Rowley v Charles Sturt University
[2026] NSWSC 172
NSWSC
2026-03-09
Justice Fagan
Not yet cited by other cases
Applicant: Rowley
Respondent: Charles Sturt University
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Concept tags · 9
Cases cited in this decision · 12
Cited
[2024] NSWCATAD 229
(not in corpus)
"…was refused leave to proceed with a discrimination complaint he had made to the President of the Anti-Discrimination Board, that had been referred to the Tribunal pursuant to the Anti- Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW):...…"
Considered
[2022] NSWSC 1681
(not in corpus)
"…e decision of the Tribunal that is challenged in these proceedings is the decision made on 13 August 2024 that leave not be granted pursuant to s 96(1). Orders [14] There is no avenue of appeal from the decision of...…"
Cited
[2009] NSWSC 143
(not in corpus)
"…discretion to grant leave [16] The question for the Tribunal to determine under s 96(1) of the AD Act was whether it was ”fair and just” to grant leave to proceed with the complaint in the Tribunal: Ekermawi v...…"
Cited
[2009] NSWCA 388
(not in corpus)
"…to determine under s 96(1) of the AD Act was whether it was ”fair and just” to grant leave to proceed with the complaint in the Tribunal: Ekermawi v Administrative Decisions Tribunal (NSW) [2009] NSWSC 143 at...…"
Cited
[2018] FCA 2083
(not in corpus)
"…uld deal with, and that the Tribunal is to bear in mind that refusal of leave may finally determine the rights of the parties. [17] The significance of the leave requirement operating as a filter was emphasised by...…"
Cited
[2019] FCAFC 91
(not in corpus)
"…to arise from the weight to be accorded to the evidence, that was a matter for the Tribunal and criticism of the weight attached to any particular evidence would not substantiate an error of law: DCPI6 v Minister for...…"
Cited
[2018] HCA 30
— Minister for Immigration and Border Protection v SZVFW
"…t the plaintiff himself tendered. [21] The plaintiff does not submit that the Tribunal’s decision is legally unreasonable or irrational. That basis of review is “stringent and extremely confined” (Minister for...…"
Cited
[2022] FCAFC 3
(not in corpus)
"…ational. That basis of review is “stringent and extremely confined” (Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v SZVFW [2018] HCA 30 at [11], [52], [135]). Djokovic v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant...…"
Cited
(2001) 206 CLR 323
(not in corpus)
"…make his or her own assessment of what evidence is material and is not bound, in reasons, to refer to every document tendered: Minister for Immigration & Page 5 of 14 Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC...…"
Cited
(2019) 264 CLR 421
(not in corpus)
"…sion he would not be entitled to relief unless it could be shown that the error was material in the sense that there was a realistic possibility of a different outcome had the error not been made: Minister for...…"
Cited
[2019] HCA 3
(not in corpus)
"…entitled to relief unless it could be shown that the error was material in the sense that there was a realistic possibility of a different outcome had the error not been made: Minister for Immigration & Border...…"
Cited
[2021] HCA 17
(not in corpus)
"…the sense that there was a realistic possibility of a different outcome had the error not been made: Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v SZMTA (2019) 264 CLR 421; [2019] HCA 3 at [45]; MZPAC v Minister for...…"
Archived text (10149 words)
Rowley v Charles Sturt University
CaseBase | [2026]
NSWSC 172 | BC202602743
ROWLEY v CHARLES STURT UNIVERSITY BC202602743
Unreported Judgments NSW · 76 Paragraphs
Supreme Court of New South Wales — Common Law
Fagan J
2024/334737
24, 25 February, 9 March 2026
Rowley v Charles Sturt University [2026] NSWSC 172
Headnotes
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW — Judicial review of NCAT decision — Disability and transgender discrimination in
education — Vilification — Victimisation — No errors of law established — Summons dismissed.
(NSW) Anti-Discrimination Act 1977
(CTH) Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986
(NSW) Interpretation Act 1987
(NSW) Supreme Court Act 1970
Choi v NSW Ombudsman [2022] NSWSC 1681 ; DCPI6 v Minister for Immigration & Border Protection [2019]
FCAFC 91 ; Djokovic v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services & Multicultural Affairs [2022]
FCAFC 3 ; Ekermawi v Administrative Decisions Tribunal (NSW) [2009] NSWSC ; James v WorkPower Inc
[2018] FCA 2083 ; Jones v Ekermawi [2009] NSWCA 388 ; Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v
SZMTA (2019) 264 CLR 421; [2019] HCA 3 ; Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v SZVFW [2018]
HCA 30 ; Minister for Immigration & Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323 ; MZPAC v Minister for
Immigration & Border Protection [2021] HCA 17 ; Rowley v Charles Sturt University [2024] NSWCATAD 229,
cited
Fagan J.
[1] On 10 September 2024 the plaintiff filed the summons by which he commenced these proceedings, purporting
to appeal from a decision of a single member of the NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal. The decision, made on
13 August 2024, was that the plaintiff was refused leave to proceed with a discrimination complaint he had made to
the President of the Anti-Discrimination Board, that had been referred to the Tribunal pursuant to the Anti-
Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW): Rowley v Charles Sturt University [2024] NSWCATAD 229.
[2] The Tribunal is the second defendant to these proceedings. It has filed a submitting appearance. On 2 October
2024 the first defendant, Charles Sturt University, filed a Notice of Motion seeking to have the summons dismissed
on the basis that the purported appeal is incompetent. On 5 December 2024 the plaintiff filed a Notice of Motion
seeking leave to amend the summons to claim judicial review of the Tribunal’s decision, pursuant to s 69 of the
Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW). The plaintiff also claims an extension of time so far as that may be necessary to
enable an application for judicial review to proceed.
[3] The two Notices of Motion and the summons were listed for hearing together, commencing on 24 February
2026, on the basis that if the Court should allow the plaintiff’s substantive claim to proceed as an application for
judicial review, that application would be determined finally.
Page 2 of 14
Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
The plaintiff’s attendance at the University and exclusion from 14 March 2023
[4] The plaintiff claims he changed his gender from female to male and he is autistic. Medical records tendered by
him indicate that the gender transition took place in 2019 and 2020. The University has conducted all its dealings
with the plaintiff, including these proceedings, upon the basis of acceptance that he has transitioned to male gender
and that his autism constitutes a disability. The impact of the gender transition upon the plaintiff’s emotional well-
being and stability and the severity and implications of his autism have not been elucidated in evidence.
[5] From 20 January 2014 the plaintiff was enrolled in a Bachelor of Theology degree course at Charles Sturt
University, School of Theology. The University conducted the course in conjunction with United Theological
College, an institution connected with the Uniting Church of Australia. The teaching sites utilised by the School of
Theology were the United Theological College at North Parramatta and St Mark’s National Theological Centre,
Canberra. United Theological College provided tuition in various subjects that formed part of the degree course.
