ACAT’s Missing Powers; Episode 1: The Phantom Jurisdiction

Many of us grew up on the original ACAT trilogy and may view these new episodes as somewhat of a hollow imitation. But the future waits for no one, time and tide, the young will eat the old, whatever the expression is that means I’m going to do it anyway, so buckle up.

To reminisce, treat yourself to one or all of the original ACAT trilogy first: A New Limit, The Counterclaim Strikes Back and Return of the Enforcement Officer.

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ACAT Jurisdiction – Ends at the Border

By virtue of the ACAT Act, ACAT has first jurisdiction in many matters including disputes under $25,000, residential tenancy disputes, fencing and boundary disputes, administrative review, energy and water and mental health assessments. Importantly, for reasons we will shortly discuss, first jurisdiction does not equal exclusive jurisdiction. The enacting legislation for the ACAT purported to set up a system that diverted a large proportion of matters, mostly minor and administrative matters out of the court system and into a specialist jurisdiction.

A recent decision out of the High Court has established some pretty strict limitations on the purported jurisdiction of tribunals all over Australia.  Essentially, that jurisdiction ends at the border, regardless of what the enacting legislation purports to do.

Recently in Burns v Corbett [2018] HCA 15 the High Court held that New South Wales’ civil and administrative tribunal, the NCAT, cannot purport to exercise jurisdiction over residents of other states or territories. The Burns decision effectively confirms Canberra’s status as a powerful city-state only.

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Kiefel CJ, Bell and Keane JJ in the majority opinion:

  1.  The first issue in these appeals is whether the Commonwealth Constitution precludes the Parliament of a State from conferring jurisdiction in respect of a matter between residents of different States within s 75(iv) of the Constitution on a tribunal which is not one of the “courts of the States” referred to in s 77 (“the Implication Issue”). If that issue were to be resolved in the negative, the further issue would arise as to whether a State law which purports to confer jurisdiction on such a tribunal in respect of such a matter is rendered inoperative by virtue of s 109 of the Constitution on the basis that it is inconsistent with s 39 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) (“the Judiciary Act“) (“the Inconsistency Issue”).
  2. The Implication Issue should be resolved in the affirmative. Considerations of constitutional text, structure and purpose compel the conclusion that a State law that purports to confer jurisdiction with respect to any of the matters listed in ss 75 and 76 of the Constitution on a tribunal that is not one of the courts of the States is inconsistent with Ch III of the Constitution, and is, therefore, invalid.

The High Court’s reasoning appears to only apply to natural persons and not corporations (Australasian Temperance and General Mutual Life Assurance Society Limited v Howe (1922) 31 CLR 290).

Howe’s Case and several others have affirmed that the reference in s75(iv) to ‘resident’ is a reference only to natural persons. The ‘great dissenter’, Justice Kirby predicted in 2003 that the narrow definition of natural persons would be proven restrictive over time. In British American Tobacco Australia Ltd v Western Australia (2003) 217 CLR 30, 72–3 [109]–[110] Kirby J wrote:

The decisions establishing that principle involved a remarkable narrowing of the constitutional language. In my view, it is a narrowing unjustified by the text or the context. In many ways it is reminiscent of judicial holdings in Australia and elsewhere at the same time to the effect that a ‘‘person’’, when referred to in legislation (for example for the purpose of admission to professional practice) did not include a woman. The only justification for such a narrow interpretation of s 75(iv) of the Constitution was the expressed judicial fear about an extension of the jurisdiction of this Court that might result in an inundation of work that this Court could not easily deflect to other courts in the views then held concerning the obligation of this Court to discharge a jurisdiction conferred on it by the Constitution.

In a proper case, this Court should reconsider the early determination that corporations, including statutory corporations, cannot be ‘‘residents’’ of a different State for the purposes of s 75(iv) of the Constitution. Self-evidently, corporations are, and were at the time when the Constitution was made, legal persons. They were then, and still are, frequent litigants in the courts. Their existence was contemplated by the Constitution itself. Although in 1985 in Crouch v Commissioner for Railways (Q) this Court declined to reopen its early holding on the meaning of s 75(iv), the decision is open to the strongest doubt and criticism. In my view it is wrong. One day this Court will say so.

Earlier Limitations

Other jurisdictional limits have already been addressed: for example, VCAT had earlier ruled against their own jurisdiction in relation to serving process in foreign countries. In Gluyas v Google Inc [2010] VCAT 540, an Australian sought to bring an action against Google for not taking down an autism hate-blog based out of the United States. VCAT dismissed the application for other reasons but did note specifically that VCAT had no powers to effect process outside of Australia. Regardless of how well the legislation is written, it is likely the same situation here.

