Brennan, F. v Enfield, J.D.

Case

[1985] FCA 361

31 Jul 1985

No judgment structure available for this case.

BETG.EEM :

FRANK ERENNAN

Applicant

,-

l

AND:

J O H N DAVID

ENFIELD

First Respondent

P-mma HAERIS. RAY GALLAGHEX

and ANCELA

XENDAL

Second Respondents

PETER STEPHEN C-ITLENSKI. JOHN

VINCENT MONAGHAN and G P ! X

GDREON GLENN

Third Respondents

MINTJTE OF ORDEF?

.-

JUDGE MAKING ORDER

: Neaves J.

-

-

DATE OF ORDER

:

31 July 1985

WHERE M.DE

: Canberra

THE COURT DRDFRS THAT:

1.

The decision of

the Promotions Appeal Committee

constituted by the second respondents made on

25

J u l y 1984 under sub-section 50(3A1 of the Public

Service Act 1922 disallowing the appeal by the

C

2 .

2. The decision of the

Public

Service

Board

constituted by the third respondents made on

3

July 1984

under sub-section SO(10) of the said

Act confirminu

the

provisional

promotion of

Peter Noble Gulld he

ser aside.

3 .

The appeal bp

the

applicant

against

the

provisional promotion

of

Peter Noble Guild be

treated as an appeal on the ground

of

equal

efficiency and seniority and be heard by a

Promotions

Appeal

Committee

constituted

by

persons other than the second respondents.

4. The application be otherwlse dismissed.

5. The respondents pay one half of the applicant's

costs of the application excluding any costs

relatinu to the hearin? on 30 May 1985.

l

Note:

Settlement and entry

of orders is dealt with in

Order 36 of the Federal

Court, Rules.

4

EETTEELI :

FRANK EREblIxIAIJ

Applicant

JOHN

fiKQID EMFIELD

I

Flrst Respondent

PAMELA HARRIS, RAY GALLACHER

and ANGEL?. KmlPAL

Second Respondencs

P E W . STEPHEN WILENSKI,

JOHN

VINCENT MONAGHAN and

GRAHAI-l

GORDDM GLENN

nird Respondents

On 3 May 1985

I announced the conclusions which I had

reached upon the application bp Frank Brennan

("the applicant")

under the Administrati:re Ijecisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977

for an order of review

in respect of decislons relating to the

promotlon under the Public Service

Act

1922 of Peter Noble

Guild

to an office

of

Clerk.

Class

11. Third

Division,

Registrar's Office. Canberra.

a position within the Policy

Frogram Co-ordination Dlvision of the Department

of Territorlcs

I

-.

J

I

In m

far a5 the applicatlon souuht an order settinu

aside the decision of

.Trsrhn David Enflzld. the first respondent.

under sub-section 50(1) of the P u b l i c Servlce Act 1922 ("the Act") promoting Mr Guild provisimally to fill the vacancy that had occurred In that office I held that, the application falled.

-4nokher of kin? decisions in relation

CO whlch an order

of review

was souaht was

a decisiun of

the Promotions Appeal

Committee constituted by

Famela Harris, Ray

Gallacrher

and

Aflarela Kendal. the second respondents, under sub-section

S O ( R A )

Of the

Act disallowing the appeal

by

th2 applicant against Mr

Guild's provisional promotion.

In relation

t o that decislon I

concluded that none of the ?rounds sec out

in the amended

application

filed on behalf

of

the

applicant

had

been

established.

I

I then went on to consider the further ground added

bp

leave durlng the course

of

the hearing, namely that the

decision of the

Promotions

Appeal

Committee

was

reached

otherwise than in

conformity

with

the

requirements

of

sub-section SO(8A) of the

Act

construed

in

its

content

l

includinu. in particular. sub-section

5 0 ( 6 ) .

In relation

t o

that qrnund I concluded that, notwithstanding that the applicant had Iclaimed that he was superior in efficiency t o Mr

i

.

3 .

Guild for the subject office. it was the riuty of the Promotions

Appeal

Committee

to

make

appropriate enquiries Into

the

!

question whether the

provlrional pknmotee or the applicant. xas

, I .*

more enticllsd. t o - promotinn r o tt-tv ?lacant office’fz&

to

. -5

”+

determine the a p p e a l

w c o r d m x l y .

lc bcln? commnn around that

the

.Ip?licant had

g r s d t e r

j en io r i tp than

tlr

Guild. h+

%as

mtl t l ed t o mcceed

In his appeal

i f , ~ f k c

making

f u l l

enquiries into the claims che plrties, the committee was of

opinlon that the 3pplicant was euual in efficiency to M r Guild for promotion t o the vacant o f f ice. i thcn pointed to the circumstancs that the Promotions Appeal Committee had expressed

its conclusion in terms

that the applicant had not demonstrated

that he

had superior efficiencll and that;

the conclusion as

so

expressed did not. In loglc. exclude the possibility that

the

committee was of the view that the

applicant and Mr Guild were

of equal efficiency for the vacant office, it being unable to

choose between them on that account.

