Wecker v Delegate to the President of the NSW Anti-Discrimination Board
[2013] FCA 1167
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2013-11-08
Before
Paul J, Farrell J
Catchwords
- ADMINISTRATIVE LAW - competency of application for judicial review - review of decision of NSW Anti-Discrimination Board - application dismissed
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (3 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 1 On 16 September 2013, the applicant filed an originating application for judicial review under the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) (ADJR Act) of two decisions of the delegate to the President of the New South Wales Anti-Discrimination Board (Anti-Discrimination Board): the first was a decision not to list an application for leave to appeal to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal; the second was a decision not to hear the applicant's case in the Anti-Discrimination Board. The complaints to the Anti-Discrimination Board were made on 30 July 2013 and 5 August 2013 and related to alleged discrimination against the applicant by the University of New South Wales. 2 The Anti-Discrimination Board is established pursuant to s 71 of Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW) (ADA NSW Act); it consists of five members, including a President: s 72. A person may make a complaint alleging that a provision of the ADA NSW Act has been contravened: s 87A. A complaint is made by lodging it with the President: s 89A. The President determines whether or not a complaint is accepted or declined: s 89B(1). The grounds on which the President may decline a complaint are set out in s 89B(2), including that the conduct complained of occurred more than 12 months before the complaint was made (s 89B(2)(b)). 3 The first respondent filed a Notice of Objection to Competency on 11 October 2013. The grounds of the objection are that: 1. The President of the Anti-Discrimination Board declined the applicant's complaint in accordance with s 89B of the ADA NSW Act and the applicant seeks a review of this decision; 2. The Federal Court has jurisdiction to review certain administrative decisions under s 5 of the ADJR Act. Section 3(1) specifies the types of decisions to which the ADJR Act applies; and 3. A decision under the ADA NSW Act is not a decision to which the ADJR Act applies. 4 The first respondent submits that the applicant carries the burden of establishing the competency of the application under r 31.05(2) of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) and if the Court decides that the application is not competent, the application is dismissed: r 31.05(5). Rule 31.05(1) provides for a Notice of Objection to Competency to be filed within 14 days after service of the application. No evidence has been provided of when the first respondent was served with the application but there are greater than 14 days between the date the application was filed and the date the Notice of Objection to Competency was filed. 5 At a directions hearing on 17 October 2013, the Court noted that the Federal Court Registry had advised the applicant that his application had been accepted in error and offering him the opportunity to withdraw it without incurring application fees; the applicant declined to withdraw his application. The Court invited brief written submissions from the parties concerning whether it had jurisdiction to entertain the application and drew attention to the decision of Greenwood J in Broadbent v Medical Board of Queensland (2011) 195 FCR 438, [2011] FCA 980.