Underdown v Secretary, Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations
[2009] FCA 1223
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2009-10-29
Before
McKerracher J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 In Underdown v Secretary, Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations [2009] FCA 965 (Underdown No 1), I concluded (at [64]) that the appeal was incompetent and had no prospects of success. I made the following additional observations (at [65] and [66]): 65 These reasons do not develop at length the underlying very sad circumstances in which the complete breakdown in communications between Mr Fazio (now) and Centrelink have developed. However unfortunate that may be, there is no power in the Court to entertain this appeal but, in any event, no useful purpose would be served by allowing an inevitably doomed appeal to continue to run. To do so would not be in the interests of the respondent, of Mr Fazio, of the public or the Court. 66 The appeal must be dismissed. Costs would follow the event in the ordinary course. I will allow Mr Fazio 10 days from the date of delivery of the reasons file any written submissions as to why costs should not follow the event. The Secretary is to file written submissions, if any, in response within a further 7 days. 2 Mr Fazio has filed and served written submissions in relation to costs in the following terms: '1. It is extremely difficult to make submissions with such a clouded mind amidst an air of futility but nevertheless we try. 2. Financially insignificant a matter as this might seem to the rest of the world, this is simply about what is right and what is wrong and the indelible scar this leaves against Samantha's exemplary name. Yes this is a tragedy if allowed to stand. 3. How dare those that perpetrated this nefarious wrong and the manifestly flawed, uncalibrated system that allows such! 4. With all deference we can only ask that in relation to costs, Your Honour is mindful of the sentencing remarks and since then, further diminished circumstances in the Federal Magistrates Court (Fazio v Centrelink (No 2) [2008] FMCA 1389.' 3 In the Federal Magistrates' decision referred to by Mr Fazio, the following comments were made by his Honour, Lucev FM: 1. Sad circumstances surround these proceedings. They were initiated in personal circumstances poignantly described by the applicant, Arturo Fazio in an affidavit sworn 16 April 2007: "My lawful wife since 24 March 2006, Samantha Underdown, is terminally ill with metastatic breast cancer whereby she is wheelchair bound and reliant upon extensive life support due to the extent of her cancer in her lungs, liver, throughout her spine and vertebrae and hips." 2. Mr Fazio's wife, Samantha Underdown died on 1 July 2007. 3. The application, which, as initially filed sought the payment of alleged unpaid and underpaid social security entitlements and out of pocket disbursements, interest on monies owed and damages, has, following amendment, become an application for payment of allegedly outstanding social security (pension and carer) entitlements, disbursements, and damages for loss of potential wages, stress, physical and mental injury, hardship, loss of earnings and dignity, plus punitive damages and unquantified interest on the basis that the respondent Centrelink, owed Mr Fazio a duty of care. In submissions filed by Mr Fazio he has also alleged misfeasance in public office by Centrelink officials. 4. Centrelink has filed an interim application seeking the summary dismissal of the amended application. 4 It may be those comments to which Mr Fazio was referring. I also observed in Underdown No 1 that the circumstances giving rise to the very extensive disputation between the parties was most regrettable given that the original sum involved was so small. At [2] of the reasons I made the following observations: The financial consequence of that conclusion was that there had been an overpayment of benefits to Ms Samantha Underdown (Ms Underdown) (almost 10 years ago) of some $70.86. The apparent emotional impact on Mr Fazio of dealings with Centrelink appears to have been extremely significant. How such a financially insignificant matter escalated in the fashion it has over many years remains a mystery as well as a tragedy. 5 Nevertheless, as his Honour concluded, especially in circumstances where Centrelink had given Mr Fazio notice of an intention to claim costs in respect of the proceedings if they were lost by Mr Fazio, he was put on notice as to that outcome and it was appropriate, on his Honour's view, notwithstanding the impecuniosity of Mr Fazio that costs should follow the event. He ordered Mr Fazio to pay Centrelink's costs of those proceedings. 6 These proceedings raised the following matters which Mr Fazio asserted were the questions of law properly raised on the appeal: '(a) whether Centrelink engaged in an abuse of legal process by raising a debt in the very first instance back in 2003, which then became the subject of subsequent various protracted appeal processes? (b) whether or not the raising of a debt by the respondent in the first instance and the subsequent appeal processes deliberately engaged in was vexatious, fanciful, capricious and or malfeasant? (c) whether or not a serious miscarriage of justice has arisen out of such in any event? (d) whether or not the applicants were denied procedural fairness in the appeal processes to the SSAT and then subsequently to the AAT? (e) whether a reasonable minded person would conclude an apprehension of bias or lack of impartiality by both the adjudicators of the SSAT and AAT? (f) whether or not proper weight was ever apportioned to the evidence? (g) whether or not the decision is incompossible at law with a finding decision of the SSAT in February 2002 which remains on foot in that, Arturo Fazio in antithesis, was not a member of a couple in a marriage like relationship with Samantha Underdown?'