The False Statement Issue
34 The basic submission of the Appellant turns on the terminology of Item Number 35643 and specifically on the introductory words: "evacuation of the contents of the gravid uterus by curettage …". The series of acts so performed by a medical practitioner are the acts involved in the removal of the contents of the patient's uterus. The Appellant submits that the benefit is payable for that procedure and does not include counselling provided to the patient prior to such procedure. Nor, the Appellant submits, does it include payment for the use of facilities where the procedure is performed. Accordingly, the Appellant submits that the counselling/theatre fee that was charged was not a charge "in respect of the professional service" specified in Item No 35643.
35 The Crown's submissions are based on the width of the phrase "in respect of" in s20A(1)(b) reflected, in terms, in the declaration on the claim form. The Crown relies on the judgment of Enderby J in Dalima Pty Ltd v Commonwealth of Australia (New South Wales Supreme Court, Unreported, 22 October 1987).
36 In Dalima a "facilities fee" was charged to patients attending medical centres. The issue that arose was whether or not these fees constituted "an amount payable in respect of medical services" rendered at the centres within the meaning of s20A of the Health Insurance Act 1973. One of the issues was whether or not a medical practitioner who made the statement that "no payments have been sought from any person for professional services" was false or misleading in a material particular within s129 of the Act, which proscribed the making of false or misleading statements.
37 Enderby J accepted the submission that the words "in respect of" were of "notoriously wide import" and were "sufficiently wide to make the facility fee an additional fee in respect of the service rendered". He rejected a submission on behalf of the medical service provider in that case to the effect that the medical services could only be said to be provided when the doctor and patient were "face to face". His Honour said:
"I hope the law reflects reality and I have no doubt that the reality of what is happening in the two sentences is that a fee called a 'facility fee' is being charged by Dr Edelstein's company to patients as a condition of them being able to use the centres and gain access to a doctor and receive medical services from a doctor.
The facility fee is an amount payable in respect of the service. It matters not that the service is being rendered also relates to an item in the table."
38 His Honour went on to hold that the imposition of a facility fee prevented the medical service provider in that case from accepting an assignment and bulk billing.
39 Since the judgment of Enderby J in Dalima the High Court has had occasion to observe that the wide meaning accorded to the words "in respect of" is not always appropriate.
40 In Workers' Compensation Board of Queensland v Technical Products Pty Ltd (1988) 165 CLR 642, Wilson and Gaudron JJ said at 646-647:
"It has been said, perhaps somewhat extravagantly, that the words 'in respect of' 'have the widest possible meaning of any expression intended to convey some connexion or relation between the two subject-matters to which the words refer': Trustees Executors & Agency Co. Ltd. v. Reilly [[1941] VLR 110 at 111], cited in State Government Insurance Office (Q.) v. Crittenden [(1966) 117 CLR 412 at 416]. The words were cited again by Gibbs J. in McDowell v Baker [(1979) 144 CLR 413 at 419], and by Mason J. in State Government Insurance Office (Q.) v. Rees [(1979) 144 CLR 549 at 561], when his Honour added the comment: 'But, as with other words and expressions, the meaning to be ascribed to 'in respect of' depends very much on the context in which it is found'."
41 To similar effect are the observations of Dean, Dawson and Toohey JJ in that case at 653-654:
"Undoubtedly the words 'in respect of' have a wide meaning, although it is going somewhat too far to say, as did Mann C.J. in Trustees Executors & Agency Co. Ltd. v. Reilly [[1941] V.R 110 at 111], that 'they have the widest possible meaning of any expression intended to convey some connection or relation between the two subject-matters to which the words refer'. The phrase gathers meaning from the context in which it appears and it is that context which will determine the matters to which it extends."
42 The authorities have recently been set out by Campbell J in Wonall Pty Limited v Clarence Property Corporation Limited (2003) 58 NSWLR 23 at [41]-[43].
43 The width of the phrase "in respect of" depends on the statutory context. This was not a matter on which the Court received detailed submissions.
44 The relevant statutory context is not criminal legislation but a system for government subsidy of medical payments with complex safeguards for the revenue. The bulk billing system manifests a policy objective of limiting patient expenditure on medical services, whilst retaining the traditional doctor/patient relationship. Medical practitioners receive the certainty of payment without any bad debts, in exchange for restraint on the fees they can charge.
