becomes easy to treat the words: "whenever any officer r
is guilty," &., as amounting to no more than a statement of what the head of the branch must find before he punishes under the section. Where a tribunal is constituted for the determination of (N.S.W.)
matters of a given class, it is common to find liabilities which depend upon its determination stated absolutely, instead of in terms of its opinion, decision or judgment. This is common enough with judicial tribunals. For instance, when an offence is defined it is usual for an enactment to say " if any person does," &., and not " if any person is found by a court to have done," &. Yet the two expressions have the same result. It is less common with administrative tribunals, but it is natural that it should occur. Thus, according to the interpretation which I put upon sec. 82 as it applies to cases occurring after 22nd June 1936, it authorizes the head of a branch to discipline an officer whom, after notice of the charge, he finds guilty of misconduct or of breach of by-laws or regulations, but makes his decision subject to appeal to a board under sec. 87. The appeal must be brought within seven days of the date of the decision appealed against (sec. 91). It is, therefore, a necessary implication that the decision, that is, the dismissal, suspension or other punishment, shall be communicated to the officer. Indeed, the words of sec. 82, "dismiss or suspend him," "fine him and " reduce him in rank
or pay" describe acts which could hardly be considered as complete or effective unless brought to the knowledge of the officer dealt with. But it appears to me that it is not enough to inform him that he has been, for instance, dismissed or suspended. He must be made aware that he has been SO dealt with on account of misconduct, or breach of by-laws or regulations, or in the purported exercise of the powers conferred by sec. 82. I do not mean that an express notice to that effect must be given, but that, in all the circumstances of the case, it must appear with sufficient certainty that the dismissal or removal is on account of something he has done or is supposed to have done,
SO that, if he knows his rights, he is made aware that he has an appeal and that he is not being removed from office, or relieved from duty, quite independently of sec. 82 or of the matters to which it