ATS (Asia Pacific) Pty Ltd v Dun Oir Investments Pty Ltd
[2012] FCA 1460
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2012-11-16
Before
Mr J, Mr P, Callinan JJ, Rares J
Catchwords
- Number of paragraphs: 14
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (3 paragraphs)
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT (REVISED FROM THE TRANSCRIPT) 1 This is an application for leave to appeal from the decision of the primary judge, striking out the proceedings brought by ATS (Asia Pacific) Pty Ltd against Dun Oir Investments Pty Ltd. The principles that govern the grant of leave to appeal are well established. An applicant for leave must establish that the decision in question is attended with sufficient doubt to warrant the grant of leave and the applicant must also show substantial injustice will result from a refusal of leave to appeal: Bienstein v Bienstein (2003) 195 ALR 225 at 231 [29] per McHugh, Kirby and Callinan JJ.
Background 2 On 18 January 2012, Dun Oir sued ATS in the District Court of New South Wales. That was shortly before ATS commenced these proceedings on 16 February 2012. Dun Oir claimed $275,000. Its claim was based on alleged breaches by ATS to make five monthly payments of $55,000 under an unsigned document that Dun Oir claimed was a contract made between the parties on 28 January 2011. Dun Oir contended that the "services" it had agreed to provide for $55,000 per month consisted of a conditional obligation to be "available" to attend a meeting with ATS for a maximum of 2 hours per month. The condition governing that obligation was that the time and place of the meeting had to be mutually agreed by the parties. ATS had paid about $360,000 to Dun Oir during the period in which Dun Oir contended that the alleged contract was in force. 3 ATS had sought to plead a cause of action seeking relief under the Independent Contractors Act 2006 (Cth) in this Court before the primary judge. Under s 5(1) of the Act a "services contract" was defined as: "Services contract General meaning (1) A services contract is a contract for services: (a) to which an independent contractor is a party; and (b) that relates to the performance of work by the independent contractor; and (c) that has the requisite constitutional connection specified in subsection (2)." (original emphasis) 4 His Honour construed the connecting factors set out in s 5(1)(b) of the Act by reference to decisions under other differently worded legislation, in particular, the different expression in s 106 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 (NSW), namely "whereby a person performs work in any industry". His Honour concluded that that Act did not apply to the contract relied on by Dun Oir because he found that: "The parties did not contract for the provision of labour by Dun Oir for the benefit of ATS' business on an independent contractor basis in contradistinction to an employer - employee relationship." 5 In my opinion, it is arguable that His Honour erred in that approach. Ordinarily, a clause employing the words "relates to" or an expression of that kind should be construed according to its ordinary natural meaning and as giving a wide connecting scope to the factors to which the clause is directed. 6 His Honour concluded, applying decisions under s 106 of the Industrial Relations Act: "Given that ATS' obligation to pay Dun Oir arises independently of the performance of work, it cannot be said that this agreement involves the performance of work and thus s (5)(1)(b) excludes the Act's application." 7 The word "involves" is not used in s 5(1)(b) of the Act, and is arguably narrower than the scope of the words "relates to" in the expression "relates to the performance of work". Something can "relate to the performance of work" without the contract requiring any work to be performed. That is unlike the operation of s 106 which required work to be performed. 8 His Honour also considered that: "… it was not the intention of Parliament to expand the scope of the Act to cover all circumstances where services are provided under an agreement to 'Party A' by a person who is independent of 'Party A'." He held that the intention of the Act was to provide protection to persons who enter into independent contracting "as a form of work arrangement". 9 In my opinion, it is arguable that his Honour may have erred in that regard, as well, bearing in mind that s 4 of the Independent Contractors Act defined "independent contractor" as: "Independent contractor is not limited to an actual person."