[6] The plaintiff was 35 years old when he commenced the course. He studied part-time over the next nine years,
taking significantly less than a full academic load each year. At least during 2022 he was in receipt of a
Commonwealth Disability Benefit and a Pensioner Education Supplement through Centrelink. The evidence does
not disclose when the plaintiff commenced to receive those benefits. On 3 January 2023 Centrelink notified him that
he would no longer receive the Pensioner Education Supplement. That led to the plaintiff requesting University staff
to write letters that would assist towards reinstatement of the benefit. Details of the letters provided by the
University during January and February 2023 will be considered later in these reasons.
[7] In January and February 2023 the plaintiff made defamatory statements about staff members, alleging that they
cancelled courses that the plaintiff wished to undertake and sabotaged his claim for Commonwealth benefits. The
plaintiff’s criticism and harassment of staff in this respect, without evidence and without adherence to a formal
complaint procedure, led to a charge against him of misconduct. That charge was found proved by a Student
Misconduct Committee. With effect from 14 March 2023, the plaintiff was excluded from enrolment for five years.
[8] The plaintiff brought an internal appeal against his exclusion but on 1 May 2023 the decision was affirmed by
the University’s appeals decision-maker. The plaintiff attempted a further appeal to the Commonwealth
Administrative Appeals Tribunal. That body lacked jurisdiction and rejected the appeal. In a final attempt to overturn
his exclusion the plaintiff lodged an application with the New South Wales Civil and Administrative Tribunal. The
application was dismissed at the conclusion of a hearing on 20 June 2023.
Procedural context of the Tribunal’s decision now challenged in this Court
[9] On 24 June 2023 the plaintiff lodged with the President of the Anti-Discrimination Board a complaint that the
University had discriminated against him because of his disability (autism) and his transgender status, that he had
been vilified because of his transgender status and that he had been victimised because he had complained about
the discrimination and/or vilification. The plaintiff’s complaint to the President had two components, which will be set
out in full later in this judgment when they can be more readily understood, after the circumstances from which the
complaint arose have been laid out.
[10] To provide procedural context, it is sufficient at this point to state that one component of the discrimination
alleged by the plaintiff concerned the University’s response to his requests in January 2023 for letters to Centrelink
to substantiate his eligibility for the Pensioner Education Supplement. The second component concerned the first
instance ruling of the University’s Student Misconduct Committee issued on 14 March 2023. He complained that the
ruling contained an indirect reference to the name by which he was known prior to transitioning to male gender. The
plaintiff referred to the use of his former, feminine name as “deadnaming transphobic vilification of me”.
[11] The President initially accepted the plaintiff’s complaint pursuant to s 89B of the Anti-Discrimination Act and
commenced to investigate it as provided for in s 90(1). The investigation was assigned to a delegate appointed
under s 94C. By operation of s 49(6) of the Interpretation Act 1987 (NSW), the functions thereafter performed by
the delegate are taken to have been exercised by the President. The powers of the President to resolve the
complaint include the following:
92 President may decline complaint during investigation
(1) If at any stage of the President’s investigation of a complaint —
(a) the President is satisfied that —
(i) the complaint, or part of the complaint, is frivolous, vexatious, misconceived or lacking in substance,
or
[…], or
Page 3 of 14
Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
(b) the President is satisfied that for any other reason no further action should be taken in respect of the
complaint, or part of the complaint,
the President may, by notice in writing addressed to the complainant, decline the complaint or part of the
complaint.
(2) The President, in a notice under this section, is to advise the complainant of —
(a) the reason for declining the complaint or part of the complaint, and
(b) the rights of the complainant under sections 93A and 96.
[12] On 26 February 2024 the President’s delegate notified the plaintiff in writing that the investigation was
complete and that his complaint was declined on the basis “that [the President] is satisfied that it is lacking in
substance”. The plaintiff was further informed that he could ask the President to send his complaint to the Tribunal
and that, “if you do so, you must ask the Tribunal’s permission to proceed”. That notification was in accordance with
s 93A, by force of which the President was bound to refer the complaint if so requested by the plaintiff.
[13] The plaintiff duly requested referral, the President complied and s 96(1), as follows, was then engaged:
96 Leave of Tribunal required for inquiry into certain matters
(1) A complaint that is referred to the Tribunal on the requirement of a complainant under section 93A(1) may not
be the subject of proceedings before the Tribunal without the leave of the Tribunal.
The decision of the Tribunal that is challenged in these proceedings is the decision made on 13 August 2024 that
leave not be granted pursuant to s 96(1).
Orders
[14] There is no avenue of appeal from the decision of the Tribunal: Choi v NSW Ombudsman [2022] NSWSC
1681 (Chen J). Because the plaintiff was self represented both in the Tribunal and before the Court, it was
considered necessary to hear at length his arguments in support of the claim for judicial review and to treat the
merits of those arguments, or the lack thereof, as the predominant factor in deciding whether to extend time and
allow the amendment.
[15] By the conclusion of evidence and argument on 25 February 2026, it was apparent that there was no merit in
the application for judicial review. The following orders were made, accordingly:
(1) Leave is granted to the plaintiff to amend his Summons to the form as filed on 18 November 2024 claiming
orders in the nature of judicial review of the decision of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal made on 13
August 2024.
(2) Time for filing the plaintiff’s Amended Summons is extended to 18 November 2024.
(3) The Amended Summons is dismissed.
(4) The plaintiff is to pay the first defendant’s costs of the proceedings.
(5) Reasons reserved.
These are the Court’s reasons for having made those orders.
The nature of the Tribunal’s discretion to grant leave
[16] The question for the Tribunal to determine under s 96(1) of the AD Act was whether it was ”fair and just” to
grant leave to proceed with the complaint in the Tribunal: Ekermawi v Administrative Decisions Tribunal (NSW)
[2009] NSWSC 143 at [36]–[37] (Schmidt J); Jones v Ekermawi [2009] NSWCA 388 at [58]. Those decisions
support a proposition that the discretion of the Tribunal under s 96(1) is unfettered, that it is to be exercised having
regard to the purpose of the legislative regime, which requires filtering the cases that the Tribunal should deal with,
and that the Tribunal is to bear in mind that refusal of leave may finally determine the rights of the parties.
[17] The significance of the leave requirement operating as a filter was emphasised by Mortimer J in James v
WorkPower Inc [2018] FCA 2083 at [32]. That case concerned whether leave should be granted under the
Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986 (Cth), which is closely analogous to the question that arises under
s 96 of the Anti-Discrimination Act. Mortimer J expressed the view that such an application for leave does not
require detailed consideration of the merits of the applicant’s underlying case (at [39]).
