South Blackwater Coal Limited v Chief Executive Officer, Australian Customs Service

Case

[2000] FCA 1398

4 OCTOBER 2000


FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

South Blackwater Coal Limited v Chief Executive Officer, Australian Customs Service [2000] FCA 1398

ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – judicial review under ss5 and 6 of Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 (Cth) and section 39B (1A) of the Judiciary Act 1903 of a decision and conduct leading to the decision of the CEO Australian Customs Service not to make a determination under s273 of the Customs Act 1901 that item 45 of Schedule 4 (relating to concessions for customs duty) to the Customs Tariff Acts 1987 and 1995 applied to certain equipment for a colliery project – Ministerial policy requiring demonstration of absence of Australian manufacturing capacity – further Ministerial policy against application for concessions being made after commitment to importation – what constituted an application for concessions – whether application retrospectively made – whether rejection of application occurred without regard to merits – construction of s273 – whether inconsistency of decision-making occurred.

WORDS AND PHRASES – Change of policy – onus of proof – unreasonableness

Khan v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (unreported Fed Ct of Aust 11 December 1987 Gummow J) applied
Bruce v Cole (1998) 45 NSWLR 16 applied
Surinakova v Minister for Immigration, Local Government and Ethnic Affairs (1991) 33 FCR 87 applied
Re Drake and Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1978-1986) 2 ALD 634 distinguished
Attorney General (NSW) v Quinn (1989-1990) 170 CLR 1 at 35-37 applied
BHP Direct Reduced Iron v Chief Executive Office Australian Customs (1988-9) 55 ALD 665 distinguished
Minister for Aboriginal Affairs v Peko-Wallsend (1986) 162 CLR 24 applied
Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 183 CLR 273 at 290 applied
Enichem Anic Srl v Anti-Dumping Authority (1992) 39 FCR 458 at 469 applied
Save The Showground For Sydney Inc v The Minister for Urban Affairs and Planning (1997) 95 LGERA 33 applied
ACI Operations Pty Ltd v CEO Customs (1998-9) 53 ALD 86 at 91 applied
Swan Television and Radio Broadcasting Ltd v Australian Broadcasting Tribunal (1985) 8 FCR 291 cited
Drake v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1979) 46 FLR 409 at 420-2 distinguished
Abebe v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1999) 162 ALR 1 at 54 applied
Mohamed v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1998) 83 FCR 234 distinguished

SOUTH BLACKWATER COAL LIMITED v CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE

CONTI J
SYDNEY
4 OCTOBER 2000

FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

SOUTH BLACKWATER COAL LIMITED v CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE [2000]

Index to Judgment

Heading  Page

The Legislation  1

The 18 October 1993 Application  4

Government Statements Concerning Industrial Policy 1994-5  10

The 13 October 1995 Application  16

ACN 94/27 ACN 95/55 and ACN 95/74  19

ACN 96/32  26

ACN 98/22  30

Correspondence and Dialogue Between Coal and Customs 1997-8  33

The 20 July 1999 Application  42

Statement of Reasons  56

Policy and Merits Generally  60

Australian Content  68

The Inflexible Applicant of Policy  80

Retrospectivity  82

IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY

N 1518 OF 1999

BETWEEN:

SOUTH BLACKWATER COAL LIMITED (ACN 011 026 154)
APPLICANT

AND:

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE
RESPONDENT

JUDGE:

CONTI J

DATE OF ORDER:

4 OCTOBER 2000

WHERE MADE:

SYDNEY

THE COURT ORDERS THAT:

1.Application be dismissed.

2.The Applicant to pay the costs of the Respondent of the Proceedings.

Note:    Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the Federal Court Rules.


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY

N 1518 OF 1999

BETWEEN:

SOUTH BLACKWATER COAL LIMITED (ACN 011 026 154)
APPLICANT

AND:

CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER, AUSTRALIAN CUSTOMS SERVICE
RESPONDENT

JUDGE:

CONTI J

DATE:

4 OCTOBER 2000

PLACE:

SYDNEY

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

  1. This is an Application for Judicial Review of a decision of the Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Customs Service (“Customs”) to refuse to make a determination in favour of South Blackwater Coal Limited (“Coal”) under section 273 of the Customs Act 1901 (Cth) in respect of certain component parts of mining equipment imported into Australia for the purposes of Coal’s Kenmare Colliery Project, being componentry comprising thirteen (13) controlled start transmission units, to which I will refer as the subject units. The Application involves a complex series of events extending over a period of about six years, and I have found it necessary, having regard to the way in which Coal has presented its submissions, to trace those events in some detail.

    The Legislation

  2. The terms of section 273 are as follows :

    “273 Determinations

    (1)The CEO may determine, by instrument in writing, that, subject to the conditions, if any, specified in the determination, an item, or a proposed item, of a Customs Tariff that is expressed to apply to goods, or to a class or kind of goods, as prescribed by by-laws shall apply, or shall be deemed to have applied, to the particular goods specified in the determination.

    (2)The CEO may make a determination under the last preceding subsection for the purposes of an item, or a proposed item, of a Customs Tariff whether or not he has made a by-law for the purposes of that item or proposed item.

    (3)Where, under this section, the CEO determines that an item, or a proposed item, of a Customs Tariff shall apply, or shall be deemed to have applied, to goods, that item or proposed item shall, subject to this Part and to the conditions, if any, specified in the determination, apply, or be deemed to have applied, to those goods as if those goods were specified in a by-law made for the purposes of that item or proposed item and in force on the day on which those goods are or were entered from home consumption.”

    This section does not purport to limit the range of considerations open to Customs for the purpose of making, or declining to make, any such determination. The making or refusal of any such determination is discretionary: ACI Operations Pty Ltd v CEO Customs (1998-9) 53 ALD 86 at 91.

  3. The reference in section 273 to “CEO” is to the Chief Executive Officer of Customs. The expression “Customs Tariff” is defined by the Customs Act to mean “… an Act imposing duties of customs, and includes such an Act that has not come into operation.” At the time of commencement of the events narrated below, there was in force legislation of that description, namely the Customs Tariff Act 1987 (Cth). That Act underwent amendment in 1989 and 1991, and was replaced by the Customs Tariff Act 1995 (Cth), the operation of which commenced on 1 July 1996. The Customs Tariff (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 1996 (Cth), which also took effect on 1 July 1996, provided for saving and transitional provisions to apply to certain by-laws made under section 273 of the Customs Act, including the presently relevant By-law 45 which was framed in similar form under Schedule 4 to both the 1987 and 1995 Customs Tariff Acts. Schedule 4 has at all times provided for “Concessional Rates Of Duty” for goods imported into Australia on or after the respective dates of commencement. From and after 12 March 1991, Item 45 of Schedule 4 to the Customs Tariff Act 1987 stipulated as follows :

    “Goods designed for use in the mining and minerals processing industries, as prescribed by by-law.  Free”

    The Customs Tariff Amendment Act (No. 1) 1996, the operation of which commenced on 15 July 1996, substituted the following Item 45 as follows:

    “Capital equipment for use in the mining and resource processing industries, as prescribed by by-law.  Free”

    Such alteration was not material for present purposes. There is no dispute that the subject units constituted “capital equipment”.

  4. Section 10 of the Customs Tariff Act 1995 provides as follows :

    “(1)Unless the contrary intention appears, if the word “Free” is set out in Section 16 or 18 or in a rate column, that word is a rate of duty.

    (2)Unless the contrary intention appears, any words, or words and figures, set out in a rate column, that enable the duty to be worked out in respect of goods, are a rate of duty.”

    Other amendments were made to the Customs legislative package which took effect in July 1996, but it is appropriate that I postpone further reference to the same until [36] below in order to maintain a measure of chronological sequence in describing the background to the present Application.

  5. What may be described as the Policy By-Law Scheme of the Customs Tariff legislation, being the scheme for prescription of By-laws referred to in section 273 of the Customs Act, has been administered by Customs since May 1994. Prior to that time, administration was undertaken jointly by Customs and the Department of Industry Technology and Regional Development (“the Department”). Such scheme has involved the periodic publication of Government or Ministerial policy taking the form of Australian Customs Notices (“ACNs’). The issue of such ACNs occurred over a number of years prior to the Customs decision now sought to be reviewed by Coal which was made on 21 September 1999. By reason of the complexity of circumstances leading to the Statement of Reasons of Customs for such decision made on 20 October 1999 pursuant to section 13 of the Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1987 (Cth) [66], and by reason of the various ways in which Coal has framed its case for administrative review by reference to events occurring over the period of six years from October 1993 to September 1999, it is necessary to set out below in considerable detail the material or potentially material events and the content of documentation brought into existence over that period of time which might bear upon the resolution of the ultimate controversies that have emerged.

  6. The original Respondents to this Application were the Chief Executive Officer of Customs and the Secretary of the Department. By consent the Secretary of the Department was omitted from the Application.

    The 18 October 1993 Application

  7. On 18 October 1993 Coal made application to Customs for admission under Item 45 of Schedule 4 of the 1987 Act of the “Goods for the Kenmare Colliery Project being components for any of the following…”, and thereafter was set out nine categories of major equipment, including that the subject of the present Application, which was described as “e) Tailgate, main heading and drift conveying equipment”, and which have been referred to in the evidence as underground conveyors. The subject matter of the litigation are not major items of imported equipment but imported components for major items of equipment being assembled in Australia, namely underground conveyors. The application was copied to the Department. Such application, and the written submissions and documents subsequently put forward on behalf of Coal to Customs and the Department, were framed and advanced on behalf of Coal by Rodda Castle and Hind, Customs and Trade Consultants, but for the purposes of these reasons for judgment, the convenient course is to include that firm within the general description “Coal”, except in the few situations where it has been necessary to distinguish between Coal and that of its said Consultants. That application contained the following descriptive material concerning the Project :

    “The project requires surface preparation in addition to the underground development work including the installation of a longwall mining machine system.  For the completion of the project, South Blackwater will seek to involve Australian manufacturers to a maximum.  The majority of the imported componentry will involve the installation of a longwall mining machine system.  Longwall mining machines are not manufactured in Australia, notwithstanding that some of the components of the system can be locally manufactured, and are classified to tariff sub-heading 8439.31.00 (duty free).

