I say, "purported to invoke section 97" because the plaintiff has presented an argument before me, which it is not necessary to decide for the purpose of the present application, that section 97 was not validly invoked.
6 From the time of her transfer to Long Bay until 10 May 2005, when she was returned to Mulawa, the plaintiff was housed in the prison hospital at Long Bay. Her return to Mulawa followed the execution, on 5 May 2005 of documentation purporting to be under section 100A MHA, which relates to some circumstances in which a person can be transferred from a hospital to a prison. It appears from the certificate that the person issuing it was of the view that the plaintiff had ceased to be a mentally ill person or to be suffering from a mental condition for which treatment was available in a hospital.
7 In purported compliance with section 97(2) MHA, the Mental Health Review Tribunal ("MHRT")was notified of the section 97 order made on 27 August 2004. The proceedings relating to the plaintiff in the MHRT were allotted file number F 1054. The MHRT held a hearing, on 23 September 2004, which was restricted to a question which the plaintiff raised, of whether the MHRT had jurisdiction over her. At the conclusion of that hearing, the MHRT reserved its decision.
8 On 1 October 2004 the plaintiff's appeal to the Court of Criminal Appeal came on for hearing. The plaintiff appeared in the Court of Criminal Appeal for herself that day. She sought an adjournment, on the basis that she had not had adequate time or facilities to prepare the appeal, and also to give her time to file an application in the High Court of Australia. The Court did not accept that her wish to file an application in the High Court justified an adjournment. However, the Court directed that the matter be stood out of the list, to be re-listed soon after the determination of the MHRT. Of its own motion, the Court also gave a direction that when the appeal was next listed before the Court the parties should place before the Court such material as was available on the issue of the plaintiff's fitness and capacity to conduct the appeal.
9 The plaintiff's appeal to the Court of Criminal Appeal has still not been determined.
10 On 6 October 2004 the MHRT published its decision on jurisdiction. That decision was:
"As a person transferred lawfully from prison into hospital under the provisions of section 97 of the Mental Health Act 1990 the Tribunal has jurisdiction to review the case of [the plaintiff] pursuant to section 86(1) of that Act, and to make a recommendation to the prescribed authority as to her continued detention, care and treatment in that hospital."
11 On 7 October 2004 the MHRT conducted a hearing concerning what recommendation, if any, it should make as to the continued detention, care and treatment of the plaintiff. The MHRT published its determination on that question on 19 October 2004. Its recommendation was:
"That the current arrangements for [the plaintiff]'s detention as a forensic patient at the Long Bay Prison Hospital should continue to apply."
12 At each of the hearings of the MHRT which related to the plaintiff, Mr Duncan Chappell, the President of the Tribunal, presided.
These Proceedings
13 On 8 February 2005 the plaintiff commenced these proceedings by filing a Summons and affidavit. The Summons seeks the following relief:
"1. That the decision by the Mental Health Review Tribunal No F 1054 pursuant to Section 86(1) Mental Health Act 1990 No 9, be set aside as being invalid pursuant to the order of the High Court in The University of Wollongong v Metwally (1984) 158 CLR 447, that Tribunals cannot make enforceable orders as law pursuant to section 25 Judiciary Act 1903 .
2. That the decision by the Mental Health Review Tribunal on 23/9/04, be set aside as unlawful and invalid, having seen no compliance with section 97 Mental Health Act 1990 No 9, as an authority, (or Schedule one forensic patient authority of the said Act).
3. That the Mental Health Review Tribunal President Duncan Chappell, make available to the Appellants Possession by service, all transcripts, and documents pertaining to the Tribunal's decision in Matter F 1054, so that the Appellant may properly prepare an appeal in this matter.
4. That the Appellant have unrestricted access to the records kept by Justice Health on the Appellant pursuant to Section [blank] Mental Health Act 1990 No 9.
5. That the Appellant be given the rights of Section 17(5) Mental Health (Criminal Procedure) Act 1990 No 10.
6. That the Minister for Justice comply with Section 24 Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 and return the inmate to Mulawa Correctional Centre, as stated in the District Court of NSW in a Warrant dated 27/6/03.
7. That the Minister for Justice comply with Section 73 Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 and Section 30 Mental Health Act 1990 No 9, and cease enforced drugging by assault and wounding (not authorised by the Mental Health Tribunal on the 23/9/04) as a crime against the Appellant pursuant to Section 298 Mental Health Act 1990 , of a drug that is inappropriate for an elderly 64 year old diabetic woman, whose life is not in danger, nor a danger to herself or anyone else, (and never has been), but whose health is being endangered by the side effects of a drug (Risperidone) that is not "Medication" as ordered by Section 300 Mental Health Act 1990 , but listed as a very toxic poison in the Australian Poison's Register as s. 4 poison; the use of such restricted criminal drugs without the consent of the Appellant by means of bashing and wounding being in law, torture of a prisoner, solely for holding ideas not expressed to psychiatrists but in Court proceedings, that are held as lawful pursuant to the Constitution, by the High Court decision of Theophanus v The Herald and Weekly Times (1994) 182 CLR 104, and which the High Court ruled the states are SUBJECT to pursuant to Clause 5 preamble Constitution.
