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- Agius v Queensland Building and Construction Commission & anor[2023] QCATA 145
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Agius v Queensland Building and Construction Commission & anor[2023] QCATA 145
Agius v Queensland Building and Construction Commission & anor[2023] QCATA 145
QUEENSLAND CIVIL AND ADMINISTRATIVE TRIBUNAL
CITATION: | Agius v Queensland Building and Construction Commission & anor [2023] QCATA 145 |
PARTIES: | mark elliot Agius (Applicant/appellant) v queensland building and construction Commission (First respondent) GEDOUN CONSTRUCTIONS PTY LTD (Second respondent) |
APPLICATION NO/S: | APL184-22 |
ORIGINATING APPLICATION NO/S: | GAR194-20 |
MATTER TYPE: | Appeals |
DELIVERED ON: | 22 November 2023 |
HEARING DATE: | 24 October 2023 |
HEARD AT: | Brisbane |
DECISION OF: | Senior Member Traves |
ORDERS: |
|
CATCHWORDS: | APPEAL – INTERLOCUTORY DECISION – GENERAL ADMINISTRATIVE REVIEW – where application to review ambiguous – whether application sought to review the decision to issue a direction to rectify or the subsequent direction to rectify – whether direction to rectify is a reviewable decision within the meaning of s 86(1)(e) of the Queensland Building and Construction Commission Act 1991 (Qld) – whether application to review should be taken to be an application to review the decision to issue a direction to rectify Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2009 (Qld), s 3, s 28, s 29, s 43, s 142(3)(a)(ii) Queensland Building and Construction Commission Act 1991 (Qld), s 86 McNab Constructions Australia Pty Ltd v Queensland Building Services Authority [2013] QSC 57 Oracle Building Corporation Pty Ltd v Queensland Building and Construction Commission [2019] QCAT 419 Oracle Building Corporation Pty Ltd v Queensland Building and Construction Commission [2020] QCAT 69 Queensland Building and Construction Commission v Whalley [2018] QCATA 38 |
APPEARANCES & REPRESENTATION: | This matter was heard and determined on the papers pursuant to s 32 of the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2009 (Qld) |
REASONS FOR DECISION
- [1]Appeals APL183-22 and APL184-22 were directed to be heard and determined together. The appeals raise issues under the review provisions in the Queensland Building and Construction Commission Act 1991 (Qld) (QBCC Act).
- [2]The first appeal (APL183-22) raised the question of what happens if two persons entitled to have reviewed a reviewable decision, both exercise their entitlements. That appeal is the subject of separate reasons.
- [3]This appeal (APL184-22) raises the question of whether a decision to issue a direction to rectify and the issuing of a notice to rectify is one decision or two decisions, and if two, whether both or which is a reviewable decision under the QBCC Act.
- [4]The decisions under appeal were decisions made on interlocutory applications, so that, under s 142(3)(a)(ii) of the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2009 (Qld) (QCAT Act) leave is required to appeal. Each matter raises issues of general application, in this case on which there have been inconsistent decisions of the tribunal, and in the circumstances, it is appropriate to give leave to appeal.
Relevant Background
- [5]It appears that the respondent undertook construction work for the appellant.[1] Prior to April 2020 the appellant complained to the Commission about certain aspects of the work undertaken by the respondent, as a result of which on 15 April 2020 the Commission directed the respondent to rectify two items of building work.[2]
- [6]On 28 April 2020 the respondent lodged an application for internal review of that decision.
- [7]On 26 May 2020 that internal review was decided, when the review officer decided not to give a direction to rectify in respect of complaints 1, A2.1, A2.2 in part, A2.3 and A2.5 in part, but to give a direction to rectify in respect of complaints A2.2 in part, A2.4 and A2.5 in part. It appears from the reasons for decision that some defective work had been rectified after the original decision, and before the review decision.
- [8]On 28 May 2020 the Commission issued direction to rectify no 0106161 to the respondent.
- [9]On 8 June 2020 the respondent filed an application to review ‘Direction to Rectify No 0106161 dated 28 May 2020 in the tribunal.
- [10]On 23 October 2020 the appellant was joined as a respondent to the proceeding following an application by the Commission to join him.
- [11]On 3 November 2020 the appellant filed an application to dismiss the review on the basis the respondent had applied as trustee of a trust when there was no reference to a trust in the building contract or the respondent’s licence. On 11 May 2021 that application was dismissed.
- [12]On 19 July 2021 the appellant applied to the tribunal to strike out the proceeding for review of the decision, on the ground that the tribunal did not have jurisdiction to review the issue of the direction to rectify, which was a separate decision from the decision to issue that direction. That application was decided by a Member on the papers on 19 May 2022 and was dismissed. This appeal is brought from that decision.
