Ceramalus v Chief Executive of the Ministry of Social Development

Case

[2012] NZHC 587

30 March 2012

No judgment structure available for this case.

IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND AUCKLAND REGISTRY

CIV2011-485-001004 [2012] NZHC 587

BETWEEN  NOBILANGELO CERAMALUS Appellant

ANDTHE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF THE MINISTRY OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT

Respondent

Hearing:         13 October 2011

Appearances: Appellant in person

T I Hallett-Hook for the Chief Executive

Judgment:      30 March 2012

RESERVED JUDGMENT OF WOOLFORD J

This judgment was delivered by me on Friday, 30 March 2012 at 12:00 pm pursuant to r 11.5 of the High Court Rules.

Registrar/Deputy Registrar

Solicitors:           Crown Law, PO Box 2858, Wellington 6140.

And to:               N Ceramalus, 2-4 O’Brien Road, Rocky Bay, Waiheke Island.

CERAMALUS V THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OF THE MINISTRY OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT HC AK CIV

2011-485-001004 [30 March 2012]

Introduction

[1]      The appellant appeals by way of case stated against the decision of the Social Security Appeal Authority dated 14 February 2011 upholding a decision of the Chief Executive of the Ministry of Social Development confirmed by the Benefits Review Committee to cancel the appellant’s unemployment benefit from 22 October 2007 on the basis that he no longer qualified for the benefit.

Factual background

[2]      The appellant was granted the unemployment benefit on 24 June 2004.

[3]      On 19 October 2007 the appellant told the Ministry of Social Development that he had been elected as a member of the Waiheke Community Board.  He was advised that he may still be able to receive the unemployment benefit depending on how much he earned in his role as a Community Board member but that in addition to the income test he would still need to satisfy eligibility criteria, in particular, being available for full-time employment, for this benefit.   It was also explained to him that if he came off the unemployment benefit that he might still qualify for additional help depending on income, assets and costs.  The appellant told the Ministry that he would contact them once he knew more about the income and time requirements of his new role.

[4]      The appellant then emailed his case manager to advise her that, now he had been elected to the Community Board, so much of his time would be taken up that he would not be able to accept a full-time employment position even if one was offered to him.

[5]      The appellant’s unemployment benefit was suspended on 29 October 2007 effective from 22 October 2007.  After further correspondence about the need to be available for full-time employment, the appellant’s unemployment benefit was cancelled and he was transferred to non-beneficiary assistance.

[6]      Over two years later, on 16 February 2010, the appellant applied to review the decision to cancel his unemployment benefit.  He was granted leave to apply out of time.

Decisions of Benefits Review Committee and Social Security Appeal Authority

[7]      Both the Benefits Review Committee at first instance and the Social Security Appeal Authority on appeal upheld the Ministry’s decision to cancel the appellant’s unemployment benefit.

[8]      The position the appellant adopted before the Benefits Review Committee and  the  Social  Security Appeal Authority  was  that  his  role  as  a  member  of  a Community Board was a full-time commitment which prevented him from taking on other employment.   He argued that the criteria for an unemployment benefit in s 89(1)(a) of the Social Security Act 1964 (“the Act”) should be read in a way that acknowledged this full-time commitment as job seeking activity.

[9]      The Authority accepted that the appellant was committed to his role as a member of the Community Board in a way that meant it was a full-time commitment for him but rejected his interpretation of the s 89(1)(a) criteria.  As a result it found that he failed to meet the job seeker requirements in s 89(1)(a) because he was not available for or willing and able to undertake additional employment outside of his Community Board role nor was he taking reasonable steps to find full-time employment during his time as a member of the Community Board.  As a result he was found to be ineligible for an unemployment benefit under s 89 of the Act or an unemployment hardship benefit under s 90.

Appellant’s benefits

[10]     During his three-year term as a member of the Waiheke Community Board from October 2007 to October 2010, the appellant received remuneration of $10,000 per annum (a gross income of $192.31 per week).   In addition, he received an accommodation supplement from the Ministry of Social Development throughout the three-year term.  He also received temporary additional support payments from

the Ministry until 28 February 2008 and then again from 22 October 2009.  As at

19 October 2010, the accommodation supplement and temporary additional support payments totalled $158.24 per week.  As at the same date the appellant also received a disability allowance of $12.15 per week.

