff in Flyco (Flying Control) overlooking the Flight Deck who controlled aircraft movements in the vicinity of the ship, the Cargo Officer and members of the cargo handling party on the Flight Deck and ship's divers based on the quarterdeck. Had a sampan been blown up near SYDNEY by a patrol boat, with bodies and body parts being thrown into the air, it would almost certainly have been observed by a large number of people, and it would have been reported to the PCO on the bridge. As such an incident would have been indicative of a possible threat to SYDNEY it would have been reported to the Commanding Officer, and the PCO would probably have asked the Harbour Control Post for information about the incident, particularly whether it appeared to be related to the presence of the two RAN ships.
The report also extracted a report from a former Lieutenant Commander which in part stated:
… Had a sampan been sunk by gunfire in the vicinity a comment would most certainly have been recorded in VAMPIRE's Report of Proceeding, which I drafted each month, and probably SYDNEY's as well. However, I did witness an incident that may be relevant; this involved a sampan (or fishing boat) and an armed patrol boat, which I think was South Vietnamese but may have been US Navy[.]
The records of the United States Navy were also addressed and the report concluded that:
… Given the nature of the incidents recorded in the monthly summary, as indicated in the extracts attached, it could be expected that the interception and sinking of a suspect junk in the anchorage at Vung Tau, would have been included in the summary.
This was all material which was not previously available and material upon which the Commission or its delegate could form the requisite state of "satisfaction".
25 It is thus considered that s 31(4) confers a power to review a decision after a decision of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. That power was open to be exercised by the Commission by reason of the fact that there was material upon which the Commission by its delegate could be "satisfied" that the evidence previously before the Commission was "false in a material particular".