The decision at first instance
- [13]The Member identified that the appellant’s argument was that the respondent applied to the tribunal to review the direction to rectify, whereas it was the preceding decision to issue a direction to rectify which was the reviewable decision within the meaning of s 86(1)(e) of the QBCC Act.
- [14]The Member considered the terms of the application to review and noted that there were features that suggested that the decision sought to be reviewed was the decision to give a direction to rectify, and others which suggested it was the issue of the direction to rectify itself which was the subject of the application. The Member concluded that, on a fair reading of the application to review a decision form, the decision under review was the direction to rectify made on 28 May 2020.[3]
- [15]The Member then considered some decisions of the tribunal on the question of whether a direction to rectify was reviewable under s 86(1)(e) of the QBCC Act and concluded that it was, so that the tribunal had jurisdiction to review the direction to rectify. The appellant’s application to strike out the proceeding was therefore dismissed.
Submissions of the appellant
- [16]The appellant reinforced the finding of the Member as to the interpretation of the application to review form and relied on s 17(1) of the QCAT Act, that the tribunal may only review decisions where an enabling Act, such as the QBCC Act, specifically confers jurisdiction. The appellant submitted that the decision of the Member erred in characterising the direction to rectify notice as itself a decision under the QBCC Act, since it simply gave effect to the earlier decision to issue that direction. The issuing of the direction did not involve the making of any further decision in its own right, as claimed by the Member at [24] of the Reasons. Accordingly, there was no reviewable decision identified in the application.
- [17]The submissions also adopted the submissions at first instance. These included the proposition that the respondent was out of time because the period of twenty-eight days referred to in the QBCC Act, s 86F(1)(b)(i) had been exceeded. But this argument depends on the proposition that the application to review filed on 8 June 2020 was not an application to review a reviewable decision so, as such, really adds nothing to the earlier submissions.
Submissions of the respondent
- [18]The respondent submitted that the appellant’s contention as to lack of jurisdiction rested on the proposition that the question of jurisdiction is determined entirely on the content of the application to review form, as to which there are no formal requirements in the QBCC Act, associated regulations or QCAT Act. The only requirement being that a review application be made on the approved form (Rule 7(1)(a) of the Queensland Civil and Administrative Tribunal Rules 2009 (Qld)). Further, to dismiss an application to review on the basis of a failure to adhere with strict compliance with forms, is inconsistent with the objects of the QCAT Act which eschew formality (s 3(b) of the QCAT Act). The respondent sought to distinguish Oracle Building Corporation Pty Ltd v Queensland Building and Construction Commission [2020] QCAT 69 on the basis that in that matter there was no doubt the direction to rectify was the decision under review and it was decided at a final hearing, rather than on an interlocutory basis.
Submissions of the Commission
- [19]The Commission submitted that the Member erred in applying the reasoning in Oracle 1 [2019] QCAT 419 because those reasons were overturned in Oracle 2 [2020] QCAT 69 when it was observed that a direction to rectify is not a ‘reviewable decision’ for the purposes of s 86(1)(e). Further, it was submitted that procedural fairness had been afforded to the appellant in directing submissions to be filed and in determining the strike out decision based on those submissions, as well as those of the Commission and the respondent.
Consideration
- [20]Section 86 (1)(e) of the QBCC Act provides that the following decision of the Commission under this Act is a “reviewable decision”:
A decision to give a direction to rectify or remedy or not to give the direction.
- [21]The giving of the direction is a consequential step, but if and to the extent that it involves a decision, it is not a reviewable decision under the QBCC Act.[4] To the extent the learned Member decided to the contrary, I respectfully disagree.
- [22]The learned Member referred to Queensland Building and Construction Commission v Whalley.[5] In that matter an application for review identified one reviewable decision as sought to be reviewed (a decision that work had not been satisfactorily rectified), but not another of the same date (to issue a new direction to rectify). It would have been sensible to also seek review of the decision to issue the direction to rectify as it was, in a practical sense, consequent on the decision reviewed. The Appeal Tribunal held that one of the errors made was to set aside the decision for DTR no 40913 because that was not the decision sought to be reviewed. As there had been no request to review that decision, the Appeal Tribunal held the tribunal lacked jurisdiction to review it, even if it was, for the purposes of the QBCC Act, a reviewable decision.[6] That is a different situation from the present.