    Other major components of the project are the surface and overland coal handling equipment, the tailgate, main heading and drift conveying equipment, and the pit top coal handling facility used to convey the extracted coal from the underground mine to the coal preparation plant.  This machinery will be manufactured in Australia and will comprise components from various sources, some of which will be imported from overseas suppliers, with the remainder being either locally sourced or manufactured.  Any decision to use imported components will be made after sourcing local manufacturers with consideration given to :

    (a)availability;

    (b)compatibility;

    (c)quality;

    (d)price;

    (e)warranty; and

    (f)delivery.

    The acquiring of the abovementioned capital equipment is in the main  to increase production in the extraction of coal from the Kenmare Colliery.

    Attached is a summary of the equipment items intended to be acquired for the project.  We are advised by South Blackwater that while they are seeking maximum Australian content into the building of the project, the requirement by some contractors to use imported components is necessary.  It is for this reason an application for by-law under Item 45 is being submitted.  The granting of a by-law under Item 45 will reduce input costs by means of minimising duty liability and subsequently a reduction in input costs.  We anticipate the benefits achieved by the granting of an Item 45 by-law will total approximately $3 million in capital costs and will assist in the continuance of using Australian manufacturers to a maximum.”

    Such “… summary of the equipment items intended to be acquired for the project” was not produced in evidence, presumably because the issue involved in this Application concerns not so-called “equipment items”, but as already indicated, components of such equipment items. Why there was a “requirement by some contractors to use imported components” was not stated.

  8. In respect of each such category of equipment, the estimated date for calling of tenders (varying from September 1993 to mid 1994) and for commissioning of the project (varying from late 1994 to late 1995) were set out, those relating to the underground conveyors being respectively mid 1994 as to tender and late 1995 as to commissioning. In the events which happened, the area of dispute the subject of this Application For Judicial Review became confined to the thirteen (13) controlled start transactions units already mentioned in [1] above, which formed part of the componentry for underground conveyors. Senior Counsel for Coal explained in address that such units comprised machinery which were placed periodically along the seven kilometres of the conveyor belt forming part of the Colliery extension infrastructure.

    Such letter of application also sought “project status” to be granted to “the minesite”, the implications or purposes of which do not directly involve any controversy in the context of the present proceedings: see [9-10], [19] and [28] below. “Project status” was apparently granted on 4 May 1998. Coal has submitted that this letter of 18 October 1993 is to be characterised by its boldly transcribed heading, namely “APPLICATION FOR BY-LAW UNDER ITEM 45 – KENMARE COLLIERY”.

  9. At the time such application to Customs was made by Coal, there was in force Australian Customs Notice (ACN) No 91/122 which had taken effect on 11 July 1991, and which stipulated certain Item 45 qualification procedures. Such procedures generally provided for an application to be made in the first place for a so-called Tariff Concession Order (“TCO”) in order to test whether goods were made in Australia or were capable of being made in Australia (as to which see [18] and [29] below), or if not granted, for an application to be made for an Item 45 By-law concession. In the latter case, such ACN 91/122 stipulated that Customs in conjunction with the Department would examine the reasons for TCO refusal and might communicate with local manufacturers to confirm the nature and extent of local manufacture in the ‘normal course of business’. Any such Item 45 application was required to take the form of “a well reasoned submission, setting out the case for consideration”. By this Coal letter of 18 October 1993, Coal purported to apply for Item 45 concessions without seeking a TCO. It appears that the view was taken at the time of writing of such letter of 18 October 1993 that for the purpose of facilitating Coal’s Item 45 concession application, it was more appropriate to seek such abovementioned “project status”. Under the heading “Background”, the following appeared in ACN 91/122:

    “The initial press release announcing Items 45… indicated that these concessional items were available for mining… equipment not made in Australia in the normal course of business. In conjunction with the Department of Industry Technology and Commerce (DITAC), normal course of business has been defined as:

    -producing now for production line items, or

    -having made the specific goods within the last two years for one off items.”

    ACN 91/122 concluded that final approval would be at the discretion of the Minister.

  10. The initial response of Customs contained in a letter of 1 November 1993 was to state that Coal’s letter of 18 October 1993 had been considered by Customs and forwarded on for Item 45 assessment by the Department. Following a meeting with Coal, the Department notified Coal on 28 February 1994 as follows (inter alia):

    “…
    The application does not specify an operative date for the concession.  If the operative date is a considerable time before the application date, the goods may not be included in the approval.  However, it is our understanding that the mine is new, therefore retrospectivity should not present difficulties.

    Your letter asks for ‘project status’ to be granted to the minesite.  Although the application does not provide details of the equipment expected to be imported, it seems to us that there will be a considerable quantity of imported goods. We agree that it is not necessary to pursue TCO’s on the imported goods, but we will require information that satisfies us that the imported goods are not made in Australia in the normal course of business.

    As we discussed at the meeting, the application identifies, in very broad terms, the major facilities that make up the operating colliery.  Would you please identify more specifically the equipment being imported for the project, together with information to enable us to determine that the ‘not made in Australia in the normal course of business’ criterion of Item 45 is satisfied.  This information should include an explanation of the efforts made by the applicant to source goods locally, and an explanation of the reasons for sourcing goods from overseas.

    In conclusion, based on the information currently available to us, we are not able to recommend to the Minister that he approve the Item 45 concession.  To assist you in gathering the information that we require, the copy of our ‘Advice to Applicants’ given to you at the meeting would be useful.  This is a draft at present and requires some improvements and clarification, but it should provide a good guide.”

    Thus it was clearly signalled at the outset to Coal that more information and detail would be necessary for the obtaining of Item 45 duty concessions for imported components of the equipment proposed to be acquired, and that the requirements of ACN 91/22 as to “a well reasoned submission, setting out the case for consideration” had not been complied with and improvement in the information provided and explanations were required of Coal. As will later appear, it was not at this point in time certain what components of the major items of equipment would definitely be imported, so that understandably Coal was not then in a position to advance this application.

  1. The document attached to such Department letter addressed the same theme as to the need to establish entitlement to concessional importation of overseas manufactured components, by reference to the unavilability of similar manufactured components in Australia, in the following terms:

    “Applicants are asked to provide a well researched, well reasoned submission covering the following points :

    Costings

    ·Total investment (excluding the purchase of land)

    ·Breakdown of costing for project into :

    -imported equipment, machinery and components

    -local equipment, machinery and components

    -construction costs – please indicate if there is imported content

    -labour costs

    -services costs.

    -

    Imported Content

    ·Broad listing of the major imported components.

    ·What efforts were made to source these major components locally?

    ·Reasons for importing each major component – it would be useful to classify these imported components to determine if some are free in their own right in the tariff or are eligible for duty free entry via tariff concession orders.

    Local Content

    ·The value of local content and percentage?

    ·Local sub-contractors and their involvement in project

    ·Do any of the goods supplied by local sub-contractors incorporate imported components?  If so, please indicate.”

  2. It follows that at an early point in time, Coal was put on notice that significantly more information would be needed for an adequate Item 45 concession application, albeit without any supervening need for a TCO application, before a favourable recommendation to the Minister would be made, and that the information in the Coal letter of 18 October 1993 fell short in the detail needed concerning proposed imported components of the nine major items of equipment described in the letter in order to gain concessions under Item 45. On the other hand, as the letter stated, at this point in time, “retrospectivity” of application for such concessions was not seen to cause difficulties to the Coal application, but understandably so because tenders had not by then been invited. There was no explicit reference to “retrospectivity” in ACN 91/122, but the text of the same implied that applications were required to be lodged in advance of importation by reason of the expression “potential local manufacturers”.

  3. Coal does not appear to have further advanced this 18 October 1993 application to any material extent by 27 April 1995, that is to say, within the succeeding eighteen months, because on that day the Department referred by letter to the absence of receipt of any further information from Coal and warned Coal as follows :

    “Based on the information we have, we would recommend that the application be refused.  If you do not provide the additional information by 18 May 1995 we will recommend  to the Minister and to the Australian Customs Service that the application be refused.

    In the meantime, the contract for the assembly of the underground conveyor equipment had been entered into by Coal on 16 March 1995, following upon acceptance of the successful tender on 15 November 1994 by Australian Conveyor Engineering Pty Limited (which later changed its name to Continental Ace Pty Limited) (see schedule to Coal’s letter of 28 September 1995 to Customs referrable to “U/G Conveyors”).

  4. Yet the first shipment of the relevant component of the underground conveyors comprising the subject controlled start transmission units (the first five of a total of thirteen) had already arrived in Australia on 5 April 1995, which was more than one year after Coal had been notified by the Department by the earlier letter of 28 February 1994 of the inadequacy of its Item 45 concession application, being an inadequacy which had not by then been remedied. Moreover the next shipment of the subject units was due on 21 May 1995 for a further six of such total of thirteen. In his Affidavit sworn in support of the present Application, Mr Rodda (a principal of Coal’s consultants), stated that “As at 28 February 1994, no tenders had been let for any of the goods listed in the application [of 18 October 1993] other than the coal handling and preparation plant. It was therefore not possible at that time for the applicant to provide the information requested by the letter”. However Coal had already allowed in excess of one year to pass by without taking further steps with Customs or the Department.

  5. It now becomes appropriate to interpolate reference to a series of announcements and communiques which took place at Government and Industry levels, before returning to a narrative of Coal’s communications with Customs on the subject of its applications for concessions foreshadowed by its letter of 18 October 1993.

    Government Statements Concerning Industrial Policy 1994-5

  6. The Minister issued on 4 May 1994 an “Industrial Policy” news release which referred to “new industry policy framework and initiatives” and “the principles for industry policy framework and initiatives”, and set out “the principles for industry policy in Australia.”  Under the heading “Other arrangements”, the Minister then stated, so far as is material :

    “The government has also decided to take action on a number of related industry assistance arrangements.

    Administrative arrangements for the Engineering Policy by-Laws will be refined, and no further retrospective claims will be considered except for Items 43 and 52 relating to split assignments, and then only in exceptional circumstances.”

    Since the Item here relevant was Item 45, this was a critical news release from Coal’s perspective. Whilst Coal had earlier been informed that “retrospectivity should not present difficulties” [10], Coal was by this time put on notice nearly one year prior to the first importation of part of the subject equipment (ie the 13 controlled start transmission units) that Item 45 concessions would not be granted retrospectively. In the events which happened, Coal did not heed that warning, and as will be seen, did not make any further application of relevance to Customs until 13 October 1995 [26].

