You are here:
AustLII >>
Databases >>
Administrative Appeals Tribunal of Australia >>
2010 >>
[2010] AATA 1050
[Database Search]
[Name Search]
[Recent Decisions]
[Noteup]
[Download]
[Context] [No Context] [Help]
Froemmcke and Secretary, Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations [2010] AATA 1050 (25 November 2010)
Last Updated: 24 December 2010
Administrative Appeals Tribunal
DECISION AND REASONS FOR DECISION [2010] AATA 1050
ADMINISTRATIVE APPEALS TRIBUNAL )
) No 2010/4437
GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISION
|
|
|
Re
|
|
Applicant
|
And
|
SECRETARY, DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, EMPLOYMENT AND WORKPLACE
RELATIONS
|
Respondent
DECISION
Tribunal
|
Senior Member Bernard J McCabe
|
Date 25 November 2010
Place Brisbane
Decision
|
The Tribunal does not have jurisdiction to
hear the application.
|
..............................................
Senior Member
CATCHWORDS
HIGHER EDUCATION LEARNING – whether
Tribunal has jurisdiction to hear the application – no confirmed, varied
or set aside
decision for the Tribunal to consider – no
jurisdiction.
Higher Education Support Act 2003 (Cth), ss 209-5, 209-10, 212-1
Aged Care Standards and Accreditation Agency Ltd v Administrative Appeals
Tribunal [2009] FCA 1514
REASONS FOR DECISION
|
Senior Member Bernard J McCabe
|
|
|
- The
Tribunal decided on 25 November 2010 that it did not have jurisdiction to deal
with Ms Froemmcke’s application for review.
I gave oral reasons for that
decision at the conclusion of the telephone hearing of jurisdiction. The
respondent subsequently asked
for written reasons for the decision. I have
prepared these written reasons from my notes.
- Ms
Froemmcke’s application for review relates to a decision of James Cook
University on behalf of the respondent made on 26
March 2009. In that decision,
the University decided not to re-credit Ms Froeemcke’s Student Learning
Entitlement and remit
her HECS-HELP debt under s 79-1 of the Higher Education
Support Act 2003 (“the Act”) in respect of three subjects that
were commenced during the relevant study period. Ms Froemmcke claims she
withdrew from the subjects before the applicable deadline but the University was
not satisfied this was so. She was subsequently
informed in writing that her
application had been declined. She was advised that could seek internal review
of the decision within
42 days of receiving the letter.
- There
is some confusion over the precise dates when the 42 day period began and ended
because the letter appears to have been incorrectly
dated. But that was
ultimately irrelevant because Ms Froemmcke did not seek reconsideration of the
decision until 30 August 2010,
some 16 months after the date on which she
probably received the decision.
- The
University declined to reconsider the earlier decision given the delay. In its
letter dated 28 September 2010, the University
added that Ms Froemmcke could
seek a review of its decision before the Tribunal.
- Notwithstanding
the University’s advice that Ms Froemmcke could seek a review in the
Tribunal, the respondent says there is
no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal.
REVIEWABLE DECISIONS
- The
Tribunal only has power to deal with reviewable decisions. Section 212-1
of the Act provides that a reviewable decision in this case is “a
reviewable decision that has been confirmed,
varied or set aside under s 209-5
or 209-10.” There is no doubt that a decision not to re-credit some or all
of a person’s
Student Learning Entitlement is a reviewable decision, but s
212-1 contemplate a further step before it can be taken up before the
Tribunal:
the decision must be confirmed, varied or set aside upon reconsideration,
whether on the decision-maker’s own motion
(s 209-5) or at the request of
the applicant (s 209-10).
- In
this case, the University did not reconsider the decision under s 209-10 because
the request was made out of time. The respondent
says that, as a result, there
is no confirmed, varied or set aside decision for the Tribunal to consider. The
decision-maker merely
refused an extension of time, and decisions in relation to
extensions of time are not listed as a reviewable decision under the Act.
- The
Federal Court’s decision in Aged Care Standards and Accreditation
Agency Ltd v Administrative Appeals Tribunal [2009] FCA 1514 reminds us that
the Tribunal must conscientiously observe the provisions in a statute which
confer jurisdiction. I accept that the
provisions referred to by the respondent
have the contended effect. It follows the Tribunal does not have jurisdiction to
deal with
Ms Froeemcke’s application.
CONCLUSION
- The
Tribunal does not have jurisdiction to deal with the application for review.
I certify that the 9 preceding paragraphs are a true copy of the
reasons for the decision herein of Senior Member Bernard J McCabe.
Signed:
...........................................................................
Patrick MacDonald
Date of Hearing 25 November 2010
Date of Written Reasons 22 December 2010
Applicant
Self-represented
Solicitor for the Respondent Ms R De Hossen, Department of Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations
AustLII:
Copyright Policy
|
Disclaimers
|
Privacy Policy
|
Feedback
URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/AATA/2010/1050.html