Solutions

Victoria presents one interesting solution to the problem. There is a little-known provision in Victoria whereby proceedings can be issued in both a Court and VCAT. The President of VCAT is a Supreme Court Judge and Vice Presidents of VCAT are County Court Judges, so there are already judges who sit in both jurisdictions. Their legislation allows for special appointments whereby a Judge could continue hearing a VCAT case, out of the jurisdiction, and also wear the hat of a Judge.

The ACT position of jumping jurisdictions is somewhat more complicated.

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Any party anywhere, international or interstate, can still consent to the jurisdiction. However, it appears that the only feasible solution for someone looking to bring an action in the ACT, where one party is interstate, is to bring the action in the ACT Supreme Court. The situation does get complicated though, despite the Supreme Court clearly holding inherent jurisdiction over any ACAT dispute, there is no ability to transfer proceedings. An ACAT dispute can have a question referred to the Supreme Court (s84) and an ACAT decision can be appealed to the Supreme Court (s86). But the Supreme Court would likely have to dismiss the proceedings on the basis that the original process was deficient for lack of jurisdiction.

Filing a matter in the ACAT for a natural person costs $338, filing in the Supreme Court costs $1,669. There is no specialist fee for ACAT referrals or for matters that cannot be started in the ACAT because of this deficiency.

For example, if you have a $2,000 bond, your landlord has unjustly kept it, but your landlord is based in Sydney, then you have no option but to file in the Supreme Court for $1,669.

The good news is that if you are in the right, rule 1722 would mean you are entitled to 100% of costs, as opposed to the ACAT presumption of 0% costs. Of course, if you are incorrect, then a simple bond dispute could lead to thousands of dollars of costs if, as a punter, you happen to get the law wrong.

The ACT is particularly susceptible to this problem given the size of the Territory and the increased likelihood that parties to transactions will be based in NSW or further afield. Essentially, the stakes are hugely raised the second you step into the Supreme Court jurisdiction, which is entirely against the original purpose of the ACAT.

This is a matter for the legislature but if I may,  I humbly propose three solutions:

  1. Create a low-cost filing fee with a presumption for no costs in the ACT Supreme Court to catch those cases that cannot find jurisdiction or where consent jurisdiction is lacking – this one is possibly as simple as allowing for the rules or even a practice direction to state that upon application the Court will apply the rules and practices of the ACAT (+the fee/costs structure);
  2. Amend the ACAT structure to have Supreme Court judges appointed as Presidential Members to create a new field of “two-hat” law, previously not in existence in the ACT (but at least Victoria has precedence to assist);
  3. Two Words: Singular Jurisdiction. Abolish the ACAT. Abolish the Magistrates Court. Everything is the Supreme Court only. We would have singular rules and simply have different levels of judicial officers hearing cases. Members can sit as Registrars when needed, Judges can sit as Magistrates on bail decisions etc. In a jurisdiction our size, there are great advantages to this approach. Massive administrative savings would be realised and the same rules can remain in place to dictate which officer should deal with each case and handle the appropriate costs positions and so on.

Point number 3 requires its own post, but if you catch me at the pub and have a spare hour or two I’ll do my best to convince you of the benefits of a sole jurisdiction. By the way, we will shortly have a big shiny new Court precinct building that would serve a single destination well, but I’ll also be the first to admit that this is a bit of a pipe dream…for now.

The High Court decision in Burns has huge implications for a jurisdiction the size of the ACT and once again I find myself writing about the ACAT facing difficult foundational issues that have existed since inception but are one-by-one coming to the fore, with real implications for those with cause to seek ACAT’s intervention.

ACAT’s Missing Powers; Episode 5 – The Counterclaim Strikes Back

In one of the prequels I updated y’all on ACAT recently having its civil jurisdiction updated from $10,000 to $25,000. Like all prequels  the updated ACAT powers neglected key elements that are fundamental to helping ACAT perform coherently with the other elements of the wider system. (with the exceptions of Batman Begins, Casino Royale and Temple of Doom; Rise of Planets of the Apes did not work and I won’t hear differently).

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The ACAT’s civil jurisdiction limit means that any case commenced in the ACAT must be for a claim of less than $25,000. Various requirements exist for the calculation of that amount such as no interest to be included unless under contract, though this is arguable once again due to limited wording. As a claim for interest under a contract or agreed rate is really a contractual debt and not strictly interest on an unpaid amount, but maybe i’ll cover this later (The Interest Awakens, Rogue Interest…leave it with me).

