Wojciechowska v Secretary, Department of Communities and Justice
[2025] NSWCATAD 2
•6 January 2025
|
New South Wales |
Case Name: | Wojciechowska v Secretary, Department of Communities and Justice |
Medium Neutral Citation: | [2025] NSWCATAD 2 |
Hearing Date(s): | 02 February 2024 |
Date of Orders: | 06 January 2025 |
Decision Date: | 6 January 2025 |
Jurisdiction: | Administrative and Equal Opportunity Division |
Before: | ADCJ Hennessy, Deputy President |
Decision: | (1) In relation to Ms Wojciechowska’s first access application I make the following orders: |
Catchwords: | ADMINISTRATIVE LAW — Freedom of information — Access to information — Exemptions |
Legislation Cited: | Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 (NSW) |
Cases Cited: | Allesch v Maunz (2000) 74 ALJR 1206 |
Texts Cited: | Mark Aronson, Judicial review of administrative action and government liability (7th ed, 2022, Thomson Reuters (Professional) Australia Limited) |
Category: | Principal judgment |
Parties: | Paulina Wojciechowska (Applicant) |
Representation: | Applicant (Self-Represented) |
File Number(s): | 2022/00123205 |
Publication Restriction: | Nil |
REASONS FOR DECISION
Overview
Ms Wojciechowska applied to the Secretary, Department of Communities and Justice (the Respondent) for access to information under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 (NSW) (GIPA Act). Ms Wojciechowska now applies to the Tribunal for a review of those decisions.
The Tribunal made procedural directions for the parties to file and serve evidence and submissions and the matters were listed together for hearing on 2 February 2024. On the morning of the hearing Ms Wojciechowska appeared by Audio Visual Link and submitted that the proceedings were procedurally unfair and therefore “null and void for jurisdictional error”. She gave two reasons for that submission.
Firstly she has not been served with the confidential bundle of material that the Respondent provided to the Tribunal (the confidential material). Ms Wojciechowska submitted that the Tribunal did not tell her that the Respondent would provide documents on a confidential basis and she is entitled to see that material. The Tribunal should order that all the confidential material be served on her but impose a condition that she not share the information with others. Ms Wojciechowska said she has nothing to say at the hearing because she has not seen the documents and the Tribunal is acting without jurisdiction. Ms Wojciechowska described this as her “major point”.
For the reasons I give below, these proceedings are not “null and void” and there is no procedural unfairness. The Tribunal will not be in breach of the hearing rule of procedural fairness by failing to direct an agency to serve an applicant with information where it is claimed that there is an overriding public interest against disclosing that information.
Secondly, Ms Wojciechowska said that the Respondent has not served her with their evidence and submissions (the open material) in accordance with the Tribunal’s directions. Apart from the Respondent’s “Submissions in Reply” dated 31 January 2024 which were served by post, Ms Wojciechowska said that the remainder of the open material was sent to her by email and she did not consent to electronic service. Ms Wojciechowska described this submission as “less relevant” than her submission that the Respondent should have served her with the confidential material.
The Respondent served the open material by post in accordance with the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Rules 2014 (NCAT Rules) when they became aware that Ms Wojciechowska did not consent to electronic service. But that did not happen until 23 January 2024, nine days before the hearing. Nevertheless, there is no procedural unfairness because of the manner in which the Respondent served the open material.
Ms Wojciechowska did not apply for an adjournment so that the agency could serve her with the confidential material, nor did she apply for an adjournment to give her more time to respond to the open material. For the reasons I give below, I did not suggest that she do so.
Ms Wojciechowska made various comments during the oral hearing that the Tribunal was not validly constituted, that there had been a constant replacement of Tribunal members and that I should not hear her application because there was, at least, an apprehension of bias. I understand that one of Ms Wojciechowska’s concerns is that because I did not preside over the directions hearings in these proceedings, or over other proceedings to which she has been a party, I do not understand the history of the proceedings between her and the Respondent.
As Ms Wojciechowska chose not to put any of these comments in the form of an application for me to recuse myself, or to make any other interlocutory order, it is not necessary or appropriate for me to consider them further.
After hearing the parties’ submissions on the preliminary issue of breach of procedural fairness and want of jurisdiction, I went on to hear the substantive application under the GIPA Act.
Are the proceedings null and void because of the Respondent’s failure to serve Ms Wojciechowska with the confidential material lodged with the Tribunal?
Factual findings
Before the hearing, and in compliance with the Tribunal’s procedural directions, the Respondent lodged the confidential material with the Tribunal. That material contained the following four sections:
(1)unredacted bundle of documents released in response to Items 15 and 16 of the first access application (pages 1 – 366);
(2)CCTV footage on a USB responsive to Item 1 of the second access application;
(3)unredacted bundle of documents released in response to Item 3 of the second access application (pages 367-381); and
(4)unredacted document released in response to item 11 of the second application (pages 382-384).
The confidential material contains information that the Respondent submits Ms Wojciechowska should not be given access to because there is an “overriding public interest against disclosure”: GIPA Act, s 13. The agency did not give the confidential material to Ms Wojciechowska.
During the hearing on 24 February 2024, the Respondent sought to tender the confidential material in evidence. The Respondent did not apply to the Tribunal for a confidential hearing in relation to any of that material presumably because Ms Wojciechowska had not advised the Respondent that she required any of the witnesses for cross-examination.
Legal principles about disclosure of information for which there is an overriding public interest against disclosure
Relevant principles of procedural fairness
One aspect of procedural fairness is the “hearing rule”. That rule requires a decision maker to give a person an opportunity to be heard before making a decision affecting their interests: Kioa v West (1985) 159 CLR 550, 553 quoting Mason J in FAI Insurances Ltd v Winneke (1982) 151 CLR 342, 360. The applicability of the hearing rule to Tribunal proceedings is reinforced by s 38(5)(c) of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2014 (NSW) (NCAT Act) which provides that the Tribunal must “take such measures as are reasonably practicable to ensure that the parties have a reasonable opportunity to be heard or otherwise have their submissions considered in the proceedings.”
Mark Aronson summarised the relevant principle in Judicial review of administrative action and government liability (7th ed, 2022, Thomson Reuters (Professional) Australia Limited). At [9.150] Aronson states that:
Parties appearing before a tribunal providing adversarial adjudication can usually expect to have access to all material that will be considered by the decision-maker.
Similarly, in administrative review proceedings, parties can usually expect to have access to all the material that will be considered by the decision maker. But that principle is not absolute. The rules of procedural fairness can be modified or excluded if there is “a clear contrary legislative intention”: Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v WZARH [2015] HCA 40 (November 2015) [30] (Kiefel, Bell and Keane JJ). As the High Court held in Gypsy Jokers Motorcycle Club Incorporated v Commissioner of Police (2008) 234 CLR 532 at 598:
Parliament can validly legislate to exclude or modify the rules of procedural fairness provided there is "sufficient indication" that "they are excluded by plain words of necessary intendment". Whether the obligation to accord procedural fairness is satisfied will always depend on all the circumstances.
Modifications to procedural fairness under the GIPA Act
Section 107 of the GIPA Act modifies the rules of procedural fairness in relation to “information for which there is an overriding public interest against disclosure”. I will refer to such information as “confidential information”.
107 Procedure for dealing with public interest considerations
(1) In determining an application for NCAT administrative review, NCAT is to ensure that it does not, in the reasons for its decision or otherwise, disclose any information for which there is an overriding public interest against disclosure.
The general rule is that the Tribunal is to ensure that it does not disclose “confidential information” when determining an application for administrative review. If the Tribunal itself is of the opinion that it is necessary to do so to prevent the disclosure of confidential information, it must close the hearing. Section 107(2) of the GIPA Act states that:
(2) On an NCAT administrative review, NCAT must receive evidence and hear argument in the absence of the public, the review applicant and the applicant’s representative if in the opinion of NCAT it is necessary to do so to prevent the disclosure of information for which there is an overriding public interest against disclosure.
Under s 107(3) the Tribunal must close the hearing if the relevant Minister or agency applies for the hearing to be closed:
(3) On an NCAT administrative review, NCAT must, on the application of the Minister administering this Act or the agency, receive evidence and hear argument in the absence of—
(a) the public and the applicant, and
(b) the applicant’s representative
if NCAT is of the opinion that it is necessary to do so to prevent the disclosure of information for which there is, or for which there could be or is claimed to be, an overriding public interest against disclosure. (Emphasis added.)
The Tribunal summarised the effect of these provisions in Brazel v Sydney Water Corporation [2021] NSWCATAP 13 at [53] – [54]:
53 This Tribunal and one of its predecessors, the Administrative Decisions Tribunal, have considered the meaning and effect of s 107 of the GIPA Act in a number of decisions.
54 In Black v Hunter New England Local Health District [2011] NSWADT 295, the Administrative Decisions Tribunal stated:
“30 Without a procedure along the lines of section 107, the general rule of an open hearing and the open receipt of evidence would apply, which would be contrary to the objects of the GIPA Act and also render the determination of the respondent nugatory. This clearly was not the intention of Parliament.
. . .
37 … subsection 107(3) is mandatory in operation in that where the Tribunal forms the opinion as prescribed in that subsection it must receive the evidence and hear argument the subject of the agency's application in the absence of the public, the applicant and the applicant's representative.”
The opinion, as prescribed in s 107(3), is the opinion that it is necessary to close the hearing “to prevent the disclosure of information for which there is, or for which there could be or is claimed to be, an overriding public interest against disclosure opinion”.
Section 107 of the GIPA Act regulates the disclosure of “confidential information” during the hearing when the Tribunal is receiving evidence and hearing argument. That provision prevails to the extent of any inconsistency with the NCAT Act or the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 (NSW): GIPA Act, s 112A.
Section 66 of the NCAT Act sets out general and specific rules about the disclosure of “confidential information” in contexts other than the hearing including before a hearing has taken place. Section 66(1) states the general rule which is that nothing in the NCAT Act requires or authorises any person or body (including a Respondent) to disclose information to another person or body (including an applicant) if there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of that information.
66 Effect of Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009
(1) General rule Except as provided by this section, nothing in this Act requires or authorises any person or body to disclose information to another person or body if there is an overriding public interest against the disclosure of the information under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009.
There are exceptions to this general rule for disclosure of “confidential information” to the Tribunal. Section 66(2) and (3) provide that:
(2) Disclosure to person or body other than Tribunal The provisions of the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 continue to apply to the disclosure of information to any person or body other than to the Tribunal as if this Act had not been enacted.
