Karmakar v Minister for Health
[2021] FCA 916
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2021-08-06
Before
Logan J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
- The application be dismissed. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
LOGAN J: 1 Ever since the commencement of the Health Insurance Act 1973 (Cth) (HIA) on 8 August 1974, the price which members of the Australian medical profession (and allied professions or health related occupations) have paid for access to public monies appropriated by Parliament for the purposes of that Act has been subjection to external scrutiny in respect of the rendering of professional services which attract the payment of those public monies. 2 As the HIA was enacted, the provision for external scrutiny was found in the then Pt V of the HIA. It centred on inquiries and then reports to the Minister for Health (Minister) concerning the rendering of professional services, following a reference by the Minister, by what were termed Medical Services Committees of Inquiry. The present system for external scrutiny, found in Pt VAA of the HIA and detailed below, though it has some similar features to the original, is much more elaborate. This case must be decided by reference to the statutory scheme as applicable to the applicant, Dr Anchita Karmakar (Dr Karmakar), during the review period, not by uncritical reference to the "muffled echoes of old arguments": Commissioner of Taxation (Cth) v Spotless Services Ltd (1996) 186 CLR 404, at 414 (Spotless Services). The review period was in respect of the provision of services by Dr Karmakar from November 2015 to May 2016. 3 The financial incentive for members of the medical profession to participate in the scheme for the payment of public monies for which the HIA has from time to time provided since its commencement has been a strong and enduring one. That is because of the attraction to patients of receiving a benefit from public monies, which they can assign (presently, s 20A of the HIA refers) to the medical practitioner, in respect of the rendering to them of a professional service. Absent the provision of that benefit, a patient might have to pay in full from their own funds for the professional service, or decide not to seek that service, or perhaps the medical professional might have to decide whether to provide the service pro bono or a lesser than usual fee. 4 The apparent source of legislative competence for the enactment of the HIA is s 51(xxiiiA) of the Constitution, which does not authorise any form of civil conscription. Some, uninformed by authority, might perhaps see in the strength of the financial incentive presented by the HIA a form of civil conscription. After all, constructive recruitment might rationally and pragmatically be regarded as a reciprocal of constructive dismissal, the latter a well-known concept in industrial law. However rational and pragmatic it may be, this is not the view which has been taken of the effect of the conscription qualification on the HIA. In Wong v The Commonwealth (2009) 236 CLR 573, the High Court adopted the view expressed as follows by Dixon J in a dissenting judgment in British Medical Association v The Commonwealth (1949) 79 CLR 201, at 278, in respect of a predecessor legislative scheme which also looked to s 51(xxiiiA) for its source of legislative competence, "[t]here is no compulsion to serve as a medical [practitioner], to attend patients, to render medical services to patients, or to act in any other medical capacity, whether regularly or occasionally, over a period of time, however short, or intermittently". The High Court found that the scheme in the HIA did not constitute a form of civil conscription. 5 Dr Karmakar has experienced both the benefit and burden of participation in the scheme for which the HIA provides. She has not sought to resurrect a civil conscription-based challenge to the validity of the HIA scheme as a whole. She has, however, included in her grounds of review a separate constitutional validity challenge to an aspect of the professional services review scheme for which Pt VAA of the HIA presently provides. Based on the implied freedom of political communication, she alleges that the confidentiality prescription found in s 106ZR of the HIA is invalid. 6 Some explanation needs to be given for the delay in the hearing of Dr Karmakar's application. It is not because of any tardiness on her part, or on the part of the respondent Minister for Health or the various other respondents performing functions under the HIA. In part, the delay is referable to an evolution in the decisions challenged, after the originating application was initially filed on 29 June 2018. The scope of the application was enlarged after the Determining Authority (the third respondent, of whom more below) made a decision in 2019. That resulted in an amended originating application being filed on 7 October 2019. Overwhelmingly however, the delay is because of the impact on the administration of justice of the COVID-19 pandemic and related State public health measures. In relation to a court which exercises federal jurisdiction nationally, and which hitherto and otherwise routinely heard by appearance in a courtroom from counsel and witnesses resident interstate, that impact, in relation to trials particularly, notwithstanding prompt and innovative use of modern communications technology by the Court, has been much more marked than in courts the routine exercise of the jurisdiction of which is confined to the borders of a given State or Territory. Appearances by such technology are qualitatively inferior to in person appearances and, in some cases, of which the present is one, just not suitable in particular circumstances for the exercise of judicial power. That necessitated postponing the hearing until in person appearances by counsel and witnesses could be undertaken. 