Smith v Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Commission
[2016] FCA 1558
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2016-12-22
Before
Tracey J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
BACKGROUND FACTS 8 After he left Joinery Products in 1998, Mr Smith moved from one job to another with periods of unemployment occasionally interspersed between them. Much of this work was performed on a part-time basis. For most of this time he was rendered partially incapacitated for work by his 1992 injury and that incapacity was, for some periods, total. 9 At various times between 1998 and 2012, Mr Smith applied, under the Act, for a review of the quantum of compensation he was being paid. 10 The most recent review was undertaken by a delegate of the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Commission ("the Commission") early in 2013. As a result of that review the delegate revoked the then-extant determination, made in 2011, and substituted a recalculated amount of benefits. 11 Mr Smith was dissatisfied with the basis upon which the recalculation had been undertaken and appealed to the Tribunal. He sought a recalculation of his incapacity benefit entitlements for the period between 29 May 2001 and 14 June 2012.
THE TRIBUNAL DECISION 12 Mr Smith's appeal raised multiple issues. Following discussions between the parties it was agreed that the appeal be confined to two issues. They were: (1) What was the correct hourly rate to be used for the purposes of calculating the civilian component of Mr Smith's NWE as at 29 May 2001? (2) What adjustments to that amount should be made during the period 29 May 2001 to 30 June 2009? 13 The parties agreed that, for the purposes of calculating the civilian component of Mr Smith's NWE, the commencement amount was an hourly rate of $15.36, as from 29 May 2001. Mr Smith contended that this amount should be adjusted in accordance with s 8(6)(c) of the Act. He said that, but for his injury, he would have been appointed as foreman with Joinery Products and would, at the time of the Tribunal hearing, have been earning $33 per hour. 14 The Tribunal found that there was no evidence that Mr Smith was entitled, from May 2001, to receive any incremental adjustment to his salary, wages or pay under s 8(6)(c). It held that any wage increases which might have occurred following a promotion to foreman could not constitute an increase of the kind contemplated by s 8(6)(c). 15 Although it did not do so explicitly, the Tribunal must further be taken to have held, accepting the Commission's contention recorded at [35], that Mr Smith was classified (under the relevant industrial instrument) as a joiner level 10 at the time of ceasing work with Joinery Products and that he was, therefore, not entitled to any further increments within his wage range. This conclusion was to be inferred from the fact that, by 1998, Mr Smith had worked for the company for 10 years and was based on the assumption that he had had the benefit of annual incremental increases. The Tribunal referred to Chun v Comcare (2009) 209 FCR 399, in which Robertson J said, at [61], that: "In my opinion the condition for the operation of s 8(6)(c) has not arisen. The provision only operates if the minimum amount per week payable is increased or would have been increased because of the receipt of an increase in salary, wages or pay by way of an increment in a range of salary, wages or pay applicable to the employee or to his or her office, position or appointment. Absent that condition "normal weekly earnings" is not increased under that provision. In light of the unchallenged finding of fact by the Tribunal that the applicant had already reached the highest level in the range of salary for the position he held for the purposes of s 8(6)(c), it follows, as the Tribunal held, that the applicant's weekly compensation should be increased only by reference to the index prescribed for the purposes of s 8(9B)." 16 The other available reading of the Tribunal's reasons is that it did not consider it necessary to deal with the Commission's contention that Mr Smith was already at joiner level 10, because, more fundamentally, there was an insufficient evidential basis in the material before it for finding that Mr Smith would have had the benefit of any increment in applicable wages (cf the first sentence of [48] of the Tribunal's reasons). 17 The Tribunal found that, from 1 October 2001 until 30 June 2009, the only annual adjustments that could be made were those provided for in the indexation provisions of s 8(9B). 18 The Tribunal decided to vary the reviewable decision as follows: (1) The correct hourly rate to be used for the purpose of calculating the civilian component of Mr Smith's NWE as at 29 May 2001 was to be $15.36. (2) During the period 29 May 2001 to 30 June 2009 the civilian component of Mr Smith's NWE should be adjusted annually, commencing 1 July 2002, by the applicable indexation figure pursuant to s 8(9B) of the Act. (3) Mr Smith was not entitled to any other adjustments to the civilian component of his NWE.