(3) Disclosure to Tribunal If a provision of this Act requires or authorises any person or body to disclose information to the Tribunal in relation to any proceedings before it and there is an overriding public interest against the disclosure of the information under the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009—
(a) the Government Information (Public Access) Act 2009 does not prevent the disclosure of the information to the Tribunal, and
(b) the Tribunal is to do all things necessary to ensure that the information is not disclosed to any person other than a member of the Tribunal as constituted for the purpose of the proceedings unless the person or body disclosing the information to the Tribunal consents to the further disclosure.
One effect of s 66(3) of the NCAT Act is that where the Tribunal directs an agency to file and serve material, and there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of that material, the Tribunal is to do “all things necessary to ensure that the information is not disclosed to any person other than a member of the Tribunal as constituted for the purposes of the proceedings…”
The text of s 66(3)(b) of the NCAT Act refers to information for which there is an overriding public interest against disclosure. Unlike s 107(3) of the GIPA Act, it does not expressly refer to information “for which there could be or is claimed to be, an overriding public interest against disclosure.” One purpose of s 107(3) of the GIPA Act and s 66(3)(b) of the NCAT Act, when read together, is to ensure that “confidential information” is not disclosed to an applicant without the agency’s consent. The Tribunal cannot determine whether the material contains “confidential information” until after hearing the evidence and submissions. If the Tribunal directs an agency to serve purportedly “confidential information” on an applicant before the hearing it risks being in breach of s 107(3) of the GIPA Act when it receives evidence and hears argument during the hearing. Such a direction would defeat the purpose of s 107(3) of the GIPA Act.
Based on the text, context and purpose of these provisions, it was parliament’s intention to modify the disclosure aspect of the hearing rule of procedural fairness in relation to the service on an applicant of purportedly “confidential information” (information for which there is an overriding public interest against disclosure) lodged by an agency under the GIPA Act. The Tribunal will not be in breach of the hearing rule of procedural fairness by failing to direct an agency to serve purportedly “confidential information” on an applicant before the hearing. It follows that the proceedings are not null and void because of the Tribunal’s failure to make such a direction.
To comply with s 66(3)(b) of the NCAT Act, the Tribunal may make an order under s 64(1)(d) of the NCAT Act prohibiting disclosure to the applicant of the content of confidential information lodged with the Tribunal.
Are the proceedings null and void because of the manner in which the Respondent served or purported to serve Ms Wojciechowska with the open material?
Procedural steps
At the Directions Hearing on 7 November 2023, Ms Wojciechowska did not appear but the Tribunal allowed her to be represented by an agent, Mr Krzysztof Bolejko.
The Tribunal made the following directions:
1. Directions 2 to 6 made on 3 October 2023 are vacated.
2. Secretary, Department of Communities and Justice to give to the Tribunal and all other parties the following material: evidence including statements, documents and submissions on or before 21 November 2023.
3. Paulina Wojciechowska is to give to the Tribunal and all other parties the following material: evidence including statements, documents and submissions on or before 19 December 2023.
4. The Information Commissioner is to give to the Tribunal and all other parties the following material: submissions on or before 16 January 2024.
5. The parties are to advise whether a hearing can be dispensed with and the matter determined on the papers on or before 16 January 2024.
6. Secretary, Department of Communities and Justice to give to the Tribunal all other parties the following material: all evidence in reply and submissions on or before 31 January 2024
7. Paulina Wojciechowska is to give to the Tribunal and all other parties any written submissions in response to the submissions filed by the Information Commissioner on or before 31 January 2024
8. The matter remains listed for an oral hearing on 2 February 2024 (unless an oral hearing is dispensed with).
Note: The Tribunal notes that Ms Wojciechowska has indicated that she agrees to the matter being determined on the papers
The Respondent lodged the following open and confidential material with the Tribunal:
(1)Three affidavits (Affidavit of James O’Young dated 21 November 2023, Exhibit R3, Affidavit of Scott Mayer dated 22 November 2023, Exhibit R4; and Affidavit of Michael McIntosh dated 23 November 2023, Exhibit R5 (the three witness affidavits);
(2)Respondent’s Open Bundle of Documents (two volumes) received by the Tribunal on 22 November 2023, Exhibit R6 (open bundle);
(3)Respondent’s Confidential bundle of documents received by the Tribunal on 22 November 2023, Exhibit R7; (confidential material)
(4)Respondent’s written submissions dated 23 November 2023; (Respondent’s submissions); and
(5)Respondent’s written submissions in Reply dated 31 January 2024; (Respondent’s reply submissions).
The material listed at (1), (2), (4) and (5) constitute the “open material”.
Ms Wojciechowska’s evidence and submissions
Ms Wojciechowska gave informal oral evidence during the hearing on 2 February 2024. The basis on which she submitted that she has not been provided with all the open material is that the Respondent has not served her with all that material by post in accordance with the Tribunal’s directions.
Ms Wojciechowska told the Tribunal at the hearing, that the Respondent terminated email correspondence in 2022 and that, “the Department always sent me everything by post.” She said that the Department always provide instructions for the lawyers. I assume she means that the Respondent always tells their lawyers to send her everything by post. I find that it was Ms Wojciechowska’s understanding, based on previous proceedings, that when the Tribunal made the directions on 7 November 2023, the Respondent would serve her by post rather than electronically.
Ms Wojciechowska told the Tribunal that she does not open attachments to emails from the Respondent because she does not trust them, but she does extend her goodwill by opening emails from time to time. Ms Wojciechowska also stated that she cannot sift through multiple documents in electronic form and it is costly to print out every page of emailed material. Even if she is successful in the proceedings, she cannot recover those costs.
I find that the Respondent has served the open material electronically but that Ms Wojciechowska did not consent to that form of service. It does not matter why Ms Wojciechowska did not consent to electronic service. She is entitled to withhold her consent.
Evidence of service and communications about service
The material handed up by the Respondent to the Tribunal at the hearing comprised:
(1)Affidavit of Robert Sherrington affirmed on 2 February 2024; Exhibit R2 (Sherrington affidavit)
(2)Email from Robert Sherrington to Ms Wojciechowska dated 2 February 2024 at 9.13 am (the morning of the hearing) attaching the affidavit by way of service and asking that Ms Wojciechowska confirm receipt of the email; Exhibit R1 (covering email).
Following Ms Wojciechowska’s submission at the hearing that she had not been served with any material from the Respondent, apart from the Reply submissions which were served by post, Mr Sherrington tendered an affidavit dated 2 February 2024. That affidavit set out the Respondent’s arrangements for service in these proceedings and some other correspondence that had passed between the parties.
Despite the fact that the covering email attaching the Sherrington affidavit was served electronically, not by post, I accepted those documents into evidence for the purpose of determining whether the Tribunal had breached the rules of procedural fairness. Ms Wojciechowska requested an adjournment for one week to provide her own affidavit as to service and to prepare cross-examination questions for Mr Sherrington about service.
The guiding principle for the NCAT Act and the procedural rules is “to facilitate the just, quick and cheap resolution of the real issues in the proceedings”: NCAT Act, s 36. I refused to adjourn the proceedings for one week because I was satisfied that Ms Wojciechowska could access Mr Sherrington’s affidavit by email and that one hour was sufficient time to prepare to cross-examine Mr Sherrington on his affidavit. It was quicker and cheaper not to give an adjournment and justice did not require an adjournment to be given.
Electronic service of open material
On 23 November 2023, two days after the date given at the directions hearing for the filing and service of material, Mr Sherrington sent Ms Wojciechowska an email attaching sworn but unsealed versions of two of the three witness affidavits in Item (1) above. He apologised for the delay in providing those materials and ended the email with the following offer:
I would be pleased to arrange for a printed copy of these materials to be posted to you. If you would like me to do so, please let me know the address I should use for that purpose.
An hour or so later, Mr Sherrington sent Ms Wojciechowska an email via a document sharing service called “Kiteworks”. The email contained a link to access the Respondent’s open bundle. Later the same day, Mr Sherrington sent Ms Wojciechowska a further email attaching sworn and sealed versions of the three witness affidavits and a sealed version of the Respondent’s submissions.
The open material was emailed to Ms Wojciechowska’s email address. The address of the email Mr Sherrington used is in paragraph 4 of his affidavit. I accept his evidence that that was the email address nominated by Ms Wojciechowska in her applications for administrative review. He knew the email address was active during the relevant period because he had received emails from that address on 6 and 7 November 2023, 18 January 2024 and 1 February 2024. On 23 November 2023 Mr Sherrington emailed the three witness affidavits, the Respondent’s open bundle of documents and a sealed version of the Respondent’s submissions.
Mr Sherrington has not received a reply to any of those emails. Ms Wojciechowska did not deny that she had received these emails. I find that Ms Wojciechowska was aware that she had received an email from the Respondent on 23 November 2023 containing material filed in these proceedings. I am not satisfied that Ms Wojciechowski read Mr Sherrington’s covering email making the offer of service by post or opened the attachments.
The Respondent did not serve Ms Wojciechowska with their open material in accordance with the NCAT Rules until 23 January 2024
The Tribunal’s direction was for the parties to “give” the other party certain material by a specified date. The reference to “give” in the directions is a reference to serving that material in accordance with Rule 13(2) of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal Rules 2014 (NCAT Rules):
(2) Means for service or giving of notices and documents
A notice or document may be served on or given to a person or body—
(a) by means of personal service, or
(b) by posting a copy of the notice or document, addressed to the person or body—
(i) to the person’s or body’s address for service, or
(ii) if the person or body does not have an address for service, to the person’s or body’s business or residential address (or the business or residential address last known to the person or body serving the notice or document), or
(c) by leaving a copy of the notice or document, addressed to the person or body—
(i) at the person’s or body’s address for service, or
(ii) if the person does not have an address for service, at the person’s or body’s business or residential address (or the business or residential address last known to the person or body serving the notice or document), or . . .
. . .
(g) in the case of a person or body that has consented to electronic service by means of an email address or mobile phone number specified by the person or body—by transmitting the notice or document in an electronic format, addressed to the person or body, to that address or number
The effect of the Rule 13(2)(g) of the NCAT Rules is that unless a party consents to electronic service as described in that Rule, the document has not been served. Rule 13(2)(i) allows for service “in such other manner as the Tribunal or a registrar directs in a particular case”. The Tribunal did not direct service to be effected in any other manner. The Respondent emailed the open material to Ms Wojciechowska but she had not consented to that manner of service.
