The Applicant's claims in the Commission: Phase 2
21 Mr Trotta took advantage of the opportunity that he had been given to respond to the Commission's indication that it was considering terminating his complaints without enquiry. He provided the Commission with further details of what he wanted it to consider by e-mails and documents. The Commission (in its Phase 2 termination decision) later summarised the additional factual premises of his complaints it had received as had been supplemented by those materials up to 3 April 2020 as follows:
• Even before the ambulance arrived at your home on 25 October 2019 to collect your father, Dr Vera and Dr Cindy had made a decision to murder your father for political, non-medical reasons based on age discrimination.
• As the ambulance officers wheeled your father into the hospital, Nurse Kara and the group of "ten angry young people" stared at you and your father. Nurse Kara was aggressive and she moved you and your father from room to room.
• Dr Cindy said, "You've had him long enough we will let him die now" and "We will get away with it and blame it on old age." Dr Vera also made threats to kill your father.
• Your father was killed by Dr Duong at Dr Cindy's request. Dr Sian Brooker and Dr Adam Skinner were accomplices.
22 The Commission summarised the further claims Mr Trotta made as follows;
• You have Autism Spectrum Disorder which you say impacts on your social skills and communication. Also, you had complaints before this Commission in 2016 and 2018 under the DDA about decisions by Northern Health to suspend your access to non-emergency cardiac care on the basis of allegations you had made about your treating practitioners and to revoke the provision of aged care services to your father on the basis of concerns that you had exhibited bullying behaviour towards its staff members.
• In the course of your father's treatment at the hospital on 25, 26 and 27 October 2019, not only was your father subject to age discrimination, you yourself were discriminated against on the ground of your disabilities and/or victimised:
- Dr Cindy said 'You've had [your father] for long enough... you retard... we'll kill your daddy now'. She killed your father because you had complained about the GOPC Form that Dr Tong had completed for your father in October 2017 marked 'not for CPR or intubation'.
- Dr Vera said 'We've given him maximum oxygen. We'll teach ya to make complaint against Dr Tong'.
- Dr Duong pushed you against the wall of the hospital room 'like a raging bull'.
- After you father died, Dr Rusheesh said 'that'll teach you to complain about Dr Tong'. She also 'violently assaulted' you.
- They each made mocking comments and bullied and teased you. As such, you were treated less favourably than family members without your disabilities would have been treated in the same or similar circumstances.
• You have been victimised by Northern Health pursuing 'vexatious' proceedings at VCAT, by seeking to appeal OVIC's decision to amend the GOPC Form when Northern Health allegedly did not have standing to do so.
• You have also been victimised for making the current complaint of age discrimination on behalf of your father. After your emails to Northern Health for clarification about your father's treatment and death on 25, 26 and 27 October 2019, Northern Health has raised concerns about you using a telecommunication service to harass their staff members and sought police intervention.
23 In addition to those complaints the Commission acknowledged that Mr Trotta had made a claim of racial discrimination on the basis that his father had not been provided with an Italian interpreter on 25-27 October 2019.
24 Mr Trotta was granted leave to amend his complaints to introduce the further issues summarised above.
25 The Commission also acknowledged that Mr Trotta had complained as follows:
• You raise more detailed concerns about alleged acts by Dr Edwina Holbeach, Consultant Geriatrician at Northern Health. You say that Dr Holbeach 'falsified' a GOPC Form in relation to your father on 16 September 2019 without consulting you - specifically, that she marked him as 'Not for CPR/intubation' and noted that in the event of cardiorespiratory arrest, the outcome for your father would be very poor and CPR/intubation would be futile.
• You also say Dr Holbeach also held 'secret' and 'political' meetings with other doctors and circulated documents to them that erroneously referred to you as having been diagnosed with schizophrenia.
26 The Commission received a response on behalf of Northern Health (which appears to be a copy of that which it had provided directly to Mr Trotta) on 27 March 2020 in which it contended as follows:
• Your father arrived at the hospital's Emergency Department on 25 October 2019 at approximately at 5.32am. The nurse who conducted an initial assessment at that time was not female, as you assert.
• Your father did not come to the hospital "for a check-up" as you assert. Rather, he arrived with a case of severe pneumonia that was actively treated in comprehensive fashion by a wide range of clinicians, with active treatment commencing less than nine minutes after arrival.
• The doctor who commenced treatment was not female and was a senior practitioner. The doctor who next treated your father was a consultant who was also not female. Accordingly, Northern Health's enquiries indicate there were no persons named Dr Vera or Dr Cindy who had any involvement with either you or your father at, or shortly after your arrival at the Emergency Department. There were no doctors in the Emergency Department at that time named either Vera or Cindy.
