Discussion
65Section 63 of the ADT Act provides that in determining an application for review the Tribunal is to make the correct and preferable decision having regard to the material before it, and any applicable written or unwritten law. It is well established that in considering an application for review the Tribunal is not restricted to a consideration of the material that was before the Commissioner, but may have regard to any relevant material before it at the time of the review: Drake v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs [1979] AATA 179; (1979) 46 FLR 409.
66A frequently used phrase is that, when conducting a review, the Tribunal 'stands in the shoes of the decision maker' and exercises the same functions and powers. The Tribunal is therefore constrained in its powers to those held by the decision maker.
67Section 63(3) of the ADT Act provides that in determining an application for the review of a reviewable decision, the Tribunal may decide:
(a) to affirm the reviewable decision, or
(b) to vary the reviewable decision, or
(c) to set aside the reviewable decision and make a decision in substitution for the reviewable decision it set aside, or
(d) to set aside the reviewable decision and remit the matter for reconsideration by the administrator in accordance with any directions or recommendations of the Tribunal.
68Section 24(2)(b)(ii) of the Act provides that the Respondent may revoke a firearms licence if the licensee contravenes any provision of the Act or the Regulation, whether or not the licensee has been convicted of an offence for the contravention.
69The Respondent contends that the garage is not an area or room that has solid walls that provide a substantial barrier to forced entry as required by clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation.
70The issue before the Tribunal calls for consideration of the standard necessary in order to comply with clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation. It appears that clause 34(7)(c) has not been the subject of consideration in the any other proceedings in this Tribunal.
71In order to comply with the clause, the garage walls must be solid and they must provide a substantial barrier to forced entry.
72In my view, it is not relevant to these proceedings that the adjacent house was previously approved as meeting the requirements of the clause. The firearms are stored in the garage and therefore it is necessary for the garage to meet the standard.
73In the absence of a statutory definition, words must be given their natural and ordinary meaning, having regard to their context and the objects and purposes of the Act.
74A purposive approach is to be taken to statutory construction. Section 33 of the Interpretation Act 1987 provides:
In the interpretation of a provision of an Act or statutory rule, a construction that would promote the purpose or object underlying the Act or statutory rule (whether or not that purpose or object is expressly stated in the Act or statutory rule or, in the case of a statutory rule, in the Act under which the rule was made) shall be preferred to a construction that would not promote that purpose or object.
75In Project Blue Sky Inc & Others v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355 the High Court (per McHugh, Gummow, Kirby and Hayne JJ) stated at paragraph [69]:
The primary object of statutory construction is to construe the relevant provision so that it is consistent with the language and purpose of all the provisions of the statute. The meaning of the provision must be determined "by reference to the language of the instrument viewed as a whole"
76In Australian Education Union v Department of Education and Children's Services [2012] HCA 3 the majority of the High Court stated at paragraph [26]:
The process of construction begins with a consideration of the ordinary and grammatical meaning of the words of the provision having regard to their context and legislative purpose.
77I agree with the Respondent's contention that the underlying principles of the Act stated in section 3(1) emphasise that firearm possession and use is a privilege conditional on the overriding need to ensure public safety. This Tribunal has adopted that approach consistently in dealing with numerous matters under the Act.
78It follows that the construction of clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation is to be in light of the overriding need to ensure public safety.
79The Macquarie dictionary provides a number of definitions of "solid". The most relevant are:
adjective 1. having three dimensions (length, breadth, and thickness), as a geometrical body or figure.
3. having the interior completely filled up, free from cavities, or not hollow: a solid ball of matter.
4. without openings or breaks: a solid wall.
9. substantial, or not flimsy, slight, or light, as buildings, furniture, fabrics, food, etc.
80While it is clear that there are cavities between the fibro and gyprock, the weatherboards are firmly attached to the studs and this leaves minimal spacing between them and the fibro. The garage walls have three dimensions, without openings or breaks and are not flimsy, slight, or light. In my view the garage weatherboard walls are 'solid' for the purposes of clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation.
81The Macquarie dictionary provides a number of definitions of "barrier ". The most relevant are:
noun 1. anything built or serving to bar passage, as a stockade or fortress, or a railing.
3. anything that restrains or obstructs progress, access, etc.: ...
4. a limit or boundary of any kind: the barriers of caste.
82I do not understand the Respondent to have argued that the walls do not present a barrier to forced entry. Nevertheless, for completeness I find that the garage walls restrain or obstructs progress or access and therefore present a barrier to forced entry for the purposes of clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation.
83The main area of dispute is whether the walls present a 'substantial' barrier to forced entry. The Respondent contends that it is possible that criminals could gain forced entry to the garage by prying away the weatherboard exterior and then breaking their way through the fibro and gyprock walls with relative ease. The Respondent says that the garage does not provide a considerable obstacle to powerful and vigorous efforts to gain entry to the garage, within the proper meaning of clause 34(7)(c).
84The Macquarie dictionary provides a number of definitions of 'substantial'. The most relevant are:
adjective 1. of a corporeal or material nature; real or actual.
3. of solid character or quality; firm, stout, or strong.
6. of real worth or value ...
7. relating to the substance, matter, or material of a thing.
8. of or relating to the essence of a thing; essential, material, or important.
85The Oxford English Dictionary definition of 'substantial' includes:
Of a structure, etc.: of solid material or workmanship, stout, solid.
...
Firmly or solidly established; of solid worth or value; of real significance, weighty; reliable; important, worthwhile.
86On the evidence before me I am of the view that the garage walls consist of weatherboards that are firmly attached to studs and could only be removed with either a power tool or considerable effort with conventional tools such as a crowbar. Any attempt to lift the weatherboards at the point where they overlap is most likely to result in the weatherboard splitting. If that did not occur, the weatherboard would need to be lifted at each stud. This would be a difficult process.
87Access would be easily gained by cutting the weatherboards on the edges of the studs using a power tool. This would then allow ready access to the interior of the garage. I accept that a well prepared criminal could remove weatherboards with minimum ease. Similarly, with power tools a well prepared criminal could remove bricks or cut steel bars to gain access to the interior or a building.
88If the standard of wall that is necessary to meet the requirements of clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation were one with the ability to resist access using power tools, very few walls would be able to meet that standard. Similarly, few structures would resist the 'powerful and vigorous efforts' that the Respondent contends to be the standard. This is consistent with Sergeant Turney's evidence regarding break and enter crimes using a range of tools. In my view that cannot be the required standard.
89In my view, clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation requires that the walls be constructed from strong material using good and proper workmanship and built to a standard acceptable in the building industry.
90On the evidence before me, the garage walls meet that standard. I find as a fact that the garage walls are constructed from strong material using good and proper workmanship and built to a standard acceptable in the building industry. They provide a substantial barrier to forced entry as required by clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation.
91For completeness I note that I am also satisfied that the garage roof provides a substantial barrier to forced entry as required by clause 34(7)(c) of the Regulation.
92That being the case, it is my view that the Respondent's decision is not the correct and preferable one and should be set aside. The effect of this decision is to reinstate the licence.