![]() |
Home
| Databases
| WorldLII
| Search
| Feedback
Supreme Court of Victoria - Court of Appeal |
Last Updated: 13 May 2021
SUPREME
COURT OF VICTORIA
COURT OF APPEAL
S EAPCI 2020 0101
---
JUDGES:
|
|
WHERE HELD:
|
|
DATE OF HEARING:
|
|
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
|
|
MEDIUM NEUTRAL CITATION:
|
|
---
STATUTORY INTERPRETATION – Accrued rights
– Merits review – Applicants charged with racing offences –
Legislative
amendments commenced before disciplinary board hearing – Right
to merits review expressly preserved for decisions made before
commencement but
not pending decisions – Whether ‘accrued right’ to merits
review for purposes of Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984 s 14(2)(e)
– Right to review accrues where proceeding pending – Colonial
Sugar Refining Co, Ltd v Irving [1905] UKLawRpAC 29; [1905] AC 369, applied – Esber v
Commonwealth [1992] HCA 20; (1992) 174 CLR 430, Attorney-General (Qld) v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2002) 213 CLR 485, In re An Appeal by
Parekaiura Parekura [1912] NZGazLawRp 172; (1912) 31 NZLR 1074, Sunskill Investments Pty Ltd v
Townsville Office Service Pty Ltd [1991] 2 Qd R 210, Rocter Tanks Pty Ltd
v Adam [2001] SASC 285; (2001) 80 SASR 214, considered – Whether amending legislation
disclosed contrary intention – Transitional provisions silent as to
pending
decisions – Amending legislation and Interpretation of
Legislation Act 1984 read together in single act of construction –
Contrary intention would produce anomalous outcome discordant with context and
purpose – GF Heublein and Bro Inc v Continental Liqueurs Pty Ltd
[1962] HCA 66; (1962) 109 CLR 153, Helmer v State Coroner of Victoria [2011] VSC 25,
Spear v Hallenstein [2018] VSC 169, Thomas v Victorian Building
Authority [2020] VSC 150
, distinguished – Racing Act 1958
ss 83OH, 108, 109, 110 – Leave to appeal granted – Appeal
allowed.
---
APPEARANCES:
|
Counsel
|
Solicitors
|
|
|
|
For the Applicants
|
Mr D Sheales with
Mr L Hogan |
Guthrie & Associates
|
|
|
|
For the Respondent
|
Mr A Anderson
|
Minter Ellison
|
|
|
|
1 On 1 August 2019, the Victorian Racing
Tribunal, or ‘VRT’, replaced the three Racing Appeals and
Disciplinary Boards,
or ‘RAD Boards’, which had until that time been
responsible for hearing charges for serious offences under the Racing Act
1958. The amending legislation, the Racing Amendment (Integrity and
Disciplinary Structures) Act 2018, or ‘RAIDS Act’, also changed
the regime for review of decisions made on serious offence charges. Whereas
there had
previously been a right of review by the Victorian Civil and
Administrative Tribunal (‘VCAT’) of decisions made by RAD
Boards, as
to liability and penalty, the right of review in respect of decisions of the VRT
was confined to questions of penalty.
2 The RAIDS Act
made provision for cases that were, broadly speaking, within the disciplinary
system but not yet determined. So,
the RADS Boards could hear and determine
pending charges, and VCAT could complete reviews already commenced. VCAT could
also hear
a review application if a RADS Board had made a decision at the date
when the changes took effect, even if a review had not yet been
sought.
Critically for the present case, the provisions were silent as to VCAT review of
decisions made by a RAD Board after the
new regime commenced
operation.
3 The applicants were licensed harness
racing drivers and trainers who were subject to charges of serious offences
against the Australian
Harness Racing Rules. When the new regime was
established, those charges were yet to be heard but were pending before the RAD
Board
for harness racing. Pursuant to the transitional provisions, they were
duly heard on 24 and 25 September 2019. On 11 December 2019,
the
applicants were found guilty on certain charges and on 19 December 2019 the
RAD Board made orders for their disqualification
for specified periods.
4 The applicants applied to VCAT for a review of the
findings of liability and penalty. Because the RAD Board decisions were made
after the commencement of the RAIDS Act, as mentioned above, this was not a
matter directly addressed by the transitional provisions.
However, the
applicants contended that they had an accrued right to apply to VCAT for a
review, which was preserved by s 14(2) of the Interpretation of
Legislation Act 1984 (‘the ILA’). Both in VCAT and on
appeal to a judge in the Trial Division, arguments to this effect were
unsuccessful.
5 For the reasons that follow, the
applicants in our view did have an accrued right to seek review in VCAT of the
decisions of the
RAD Board, as to both liability and penalty, within the meaning
of s 14(2) of the ILA, and the RAIDS Act did not operate to deprive them of
that right. Leave to appeal will therefore be granted and the appeal
will be
allowed.
Legislative provisions — before 1 August 2019
6 When the charges were laid against the
applicants, pt IIA of the Racing Act 1958 provided for the Racing
Appeals and Disciplinary Board for Harness Racing Victoria. That Board was
established by s 50B. Its functions, under s 50C, included to hear
and determine charges made against persons for serious offences: s 50C(b).
Section 50M(1) provided that, if a person had been charged with a serious
offence, the Board must hear and determine that charge.
7 Section 50N provided for hearings of the Board.
The Board could conduct the hearing in the presence of the parties or their
representatives,
or without some or all of those parties or representatives if
the parties had been advised of the date, time and venue of the hearing.
It
could hear evidence by telephone, closed circuit television or video link, but
was required to hold a hearing in public unless
it considered it was in the
public interest or the interests of justice to conduct it in private. The Board
was required to give
reasons for any decision it made and was bound by the laws
of natural justice. Section 50Q provided for a penalty of 10 penalty units
for acts done in contempt of the Board.
8 In
pt IIIBA, provision was made for review by VCAT of decisions of the RAD
Boards. The part contained only two provisions. Section 83OH provided as
follows:
83OH Review by VCAT of decisions of [RAD Boards]
(1) A person whose interests are affected by a decision made by a [RAD Board] may apply to VCAT for review of that decision.
(2) A Steward may apply to VCAT for review of a decision made by a [RAD Board].
9 Another provision, s 83OI, provided for a time limit of 28 days for making an application for review. Any review was then governed by the provisions of the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 1998 (‘the VCAT Act’).
Legislative provisions — from 1 August 2019
10 As mentioned, the RAIDS Act amended the
Racing Act with effect from
1 August
2019.