Totally Not A Recent Case

So let’s say Joe Alow starts a matter for $10,001 against Joe Blow in ACAT for building work defects. Joe Alow has no choice because his amount is within the new ACAT jurisdiction. Joe Blow as the builder is owed $25,001 under the final contract payment.

Joe Blow would have normally been allowed to commence his claim in the Magistrates Court and would therefore have been allowed legal costs for his troubles. Even if Joe Blow agreed that there was about $10,001 in set-offs, he still could have commenced in the Magistrates Court and have been allowed costs because, giving each party full credit, should still result in a payment of $15,000 in his favour. So Joe Blow would get his costs, which for a matter such as this could be anywhere between $8,000 to $18,000, if not lots more or a little less, depending on the law firm and depending on the litigation philosophy of each lawyer.

What’s the Problem?

Well, because Joe Alow commenced first in the ACAT,  Joe Blow is required to bring all claims in the same action that are related to the same material facts thanks to a genuinely great principle called Anshun Estoppel. Anshun Estoppel is a principle cemented in the case Port of Melbourne Authority v Anshun Pty Ltd. The principle essentially states that, to save the parties, the courts and the public, time and money, litigation should be conducted as efficiently as possible with similar matters being dealt with concurrently. Which means that if you have matters and arguments against the same parties relating to the same material facts or matters, then those should all be brought up in the same case. If you fail to bring it up, you may be estopped (stopped) from raising it later.

This is a great principle brought about by good intentions, but then the legislature accidentally gets in the way.

So What Happens to Joe Blow?

Joe Blow is required to present his counter-claim in the ACAT action but has now brought a counter-claim that exceeds the ACAT jurisdiction. Which means that ACAT is not jurisdictionally competent to hear the claim.

Joe Blow’s claim could be transferred to the Supreme Court under s83 of the ACAT act, however this requires the parties to jointly apply to ACAT to transfer that matter. No other power of ACAT exists to transfer matters between jurisdictions. BY CONSENT ONLY.

Alternatively, the ACAT Act allows parties to drop any portion of a claim, without surrendering the right, that is over the jurisdictional limit under s21 of the ACAT act, however once again, this requires that party’s consent. So if a party refuses, there is no mechanism for resolution.

There are additional inherent powers of the Supreme Court to accept an application to transfer the matter to the Supreme Court, but nothing on the books. But even if this were to occur, the Supreme Court has the exclusive jurisdiction of $250,001 and above for civil claims, so Joe Blow may face an adverse costs order for wasting the Supreme Courts time with a claim that essentially zeros out at $15,000.

Further, s266A of the Magistrates Court Act specifically prohibits bringing claims that should be commenced in the ACAT due to the limit of $25,000.

So within the world of this legislative maze, withholding consent can be the nuclear option in litigation. How lame.

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Fabian ACAT tactics

So if you are Joe Alow, and know that you will go down on the claim of $25,001 because it’s a legitimate claim, you could start a smaller claim first on a questionable basis and refuse to consent to any transfer. The matter is then permanently trapped in ACAT which has no power to adjudicate on it or transfer it to a higher court, or even award costs if it eventually goes ahead and you are unsuccessful. Joe Blow would have to drop any portion of his claim over $25,000. There are ways for the ACAT to award costs in very limited circumstances, but you could totally avoid the stage that this is even accessible by refusing to consent.

Alternatively if you are Joe Blow and doubt the veracity of your $25,001 claim then you could do the converse and refuse to consent and let Joe Alow rack up costs chasing you.

Tactically, this is the perfect time to order your lawyers to turn the dial to all-stop and allow the other side to rack up maximum costs, in a no-costs jurisdiction, until a subtle “walk-away” offer becomes amicable to both sides.

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Fixes

This is insane. Both Joes are bound by law to bring their claims in their jurisdictions. Both Joes are bound by law to keep their claims in ACAT and both Joes are bound by law to never have their claims resolved if the other never concedes. Like a weird Byzantine, Schopenhauer, Kafka hybrid system. Scary stuff.

A simple legislative amendment would fix this and it could be as simple as: “new s21A: all claims or counter-claims that exceed the jurisdiction of the ACAT can be transferred to any court or tribunal the ACAT considers appropriate on either the application of either party or on the ACAT’s own initiative.”  Now I’m typing off the cuff here, but on the face of it, this would probably work. Ironically, any misapplication of a rule like this would result in an application to ACAT, but let’s start with small steps.

I’ve drafted legislation previously, so I sympathise with the position that a well-meaning, well-written law can lead to distorted outcomes. But given that matters have been filed that gave rise to this issue previously, it seems unacceptable that this wouldn’t have been fixed sooner.