CONSIDERATION
29 In substance the new application contemplates an action in damages against the trustee arising out of the execution of the warrant of possession.
30 It seems to me that the Deputy Registrar's decision was made on two bases: the first, that, on the face of the documents constituting the lodgement, the lodgement was an abuse of process because it did not "identify the relevant acts, omission or decision pursuant to which s 178 [was] said to be enlivened"; the second, that, having regard to both the terms of the documents constituting the lodgement and documents filed in other proceedings - namely, VID73/2017, VID74/2017 and VID 58/2017 - the lodgement was an abuse of process because it sought to re-agitate matters already before, or dispensed with by, the Court.
31 The first basis for the Deputy Registrar's decision is authorised by r 2.26(a). While, having carefully considered the terms of the new application it seems to me likely that another decision-maker may have formed a different view as to the sufficiency of the particulars provided, there is no evidence before me to support a conclusion that the Deputy Registrar's view in this respect was not reasonably, honestly and actually formed. Moreover, I do not consider that that aspect of the Deputy Registrar's decision was unreasonable in the legal sense.
32 There is some debate as to whether the test for unreasonableness at common law is broader than that in s 5(2)(g) of the ADJR Act: see SZVCP v Cho [2017] FCA 310 at [30]-[41] and the cases there cited. I am not satisfied that either standard of unreasonableness is met in this case. The Deputy Registrar's finding that the lodgement did not "identify the relevant acts, omission or decision pursuant to which s 178 [was] said to be enlivened" cannot, in my view, be characterised as so unreasonable that no reasonable decision-maker would have arrived at it (within the language of s 5(2)(g) of the ADJR Act). Nor was the finding "sufficiently lacking rational foundation, or an evident or intelligible justification, or in being plainly unjust, arbitrary, capricious, or lacking common sense having regard to the terms, scope and purpose of the statutory source of the power, such that it cannot be said to be within the range of possible lawful outcomes as an exercise of that power": Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v Stretton (2016) 237 FCR 1 at [11] per Allsop CJ.
33 The second basis for the Registrar's decision would need to be supported by r 2.26(b), given that the terms of the documents constituting the lodgement do not themselves reveal the matters raised in the other proceedings, nor do they refer to those proceedings at all. Accordingly, in order to have formed the view that the documents were an abuse of process because they sought to re-agitate matters previously or otherwise litigated before the Court, the Deputy Registrar would have to have had regard to documents other than those constituting the lodgement. Moreover, as the documents constituting the lodgement would have, if accepted, constituted an originating application in a new proceeding, there were no other documents filed in the proceeding to which the Deputy Registrar could have had regard. It seems to me, therefore, that the only way in which the Deputy Registrar could have formed a view that the application sought to re-agitate matters already raised before the Court was to have regard to documents filed in other proceedings. Such documents were beyond the scope of the material to which the Deputy Registrar can have regard under r 2.26(b). Accordingly, the Deputy Registrar erred, by taking into account irrelevant considerations in considering Mr Reaper's litigation history in this Court, including in respect of VID58/2017, VID73/2017 or VID74/2017, for the purposes of determining whether to accept for filing the documents lodged on 5 March 2017.
34 I should also note, for completeness, that I have carefully considered two of the previous applications made to this Court (VID73/2017 and VID74/2017), to which the Deputy Registrar referred in his 9 March 2017 letter, including in the context of ruling on those applications: see Reaper v Vrsecky (Trustee), in the matter of Reaper [2017] FCA 948. Having done so, it seems to me sufficiently clear that the matters that Mr Reaper sought to raise in his new application have not been the subject of any of the many actions which Mr Reaper has previously brought against the trustee in this Court.