11 By s 1, the purposes of the RAIDS Act
included, relevantly, to (a) replace the RAD Boards with a new body established
under the Racing Act (the VRT),
(b) provide for the powers of the VRT
to hear and determine a matter, (c) limit the right of appeal to VCAT to
decisions made by the
VRT in respect of a penalty, and (d) make other
consequential amendments to the Racing Act and the VCAT
Act.
12 Section 14 of the RAIDS Act
substituted a new pt IIA containing provisions dealing with the VRT.
Section 50B established the VRT.
Its functions include to hear and determine a
charge made against a person for a serious offence: s 50C(c). The VRT
must hear
and determine the charge if a person has been charged with a serious
offence: s 50O. Section 50Q deals with proceedings of the
VRT. Like its
predecessors, it may conduct the hearing in the presence of the parties or their
representatives, or without some
or all of them if they have been advised of the
date, time and venue of the hearings. Again, the VRT may conduct a hearing in
private
if it considers it is in the public interest or the interests of justice
to do so, but must otherwise hold its hearings in public.
The VRT is bound by
the rules of natural justice but is not bound by the rules of evidence except if
it adopts those rules. It
may inform itself on any matter as it sees fit and
must conduct each hearing expeditiously and with as little formality and
technicality
as is reasonably possible.
13 The new
pt IIA contains significant powers which were not available to the RAD
Boards. Section 50S permits the VRT to serve written
notice on a person
requiring that person to produce a specified document or attend a hearing. The
Supreme Court may order a person
who has failed to comply with such a notice
without reasonable excuse to comply with it: s 50V. Section 50U provides
for examples
of reasonable excuses including legal professional privilege and
public interest immunity. However, the fact that the information
or document
might tend to incriminate a person or make the person liable to a penalty is not
a reasonable excuse: s 50ZJ. Failure
to comply with a notice is an
offence punishable by imprisonment for six months:
s 50ZG.
14 Part IIA also provides for wider
powers than its predecessor in relation to the conduct of hearings. Evidence
may be given orally,
in writing, by telephone or closed circuit television or
video link and the VRT may require a person to give evidence or answer questions
on oath or affirmation: s 50Y. A person who is served with a notice and
refuses or fails to take an oath or make an affirmation
when required to do so,
or refuses or fails to answer questions when required by the VRT to do so,
commits an offence punishable
by imprisonment for six months: s 50ZH. It
is also an offence to make a statement to the VRT that the person knows to be
false
or misleading in a material particular or to produce a document of that
kind: s 50ZI. Finally, s 50ZK provides for contempt of
the VRT in
the same terms as former s 50Q, but the maximum penalty is now 240 penalty
units or imprisonment for two years, or both.
15 Section 23 of the RAIDS Act also substituted a
new s 83OH in pt IIIBA, in the following terms:
Review by VCAT of decisions of the [VRT]
(1) A person whose interests are affected by a decision made by the [VRT] may apply to VCAT for review of that decision in relation to a penalty imposed on the person by the [VRT].
(2) A Steward may apply to VCAT for review of a decision made by the [VRT] in relation to a penalty imposed by the [VRT].
16 Section 25 inserted pt X, containing transitional provisions. Section 108 of the Racing Act now provides for the transition to the VRT, in the following terms:
Transition of [RAD Boards] to the [VRT]
(1) This section applies if immediately before the commencement day—
(a) a person is charged with a serious offence under the rules and the serious offence—
(i) has been part heard by [a RAD Board] and has not been determined by the relevant Board; or
(ii) has not been heard or determined by the [RAD Board]; or
(b) a person has lodged an appeal against a Steward’s decision with [a RAD Board] and the appeal has not been heard or determined by the relevant Board; or
(c) any other proceeding has commenced with [a RAD Board] and the proceeding has not been determined by the relevant Board.
(2) Despite the repeal of section 5G by the [RAIDS Act], the substitution of Part IIA by the [RAIDS Act] and the repeal of Part IIIA by the [RAIDS Act], section 5G, Part IIA and Part IIIA as in force immediately before the commencement day continue to apply until the hearing, the appeal or the proceeding is completed by the relevant Board.[1]
...
17 Section 109 addresses the review of decisions of the RAD Boards, as follows:
Review of decisions of [RAD Boards]
(1) This section applies if immediately before the commencement day—
(a) a person whose interests are affected by a decision of a [RAD Board] under section 83OH(1) proposes to apply to VCAT for a review of that decision; or
(b) a Steward proposes to apply to VCAT for a review of a decision made by a [RAD Board] under section 83OH(2).
(2) Despite the substitution of section 83OH by the [RAIDS Act], the person or the Steward may apply to VCAT for review on and after the commencement day if the time limit for applying for a review under section 83OI as in force immediately before the commencement day has not expired.
(3) Despite the substitution of section 83OH by the [RAIDS Act], VCAT may conduct the review under the [VCAT Act] on and after the commencement day as if—
(a) section 83OH had not been substituted by the [RAIDS Act]; and
(b) Part 16D of Schedule 1 to the [VCAT Act] had not been enacted.
18 Section 110 provides for existing reviews yet to be finalised by VCAT, as follows:
Review of decisions by VCAT
(1) This section applies if immediately before the commencement day—
(a) a person or a Steward has applied to VCAT for a review of a decision made by a [RAD Board] under section 83OH; and
(b) the review has not been finalised by VCAT.
(2) Despite the substitution of section 83OH by the [RAIDS Act], VCAT may continue to conduct the review under the [VCAT Act] on and after the commencement day as if—
(a) section 83OH had not been substituted by the [RAIDS Act]; and
(b) Part 16D of Schedule 1 to the [VCAT Act] had not been enacted.
19 Finally, s 35 of the RAIDS Act inserts a new pt 16D in the VCAT Act. The effect is to include a new cl 66N in sch 1 to that Act, in the following terms:
66N [VCAT] bound by findings of fact made by [the VRT]
Despite section 51, in determining a proceeding for review of a decision of the [VRT] under s 83OH of the Racing Act 1958 in relation to a penalty imposed by the [VRT], [VCAT] is bound by the findings of fact which were made by the [VRT].
Legislative provisions — ILA
20 Section 14(2) of the ILA relevantly provides:
Where an Act or a provision of an Act—
(a) is repealed or amended; or
(b) expires, lapses or otherwise ceases to have effect—
the repeal, amendment, expiry, lapsing or ceasing to have effect of that Act or provision shall not, unless the contrary intention expressly appears—
...
(e) affect any right, privilege, obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred under that Act or provision;
...
(g) affect any investigation, legal proceeding or remedy in respect of anything mentioned in paragraphs (e) to (f)—
and any such investigation, legal proceeding or remedy may be instituted, continued or enforced, and any such penalty, forfeiture or punishment may be imposed, as if that Act or provision had not been repealed or amended or had not expired, lapsed or otherwise ceased to have effect.
