Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy
Ebner v Official Trustee in Bankruptcy is a decision of the High Court of Australia. The case is an important decision in Administrative Law, for its holdings about the legal test for actual and apprehended bias in a decision maker. According to LawCite, the case has been cited the 28th most times of any High Court decision.[1][2] FactsThe facts of Ebner involved two appeals. In each proceeding it was contended that the presiding judge ought to be disqualified for reason of holding shares in the bank ANZ. The bank had an interest in the outcome of the proceedings.[3] In each matter it couldn't be suggested that the value of the shares would be affected by the case's decision. However, the parties requested that the High Court reaffirm a common law rule that "any direct pecuniary interest, however small, in the subject of inquiry ... disqualifies a person from acting as a judge in the matter".[Note 1][4] JudgementThe High Court unanimously dismissed the appeal. Whilst doing so, it restated the common law rules of actual bias and apprehended bias. The majority stated the applicable test for apprehended bias as being:[5]
The majority then stated that the apprehension of bias principle requires two steps for its application:[6]
In each of the appeals concerned within Ebner, the judges were found to have only relatively small holdings of shares, and the decisions were expected to have a negligible impact on ANZ's share price. This led the court to find the tests for apprehended bias had not been met. See alsoNotes
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