45 The words "in respect of" are ubiquitous in the legislative scheme. They appear in numerous sections other than s20A. A quick overview of the Act would suggest that they appear well over 100 times. The focus of attention in this case is the use of the word in s20A(1)(b), namely the reference to the assignment being accepted in full payment of "medical expenses incurred in respect of the professional service by the first mentioned eligible person". It is this formulation that finds its way into the declaration in the claims form.
46 In s20A(1) the words, "first mentioned eligible person" are a reference back to the introductory words of the section which, to repeat, states: "Where a medicare benefit is payable to an eligible person in respect of a professional service rendered to the eligible person". As can be seen the words "in respect of" occur in this formulation also. Where there occurring they constitute a reference back to s20(1) which states:
"20(1) Subject to this Part, medicare benefit in respect of a professional service is payable by the Commission on behalf of the Commonwealth to the person who incurs the medical expenses in respect of that service."
47 Again, as can be seen, the words "in respect of" appear twice in this subsection.
48 The use of the phrase appears again in the particular circumstance from which s20(2) makes provision as follows:
"20(2) Where a person to whom a medicare benefit is payable under subsection (1) in respect of a professional service has not paid the medical expenses that he or she has incurred in respect of that professional service, he or she shall not be paid the medicare benefit but, if he or she so requests, there shall, in lieu of that payment, be given to him or her … a cheque for the amount of the medicare benefit drawn in favour of the person by whom, or on whose behalf, the professional service was rendered."
49 Section 20 is concerned to identify the persons who are entitled to Medicare benefits. It is s10 which establishes the entitlement to Medicare benefits, again with use of the phrase "in respect of". That section provides:
"10(1) Where, on or after 1 February 1984, medical expenses are incurred in respect of a professional service rendered in Australia to an eligible person, medicare benefit calculated in accordance with subsection (2) is payable, subject to and in accordance with this Act, in respect of that professional service."
50 Subsequent sections of the Act use the phrase "in respect of a professional service" in numerous different contexts including:
· Stating that a Medicare benefit shall not exceed the medical expenses incurred (s14).
· Restricting the Medicare benefit payable where two or more operations are performed on the one occasion where each constitute a professional service covered by a separate Item (s15).
· Restricting the circumstances in which Medicare benefit is payable with respect to the administration of an anaesthetic (s16) or with respect to a pathology service (s16) or with respect to a certain diagnostic imaging service (s16B).
· Establishing that Medicare benefit is not payable if medical expenses "in respect of that service" have been paid to a recognised hospital that was prescribed and an amount had been paid pursuant to a scheme under which a health programme grant had been made.
· Establishing that Medicare benefit is not payable where a person has received compensation for personal injury (s18).
· Establishing that Medicare benefit is not payable for a medical examination for the purposes of life insurance or superannuation (s19).
51 Numerous other provisions could be added to this list. The cumulative effect is such that, in the scheme of this legislation, there is no basis for giving anything but a broad meaning to the words "in respect of a professional service".
52 The Court should be very slow to find in such a statutory context that the words "in respect of a professional service" are not intended to encompass all matters directly incidental to the provision of that service.
53 The concluding words of Item Number 35643, which I have quoted above, are "Anaes. 17722". This is a reference back to another part of the table which provides for the provision of anaesthetic services. That part is said to apply in the following manner: "Administration of an anaesthetic - in connection with a medical service which has been assigned an anaesthetic unit value …", relevantly 17722. The table makes provision for an amount payable for the anaesthetic service. Accordingly, where another medical service that is incidental to the abortion itself has been identified as justifying a separate payment, express reference is made. It is true that this service is provided by a different medical specialisation, but nevertheless this linkage is indicative.
54 As set out above, Item 35643 does not apply where Item 35639/35640 applies. That item is:
"Uterus, curettage of … where undertaken in a hospital or approved day hospital facility …"
55 Accordingly, in the relevant context, the table makes separate provision, where thought appropriate, with respect to the place that the medical service is provided. This indicates that a separate theatre fee is impermissible for bulk billing.