[11]     The unemployment benefit at the time was $212.06 per week or $19.75 per week more than the remuneration he was receiving as a member of the Waiheke Community Board.  If the appellant had received the unemployment benefit while a member  of  the  Board,  his  benefit  would  accordingly have  been  abated  to  take account of his income as a member of the Board.   The appeal therefore concerns very little money. The appellant, however, sees it as a matter of principle.

[12]     The appellant describes it thus:

[9]       On the face of it this case is a trivial matter.  Of course on the tiny canvas of my life it was not and is not trivial, but on the vast canvas of great matters it may at first seem so.  But it is in fact of fundamental importance. For in a democratic society it is vital that the democratic will of the people can be expressed freely and fairly.  Therefore any action, particularly official action, that interferes with free and fair elections, that interferes with the democratic process, that interferes with making available a choice of candidates that is truly democratic, truly representative and truly unencumbered, and interferes with the ability of those elected to carry out their democratic duties is a great evil.   What caused the predicament in which  I  found  myself  was  just  that:  unlawful  interference  with  the democratic  process  of  selecting elected  officials in New  Zealand’s  local government, and unlawful interference with the carrying out of their sworn duties.   Thus the  unlawful  assault on my personal circumstances  was  a microcosm  of  the  chronic  unlawful  assault  on  our  local  democracy. Therefore this case, which involves an uncommon, perhaps unique, set of circumstances, whilst exposing an evil done me also exposes an evil that has long afflicted our local government: and therefore resolution for me can also en passante be resolution for the nation.

Nature of Appeal

[13]     This is not a general appeal but an appeal on three specified questions of law. The questions of law for the opinion of the Court are:

(a)      Was the Authority’s interpretation of the criteria in s 89 of the Social

Security Act 1964 correct?

(b)      Was there any evidence on which the Authority could conclude that the appellant did not satisfy the criteria in s 89(1)(a) of the Act?

(c)      Was the Authority’s interpretation of s 90 of the Social Security Act

1964 correct?

[14]     The appellant seeks to include a fourth question for the opinion of the Court, namely, “Was the Authority correct not to consider the alternative of ruling under s 61 of the Act?”  Section 61 of the Act provides that the Chief Executive may grant an emergency benefit in cases of hardship.

[15]     It is not appropriate, however, for a fourth question of law to be added to this case stated appeal.  The appellant first raised the issue of whether he should have received an emergency benefit in his supplementary submissions to the Authority. Under s 12J(1) of the Act, a right of appeal to the Authority is restricted to decisions of the Chief Executive that have been confirmed or varied by a Benefits Review Committee.  The grant of an emergency benefit to the appellant was not considered by the Chief Executive nor by the Benefits Review Committee.  Although raised in submissions before it, the Authority made no findings on the availability of such a benefit.  In those circumstances, I do not propose to consider s 61 any further.

Appellant’s submissions

[16]     The appellant’s submissions comprised a closely typed 124 pages. They were

extremely discursive and unfocused. As explained by the appellant himself:

[3]       Because of the nature of this case the questions of law have been treated as a continuum rather than answered separately.  In effect they have been  broken  into  subsidiary  points  which  have  been  addressed  in  what seemed a logical order.

[4]       Because  I  expected  the  submission  to  be  referred  to  hither  and thither at some point I have tried to make each section reasonably self- contained rather than making a myriad of cross-references, although that means there is repetition when reading it as a whole.  I apologise profusely for its deficiencies, but this chronic ordeal has not been conducive to best practice. And I am only a lay person.  I trust the Court will make allowances for that. And also for the fact, as the saying goes, that it smells of the lamp.

[5]       Although my circumstances in this case were created by the Ministry of Social Development, and that evil is what I am appealing against, what created the underlying reason for it was the Remuneration Authority (but not so as to make it a co-defendant).   Therefore a Judge who knows or has known anyone on that Authority should not preside over this case, because there would be a personal conflict of interest.