  7. Such news release was followed by the Minister’s letter of 9 December 1994 to the President of the Australian Mining Industry Council, which stated (inter alia) :

    “… the government has instituted procedures whereby duty free entry of certain goods otherwise dutiable may be allowed for specified industry policy reasons.  The Government, through various decisions over a number of years, has revised the Tariff Concession System and introduced the Policy By-laws (PBL) system to facilitate this aim …

    The Policy Items that may be of relevance to your members are Item 45, covering goods for the mining and minerals processing industries …

    … I have instructed my Department and the Australian Customs Service that the system should be administered in a manner that gives both sides, ie. Project proponents/importers and potential local suppliers, a better opportunity to comment on proposals for the concessional entry of goods, particularly when a high value of imports is involved.

    … I would encourage contact early in the design of projects with potential Australian suppliers, including through relevant supplier industry associations and the Industrial Supplies Offices, so that potential local suppliers are not ‘designed out’ of the project.  My desire is not only the process be transparent and sound, but that competitive Australian suppliers be given genuine opportunity to bid for contracts.  In this way, I am sure that local industry will develop and expand with consequential benefits for the economy and project developers.

    …”

    Thus the facility of the Industrial Supplies Offices, as one means of satisfying Customs of the merits of a By-law 45 application was highlighted to the mining industry, and as will be seen, continued to be so highlighted. Moreover the requirement of prospectivity of application, was inherent in this communique.

  8. Subsequently on 21 June 1995, the Minister wrote to the Customs Brokers Council of Australia Inc in the following terms (inter alia) emphatic of what was described as the “fundamental principle”:

    “I am responsible for the Policy By-law Scheme and the process of considering applications for by-law concessions, which requires my Department to seek advice from me in respect of whether an application meets the Government’s policy intent.

    … I see the Policy By-law System as an industry development tool, with project proponents giving genuine opportunities to local manufacturers in return for duty-free entry of goods not made in Australia.

    The fundamental principle is that only goods that are not made in Australia should be given duty-free entry.  The requirement to apply for Tariff Concession Orders (TCO’s) is the process whereby local manufacturers are identified, and the claims of importers are assessed against the capabilities and products of local producers.  In this way, the Government’s fundamental principle can be implemented in a transparent and consistent manner…

    …”

  9. As earlier indicated, Coal had already determined to proceed by way of the By-law system and involving the grant of project status, rather than by way of the TCO system, but the need to establish the absence of Australian capacity to manufacture equipment proposed to be imported remained paramount if tariff concessions were to be obtained for any imported equipment.  The Minister then proceeded to repeat by this letter of 21 June 1995 how the By-law system would be allowed to take its course, with continuing emphasis on the need to establish absence of Australian capacity to manufacture equipment and its componentry required for mining projects, and the availability of appropriate assistance from the Industrial Supplies Offices in order to identify existing Australian manufacturing sources, as follows:

    “the practice of considering ‘project status’ in relation to an Item 45 Application is one which has developed as an administratively convenient form of assistance for the project proponents.  But what does project status really confer?  It merely confers an agreement to waive the requirement to apply for a TCO in respect of the dutiable imported goods related to a specific Policy By-law application.

    While I do not have any problems in-principle with this practice, I am keen to ensure that the decision making process for applications for project status is transparent.  Also, I do not wish to see this practice used to circumvent procedures that have been established for very good reasons.  Australian industry must be given proper opportunity to make its capabilities known and, where possible, to demonstrate those capabilities.  Accordingly, I have instructed my Department and the Australian Customs Service that the Policy By-law System should be administered in a manner that gives both the project proponents (or importers) and local suppliers a better opportunity to comment on proposals for the concessional entry of goods, particularly when a high value of imports is involved.

    Consequently, I actively encourage project proponents to identify and make contact with potential Australian suppliers early in the design of projects, so that potential suppliers are not ‘designed out’ of a project.  Relevant supplier industry associations and the network of Industrial Supplies Offices can provide assistance to identify potential Australian suppliers.  I have held discussions on this matter with a number of industry associations, including AMIC, and specifically made my views clear in a letter I sent on 9 December 1994.  Also, in this context.  I am sure that you and your clients are aware that world best purchasing practice recognises the benefits of sourcing locally, and of building ‘partnering’ or strategic relationships with those suppliers for the domestic and overseas markets.  I believe that it is in the best interests of the management of the company to look at adopting these approaches, just as the Government has done in its acquisition practices to enhance opportunities for local companies in its purchasing requirements.”

  10. And specifically in relation to Item 45 concessions, this Ministerial communication indicated the following in effect as an adjunct to the Government policy of advancing Australian based product manufacturers of mining equipment and its componentry for the Australian mining industry :

    “… in the case of Item 45, the fact that goods meet the terms of that Item ‘goods designed for use in the mining and minerals processing industry’ does not mean that they can necessarily enter duty free.”

  11. The Minister thereafter concluded with the following explanations which would have conveyed an emphatic warning to industry participants, then in the position of Coal and its Consultants, concerning the need for obtaining adequate information and supporting material as to the absence of capacity of Australian based manufacturers of relevant equipment and its componentry, in advance of placement of orders overseas, in order to gain Item 45 concessions :

    “Applicants that successfully apply for a Policy By-law concession provide information sufficient to demonstrate that the Government’s policy objectives are being met.  Too often applications, particularly (it seems) those prepared by consultants, fail to provide sufficient information to allow simple processing.  Applicants are required to demonstrate that they meet the criteria for a by-law and that the granting of a by-law will contribute to the government’s industry policy objectives.

    For example, too many applicants fail to demonstrate that any reasonable level of action, consistent with the Government’s industry policy objectives, has been taken to identify potential local suppliers.  Few invite local industry involvement in the early design stages of a project – something that demonstrably reduces costs and often improves outcomes – and this is a point on which I am very firm.  Companies are able to place orders from overseas, but they cannot expect my support for a by-law concession unless they clearly demonstrate that they have taken appropriate action to identify local suppliers.

    As I stated above, I view the administration of the Policy By-law System primarily as one mechanism to achieve the Government’s industry policy objective, rather than merely a means of achieving a monetary benefit to a company through an exemption of duty.  The latter, unfortunately, generally appears to be the sole aim of many applicants who ignore the ultimate intent of the policy.”

  12. By way of response to the Minister’s above communication of 21 June 1995, the Customer Brokers Council of Australia Inc published for the benefit of its members the Minister’s views and policies in a document headed Policy By-laws, which included the following :

    “Applicants that successfully apply for a Policy By-law concession provide information sufficient to demonstrate that the government’s policy objectives are being met.  Too often applications, particularly (it seems) those prepared by consultants, fail to provide sufficient information to allow simple processing.  Applicants are required to demonstrate that they meet the criteria for a by-law and that the granting of a by-law will contribute to the Government’s policy objectives.

    For example, too many applicants fail to demonstrate that any reasonable level of action, consistent with the Government’s industry policy objectives, has been taken to identify potential suppliers.  Few invite local industry involvement in the early stages of a project – something that demonstrably reduce costs and often improves outcomes – and this is a point on which I am very firm.  Companies are able to place orders from overseas but they cannot expect my support for a by-law concession unless they clearly demonstrate that they have taken appropriate action to identify local suppliers.”

    Again, emphasis was thus made upon the need for demonstration of qualification for concessions before placement of orders overseas, rather than resorting to mere assertion of absence of Australian capacity. The foregoing criticism of the shortcomings of consultants in terms of failing to undertake sufficient research and to provide sufficient information for by-law applications may also be observed, bearing in mind that virtually all communications on the part of Coal referred to in this Judgment were undertaken on Coal’s behalf by its Consultants.

  13. Finally as to notifications of Government policy up to and including 1995, I should extract part of the Minister’s announcement on 18 October 1995 concerning the significance of the role of the various Industrial Supplies Offices, to which I have already made reference in [17] and [19] (abbreviated therein as ISOs), in the administration of the Policy By-laws System :

    “The PBL System provides the Australian Customs Service with the authority to permit the concessional entry of certain goods provided such goods are not made in Australia and they meet the policy and administrative intent of the relevant PBL item.

    ‘I expect companies seeking concessions of duty to demonstrate that they have first examined through a transparent process the capabilities of Australian industry to supply the goods in question, before a decision to import and to seek concessional entry for the imported goods is taken,’ Senator Schacht said.

    One way in which project proponents can identify and make contact with potential Australian manufacturers early in the design of projects is through the Industrial Supplies Offices.

    All States and the Northern Territory established ISOs in the mid 1980s, with the objective of assisting industry to source more of its requirements within Australia.

    The ISOs are accordingly ideally suited to providing information to potential PBL applicants on Australian industry capability and competitive Australian suppliers for a wide range of industry sectors, including the petroleum exploration, mining and minerals processing, agricultural, food processing and good packaging, engineering, chemicals, plastics, paper, electrical and electronic and general manufacturing industries.

    A list of ISOs are attached.”

    The foregoing notification of policy again emphasised the need for determination of Australian manufacturing capacity in advance of importation, and the availability of the Industrial Supplies Offices to assist the sourcing of such capacity, and the necessity for demonstration of any absence of such capacity to Customs.

  14. The material in evidence does not disclose the making or the results of any enquiries which Coal may have undertaken at any material time with any Industrial Supplies Offices prior to 16 August 1999 in relation to equipment required for its Kenmare Colliery Project, and in particular in relation to the 13 controlled start transmission units which it imported, that is to say, until immediately prior to Coal’s letter to the Department of 24 August 1999 extracted in [59] below: the reference to such 16 August 1999 occurrence is at [61]. At this early point in time (October 1995), two shipments of the controlled start transmission units involving eleven in number had already been imported by Coal in April and May 1995, and the third and final shipment of the remaining two of such units was due in Australia during the following month of November 1995 [26], so that unless Coal had done its homework already, the task of appropriate research and enquiry was necessarily going to be undertaken subsequent to importation and thus contrary to Ministerial policy.