On the basis of [15] – [18] of Mr Sherrington’s affidavit and the answers he gave in cross-examination, I find that on 16 January 2024, Mr Sherrington sent Ms Wojciechowska an email requesting that she notify him as to whether she required any of the agency’s witnesses for cross-examination. On 18 January 2024, Ms Wojciechowska replied by email thanking him for the email and stating that:
Unfortunately I cannot inform you of that as I have not yet been provided with all of your materials.
You are in default of the Tribunal’s orders.
Please provide all of your materials immediately.
For clarity it is denied that you served anything on me in this matter.
Once you serve your materials I will need 8 weeks minimum to prepare my materials.
On 18 January 2024, Mr Sherrington prepared a letter to Ms Wojciechowska enclosing all of the agency’s open material and caused it to be sent by registered post to the postal address nominated on the application for administrative review. Mr Sherrington stated that while he did not personally post that material, he left the material and a covering letter together and attached a post it note with instructions on how it should be posted. In accordance with the practices and procedures of the Crown Solicitors Office, his understanding is that someone else placed the material in an envelope and posted it at the Post Office.
The Australia Post online tracking document records that delivery to Ms Wojciechowska’s address was attempted on 23 January 2024. It also records that as at 3.08 on 23 January 2024, the letter was “awaiting collection” at Lenah Valley LPO.
Ms Wojciechowska did not admit that Mr Sherrington posted the letter or that delivery was attempted. She questioned Mr Sherrington about the purported service of the letter.
A document may be served on or given to a person “by posting a copy of the notice or document addressed to the person or body to the person’s or body’s address for service”: NCAT Rules r 13(2)(b). Proof of service by post does not require proof of personal service. I find that, in accordance Rule 13(2)(b)(i) of the NCAT Rules, the agency’s open material was served on Ms Wojciechowska by post on 23 January 2024. Mr Sherrington posted a copy of that material to her at her address for service. The Australia Post online tracking document is a contemporaneous record confirming that delivery was attempted on 23 January 2024. It also records that as at 3.08 on 23 January 2024, the letter was “awaiting collection” at Lenah Valley LPO.
Regardless of whether Ms Wojciechowska received a notice from the Post Office that a parcel was awaiting collection, as a matter of law, the letter has been served by post. The mode of service in Rule 13(2)(b)(i) does not require proof that the material was actually delivered to the person.
Ms Wojciechowska did not tell the Tribunal why she did not comply with the Tribunal’s directions
Ms Wojciechowska did not comply with the Tribunal’s direction to give her evidence and submissions to the Tribunal and the other parties by 19 December 2023. She did not tell the Tribunal until the day of the hearing that her main reason for not complying was that she had not been served with the confidential material. Nor did she tell the Tribunal that she had not been served with the open material electronically rather than by post.
On 18 January 2024, Ms Wojciechowska wrote to the Tribunal in response to a direction made on 7 November 2023. That direction was that by 16 January 2024 the parties are to advise whether a hearing can be dispensed with under s 50(1)(c) of the NCAT Act. In that email, Ms Wojciechowska wrote:
I agree that it is likely that the hearing might be needed. However, the hearing on 2 February 2024 is unsustainable as the respondent has not yet provided me with all of its materials. Once again the respondent breached the Tribunal orders.
Other than above I cannot assist the Tribunal with a more definite statement at this juncture. Once the respondent complies with the directions of the Tribunal, I will be able to start preparing my materials and especially my submissions. Then I will be in a position to say if the hearing is needed with certainty.
The Tribunal proceeding when one party (the Secretary of Department of Communities and Justice) has not yet been provided the other party (me) with all the materials would necessarily proceed in denial of procedural fairness. The Tribunal acting in the breach of procedural fairness acts without jurisdiction and all of its decisions are void.
In my short reasons for deciding that a hearing should not be dispensed with, dated 23 January 2024, I noted that:
. . . the Applicant has not specified what material the Respondent has not provided nor the source of the duty or responsibility to file such material.
At the hearing Ms Wojciechowska explained that she did not contact the Tribunal about the Respondent’s failure to serve the confidential material or its failure to serve the open material by post because she has been criticised for repeatedly communicating with the Tribunal and the Respondent about objections she has taken.
Legal principles
Failure to serve an applicant with material in accordance with the NCAT Rules does not make the entire proceedings null and void. Nor does such a failure necessarily mean that the Tribunal has breached the rules of procedural fairness. I have set out the elements of the “hearing rule” of procedural fairness above. I repeat the Tribunal’s obligation under s 38(5)(c) of the NCAT Act to “take such measures as are reasonably practicable to ensure that the parties have a reasonable opportunity to be heard or otherwise have their submissions considered in the proceedings.” In Allesch v Maunz (2000) 74 ALJR 1206 at 1213 Kirby J said:
Sometimes, through stubbornness, confusion, misunderstanding, fear or other emotions, a party may not take advantage of the opportunity to be heard, although such opportunity is provided. Affording the opportunity is all that the law and principle require.
Findings and conclusion
The Tribunal took all reasonably practical measures to ensure that Ms Wojciechowska had a reasonable opportunity to be heard. It did so by making directions that the Respondent file and serve its material and that Ms Wojciechowska give to the Tribunal and all other parties her evidence including statements, documents and submissions on or before 19 December 2023. Ms Wojciechowska had notice of the hearing and appeared by AVL.
Despite being given a reasonable opportunity to be heard or otherwise have her submissions considered, Ms Wojciechowska did not take advantage of that opportunity.
The first and major reason Ms Wojciechowska did not take advantage of that opportunity was her view that the proceedings were null and void because of the Respondent’s failure to serve the confidential material. Ms Wojciechowska was self-represented but she has extensive experience with Tribunal proceedings under the GIPA Act. She knew that that submission would put the hearing at risk but she chose not to make any express submission about it until the day of the hearing. She does not have a good reason for failing to do so.
The second reason Ms Wojciechowska did not take advantage of the opportunity to be heard was because the Respondent did not serve her with the open material by post in November 2023. I have found that the open material was not served until 23 January 2024, nine days before the hearing. Ms Wojciechowska said that the Respondent always provide instructions to its lawyers about the manner of service. While I am not satisfied that Ms Wojciechowska read the email offering service by post, she was aware that the Respondent had purported to serve her with the open material by email. Despite that awareness, she did not tell the Tribunal until the day of the hearing that she had not been served by post in November 2023.
I was not persuaded by her informal evidence that fear of criticism or an assumption that the Respondent knew that they should not communicate by email were sufficient reasons for Ms Wojciechowska not taking advantage of the opportunity to be heard. She knew that doing nothing would put the hearing at risk and waste the Respondent’s and the Tribunal’s resources. Once the time had come for her to file and serve her material, she should have contacted the Tribunal to advise that she could not do so because she had not yet received the Respondent’s confidential material or the Respondent’s open material by post. She does not have a good reason for failing to do so.
The Tribunal has not breached the hearing rule of procedural fairness and the proceedings are not null and void because of the manner in which the Respondent served or purported to serve Ms Wojciechowska with the open material.
Should the Tribunal have offered Ms Wojciechowska an adjournment?
Ms Wojciechowska did not apply for an adjournment and for the following reasons, I did not offer an adjournment.
Reasons for offering an adjournment include that a party has not followed the Tribunal’s directions to prepare the case for hearing or that a party has not had a reasonable opportunity to respond to the information provided by a party. Despite the fact that the Respondent has not complied in sufficient time with the Tribunal’s directions to serve the open material by post, I have found that Ms Wojciechowska failed to take advantage of the reasonable opportunity that the Tribunal gave her to be heard. I have also weighed up the fact that an adjournment would have been prejudicial to the Respondent and would have unnecessarily consumed the Tribunal’s resources.
Ms Wojciechowska submitted that the proceedings were null and void because the confidential material had not been served. That submission was not made until the day of the hearing. Again, Ms Wojciechowska failed to take advantage of the reasonable opportunity the Tribunal gave her to be heard. To delay the proceedings to determine that preliminary issue, when the submission was not made until the day of the hearing, would have been prejudicial to the Respondent. It would also have unnecessarily consumed the Tribunal’s resources.
Substantive decision on GIPA applications
Ms Wojciechowska has applied to the Tribunal for administrative review of numerous decisions made by the Respondent following three separate applications under the GIPA Act. The applications were heard together as part of the same proceedings. The overarching issue in relation to each decision is whether that decision is the “correct and preferable” decision and whether each decision should be affirmed, set aside or varied in some way: Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 (NSW), s 63.
As I have set out above, the Respondent provided an open bundle of material and the confidential material. The Respondent also advised that some documents responsive to Ms Wojciechowska’s application had not been produced to the Tribunal even on a confidential basis. The Respondent tendered three affidavits in support of various aspects of the decisions. Both the Respondent and the Information Commissioner provided written and oral submissions.
Ms Wojciechowska did not lodge any evidence or provide any written submissions, but she did make some brief oral submissions. The Respondent says it has responded to what it understands to be the real issues in dispute. For example, detailed evidence has not been provided about every search for information, particularly for information contained in a single document or a narrow class of documents. I will keep that submission in mind when reviewing the Respondent’s decisions.
The Information Commissioner has a right to appear and be heard in these proceedings and has chosen to do so: GIPA Act, s 104(1).
First application resulting in reviewable decisions made on 7 December 2021
Application and outcome
On 2 August 2021, Ms Wojciechowska lodged an access application seeking 16 items of information. In general terms, Ms Wojciechowska sought the CCTV footage of five separate hearings and case conferences to which she was a party (Items 1-5); Tribunal correspondence and documents in relation to some of those proceedings (Items 6-14); and general Tribunal correspondence relating to herself (Items 15- 16). Following further communications between the parties which resulted in a narrowing of the scope of the documents sought, the Respondent gave Ms Wojciechowska access to 364 documents, parts of which were redacted because they were either not relevant or there was claimed to be an overriding public interest against disclosure. On 7 December 2021, the Respondent provided reasons for its decision.
Tribunal CCTV footage (Items 1-5)
The Respondent decided that the CCTV footage “is not held by the agency”: GIPA Act, s 58(1)(b). A “decision that government information is not held by the agency” is an administratively reviewable decision: GIPA Act, s 80(e).