8. That the Minister for Justice produce the Appellant to the Court for examination by a jury, to determine if the Appellant is mentally ill, as ordered by Parliament in Section 428Z Crimes Act 1900 and Section 11 Mental Health (Criminal Procedure) Act 1990 No 10, to decide the matter of mental illness.
9. That the Appellant be awarded damages for assault and pain and suffering, as applies in law for the unlawful assault and wounding and hospitalisation for a diagnoses that cannot be supported as ideas of mental illness, by the Constitution as ruled by the High Court in Theophanous v The Herald and Weekly Times (1994) 182 CLR 104."
14 The Summons is one in which the respondent to the present application refers to herself variously as "the appellant" and "the applicant". I will refer to her in these reasons as "the plaintiff".
15 There are two "respondents" to the Summons - the NSW Minister for Health, and the NSW Minister for Justice. Both of those respondents appeared with common representation.
16 The Notice of Motion of the defendants came on for hearing before me on 12 July 2005. At that time the plaintiff was still in custody at Mulawa, and was brought to the Court for the purpose of conducting the hearing. She represented herself on that occasion.
Present Situation Concerning the Plaintiff's Imprisonment
17 The plaintiff's non-parole period expired on 3 May 2005, but she was not released on parole at that time because the Parole Board was not satisfied about the arrangements for her accommodation. However, after some different arrangements for accommodation were proposed, the Parole Board, on 7 July 2005, approved her release on parole no later than 14 July 2005. A Court Escort Security Unit form relating to the plaintiff's appearance in Court before me bore the notation "due out 14 July 2005". Thus, at the time of delivery of these reasons for the judgment the plaintiff will have been released on parole, although her sentence will still be running.
The Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act
18 The Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981 provides;
"4 Leave to sue required for persons convicted of serious indictable offences
A person who is in custody as a result of having been convicted of, or found to have committed, a serious indictable offence may not institute any civil proceedings in any court except by the leave of that court granted on application.
5 Grant of leave
A court shall not, under section 4, grant leave to a person to institute proceedings unless the court is satisfied that the proceedings are not an abuse of process and that there is prima facie ground for the proceedings."
19 The term "serious indictable offence" is defined in section 21 of the Interpretation Act 1987 as follows:
" serious indictable offence means an indictable offence that is punishable by imprisonment for life or for a term of 5 years or more."
20 Each of the charges of which the plaintiff was convicted is, therefore, a serious indictable offence, notwithstanding that the punishment actually inflicted on her was imprisonment for a term of less than 5 years.
21 I mention that section 7 Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981, provides:
"7 Right of appearance
At the hearing or determination of an application or appeal under this Act, except by the leave of the court to which the application or appeal is made:
(a) the applicant or appellant, as the case may be, is not entitled to appear in person, and
(b) the person who would, if the proceedings to the institution of which the application or appeal relates were instituted, be the defendant in those proceedings, is not entitled to appear or be represented."
22 Arrangements had been made, without any reference to me, for the plaintiff to be brought from Mulawa to Court for the purpose of the hearing on 12 July 2005. The representative of the defendants raised no objection to the plaintiff appearing. That may well have been because the Notice of Motion sought orders on the basis of Part 13 rule 5 Supreme Court Rules 1970, as well as pursuant to the Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981. My attention was not directed at all to section 7. To the extent necessary, I grant leave to the plaintiff nunc pro tunc to appear at the hearing on 12 July 2005. Nor did the plaintiff raise any objection to the defendants appearing and being represented at the hearing before me. To the extent necessary, I grant leave to the defendants nunc pro tunc, to appear and be represented at the hearing on 12 July 2005.
23 The plaintiff contended that section 4 Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981 did not apply to her, because she had instituted an appeal against her conviction, which had not been determined, and section 107 Justices Act 1902 had the effect of imposing a stay on her conviction. Section 107 Justices Act 1902 is concerned with appeals to the Supreme Court from certain decisions made by a Magistrate. It does not apply to appeals to the Court of Criminal Appeal, from a conviction by a jury or a sentence imposed by a judge in proceedings in the District Court. The submission that section 107 Justices Act 1902 has the effect that the plaintiff was not subject to the Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981 at the time she filed these proceedings is not only mistaken, it is unarguable.
24 The present proceedings were commenced without the plaintiff seeking or obtaining any leave. However, if a person commences proceedings in breach of section 4, as the plaintiff has done, those proceedings are not a nullity - rather, they suffer from an irregularity, which the Court can, in an appropriate case, cure by a grant of leave nunc pro tunc: Jol v State of New South Wales (1998) 45 NSWLR 283 at 290. To the extent that Potier v Magistrate Moore & Anor [2004] NSWSC 1131 at [16] decides otherwise, it cannot be followed. I note that the decision of the Court of Appeal in Jol v State of New South Wales was not cited to the learned judge who decided Potier v Magistrate Moore.
