Scott v Judicial Registrar Ditton
[2023] FCA 947
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2023-08-11
Before
O'Sullivan J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (4 paragraphs)
The applicant's submissions 22 The applicant filed written submissions, in which (at [1]) she confirmed her initial application to this Court which is the subject of the Decision, is for this Court "to adjudicate what the South Australian Court refuses to adjudicate". 23 The applicant describes her claim as arising "… from the failure of constitutional liberal democratic government in South Australia, the refusal by the Supreme Court of South Australia to abide by the Rules of the Supreme Court and in contravention of the common law of Australia to pervert the course of justice." The claim is also said to "arise from the refusal of the Rule of Law and Separation of Powers in South Australia". 24 The submissions (at [3]) also refers to the "common law right of Testamentary Disposition in the delegation of a trusted person as Executor". 25 In the written submissions, the applicant questions the role of the Registrar to act in a way which is described by the applicant as prohibiting the exercise of judicial power. 26 The applicant contests the description of her claim as being an abuse of process, or vexatious or frivolous and contends it is a tool used to censor and disregard factual evidence.
Principles 27 In Ferdinands v Registrar Stone [2022] FCA 589 at [13], I said: In Ferdinands v Registrar Cridland [2021] FCA 592 at [9], White J referred to what he said in Ferdinands v Registrar Parkyn [2020] FCA 1676 where he set out some provisions from the authorities concerning the power which a Registrar may exercise pursuant to FCR 2.26. In Cridland, his Honour said: 10 The nature of the power bestowed on a Registrar pursuant to O 46, r 7A of the original Federal Court Rules (the predecessor of r 2.26) was discussed by the Full Court in Bizuneh v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2003] FCAFC 42; (2003) 128 FCR 353. The Full Court said: [15] The rule in its current form removed a clog on the Registrar's discretion to act by permitting the Registrar to refuse to accept or issue a document without the Registrar being required to obtain authority from a Judge so to act. The first point to note in the construction of the rule is that O 46 is directed to administration of registries of the Court. The purpose of r 7A is to assist the Registrar to maintain efficient operation of a registry and, thereby, the Court. Even without a rule in the terms of r 7A it may be thought that it would be implied that a Registrar would have the power, or be under a duty, to protect Court procedures from abuse by refusing to accept a document for lodgement or filing which, on its face, would be an abuse of court process or frivolous or vexatious. 11 This reasoning was applied more recently in Nyoni v Murphy in which the Full Court said: [33] The purpose of a rule such as r 2.26 is to assist the Registrar to maintain efficient operation of a registry … It is in the interests of the administration of justice that there be procedural requirements to be met in order for an application to be brought before a judge of the Court and for other parties to be required to attend … … [38] [A] Registrar acting under r 2.26 does not have power to adjudicate under the substantive law whether an application that a party seeks to bring is an abuse of process (or is frivolous or vexatious). The Registrar has no judicial power to determine substantively whether a claim must be dismissed because it is an abuse of process (or is frivolous or vexatious). Rather, r 2.26 is the means by which an administrative requirement is expressed that all documents filed in the Registry must not in their form and content (irrespective of any substantive assessment of their merit) be an abuse of the process of the Court or frivolous or vexatious … (Citation omitted and emphasis added)