Section 53 sets out an agency’s obligation to search for information.
53 Searches for information held by agency
(1) The obligation of an agency to provide access to government information in response to an access application is limited to information held by the agency when the application is received.
(2) An agency must undertake such reasonable searches as may be necessary to find any of the government information applied for that was held by the agency when the application was received. The agency’s searches must be conducted using the most efficient means reasonably available to the agency.
(3) The obligation of an agency to undertake reasonable searches extends to searches using any resources reasonably available to the agency including resources that facilitate the retrieval of information stored electronically.
(4) An agency is not required to search for information in records held by the agency in an electronic backup system unless a record containing the information has been lost to the agency as a result of having been destroyed, transferred, or otherwise dealt with, in contravention of the State Records Act 1998 or contrary to the agency’s established record management procedures.
(5) An agency is not required to undertake any search for information that would require an unreasonable and substantial diversion of the agency’s resources.
The Appeal Panel in Wojciechowska v Commissioner of Police [2020] NSWCATAP 173 held at [41] that:
41. . . . whether an agency has complied with the obligation imposed by s 53 of the GIPA Act is plainly a relevant factor in determining whether an “information is not held” decision is the “correct and preferable decision”. …
At [43] the Appeal Panel made the following observations about the issues of fact which may arise in relation to a decision under s 58(1)(b) that the agency does not hold the information:
In the context of a decision made under s 58(1)(b) of the GIPA Act, the issues of fact which an agency must establish on the balance of probabilities, will depend on the reasons given by the agency that it does not hold the requested information. If the stated reason is that the agency has searched for the information but is unable to find the requested information, a factual issue will be whether the agency has undertaken “such reasonable searches as may be necessary to find any of the government information applied for that was held by the agency when the application was received”: s 53(2) of the GIPA Act. A further relevant issue may be whether material has emerged since the search was undertaken which suggests that the requested information exits and is held by the agency. Other relevant factual issues may include whether any search for information would require an unreasonable and substantial diversion of the agency's resources: s 53(5) of the GIPA Act.
At [44], the Appeal Panel provided the following summary of the steps the Tribunal should undertake when reviewing a decision that requested information is not held by the agency:
(1) identify on the basis of the agency's reasons and the applicant's submissions, any relevant factual issues including those derived from s 53(1) - (5);
(2) determine whether the agency has proved any relevant factual issues on the balance of probabilities;
(3) consider any evidence which may have emerged since the agency made its decision, which might tend to prove that the requested information is held by the agency;
(4) applying those findings, decide what the correct or preferable decision is;
(5) affirm, set aside or vary the agency's decision: s 63(3) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act.
The Respondent relied on an affidavit of Scott Mayer, the Deputy Sheriff employed in the NSW Sheriff’s Office. He has overall responsibility for requests made for CCTV footage by members of the public. In his affidavit of 21 November 2023, Mr Mayer states that the NSW Sheriff’s Office operates a CCTV system using software supplied by a security technology company. Past CCTV footage can be viewed on specialised terminals available for that purpose.
Mr Mayer’s evidence was that, as a general rule, CCTV footage of Tribunal proceedings is retained for approximately 28 days. The system automatically and continuously overwrites the oldest footage when the local storage is full. At paragraph 11 of his affidavit of Mr Mayer states:
When new CCTV systems are established, they are designed to have sufficient local storage to retain at least 28 days of footage from all the cameras on site. The amount of local storage required depends on the number of cameras and their resolution. As CCTV cameras are added to and upgraded, the local storage may not correspond to exactly 28 days of footage. That is especially the case at large sites like John Maddison Tower with many cameras.
Ms Wojciechowska lodged her application on 2 August 2021 at 10.48 am. That was exactly 28 days after the footage sought in Item 1 was recorded. Despite making inquiries about the footage promptly, as detailed in Mr Mayer’s affidavit, by the time the relevant officers searched for it on the afternoon of the 4 August 2021, the footage identified in Item 1 had been overwritten. The footage identified in Items 2-5 had been overwritten before Ms Wojciechowska made the access application.
I find on the basis of Mr Mayer’s credible evidence that the Respondent has undertaken reasonable searches to find the CCTV footage identified in Items 1 – 5 and that the agency’s searches were conducted using the most efficient means reasonably available. The searches were conducted promptly. Notwithstanding those efforts, I am satisfied that the items identified in 1 – 5 are not held by the agency.
I make the following order:
The Respondent’s decision that the government information identified in Items 1 to 5 is not held by the agency is affirmed.
Tribunal correspondence and documents (Items 6 – 14)
In Items 6-14, Ms Wojciechowska applied for access to information in relation to two Tribunal proceedings to which she was a party: Wojciechowska v Blue Mountains City Council (2019/234255) and Wojciechowska v Commissioner of Police (2019/142529). For the first matter, Ms Wojciechowska sought documents provided to the Blue Mountains City Council and its representatives and agents in July and August 2019 (Items 6 and 7) as well as documents containing the dates of those documents including logs, mail registers and email reports (Item 8). For the second matter, Ms Wojciechowska sought the documents containing the Tribunal listing details (including date, location, member name, room, parties, listing type, person listing) for the months of May to October 2019 (Items 9 – 14).
Although this information, and some other information sought by Ms Wojciechowska is held by the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal (NCAT), the Department of Communities and Justice is the correct respondent. NCAT is taken to be a ‘subsidiary agency” of the Respondent, rather than a separate agency: GIPA Act, Sch 4, cl 6(1) and Sch 3 to the Government Information (Public Access) Regulation 2018.
The Respondent decided that the information identified in Items 6-14 was not a valid application because it was an application for “excluded information of the agency”: GIPA Act, s 43. A decision that an application is not a valid application is an administratively reviewable decision: GIPA Act, s 80(a). At the hearing, the Respondent relied on legal submissions to support that conclusion.
Under s 43 of the GIPA Act, an access application cannot be made for excluded information.
43 Access application cannot be made for excluded information
(1) An access application cannot be made to an agency for access to excluded information of the agency.
Note—
Information is excluded information of an agency if it relates to any function specified in Schedule 2 in relation to the agency.
(2) An application for government information is not a valid access application to the extent that the application is made in contravention of this section.
In the definition section of Sch 4 to the GIPA Act, “excluded information of an agency specified in Schedule 2” means information that relates to any function specified in that Schedule in relation to the agency”. Schedule 2 to the GIPA Act is headed “Excluded information of particular agencies”. Under the sub-heading “Judicial and prosecutorial information” are the words “A court—judicial functions”. “A court” is defined as including “a tribunal” and “a registry or other office of a court and the members of staff of that registry or other office”. “Judicial functions in relation to a court, means such of the functions of the court as relate to the hearing or determination of proceedings before it . . .”: GIPA Act, Sch 4, cl 1.
The effect of these provisions is that information which “relates to” such of the functions of the Tribunal that “relate to the hearing or determination of proceedings before it” will be excluded information of the Tribunal. The words “relates to” are “extremely wide” and only require the existence of a connection or association between two things: Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355 at [87] and Betzis v Commissioner of Police [2020] NSWCATAD 71 at [33]-[36].
The information as summarised above relates to two proceedings to which Ms Wojciechowska was a party. Information in documents provided to a respondent to one of those proceedings relates to the hearing and determination of those proceedings before the Tribunal. The Tribunal’s listing details for the other proceedings for six separate months relates to the hearing and determination of those proceedings.
The Respondent conducted searches for the information as set out in the Open Bundle of material at Tab 5. The information was not produced to the Tribunal but I am satisfied that the information, as described in Items 6-14 of the first application, is excluded information and the access application is invalid. I make the following decision:
The Respondent’s decision that the application for government information identified in Items 6 to 14 is not a valid access application is affirmed.
I note that the Tribunal is part of the Respondent, so the claim in relation to the Tribunal’s excluded information is being made by the agency whose excluded information it is, rather than by another agency: GIPA Act, cl 6(2) of Sch 1.
I also note the following information provided by the Executive Director and Principal Registrar of the Tribunal in the search certification signed on 13 August 2021:
However, Ms Wojciechowska is a party to proceedings so she can make arrangements to inspect the files under NCAT Rule 42 . . . once she has paid the fees for retrieval of the file from GRR for the file 2019/0014259 and any other applicable fee (if any)
The reference to the file number should have been (2019/00142529).
General correspondence (Items 15 and 16)
Application and outcome
Item 15, as amended to reduce its scope, seeks all documents ever created by the Respondent in relation to Ms Wojciechowska and her previous application under the GIPA Act from 7 January 2021 to 4 May 2021. Item 16 seeks the documents that contain the dates when the documents identified in Item 15 were created and/or sent out.
The Respondent’s decision, made under s 58(1)(a) of the GIPA Act was to provide access to some of the information and to refuse to provide access to other information because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure. That decision is an administratively reviewable decision: GIPA Act, s 80(d).
The Respondent did not make a separate decision that the information in Item 16 was not held by the agency. However, as explained in paragraph 17 Michael McIntosh’s affidavit, that was the Respondent’s decision:
On the basis of Mr Barber’s indications to Ms Beresford, I believe that the respondent holds no information which is responsive to Part 16 of the first access application other than the information recorded on the documents themselves (such as dates of emails).
I understand the reference to the information recorded on the documents themselves to be a reference to the documents identified in Item 15.
Item 16
In accordance with the principles I have outlined above, the first step is to identify any relevant factual issues including those derived from s 53(1) - (5) of the GIPA Act and decide whether the agency has proved any relevant factual issues on the balance of probabilities.
At paragraphs 14 to 17 of his affidavit, Mr McIntosh sets out the evidence which supports his conclusion that the Respondent does not hold any information responsive to Item 16. Mr Barber, the Senior Security Administrator in the Cyber Risk, Audit & Compliance Unit (CRAC Unit), Information & Digital Services within the Department’s Corporate Services Division advised that there is no separate system that tracks when emails are created or sent, or when the documents themselves are created. The email system itself only holds logs for 30 to 90 days and then they are transferred to an email archive, Quest Archive Manager, which stores a copy of every email sent and received. That evidence, although hearsay, is detailed and credible. I am satisfied that it justifies the implied decision that the information identified in Item 16 is not held by the Respondent. I make the following decision:
The Respondent’s decision that the government information identified in Item 16 is not held by the agency is affirmed.