21 The first question which the proposed
appeal presents is whether the applicants had an accrued right, when the RAIDS
Act commenced,
to seek review by VCAT of any adverse decision which the RAD
Board might come to make in the hearing which was at that time yet to
be held.
If so, the second question is whether there is any intention expressly appearing
in the RAIDS Act contrary to the preservation
of that right as described in
s 14(2).
22 The primary judge decided both
those issues adversely to the
applicants.[2] The proposed appeal
relies on two grounds, addressing each of the questions.
23 It is tempting, faced with such an issue, to
turn directly to the specific transitional provisions and construe them to see
whether
they cover the case, turning then to the ILA only if the party asserting
the accrued right has not already succeeded in establishing
its case without
resort to the ILA. The respondent, Harness Racing Victoria, invited the Court
to proceed on this basis.[3]
Obviously, if the transitional provisions specifically preserve the right in
question, the ILA has no work to do. But otherwise,
the formation of a view as
to the proper construction of the statute in isolation may have the effect of
overlooking the role and
undermining the potential significance of the ILA.
24 More fundamentally, in principle what is taking
place is a single act of statutory construction. Gleeson CJ explained the
correct
approach in Attorney-General (Qld) v Australian Industrial Relations
Commission:[4]
Acts
of Parliament are drafted, and are intended to be read and understood, in the
light of the Acts Interpretation Act. A particular Act, and the Acts
Interpretation Act, do not compete for attention, or rank in any order of
priority. They work together. The meaning of the particular Act is to be
understood in the light of the interpretation legislation. The scheme of that
legislation is to state general principles that apply
unless a contrary
intention is manifested in a particular
Act.[5]
25 Applying
this understanding to the present kind of issue, Gleeson CJ
stated:
When a statute changes the law, the effect
of the change upon existing rights, liabilities, claims, or proceedings is
determined by
the meaning of the statute. The common law developed rules of
statutory construction as an aid to discovering that meaning. Such
rules
involved presumptions; but, being rules of construction, they were subject to
any contrary intention evinced with sufficient
clarity in the statute.
...
The Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth)
is, according to its long title, an Act for the interpretation of Acts of
Parliament and for shortening their language. It
shortens the language of Acts
of Parliament by making it unnecessary for Parliament to enact elaborate and
repetitive provisions
anticipating possible uncertainties and declaring the
legislative intention on those points. Naturally, the Acts Interpretation
Act makes repeated reference to the concept, central to statutory
construction, of intention. Parliament, having expressed its intention
as to
the way in which its enactments are to be interpreted, frames its legislation
accordingly. But its general expressions of
intention are subject to anything
that appears in the particular
legislation.[6]
26 It
follows that the RAIDS Act is taken to have been drafted on the basis that
s 14(2) would operate to assist in identifying its
meaning. The question
is therefore, not what the RAIDS Act by its own terms provides in respect of the
ability of the applicants
to seek a review in VCAT, but what it provides when
read with s 14(2). The answer to that question involves, first,
identifying
whether the applicants had an accrued right of the kind to which
s 14(2) applies, and secondly, if they did, determining whether
the RAIDS
Act expressly provides to the contrary of s 14(2)(e) when it says that the
right is unaffected by the RAIDS Act. In the
absence of such contrary
provision, the default position is that an accrued right is preserved.
Was there an accrued right? — proposed ground 1
27 The applicants placed emphasis on the
decision of the Privy Council in Colonial Sugar Refining Co, Ltd v
Irving.[7] In that case, the
appellant company brought an action in the Supreme Court of Queensland against
the Collector of Customs. After
the proceeding was commenced, but before
argument was heard, the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) commenced. It provided
that every decision of a Court of a State, from which an appeal formerly lay to
the Privy Council, was final
and conclusive except so far as an appeal may be
brought to the High Court. After judgment was subsequently given in the Supreme
Court, the company successfully applied to the Supreme Court for leave to appeal
to the Privy Council.[8] The
Collector petitioned the Privy Council for an order that the appeal be dismissed
for want of jurisdiction as a result of the
passing of the Judiciary
Act.
28 The Privy Council dismissed the
petition. Lord Macnaghten, delivering the judgment,
stated:
As regards the general principle applicable
to the case there was no controversy. On the one hand, it was not disputed that
if the
matter in question be a matter of procedure only, the petition is well
founded. On the other hand, if it be more than a matter of
procedure, if it
touches a right in existence at the passing of the Act, it was conceded that, in
accordance with a long line of
authorities extending from the time of Lord Coke
to the present day, the appellants would be entitled to succeed. The Judiciary
Act is not retrospective by express enactment or by necessary intendment. And
therefore the only question is, Was the appeal to His
Majesty in Council a right
vested in the appellants at the date of the passing of the Act, or was it a mere
matter of procedure?
It seems to their Lordships that the question does not
admit of doubt. To deprive a suitor in a pending action of an appeal to a
superior tribunal which belonged to him as of right is a very different
thing
from regulating procedure. In principle, their Lordships see no difference
between abolishing an appeal altogether and transferring
the appeal to a new
tribunal. In either case there is an interference with existing rights
contrary to the well-known general principle that statutes are not to be held to
act retrospectively unless a clear intention to
that effect is
manifested.[9]
29 The
facts of Colonial Sugar bear a close similarity to the present case. In
each case, the appeal or review right was replaced while the underlying
proceeding
was pending. The opportunity to pursue that right had not arisen,
being contingent on the pending decision being made and proving
adverse to the
putative appellant or applicant for review. In some respects the present is a
stronger case: one distinction is
that under the amendment in issue in
Colonial Sugar a right of appeal still existed, but it was exercisable to a
different tribunal (the High Court, rather than the Privy Council).
Here, the
new right of review lies to the same tribunal, namely VCAT, but it is
significantly attenuated because it extends only
to the question of penalty, and
VCAT is bound by the factual findings of the VRT. Moreover, the new right of
review in this case
is not available to the applicants at all because they have
no proceeding before the VRT.