7 The relief which, by her amended originating application, Dr Karmakar seeks, and the related grounds for claimed entitlement to that relief, may be summarised as follows: (a) A declaration that the decision of Dr David Field, as a delegate of the Chief Executive, Medicare (the fifth respondent) to ask the Director of the Professional Services Review Agency (the second respondent - Director - CEO) to review her practice was invalid, as the decision was based upon a subjective comparison of Dr Karmakar with other (unnamed or unidentified) medical practitioners, rather than being based upon an objective standard; (b) A declaration that the decision of the Director to undertake that review was invalid, as the decision was based upon a subjective comparison of the Applicant with other (unnamed or unidentified) medical practitioners, rather than being based upon an objective standard; (c) A declaration that the decision of the Director to refer her to the Professional Services Review Committee No. 1092 (the fourth respondent - Committee) was invalid, as that decision: (i) was based upon a subjective comparison of Dr Karmakar with other (unnamed or unidentified) medical practitioners, rather than being based upon an objective standard; and (ii) did not take into account the fact that the medical records under consideration were incomplete, and that Dr Karmakar did not have any opportunity or ability to obtain the complete records; (d) A declaration that the decision of the Committee that she had engaged in unsatisfactory practice was invalid, as that decision: (i) was based upon a subjective comparison of Dr Karmakar with other (unnamed or unidentified) medical practitioners, rather than being based upon an objective standard; (ii) did not take into account the fact that the medical records under consideration were incomplete, and that Dr Karmakar did not have any opportunity or ability to obtain the complete records; and (iii) was made in circumstances which involved a denial of natural justice. (e) A declaration that the decision of the Determining Authority that Dr Karmakar had engaged in unsatisfactory practice was invalid as it was based wholly or substantially on the unlawful decision of the Committee referred to at paragraph 1.d above; (f) A declaration that s 106ZR of the HIA is invalid, as it unreasonably burdens political communications. Dr Karmakar seeks the consequential quashing of the decisions challenged and injunctive relief restraining the respondents from acting upon them. 8 The term "unsatisfactory practice" does not appear in the HIA but the case was conducted, and I have decided it, on the basis that the use of this term was intended to be a reference to the term which is used in the HIA, "inappropriate practice" (defined in s 82). Acting upon the report of the fourth respondent, the Committee, a committee constituted for the purposes of Pt VAA of the HIA, the third respondent, the Determining Authority, made a finding that Dr Karmakar had engaged in "inappropriate practice". 9 The Committee and the Determining Authority have, appropriately, each made a submitting appearance. The active party respondents are thus the first, second and fifth respondents, respectively, the Minister, the Director and the CEO. 10 In summary and chronologically, what has occurred in relation to Dr Karmakar under Pt VAA is as follows: (a) In 2015 and 2016, a Dr Peter Baker, as a delegate of the Department of Human Services Medicare, made some preliminary inquiries, which included dealings with Dr Karmakar and her then lawyers, in relation to payment claims in respect of certain services rendered by her. (b) On 17 March 2017, and as a sequel to Dr Baker's preliminary inquiries, a Dr David Field, as a delegate of the CEO, requested the Director, pursuant to s 86 of the HIA, to review the Dr Karmakar's provision of certain services. (c) The Director decided to undertake a review. The culmination of that review was that, on 13 November 2017, the Director decided to establish the Committee to investigate the provision of certain services by Dr Karmakar and to decide whether it should make findings whether in so doing she had engaged in "inappropriate practice", as defined. (d) The committee process occurred throughout 2018. It included six days of hearings in February and March 2018. The final report of the Committee was issued on 30 January 2019. The Committee made findings of inappropriate practice in respect of the rendering of certain services (detailed below by reference to item numbers) by Dr Karmakar. (e) On 27 August 2019, in respect of the findings of the