Decision and issues (Item 15)
Mr McIntosh’s evidence was that a list of search terms was formulated to identify the information described in Item 15. That search produced approximately 1.6GB of data. The data was manually reviewed and information which was not within the date range (7 January 2021 to 4 May 2021) was excluded. Similarly, information in a document that was not created by the Respondent was excluded.
The Respondent gave Ms Wojciechowska access to 364 pages containing information responsive to Item 15. Some of the information contained in those pages was redacted because it was considered to be subject to an overriding public interest against disclosure. The basis for that conclusion was that it contained personal information, other than the information of Ms Wojciechowska or of Mr Bolejko. (I note that Mr Bolejko consented to the Respondent releasing his personal information to Ms Wojciechowska.) Evidence in support of the decision to redact personal information is contained in paragraphs 28 of the affidavit of Michael McIntosh of 23 November 2023.
Three issues arise in relation to this decision. The first is whether information, other than the information that the Respondent searched for and produced to the Tribunal, is held by the agency. The second is whether certain redacted information is relevant to the information Ms Wojciechowska applied for. The third issue is whether there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of certain information because it contains personal information. The basis for deleting the second and third kinds of information is in s 74 of the GIPA Act:
74 Deletion of information from copy of record to be accessed
An agency can delete information from a copy of a record to which access is to be provided in response to an access application (so as to provide access only to the other information that the record contains) either because the deleted information is not relevant to the information applied for or because (if the deleted information was applied for) the agency has decided to refuse to provide access to that information.
Is the information in Item 15 held by the Respondent?
A decision to produce some information may be challenged as an implied decision that no other responsive information exists. In other words, that certain other information is not held.
Ms Wojciechowska has not submitted that the searches were not reasonable or that certain documents or kinds of documents are missing. Nevertheless, the Respondent has the burden of establishing that the decision is justified: GIPA Act, s 97(1). The steps taken to search for the information are outlined in Mr McIntosh’s affidavit at paragraphs 18 to 24. As the Respondent states in their submission, the information produced includes documents ranging from the original application, to searches and enquiries, to decision-making, and then to the review by the Information and Privacy Commissioner. The documents that have been produced establish that its searches comply with the s 53(2) and (3) of the GIPA Act.
Is the information in Item 15 relevant to the information applied for?
I have reviewed the redacted information in the confidential material and I find that the information marked “s 74 material not within scope” is not relevant to the information applied for. Much of that material is correspondence with the Information Commissioner. I make the following decision:
The Respondent’s decision that the deleted information marked “s 74 material not within scope” is not relevant to the information applied for in Item 15, is affirmed.
Is there an overriding public interest against disclosure of any information responsive to Item 15?
Under s 5 of the GIPA Act:
There is a presumption in favour of the disclosure of government information unless there is an overriding public interest against disclosure.
There is a general public interest in favour of the disclosure of government information: GIPA Act, s 12(1). While not limiting any other kinds of public interest considerations in favour of disclosure, the note to s 12 provides the following examples:
12 Public interest considerations in favour of disclosure
Note—
The following are examples of public interest considerations in favour of disclosure of information—
(a) Disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to promote open discussion of public affairs, enhance Government accountability or contribute to positive and informed debate on issues of public importance.
(b) Disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to inform the public about the operations of agencies and, in particular, their policies and practices for dealing with members of the public.
(c) Disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to ensure effective oversight of the expenditure of public funds.
(d) The information is personal information of the person to whom it is to be disclosed.
(e) Disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to reveal or substantiate that an agency (or a member of an agency) has engaged in misconduct or negligent, improper or unlawful conduct.
Section 13 states what is meant by the phrase “overriding public interest against disclosure”:
There is an overriding public interest against disclosure of government information for the purposes of this Act if (and only if) there are public interest considerations against disclosure and, on balance, those considerations outweigh the public interest considerations in favour of disclosure.
The public interest considerations against disclosure listed in the Table to s 14 are the only considerations that may be taken into account. A relevant consideration in this case relates to individual rights. Under cl 3(a) and (b) to the Table to s 14;
Individual rights, judicial processes and natural justice
There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects—
(a) reveal an individual’s personal information,
(b) contravene an information protection principle under the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 or a Health Privacy Principle under the Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002,
Personal information is defined in cl 4 of Sch 4 to the GIPA Act to include information “about an individual (whether living or dead) whose identity is apparent or can reasonably be ascertained from the information or opinion”: GIPA Act, s 4.
The Respondent decided that there was an overriding public interest against disclosing the redacted information marked ““s 14 cl. 3(a), s 14 cl 3(b)” because it contains personal information that was not the personal information of Ms Wojciechowska or of Mr Bolejko. Where the personal information of another individual appeared on a document, it was redacted.
The justification for doing so was that there is no public interest in favour of disclosing this information and its disclosure would unreasonably interfere with the privacy of the individuals concerned. Disclosure would also be contrary to the principle in s 18 of the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 (the PPIP Act).
18 Limits on disclosure of personal information
(1) A public sector agency that holds personal information must not disclose the information to a person (other than the individual to whom the information relates) or other body, whether or not such other person or body is a public sector agency, unless—
(a) the disclosure is directly related to the purpose for which the information was collected, and the agency disclosing the information has no reason to believe that the individual concerned would object to the disclosure, or
(b) the individual concerned is reasonably likely to have been aware, or has been made aware in accordance with section 10, that information of that kind is usually disclosed to that other person or body, or
(c) the agency believes on reasonable grounds that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious and imminent threat to the life or health of the individual concerned or another person.
(2) If personal information is disclosed in accordance with subsection (1) to a person or body that is a public sector agency, that agency must not use or disclose the information for a purpose other than the purpose for which the information was given to it.
I reviewed the confidential material and I am satisfied that the information marked “s 14 cl. 3(a), s 14 cl 3(b)” is personal information because it identifies a person or persons who has applied for information under the GIPA Act, other than Ms Wojciechowska and Mr Bolejko, and contains information about that person. As well as identifying the name of a person or persons, the redacted information contains signatures, dates of birth and credit card details. Disclosure of that information could reasonably be expected to reveal an individual’s personal information.
There is a general public interest consideration in favour of the disclosure of government information. There are no other public interest considerations in favour of disclosing this information. The considerations against disclosure relate to a person’s individual rights. Disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to reveal an individual’s personal information. Furthermore, disclosure of that information would contravene s 18 of the PPIP Act. On balance, there is an overriding public interest against disclosure.
I make the following order:
The Respondent’s decision to refuse to provide access to the government information marked “s 14 cl. 3(a), s 14 cl 3(b)” in response to the access application in Item 15, is affirmed.
Second application resulting in reviewable decision made on 23 November 2021
Application and outcome
On 13 October 2021, Ms Wojciechowska applied for access to: the CCTV footage of a Tribunal hearing on 16 September 2021 (Item 1); employment records “for all persons named Karen and working for the Office of General Counsel in February 2020” (Item 2); various employment records and complete termination of employment details for Kyle Hudson (former employee of the Crown Solicitor’s Office) for various periods (Items 3-5); list of applicants who applied in 2021 for the position of Deputy President and Head of NCAT’s Guardianship Division (Item 6); complete short-list of applicants for that position (Item 7); dates of all interviews conducted for that position (Item 8); documents provided by Anne Britton in relation to her application for that position (Item 9); documents provided to NCAT in relation to Anne Britton’s application for that position (Item 10); notes made by any employee of the Crown Solicitor’s office in connection with a case conference held on 11 January 2021 in Wojciechowska v Commissioner of Police (2020/00333837) (Item 11).
The Respondent made a decision on 23 November 2021. In these proceedings it concedes that aspects of that decision were not the correct or preferable decision and submits that the Tribunal should either make a different decision or make the same decision for different reasons.
CCTV footage from Tribunal hearing on 16 September 2021 (Item 1)
The information identified in Item 1 is the CCTV footage of proceedings in a Tribunal hearing room.
Mr Mayer is the Commander of Security, Intelligence and Risk Command and has overall responsibility for the security of Court and Tribunal premises. Applications for CCTV footage are made either by summonsing the footage or by applying under the GIPA Act. Mr Mayer’s evidence was that the Sheriff’s Office will act on either informal or formal requests to quarantine and save footage. He gives the example of the NSW Police Force advising that particular footage will be required for an investigation. In those circumstances the footage is saved pending a formal request for the footage to be made available.
The footage in Item 1 is of the entire hearing room and the people in that room including the Tribunal member. An AVL screen with the image of participants on the screen can also be seen. As Mr Mayer states in his affidavit, the camera is placed high in the corner above the bench. It shows the whole of the courtroom in clear detail. The camera angle provides a view of the Tribunal member entering and leaving the hearing room and sitting behind the bench. There is no audio recording associated with the CCTV footage.
After receiving a request from the Respondent for the CCTV footage described in Item 1, the footage was saved and a copy provided to the Respondent. On 18 October 2021, the Sheriff of NSW approved a letter to accompany the footage in response to Ms Wojciechowska’s access application. The letter is said to reflect the policy of the Sheriff’s Office that CCTV footage should ordinarily be provided by way of “view-only” access rather than “copy” access.
The Respondent’s decision 23 November 2021 decision was to provide access to the information by way of inspection on MS Teams: GIPA Act, s 72(1)(a). That decision was based on a finding that providing a copy of the recording was a breach of copyright. Having regard to the reasons the Information Commissioner expressed about that decision, the Respondent acknowledges that that decision is not the “correct and preferable” decision. The Respondent now submits that the CCTV is “excluded information” and that Ms Wojciechowska’s application for that information is not a valid access application: GIPA Act, s 43. Alternatively, the Respondent submits that there is on overriding public interest against providing the information in a form which would allow Ms Wojciechowska to disclose the information to others. However, if a condition is placed on how Ms Wojciechowska may exercise her right of access, there would no longer be an overriding public interest against disclosure.
Is the information in Item 1 excluded information?
The Respondent submitted that the CCTV footage is “excluded information” because it is information which “relates to” such functions of the Tribunal that are “related to the hearing or determination of proceedings before it”: GIPA Act, s 43 and Sch 4, cl 1; Sch 2, cl 1. According to the Respondent, the function of the Tribunal that is implicated is its primary function of hearing and determining proceedings. The information in question is said to “relate to” that function.