30 The respondent
noted a distinction said to distinguish the present case, namely that
Colonial Sugar concerned a judicial proceeding, whereas here we are
concerned with administrative merits review of a disciplinary hearing conducted
by a tribunal. The submission went further, and contended that the applicants
would not have had an accrued right to review in VCAT
even if, at the time the
RAIDS Act commenced, they had commenced an application for review. On this
argument, the transitional provisions
went further than would otherwise have
been the case, by preserving the position of an applicant who had sought review
in VCAT before
the new regime
commenced.[10]
31 In
support of this argument, the respondent referred to decisions in which a party
had sought review of a decision refusing to
grant or confer a right, as distinct
from a decision whether or not to recognise a pre-existing right. In
particular, in his dissenting
reasons in Esber v
Commonwealth,[11] Brennan J drew
a ‘critical’ distinction between a judicial proceeding to enforce an
accrued right and an administrative
proceeding to determine whether a right
should be granted.[12] The
respondent submitted that the present case was of the latter kind. The
distinction was supported by the Privy Council’s
decision in Director
of Public Works v Ho Po
Sang,[13] where it was said
that, under a provision equivalent to s 14(2) of the ILA, the former kind
of proceeding is preserved but the latter
is
not.[14] The respondent submitted
that the majority decision in Esber depended on the construction of the
transitional provisions in that case and that this had been confirmed by the
later High Court
decision in AIRC. The observations of the majority
contrary to the reasoning of Brennan J were therefore not part of the ratio of
the case and (it
seemed to be said implicitly) need not be followed.
32 Esber concerned an application to
redeem weekly compensation payments by way of a lump sum. After the responsible
officer refused the
appellant’s application, the appellant sought review
in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (‘AAT’). Before the
matter
was heard, the legislation was amended so that payments of the amount received
by the appellant could not be redeemed. The
majority decided in the
appellant’s favour without having recourse to s 8 of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth), which is relevantly in the same terms as
s 14(2) of the ILA. However, they went on to address that
provision.
33 The majority first stated that the
equivalent of s 14(2)(g) operates in relation to a ‘right’
acquired or accrued as
described in s 14(2)(e), and not independently of
such a right.[15] This was a point
also emphasised by the Privy Council in Ho Po
Sang.[16] They went on to
identify two bases on which the appellant had advanced this aspect of his case.
By the first, the relevant right
was a right to redemption of weekly payments.
The majority identified difficulties with this approach and did not decide the
point.
By the second basis, the right was a right to review of the original
decision. The majority stated that the appellant had a right
to have his claim
accepted if the decision-maker had wrongly refused it. They
explained:
Once the appellant lodged an application
to the Tribunal to review the delegate’s decision, he had a right to have
the decision
of the delegate reconsidered and determined by the Tribunal. It
was not merely ‘a power to take advantage of an enactment’.
Nor was
it a mere matter of procedure; it was a substantive right. Section 8 of the
Acts Interpretation Act protects anything that may truly be described as
a right, ‘although that right might fairly be called inchoate or
contingent’.
This was such a right. It was a right in existence at the
time the 1971 Act was repealed. That being so, and in the absence of
a contrary
intention, the right was protected by s 8 of the Acts Interpretation
Act and was not affected by the repeal of the 1971
Act.[17]
One
of the authorities relied on in this passage, ‘by way of analogy’,
was Colonial Sugar.
34 In AIRC, the
High Court distinguished judicial functions from the exercise of arbitral
functions. In that case, a ‘right’ to
have an arbitration conducted
was not an accrued right of the kind protected by the interpretation
legislation, being a ‘right’,
not to have existing legal rights and
liabilities determined, but to have future conditions decided which would then
become legal
rights according to
statute.[18] The plurality
distinguished Esber on two bases. First, the majority had allowed the
appeal by reference to the specific transitional provisions in that case.
Secondly,
the ‘accrued right’ which they had considered concerned
the continuation of an application for review by the AAT which
had already been
lodged.[19]
35 We
are unpersuaded that the majority reasons in Esber should be left out of
account in the manner for which the respondent contended. Esber was not
disapproved in AIRC.[20]
Moreover, the majority referred to the ‘accrued right’ analysis
without disapproval. The reasoning of the majority
on this matter is plainly
‘seriously considered dicta of a majority’ of the High Court based
on ‘long-established
authority’.[21] It was
examined without disapproval in a later High Court decision. As such, this
Court should follow it.
36 We acknowledge, however,
that the reasoning of the majority in Esber is capable of being read as
depending on the fact that an application for review had already been lodged
when the amending legislation
took effect in that
case.[22] To that extent,
Esber is distinguishable. At the same time, the majority reasoning
plainly recognises that a right, including a right to administrative
review, may
be ‘inchoate or contingent’ and still constitute an accrued right
for the purposes of the interpretation
legislation.
37 Beyond these conclusions, we need
not decide the respondent’s submission that, even if the present
applicants had lodged
an application for VCAT review before the new regime
commenced, they would not have had an accrued right to have that review
completed
within the meaning of s 14(2)(e) of the ILA. The arguments can
be considered more conveniently by reference to the facts of this
case, in which
no such application had been made, nor could have been made, given that the RAD
Board had not made its decisions.
38 The decision in
Colonial Sugar plainly accepts that a right of appeal may exist in
respect of a pending but incomplete proceeding, to which the common law
presumption
against retrospective operation of legislation applies. In the
language of s 14(2), which replicates the common
law,[23] a right may
‘accrue’ or be ‘acquired’ in these
circumstances.
39 We were not taken to any authority
to the contrary of Colonial Sugar. As noted above, it was cited with
approval by the majority in
Esber.[24] It is consistent
with the observation that rights may be inchoate or contingent for these
purposes.
40 That suffices to establish that, if
the ‘right’ to seek review in VCAT was a right within the meaning of
s 14(2) of
the ILA, then that right was accrued, or acquired, by the
applicants in the present case notwithstanding that the RAD Board had not
made a
decision when the RAIDS Act commenced. Indeed, there are other cases where a
‘right’ to pursue an appeal or review
mechanism was preserved, on
the basis that it had accrued or been acquired, notwithstanding that the
underlying decision had not
yet been made, or the appeal or review had not been
commenced, when the relevant legislative change took effect. It is convenient
to refer to those cases, which will bear on the question whether the
‘right’ of review with which this case is concerned
is, as the
respondent contended, distinct from those rights that have been found to be
preserved in the authorities.
41 The first case,
Hyde v Lindsay,[25] is a
decision of the Supreme Court of Canada which predates Colonial Sugar but
is on all fours with it. The Court held that a provision abolishing a right of
appeal, which commenced after a trial judgment
was reserved but before judgment
was given, was inapplicable to deprive the unsuccessful party of the right to
appeal the eventual
judgment. The Court relied on previous authority without
referring to any interpretation legislation.
42 A
somewhat different situation arose in the New Zealand case In re An Appeal by
Parekaiura Parekura.[26] This
case concerned an application to a Native Land Court to determine the amount of
compensation payable in respect of ‘Native
land’ taken for public
works. An appeal lay from that court to a Native Appellate Court upon any
ground of law or fact, including
the inadequacy of any compensation awarded.