• No Emergency Department clinicians were involved in the care of your father after his transfer to the medical ward on 25 October 2019.
• Your father did not require intensive care unit management. His-condition deteriorated suddenly, a short time after the senior treating doctor had met with you and explained that your father may not survive.
• Northern Health is instructed that your father was already deceased at the time when you called for CPR.
• You have raised the same or similar subject matter with a range of other bodies including the HCC.
27 The Commission provided Mr Trotta with a copy of Northern Health's response on 7 April 2020.
28 On 7 December 2020 the President of the Commission, by her delegate Ms Holt (the President), made a decision to terminate Mr Trotta's complaints on his own account and on behalf of his father under s 46PF(1)(b) and s 46PH(1)(c) of the AHRCA. The President provided a statement of reasons from which the facts as relevant to the proceedings in the Commission set out above have been drawn.
29 The President reasoned that because there was no information before the Commission to indicate that Mr Trotta's father had made any requests for an Italian interpreter, there was no reasonably arguable claim of racial discrimination before her. She had also had not progressed any of his complaints on the ground of disability as those claims had not been sufficiently particularised and did not appear to support a reasonably arguable claim of disability on that basis.
30 The President stated in her termination reasons at page 12:
I appreciate you disagree with what appears to be a medical decision by Dr Holbeach in the weeks prior to your father's treatment and death at Northern Hospital on 25, 26 and 27 October 2019. However, in relation to Dr Holbeach's medical assessment of your father, I consider that there is insufficient information to support a reasonably arguable claim of unlawful discrimination or victimisation against Dr Holbeach in relation to you your father under the ADA or DDA and accordingly, Dr Holbeach has not been considered or progressed as a respondent.
I also consider that there is insufficient information to support a reasonably arguable claim of unlawful discrimination or victimisation under the ADA or DDA in relation to your concerns about Northern Health staff members allegedly imputing you with a false diagnosis of schizophrenia, so this issue is not being considered or progressed as part of your complaint.
31 The President expressed some concerns about the apparent merit of Mr Trotta's factual complaints but I do not take that to have been decisive.
32 The substantive reasons for the President's decision to terminate Mr Trotta's complaints were reflected in the following paragraphs which appear under the heading; "Other actions taken and/or remedies available":
You raise a number of very serious allegations about your father's medical treatment on 25, 26 and 27 October 2019. Your allegations include that doctors made threats to kill your father; that a secret decision was made to withdraw life sustaining treatment; that it already decided to murder your father even before the ambulance arrived at your home to collect him; that your father was involuntarily euthanised; and that a doctor treating your father was drunk and mentally impaired.
I note you have already made a complaint about the same or substantially the same subject matter to the HCC - however, on 28 January 2020 the HCC advised you that 'could not assist you further in this instance' and referred you to AHPRA. Information about AHPRA's investigation process can be accessed on its website here. AHPRA through its National Boards can conduct investigations, place requirements on a practitioner's registration, and for very serious matters, refer a practitioner to VCAT for registration suspension or cancellation. It appears you have tried to complain to AHPRA- however, you have recently told the Commission that AHPRA is refusing to investigate and has lost evidence. The current status of any investigation by AHPRA is not clear.
Further, I note the circumstances of your father's death have also been investigated by the coroner. Information about the coroner's death investigation process can be accessed on its website here. In the course of an investigation, the coroner can obtain information and documents from various people and organisations and request expert reports and opinions. The coroner will also determine if an inquest is required. The coroner will make a finding at the end of every investigation, sometimes with recommendations. The HCC documents you provided to this Commission on 28 March 2020 indicate that Northern Health has advised the HCC that it intends to cooperate with the coroner's investigation. The current status of the coroner's investigation is not clear.
In my view, the circumstances of your father's death are complex because there appears to have been different information at the time of his death regarding whether or not to conduct CPR on him - I refer specifically to the different GOPC Forms and Advanced Care Plans that you have provided and/or referred to in your correspondence to the Commission. I also consider that the very serious nature of your allegations about doctor misconduct and your father's death are better considered by agencies with expertise in such matters and the power to make findings, such as AHPRA and the coroner. It is difficult for this Commission, whose jurisdiction is federal anti-discrimination and human rights law, to assess allegations about the quality of medical treatment and the basis for medical decisions or actions.
…
For the above reasons, I consider that there are other more appropriate actions and remedies available to you for key issues raised in your complaint.
