Background
5 The applicant was born in January 1960, and has been an Australian citizen since October 1994. In the application letter dated 30 September 2022 he sought portable pension benefits for a proposed period of absence from Australia commencing on 29 November 2022. In support of his application for portability, the applicant made the following claims in the application letter -
(1) The applicant stated that he migrated to Australia in July 1992, and that from time to time after 27 July 1992 he received Centrelink benefits, and that he had been receiving income support payments continuously since 11 September 2009.
(2) The applicant was suffering from a number of ailments which he said were related to age. In particular, he annexed a copy of a report of a CT coronary angiogram dated 26 July 2022 that showed various levels of stenosis in some of his arteries, and which recommended an angioplasty.
(3) The applicant stated that his cardiologist had referred him to the Alfred Heart Centre on 12 July 2022 for an angioplasty. The applicant stated that he believed that a coronary-related problem needed to be treated immediately, and that despite the lapse of 70 days he had not received an appointment from the hospital. The applicant stated that he had therefore decided to obtain "life-saving treatments" from overseas. The applicant annexed to his letter a travel document evidencing a booking on a flight departing Melbourne for Bangkok on 29 November 2022.
(4) The applicant claimed that he was suffering from financial hardship. In support of his claim of financial hardship, the applicant stated that he had been psychiatrically impaired since 2009, and had been unfit for work for seven to eight years. The applicant claimed that he had held a disability support pension card due to psychiatric impairment from 21 August 2014, and that he was currently holding such a card. The applicant annexed to his letter a report from a psychiatrist, Dr Kwong, dated 11 September 2013 who diagnosed the applicant as having had paranoid schizophrenia since 2009, and which noted dosages of antipsychotic and antidepressant medications. The applicant also annexed to one of his affidavits, without objection, the decision of his Honour Judge Dyer in Haque v State of Victoria [2014] VCC 2035. Whether the applicant currently suffers from any psychiatric impairment is not an issue that arises for determination by the Court. I note in passing that a referral from the applicant's general practitioner to a specialist dated 1 September 2022 that was annexed to the application letter did not identify any antipsychotic or antidepressant medications amongst the medications that the applicant was prescribed.
(5) The applicant referred to his financial commitments, such as mortgage liabilities to his bank, rates, and body corporate fees, and to Centrelink payments that he was receiving. In light of these commitments, the applicant sought continuation of payments during the period of temporary absence overseas for at least three months from 29 November 2022.
6 By the application letter, the applicant sought three types of payments, expressed in the alternative -
(1) First, the applicant sought an extension of the portability period pursuant to s 1218D of the Social Security Act, which has as its heading, "Extension of person's portability period - life-saving medical treatment overseas".
(2) In the alternative, the applicant sought a special needs age pension while he was temporarily absent from Australia. In relation to this benefit, the applicant cited in his letter s 772 of the Social Security Act.
(3) In the further alternative, the applicant claimed in the letter that he qualified for a special needs disability support pension, citing ss 94 and 773 of the Social Security Act. In this context, the applicant stated in the letter that he first received a disability support pension card due to psychotic impairment from 21 August 2014, and that he currently held such a card.
7 After setting out the three bases on which portable payments were sought, towards the conclusion of the application letter, the applicant stated (set out verbatim) -
By considering the above facts & legislative authorities, the applicant is humbly & respectfully requesting the honorable secretary to continue the applicant's payments during his temporary absent from the Australia from 29/11/2022 for at least three months and/or until further report/return back to his home country, pursuant to section 772(d & f) of the Act or any other portable options that the authority deems to be fits & appropriate. The special needs age pension is within the group of all pensions and has unlimited period of portability (Table of section 1217; row-1, item-1).
8 In affidavits affirmed 12 October 2023 and 4 December 2023, the applicant referred to some subsequent events -
(1) The applicant attended hospital on 20 October 2022 for an angioplasty where the cardiologist "advised for medicine therapy", which I interpret to mean that the cardiologist advised against an angioplasty, but prescribed medication.
(2) The applicant stated that he did not get any relief from medication, and continued to suffer from chest pains and breathing problems. The applicant stated that he decided to go to Thailand for a second opinion, and then to Bangladesh to have a stent inserted.
(3) On 29 November 2022, the applicant left Australia, returning on 31 March 2023.
(4) Upon the applicant leaving Australia, Centrelink issued a notice of suspension of the applicant's jobseeker payment on the ground that the applicant was not in Australia, and which noted that if the payment was not automatically restored when he returned to Australia, he should contact Centrelink. It appeared to be common ground that I should infer that the notice of suspension of the applicant's jobseeker payments was generated by a computer program, and that the notice was triggered by the applicant's departure from Australia: see Social Security (Administration) Act 1999 (Cth) (Administration Act) s 6A.
9 At the first case management hearing in this proceeding on 25 August 2023, I ordered the Secretary to file and serve a document to be titled "Response to the applicant's application for judicial review". That document was subsequently filed and served on 21 September 2023. Amongst other things, the Secretary acknowledged that there had been a failure to respond to the application letter, stating -
17. The Secretary regrets that the applicant did not receive a reply to his letter of 30 September 2022, and apologises to Mr Haque for the failure to provide a reply.
18. However, the Secretary contends that the applicant was not eligible for receipt of the portable payments, or for the extension to portability, sought in that letter.
19. The Secretary has since arranged for Mr Haque's portability request in the 30 September 2022 letter to be actioned. In a decision dated 19 September 2023 it was determined that the applicant could not have his Jobseeker payment made portable upon his departure from Australia on 29 November 2022.
10 As indicated in the response document filed in this proceeding, on 19 September 2023 an officer of "Services Australia", also identified as "Centrelink", wrote to the applicant stating that the evidence that he had provided was not sufficient to support a jobseeker payment in respect of the period he was outside Australia. The material part of the letter stated -
I have carefully considered the evidence you provided in relation to your travel outside of Australia on 29 November 2022. A decision has been made under Section 1212 of the Social Security Act 1991 that the evidence provided is not sufficient for payment of your Jobseeker Payment whilst you were outside Australia.
11 The letter of 19 September 2023 also gave notice to the applicant of his rights of internal review by a review officer, by the Social Security Appeals Tribunal, and by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, noting a time limit of 13 weeks within which to ask for a review. The reference in the letter to the Social Security Appeals Tribunal was redundant, because on 1 July 2015 that Tribunal merged with the Administrative Appeals Tribunal, and a two-tiered process of review in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal was introduced: Tribunals Amalgamation Act 2015 (Cth) Schedule 3. The Secretary should review the form of notices that are issued by Services Australia so that incorrect and potentially confusing information is not given.
12 At the case management hearing on 28 September 2023, I drew attention to the potential for administrative, merits-based review, but the applicant was firm in stating that he sought judicial review. The applicant sought and obtained leave to amend his application for judicial review. The subject matter of the applicant's amended application for judicial review is now the ostensible decision of 19 September 2023, which the applicant challenges on a number of grounds that are referable to grounds of review available under s 5 of the ADJR Act.