Page 4 of 14
Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
[18] In the present case, the Tribunal, constituted by Senior Member Ms D Dinnen, refused leave after extensive
review of the documentary evidence and submissions that had been presented to her. The Senior Member
concluded as follows:
[100] As to whether it would be fair and just in all the circumstances for leave to be granted, I have regard to the
purpose of the legislative scheme established by the Act and am guided by the consideration that the refusal of
leave will finally determine the complainant’s rights under that scheme. I appreciate the significant detriment
experienced by the Applicant as a result of the imposition of the suspension order made by the Respondent, the
misconduct process and findings, and the serious penalty imposed by the Respondent as a result of the
[misconduct decision].
[101] I also take into consideration the Respondent’s submission that these proceedings are essentially being
impermissibly used by the Applicant to obtain a review of the [misconduct decision], in circumstances where an
application for review of that decision brought by the Applicant was dismissed by the Tribunal for lack of
jurisdiction on 20 June 2023. The Applicant’s complaint in these proceedings was submitted to the [President of
the Anti-discrimination Board] shortly thereafter, on 24 June 2023.
[102] I also take into account the manner in which the Applicant presented his application for leave, which tended to
suggest an inability to engage with the issues raised by that application, an inability to understand or implement
directions made by the Tribunal, and an inability to understand how to reasonably present evidence in the most
basic way. This issue, however, is of limited weight in comparison to the Tribunal’s other considerations.
[103] Most significantly, I take into consideration that the Applicant’s complaint was almost entirely lacking in
substance. The only issue which had some substance was the complaint of indirect disability discrimination in
relation to the Suspension Notice, but as discussed above, there is no substance to a complaint that this indirect
disability discrimination was unlawful pursuant to s 49L of the Act
[104] In all the circumstances, it would not be fair and just to allow the complaint to proceed. The Tribunal therefore
declines to exercise its discretion to grant leave pursuant to s 96(1) of the Act.
[19] The Senior Member correctly understood the nature of the discretion she was required to exercise. The
conclusion that leave should be refused was reached with proper regard to the principles governing the Tribunal’s
function.
Principles upon which the Tribunal’s refusal of leave may be reviewed
[20] The plaintiff does not submit that the Tribunal acted beyond its jurisdiction in refusing leave. He purports to
have identified numerous errors of law in the Tribunal’s reasons for decision. Any demonstrated errors of law would
support a grant of relief: s 69(3) and (4) of the Supreme Court Act 1970 (NSW). Upon examination of the grounds it
is apparent that most of them concern alleged errors of fact. If the putative errors were said to arise from the weight
to be accorded to the evidence, that was a matter for the Tribunal and criticism of the weight attached to any
particular evidence would not substantiate an error of law: DCPI6 v Minister for Immigration & Border Protection
[2019] FCAFC 91 at [87] (Beach, O’Callaghan and Anastassiou JJ). As their Honours said in that case, “questions
of weight per se are not amenable to judicial review”. As it happens, the facts taken into account by the Tribunal in
respect of which the plaintiff asserts error turn out to be matters incontrovertibly established by the documents that
the plaintiff himself tendered.
[21] The plaintiff does not submit that the Tribunal’s decision is legally unreasonable or irrational. That basis of
review is “stringent and extremely confined” (Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v SZVFW [2018] HCA 30
at [11], [52], [135]). Djokovic v Minister for Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services & Multicultural Affairs [2022]
FCAFC 3 illustrates just how difficult it is to sustain a review on that ground. It was not attempted and is not
engaged in the present case.
[22] The plaintiff presented his documentary evidence to the Tribunal in great disorder. The documents were not
arranged chronologically. Nor were they grouped or sequenced according to any subject matter or theme. Many
documents were reproduced in duplicate, triplicate and further copies, scattered across various locations in two
large folders. In that state of affairs the Senior Member made clear that she would not look at all of the documents
tendered and she invited the plaintiff to draw her attention to those that supported his complaint against the
defendant. It is clear from the Senior Members’ reasons that she looked at sufficient of them to gain a
comprehensive understanding of the dealings between the plaintiff and the University.
[23] The plaintiff now complains that it was unreasonable for the Senior Member not to have looked at all of his
jumbled papers. An administrative decision maker is entitled to make his or her own assessment of what evidence
is material and is not bound, in reasons, to refer to every document tendered: Minister for Immigration &
Page 5 of 14
Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf (2001) 206 CLR 323 at [35] (Gaudron J) and [69] (McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ,
Gleeson CJ agreeing). The documents were tendered in this Court in the same chaotic state as that in which the
Tribunal received them. The plaintiff did not identify any specific document that the Tribunal overlooked and that
might have been significant to the question of leave under s 96(1) of the Anti-Discrimination Act.
[24] If the plaintiff were able to identify any reviewable error in the Tribunal’s decision he would not be entitled to
relief unless it could be shown that the error was material in the sense that there was a realistic possibility of a
different outcome had the error not been made: Minister for Immigration & Border Protection v SZMTA (2019) 264
CLR 421; [2019] HCA 3 at [45]; MZPAC v Minister for Immigration & Border Protection [2021] HCA 17 at [2]–[4]. As
will be seen, the plaintiff has failed to identify any error.
Facts established before the Tribunal
[25] The plaintiff was accorded a hearing in the Tribunal that extended over one and a half days, on 1 May 2024
and 4 July 2024. He tendered over 2,000 pages of documents, including many emails, University records of
enrolment, communications from Centrelink and records of proceedings before the University’s Student Misconduct
Committee and appeals decision maker. The Tribunal permitted the plaintiff to give evidence by way of a statement
of 18 pages. The University tendered a statutory declaration of Ms Joanne Stokes, an employee of the United
Theological College who acted as a Course Administration Officer for the University in relation to its School of
Theology. Neither the plaintiff nor Ms Stokes was cross-examined.
[26] The two witnesses gave some evidence about the documents that were before the Tribunal but those
documents were mostly self explanatory. All facts that could have had any bearing upon the plaintiff’s
discrimination complaint were uncontroversially established by the contemporaneous communications and business
records tendered by the plaintiff himself. The authenticity of the documents was not in issue. What follows is a
recapitulation of the chronology of events, as established from the plaintiff’s tender documents and as expressly
found by the Tribunal.