56 Since writing the above, I have read the judgment of Adams J in draft.
57 His Honour refers to the modesty of the fee as a matter suggesting a restrictive interpretation of "in respect of". The appropriateness or otherwise of the fee in relation to the costs of providing a medical service is, no doubt, an important issue of a political character in determining fees in the table and the structure of the table where, as in this case, more than one fee is payable with respect to a single operation. In my opinion, the asserted "modesty" of the fee is of no assistance on statutory interpretation. In any event, the evidence of the Appellant on the inadequacy of the fee, which may have been relevant to the issue of dishonesty, is an inadequate evidentiary foundation for any inference, if relevant at all.
58 His Honour also relies on the proposition that a "minimum standard" is an "assumption inherent in the item". There is no evidentiary basis for any such "assumption". Nor is there, in my opinion, any warrant for the inference that charging patients for a 'higher standard' of services is consistent with the bulk billing regime. Indeed, in my opinion, bulk billing is, in part, directed to preventing such conduct which results in higher charges to patients.
59 Each of the additional payments in issue in the present case were identified as being for counselling and theatre fees, although sometimes there were separate charges. The evidence by the various employees of the medical centre operated by the Appellant, and of the Appellant herself, confirmed that the counselling and theatre fees charged were inextricably connected with the termination itself. In the case of a theatre component of the fee it was a fee for the location in which the termination was conducted. In the case of the counselling component it was payment for a consultation as to whether or not the termination should proceed.
60 In the Appellant's own evidence she gave the following answers:
"Q. If they were having a termination they were charged for the theatre because they were in there having a termination?
A. Yes, you are right.
Q. They were charged for counselling because they were there to have a termination?
A. Yes they were. We had patients who did not have termination and had counselling also and we had patients who were not for termination and had counselling also.
Q. I'm just asking you about the patients who had terminations at the moment, all right? The patients who had terminations were charged for counselling because they were there to have a termination, correct?
A. It's a juggling of words I think. We were charging counselling which was just counselling. It could be for anything."
61 In subsequent questioning she was asked whether or not the counselling was "part of the process" and replied that it was a "pre-requisite" for the termination but not "part of the termination". In my opinion, a "pre-requisite" is sufficiently closely connected to be "in respect of the professional service" for which it is a "pre-requisite".
62 As indicated above, the fee, most often a single fee for both matters, was charged on the sliding scale depending on the length of the pregnancy. Indeed, where persons had been charged a certain amount on the assumption that a pregnancy was of a certain period, but it transpired subsequently that the period was in fact longer, then an additional fee was charged.
63 I am of the view that the position with respect to the theatre charges is quite clear. It was an essential part of the provision of the medical service for a termination of pregnancy that a sterile place be provided for the conduct of the operation. Under the bulk billing arrangements, there is no more justification for charging extra for this service than there would be for charging extra for other matters necessarily incidental to the conduct of a physical facility in which the service is to be provided. In this respect it is identical to the "facility fee" found to be inextricably linked in Dalima.
64 The "consultation fee", for those few cases when it was separate, is not so clear. The evidence suggests that this is a consultation by a nurse as to whether or not the abortion should proceed at all. It is not clear why this is separate from the consultation by Dr Sood herself for which a separate charge was made in each case. These claims were not challenged in the proceedings as outlined above at [15]. Presumably, where the result of the consultation with a nurse is that the abortion does not proceed, no Medicare benefit claim could be made under Item Number 35643. In such a case there could be no assignment of the Medicare benefit and it could not be said that any consultation fee paid was "in respect of the professional service", being the termination.
65 The issue for present purposes is what is the position with respect to those occasions on which the consultation resulted in the termination proceeding, when a claim was made. My mind has fluctuated on this but, in the event, I have formed the view that the words "in respect of" in the context are so wide that they cannot be relevantly read down. In my opinion, the preliminary consultation is encompassed within the termination to which the relevant item number relates.
66 I am influenced in this conclusion by a number of considerations of the facts of this case. First, no patient was offered a choice. It was an essential precondition of any termination that there be such a consultation. Secondly, in many, it appears most, cases, there was no differentiation between the "theatre" and the "consultation" fee. Thirdly, in every case, the fee was increased depending on the length of the pregnancy. Each of these matters suggest that, as a matter of practice in this medical clinic, the consultation fees were inextricably linked to the termination itself. Accordingly, these fees were paid "in respect of the professional service" to which Item 35643 refers.
67 On this basis, the lack of entitlement was made out as a matter of law. Other submissions were made under this ground of appeal but it is unnecessary to deal with them.