  15. Returning then to the narrative of the contemporary dialogue taking place between Coal and the Department and subsequently between Coal and Customs, a meeting between representatives of Coal and the Department occurred in Canberra on 17 May 1995.  Handwritten notes of what was said and achieved at that meeting were tendered in evidence on behalf of Coal, and the same indicate that Coal obtained at the meeting an extension of time until 9 June 1995 to provide the information requested in the Department’s letter of 27 April 1995 [13], but that Coal’s representatives were also informed that the onus of proof lay upon Coal to prove its case and support its claims with facts concerning its attempts to source the requisite equipment locally. In that regard such handwritten  notes contain the words “Onus of proof… Back up your claims – evidence attempts source locally – ISO’s. Facts to back up application”.

    The 13 October 1995 Application

  1. On 13 October 1995, Coal submitted to Customs by letter headed “APPLICATION FOR ITEM 45 BY-LAW…” what it described as “… further information relating to each of the functional units referred to in our original application dated 18 October 1993”, and commented “Please note that this information was previously offered to [the Department] in June this year to facilitate the Department’s processing of this application” but that “We were advised… it would be appropriate for this material to be directed to you”. The delay of about four months in so doing was not explained. Under the heading “Project Overview”, the following appeared:

    “Details of the project in toto are set out in Attachment A. This document was provided some time ago to [the Department], but it is unclear from our file whether a copy was forwarded to [Customs] with our original submission.

    All equipment items required for this project were or are to be the subject of invitations to tender published in national daily newspapers and by direct invitation.”

    The reference to “all equipment items” would appear to have been used by way of distinction from componentry for equipment.

    Coal relies on this letter, and its earlier letter of application of 18 October  1993, either individually or together, as constituting applications for Item 45 By-law concession in respect of an array of componentry for the major items of equipment for the Kenmare Colliery, including the subject thirteen controlled start transmission units to comprise one of two categories of components for the underground conveyors, the other being belting. It may again be emphasised that by this time, eleven out of the thirteen controlled start transmission units had already been imported in April and May of 1995, and the final two would arrive in Australia at the beginning of November 1995.

    Thus on pages 10 and 11 of the letter of 13 October 1985, under the heading “Underground Conveyors”, the following appeared:

    “7.      Underground Conveyors

    (a)Identification

    The goods covered by this section of the project are tailgate, maingate and drift conveyors installed underground to remove coal from the stage loader/crusher after extraction by the longwall system.

    Such goods are classified in subheading 8428.31.00 and are currently dutiable at 8% General.

    (b)Tenders

    The successful tenderer was Australian Conveyor Engineering Pty Ltd of Wyong, NSW.

    The value of the successful bid was A$10,171,079. Australian labour and materials totalled A$8,719,339 (85.8%) and imported componentry totalled A$1,451,740 (14.2%).

    The principal imported components were the following

    (i)Dodge CST transmission modules ex USA valued at A$966,568

    (ii)1600mm PVC belt ex UK valued at A$439,100

    The unsuccessful tenderers and brief details of their offers are as follows:

    (i)Gulf Conveyor Systems Pty Ltd

    Tender included the use of Dodge CST drives with tender options to use 1500mm TBA Europa of 1600mm Imas belting, both of which are imported.

    (ii)Nepean Mining Pty Ltd

    Tender included the use of Flender drives from Germany and 1600mm belts from Fenner in UK.

    (iii)Prok Group

    Tender included use of Toshiba drives from Taiwan and Fenner belts from UK.

    (iv)Continental Conveyor/ESS Pty Ltd

    Tender made no mention of where components were being sourced.

    (c)Tariff Concession Order

    Australian content in the successful tender exceeded 85% thus precluding any possibility of a TCO for these goods. No TCO application was lodged pursuant to the DIST decision dated 28 February 1994.

    (d)Commissioning Date

    This stage of the project was scheduled for completion by April 1995.”

  2. Apart from the above described componentry of so-called “underground conveyors”, this letter of 13 October 1995 made application also in relation to the componentry of “Coal Handling and Preparation Plant”, “Continuous Mining Equipment”, “Ventilation Equipment” and “66kV-11kV Power Supply Equipment”. The letter concluded as follows:

    “In view of the amount of material provided in this matter to date and the likelihood that further material may be required by [Customs] to support individual sections of this application, we consider it would be prudent for a meeting to be held between [Customs] and ourselves before proceeding further. To that end, we would be grateful if an appointment would be arranged, at a mutually convenient time, to examine the documentation provided and to determine the nature and extent of any additional material that may be required.”

    In his Affidavit, Mr Rodda (Coal’s Consultant) described such letter of 18 October 1995 as containing all of the relevant information relating to the subject units. However as just indicated, the letter concluded by explaining “… the likelihood that further material may be required by [Customs] to support individual sections of this application…”, and in the File Note coversheet to each group of Annexures to the letter there appeared the following:

    “Specific details as to imported/local machinery and local/overseas suppliers are not included.”

    Customs took a different view as to the adequacy of the information provided by this 13 October 1995 letter: see [30-31] below.

    ACN 94/27, ACN 95/55 and ACN 95/74

  3. On 6 May 1994, Customs had published ACN 94/27 which stated that “… no retrospective claims will be considered apart from Items 43 and 52 relating to split consignments, and then only in exceptional circumstances”. What is solely here relevant is of course Item 45. On 11 September 1995, Customs published 95/55 which confirmed such policy against retrospectivity. As variously indicated elsewhere in this Judgment, the arrival of the shipments of the subject units in Australia occurred on 5 April 1995, 21 May 1995 and 1 November 1995.  And on 14 December 1995, Customs published the more comprehensive ACN 95/74 containing the following under the policy sub-heading “Maximisation of Australian Industry Participation” under the heading “Specific Policy Issues”:

    “Project proponents should assess the benefits of a PBL concession as part of the purchasing decision process. Project proponents are encouraged to identify and make contact with potential Australian suppliers early in the design of projects, so that local suppliers are not “designed out” of a project. Also, in this context, world best purchasing practice recognises the benefits of sourcing locally, and of building “partnering” or strategic relationships with those suppliers for the domestic and overseas markets. It is in the best interests of the management of the company to adopt these approaches, which also will enhance opportunities for local companies.

    Where applicants cannot demonstrate that they have given consideration to potential Australian suppliers in the early planning stage of projects, it is unlikely the applications will succeed. This issue is particularly important in industry sectors where Industry Development Deeds exist.

    For this reason applicants should:

    ·seek to maximise the opportunities for local industry to become involved in the provision of major equipment and/or the development of projects; and

    ·demonstrate in their applications that they have made serious efforts to seek out local manufacturers, or potential local manufacturers, of the goods to be imported.

    The maximisation of Australian industry participation should be demonstrated by the use of the TC System. This may be waived if project status is granted (see Section 6.2). If project status is granted project proponents should use alternative methods to demonstrate the maximum of Australian participation such as open tendering processes, Industrial Supplies Office network (ISOs) or through contact with relevant supplier industry associations.”

    Coal places strong reliance in this Application upon the above reference to “open tendering processes”. Under the heading “Retrospective Applications”, the following appeared:

    “Consistent with Government policy of maximisation of Australian industry participation retrospective PBLs will normally not be granted, except for Items 43 and 52, relating to split consignments, and then only in exceptional circumstances. This position was previously notified in ACN 94/27.

    Applicants should be aware that the date of importation, not the day of entry for home consumption, will be compared to the application date (generally the date of receipt of the application by Customs) to establish whether an application is prospective or retrospective.”

    And lastly under the heading “Details of approaches to local manufacturers” the following appeared:

    “…
    All applications… must give detailed information on the applicant’s efforts to source goods from local manufacturers. Evidence of approaches to relevant supplier industry associations and ISOs, tender documents and replies from local manufacturers will be taken into account when evaluating the application.”

  4. The purpose of ACN 95/74 was described in the Customs Affidavit evidence in the following terms :

    “… ACN 95/74 … consolidated and clarified information provided in all previous Policy By-Laws ACNs … [and] confirmed that Policy By-Laws concessions differ from those available under the Tariff Concession.”

    As to the TCO system, ACN 95/74 stated that “Concessions available under the TC system must be pursued in the first instance before importers seek concessional entry under the PBL System. A successful TCO application negates the need for a PBL concession or establishes a rate of duty”.

  5. Returning to Coal’s submission of a large bulk of information under cover of its said letter of application of 13 October 1995 [26], an internal Customs examination thereof was undertaken at some length to ascertain “… whether the information supplied is sufficient to enable the delegate to make a decision on this application”.  Such examination was completed and recorded in a lengthy Customs Minute Paper of 24 January 1996 by Mr Praks, and was summarised in a contemporaneous Customs Minute Paper of Mr Kittler reading as follows :

    ITEM 45 : SOUTH BLACKWATER COAL MINE-KENMARE COLLIERY

    Mr Prax (sic) has done an extensive analysis of RCH’s further submission (f251-256).

    In short the current position is that

    ·two of the major items of equipment the longwall miner and the shearer are duty free anyway and shouldn’t be part of the Item 45 application.

    ·the actual goods being imported are not identified.

    ·the designed for use test has not been addressed.  At least some of the gear eg. computer hardware would not meet the test.

    ·there is no evidence only assertions that local industry can’t make or doesn’t make suitable equipment.

    Suggest meeting with RCH to explain shortcomings of submission in week or so to coincide with your movements.”

    The underlining was that of Mr Kittler.

  6. Thus by this time, namely late October 1995, with only 2 out of the 13 controlled start units yet to be imported into Australia, on the basis of Customs’ examination of the material thus far provided by Coal, the processing of any Item 45 concession for Coal had not even reached the first base from Customs perspective of identification of equipment the subject of any discrete Item 45 concession application or applications, much less evidence as to absence of Australian manufacture thereby. Mr Kittler’s Report made no reference to the factor of retrospectivity, but the text thereof suggests an unawareness on his part of the shipment arrival times and circumstances at least in respect of the subject controlled start transmission units. His focus was upon the existence or otherwise of capacity for local manufacture of the componentry of the major items of equipment, in relation to which he reported a lack of relevant detail and concluded as follows:

    ·The application is a conglomerate of various systems/projects and components, some of which are free in the Tariff, and some of which would not satisfy the criterion – designed for use in the mining and minerals processing industry.

    ·Sufficient information as to description of goods, suppliers and efforts to source locally, has not been provided in the latest information in relation to certain systems/projects listed in the original application at folio 15.

    ·Tenders for certain systems/components had not been finalised as at October 1995 – no further information has been supplied to date.