[6]       Legislation significantly relied on, or referred to, in this submission includes:   the Social Security Act 1964, the Interpretation Act 1999, the Evidence Act 2006, the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990, the Imperial Laws Applications Act 1988, the Statues of Westminster;  The First 1275, the Criminal  and  Civil  Justice  Statute  1351,  the  Criminal  and  Civil  Justice Statute  1354,  the  Observance  of  Due  Process  of  Law  Statute  1368,  the Petition of Rights Act 1627, the Bill of Rights Act 1688, the Minimum Wage Act 1983, the Employment Relations Act 2000, the Local Government Act

2002, the Local Government Official Information and Meetings Act 1987, the Local Authorities (Members’ Interests) Act 1968, the Crimes Act 1961, the Secret Commissions Act 1910, the Securities Act 1978, the Civil Defence Emergency Management Act 2002.  International instruments relied on are the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICOCAPR is the most pronounceable abbreviation), the International Covenant on Economic Social and Cultural Rights, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the United Nations Charter.

[17]     As is foreshadowed in para [5] of his submissions, the appellant’s underlying complaint, which he develops at great length in his submissions, is that the Remuneration Authority failed to set salaries for community board members at a sufficient level to adequately remunerate them for what should be a full-time commitment to the service of their community.  That is not however something the Authority or this Court can review in the context of this appeal.

[18]     The appellant summarises what he says is the correct approach to assessing his eligibility for an unemployment benefit as follows:

[385]    Once the fundamental principle of the law has been recognised it must be recognised as the fundamental test for all decisions at law.  For my WINZ case manager, the Ministry of Social Development’s Benefits Review Committee and the Social Security Appeal Authority to have arrived at the right decision in law they had to ask themselves a very simple question: “How can I best employ the Social Security Act 1964 to recognise fully the inherent dignity and worth of this man?”  They failed to do that.  If they had, the answer was obvious:   make up as much as possible of the unlawful deficit caused by the malfeasance of the Remuneration Authority.

[19]     In essence, the appellant submits that he was eligible for an unemployment benefit  because  he  was  seeking  full-time  employment  within  his  role  as  a Community Board member.  He was always searching for ways in which he could be

employed in serving the best interests of his community to the best of his skill and judgement.

[20]     The appellant states:

[104]    It is impossible even to look seriously for a second full-time job if you already have full-time duties in the first one.  Just looking for a full-time job is a full-time job, in which you would be working for yourself, not for your community.   You cannot in logic and natural justice be compelled, under the threat of being punished with a financial penalty, to look for what you already have, or worse, if you found another full-time job, to double your  load.     No  officer,  no  committee,  no  authority  may  expect  the impossible, ask the impossible, compel the impossible.  Again, that is cruel treatment, which breaches human rights enactments and of the promises and commands of the King.

Question One:  Was the Authority’s interpretation of the criteria in s 89 of the
Social Security Act 1964 correct?

[21]     Section 89 and 90 set out the requirements for an unemployment benefit. They relevantly provide:

89       Unemployment benefit: standard eligibility requirements

(1)      A person is entitled to an unemployment benefit if he or she satisfies the criteria in subsections (2), (3), and (4), and—

(a)      Is not in full-time employment, but—

(i)       Is seeking it; and

(ii)      Is available for it; and

(iii)     Is willing and able to undertake it; and

(iv)     Has taken reasonable steps to find it; or

(b)      Repealed. (c)      Repealed.

(2)       An applicant for an unemployment benefit must be—

(a)      Aged 18 years or over; or

(b)       Aged 16 years or over, be married or in a civil union or in a de facto relationship, and have one or more dependent children.

(3)       An applicant for an unemployment benefit must meet the residential requirements in section 744A.

(4)      An applicant for an unemployment benefit must have—

(a)      No income; or

(b)       An income of less than the amount that would fully abate the benefit.

(5)       Nothing  in  subsection  (4)  affects  the  entitlement  of  a  person  to receive an unemployment benefit if, during a temporary period, the person has income sufficient to fully abate the benefit but the person otherwise fulfils the conditions of entitlement to the benefit.

90       Unemployment benefit: grounds of hardship

(1)       The  chief  executive  may  grant  an  unemployment  benefit  under section 89 to a person who meets the criteria in section 89(1) and

89(2) , but who does not meet the other criteria in that section, if—

(a)      The person is suffering hardship; and

(b)      The person is not qualified to receive any other benefit; and

(c)       The person is unable to earn sufficient income to support the person and his or her spouse or partner and any dependent children.