[27] By October 2022 the plaintiff had enrolled with the University to study a subject entitled “Christian Ministry”
during Session 1 in 2023. The subject was to have been taught by the United Theological College. On 28 October
2022, Dr Anthony Rees, the Associate Head of the School of Theology, sent an email to the plaintiff as follows:
I have noticed you are enrolled in [Christian Ministry]. Unfortunately, the plans for that subject have fallen through and we
will not be offering it next year. I hope you are able to find another subject on the timetable to take its place. Please be in
touch if there are any further issues.
[28] Ms Stokes said that subjects taught by United Theology College are not necessarily delivered every year on
every campus. Whether a particular subject will be taught in any given year depends upon student demand at a
particular campus and the availability of teaching staff. Enrolments are monitored at the end of each calendar year.
It is not uncommon for a decision to be made as late as January that a particular subject should be cancelled for the
year if numbers are low. The evidence before the Tribunal and the Court included illustrations of earlier course
cancellations that resulted from low enrolment, as recorded in emails sent during June 2019 and June 2021.
[29] The plaintiff responded to Dr Rees on 1 November 2022, writing “I guess I will have to go to Canberra and
complete the Christian Ministry subject there in Semester 1”. In a further email of 1 November 2022 Dr Rees
advised him to check whether his proposed solution was viable, as he was not sure whether the Canberra campus,
being St Marks National Theological Centre, would offer the course. The plaintiff did not take action to alter his
enrolment for Christian Ministry.
[30] The plaintiff approached the Canberra campus, which agreed that he could take classes at that location. When
informed of this on 1 November 2022, Dr Rees wrote to plaintiff as follows, by email:
I am glad that our colleagues in Canberra are happy for you to take classes there, as we have been. You should be aware
that the subject [Christian Ministry] actually comes through our partners in Adelaide. Given the stresses on staffing [that]
may well mean the subject is vulnerable. I hope not for your sake.
[31] On 1 November 2022 Ms Stokes independently noted that the plaintiff was enrolled for Christian Ministry and
that the subject was not going to be taught. She sent him an email in similar terms to Dr Rees’ advice of 28 October
2022 and stated that Christian Ministry would be removed from the University’s Subject Availability List. Ms Stokes
said in her statutory declaration that the plaintiff told her Dr Rees had already made him aware of the unavailability
of the course.
[32] Ms Stokes said that on 2 December 2022 she learned that the relevant teaching body in Adelaide was no
longer going to teach Christian Ministry, thus confirming that the subject would have to be deleted from the
Availability List. She also ascertained that the plaintiff was the only enrolled student for the course. On 19
December 2022 Ms Stokes sent the plaintiff a further email, as follows:
Page 6 of 14
Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
I am writing to advise that unfortunately, [Christian Ministry] will not [be] running at either Canberra or Parramatta campuses
in 2023 [Session 1]. You will need to delete the subject from your enrolment and select another subject. I will be removing it
from the Subject Availability List today.
If you need academic advice to help with subject selection as you are nearing the end of your degree, please feel free to
touch base with [Dr Rees] or Ockert Meyer in the New Year.
[33] Ms Stokes said that as at 20 December 2022 the University’s records showed that the plaintiff was enrolled in
only two subjects for 2023, as a result of the cancellation of Christian Ministry. Those subjects were to be taught in
Sessions 2 and 3, respectively. The plaintiff needed three subjects to complete the degree course. Ms Stokes
therefore wrote to Dr Rees and asked him to review the plaintiff’s position.
[34] On 3 January 2023 Centrelink notified the plaintiff that his Pensioner Education Supplement was no longer
being paid “as you have reached the end of the period payable for your course”. Ms Stokes said that on 9 January
2023 the plaintiff phoned her to request a meeting with Dr Rees about his academic program. The plaintiff also told
her that he needed a letter for Centrelink to confirm that he had not yet completed his degree course. It appeared to
Ms Stokes, from looking at the University’s enrolment record, that he had applied for leave of absence for Session 1
in 2023. Her recollection of what she told the plaintiff in this conversation was as follows:
If you do not have an active enrolment for the session it is possible that Centrelink may not make payments to you.
The plaintiff responded that the letter he required did not need to mention subjects or enrolments, just that he had
not completed the degree. Ms Stokes told him that she had asked Dr Rees to look at his program and that Dr Rees
would be in touch with him.
[35] In the plaintiff’s statement of evidence to the Tribunal he said that Ms Stokes’ words were:
You shouldn’t be doing any studies and shouldn’t be getting any payments.
If this was said, it would be difficult to understand what the first part of it meant. “Shouldn’t be doing any studies”
according to what criterion, or from what perspective? The obscurity of the asserted statement makes it improbable
that the words attributed to Ms Stokes were actually spoken by her. It is unlikely that, as an administrative officer in
the employ of the United Theological College, Ms Stokes would tell a student he should not be studying. If the
second part of the statement, or something to similar effect, was said, it would merely reflect an understanding on
Ms Stokes’ part that payment by Centrelink of an Education Supplement would be subject to the obvious
prerequisite that the recipient should be undertaking study.
[36] The plaintiff submitted that Ms Stokes’ words, on his version, amounted to a refusal on discriminatory grounds
to assist him with Centrelink and that they constituted discrimination or vilification. Taking the applicant’s evidence
at its highest, the Tribunal member concluded that such a negative construction of the alleged words rested only
upon speculation by the plaintiff and should not be adopted where “a more probable and innocent explanation is
available”; namely, that Ms Stokes was expressing her understanding that he would be ineligible for the benefit if
you were not enrolled for any subject that was going to be taught in Session 1 of 2023. There was no error in that
approach to fact-finding.
[37] On 11 January 2023 at 9:00 am Dr Rees sent an email to the plaintiff to advise him on course options for
2023, as Ms Stokes had requested. Dr Rees noted that the plaintiff was at that date enrolled in one subject for each
of Sessions 2 and 3 in 2023. He suggested two subjects from which the plaintiff might choose one, to study in
Session 1. His email concluded as follows:
I note that you have an approved absence for session 1, so perhaps you are not intending on doing anything in this
session. That being the case, I would be happy to talk to you later in the year about your options.
[38] Before the Tribunal and again before the Court the plaintiff disputed that he ever sought leave of absence for
Session 1 in 2023. It is inconsequential whether he did or did not seek such leave. It is possible that the University
system would automatically show a student as taking leave of absence for any session in which he or she was not
enrolled for any subject. The documentary evidence clearly shows that after Christian Ministry was cancelled, the
plaintiff did not enrol for any other subject for Session 1 until 12 January 2023.
[39] At 1:14 pm on 11 January 2023 the plaintiff sent an email to Dr Rees asking when he would be available for a
meeting and stating that he needed a letter for Centrelink certifying that he was still completing his degree. Dr Rees’
reply at 2:04 pm included the following:
Page 7 of 14
Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
[Ms Stokes] will put together a letter for you which I will sign. I am not sure what sway that will have with the Centrelink
people but we will certainly be able to confirm you are an active student. There are legislated time-frames for government
support for study, but perhaps you will be able to sort something out with them directly.