None of the objects of the NCAT Act expressly refers to the safety and security of the Tribunal, nor is safety and security a statutory function of the Tribunal or its individual members. The Sheriff is given the statutory function of providing for the safety and security of tribunals under s 4(1)(a) of the Sheriff Act 2005 (NSW):
(1) The Sheriff has the following functions—
(a) to provide for the safety and security of courts and tribunals, including by exercising the functions given to the Sheriff by or under the Court Security Act 2005
Even giving the words “relates to” a wide interpretation, CCTV footage of Tribunal proceedings does not relate to the Tribunal’s function of hearing or determining proceedings. That information relates to a function performed by the Sheriff of providing for the safety and security of the Tribunal. The information in Item 1 is not “excluded information”. Ms Wojciechowska’s application for that information is a valid application.
Is there an overriding public interest against disclosing the information in Item 1 and can that outcome be avoided by the form of access?
Legal principles on “view only” access
Alternatively the Respondent submitted that Ms Wojciechowska’s access should be on a “view-only” basis. The term “view only” access is not used in the GIPA Act. To understand the Respondent’s submission, it is necessary to summarise the relevant provisions of the GIPA Act about the form of access.
An application may be determined in any of the ways listed in s 58 of the GIPA Act:
58 How applications are decided
(1) An agency decides an access application for government information by—
(a) deciding to provide access to the information, or
(b) deciding that the information is not held by the agency, or
(c) deciding that the information is already available to the applicant (see section 59), or
(d) deciding to refuse to provide access to the information because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information, or
(e) deciding to refuse to deal with the application (see section 60), or
(f) deciding to refuse to confirm or deny that information is held by the agency because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of information confirming or denying that fact.
Note—
These decisions are reviewable under Part 5.
A decision to provide access under s 58(1)(a) or to refuse to provide access to information under s 58(1)(d) are reviewable by the Tribunal: GIPA Act, s 80(d). A decision to provide access to information in a particular way in response to an access application is also a reviewable decision as is a decision not to provide access in the way requested by the applicant: GIPA Act, s 80(i).
Section 72(1) lists the ways in which access to government information may be provided:
72 Forms of access
(1) Access to government information in response to an access application may be provided in any of the following ways—
(a) by providing a reasonable opportunity to inspect a record containing the information,
(b) by providing a copy of a record containing the information,
(c) by providing access to a record containing the information, together with such facilities as may be necessary to enable the information to be read, viewed or listened to (as appropriate to the kind of record concerned),
(d) by providing a written transcript of the information in the case of information recorded in an audio record or recorded in shorthand or other encoded format.
Section 72(2) states the general rule that an agency must provide access in the way requested by the applicant but then lists four exceptions to that general rule.
(2) The agency must provide access in the way requested by the applicant unless—
(a) to do so would interfere unreasonably with the operations of the agency or would result in the agency incurring unreasonable additional costs, or
(b) to do so would be detrimental to the proper preservation of the record, or
(c) to do so would involve an infringement of copyright, or
(d) there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information in the way requested by the applicant.
In this case, Ms Wojciechowska did not nominate a particular way in which she sought access to the information. That means that the Respondent did not have to provide access in a particular way and s 72(2) was not engaged.
Section 15(e) sets out certain principles to be applied when determining whether there is an overriding public interest against disclosure:
A determination as to whether there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of government information is to be made in accordance with the following principles—:
(e) In the case of disclosure in response to an access application, it is relevant to consider that disclosure cannot be made subject to any conditions on the use or disclosure of information.
Section 15(e) is subject to s 73 of the GIPA Act which provides that access is to be unconditional unless the circumstances in s 73(2) or (3) are met:
73 Access to be unconditional
(1) An agency is not entitled to impose any conditions on the use or disclosure of information when the agency provides access to the information in response to an access application.
(2) A condition may be imposed as to how a right of access may be exercised (such as a condition that prevents an applicant making notes from or taking a copy of a record that is made available for inspection) but only to avoid there being an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information.
(3) A condition may be imposed that access to medical or psychiatric information will only be provided to a medical practitioner nominated by the applicant and not to the applicant personally.
When read together, these provisions mean that while there is a general principle that disclosure cannot be made subject to any conditions on the use or disclosure of information, an agency may impose a condition “as to how a right of access may be exercised” but only to avoid there being an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information. Section 73(3) is not relevant to the facts of this case.
Based on the legislative scheme and the Respondent’s submissions, I understand the Respondent’s case to be that despite there being an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information in Item 1, if access is given under s 72(1)(a) or s 72(1)(b) and conditions placed on how the right of access may be exercised, (including taking notes, making an image or copying the record) there will no longer be an overriding public interest against disclosure.
Issues and consideration
The questions to be resolved are:
(1)Is there an overriding public interest against disclosure?
(2)If so, is there no longer an overriding public interest against disclosure if access to the information is given in a particular form and/or if conditions are imposed on how the right of access may be exercised?
I have outlined the relevant provisions governing the determination of the question as to whether there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of government information. There is a general public interest in favour of disclosure. Disclosure of the CCTV footage could reasonably be expected to inform the public about the operations of the Tribunal, in particular, how the hearing room is configured and the movements of the Tribunal Member and employees of the Respondent during the hearing: GIPA Act, Note to s 12(2). But there is no issue of public affairs or public importance which would be promoted or enhanced if the footage was disclosed. The Tribunal is accountable for how it conducts a hearing because the hearing is recorded. The extra level of accountability in being able to see what the Member or employees of the Respondent are doing when conducting a hearing is minimal. The personal interest of Ms Wojciechowska is also minimal because she was present at the hearing, via AVL.
The three public interest considerations against disclosure on which the Respondent relies are: those in cl 6 to the Table to s 14 headed “Secrecy provisions”; those in cl 2(e) and (f) (endanger the security of, or prejudice any system or procedure for protecting, any place, property or vehicle, and facilitate the commission of a criminal act) and those in cl 3(a) (reveal a person’s personal information). I address each of these considerations in turn below.
Clause 6 of the Table to s 14, is headed “Secrecy provisions”:
(1) There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information by any person could (disregarding the operation of this Act) reasonably be expected to constitute a contravention of a provision of any other Act or statutory rule (of this or another State or of the Commonwealth) that prohibits the disclosure of information, whether or not the prohibition is subject to specified qualifications or exceptions.
(2) The public interest consideration under this clause extends to consideration of the policy that underlies the prohibition against disclosure.
Cabinet relies on the advice and information it receives from Ministers, from government officers and, on occasions, from judicial officers to make decisions. The notion of collective Ministerial responsibility recognises that it is central to the Westminster system of democratic government that the recommendations and other information Cabinet and its Ministers receive from those sources remains confidential. Ministers in Cabinet must be free to have candid discussions about the decisions they make. The shortlist of applicants is information in a document prepared before a Cabinet deliberation or decision on a matter that reveals or tends to reveal the position that a particular Minister has been recommended to take on the matter in Cabinet. Disclosure of that information could reasonably be expected to prejudice collective Ministerial responsibility. That is a strong consideration against disclosure of the information comprising the shortlist of applicants in Justice Armstrong’s letter.
I am not satisfied that Ms Britton’s application falls into the same category as the shortlist of applicants. It can be implied, based on the Respondent’s response to Ms Wojciechowska’s application, that information relating to that application was provided in a tab to the Briefing Note. But that information does not contain any advice or recommendations and could not reasonably be expected to prejudice collective Ministerial responsibility.
Information provided to an agency in confidence
Under cl 1(g) to the Table to s 14:
There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects (whether in a particular case or generally)—
(g) found an action against an agency for breach of confidence or otherwise result in the disclosure of information provided to an agency in confidence
This consideration has two limbs. Either disclosure could reasonably be expected to “found an action for breach of confidence” or disclosure could reasonably be expected to result in disclosure of information provided to an agency “in confidence”. The Respondent relied on both limbs.
In Public Service Association and Professional Officers Association, Amalgamated Union of NSW v Premier’s Department [2002] NSWADT 277 at [51] - [53] the Tribunal set out the five elements of an equitable action for breach of confidence (quoting Re B and Brisbane North Regional Health Authority (1993) 1 QAR 279):
. . . first, the information must be capable of being specifically identifiable as information which is secret rather than generally available; second, the subject matter of the obligation of confidence must not be trivial or useless or generally known; third, the information must have been communicated in circumstances such as to fix the recipient with an equitable obligation not to use the information in an unauthorised way; four, it must be established that the disclosure of the information would constitute an unauthorised disclosure; and, five, it must be established that the giver of the information would suffer a detriment, not necessarily pecuniary, such as loss of privacy or embarrassment.
The Respondent has not addressed each of these elements in their evidence or submissions. I am not satisfied that the Respondent has discharged its onus of proving that disclosure could reasonably be expected to found an action for breach of confidence.
The alternative basis under cl 1(g) is that disclosure could reasonably be expected to result in disclosure of information provided to an agency “in confidence”. The words “in confidence” should be given their ordinary English meaning when understood in context. The words “in confidence” are defined in the Macquarie Dictionary to mean:
7. in confidence, as a secret or private matter, not to be divulged to others: I told him in confidence.
Based on this definition, to be provided “in confidence” the information must be secret or private rather than generally available. Secondly, the information must be provided to the recipient on the understanding that it will not be divulged to others. Even if the information has not expressly been provided to an agency in confidence, that fact can be inferred from the circumstances in which it was provided: Australians for Sustainable Development Inc v Barangaroo Delivery Authority [2013] NSWADT 252 at [68].
The Respondent’s submissions rely on the Tribunal inferring that the information is confidential information from the nature of the information and from the circumstances of the case. The Respondent submitted that job applications are made by applicants in confidence. Both the fact of having made a particular application and the contents of an application may, for various reasons, be matters which candidates wish to keep to themselves. Reasons may relate to their existing employment or simply because they desire to keep their affairs private. That expectation of confidentiality is said to be closely related to the expectations members of the public have about their personal information being kept private when it is provided to government.
I note that the hard copy of the advertisement filed as an attachment to Mr O’Young’s affidavit does not contain a statement that applications will be treated confidentially or any other reference to the disclosure or publication of the applications. However, the test under cl 1(g) is whether the information was provided in confidence.
No evidence is needed to draw the inference that when each of the applicants applied for the positions, that information (their name) was a private matter. It was provided to the recipient on the understanding that it would not be divulged to anyone not involved in the selection process. That reasoning also applies to the names on the short list which is a sub-set of applicants.