While a claim was pending in the Native Land Court, legislation was passed
stating that
the award of that court was final as regards the amount awarded.
Cooper J, constituting the Supreme Court of New Zealand (as it
was in 1912),
applied Colonial Sugar to hold that the parties in the Native Land Court
had a vested right of appeal to the Native Appellate Court, which could only be
taken away by express language or necessary intendment. This was correlative to
the duty of the Native Land Court ‘as a judicial
tribunal of ascertaining
the amount of compensation payable by the Crown to the appellants, and of making
an award to that effect’.[27]
In this way, the right in question resulted from the fact that the appellants
had engaged the duty of the lower court to perform
its statutory function. It
is not entirely clear whether Parekaiura Parekura involved proceedings to
acquire rights, or proceedings to recognise existing rights. Nor is it apparent
whether the specialist ‘courts’
in question were exercising judicial
power or were tribunals acting in a judicial manner. These distinctions were
not drawn in the
judgment.
43 Parekaiura
Parekura was applied by the New Zealand Court of Appeal in Accolade
Autohire Ltd v Aeromax Ltd,[28]
a case about judicial appeals in which the relevant appeal had, again, not been
instituted when the relevant amendment
commenced.
44 Another case involving judicial
proceedings is Sunskill Investments Pty Ltd v Townsville Office Service Pty
Ltd.[29] That case concerned
the introduction of a jurisdictional limit on appeals, which commenced after an
appeal had been commenced, but
before it was heard. McPherson J applied
Colonial Sugar and stated:
A right of appeal
that exists when the proceedings are instituted is considered as inhering in the
proceedings from commencement of
the action, and so will not be affected by
subsequent statutory restriction unless it is plain that the restriction is
intended to
have retrospective
operation.[30]
This
case again concerned an appeal to a court. The above reasoning appears not to
depend on the fact that an appeal had been
commenced.
45 A case closer to the present is
Dolphin v Workers Rehabilitation and Compensation
Corporation.[31] Dolphin
is significant because it concerned a right of administrative appeal to a
statutory tribunal rather than an appeal to a court as
part of a judicial
proceeding. The appellant had sought workers’ compensation from the
relevant statutory corporation and
initially obtained a favourable amount. A
subsequent ruling reducing the amount was overturned by a review officer’s
determination.
The corporation sought to appeal to the statutory tribunal.
Before it did so, but after the determination was made, the legislation
was
amended to replace the appeal procedure with a different system of review. Cox
J referred to Colonial Sugar and Esber in holding that there was
an accrued right of appeal to the statutory tribunal which was preserved in the
absence of a contrary intention.[32]
The relevant passages of his reasons were quoted with approval by Kourakis CJ in
R v
Hamra.[33]
46 Finally,
in Rocter Tanks Pty Ltd v
Adam,[34] the Full Court of the
South Australian Supreme Court again applied Colonial Sugar, albeit with
misgivings, to hold that a right of appeal from the Magistrates’ Court to
the Supreme Court accrued before judgment
in the lower court proceedings was
given.
47 The primary judge in the present case held
that the applicants did not have an accrued right to apply to VCAT under the old
s 83OH.
She relied in part on the decision of Niall JA in Spear v
Hallenstein.[35] The plaintiff
in that case sought to rely on a statutory provision which had permitted a
person to seek review of a coroner’s
findings, but which had been repealed
before the plaintiff sought any review. This was held not to have created any
right, but an
ability to take advantage of an enactment. The case is
distinguishable because the provision in question enabled any person to seek
the
review. In those circumstances, it would have been highly artificial to regard
persons as having accrued rights under the legislation
if they had taken no step
to invoke the section before its repeal. Unlike the present case, the plaintiff
in Spear could not be said to have an ‘inchoate’ or
‘contingent’ right.
48 Similarly, in
Thomas v Victorian Building
Authority,[36] upon which the
judge and the respondent also relied, no inquiry had been commenced when the
relevant review provision was repealed.
Again, the plaintiff had taken no step,
and none had been taken against him, under the relevant regime before it was
amended. Any
question of review was therefore remote and entirely
hypothetical.
49 In both these cases, there was
simply no foundation upon which to found the suggested right of review. Here,
there was a matter
pending in the RAD Board. As Esber confirms, the
right may be inchoate or contingent — here, contingent on the pending
proceeding yielding an adverse result.
Colonial Sugar and like cases
show that the right need not be available for exercise at the time of the
relevant amendment or repeal in order to
fall within the protection of
s 14(2) or its common law equivalent.
50 These cases clearly establish that a right of
appeal to a court accrues when the matter is pending in the lower court or
tribunal,
and not when that body delivers judgment or makes its
decision.
51 The same logic would suggest that
rights of appeal or review to bodies other than courts likewise accrue when a
matter is before
the primary decision-maker. Although the majority in Esber
stated that the right to AAT review accrued once an application had been
lodged, we do not take that statement to have overruled the
above line of
authority or to have suggested it operates differently in respect of
administrative review. To the contrary, as noted,
Colonial Sugar was one
of the cases cited by the majority.
52 That raises
the question whether such other rights, and particularly the ‘right’
in the present case to seek VCAT review
of a RAD Board decision, lie within the
‘rights’ to which s 14(2)(e) of the ILA applies. On that
question, considerations
of principle and authority point to an affirmative
answer.
53 The respondent sought to distinguish
between appeals as part of an existing judicial proceeding, as in Colonial
Sugar, and administrative rehearings such as that in Esber. It was
submitted that disciplinary hearings stood apart from judicial proceedings and
were administrative in nature.
54 In our opinion,
these distinctions are not especially helpful in this case. A hearing, or
rehearing, to decide upon and impose
liability for a penalty is not entirely
dissimilar to a proceeding for the judicial determination of rights, at first
instance or
on appeal. But in any event, the majority in Esber
considered the right of AAT review in that case to be a right to which the
interpretation legislation was capable of
applying.[37] It involved no
judicial proceeding, but a rehearing of an application for the exercise of a
statutory power to redeem compensation
payments. That case is not unlike
Dolphin, which concerned tribunal review of an assessment of
compensation, and Parekaiura Parekura, where compensation was determined
by specialist ‘courts’. Even if the right of VCAT review is
characterised as ‘administrative’,
therefore, we can see no
principled basis for distinguishing appeals to courts and other rights of appeal
or review on the suggested
basis.