    ·Tender documents, obtained from successful tenderers for some systems/ projects and components have been supplied in most instances, but very few of those documents differentiate between imported and locally sourced goods.

    ·Details of successful and unsuccessful tenderers have been supplied in most instances, but sufficient information as to why the successful tenderers were chosen over other suppliers has not been supplied ie, reasons for sourcing imported goods.”

  7. As earlier indicated already in [27], I have difficulty in comprehending how the assertion of Mr Rodda’s Affidavit that “By letter dated 13 October 1995, I, on behalf of RCH, supplied to the ACS (ie. Customs) all of the relevant information relating to the equipment items” could have been realistically justified, at least in terms of the subject thirteen controlled start transmission units. Customs wrote back to Coal on 14 March 1996 following a meeting between Coal and Customs on 27 February 1996, and drew attention to the requirements of ACN 95/74 and to shortcomings in the information thus far provided, and concluded :

    “Your application will be further processed on receipt of a complete list of imported dutiable goods, together with evidence to demonstrate that those goods are/were not made in Australia in the normal course of business.”

  8. Coal’s response to such Customs requests for further information contained in the Customs letter of 14 March 1996 was made by a lengthy and strongly worded letter of 2 July 1996 (written as usual on its behalf by its Consultants), which commenced as follows :

    “A copy has been supplied to our clients with a view to obtaining the further information requested in respect of imported goods and evidence to demonstrate (where appropriate) that those goods were not made in Australia in the normal course of business.  We will respond to your request as soon as circumstances permit and ask that you note in the interim that much of this information is to be obtained from the contractors who actually performed or who have been contracted to perform the assembly or construction of the plant and equipment under consideration.”

  9. Coal’s said response of 2 July 1996 continued to the effect that Coal’s application for Item 45 concessions lodged on 18 October 1993 “… was entirely consistent in content and format with other applications for Item 45 By-laws lodged by ourselves and by other consultants prior to and around the same time”, and examples were given, and further that Coal had been advised by Customs that assessment of that application had been completed from Customs perspective by 1 November 1993, and further again that “It remains unclear to us why this matter seemingly requires further consideration by the ACS in 1996.” I am unclear as to how such a conclusion could have been justifiably attributed by Coal to the content of Customs’ letter of 1 November 1993 [10], particularly in the light of Customs’ subsequent letter to Coal of 27 April 1995 [13]. In any event, Coal did not gainsay Customs’ assertions of inadequacy of the materials presented, but sought to justify the content of what it had already provided to Customs by reference to precedent. Any such precedent would have become inconsistent in material respects with the Department’s letter of 28 February 1994 [10-11] as to the need for detailed information concerning the sourcing of equipment the subject of concession applications, and with the Ministerial statements made during 1994 and 1995 [16-23], and with the published Australian Customs Notices concerning Item 45 concessionary requirements comprising ACN 94/27 [28] and ACN 95/74 [28-29]. Such Coal response of 2 July 1996 then referred to ACN 95/74 and continued :

    “With respect, we do not believe it is open to you to attempt to rewrite history in the manner reflected in ACN 95/74, and to then proceed with the processing of applications for policy by-laws in a manner which directly conflicts with the principles which were on the public record (through earlier ACNs) and in the public knowledge at the time those applications were lodged.”

    Nevertheless it may be here observed that any such suggested “rewriting of history” by ACN 95/74 had occurred against the context of prior statements, if not warnings, concerning Government policy or approach contained in the written materials reviewed in [9-12] and [16-23] and contained also in ACN 94/27 and ACN 95/55 [28-29].

  10. Other complaints and criticisms were advanced by Coal in such response of 2 July 1996 and the same concluded with the following broadly expressed assertion :

    “Your letter acknowledges that we provided to you copies of the successful tender documents and details of unsuccessful tenders.  Your letter then goes on to suggest that it is not clear in some instances as to whether the successful tenderers offered imported or locally manufactured equipment.  Our understanding is that the material provided to you makes clear that local content has been maximised in all of the major equipment items and that any componentry imported for use in those major equipment items was imported only because local manufacturers do not manufacture a comparable component in the normal course of business.  If that matter is not clear in our letter, please provide further details of the specific items in respect of which that additional information is required.” (the underling was made by Coal’s Consultants).

    Coal was thus contending that favourable conclusions should have been already reached by Customs in relation to imported componentry for major equipment, because local assemblers of major equipment should be presumed not to have imported componentry for such major equipment in circumstances where local componentry was available, a thesis which Coal persistently advanced as being inherent in the nature of the “open tendering” process.

  11. Customs’ reply by letter dated 2 August 1996 to Coal’s lengthy letter of 2 July 1996 was confined as follows :

    “Changes to the Policy By-Law (PBL) System recently implemented by the parliament and set out in the Customs Amendment Act 1996 and the Customs Tariff Amendment Act 1996 require that as from 15 July 1996, any undetermined application must be assessed under the new PBL System criteria. Administration of the new system is explained in Australian Customs Notice No. 96/32. I have enclosed a copy of this ACN for your information.

    Once the South Blackwater submission has been assessed against the new criteria as required by the Parliament, I will write to you again.”

    One such statutory amendment having effect from 15 July 1996 has already been referred to in [3] above, namely that relating to By-law 45, which change was inconsequential for present purposes. Taking effect from the same date was the replacement for ACN 95/74, namely ACN 96/32 (see [37] below). Most significant of all changes taking effect from 15 July 1996 were the following amendments to the Customs Act 1901:

    “42.     Revocation of certain by-laws and determinations

    (1)This item applies:

    (b)to any determination made under section 273 of that Act in force immediately before that time;

    if that by-law or determination is taken to be made in relation to item … 45 … of Schedule 4 to the Customs Tariff Act 1995 ….

    (2)A determination to which this item applies is to be taken to have been revoked with effect from the commencing time.

    (3)If:

    (a)a person had, before the commencing time, requested that the CEO make a determination under section 273 of the Customs Act to enable goods to be covered by an item referred in sub item (1); and

    (b)that request was still outstanding at that time;

    that request is to be treated as if it were a request made under the Customs Act as amended by this Act.”

    Counsel for the Respondent described the effect of the amendments in terms of “wiping the slate clean of all the Section 273 by-laws that then existed prior to 15 July 1996” and requiring all pending decisions to be made under ACN 96/32. Significantly for the purposes of this Application, no decision had yet been made under the purported Item 45 applications of 23 October 1993 and 13 October 1995, and consequently if the same were to be determined during the life of ACN 96/32, the latter would represent the applicable policy.

    ACN 96/32

  1. Such new ACN 96/32 bore the date 10 July 1996, and the same did purport to replace Notice 95/74 effectively from 15 July 1996, with the changed so-called Policy By-law (PBL) System.  On 18 July 1996 and 9 September 1996, two Ministers of the incoming Federal Government publicly endorsed ACN 96/32 as representing the intent of continuing Government Policy.  Eligibility for consideration of By-law concessions pursuant to Item 45 (inter alia) would henceforth require demonstration of the following four matters which I extract from the Overview on page 3 of ACN 96/32 :

    “In order to be eligible for consideration of a PBL concession, applicants will be required to demonstrate that :

    -the goods to be imported satisfy the legal terms of the relevant Item in Schedule 4 to the Tariff;

    -that the granting of a PBL concession for the specific goods is consistent with prevailing Government policy, as contained in this ACN;

    -that applicants have implemented, as part of their project development considerations, measures to adequately consider local supply, before orders are placed overseas; and

    -that the imported goods are not available from an Australian manufacturer.

  2. The following warning to applicants for By-law concessions was provided by such ACN 96/32, in a context which continued the emphasis upon utilisation of Industrial Supplies Office assistance, as well as the need for particularity in identification of equipment required for concessionary treatment :

    “Importers should not assume that their request will be automatically approved.  Each request will be considered on its merits.  In all cases the ACS will conduct an evaluation of the request to ensure that the established legal and policy criteria have been satisfied.  Broadly based or unsupported assertions on the part of applicants that goods are not available from Australian manufacturers will not be accepted.  The revised PBL System places an obligation on applicants (other than for item 43, 52 and 55) to ascertain the capacity of Australian industry to manufacture the particular goods that they require.”

  3. And further that :

    “Applicants will also be expected to identify and make contact with potential Australian manufacturers early in the design phase, particularly to ensure that local manufacturers are not ‘designed out’ of a particular project.  The types of processes envisaged include use of the existing TCO procedures, open tendering, seeking active participation and advice from the Industrial Supplies Office (ISO), or local equivalent thereof, and/or pursuing direct contact with relevant industry associations, Chambers of Commerce and the like, which represent the interests of local manufacturers.

    Where applicants cannot demonstrate that they have given adequate consideration to potential Australian manufacturers in the early planning stages of particular importations or major projects, it is unlikely that a PBL request will be successful.

    To reiterate, applicants for concessional treatment under the PBL system will be required to satisfy certain industry policy objectives by demonstrating that they have :

    -maximised the opportunities for local industry to become involved in the provision of major equipment and/or the overall development of the particular project; and

    -made serious efforts to seek out local manufacturers, or potential local manufacturers, of the required goods, prior to committing to overseas orders.”

    I refer in particular to that part of the foregoing Policy recommendations as to alternative ways of establishing the absence of local manufacture, including “open tendering” as an alternative to TCO procedures or utilisation of the Industrial Supplies Office. Reference to those procedures also appeared in ACN 95/74 [29]. The process of establishing the absence of Australian manufacture of particular goods at material times by way of implementation of “open tendering” was one which Coal has pressed virtually as decisive in the circumstances of this Application. There was a lengthy account of “open tendering” by or on behalf of Coal for componentry in Coal’s letter of 13 October 1995 and summarised in [26] in relation to the underground conveyors. Similar detail appeared in relation to the other four main equipment items identified in [27]. As already noticed Coal adopted the position with Customs to the effect that if Australian Industry tendered for equipment upon the basis of its intended inclusion of imported componentry, it must follow as a matter of realistic implication that such componentry was not manufactured in Australia.

  4. On the further matter of retrospectivity the following appears in ACN 96/32:

    “It is fundamental to the objectives of the PBL system that importers seeking PBL concessions should first take appropriate steps to maximise the opportunities for Australian manufacturers to produce the particular goods.  To accord with that philosophy, government industry policy dictates that the PBL System should be prospective in nature.  Clearly, the lodgement of a request for a PBL concession after goods have been imported would be inconsistent with this objective.