25 The principle which guides a court in deciding whether to grant leave nunc pro tunc was stated by Sheller JA (with whom Beazley JA and Sheppard AJA agreed) in Jol v State of New South Wales (1998) 45 NSWLR 283 at 290 as follows:
"The purpose of the Act, as appears from section 5, is to enable the court to supervise such proceedings by ensuring that they do not go forward to trial if they amount to an abuse of process or there is no prima facie ground for them."
26 In recognition of that state of affairs, the applicants put at the forefront of their submissions the claim that the Summons be stayed or dismissed generally pursuant Part 13 rule 5 Supreme Court Rules 1970. That rule provides:
"(1) Where in any proceedings it appears to the Court that in relation to the proceedings generally or in relation to any claim for relief in the proceedings:
(a) no reasonable cause of action is disclosed,
(b) the proceedings are frivolous or vexatious, or
(c) the proceedings are an abuse of the process of the Court,
the Court may order that the proceedings be stayed or dismissed generally or in relation to any claim for relief in the proceedings.
(2) The Court may receive evidence on the hearing of an application for an order under subrule (1)."
27 The principles upon which the Court stays or dismisses proceedings under that rule are identical to those on which the Court operates under its inherent jurisdiction in deciding whether to stay or dismiss proceedings which are an abuse of the process of the Court as being frivolous or vexatious: Brimson v Rocla Concrete Pipes Ltd [1982] 2 NSWLR 937 at 944. In exercise of that jurisdiction, the Court, in a pleaded case, can look not only at the Statement of Claim, but also at evidence (Brimson v Rocla Concrete Pipes Ltd [1982] 2 NSWLR 937), as Part 13 rule 5(2) expressly provides. When a claim is brought by Summons, likewise, evidence may be looked at for the purpose of deciding whether to exercise the power under Part 13 rule 5. The purpose of looking at that evidence is, however, to see whether the claim for the relief which is sought in the Summons is an abuse of process. It is not to sift through the evidence to see whether some relief, other than that claimed in the Summons, could be applied for without there being an abuse of process.
28 Consistently with her submission that she was not bound by the Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981 the plaintiff did not actually apply for leave under that Act. However, the defendants submitted, and I accept, that in deciding whether to summarily dispose of the proceedings I should take into account whether leave should be granted, and to the extent (if any) that it is appropriate, grant it. The defendants submitted that no leave at all should be granted.
The Plaintiff's Adjournment Application
29 The plaintiff applied for an adjournment of the hearing before me, to enable her to seek legal representation. It was in connection with that application for an adjournment that I proceeded to examine the merits of the defendants' claim for summary dismissal of the proceedings. I did this on the basis that, if nothing could fairly be said to prevent the Summons (or particular paragraphs in it) from being summarily dismissed, there would be no point in granting the adjournment application. The defendants' contention was that the entire proceedings were an abuse of process. To the extent that that contention was clearly right, it would only be compounding the abuse to permit the proceedings to be adjourned. Conversely, in connection with the adjournment application the defendants put everything they wished to put on the question of whether the Summons, or individual paragraphs in it, should be summarily dismissed. To the extent that those arguments would not prevail, there was no need for the plaintiff to have an adjournment. In deciding to proceed this way, I also took into account that the plaintiff's contention that she was not someone to whom section 4 of the Felons (Civil Proceedings) Act 1981 applied by reason of section 107 Justice Act 1902, was unarguable.
30 I shall proceed to consider the various paragraphs of the Summons one by one.
Paragraph 1
31 Section 86(1) Mental Health Act 1990 provides:
"(1) The Tribunal must, as soon as practicable after a person is transferred to a hospital under section 97 or 98:
(a) review the case of the person, and
(b) make a recommendation to the prescribed authority as to the person's continued detention, care or treatment in the hospital."
32 Both the preliminary decision of the Tribunal on 6 October 2004 concerning jurisdiction, and its decision of 19 October 2004 were made under section 86(1).
33 The University of Wollongong v Metwally (1984) 158 CLR 447 concerned a decision made by the Tribunal established under the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW), which upheld complaints of racial discrimination which Mr Metwally made against the university. After Mr Metwally had lodged the complaints which were the foundation of the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, but before the Tribunal gave its decision, the High Court held, in Viskauskas v Nilind (1983) 153 CLR 280 that, pursuant to section 109 of the Constitution various provisions of the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977, were invalid because they were inconsistent with the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth). Very soon after that decision of the High Court, the Federal Parliament passed the Racial Discrimination Amendment Act 1983. It amended the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 (Cth) by a provision which stated that the Commonwealth legislation
"is not intended, and shall be deemed never to have been intended, to exclude or limit the operation of a law of a State or Territory that furthers the objects of the Convention and is capable of operating concurrently with this Act."