55 The applicants
submitted that the more relevant distinction was that drawn in the cases between
an action to recognise an existing
right and an ability to take advantage of an
enactment so as to have a right created. The present case was said to be of the
former
kind because the issue was how to characterise past events and what
consequences should attach to that characterisation. The ‘right’
to
seek VCAT review, being a right to pursue a rehearing, was said to be of the
same character. Again, this distinction is not especially
helpful in the
present context. As in Esber and the related cases, the right here is
the very right of review itself, not any right that may be recognised or
acquired in that
process. But if the distinction is to be drawn, a disciplinary
case is closer to the former than the latter
category.
56 In our view there is therefore no
basis, in the distinctions which have been drawn in the authorities, for
treating this case any
differently to Colonial
Sugar.
57 Finally, the primary judge referred to
this Court’s decision in Felman v Law Institute of
Victoria,[38] in which it
was held that the Law Institute of Victoria had, after commencing a proceeding
for orders restraining the defendant from
practising as a solicitor, a right to
have the Court determine that proceeding. The judge accepted that it would
follow that the
stewards had a right to have the RAD Board hear and determine
the charges against the applicants in this case. We agree. It likewise
follows, in our view, on the authority of the Colonial Sugar line of
cases, that the parties to the proceeding before the RAD Board had a right to
engage the former review procedure in VCAT
in respect of the decision of that
Board once it was made.
58 In summary, principle
and authority support the application of Colonial Sugar to this case.
Accordingly, when the RAIDS Act commenced, the applicants had an accrued right,
within the meaning of s 14(2)(e) of
the ILA, to seek review in VCAT of any
decision adverse to their interests that the RAD Board might make in the
proceeding then pending.
59 The question then is
whether that right was preserved by operation of s 14(2) or whether the
RAIDS Act provided to the contrary.
Was there a contrary intention in the RAIDS Act? — proposed ground 2
60 Section 14(2) provides for the
preservation of rights to which it applies ‘unless the contrary intention
expressly appears’.
In the context of comparable legislation where the
word ‘expressly’ does not feature, the contrary intention must
appear
‘with reasonable
certainty’.[39] That will be
so if it appears ‘clearly’ or ‘plainly’ from the text
and context of the provisions in question
that they are intended to operate
inconsistently with the preservation of the relevant
right.[40] The word
‘expressly’, which features in s 14(2), does not mean to
exclude a contrary intention that appears only by
necessary implication. To the
contrary, ‘expressly’ means ‘plainly’,
‘clearly’, or ‘by
necessary
implication’.[41]
61 The
applicants submitted that the transitional provisions were silent as to the
availability of VCAT review of RAD Board decisions
made after 1 August 2019. It
was submitted that this silence could not be construed as evincing the requisite
intention to deny
review, especially when regard is had to extrinsic materials.
In particular, the statement of compatibility under s 28(2) of the
Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006 (‘the
Charter’) made no reference to the denial of rights of review; it spoke
only of ‘narrowing’ rights
of
appeal.[42]
62 The reason for doing this, as articulated in the
Second Reading Speech, was that VCAT was not well equipped with the necessary
expertise to deal with matters under the racing
codes.[43] Instead, the VRT, a
specialised racing tribunal, was being given powers previously available to VCAT
but not the RAD Boards. As
the VRT would now conduct hearings, merits review by
VCAT was no longer appropriate
63 It was submitted
that, in those circumstances, it would be anomalous to deprive those with
matters pending in a RAD Board of VCAT
review, especially by taking away even
the right to a review on penalty, which right was available in the case of
decisions of the
VRT (albeit that VCAT would be bound by the findings of fact
made by the VRT).
64 The applicants also submitted
that s 32 of the Charter, which requires the Court to interpret statutory
provisions, so far as it is possible to do so consistently with their
purpose,
in a way that is compatible with human rights, tells against identifying a
contrary intention. Reliance was placed on the
right to a fair hearing (being
the VCAT hearing) in s 24(1) of the
Charter.
65 The respondent contended that a
sufficiently clear contrary intention was evinced. The transitional provisions
in the RAIDS Act
were said to identify exhaustively the circumstances in which
review under the former s 83OH would continue to lie. Reference was
made to a
number of cases in which transitional provisions were held to have such an
operation. The respondent submitted that the
transitional provisions in this
case were to be construed having regard to the purpose stated in s 1(a)(iv)
of the RAIDS Act, namely
‘to limit the right of appeal to VCAT’ to
decisions of the VRT on a penalty imposed by the VRT.
66 The respondent conceded that it might seem
‘incongruous’ that persons in the applicants’ circumstances
were to
have no right of merits review, but submitted that the incongruity
diminished once it was appreciated that the applicants had a ‘fair
and
comprehensive’ first instance disciplinary hearing chaired by a judicial
officer and retained the right to appeal on a
point of law to the Supreme
Court,[44] and that, even under the
new regime, parties were entitled only to very limited VCAT review.
67 The respondent submitted that the extrinsic
materials were no substitute for the statutory text, which had comprehensively
addressed
the position regarding cases that were not completed when the new
regime took effect. It was said that if Parliament had wanted
to go further and
provide for persons in the applicants’ position to have VCAT review
rights, it would have been a simple matter
to say
so.[45]
68 In
our opinion, the RAIDS Act does not clearly or plainly provide that the right to
VCAT review which had accrued to the applicants
was not to be preserved by
operation of s 14(2) of the ILA. It is true that new ss 108–110
of the Racing Act contain provisions dealing with the position of certain
classes of person whose cases had yet to be completed when the new regime
commenced, and that persons with matters pending in a RAD Board were among those
persons. It is also true that the latter class
of cases was expressly addressed
by providing (in s 108) for the RAD Board to finish hearing and determining
the matter, and that no provision was then made for VCAT review of the resulting
determination. Instead, pt IIIBA is conspicuously absent from the
provisions whose operation is preserved by
s 108(2).
69 If that outcome sat comfortably
with the context and purpose of the RAIDS Act, then it may be that it could be
said to emerge with
sufficient plainness and clarity that the accrued right to
review was not preserved. But it does not. Instead, the outcome is anomalous.
It is anomalous because the result would be that persons in the
applicants’ position, and the stewards in such cases, would
never have
their cases heard by a body having full powers of inquiry (VCAT under the former
regime or now the VRT), despite it being
the policy of the Racing Act,
before and after the RAIDS Act, to provide for such hearings to occur. It is
even more anomalous because VCAT review would be denied
altogether, rather than
merely narrowed or limited, in cases such as the present, which would be the
only ones in which no VCAT review
in respect of penalty was available. These
anomalies are not lessened by the fact that, in common with all other persons
whose interests
are affected by decisions of a RAD Board or the VRT, the
applicants are entitled to seek judicial review in the Supreme Court; merits
review is a different avenue of relief entirely.