Having regard to the circumstance that.

the pomt had

not been raised in

the original dpplication to the Court filed

on 17 September 1984 or

in the amended application filed on 15

January 1985 but was a

ground added by leave during

the course

l

of the hearing.

I considered that the appropriate course was to

make no final order in the matter

at that staqe but to adjourn

the

hearing

for

a short

period

to

enable

the

second

respondents. if they were so advised. to place material before

I

S .

Each of

the jecond respondents filed

.an affidavit

I

dealinu with their deliberations clpon the

appeal and each was

cross-examined on that affidavit.

I am satlsfled thac each of

the witnesses was frank in the answers Tiven to the questions

.asked

and that there

had

been

no

prior

consultatlnn

or

collaboration between them

as to the evidence they would qive.

The picture that emerge5

from the evidence is that the

commlttee did no% make any decision upon the question whether

the applicant's efficienc:J for the vacant Infficr was

equal to

that of Flr Guild. -4

rindinu to that effect. combined with the

applicant's seniority. would have entitled him

t o

succeed on

his appeal. The committee considered that the only question

which it had to determine was whether the applicant was

superior in efficiency to

Mr Guild for the vacant office and it

decided that question decisively against the applicant. The

committee took the

view that that was

the only question for its

decision because of the insistence

by

the applicant that that

was the issue upon which e wished the appeal

t o he determined.

As I said in the reasons

for judqment previously delivered, the

committee's approach was clearly understandable having reqard

to the applicant's conduct. but.

the result. is that the committee

failed to determine the question which. in the final analysis.

was the question which

the statute Icommitted to it, namely

5 .

-.

whether the provisional .prnmotee or the, applicant waz mdre

entitled to prombtian to the

vacant Office.

to r a r ry out the dut7 that va,j entrusted to it by the statute.

In ordmary circums:inct?s

such a conclusion would lead t o an

order ssttina aside

the decision of the cmnmittee .md the

decision of the

Pub l i c

Service Eoard coni’irminu

Mr

Guild‘s

provisianal

promotion

and

directing

that

the

appllcant’s

s p p e a l , treated as an appeal on the qrsund of equal efflciency

and seniority. be re-heard. However.

for the respondents it

was submitted that, in all the circumstances, the Court should

exercise

its

dlscrrtion

to

deny

relief

to

the

applicant.

Counsel

nubmitted

that,

althouqh

the

committee

did

not

collectively determine the issue. the evidence established

that

each of the second respondents had individually formed the view

that Mr

Guild was of superior efficiency to the applicanr. for

the vacant office

so that it was clear Ghat the result of their

deliberations would have been had those deliberations taken

place.

This approach has

a certam Attractiveness as the

I

evidence of the second respondents supports the conclusion that

each

had individually formed the view

that. Mr Guild was

superior

efficiency

n

t o

the

applicant.

However,

notwlthstandlnq this superficial attractiveness

I

think it

Would not be appropriate to exercise my discretion against

n.

the wmmltt?e Cel~bec,~te

upon khe luestim wher-her ne was of

cquai efflcj.enc:J to Mr C u l l d . ~t does not seem t o be 3 proper

-

3ubstitute for that deliberation far the C a u r t now t o conclude

what the result

of thac dellberation would ha7e been.

The decision of the second respondent; t o disallow the

appeal by the appllcant aqainst the provisional promotion of

Mr

Gulld and the decision of the thlrd respondents confirming that

provisional promotion are, therefore. set aside. I order that

the appeal by the applicant be treated as an appeal on the qround of equal efficiency and seniority and be heard by a Promotions Appeal Committee constituted bp persons other than

the second

respondents.

The applicaclon

is

therwise

dismissed.

On the question of costs.

I

have had regard to the

circumstance that the applicant did not succeed on any of the

grounds taken In the application filed

on 17 September l984 or

in the amended application filed on 15

January l985 and that,

in relatlon to the grounds alleging serious impropriety. no

material was placed before

the Court to support the claims

made.

I have also taken into account. that

It was larTely. if

not solely, as a result of the applicant's own conduct that the

Promotions Appeal Committee adopted the

roursc which it did and

which led it into

e r m r .

I

note. further. that

the hearlnq

that was fixed by sgreement

for

30

Map

1985 was

l a r g e l y

abor t ive

because

the

a p p l i c a n t

was

not

hen

ready

to

p roceed .

Tlkinq

thorje

matters

i n t o

a c c o u n t ,

I

t h i n k

the

a p p r o p r i a t e

order f o r

costs is

that the respondents

pay

one

half of the

a p p i i c a n t ' s

c o s t s

e r c l u d i n c r

any

c o s t s

r e f e r a b l e

r;o

che

hear

in?

on 39 May l sR5.

I

c e r t i f y

that t h i s

a n d

the

p recedinu

6 n q e s are

a t r u e copy of

the Reasons

for JudTment h e r e i n of

the

Honourable

Mr

J u s t i c e

~~

Neaves .

Associa te

Dated: 31 Ju1:r 1985

I

I

Actions
Download as PDF Download as Word Document


Cases Citing This Decision

0

Cases Cited

0

Statutory Material Cited

0