    In the interests of uniformity, it is proposed to retain the practice, adopted in 1994, whereby PBL concessions will not be granted retrospectively.

    Applicants should be aware that the date of importation of the goods, not the date the goods are entered, will be compared against the date of receipt of the request by Customs (including a facsimile advance copy) to establish whether the concession sought is prospective or retrospective.”

    This policy as to determination of the time by which retrospectivity/prospectivity issues were to be judged, namely the time of importation, was applied by Customs in the circumstances of this Application.

  5. Under the heading “Information Required”, reference was made by ACN 96/32 to the kind of “reasonable endeavours to source goods locally before making arrangements to purchase goods from overseas suppliers” which should be undertaken by applicants for Item 45 concessions.  And then under the heading “Undetermined PBL Requests”, the following statement of policy was enunciated in relation to the subject of retrospectivity/prospectivity, consistently with what has already been recounted in [36] above:

    “Policy By-law instruments (either by-laws made under section 271 of the Customs Act or determinations made under section 273 of the Customs Act) made in relation to items 43, 45, 46, 52 and 56 of the Tariff are taken to be revoked from the 15 July 1996 commencement of the CAA Act. The same legislation also provides that all requests for concessions under these items which are undetermined at 15 July 1996, the date of commencement, will be treated as if they were received at the commencement of the new legislation. Applicants with undetermined requests might therefore elect to submit a fresh request addressing the new requirements set out in this ACN. Such requests will be subject to the new legislative and policy requirements now applying to these PBL items.”

    The reference to the “CAA Act” was to the Customs Amendment Act 1996 (Cth) earlier referred to above [37], which as there indicated, provided legislative authority to subject undetermined By-law 45 applications to new policies. The consequence to Coal of this Policy change was that if it could rightly be postulated that Coal’s letters of 18 October 1993 and/or 13 October 1995 constituted Item 45 concession applications in relation to the componentry consisting of the subject thirteen controlled start transmission units, the same would henceforth constitute an “undetermined request” within ACN 96/32.

  6. In that regard, the special “in transit” provisions made in the Customs Amendment Act 1996 (which took effect on 15 July 1996) relating to goods falling within Item 45 (inter alia) were confined to three particular situations as follows :

    -“goods which have been imported on or before the 15 July 1996 date of revocation of the concession instrument, provided they are entered for home consumption within 28 days of that date;

    -goods on direct shipment to Australia before the 15 July 1996 date of revocation of the concession instrument, provided they are entered for home consumption within 28 days of importation; or

    -goods which are made-to-order capital equipment (as defined for the purposes of the Tariff Concession System), provided such goods are imported and entered for home consumption under one of these items by 15 February 1997.”

    Coal’s circumstances were however that the subject units had been imported in three shipments respectively arriving in Australia on 5 April 1995, 21 May 1995 and 1 November 1995. Therefore such in-transit provisions would appear to have had no application to the subject units, and the status of the contentious Coal application of 13 October 1995 would be from Customs’ perspective “undetermined” within ACN 96/32. In the events which happened, no determination was made in relation to the subject units during the life of ACN 96/32

  7. The foregoing impact upon “undetermined” Item 54 concession applications was recorded internally in the Customs contemporaneous Minute Paper of 10 July 1996 as follows :

    “It is possible that a limited number of importers whose applications were not resolved at the time of commencement of the new legislation will express concern that their applications will now be assessed under the new rules.  This is an intended outcome of the new legislation, designed to close off inconsistencies that had become apparent in the old PBL System”.

  8. Prior to the making of the decision the subject of this Application, three further Notices relating to Customs By-laws were published by Government, the first on 30 June 1997 (ACN 97/49), the second on 27 February 1998 (ACN 98/18), and the third on 23 June 1998 (Notice 98/22).

  9. ACN 97/49 did not add any significantly different requirements for Item 45 concessions at least of materiality here.  The emphasis continued to be on the need for evidence as to the absence of Australian manufacturers being able to perform a similar manufacturing function to a manufacturer of imported goods, and on the need for clear identification of the goods proposed to be imported free of duty.  ACN 98/18, which was supplementary to ACN 97/49, set out certain “Capital Equipment Guidelines” that do not require special mention.

    ACN 98/22

  10. ACN 98/22 was comprehensive in scope, purporting as it did to set out “the policy and administrative criteria to be applied when processing requests for duty concessions on certain items of imported equipment”, which included proposed Item 45 equipment.  ACN 98/22 was expressed to replace what was known as the Policy By-law System with the Project By-law Scheme (“PBL Scheme”) as from 1 August 1998, and ACN’s 96/32, 97/49 and 98/18 were stated to cease to have effect on that day. As will be later seen, it was by reference to the policies of ACN 98/22 that Customs undertook its decision-making in relation to the subject units. A joint Media Release was issued by the relevant Ministers on 23 June 1998 which declared (inter alia) as follows :

    “The new scheme … will also clarify the responsibilities that project proponents have to ensure that Australian industry has the opportunity to supply items of capital equipment for major projects.

    …Industrial Supplies Offices in the States and Territories would play a key role in promoting Australian goods and services for major projects.

    The changes relate to concessional items 45 … of Schedule 4 of the Customs Tariff Act, which permit duty-free entry of capital equipment that isn’t manufactured here.

    In order to demonstrate that items of capital equipment are not manufactured in Australia, project proponents will need to quote a Tariff Concession Order, or provide a statement from the Industry Supplies Office Network … and show that they have nationally advertised their capital goods requirements.”

    Thus according to such Media Release, the role of the Industrial Supplies Office in providing demonstration of absence of local manufacture of imported goods received not just continuing but exclusive emphasis, save as to circumstances where a TCO of relevance was also subsisting, and the previous recognition by ACN 95/74 and ACN 96/32 of “open tendering” as one possible process of establishing absence of local manufacture [29] and [40] was now omitted.

  11. The text of the ACN 98/22 was not quite the same. The following require citation, referring as they do to the continuing need for specific demonstration of the absence of Australian manufacturing capacity for equipment sought to be imported free of duty and conversely the unacceptability of broadly based or unsupported assertions, and of the need for prospectivity of applications :

    “Applicants should not assume that their requests would be automatically approved. Each request will be considered on its merits. In all cases, Customs will conduct an evaluation of the request to ensure that established legal and policy criteria have been satisfied. Broadly based or unsupported assertions by applicants that equipment is not available from Australian manufacturers will not be accepted.  The new PBL Scheme placed an obligation on applicants to ascertain the capacity of Australian industry to manufacture the particular goods that they require.

    Applicants should contact Customs at an early stage in order to provide details of the preposed project and to receive advice on the PBL Scheme.

    The Government policy directive is that the PBL Scheme operates on a prospective basis.  Therefore the project advice and the goods request must be lodged before the capital equipment is imported.  If either the project advice or the goods request is lodged after the equipment has been imported, the request is retrospective and will be refused.

    Project proponents must demonstrate that they have advertised in national newspapers or trade journals and with relevant industry associations for expressions of supply from Australian manufacturers…

    An applicant must demonstrate that the capital equipment to be imported is not produced in Australia in the ordinary course of business.  This can be demonstrated by :

    ·identifying a Tariff Concession order (TCO) for the equipment which is in force when the goods request is lodged; or

    ·Providing a statement from Industrial Supplies Office (ISO) stating that it is not aware of an Australian manufacturer producing or capable of producing the equipment or an equivalent good for the applicant’s  project.

    … Goods are equivalent goods if they meet the applicant’s engineering and technical requirements.  They do not need to be identical to the equipment to be imported, nor do they have to meet the applicant’s unduly specific criteria in terms of proprietary materials, technologies or the like.

    After an applicant’s project advice has been accepted, Customs will consider goods requests that have been lodged for that particular project …

    Where a request does not include the information required by this [Notice], it will be refused.

    It is in the interests of applicants to lodge goods requests well in advance of the date of importation. The goods request must precede the date of importation of the particular goods. Where a PBL Scheme request is retrospective it will be refused.”

    ACN 98/22 then proceeded to stipulate, importantly for present purposes, for “transitional arrangements” in the following terms:

    21.     Transitional Arrangements

    The guidelines outlined in this ACN will apply to all items 45, 46 and 56 requests for duty concession received from 1 August 1998.

    Any PBL requests lodged before 1 August 1998, for which no decision has been provided, will be assessed as follows:

    Project advice stage

    Undecided project advices will be assessed against the Project By-law criteria set out in this ACN.  Where Customs has provided a decision on the project advice stage.  Customs will honour that decision.

    Goods request stage

    Where Customs has provided a formal decision on the duty-free entry of capital equipment under item 45, 46 and 56, Customs will maintain this decision.  Where Customs has not provided a formal decision on the duty-free entry of capital equipment under items 45, 46 or 56, Customs will assess the goods request under Project By-law criteria.  The sole means of demonstrating that the imported goods are not made in Australia will be by a current TCO or ISO advice.

    It is strongly recommended that item 45, 46 and 56 applicants who have lodged duty concession requests with Customs before the commencement of this ACN review their requests to determine whether they should lodge additional information in accordance with this ACN’s requirements.”

    In the events which happened, Customs treated this ACN 98/22 as constituting the policy charter by which the concession application in relation to the subject units fell to be considered. Even if there was already an adequate Coal Item 45 application or applications in relation to the subject units before Customs, in the form of the 18 October 1993 and/or 13 October 1995 letters, or both, notwithstanding that Customs had signalled that the same could not be the subject of decision-making without more [10-13] and [30-32], it was ACN 98/22 which would henceforth apply if such applications were to be pursued, renewed, expanded or recast.