70 Viewed in this light, the irresistible
conclusion is that, far from being intended to be exhaustive, ss 108-110
are simply silent
as to the class of case of which the present is an example.
In that situation, the ‘gap’ is filled by s 14(2). It is
not a
matter of Parliament having not articulated its intention. It has done so,
through s 14(2).
71 The cases on which the
respondent relied are distinguishable because, in each of them, the context
pointed to the opposite conclusion.
First, in GF Heublein and Bro Inc v
Continental Liqueurs Pty
Ltd,[46] an application was made
to have a trade mark removed from the register for non-user. Before the
application was determined, the
legislation was repealed. The new statute
provided that trade marks registered under the repealed statute were deemed to
be registered
under the new one. The new statute made ‘somewhat different
provision’ for removal of trade marks for non-user, which
provision would
have been available in respect of the trade mark in question, such that it would
have been an ‘anomaly’
for the previous regime to have been
applicable as well. Ultimately, the High Court held that it was
‘conclusive’ that
there were ‘exhaustive’ transitional
provisions by which pending applications for registration of a trade mark or of
a person as the registered user of a trade mark were preserved under the former
statute.[47]
72 This
case dealt with a statutory register which was replaced with a new regime under
which different provision was made for removal
from the new register. The only
pending applications which were preserved were applications for entry onto the
register. Otherwise,
trade marks on the former register were deemed to be on
the new register. In circumstances where the possibility of removal from
that
new register for non-user was specifically addressed, without preserving pending
applications for such removal under the repealed
legislation, the transitional
provisions could more readily be seen to be exhaustive and to exclude any
accrued right to seek removal
under the former statute. Here, in contrast, the
anomaly arises on the opposite construction. The present case also lacks any
provision
equating to the deeming provision in Continental
Liqueurs.
73 The respondent also relied on
Helmer v State Coroner of
Victoria.[48] The question in
that case was whether an application for the reopening of an inquest under
s 59 of the Coroners Act 1985 could proceed after the repeal of that
Act. The repealing Act provided that, if the hearing of an application under
s 59 had begun,
the repealed Act continued to apply to that hearing.
Habersberger J held that an intention contrary to s 14(2) expressly
appeared
from that transitional provision, because, in effect, it addressed the
issue and made provision in terms more limited than s 14(2)
would have
done.[49]
74 Again,
that case differs from the present. The repealing statute provided for
continuation of applications where a hearing had
been commenced and it would
have been contrary to that provision to allow for the continuation of hearings
where no hearing had been
commenced. There is no equivalent in the RAIDS Act,
where nothing at all is said about VCAT review of decisions pending in the RAD
Boards. The identification of a contrary intention in Helmer also
involved no anomaly of the kinds identified earlier in the present case. It was
open to the plaintiff to pursue an application
under provisions of the new
legislation.
75 Helmer was followed in
Spear.[50] Again, a
plaintiff sought to rely on s 59 of the Coroners Act 1985 to reopen
an inquest. Here, however, not only had there been no hearing, but no
application had been made before the repeal of that
Act. Niall JA decided the
case on the basis that no relevant right had accrued. He went on to hold that,
in any event, to preserve
the ability to commence an application would
completely undermine the repeal of s 59. As such, the repeal of s 59
itself manifested
the necessary clear or plain intention to abrogate any right
to commence a proceeding under that
provision.[51] Moreover, the
transitional provision applied, consistently with Helmer, so as to be
exhaustive and to manifest an intention contrary to the application of
s 14(2) to any such right.[52]
Niall JA pointed out that it would be anomalous if a person whose proceeding was
awaiting hearing at the time of the repeal could
not have that proceeding heard,
but a person who had not commenced a proceeding before the repeal could still do
so and have their
matter heard.[53]
This case is again different, because in the present case the anomalous or
incongruous outcome is produced by reading the transitional
provisions as
exhaustive, rather than the reverse.
76 Finally, the
respondent relied on
Thomas.[54] In that case, a
builder subject to a disciplinary proceeding argued that he had an
‘accrued liability’ to disciplinary
action under the form of
legislation as it stood before the commencement of provisions amending the
Building Act 1993. Kennedy J held that there was no
‘liability’ of the kind asserted. But in any event, an express
contrary intention
under s 14(2) was disclosed by the amending legislation.
In particular, transitional provisions permitted an abolished tribunal to
continue and
determine an inquiry that had already been commenced and this was
to be taken as an exhaustive statement as to the circumstances
in which that
tribunal could continue to
function.[55] The case is similar
to those involving the coroner. To have held otherwise would have produced the
result that the abolished tribunal
could have heard disciplinary cases involving
all past conduct, even though the transitional provision referred only to
inquiries
already commenced. The case is likewise distinguishable from the
present one.
77 The respondent drew attention in
oral submissions to a passage in AIRC in which the plurality drew
attention to an ‘express transitional provision’ and said it was
‘properly to be regarded
as exhaustive in respect of the transitional
application of the repealed provisions to existing
proceedings.[56] The judgment went
on to say that an ‘exhaustive transitional provision of this nature leaves
no room’ for provisions
such as s 14(2) to operate. However, the
High Court is not to be taken as laying down any rule that transitional
provisions are invariably ‘exhaustive’
in this way. Where they are,
by definition, a contrary intention is manifested. But the anterior question,
whether the transitional
provisions leave room for the preservation of accrued
rights not expressly preserved, is the critical one. That is the question
of
statutory construction, decided in the ordinary way by reference to text,
context and purpose. Again, in AIRC, the plurality pointed to the
anomalous result which would have arisen had the transitional provision in
question not been construed
as
exhaustive.[57]
78 The
anomalies which would ensue from treating the transitional provisions in the
present case as exhaustive also tell against relying
on the purpose provision in
s 1(a)(iv) of the RAIDS Act as the respondent contended. That provision is
in terms too general to warrant
it governing the construction of the more
specific transitional provisions: the provision says nothing as to review of
decisions
made, or yet to be made, by RAD
Boards.
79 Contrary to the submissions of the
respondent and, to some extent, the reasons of the primary judge, this result
does not give
the extrinsic materials precedence over the statutory text. Nor
does it impermissibly fill a ‘gap’ in that text. As
mentioned at
the outset, the text must be construed having regard to s 14(2). The
question is whether the text, properly construed,
excludes the operation of
s 14(2). That question of construction cannot proceed without reference to
statutory context and purpose.
80 In the
circumstances, it is not necessary to consider the arguments based on the
Charter.
81 We note finally an argument to the
effect that the above construction leaves out of account the need for a
provision conferring
jurisdiction on VCAT. The short answer to that submission
is that s 14(2) addresses that matter by providing that the
‘investigation,
legal proceeding or remedy’, which includes the
review, may be ‘instituted, continued or enforced’ as if the
repealing
provisions of the RAIDS Act had not been enacted.