- [23]In Oracle Building Corporation Pty Ltd v Queensland Building and Construction Commission[7] the Member who decided the strike out application in this matter, decided that the decision to give a direction to rectify and the giving of the direction to rectify were each a reviewable decision within the meaning of the QBCC Act s 86(1)(e). In Oracle Building Corporation Pty Ltd v Queensland Building and Construction Commission,[8] a different Member declined to follow that decision, and said that the giving of the direction to rectify was not a decision and hence not a reviewable decision under s 86 of the QBCC Act.
- [24]In McNab Constructions Australia Pty Ltd v Queensland Building Services Authority[9] Dalton J (as her Honour then was) drew a distinction between the decision to give a direction to rectify and the direction to rectify given pursuant to the decision. In that matter it was held that notices which required the work to be completed within 28 days from the date of signing, or the date of posting of the notices giving a direction to rectify did not comply with the requirement in s 72(3) of the QBCC Act, which was interpreted as requiring a period of 28 days from the receipt of the notice by the contractor. Accordingly, a declaration was made that the directions were void. The Commission had argued that a merits review of the decisions to give the directions to rectify was soon to be heard in the tribunal and that the declaration should be refused as a matter of discretion. That was refused on the basis that the decision to give the directions and the giving of the notices of the directions were different, and her Honour’s decision concerned the validity of the directions to rectify that were actually given.[10] The problem in that case was that the period within which work was required to be done was less than that required by the QBCC Act, whether or not there was anything wrong with the decision to give the directions. The distinction was, with respect, entirely appropriate in the circumstances of that case but did not, in my view, go so far as to establish that the giving of the direction was a separate decision, whether or not reviewable.
- [25]It follows, in my view, as I have stated above, the reviewable decision is the decision to give the direction, as opposed to the direction itself. I do not agree with the learned Member that the decision to give a direction and the direction itself can each be a reviewable decision for the purposes of s 86(1)(e).
- [26]That, however, in my view is not the end of the matter. Section 3(b) of the QCAT Act provides that the objects of the Act are ‘to have the tribunal deal with matters in a way that is accessible, fair, just, economical, informal and quick’. Further s 4 provides that to achieve the objects of the Act the tribunal must:
(c) ensure proceedings are conducted in an informal way that minimises costs to parties, and is as quick as is consistent with achieving justice; and
…
(e) ensure the tribunal is accessible and responsive to the diverse needs of persons who use the tribunal; and
- [27]Section 28(2) of the QCAT Act provides:
In all proceedings, the tribunal must act fairly and according to the substantial merits of the case.
- [28]And, relevantly, s 28(3)(d) provides, that in conducting a proceeding, the tribunal –
must act with as little formality and technicality and with as much speed as the requirements of this Act, an enabling Act or the rules and a proper consideration of the matters before the tribunal permit;
- [29]Sections 28 and 29 must, in my view, be read with s 43 which deals with representation. The main purpose of the section is stated in ss (1) to be:
to have parties represent themselves unless the interests of justice require otherwise.
- [30]
- [31]In circumstances where the decision to give a direction to rectify is a reviewable decision, an application to review a decision which is ambiguous should be taken to be an attempt to review the reviewable decision, rather than an attempt to review the unreviewable consequential step.
- [32]Given the very close relationship between the decision to give the direction and the giving of the direction itself, even if the application refers clearly to the giving of the direction, it should be treated as an application to review the reviewable decision.
- [33]Precise compliance with the requirements of the form is not required, only substantial compliance, and, in interpreting an application for review the tribunal should lean heavily in favour of an interpretation which renders it effective to achieve the obvious purpose of the party bringing the application to review. Here that clearly was to challenge the decision that could be challenged under s 86(1)(e).
- [34]The correct interpretation of the application to review filed by the respondent is that it is an application to review the decision to give the direction to rectify which was given. As was noted by the learned Member, there were elements of ambiguity in the identification of the decision sought to be reviewed, but the interpretation which prevents the process from being futile on a technicality should be avoided.
- [35]The appellant’s application to strike out the application to review was correctly dismissed, and the appeal is dismissed.
Footnotes
[1] For convenience I will refer to Mr Agius as the appellant, the contractor Gedoun Constructions Pty Ltd as the respondent, and the Queensland Building and Construction Commission as the Commission.
[2] It may be that one of the items had a number of different parts.
[3] GAR194-20 Reasons at [15].
[4] It may still be reviewable under the Judicial Review Act 1991 (Qld) or in proceedings for a declaration in the Supreme Court.
[5] [2018] QCATA 38.
[6] Ibid at [36].
[7] [2019] QCAT 419.
[8] [2020] QCAT 69.
[9] [2013] QSC 57.
[10] Ibid at [18].
[11] QCAT Act, s 33(2)(a).
[12] QCAT Act, s 33(2)(b).