Committee, the Determining Authority determined that: (i) a reprimand was warranted and that the Director or the Director's nominee reprimand Dr Karmakar - s 106U(1)(a) of the HIA; (ii) counselling was necessary and that the Director or the Director's nominee counsel Dr Karmakar - s 106U(1)(b) of the HIA; (iii) due to the level of inappropriate practice as found by the Committee, repayment in the amount of $352,553.70 was warranted - s 106U(1)(cb) of the HIA (representing full repayment of the Medicare benefits that were paid for the MBS item 54, 597, 721, 723 and 732 services in connection with which Dr Karmakar was found by the Committee to have engaged in inappropriate practice); and (iv) having regard to the reasons for the Committee's findings of inappropriate practice in relation to MBS items 54, 597, 721, 723, 732, that Dr Karmakar be disqualified from rendering MBS services as follows: (A) MBS item 54, 585, 588, 591 and 594 services - for a period of 6 months starting when the determination takes effect - s 106U(1)(g)(i) of the HIA; and (B) MBS item 721, 723 and 732 services - for a period of 12 months starting when the determination takes effect - s 106U(1)(g)(i) of the HIA. To the extent necessary, I elaborate on these occurrences below. 11 Given the bases of challenge, it is desirable to commence with an outline of the scheme found in Pt VAA of the HIA. Since the review period, the scheme in Pt VAA has been extensively amended by the Health Legislation Amendment (Improved Medicare Compliance and Other Measures) Act 2018 (Cth), Schs 2 to 5 of which commenced on 1 July 2018. As it happens, a comprehensive outline of the scheme in Pt VAA as it stood during the review period, including the reproduction of key statutory provisions, was offered by Griffiths J in National Home Doctor Service Pty Ltd v Director of Professional Services Review (2020) 276 FCR 338, at [9] to [65] (First NHDS Case). I gratefully adopt and incorporate that outline, including its statutory extracts, by reference, without separately reproducing it. 12 Suffice it to say, the scheme in Pt VAA of the HIA has the potential, as disclosed by s 80 of the HIA, for four, successive stages or "tiers" - CEO request stage, Director review stage (if so disposed in response to the request), committee stage, entailing investigation and, if thought warranted, findings in respect of inappropriate practice in relation to the provision of services referred for investigation by the Director (if the Director's review has resulted in the establishment of a committee) and the Determining Authority stage, in which the Determining Authority considers what action should be taken in response to the findings of a committee. The decision of a Determining Authority can provide for one or more of the counselling or reprimand of a practitioner found by a Committee to have engaged in "inappropriate practice" in the provision of services, the repayment to the Commonwealth of benefits paid in respect of such services and the disqualification of the practitioner for a specified period in respect of the provision of particular services or to a particular class of persons. As the chronology above attests, each of these stages is exemplified in Dr Karmakar's case. 13 The object of the professional services review scheme found in Pt VAA of the HIA is as stated in s 79A of the HIA: 79A Object of this Part The object of this Part is to protect the integrity of the Commonwealth medicare benefits, dental benefits and pharmaceutical benefits programs and, in doing so: (a) protect patients and the community in general from the risks associated with inappropriate practice; and (b) protect the Commonwealth from having to meet the cost of services provided as a result of inappropriate practice. 14 The active party respondents accept that the decisions made by the Committee and the Determining Authority are amenable to review under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) (ADJR Act). However, referring to Australian Broadcasting Tribunal v Bond (1990) 170 CLR 321 (ABT v Bond), especially the discussion of principle by Mason CJ in that case, at 335 - 339, an application of that discussion by the Full Court in Edelsten v Health Insurance Commission (1990) 27 FCR 56 (Edelsten) in respect of the predecessor scheme in the HIA and to the later judgment of the High Court in Griffith University v Tang (2005) 221 CLR 99 endorsing the discussion of principle in ABT v Bond, they submit that the antecedent decisions made in relation to Dr Karmakar do not have the necessary quality of finality to be amenable to review under the ADJR Act. They also advance the submission, correct in itself, that, being nonetheless decisions, they cannot simultaneously constitute conduct amenable to review under the ADJR Act. In Edelsten, decisions anterior to an inquiry and a Ministerial decision were not regarded as amenable to review under the ADJR Act. 15 For her part, Dr Karmakar submitted that the statutory regime considered in Edelsten was very different to that found in the present Pt VAA of the HIA. She particularly pointed to provisions found in Div 3A of Pt VAA, notably: (a) the Director's discretionary power to make a referral to a Committee - s 93; (b) the ability of the Director of her own motion to decide to take no further action - s 91; and (c) if the Director decides not to take no further action, the ability of the practitioner under review to make a further submission to seek to convince the Director to decide under s 91 to take no further action - s 89C(2). 