    Correspondence and Dialogue Between Coal and Customs 1997-8

  12. It is appropriate now to return to a narrative of the events involved in connection with Coal’s application for By-law 45 concessions, following upon Coal’s lengthy letter of 2 July 1996 to Customs, and Customs’ response of 2 August 1996 [34-37]. On 17 March 1997, Coal wrote to Customs and complained of discrimination in favour of unidentified competitors and asserted invalidity of policy criteria relating to ACN’s 95/74 and 96/32 concerning Item 45 concessional applications. A threat of litigation was made by Coal, and further dialogue was sought. Subsequently by letter of 19 March 1997, Coal made further complaint by reference to the circumstance that after the publication of ACN 95/94, Coal had applied for a TCO for component parts for an armoured face conveyor for the longwall mining system (TCO 9605410), in the light of the reference therein to “The maximisation of Australian industry participation should be demonstrated by the use of the TC System” [28]. Plainly this letter was not addressing the circumstances of the componentry for the underground conveyors. The letter went on to refer to Customs’ rejection of Coal’s TCO application, but in circumstances where Coal seems to me, for what it may matter, to cite from page 7 of ACN 95/74 to an extent which was not entirely accurate. Such page 7 did contain the text of what appears under the heading “Details of approaches to local manufacturers”, part of which has been already extracted at [28]. By a further letter of 7 April 1997, Coal made complaint inter alia of the “inordinate length of time taken to date by [Customs] to process our original Item 45 application, and of change in policy by-law criteria over the preceding two years”, complaints which I find hard to follow in the light of what appears at [10-13] and [30-32]. This letter of 7 April 1997 then concluded with the request “… that our client’s Item 45 application be given proper consideration on its merits”, and with the offer “As we have indicated on a number of occasions, we are willing to provide any further information or assistance that may be required by the ACS to bring our client’s application to finality.” Customs purported to address these assertions in correspondence to which does not appear necessary to refer, other than the following passage in Customs’ letter to Coal of 30 April 1997:

    “A fundamental requirement of any PBL request is that the goods for which a determination is sought are clearly identified.  ACN 96/32 calls for written and descriptive material and the classification of the goods for which a determination is sought.  While you have identified the type of goods in broad generic terms for the mine systems, Customs requires identification of the particular goods in the form that they are to be imported (or have been imported) for the project.”

    The imposition of such requirement was consistent with Customs’ ACNs preceding ACN 96/32 and the Ministerial and Customs communications which I have earlier reviewed. Also at this point in time, Customs was uncertain as to what componentry had already or had not yet been imported, as the last sentence of Customs’ letter to Coal of 30 April 1997 just extracted would indicate. As the above letter then proceeded to infer, the Coal letter of 2 July 1996 [34-36] related mainly to component parts for the longwall system, and much the same can be said of Coal’s next correspondence, including Coal’s letter to Customs of 29 May 1997 (so much is evident also from paragraphs 14 and 15 of the Affidavit of Coal’s Consultant Mr Rodda filed in support of Coal’s Application). Such Coal letter of 29 May 1997 also contained the following in relation to componentry other than that of the longwall system, and thus related to the subject units:

    “Details of the componentry imported for incorporation in the other items of capital equipment for this project, described in our letter of 13 October 1995, have not been provided as the 28 day period specified in your letter was impossible to meet.  The other componentry was imported at various times over the past three years or so.  The large number of organisations involved, and changes in personnel within that time, precluded any possibility that your deadline could be met.”

  1. Moving next to paragraph 13 of Coal’s submissions extracted in [79] above, Coal contends that Customs has failed to address the fact that one tender for controlled start transmission units was in fact provided to Customs and all other tenders for supply of the same componentry were offered and made available to Customs for inspection, and that what Customs did was refrain from “verifying information from readily available material”, and dismissed such summary “information” as “unsupported assertion”. In so doing, Coal contends that Customs thereby “placed an onus of proof upon the applicant that is not permitted”. The tender so provided to Customs was that of Nepean, which was attached to the Coal letter of 14 September 1999 [61], and “the other tenders” are referred to in such letter. As to Customs’ alleged refrain from “verifying information from readily available material, no identification of the same is specifically provided, and I would refer to the authorities cited in [83] above. Coal relies however upon the principle of law to the effect that it is rarely appropriate to speak in terms of onus of proof in relation to administrative decision-making: see for instance Swan Television and Radio-Broadcasters Ltd v Australian Broadcasting Tribunal (1985) 8 FCR 291 at 297, but this principle has been applied in different contexts to that here involved. The context here is the implementation or otherwise of successive policies of Government, being policies which have imposed obligations upon importers to demonstrate or satisfy the discretion of the Government decision-maker as to entitlement to fiscal concessionary treatment from Government. There can be no objection in principle to Government formulating policies stipulating for the discharge of an onus of demonstration, and understandably so where as here the information needed to be demonstrated is required to accommodate the favourable exercise of Government discretion.

  2. Moreover the Coal submission referred to in [87] above incorrectly describes the Customs’ finding and reasons for decision, as well as the substance of Coal’s submissions to Customs of 24 August 1999 [59] and 14 September 1999 [61]. The circumstances that Nepean did not choose to incorporate its locally manufactured componentry into its tendered underground conveyor model, or that Coal did not award the contract for the underground conveyors to Nepean because of the insufficiency in capacity size of Nepean’s underground conveyor model the subject of its tender which equipment incorporated Nepean’s own manufactured control start transmission units, being an insufficiency in capacity size compared to that of the successful tenderer, did not operate to produce the consequence that there was evidence before Customs of the fact of an absence of capacity on the part of Nepean to manufacture in Australia such units of componentry as those incorporated by Continental Ace into its underground conveyor model. Contrary to Coal’s submission, Customs did not purport to found its decision upon “a fact” that Nepean manufactured in Australia in early 1994 or thereabouts the subject units to the capacity size of those imported USA units assembled by Continental Ace in its underground conveyors, but upon the circumstance that Coal had not demonstrated to Customs an absence of Nepean’s capacity to manufacture in Australia units of the capacity size needed to accommodate the capacity performance of Continental Ace’s underground conveyors (see again paragraphs 60, 71 and 75 of the Statement of Reasons [65-66]. The fact that Coal asserted in its letter of 15 September 1999 to its Consultants (lastly extracted in [61]) that “Nepean Mining did not offer a system incorporating its [Australia made] ‘Boss’ “drives in early tender discussions, but withdrew those drives in the final offer and substituted the Flender drives for them” did not demonstrate any conclusion about Nepean’s capacity to manufacture in Australia “drives” to a capacity size of that incorporated by Continental Ace in its successful tender for the underground conveyors. In any event, the Coal submission does not adequately come to grips with the requirements of the prevailing policy that Government was demanding, namely the provision by Coal of an authoritative statement in writing from the Industrial Supplies Office.

  3. Thus it is to be appreciated that Customs did not express “a state of satisfaction”, as Coal submits, but importantly in relation to the terms of ACN 98/22, Customs expressed a state of dissatisfaction; see Customs’ notification of decision of 21 September 1999 [63] where under the heading “Policy considerations”, the following appears:

    “However, I am not satisfied that the request meets all of the Government’s policy criteria… I have found… the submissions have not substantiated your claim that at the time the thirteen (13) controlled start transmission systems were imported they were not produced in Australia in the ordinary course of business.”

    As I have previously indicated, there is no reason in principle why Customs could not adopt and put into effect the policy requirements of ACN 98/22, and thereby place on importers the obligation to satisfy Customs as to fulfilment of applicable aspects of policies regulating their concessionary entitlements. Contrary to Coal’s submission, by so doing Customs did not require Coal to produce corroborative evidence in the sense described in Mohamed v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1998) 83 FCR 234 at 246, but rather to demonstrate its claims to alleged entitlements. Of course, Customs had to take into account in the decision-making process any merits appertaining to Coal’s Item 54 application in relation to the subject units [69-70], but in the light of the analysis of the evidence undertaken in [82] to [86] above, I have not been able to identify the existence of merits in the terms for which Coal contends. It was one matter to demonstrate the kind of “open-tendering” process as described by Coal in its submissions to Customs of 20 July 1999 [56-57], and of 24 August 1999 [59], and of 14 and 15 September 1999 [61], but another matter to establish authentically from Nepean directly the extent of its relevant manufacturing capacity in Australia at the material time, or from the Industrial Supplies Office in relation for instance to Nepean by way of written statement in conformity with ACN 98/22. I would not accept the descriptions of the “open tendering” processes as provided by and on behalf of Coal to have occurred as proof of that conclusion which Coal was required by ACN98/22 to establish to Customs. Inferences may be drawn from the circumstances of an “open tendering” process as to what is a manufacturer’s capacity to create the very thing for which it has tendered, but not
    as to the limits of its capacity to create larger or different items of equipment if so commissioned.

  4. In the result, I would reject the Coal contention contained in paragraph 13 of Coal’s submissions that Customs disregarded or failed to take into account such information as was placed by Coal before Customs within the Peko test [70]. On my reading of the Statement of Reasons [65-66], such material was taken into account. And in any event, for what it may matter and for the reasons I have explained, I would not think that such information could have been necessarily characterised as sufficiently meritorious in any event.

  5. Coal next submits in the context of its segment as to “Australian Content”, but referrable also to its segment as to “Inflexible Application of Policy”, that “What forever remains unexplained is why the approach being urged upon [Customs] was accepted, on both the grounds of retrospectivity and local content in indistinguishable circumstances for some goods (referring thereby to the armoured face conveyor components, gear boxes and gears) but shunned in the present case”. In that regard Coal has pointed to the Goods Request Assessment Report of 23 April 1998 which was in terms similar to the contemporaneous Project Advice Assessment Report, extracted in [54], both of which were prepared in the context of Coal’s letters of 24 October 1997 and 14 November 1997 addressed in [52] and [53]. Coal contends that all that was so submitted in connection with Coal’s Item 45 application in relation to the armoured face conveyor components was also true of Coal’s Item 45 application in relation to the subject units, and that Customs had been inconsistent in its decision-making, and unreasonable by virtue of such inconsistency, citing Drake v Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs (1979) 46 FLR 409 at 420-2 (per Bowen CJ and Deane J), and the decision in Drake below in the Administrative Appeals Tribunal (1979) 2 ALD 634 (per Brennan J). I do not think that the relevant circumstances of such two Coal Item 45 concession applications were indistinguishable.