[22]     The Authority summarised the criteria which must be satisfied in order to be eligible for an unemployment benefit. The applicant must be:

(a)       Not in full-time employment; (b)         Seeking full-time employment;

(c)       Available for full-time employment;

(d)      Willing and able to undertake full-time employment; (e)        Taking reasonable steps to find it.

[23]     The   Authority   took   the   view   from   information   received   from   the Remuneration Authority including its salary determination for Community Board members that the appellant’s position as a Community Board member was a part- time position.  It noted that at least two other members of the Waiheke Community

Board held full-time employment in addition to their Community Board duties.  The other two members were apparently retired.

[24]     The Authority accepted that although the Community Board position was a part-time  commitment  and  remunerated  accordingly,  the  appellant  committed himself to the position in such a way that it was full-time commitment for him.

[25]     In my view the Authority correctly stated the criteria in s 89(1)(a) of the Act that must be satisfied in order to be eligible for an unemployment benefit.   The Authority concluded that the appellant did not satisfy three of these criteria as he:

(a)       Was not available for full-time employment;

(b)Was not willing and able to undertake full-time employment or a second part-time job in addition to his work as a Community Board member; and

(c)       Had not been taking reasonable steps to find full-time employment.

As a result it found he did not satisfy the criteria for receipt of the unemployment or unemployment hardship benefit.

[26]     I am of the opinion that the Authority’s approach was entirely orthodox, consistent with s 89(1)(a) and the scheme of the Social Security Act.  There is no obvious error of law.  I accept the Crown’s submissions that the criteria applied are reasonably open-ended concepts that are not prescriptively defined in the Act.  This reflects  the  fact  that  the criteria  are  meant  to  be  flexibly applied  by the Chief Executive to  a wide range of different  facts  and circumstances.    However,  this flexibility is not without limit.  The focus of the Act is on self-sufficiency, in helping people return to work where appropriate and the underlying principle that “work in paid employment offers the best opportunity for people to achieve social and economic wellbeing”: s 1B(a).

[27]     The  unemployment  benefit  must  also  be  viewed  in  the  context  of  New

Zealand’s  broader  social  security  regime.    The Act  contemplates  that  there  are

situations where a person will be unable to work and provides benefits which apply in these cases.  It also provides for monetary benefits that are not tied to job seeking activity to assist people of limited means meet various costs.  I therefore agree with the Crown that it is wrong to read the unemployment benefit in isolation as being directed at correcting all hardship.

[28]     I  reject  the  appellant’s  argument  that  seeking  out  additional  work  as  a member of the Community Board should be regarded as satisfying the criteria as set out in s 89(1)(a).   If the appellant’s interpretation was correct, he would remain eligible to an unemployment benefit without any corresponding obligation to work towards self sufficiency through employment.  This is entirely inconsistent with the objectives of the unemployment benefit and the principles which underpin it.

Question Two:  Was there any evidence on which the Authority could conclude that the appellant did not satisfy the criteria in s 89(1)(a) of the Act?

[29]     I am also of the view that there was sufficient evidence before the Authority for it to conclude that the appellant did not meet the eligibility criteria of s 89(1)(a). The Authority stated:

[22]     We are not satisfied that the appellant was available for full-time employment outside his Community Board role because he was fully occupied by his Community Board activities.  Neither are we satisfied that he was willing and able to undertake full-time employment or a second part- time job in addition to his work on the Community Board.   On this basis alone the appellant could not continue to receive the Unemployment Benefit.

[30]     In the course of his submissions, the appellant acknowledged that he was not available for full-time employment outside his Community Board role nor was he willing and able to undertake any employment in addition to his work on the Community Board.

[31]     This  concession  on  the  part  of  the  appellant  flowed  naturally  from  the

appellant’s flawed interpretation of the job search criteria in s 89(1) of the Act.

Question  Three:    Was  the Authority’s  interpretation  of  s  90  of  the  Social

Security Act 1964 correct?