[…]
I want you to be assured that we have no concerns about your studies that are any different to other students. All we want,
for all our students, is that they work their way through the program in a way which fulfils all the requirements. Some
students don’t listen to us and run themselves into trouble because they miss certain requirements. But you have always
been well engaged and have gotten through to the end without getting into any of that kind of trouble. We are looking
forward to the day when you are finished and get hold of the degree that you have worked so hard for!
[40] Later again on 11 January 2023 Dr Rees sent by email to the plaintiff a signed letter, addressed to the plaintiff,
containing the following confirmation for the benefit of Centrelink:
This letter is to state that you are still currently enrolled in the Bachelor of Theology with Charles Sturt University, through
the United Theological College campus in North Parramatta.
To graduate in this bachelor degree students need to satisfactorily complete 192 credit points. You have currently
completed 168 credit points.
You will be required to successfully complete an additional 24 credit points (or 3 x 8-point subjects) in the appropriate
subdiscipline and level to be eligible for graduation.
[41] Dr Rees’ letter of 11 January 2023 was provided by the plaintiff to Centrelink that day. Centrelink also required
“a document that shows what subject you are enrolled into and studying for Semester 1 in 2023”. On 12 January
2023 the plaintiff enrolled in the subject “Paul and His Letters” for Session 1 in 2023, commencing 27 February
2023 and continuing to 16 June 2023. That single subject amounted to a 25% course load for the session. A record
from Centrelink shows that after provision of that information, the plaintiff’s Pensioner Education Supplement was
approved to continue from 12 January 2023. However, according to an email dated 15 January 2023 from the
plaintiff to a staff member at the University’s Canberra campus, Centrelink restored payment of the benefit on
condition that the plaintiff would undertake a full-time study load. This would require enrolment for a minimum of
three subjects in each session.
[42] On 16 January 2023 at 3:45 pm Dr Rees emailed to the plaintiff a further letter addressed to him, which
commenced as follows:
On Wednesday 11 January I signed a letter that was sent to you, by which you were able to have your Centrelink payment
restored. You confirmed this via email on Saturday, January 14. It appears that Centrelink now require further information
regarding the completion of your studies.
As I wrote in the previous letter, you have three subjects outstanding to complete your degree. Of these, one must be a
language subject, and one must be at 300 level. Any other additional subject would complete the requirements. These
requirements can be satisfied in one full-time session of study this year.
In the balance of the letter Dr Rees identified subjects that could be undertaken in order to complete the degree
course requirements, noting various combinations in which subjects could be studied concurrently.
[43] At 5:39 pm the plaintiff replied, expressing dissatisfaction with Dr Rees’ outline of how the balance of his
degree course could be completed and nominating additional subjects that he wished to study. The plaintiff’s email
then digressed into assertions that his academic endeavours were being thwarted by, amongst others, “the no
voters”. That is a term that the plaintiff used in his correspondence and in these proceedings to refer to people
whom he perceived as having opposed legislative change to permit same-sex marriage. The email included the
following (errors as in original):
[W]hat if the no voters cancels a subject or I fail because of prejudice marking or can’t handle a full-time study load because
of my neurological disability or legal matters or my name gets called up to gender affirmation surgery? […] I realise
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Centrelink have given the no voters of [United Theological College] an ultimatum to let me get my studies done in response
to the no voters tactics since 2017 to delay me from completing my degree […]
[44] At 6:34 pm Dr Rees replied, explaining that the course plan he had laid out was only addressed to completion
of the Bachelor of Theology degree course and that he had not been asked to consider additional subjects beyond
the course requirements. His email continued as follows:
I am aware of your neurological disability which complicates your situation. You can continue to access your [Charles Sturt
University] plan concerning assessment and learning activities. In relation to this, I would again suggest you undertake [a]
schedule that doesn’t involve taking both languages together. […]
To be clear, there has been no agenda to cancel classes. Such decisions are always done with a good deal of
disappointment on our part given the large amount of energy expended in their preparation. Secondly, there has been no
ultimatum from Centrelink or anyone else. The Government regulations regarding the length of time one can receive
support payments is nothing to do with [the University] nor [the College]. That is a private matter for you to pursue with
them. I have provided the information requested, and collectively we have committed enormous energy into our dealings
with you, even in the past few days, in order to facilitate a pathway through to the completion of your degree.
Again, rev, we are trying very hard to help you. We have laid out multiple options for you and each allows you to finish this
session.
[45] As at 20 January 2023 the plaintiff understood that, in order to continue receiving his Pensioner Education
Supplement, Centrelink still required him to be a full-time student. On 20 January 2023 he requested Dr Rees to
provide “a university letter for centrelink for a part-time study load”. Dr Rees replied to the request as follows:
I am happy to write a letter next week telling Centrelink that [full-time] studies are inappropriate for you due to your
disability. My understanding from your correspondence with us is that you need to be a [full-time] student to receive
payments, which lies behind [Ms Stokes’] comments to you. [Dr Rees referred to a possibility of the plaintiff undertaking
more than the remaining three subjects of his course]. My guess would be that [Centrelink] would not support you beyond
24 subjects [being the minimum requirement to complete the degree course] and that they would not provide support in the
semester in which you are enrolled in only one subject, though perhaps I’m wrong about that.
[46] On 31 January 2023 Dr Rees wrote the plaintiff yet another letter for him to provide to Centrelink, to support
his benefit claim — as follows:
Earlier this month you asked me for a letter to send to Centrelink in order to have your study support payments re-
commenced. Due to the fact that your payments were being stopped I laid out a plan that allowed you to complete your
studies in the coming semester. That allowed you to enrol as a full time student and complete your studies in the most
timely fashion.
However, it is true to say that you need not — from our perspective — complete your studies full time. Indeed, you are well
within your rights to study at your own pace. Given some of the challenges you face in relation to study, this may well be a
preferable option. There may be consequences in relation to your Centrelink payments, but that is an issue for you to
resolve.
I understand that you have a plan in place to finish your studies which you developed with Dr Marie-Louise Craig. If you are
happy with that, please follow it. As always, we will endeavour to offer the classes in the normal rotation. None of this is to
be assumed through, as the viability of subjects is related to enrolment. In the case that numbers are too low, classes may
well be cancelled. In that instance, you may need to seek an alternative pathway to graduation.