Ms Britton’s cover letter and online application were also provided “in confidence”. They contain private information about Ms Britton’s suitability to be appointed to the positions. It can readily be inferred that that information was provided to the Respondent on the understanding that it would not be divulged to anyone who was not involved in the selection process. Ms Britton’s CV is in a different category. The information in a CV is not “secret” or “private”. Information of that kind is often more generally available.
There is a public interest against disclosure of the names of the applicants, including the names of the candidates on the shortlist and of the content of Ms Britton’s application, apart from her CV, under cl 1(g) to the Table to s 14.
Exercise of agency’s functions
Under cl 1(d) to the Table to s 14:
There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects (whether in a particular case or generally)—
(d) prejudice the supply to an agency of confidential information that facilitates the effective exercise of that agency’s functions,
According to the Respondent, it is reasonable to assume that at least some potential applicants to Tribunal positions would be deterred from applying if it became known that their names as applicants might be disclosed in answer to an access application. The effect of the release of that information would be to narrow the pool of potential applicants to fill the roles of Tribunal members. That, in turn, would have the tendency to reduce the quality of the candidates being appointed and thus the effective exercise of the Tribunal’s functions. The Respondent accepts that the overall effect may be small but maintains that it is nevertheless significant.
I am not satisfied that disclosure of the confidential information “could reasonably be expected” to prejudice the supply to the Respondent of that information. There must be “real and substantive grounds supporting an opinion that disclosure could reasonably be expected to have that effect”: Newcastle City Council v Newcastle East Residents Action Group [2018] NSWCATAP 245 at [59]. The grounds articulated by the Respondent are not substantive. The public interest consideration against disclosure in cl 1(d) to the Table to s 14 is not applicable.
Under cl 1(f) to the Table to s 14:
There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects (whether in a particular case or generally)—
(f) prejudice the effective exercise by an agency of the agency’s functions,
As with cl 1(d) I am not satisfied that disclosure of the information “could reasonably be expected” to prejudice the effective exercise of the Respondent’s functions. The public interest consideration against disclosure in cl 1(f) to the Table to s 14 is not applicable.
Personal information
The Respondent also relied on the public interest considerations against disclosure of an individual’s personal information: GIPA Act, s 14, cl 3(a) and (b).
There is a public interest consideration against disclosure of information if disclosure of the information could reasonably be expected to have one or more of the following effects—
(a) reveal an individual’s personal information,
(b) contravene an information protection principle under the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act 1998 or a Health Privacy Principle under the Health Records and Information Privacy Act 2002,
. . .
The name of a person who has applied for government position, including the names of a person on the shortlist, and the entire content of Ms Britton’s application is personal information as defined in cl 4 of Sch 4 to the GIPA Act. Disclosure of that information could reasonably be expected to reveal that information.
Is there an overriding public interest against disclosure?
I have set out the public interest considerations in favour of disclosure above and concluded that there is a general public interest in disclosing the information. I give that consideration significant weight.
The public interest considerations against disclosing the shortlist of candidates is that it could reasonably be expected to prejudice collective Ministerial responsibility, disclose information provided in confidence and reveal an individual’s personal information. The strength of those considerations and the combined effect of disclosure on responsible and effective government and on a person’s individual rights, mean that those considerations outweigh the significant general public interest consideration in favour of disclosure.
Disclosure of the names of the applicants and the content of Ms Britton’s application could not reasonably be expected to prejudice collective Ministerial responsibility. However, disclosure of the names of the applicants and the content of Ms Britton’s application, apart from her CV, will affect responsible and effective government because it will disclose information provided in confidence. Disclosure of that information will also reveal an individual’s personal information. While not as strong as the considerations against disclosing the shortlist, the strength of these considerations and the combined effect of disclosure on responsible and effective government and on a person’s individual rights, outweigh the significant general consideration in favour of disclosure.
Ms Britton’s CV contains her personal information. That is the only consideration against disclosure. Before giving access to that information the Respondent is required to take such steps as are reasonably practicable to consult with Ms Britton: GIPA Act, s 54. Ms Britton may reasonably be expected to have concerns about the disclosure of the information. Those concerns may reasonably be expected to be relevant to the question of whether there is a public interest consideration against disclosure of the information.
I make the following orders:
The Respondent’s decision in relation to Items 6, 7 and 9 (apart from Ms Britton’s CV) is set aside. The following decision is made in substitution for that decision:
Access to the information is refused because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure.
Pursuant to s 65(1) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997, the Respondent’s decision not to give access to Ms Britton’s CV is remitted to the Respondent for reconsideration in accordance with these reasons.
The effect of this decision is to preserve the rights of Ms Wojciechowska to proceed with the application for review in relation to any new decision about Ms Britton’s CV or to withdraw the application: Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997, s 65(4).
Notes of case conference (Item 11)
Item 11 is for “. . . complete copies of all unedited, unredacted and complete notes made by any employee of the Crown Solicitor’s Office . . . in connection with . . . the case conference held on 11 January 2021 in Wojciechowska v Commissioner of Police (NCAT no 2020/00333837).” The Crown Solicitor acted for the Commissioner of Police in those proceedings.
One document was lodged confidentially with the Tribunal in response to this item. The Respondent consulted with the NSW Police Force about this document pursuant to its obligations under s 54 of the GIPA Act.
The Respondent claims legal professional privilege over all the information in this document. Under Sch 1, clause 5 of the GIPA Act it is to be conclusively presumed that there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of certain information:
5 Legal professional privilege
(1) It is to be conclusively presumed that there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of information that would be privileged from production in legal proceedings on the ground of client legal privilege (legal professional privilege), unless the person in whose favour the privilege exists has waived the privilege.
(2) If an access application is made to an agency in whose favour legal professional privilege exists in all or some of the government information to which access is sought, the agency is required to consider whether it would be appropriate for the agency to waive that privilege before the agency refuses to provide access to government information on the basis of this clause.
(3) A decision that an agency makes under subclause (2) is not a reviewable decision under Part 5.
Ms Wojciechowska submitted orally at the hearing that Legal Profession Privilege had been waived because “they” relied on its content in proceedings. No evidence was provided for that assertion.
The Respondent provided evidence of its communication with the NSW Police Force about the disclosure of this document. Their submission was that the NSW Police Force declined to waive privilege. That is apparent from p 577 and 578 of the Respondent’s open bundle of material, namely a letter from NSW Police Force to the Respondent dated 16 November 2021. In that letter, the NSW Police Force advised that they objected to the disclosure of the document on the basis of legal professional privilege and that privilege would not be waived.
The following elements of legal professional privilege are derived from s 118 and 119 of the Evidence Act 1995:
(1)the existence of a client and lawyer relationship;
(2)the confidential nature of the communication or document; and
(3)the communication or document was brought into existence for the dominant purpose of either:
(a)enabling the client to obtain, or the lawyer to give legal advice or provide legal services, or
(b)the client being provided with legal services relating to existing or anticipated litigation.
I have reviewed the content of the document. The information it contains was prepared by the NSW Police Force’s legal representative (the Crown Solicitor’s Office) in connection with legal proceedings. I am satisfied that there exists a client and lawyer relationship between the NSW Police Force and the Crown Solicitor’s Office. The information is confidential in nature. The information is a communication between a solicitor and a client for the dominant purpose of the solicitor providing legal services in relation to existing litigation in the Tribunal. There is no evidence that privilege has been waived.
I make the following order:
The Respondent’s decision to refuse to provide access to the information in Item 11 because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information is affirmed.
Third application resulting in reviewable decisions made on 2 March 2022
Application and outcome
On 4 February 2022, Ms Wojciechowska applied for approximately 36 categories of documents. The Respondent made an initial decision that the application was invalid as a whole because it did not include information reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified. That decision was made under s 41(1)(e) of the GIPA Act:
41 How to make an access application
(1) An application or other request for government information is not a valid access application unless it complies with the following requirements (the formal requirements) for access applications—
. . .
(e) it must include such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified.
The “identification requirement”
I will refer to the requirement in s 41(1)(e) as the “identification requirement”. Whether the identification requirement exists is an objective question of fact. Contrary to the Information Commissioner’s submission it is not a discretion. Either the access application includes such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified or it does not include such information.
In Jeray v Blue Mountains City Council [2021] NSWCATAP 310 at [17] the Appeal Panel held that “. . . the identification requirement does (sic) mean that an applicant has to confine an application to a particular time frame or to particular types of records or documents. The fact that the requested information is vast or that the information is difficult to locate, does not make the application invalid.” The word “not” has been accidentally omitted.
In Department of Communities and Justice v Zonnevylle [2020] NSWCATAP 126 at [42] the Appeal Panel held that to be valid “an application for government information must include such information as is reasonably necessary to enable all the government information applied for to be identified”.
Obligations when application regarded as invalid
When an agency receives an application for access to government information, the agency is to decide whether the application is a valid application and notify the applicant accordingly: GIPA Act, s 51. Where an access application is determined to be invalid, the obligations in s 52 arise. I have only reproduced those parts of the provisions that are relevant to the facts of this case:
52 Agency assistance with invalid applications
(1) The notification of an agency’s decision that an application is not a valid access application must—
(a) include a statement of the reason why the application is not a valid access application (including reference to the relevant provisions of this Act), and
. . .
(c) if a reason is failure to provide required information, invite the applicant to provide the information, and
(d) notify the applicant of the right of review under Part 5 that applies in relation to a decision that an application is not a valid access application.
(2) The application becomes a valid access application if the applicant pays the required fee or provides the required information (as appropriate), and is then deemed to have been made when the fee or information was received by the agency.
(3) An agency must provide advice and assistance, so far as it would be reasonable to expect the agency to do so, to assist an applicant to provide such information as may be necessary to enable the applicant to make a valid access application.
. . .
On 2 March 2022 the Respondent wrote to Ms Wojciechowska conveying the decision and identifying the parts of the application where further information was required before the application could be regarded as valid. As well as those categories, in written submission the Respondent identified other parts of Ms Wojciechowska’s application that were said to be invalid. The Respondent now relies only on Items 9-14; 15 –19; 21 and 25 as having insufficient information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified.
Ms Wojciechowska responded on 24 March 2022 stating that the decision that the application was invalid was “unlawful”. However, Ms Wojciechowska did respond to what she characterised as an “informal requests for refinement”. On 29 April 2022, Ms Wojciechowska sought administrative review of the Respondent’s invalidity decision. On the same day, but before the Respondent had received notice that Ms Wojciechowska had lodged the application, the Respondent replied to her letter of 24 March 2022.