[32]     Section 90 enables the chief executive to grant an unemployment benefit to a person who meets the criteria in ss 89(1) and (2), but who does not meet the other criteria in that section if they are suffering hardship.  The criteria in s 89(1) are those which are directly in issue in this case.  According to s 89(1), the applicant must not be in full-time employment but must:

(a)      Be seeking it; and

(b)      Be available for it; and

(c)      Be willing and able to undertake it; and

(d)      Have taken reasonable steps to find it.

[33]     In the appellant’s case, the Authority found he was not entitled to an ordinary unemployment benefit because he did not satisfy the criteria in s 89(1).  It follows that he was not entitled to a hardship unemployment benefit on the same basis.

[34]     The Authority’s interpretation of s 90 was therefore correct.  The criteria in s 89(1) needed to be satisfied before the appellant could be considered for a hardship unemployment benefit under s 90.

Conclusion

[35]     I have not considered it necessary to respond in any detail to the voluminous submissions  for  the  appellant  which  included  references  to  Imperial  legislation dating back to 1275, a wide range of New Zealand Statutes and a number of cases, the vast majority of which appear to me to be of no relevance to the determination of this appeal.  As an example, the appellant cites a statute passed in 1297 in the reign of Edward 1 which provided (according to the appellant’s submissions) as follows:

29 imprisonment, etc contrary to law. Administration of justice

NO Freeman shall be taken or imprisoned, or be disseised of his Freehold, or Liberties, or free Customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or any other wise destroyed; nor will We not pass upon him, nor condemn him, but by lawful

judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the Land.  We will sell to no man, we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right.

[36]     The appellant submits in relation to this provision:

Disseise is defined by The Shorter Oxford English Dictionary as: 1 Law (now historical) put out of actual seisen or possession; dispossess (a person) of estates etc., usually wrongfully or by force; oust.”   Some modern “translations” of disseise replace it with “deprived of”, but that misses its true meaning; it is too passive.   For “seize” means “to grasp” (A Concise Etymological Dictionary of the English Language, published by Oxford), to take possession of.  “Disseise” is an act of force, an assault, it means to be seized out of, to have seized from you, something you rightfully possess. Metaphorically speaking, rough hands were laid upon what I possessed by right of Royal Decree and it was stolen from me.  Like the man in the Bible I fell among thieves, was stripped and robbed and left lying upon the King’s Highway as if it were a meaningless tract of dirt.

[350]    I was disseised of my liberties and the free customs of this nation, as was my community.   I was destroyed financially, and I was denied justice and right, by officers of the King although I too was in the King’s service.  I was  condemned  to  penury  and  beggary  without  lawful  judgement,  in defiance of lawful judgement, against the desire of freemen expressed in the King’s name in Clause 7 Schedule 7 of the Local Government Act 2002.

[351]    The King declared that no one may be punished unlawfully.  I was punished for obedience to the King’s law by being forced into beggary in his service by the unlawful actions of other servants.   Their disobedience punished my obedience.

[37]     It is difficult to understand how the submission is of relevance to the three questions of law posed in the case date of appeal.  In my view it is unnecessary to draw on Imperial legislation to give meaning to words used in s 89(1)(a).

[38]     In conclusion, the questions of law are answered as follows:

(a)      Was the Authority’s interpretation of the criteria in s 89 of the Social

Security Act 1964 correct? Yes.

(b)Was there any evidence on which the Authority could conclude that the appellant did not satisfy the criteria in s 89(1)(a) of the Act? Yes.

(c)      Was the Authority’s interpretation of s 90 of the Social Security Act

1964 correct? Yes.

[39]     The appellant states that he has put in excess of a man year of work into trying to obtain redress.  That is unfortunate if that is indeed the case.  I am certainly not in a position to do likewise in researching and delivering this judgment.  Having put in excess of a man year of work into trying to obtain redress, the appellant seeks costs of $47,804, being the average annual gross earnings in New Zealand over the three year period between 2008 and 2010.

[40]     The appeal has been determined against the appellant and normally costs would follow the event.  However, the Crown generously does not seek costs against

the appellant.  In those circumstances, costs are to lie where they fall.

Woolford J

Actions
Download as PDF Download as Word Document


Cases Citing This Decision

1

Easton v Attorney-General [2013] NZHC 2889
Cases Cited

0

Statutory Material Cited

1