Skyring, Alan George v Telecom Australia

Case

[1984] FCA 391

18 Oct 1984

No judgment structure available for this case.

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JUDGMENT No. ......,........ ...

I ..,

.,....,.. -

IN THE FEDERAL COURT or AUSTRALIA

)

DUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY

)

GENERAL DIVISION

1

QLD

G105 of 1984

I

BETWEEN :

ALAN GEORGE SKYRING

Applicant

kND :

TELECOM AUSTRALIA

Respondent

O R D E R

JUDGE MAKING ORDER:

SPENDER J.

DATE OF ORDER:

18 OCTOBER 1984

WHERE MADE:

BRISBANE

THE COURT ORDERS

THAT:

1. Application G105 of 1984 be refused.

2. Applicant pay Respondent's

costs to be

taxed.

IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

)

OUEENSLAND

DISTRICT

REGISTRY

1

GENERAL

DIVISION

)

QLD G105 of 1984

N

-

B

:

ALAN GEORGE SKYRING

Applicant

AND :

TELECOM AUSTRALIA

Respondent

SPENDER J.

18 OCTOBER 1984

EXTEMPORE REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

I assume for the purpose of this application that the

communication which is Exhibit

"A"

to Mr

Skyring's affidavit,

filed 9 October 1984, which is a letter dated

26 September 1984,

(which is the date upon which this application was filed), and/or

the conduct by the person responsible

for that letter constitutes

a

decision

to

which

the

Administrative

Decisions

(Judicial

Review) Act 1977

("the Act") applies.

I have listened to the confident submissions made by Mr

Skyring in relation to this matter, and shortly put, none of the grounds of his application are made out. It is not suggested by

him that there is anything biased

or mala fide in the dealings by

the officers of Telecom Australia. Essentially, what he frankly

asserts to be the reason for these various applications is his

2.

desire to chall~nge the money system, essentially on the grounds

of

claimed

infringement

of 5.115 of

the

Commonwealth

Constitution.

I refer

to

the

judgment

of

McPherson

J. in

the

Queensland Supreme Court in relation to an income tax

appeal

t

between Mr

Skyring and the Commissioner of Taxation (unreported

19 August 1983).

I adopt expressly the observations which appear

at p.3 of his Honour's judgment

-

l'...

some reference was made to 3.115 of the

Constitution and to the undesirability of the

printing,

issue

and

circulation

of

paper

money in which the taxpayer said he might

ultimately be obliged to pay the assessment

once this appeal failed, if it did. The

questlon whether or not

it is desirable to

return to the gold standard, to cease issuing

paper money

or to acknowledge any of the

varlous

forms

of

credit,

financing

and

banking of the kind that were referred to in

argument before me is, of course, a matter

entirely for Parliament and not for this

Court. In this Court the matter of

the law

governing

discharge

of

bligations

i

determined by the Currency Act 1965, 3.16 of

which prescribes what is legal tender in

Australia. That Act

binds

me.

It

is

certainly in no way affected by

5.115 of the

Constitution

which

creates

simply

a

prohlbition against the issuing of currency by State governments. Accordingly, no

problem will arise in relation to

a tender by

the taxpayer of a sufficient number of notes

and coins constituting legal tender within

s.16

of the Currency Act for the purpose of

discharging

his

l ability

under

the

assessment which has

issued.

I am, of

course, not concerned in any event with the

means

by

which

the

assessment

is to

be

discharged but only with the question of

whether it was properly made. However, I

have mentioned the argument on the currency

question simply because it was one that was

raised before me.

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The Act binds me equally as it does McPherson J.

It is

3.

I

certainly in no way affected by

3.115 of the Constitution, which

creates simply a prohibition against the issuing of currency by

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State governments.

In my view, the circumstances of s.78B notices under the

Judiciary Act 1903 do not apply here, and what has in fact

occurred is that the taxpayer, or another person, his wife, has

tendered a sufficient number

of notes or coins constituting legal

tender within

5.16

of the Currency Act 1965 to enable the

telephone service not to be disconnected.

In this particular case, even assuming that a relevant

!

decision ~7as made, no grounds exist upon which that decision can

properly be challenged under the Act in this Court.

The same broad complaint, however,

was addressed by Mr

Skyring to the Full Court of the Federal Court in the appeal from

the judgment of McPherson

J., and I

have been referred to the

judgment of Sir Reginald Smithers

in respect of that matter. Its

relevance to this present application is self-evident.

It appears from the affidavit

of

Mr Fitzsimon that the

telephone account in question has been paid. In truth the

submissions before me were directed to the raising of the

question of the currency system and the implications, if any,

of

3.115 of the Constitution on that matter. For my

own part, the

position I s as was indicated in the judgment

of McPherson J., and

no reviewable error appears in respect of application number Qld

G105 of 1984.

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4.

l

In the circumstances, I order that the application be

refused with costs to be taxed.

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Areas of Law

  • Administrative Law

Legal Concepts

  • Jurisdiction

  • Standing

  • Judicial Review

  • Natural Justice & Procedural Fairness

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