Conclusion
82 Leave to appeal should be granted and the appeal allowed. In place of the orders of the primary judge, the appeal to the Trial Division should be allowed and the decision of VCAT that it lacked jurisdiction should be set aside. We will hear the parties as to costs.
- - -
[1] Section 5G provided for hearings of the RAD Board for horse racing, and pt IIIA provided for the RAD Board for greyhound racing.
[2] Douglas v Harness Racing Victoria [2020] VSC 568 (‘Reasons’).
[3] The respondent, while not actively opposing VCAT’s jurisdiction, acted as contradictor in this Court.
[4] (2002) 213 CLR 485 (‘AIRC’).
[5] Ibid 492–3 [8].
[6] Ibid 492 [6]–[7] (citation omitted). See also Waterfront Place Pty Ltd v Minister for Planning (2019) 59 VR 556, 565–6 [36]–[37] (Maxwell ACJ, T Forrest and Emerton JJA) (‘Waterfront’).
[7] [1905] UKLawRpAC 29; [1905] AC 369 (‘Colonial Sugar’).
[8] Colonial Sugar Refining Co, Ltd v Irving [1904] St R Qd 18, 24–6 (Cooper CJ); cf 32–4 (Real J, dissenting).
[9] Ibid 372–3 (emphasis added).
[10] See [18] above; Racing Act s 110.
[11] [1992] HCA 20; (1992) 174 CLR 430 (‘Esber’).
[12] Ibid 449.
[13] [1961] UKPC 22; [1961] AC 901 (‘Ho Po Sang’).
[14] Ibid 922 (Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest for the Court).
[15] Esber [1992] HCA 20; (1992) 174 CLR 430, 439 (Mason CJ, Deane, Toohey and Gaudron JJ).
[16] [1961] UKPC 22; [1961] AC 901, 922.
[17] [1992] HCA 20; (1992) 174 CLR 430, 440–1 (citations omitted).
[18] (2002) 213 CLR 485, 503–5 [44]–[45] (Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ).
[19] Ibid 504–5 [50]; see also 528–9 [127]–[128], 531 [139] (Kirby J), 537 [157] (Callinan J).
[20] The Court appears to have been invited to do so: ibid 531 [137] (Kirby J).
[21] Farah Constructions Pty Ltd v Say–Dee Pty Ltd (2007) 230 CLR 89, 151 [134], 155 [147] (Gleeson CJ, Gummow, Callinan, Heydon and Crennan JJ).
[22] See, eg, Re Ross; Ex parte Australian Liquor, Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers’ Union [2001] FCA 770; (2001) 108 FCR 399, 414–15 [52]–[53], 416–17 [59] (Gray, Lee and Stone JJ); Yao v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs [1996] FCA 1792; (1996) 69 FCR 583, 590 (Black CJ and Sundberg J). But see also Repatriation Commission v Keeley [2000] FCA 532; (2000) 98 FCR 108, 131–2 [80] (Kiefel J).
[23] ADCO Constructions Pty Ltd v Goudappel (2014) 254 CLR 1, 15 [27] (French CJ, Crennan, Kiefel and Keane JJ) (‘ADCO’); Waterfront (2019) 59 VR 556, 564 [30] (Maxwell ACJ, T Forrest and Emerton JJA).
[24] See also Willmott v Kaufline [1909] ArgusLawRp 88; (1909) 9 CLR 36, 45 (O’Connor J, Isaacs J relevantly agreeing at 47); Australian Coal and Shale Employees Federation v Aberfield Coal Mining Co, Ltd [1942] HCA 23; (1942) 66 CLR 161, 185 (Starke J), 194 (Williams J).
[25] (1898) 29 SCR 99 (Tascherau J for the Court).
[26] [1912] NZGazLawRp 172; (1912) 31 NZLR 1074 (‘Parekaiura Parekura’).
[27] Ibid 1077.
[28] [1998] 2 NZLR 15, 18 (Keith J for the Court).
[29] [1991] 2 Qd R 210 (‘Sunskill’).
[30] Ibid 218 (Demack J agreeing at 211). See also Holts Hill Quarries Pty Ltd v Gold Coast City Council [2001] 1 Qd R 372, 376 (de Jersey CJ, Thomas JA and Helman J).
[31] (Full Court of the Supreme Court of South Australia, Cox, Lander and Bleby JJ, 9 December 1997) (‘Dolphin’).
[32] The separate reasons of Lander J and Bleby J were to similar effect.
[33] (2016) 126 SASR 374, 381–2.
[34] [2001] SASC 285; (2001) 80 SASR 214, 227 [98]–[99] (Perry J, Doyle CJ agreeing at 215 [1], Bleby J agreeing at 228 [110]).
[35] [2018] VSC 169 [56] (‘Spear’); Reasons [53]–[54].
[36] [2020] VSC 150
(‘Thomas’).
[37] Esber [1992] HCA 20; (1992) 174 CLR 430, 440 (Mason CJ, Deane, Toohey and Gaudron JJ); cf Repatriation Commission v Keeley [2000] FCA 532; (2000) 98 FCR 108, 131–2 [80] (Kiefel J).
[38] [1998] 4 VR 324; Reasons [48].
[39] ADCO (2014) 254 CLR 1, 15 [27] (French CJ, Crennan, Kiefel and Keane JJ), 22 [52] (Gageler J).
[40] Ibid 22 [52] (Gageler J).
[41] Mitchell v Latrobe Regional Hospital (2016) 51 VR 581, 593–6 [51]–[64] (Osborn and Beach JJA and J Forrest AJA).
[42] Victoria, Parliamentary Debates, Legislative Assembly, 20 June 2018, 2087, 2090 (Martin Pakula, Minister for Racing).
[43] Ibid 2091.
[44] This submission appeared to allude to judicial review.
[45] Treasurer of Victoria v Tabcorp Holdings Ltd [2014] VSCA 143, [82] (Maxwell P, Beach JA and McMillan AJA).
[46] [1962] HCA 66; (1962) 109 CLR 153 (‘Continental Liqueurs’).
[47] Ibid 161 (Dixon CJ, Taylor and Windeyer JJ).
[48] [2011] VSC 25 (‘Helmer’).
[49] Ibid [41] (Habersberger J).
[51] Ibid [92]–[93].
[52] Ibid [97]–[119].
[53] Ibid [108]–[109].
[55] Ibid [119]–[126].
[56] (2002) 213 CLR 485, 509–10 [65] (Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ).
[57] Ibid 510 [67].
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/vic/VSCA/2021/128.html