Although the basic test for apprehended bias is now well-established in Australian law, its application continues to present difficulties. The basic test is whether a fair-minded lay observer with knowledge of the material objective facts might reasonably apprehend that the judicial or administrative decision-maker might not bring an impartial and unprejudiced mind to the resolution of the question at hand. It is equally well-established that, while the same objective test applies to judges as to tribunal members and other public decision-makers, the application and content of that test varies depending on the context, including differences in decision-making roles, functions, powers and processes.
The application of the test can be problematic and somewhat unpredictable. For example, despite the unqualified terms of the relevant parts of the High Court’s decision in Ebner, it now appears that, at least in the context of curial decision-making, the Ebner two-step test is not universal in its application.