16 The objection taken by the active party respondents depends for its foundation upon Dr Karmakar's having invoked the Court's jurisdiction under the ADJR Act. That is not expressed to be so by the amended originating application, which adopts a form apt for use when the Court's separately conferred judicial review jurisdiction under s 39B(1A) of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) (Judiciary Act) is invoked. Were the Judiciary Act either further or alternatively the invoked source of jurisdiction, it would be nothing to the point jurisdictionally whether any of the challenged decisions were "final", although an absence of that quality might well be relevant in relation to whether, as a matter of discretion, to grant relief. However, in its final, amended form, Dr Karmakar's statement of claim refers only to the ADJR Act. Ordinarily, one might, and I do, regard the later filed and served statement of claim as amending by necessary implication the apparent jurisdictional invocation found in the originating application. Dr Karmakar's submissions were cast on the basis that the ADJR Act was the invoked source of jurisdiction. I therefore proceed on the basis that the jurisdiction invoked is solely that conferred on the Court by the ADJR Act. 17 The recollection in the opening paragraphs of this judgment of Spotless Services and the reference in that case to "muffled echoes" of old arguments was prompted by the reliance on Edelsten by the active party respondents to support their objection. The regime found in Pt VAA of the HIA is indeed different to that considered in Edelsten. The differences to which Dr Karmakar pointed in her submissions were the same as those recognised and highlighted by Griffiths J in the First NHDS Case, at [147]. The authorised report of his Honour's judgment in that case does not, however, disclose (see, at [1]) the source of the "judicial review" jurisdiction being exercised by his Honour. Further, though Edelsten was considered by his Honour, that consideration was to the different end of whether it compelled particular conclusions as to the absence at particular stages of a procedural fairness obligation to the applicant. That means one cannot treat the First NHDS Case as an authority directly against the objection taken by the active party respondents. 18 The decisions which s 89C(2) summarises as open to the Director to make are not merely procedural. Decisions to take no further action or to enter into an agreement bring the Pt VAA process to an end. Once made, they become the source of substantive rights. If not made, those substantive rights are denied to the practitioner. These features, in my view, give each the necessary quality of finality to make each of the decision options mentioned in s 89C(2) decisions to the ADJR Act applies. 19 It does not follow from this conclusion that the anterior decisions of the CEO under s 86 to request the Director to undertake the review of services and a decision of the Director under s 88A as to whether or not to undertake that review have that same quality. Neither such decision entails what Mason CJ in ABT v Bond, at 337, described as a "substantive determination". Each is wholly procedural. The administrative states of mind which inform the making of these decisions have no consequential binding effect whatsoever in respect of any later stage in the Pt VAA review processes. In my view, neither of these anterior decisions is a reviewable decision for the purposes of the ADJR Act. As that Act is the asserted jurisdictional foundation, it necessarily follows that, insofar as Dr Karmakar's originating application claims the declaratory relief specified in paragraphs 1 and 2, the application must, for that reason alone, be dismissed. Another consequence of that conclusion is that evidence concerning these anterior decisions and of the conduct of Dr Peter Baker, the delegate of the CEO, is not relevant, save to the extent that it explains the occasion for the Director conducting her review. As to that evidence, I do nothing more than record that I am quite unpersuaded, having regard to the contemporary correspondence, that there was anything misleading of Dr Karmakar in statements made by Dr Baker as to the nature of the Pt VAA review processes or her billing practices. 20 For completeness, I should record that, after judgment was reserved, my attention was drawn by the parties to Yoong v The Chief Executive of Medicare [2021] FCA 701 (Yoong). It is evident from Yoong, at [3], that the applicant in that case invoked both the ADJR Act and the Judiciary Act as sources of jurisdiction. Unsurprisingly in those circumstances, the question as to whether a decision under s 86 was a decision amenable to review under the ADJR Act did not arise as an issue, because the Court would any event have retained jurisdiction, albeit to review for jurisdictional error rather than on a ground specified in s 5 of the ADJR Act.