[47] In late January and in early February 2023, the plaintiff contacted teaching staff at St Marks Theological
Centre in Canberra for advice on a course plan to complete his studies for the degree and at the same time to
satisfy Centrelink’s benefit eligibility requirements. He also sent emails to Ms Renee Kelly (an administrator at the
United Theological College) and Ms Melanie Rumble (the University Ombudsman), amongst others. In those
communications the plaintiff made allegations that Ms Stokes was “keen to get rid of me”, that she had engaged in
“disability discrimination … that resulted in my [Pensioner Education Supplement] payments being cut for my whole
degree”, that she should stop “cancelling my subjects” and “cancelling my disabilities studies payments”. He
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asserted that University staff had lied to Centrelink “about my studies to get me cut off from my part-time disability
study load payments”. The evidence before the Tribunal and now before the Court does not disclose any foundation
for any of those claims.
[48] By email of 2 February 2023 to the plaintiff, Dr Rees referred in general terms to “allegations you have made
in recent communications with me” and allegations that the plaintiff had made on a University information platform
known as ASKCSU. Those allegations were defamatory of Ms Stokes. Dr Rees referred to the assistance he and
others had recently provided to enable the plaintiff to meet his course requirements. He noted that the plaintiff had
been “offered the support of a student advocate and referral to counselling if the need should arise”. Dr Rees’ email
included the following:
To date, you have made allegations against a staff member in many communications across multiple areas of the
University, yet you have failed to provide evidence to support your allegations. Unless you provide the required information
through one of the advised avenues for reporting to allow us to conduct a meaningful investigation, I consider this matter
closed and will not communicate any further on these matters.
[49] On 3 February 2023 the plaintiff replied to Dr Rees, with a copy to Ms Rumble and others. The email included
the following:
CSU student advocacy recommended for me to lodge a university complaint against Joanne Stokes and the no voters.
CSU counselling said the matter needs action.
Evidence can be found in a Centrelink letter sent to me dated 4 January 2023 when Joanne told Centrelink I had finished
my CSU [Bachelor of Theology] studies in 2022 when I still had three subjects left. Evidence can be found in Joanne
Stokes emails she [sent] to me cancelling my subjects every time I enrolled in my subjects to complete. Evidence can be
found when Joanne said to me by phone, “you’re not doing any studies and shouldn’t be getting any payments” when I
asked for a university letter to Centrelink to confirm I am a CSU [Bachelor of Theology] enrolled continuing part-time
student to restore my part-time disability payments.
[50] The matters that the plaintiff referred to in that email as “evidence” were false assertions, contradicted by the
correspondence that has been referred to earlier in these reasons. While claiming that Ms Stokes had refused to
assist with a letter to Centrelink, the plaintiff said nothing about Ms Stokes’ referral of the request to Dr Rees or
about the multiple letters that had then been written to Centrelink, signed by Dr Rees and in at least one case
prepared by Ms Stokes.
[51] On 6 February 2023 the Ombudsman, Ms Rumble responded to the plaintiff in an email that included the
following:
Dr Rees and Student Advocates have provided you with details on how to make a formal complaint to the University.
Student Advocates have also provided detailed instructions on how to structure and support your complaint with evidence
prior to submission. If you wish to make a formal complaint you may do so by phoning [number provided] or via the online
portal here 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
[…]
It is your responsibility to manage any correspondence with, and eligibility for Centrelink payments. Charles Sturt University
have no responsibility for assessing Centrelink eligibility or payments. It is my understanding that Dr Rees has provided you
with a letter (that you requested be prepared) detailing what was required to fulfil the requirements of your course.
No individual staff member of the School of Theology, including Joanne Stokes, cancels subjects. If a subject is no longer
offered in the session that students are enrolled in, enrolment in the subject is cancelled as the subject is not available. This
applies to any student enrolled in the subject that does not proceed. This occurs across all faculties within the University as
the need arises for a variety of reasons, usually due to low enrolment numbers.
[…]
The University, and specifically Joanne Stokes has no authority or ability to cancel your “disabilities studies payments”.
Centrelink payments are not under the purview of the University and are a matter between you and Centrelink.
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[52] Ms Rumble’s email concluded with a reference to the University’s published policy for prevention of bullying,
discrimination and harassment. Specifically, she referred to prohibition on bullying constituted by “repeatedly
criticising or making comments intended to discredit or undermine a person or devalue their work”. Ms Rumble
repeated Dr Rees’ statement to the plaintiff of 2 February 2023: that if he did not make a formal complaint
supported by evidence, to enable a meaningful investigation of his allegations against Ms Stokes to be conducted,
then the matter would be treated as closed.
[53] The plaintiff did not lodge a formal complaint. He persisted in his misconceived allegations by responding to
Ms Rumble the same day with the following claims, amongst others:
The last thing I expected them to do was to go as far as lying to Centrelink about my studies to get me cut off from my part-
time disability study load payments […] All Centrelink wanted was a simple university letter about my part-time study load
enrolment for my whole degree because of the fact it became clear to Centrelink Joanne Stokes had lied to them about my
studies […]
[54] On 8 February 2023, in another email to Ms Rumble, the plaintiff listed a number of aspects of his own
activities with respect to which he claimed to have experienced discrimination, without specifying what steps had
been taken against him that constituted the discrimination. Part of the email was as follows:
[The] no voters at UTC are very good at denying their dead naming of me and misgendering of me and their discrimination
against me using the men’s toilets and their discrimination against me wearing men’s clergy, and [their] discrimination
against me wanting to be called by my name and pronouns […]
The list continued, with no particulars or supporting evidence.
[55] The plaintiff’s persistent harassment of staff by making widespread defamatory criticisms, without formal
complaint to enable those criticisms to be tested, led to a notification on 13 February 2023 from Dr Stacey Jenkins,
the University’s Executive Director for Safety, Security and Wellbeing, that a suspension order would be made
against him. The plaintiff was invited to make any written submission before the suspension came into force. On 16
February 2023 Ms Jenkins informed the plaintiff by email that the suspension order had taken effect, to which he
replied the same day requesting “an extension of time” with detailed argument about what had taken place between
himself, Ms Stokes and Dr Rees. Although the plaintiff was suspended from attending classes, he was permitted to
continue his studies online.
[56] There followed a charge against the plaintiff of general misconduct, which resulted in his exclusion from
enrolment for five years, as earlier referred to. A letter dated 14 March 2023 from Ms Michelle Jones, Secretary of
the Student Misconduct Committee, notified the plaintiff of the Committee’s determination. The Committee’s
reasons included the following:
The Committee considered your previous misconduct record when imposing a penalty. You have been found to have
engaged in general misconduct previously, behaving inappropriately in [a Students Representative Council] meeting. The
Committee are of the opinion that you have not taken the opportunity to learn from your previous penalty nor modified your
behaviour.
