REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
(Revised from Transcript)
1 On 9 February 2010, the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal (the Tribunal)made an order requiring the applicant, Mr Ibarcena, to pay to Huang S & W Pty Ltd trading as Woden Dental Care (WDC), the first respondent, the amount of $1,446.70 within 28 days. The order of the Tribunal refers to "services rendered" and although the order was not accompanied by any reasons for decision, it is clear that the services referred to are dental services (which I will more fully describe later in these reasons) that were provided by or on behalf of the first respondent to the applicant in or about November 2008.
2 Mr Ibarcena did not comply with the Tribunal's order. Presumably, it was in anticipation of the Tribunal's order that he commenced this proceeding by application filed on 4 February 2010 against WDC (the first respondent), a director of that company, Ms Zhang (the second respondent) and Mr Mendelson (the third respondent), who was the solicitor whose company Mendelsons Lawyers Pty Ltd (Mendelsons) acted for WDC in the Tribunal. Mendelsons is based in Victoria and it engaged an agent in the Australian Capital Territory, where WDC is based and Mr Ibarcena resides, to act in the proceeding in the Tribunal. Mendelsons engaged Hansteins Lawyers for that purpose. Mr Nyman (the fourth respondent) is a principal of Hansteins.
3 There are various claims raised by Mr Ibarcena under the Trade Practices Act 1974(Cth) (the Act)against each of the respondents. No statement of claim has been filed and no particulars have been provided which clearly identify the particular allegations that Mr Ibarcena makes against the various respondents. It is clear, however, that the statutory provisions relied upon by him are ss 51AB, 53(a), 53(bb), 53(g), 63A, 64, 75AZQ and 75AZC of the Act. He also seeks to rely upon the cartel conduct provisions contained in Part IV, Division 1 of the Act. Mr Ibarcena claims damages from the respondents pursuant to s 82 for loss and damage he alleges he has suffered by reason of the respondents' alleged contraventions of the Act.
4 At the hearing before me there was little in the way of reasoned argument from Mr Ibarcena as to how the particular statutory provisions relied upon by him might apply in the circumstances of his case. While it is clear that he disputes the entitlement of WDC to the sum of $1,446.70, it is not at all clear how, even if I was to accept that WDC was not entitled to that sum, this should give rise to any entitlement to the relief he claims against the various individuals who he has joined as respondents in the proceeding.
5 In any event, I will take as my starting point Mr Ibarcena's contention that he was never indebted to WDC in the amount of $1,446.70. The claims against the respondents appear to hinge on each of them having been involved in attempts, which Mr Ibarcena from time to time describes in terms of a conspiracy, to obtain payment from him for an amount which he says he never owed and which he says the respondents had no reasonable cause to demand from him.
6 Mr Ibarcena had been a patient of his general practitioner, Dr Stephen Moulding for some years. Apparently, Mr Ibarcena consulted Dr Moulding fairly regularly and Dr Moulding "bulk billed" Mr Ibarcena for medical services he provided to him. This involved Mr Ibarcena signing forms, I infer, that had the effect of assigning to Dr Moulding any entitlement Mr Ibarcena had to a Medicare benefit in respect of Dr Moulding's services, thereby allowing Dr Moulding to be paid by Medicare directly and avoiding the need for Mr Ibarcena to make any payment out of his own moneys to Dr Moulding.
7 Dr Moulding saw Mr Ibarcena in September 2008. He subsequently provided Mr Ibarcena with a referral, purportedly under the Medicare Chronic Disease Dental Scheme (CDDS). The CDDS came into effect in late 2007. The CDDS permits Medicare benefits to be paid for certain dental services provided in accordance with the Chronic Disease Management Scheme (CDMS) which was formerly known as the Enhanced Primary Care Scheme (EPC). The CDDS was established by the Health Insurance (Dental Services) Determination of 2007 (the Determination) made under s 3C(1) of the Health Insurance Act 1973 (Cth).
8 The CDDS permits patients with chronic conditions and complex care needs to receive Medicare benefits for certain dental services. To come within the CDDS, the patient must be referred to the dentist or dental prosthetist by a general practitioner who is managing a chronic medical condition under a CDMS plan. The general practitioner determines the patient's eligibility for a referral under the CDDS. The referral is one of the preconditions to obtaining a CDDS Medicare benefit.
9 Paragraphs 6 and 9 of the Determination relevantly provide:
6. Patient eligibility