  6. As indicated in [54] above, the detail concerning the armoured face conveyor componentry as initially provided by Coal to Customs was reported internally within Customs on 4 May 1998 to have been “refined” since Coal’s original letter of application of 18 October 1993. Coal’s Item 45 application concerning the armoured face conveyor componentry had been lodged with Customs on 1 March 1994, and the goods had been imported thereafter in March, April and May 1996, and upon such basis the application was found by Customs to be prospective [54]. It is true that as further indicated in [55], what was reported in terms of maximisation of involvement of Australian suppliers in relation to this componentry seems to have been largely demonstrated by reference to the “open tendering” process which had occurred, but at the time that such Report was compiled on 4 May 1998, ACN 96/32 was still current, along with its express approbation of the “open tendering” process, and in any event, more investigation as to local manufacture had been undertaken by Coal, for the reason explained in [54], than appears to have been the case in relation to the subject units. In addition and in any event, this By-law 45 application carried the benefit of a TCO relating to the equipment the subject of the application, or at least most of it: see [53] and [56]. Consequently at least for those reasons, in terms of both absence of Australian manufacture and prospectivity of application, Customs came to different conclusions than it did in relation to the subject units. I would therefore reject the submissions as to the presence of inconsistency in decision-making on the part of Customs, and of failure to take into account relevant matter placed before Customs for the purpose of decision-making.

    The Inflexible Applicant of Policy

  7. In this segment of Coal’s submissions, Coal seeks judicial review by reference to Customs findings set out in the following passages of decision-making.

    As to Customs’ letter of 21 September 1999 [63], from that part of what appears under the heading “Policy Considerations”, which indicates the following conclusions upon the subject of Retrospectivity:

    “I have considered all the information contained on file including the additional information provided in your submission of 14 September 1999. I have found that the request is retrospective and the submissions have not substantiated your claim that at the time the thirteen (13) controlled start transmission systems were imported they were not produced in Australia in the ordinary course of business.

    I have therefore concluded that the item 45 goods request does not meet the Government’s policy requirements as outlined in ACN 98/22.”

    As to the Statement of Reasons, the following paragraphs already extracted in [66] above, namely 61 and 71-76.

  8. The submissions as to such inflexibility of applications is said to be revealed as follows:

    “20.     Such inflexibility of application is revealed by:-

    ·the basis upon which the Respondent rejected the Applicant’s reliance upon an identified Tariff Concession Order; and

    ·the failure to place any weight upon a statement from the ISO; and

    ·the fact that a determination was made in respect of indistinguishable goods and indistinguishable facts – if the merits of one application dictated a favourable determination, it is only the inflexible application of policy which dictates an adverse decision in the present case.”

  9. As to the basis upon which Customs rejected Coal’s reliance upon such “Tariff Concession Order”, I would refer to the brief reference thereto at the conclusion of the Coal letter of application of 20 July 1999 in [56] and my explanation in relation thereto at [57]. I would also refer to the extracts from the Customs’ internal report of 26 August 1999 concerning this TCO (correctly to be numbered 9750621) extracted at [60]. Significantly, Coal did not pursue this issue further in its final contentions to Customs of 14 September 1999 [61], and on the contrary appears to eschew any further purported reliance upon the same in [64].

  10. There is no merit in this TCO contention. As indicated in [80] above, Coal elected to base its By-law 45 application in relation to all componentry for the Kenmare Colliery project from the outset without recourse to a Tariff Concession Order [9]. The circumstance that Coal subsequently adopted a change of course in relation to the armoured face conveyor componentry (see [48] above) does not assist Coal, because it did not do so in relation to the componentry comprising the subject units. To have attached TCO 9705621 to the 20 July 1999 application [56] in relation to the subject units created an irrelevancy. As Customs reported internally on 26 August 1999 [60], TCO 9705621 concluded nothing about the capacity to manufacture goods such as the subject units imported in 1995, and in any event related to gear boxes and drive axles [57].

  11. As to Coal’s submissions as to Customs “failure to place any weight upon a statement from the ISO,” the same is of course a reference to the oral information which Coal reported to Customs as having been communicated to Coal by the Industrial Supplies Office on 16 August 1999 [59]. Again this submission is without proper foundation. It cannot rightly be said that Customs placed no weight on such ISO statement which it so reported to Customs. The situation rather was that Coal having reported this statement to Customs in the hearsay terms which it did, without obtaining the written statement from the ISO as required by ACN 98/22,which may well have been more specific and otherwise informative for Customs, Coal thereafter sought to render nugatory such ISO information by its comprehensive submissions to Customs of 14 and 15 September 1999 [61].

  12. As to this segment of Coal’s written submissions concerning “indistinguishable goods” and “indistinguishable facts”, it suffices to repeat what has already been said above in relation to the armoured face conveyor componentry in [91] above.

    Retrospectivity

  13. Coal first submits that “The policy of retrospectivity seeks to ensure that applicants maximise the opportunity for Australian manufacturers to participate in the project so far as they are able”. I cannot identify any such notion underpinning the policy against retrospectivity. The policy against retrospectivity, consistently formulated in the context mainly of ACNs, has been already summarised historically in [28] as to both ACN 95/55 and 95/74, [40] as to ACN 96/32, and [47] as to ACN 98/22. It may also be inferred that there existed a policy against retrospectivity of lodging applications prior to the writing of the Department’s letter of 28 February 1994 to Coal having regard to the content of such letter [12]. The policy is plainly directed at lest primarily to convenience and effectiveness of public administration. The lodgment of applications for Item 45 concessions after commitment to importation, and all the more so after completion of importation, has the inherent tendency or potential to render the task of bureaucratic investigation and verification more difficult, and more uncertain in outcome. Moreover, retrospective applications in relation to Item 45 matters are antithetical to the other principal policy as early identification of the existence or non-existence of manufacture of relevant equipment in Australia as an incident to effective demonstration of such non-existence to Government.

  14. Coal further submits that no policy can validly preclude the making of a determination subsequent to the date of importation, by reason of the presence of the expression “or shall be deemed to have applied” in sub-section 273(1) of the Customs Act [2]. Upon that footing, the provisions of ACN 98/22, extracted in [47] above, which I repeat below for ease of reference, are said to be invalid:

    “The Government policy directive is that the PBL Scheme operates on a prospective basis. Therefore the project advice and the goods request must be lodged before the capital equipment is imported. If either the project advice or the goods request is lodged after the equipment has been imported, the request is retrospective and will be refused.”

    There is no substance in this contention. The expression “particular goods” is directed to classifications of goods, in the sense of types of goods differing according to utility or function, such as those used for major resource processing and agricultural based products, or for construction or shipbuilding. It would not make sense nor serve any contextual purpose for section 273 to be purporting, by implication of the use of the words “or be deemed to have applied”, to merge the distinction between goods which have been already imported and those which have not yet been imported.

  15. Coal then submits alternatively that the policy against retrospectivity expressed in ACN 98/22 has been inflexibly applied by Customs in its decision-making of 17 September 1999 [62], where the following appears:

    “The request is clearly retrospective and there are no circumstances which would warrant departure from the policy and administrative guidelines regarding the ‘prospectivity’ requirement.”

    Coal points to the following circumstances, first, that the Coal letter of 13 October 1993 foreshadowed that a determination was being sought, and secondly, that the Coal letter of 23 October 1995 preceded at least the last of the three shipments, namely that which arrived in Australia on 1 November 1995. Such submissions overlook a number of intervening matters to which reference has already been made, which I repeat below:

    (i)whilst the letter of 13 October 1993 did foreshadow that a determination under By-law 45 would be sought, it did not identify the subject units, nor could it have then done so because of the uncertainty as to what componentry would be the subject of ultimate application; to have merely foreshadowed such application served no utility to the administration of Customs, as it made clear to Coal [10-12];

    (ii)Notwithstanding the Government policy statements made from 4 May 1994 to 21 June 1995 [16-22], Coal took no steps in pursuit of an Item 45 application until its letter of application of 23 October 1995, despite its importation of eleven out of the thirteen subject units prior to the writing of such letter, and its completion of importation within a week or so after writing such letter;

    (iii)Virtually the only utility of the letter of 23 October 1995 for the purpose of this present Application for Review was to identify the subject units, and such letter did not advance any By-law application to any material extent: on the contrary see the internal Customs reports summarised at [29-30], and Customs’ response to Coal of 14 March 1996 [32]. Even if the letter of 13 October 1995 had constituted a competent By-law 45 application, as a result of subsequent statutory amendment the same was reconstituted as a fresh application [36];

    (iv)In the result, no application for a Item 45 By-law determination in respect of the subject units was made until 20 July 1999, a delay which Coal sought to explain in such letter of application by reference to mislaid documentation [56].

    It was partly in the foregoing context that Customs entered upon the examination of an application made for the most part about four years after the subject units had been imported, hardly a case of merits or exceptional circumstances persuasive of a favourable exercise of discretion.

  1. Coal then submit that “Both the statutory provision and administrative guidelines contemplate that consideration should be given to such matters as:

    ·whether the importation of the goods in question will in fact discourage, rather than encourage, the development project which is proposing to import the goods from investing in Australia

    ·whether the importation of the goods will in fact detrimentally affect assistance to Australian manufacture of goods

    ·whether the importation of the goods will in fact detrimentally affect the maximisation of Australian industry participation in a project or opportunities for local industry in the provision of major equipment.”

    These factors are referred to in ACN 95/74 and ACN 96/32. But such factors do not so operate within such ACNs as to derogate from or in any way modify the policy as to retrospectivity, which, as has been seen, received perhaps the predominant emphasis in the Ministerial communications and ACNs which I have reviewed in this Judgment. Indeed all such three factors extracted concern policy in relation to potential limitations upon importation of goods.

  2. By addressing the Applicant Coal’s written submissions in the way which I have, commencing with my own initial segment headed “Policy and Merits Generally”, I have covered all of the grounds for review advanced by the applicant’s Further Amended Application For An Order Of Review and extracted at [67], save as to the issues as to weight raised by my particulars to its “Wednesbury” grounds set out in paragraph 5. I think that it suffices to say that weight was clearly a matter for the Respondent: Abebe v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1999) 162 ALR 1 at 54.

  3. I therefore dismiss the Applicant and order the Applicant to pay the Respondent’s costs.

I certify that the preceding one hundred and four (104) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Conti.

Associate:

Dated:             4 October 2000

Counsel for the Applicant: Dr G Flick SC
Ms P Sibtain
Solicitor for the Applicant: Dixon Holmes du Pont
Counsel for the Respondent: Mr S Gageler
Mr S Lloyd
Solicitor for the Respondent: Australian Government Solicitor
Date of Hearing: 17 August 2000
Date of Judgment: 4 October 2000
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