[57] The reference to previous misconduct was to a charge that in 2017 the plaintiff had raised his voice, used
expletives and slammed his hand on the table in the course of heated discussion during a Students Representative
Council meeting. The charge was found proved. In February 2018, when an appeal by the plaintiff was heard by the
General Misconduct Appeals Committee, the plaintiff was still known by his pre-transition female name. He was
referred to by that name in the Appeals Committee’s record of proceedings in 2018. By letter of 6 March 2018 the
plaintiff was notified that the Committee had denied his appeal and had upheld the penalty imposed, which was a
reprimand. The notification continued as follows:
In communicating this, the Committee confirms that no further action will be taken against you in relation to this matter of
misconduct.
The Committee also notes that the reprimand is a warning only and as such will not be recorded on your student record nor
communicated to your fellow students, unless you choose to do so.
[58] In 2023, after conclusion of the internal appeal from the decision excluding the plaintiff for five years, the
plaintiff was issued with a Trespass and Exclusion Notice by the University’s Chief Security Officer. He was thereby
prohibited from entering the School of Theology’s teaching sites.
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The complaint to the President
[59] The plaintiff’s complaint to the President of the Anti-Discrimination Board was lodged on 21 June 2023,
alleging discrimination, vilification and victimisation. The following is the text of the complaint, which I have divided
into separate numbered points for ease of reference:
[1] The […] suspension order [from 16 February 2023] and the General Misconduct Complaint [determined on 14
March 2023] related to Joanne Stokes informing Centrelink in 2022 to cancel the […] Christian Ministry Subject I
was enrolled which cancelled my Disability Pensioner Education Supplement from 03/01/2023.
[2] On 11/01/2023 Joanne Stokes refused to help stating by phone, “You’re not doing any studies and shouldn’t be
getting any payments.” […]
[3] When Anthony Rees contacted me with university letters for Centrelink confirming my CSU [Bachelor of Theology]
part-time enrolment, I got suspended for it without a hearing on the matter by Joanne Stokes, Melanie Rumball
and Anthony Rees.
[4] […] [The] 5-year CSU Trespass and Exclusion Notice unlawfully disclosed a 2017 UTC Student Association
deadnaming transphobic vilification of me as reason for the exclusion. This threat came from some prejudiced
Uniting Church University staff.
[5] This 5 Year CSU Trespass and Exclusion is
(a) against the 06/03/2018 CSU Student Misconduct Appeals Committee decision that “will not be recorded on
your student record…the finding that there was insufficient evidence to support the allegation…No further
action will be taken against you in relation to this matter of misconduct”
(b) against my legal transgender male name “Rev”,
(c) against me wearing Transgender male clergy collars,
(d) against me campaigning for Australian Marriage Equality,
(e) against my Genesis 1-9 Rainbow black Noah’s Arc Martin Luther King, I have a dream dare to dream Student
university graduation posters,
(f) against me completing my CSU Bachelor of Theology degree.
[60] Those particulars of complaint may be contrasted with the summary of communications and events given
earlier in these reasons. The actual communications and events are beyond contest by the plaintiff. They are
documented in the very records that he provided to the President and again to the Tribunal and the Court. The
refutation of everything that the plaintiff complained of to the President is as follows, using the same numbering as
adopted above:
[1] Ms Stokes did not cancel the Christian Ministry subject. Nor did she inform Centrelink that it had been cancelled.
In the 2,500 pages of documents that the plaintiff has relied upon at each level of consideration of his complaint,
there can be found no evidence that Ms Stokes did either of these things. Nor is there any testimonial evidence to
that effect, in any form.
[2] Taking the plaintiff’s assertion at its highest and assuming that the words attributed to Ms Stokes were spoken,
they did not amount to a refusal of help with respect to a letter from the University to Centrelink. Far from refusing
assistance, it is a matter of undisputed contemporaneous record that Ms Stokes referred the plaintiff’s request to
Dr Rees who, as Associate Head of the School of Theology, would have to issue an official letter. In conjunction
with Dr Rees, Ms Stokes prepared some of the correspondence to Centrelink that was then issued.
[3] Dr Jenkins’ emails to the plaintiff of 13 and 16 February 2023 show that his suspension was not “for” his request
for letters from the University to Centrelink. He was not accorded an oral hearing in relation to the decision to
suspend him but was given the opportunity to make a written submission.
[4] The Trespass and Exclusion Notice from the University’s Chief Security Officer made no reference to the 2017
misconduct complaint in connection with which the plaintiff’s previous female name had been used. The reasons
for decision of the Student Misconduct Committee, issued on 14 March 2023, made reference to that earlier
complaint but not in a way that used or disclosed his previous female name.
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[5](a) The exclusion of the plaintiff from enrolment for five years from 14 March 2023, on the ground of his
defamatory and harassing misconduct towards staff, did not contradict or depart from the terms of the Student
Misconduct Appeals Committee’s decision of 6 March 2018, quoted at [57] above.
[5](b)–(f) The plaintiff’s complaint that the five year exclusion was “against” the matters specified at (b)–(f) is
meaningless.
[61] Thus, the communications and events of which the plaintiff complained to the President were shown by the
documents that he relied upon not to have taken place as he described them. Further, in the plaintiff’s evidence to
the President and to the Tribunal and to this Court, there is no trace of proof that anything that did occur between
the University and the plaintiff resulted from or involved discrimination or vilification on the basis of his transgender
status or autism. There is no evidence that he was in any way victimised by reason of having made complaint about
discrimination or vilification.
[62] The reasons given by the President for her conclusion of 26 February 2024 that the plaintiff’s complaint was
“lacking in substance” were as follows:
— Mr Rowley has failed to establish Charles Sturt University (“CSU”) treated him less favourably because of his
disability in education than others are likely to be treated in circumstances that are not materially different.
— The complainant has not established CSU, in maintaining student records in the name of a student at the time
that record was created, amounts to less favourable treatment on the basis of transgender status.
— CSU provided information of its legislative obligation to retain all its student records in the form the records were
created. The information also supports that subsequent records held for Mr Rowley reflect his preferred gender
and pronouns and all communications are addressed in his preferred gender and title.
— Mr Rowley has not established CSU imposed a requirement or condition on him which he was unable to comply
with because of his disability and/or transgender status and which a substantially higher proportions of persons
who do not have that disability and/or are not transgender are able to comply.
— Mr Rowley has failed to show the respondent victimised him, ie subjected him to a detriment that he would not
have otherwise been subjected to but for making a complaint of disability and/or transgender discrimination.
— The respondent provided supported reasons for the actions it took in amongst other matters, excluding Mr Rowley
from study at CSU for a 5 years period, which do not relate to any disability he has or because of his transgender
status.