33 The President stated that there was no reasonable prospect of the parties achieving a practical outcome by way of conciliation through the Commission's processes.
34 The President's decision was as follows:
After considering all of the above factors, I have decided that it is appropriate to terminate the complaint without inquiry because I am satisfied, having regard to all the circumstances, that an inquiry into the complaint is not warranted.
35 Mr Trotta was advised regarding his legal rights by the President as follows:
The AHRCA says that after a complaint is terminated, the person affected by the alleged discrimination may be able to apply to the Federal Circuit Court of Australia (FCCA) or the Federal Court of Australia (FCA) to have the allegations decided by the court.
The law also says that if a complaint is terminated under sections 46PF(1)(b) and 46PH(1)(c) of the AHRCA, an application to the court can only be made if the court concerned grants leave to make the application.
…
Any application to the court must be made within 60 days of the date on the Notice of Termination.
…
36 Notwithstanding his having received that advice Mr Trotta did not seek leave to make an application to have his allegations decided by the Court. Instead on 9 February 2021 he filed a purported application without such leave. Thus, even assuming leave had been obtained, this proceeding was not commenced within 60 days of the date of the Notice of Termination. It would have been (purportedly) commenced two days out of time.
37 Section 46PO of the AHRCA relevantly provides:
Application to court if complaint is terminated
(1) If:
(a) a complaint has been terminated by the President under section 46PE, paragraph 46PF(1)(b) or section 46PH; and
(b) the President has given a notice to any person under subsection 46PH(2) in relation to the termination;
any person who was an affected person in relation to the complaint may make an application to the Federal Court or the Federal Circuit Court, alleging unlawful discrimination by one or more of the respondents to the terminated complaint.
Note: Part IVA of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 allows representative proceedings to be commenced in the Federal Court in certain circumstances.
(2) The application must be made within 60 days after the date of issue of the notice under subsection 46PH(2), or within such further time as the court concerned allows.
(3) The unlawful discrimination alleged in the application:
(a) must be the same as (or the same in substance as) the unlawful discrimination that was the subject of the terminated complaint; or
(b) must arise out of the same (or substantially the same) acts, omissions or practices that were the subject of the terminated complaint.
(3A) The application must not be made unless:
(a) the court concerned grants leave to make the application; or
(b) the complaint was terminated under paragraph 46PH(1)(h); or
(c) the complaint was terminated under paragraph 46PH(1B)(b)….
38 Mr Trotta submits that the Court should exercise its power, nunc pro tunc, both to grant leave and to extend the time for making each application.
39 Mr Trotta is self-represented. When it was identified that leave was required to bring these proceedings the Applicant filed an affidavit dated 15 April 2021. In his affidavit he exhibited medical certificates in which two medical practitioners certified to the effect that his medical conditions meant it would be appropriate to allow him a six months adjournment. I need not traverse the list of significant conditions Mr Trotta's treating doctors cited as relevant in that regard. It is sufficient to note there is nothing in what they state to suggest the significant chronic conditions they identify he suffers from would be likely resolve in six months. In the end it was unnecessary for the Court to rule upon the question of an adjournment. Mr Trotta consented to having the threshold leave issue(s) heard and determined after written materials were to be filed on the papers. Those are the matters now before the Court.
40 In respect of the approach which the Court is to apply in deciding whether an extension of time should be granted, Markovic J summarised the principles for determining whether to grant an extension of time under s 46PO(2) of the AHRCA in Reurich v Sureway Employment and Training Pty Ltd [2018] FCA 680. At [18] her Honour said:
18. In considering whether to grant an extension of time under s 46PO(2) of the AHRC Act the three principal matters for the Court to take into account are the explanation for the delay; any prejudice to the respondents, including any prejudice to them in defending the proceeding occasioned by the delay; and whether the applicant has an arguable case: see Vergara v Living and Leisure Australia Ltd [2013] FCA 775 (Vergara) at [3] (Davies J).
41 I agree with, and adopt, Markovic J's statement.
42 At the outset I should indicate that I am unpersuaded that the Respondents will suffer any significant prejudice by reason of these proceedings being permitted to be commenced two days out of time. While Mr Trotta has advanced no reason other than his general ill health as might explain his delinquency in that regard, neither have the Respondents identified any actual prejudice they might suffer on that account. The critical issue with respect to whether Mr Trotta should be permitted to commence his proceeding notwithstanding it having been filed out of time involves overlapping, albeit not identical, considerations with those which arises in respect to whether he should have leave to commence them at all. I therefore first turn to that question.