What is the reviewable decision?
The Respondent submits that the operative decision should be regarded as that contained in its letter of 29 April 2022, not the initial decision of 2 March 2022. It is the 29 April 2022 decision that sets out the basis on which the third application remained invalid following the additional information provided by Ms Wojciechowska on 24 March 2022. That is said to be the reviewable decision under s 80(a) of the GIPA Act.
Under Part 5 of the GIPA Act, entitled “Review of decisions”, a decision that an application is not a valid access application is a reviewable decision: s 80(a). When determining an application for an administrative review of an invalidity decision, “the Tribunal is to decide what the correct and preferable decision is having regard to the material then before it”: Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997 (NSW), s 63(1).
Ms Wojciechowska applied for administrative review of the 2 March 2022 decision. That is the decision she attached to her application for administrative review. It is apparent that when she lodged the application on 29 April 2022, she had not received the Respondent’s 29 April 2022 letter. It follows that the 2 March 2022 decision is the reviewable decision. However, I must decide what the correct and preferable decision is at the date of the hearing: YG and GG v Minister for Community Services [2002] NSWCA 247 at [25]. In doing so I may take into account further material lodged by the Respondent including the 29 April 2022 decision and the Respondent’s written submissions in these proceedings.
Job application documents (Items 9 – 14)
Items 9, 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 sought “job application documents” and “application documents” about a number of people identified by name. For example, Item 9 sought:
Complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited copies of all complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited job application documents (including but not limited to resumes, curricula vitae, applications, cover letters, role/s applied for, references etc) in relation to James Howard.
Items 10, 11, 12, 13 and 14 sought the same information in relation to Christine Skinner, Michelle Bechini, Jason Day, Michael McTegg and Joseph Karam. Item 12 which relates to Jason Day merely sought “application documents”, not “job application documents”.
The Respondent sought information about the particular agencies from whom information was sought, the time period in which information was sought and clarification of what was meant by “job application documents” or “application documents”. Ms Wojciechowska gave the following explanation as to what those terms mean:
All information in the job application documents (including but not limited to the information in the layout)’ and ‘all the information in the application documents (including but not limited to the information in the layout)’
In the letter of 24 March 2022, Ms Wojciechowska amended her application by specifying a date on or after which such an application was submitted. For example, for Item 9, Ms Wojciechowska requested:
Complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited copies of all complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited job application documents (including but not limited to resumes, curricula vitae, applications, cover letters, role/s applied for, references etc) in relation to James Howard submitted or created, received on or after 01.01.2013.
Ms Wojciechowska also included the full name and position of the person including the agency in which that person was employed on a specified date.
Mr McIntosh’s evidence was that the terms “job application documents” and “application documents” are ambiguous and do not clearly identify the information sought by the application.
The Respondent noted that the GIPA Act provides for rights to access government information meaning information contained in a record held by the Department, not simply the records themselves. The Respondent submitted that each of the requests for clarification was reasonable, having regard to the prolix and obscure way in which the information was identified. In circumstances where each of the items was related to Ms Wojciechowska’s own dealings with the Department, it was appropriate to ask her to identify as much as she knew about the categories of information she sought.
On 24 March 2022 Ms Wojciechowski described what she meant by “job application documents”. She means “resumes, curricula vitae, applications, cover letters, role/s applied for, references etc”, that is, all the information contained in an application for a job by the nominated person. She describes the “application documents” in Item 12 in the same way. The application is not vague or ambiguous. I assume when Ms Wojciechowska requests “application documents” in Item 12, she means “job application documents”. Those terms are not vague or ambiguous.
I do not know what Ms Wojciechowska means by the “information in the layout” but, based on her description of the information for Items 9 to 14 in her letter of 24 March 2022, there is such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified.
ROPs entered in court proceedings - Items 15 - 19
Items 15 – 19 sought information about “ROPs entered” in various Local Court, District Court and Tribunal proceedings to which Ms Wojciechowski or Mr Bolejko was a party. Items 15 seeks:
Complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited copies of complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited texts of all complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited ROPs entered in Wojciechowska v Commissioner of Police, NSW Police Force (Local Court number 2021/102332) including but not limited to those entered online.
Items 16, 17, 18 and 19 sought similar information about other proceedings. Mr McIntosh’s evidence was that the Respondent asked Ms Wojciechowska to clarify the meaning of the acronym. She said she did not know but that the Respondent knows and that she copied the term from documents provided by the Respondent. Ms Beresford then wrote to Ms Wojciechowska saying that the acronym is an abbreviation for multiple terms familiar to the Respondent including Restriction of Privileges, Rules of Procedure and Record of Proceedings. Ms Beresford also asked Ms Wojciechowska to provide the contextual information to ascertain the meaning of that term, such as a copy of the document from which the applicant copied the term or the agency from which the document containing the terms originated.
In response to the Respondent’s request to provide further information about what she means by ROPs, Ms Wojciechowska requested, in the 24 March 2022 letter, that she be “provided with the list of all the agencies holding any document in relation to Wojciechowska v Commissioner of Police, NSW Police Force (Local Court number: 2021/1023320 and Bolejko v Commissioner of Police, New South Wales Police Force (Local Court number: 2021/00098972) so that she can make that “refinement”. She stated that, due to lack of information, she is unable to do so.
Ms Wojciechowska may make an application under the GIPA Act for the information she has identified, or the agency may provide that information informally: GIPA Act, s 8. But the preliminary issue I have to determine is whether the information Ms Wojciechowska has provided in Items 15 – 19, includes such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified. I find, in accordance with Mr McIntosh’s evidence, that the Respondent is unable to identify the meaning of the acronym ROP without more contextual information. Objectively, the access application does not include such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified.
In the written submissions the Respondent also submitted that the request for information in Items 21 and 25 are invalid because they do not comply with the “invalidity requirement” in s 41(1)(e).
Item 21
Item 21 requests:
Complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited copes of all complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited documents (including but not limited to written documents, audio documents and electronic documents) from which Jason Day gained knowledge that caused him write (sic) to (email address deleted) on 5 May 2021: “A mistake does not amount to corruption or incompetence and your reference to the intelligence of my team members does not assist or progress this matter”.
Government information means “information contained in a record held by an agency”: GIPA Act, s 4. In order to identify the requested information in Item 21, the Respondent would need to know how Mr Day “gained the knowledge that caused him to write” to Ms Wojciechowska. That information is not in a record. As the Respondent submits, the identification of that government information, if any, depends on what information caused Mr Day to write that letter. That is not a request that can be made under the GIPA Act.
The access application does not include such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified.
Item 25
Item 25 requests:
Complete, unredacted and otherwise unedited copies of all documents containing any information disclosing or capable of leading to discovery of the identity of all persons who directly and/or indirectly caused the appearance of the text “Part heard before Magistrate McIntyre” in any document in relation to (named proceedings)
Items 2-4 and 26-34 are framed in a similar way. These requests call for an evaluative assessment of documents before a decision maker can decide whether they are “capable” of leading to the identification of a person. These requests do not include such information as is reasonably necessary to enable the government information applied for to be identified.
An insufficiently specific portion of an access application cannot be severed from the remainder of the application to make other parts of it valid: Department of Communities and Justice v Zonnevylle [2020] NSWCATAP 126 at [42].
I make the following order:
The Respondent’s decision that the third access application is not a valid access application is affirmed.
Orders
(1)In relation to Ms Wojciechowska’s first access application I make the following orders:
(a)The Respondent’s decision that the government information identified in Items 1 to 5 is not held by the agency is affirmed.
(b)The Respondent’s decision that the application for government information identified in Items 6 to 14 is not a valid access application is affirmed.
(c)The Respondent’s decision that the government information identified in Item 16 is not held by the agency is affirmed.
(d)The Respondent’s decision that the deleted information marked “s 74 material not within scope” is not relevant to the information applied for in Item 15, is affirmed.
(e)The Respondent’s decision to refuse to provide access to the government information marked “s 14 cl. 3(a), s 14 cl 3(b)” in response to the access application in Item 15, is affirmed.
(2)In relation to Ms Wojciechowska’s second application I make the following orders:
(a)The Respondent’s decision in relation to Item 1 is set aside. The following decision is made in substitution for that decision:
Ms Wojciechowska is to be given access to the information in Item 1.
The form of access is by providing a reasonable opportunity to inspect a record containing the information, together with such facilities as may be necessary to enable the information to be viewed.
A condition of access is that Ms Wojciechowska not make any record of the information including by taking notes, making an image or copying the record.
(b)The Respondent’s decisions that it held no information in relation to Item 2 is affirmed.
(c)The Respondent’s decisions that it held no information in relation to Item 3 and Item 5 is affirmed.
(d)The Respondent’s decision to refuse to provide access to the government information in Item 4 marked “s 14 cl. 3(a), s 14 cl 3(b)” is affirmed.
(e)The Respondent’s decision in relation to Item 8 is set aside. In substitution for that decision, the following decision is made:
Access is given to a copy of the information in the letter from Justice Armstrong to the Attorney General referred to in paragraph 16 of the affidavit of James O’Young dated 21 November 2023 which discloses the date of all 2021 interviews conducted for the position of Deputy President and Head of NCAT’s Guardianship Division. Access is refused to the remainder of the information in that letter apart from the formal parts of the letter including the address, the date, the salutation and the sign off.
(f)Pursuant to s 65(1) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997, the Respondent’s implied decision that it does not hold information responsive to Item 10 is remitted to the Respondent for reconsideration in accordance with these reasons.
(g)The Respondent’s decision in relation to Items 6, 7 and 9 (apart from Ms Britton’s CV) is set aside. The following decision is made in substitution for that decision:
Access to the information is refused because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure.
(h)Pursuant to s 65(1) of the Administrative Decisions Review Act 1997, the Respondent’s decision not to give access to Ms Britton’s CV is remitted to the Respondent for reconsideration in accordance with these reasons.
(i)The Respondent’s decision to refuse to provide access to the information in Item 11 because there is an overriding public interest against disclosure of the information is affirmed.
(3)In relation to Ms Wojciechowska’s third application I make the following order:
(a)The Respondent’s decision that the third access application is not a valid access application is affirmed.
**********
I hereby certify that this is a true and accurate record of the reasons for decision of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal of New South Wales.
Registrar
Amendments
16 January 2025 - Paragraph 180 - 'pointed' amended to 'appointed'.
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