[63] The second and third points refer to a grievance that the plaintiff has expressed in his emails with the
University and in his representations to the President, although not in his filed complaint under the Anti-
Discrimination Act. The grievance is that that the University’s records from the time of his original enrolment in 2014
identify him as female, with a feminine name. Those records have not been retrospectively altered by the University
following his gender transition.
[64] As earlier mentioned, the documents that the plaintiff has tendered to the Tribunal and to the Court are what
the President received in support of the plaintiff’s complaint of discrimination. Applying the relevant provisions of the
Act, as referred to at [66]-[69] below, to the facts disclosed by those documents, the President’s conclusion that the
complaint was “lacking in substance” was inevitable.
The plaintiff’s grounds of review
[65] At the hearing of the Notices of Motion and of the proposed Amended Summons, the plaintiff relied upon his
affidavit sworn 17 March 2025 as a submission. It purported to identify “104 errors of law in the […] NCAT decision
under review”. The 104 errors corresponded with the 104 paragraphs of the Tribunal’s reasons. In many of those
paragraphs the Tribunal merely recounted the contents of emails and other documents that the plaintiff had
tendered and that etablished uncontested facts. The plaintiff’s submissions in this Court did not identify any
paragraph containing a finding of fact that was properly amenable to judicial review, having regard to the principles
noted at [20] above.
[66] Numerous paragraphs of the reasons were taken up with the quotation of relevant sections of the Anti-
Discrimination Act and analysis of what those sections require to be proved in order to establish each of the
categories of wrong that the plaintiff alleged in his complaint to the President. With respect to Pt 4A of the Act,
entitled “Discrimination on the ground of disability”, the Senior Member quoted s 49B and analysed the difference
between direct and indirect discrimination, in pars (a) and (b) respectively of s 49B(1). Section 49L(2), by which it is
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Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
made unlawful for an educational authority to discriminate on the ground of disability, was considered, together with
the statutory concept of unjustifiable hardship (in s 49C) as a circumstance excusing such discrimination.
[67] The Tribunal’s reasons contain extracts from Pt 3A entitled “Discrimination on transgender grounds”, including
s 38B in which the Act specifies what constitutes that form of discrimination. The reasons contain extracts from and
analysis of s 38K, which prescribes the circumstances that make it unlawful for an educational authority to
discriminate against a person on transgender grounds.
[68] The Senior Member cited authorities that establish the onus of proof born by a complainant to prove that he or
she was treated less favourably “on the grounds of” or “because of” or “due [at least in part] to” disability or
transgender status.
[69] Part 5 of the Act proscribes some forms of conduct in addition to discrimination. Notably, s 50 prohibits
victimisation by subjecting a person to any “detriment” on the ground that the person victimised has, amongst other
things, alleged that the person carrying out the victimisation has contravened the Act. The Senior Member quoted
that section and analysed the elements required to be proved. Cases were cited in which the concept of “detriment”
in s 50 has been expounded and in which it has been held that the words “on the ground that” require a direct
causal link between the relevant act of victimisation and the reasons for that act.
[70] The plaintiff submitted that each one of the paragraphs in which the Senior Member undertook the above
citation and analysis of the law, from [16] to [42] of the reasons, gave rise to a separate ground of error. He did not
specify any mis-quotation of the statute or of the cases, nor did he particularise any respect in which the Senior
Member had misunderstood the sections or the precedents. A cavalier, indiscriminate submission of that nature did
not deserve close consideration. However, making due allowance for the plaintiff’s position as an unrepresented
litigant, I have reviewed carefully the law quoted by the Tribunal. I can find no error in the impugned paragraphs of
the reasons.
[71] A further ground of review propounded by the plaintiff is that the Tribunal Member failed to act upon his
evidence “at its highest”. The testimonial evidence in the case was minimal and not significant. The only difference
between the plaintiff and any other witness concerned the terms of his conversation with Ms Stokes on 9 January
2023 (see [35]–[36] above). That difference was immaterial, for reasons already given. What the plaintiff refers to in
support of this ground is the Senior Member’s refusal to accept his bald assertions that actions contrary to his
wishes were undertaken “on the ground of” discrimination against his disability and/or transgender status. Those
assertions were no more than self-serving speculative opinions from the plaintiff. The Senior Member was right to
discount them. In his dealings with the University up to May 2023 and in the subsequent complaint and legal
proceedings, the plaintiff has routinely characterised all conduct that falls short of his wishes as discriminatory on
the grounds of his autism and transgender status.
[72] The plaintiff submitted that the Tribunal Member failed to tell him the proceeding before her was a leave
application. The transcript of proceedings in the Tribunal shows that that was made clear to the plaintiff on more
than one occasion. He was also aware of the requirement for leave when the President notified him that his
complaint was declined: see [12] above.
[73] A further contention by the plaintiff was that the Senior Member had undertaken that she would receive oral
evidence from him. That, also is refuted by reference to the record of proceedings in the Tribunal. The plaintiff was
informed that he could give evidence either orally or by written statement and he adopted the latter means.
Conclusion
[74] The documents tendered by the plaintiff include an autobiographical article. From that it is evident that he
suffered a great deal of adversity in his early home life and in foster homes and institutional care. The plaintiff’s
autism and change of gender have added to his difficulties. The plaintiff is deserving of a great deal of sympathy for
the personal hardships he has had to bear.
[75] The University’s communications with the plaintiff have at all times exhibited patience, respect and a
conscientious endeavour to make allowances. Dr Rees’ emails, particularly, are not merely administrative
notifications on behalf of the faculty. They are written with warmth, care and individual consideration. The University
clearly endeavoured to provide a nurturing and safe environment for the plaintiff’s learning experience, recognising
the personal challenges he faces.
[76] Sadly, the plaintiff’s interactions with the University deteriorated into irrationality and embitterment on his part.
In addition to finding no fault in the Tribunal’s disposition of the leave application, I am unable to discern anything in
the conduct of the University that could explain the plaintiff’s apparent fixation upon the belief that he has been
discriminated against in contravention of the statute.
Order
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Rowley v Charles Sturt University, [2026] NSWSC 172
(1) Leave is granted to the plaintiff to amend his Summons to the form as filed on 18 November 2024 claiming
orders in the nature of judicial review of the decision of the Civil and Administrative Tribunal made on 13
August 2024.
(2) Time for filing the plaintiff’s Amended Summons is extended to 18 November 2024.
(3) The Amended Summons is dismissed.
(4) The plaintiff is to pay the first defendant’s costs of the proceedings.
The plaintiff appeared in person.
Counsel for the first defendant: O Jones SC
Solicitors for the first defendant: Minter Ellison
End of Document