Accessorial liability - ss 550 & 793
46 An exposure on the part of a body corporate such as the CFMEU to the imposition of a civil penalty may relevantly arise under the Fair Work Act by reason of its being "involved in" a contravention (as provided for in s 550) or by reason of a liability assumed by reason of the conduct of an officer, employee or agent acting within the scope of his authority (as is provided for in s 793). Any vicarious liability that the CFMEU might have assumed at common law was not a question pursued during the course of the present hearing.
47 But difficulties in the construction and application of these provisions, and in particular s 793, have recently emerged.
48 Section 550 is expressed in comparatively simple terms and largely replicates earlier statutory provisions such as s 75B of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). That section, in very summary form, provides that a person who is "involved in a contravention" is "taken to have contravened that provision". The section in its entirety provides as follows:
Involvement in contravention treated in same way as actual contravention
(1) A person who is involved in a contravention of a civil remedy provision is taken to have contravened that provision.
(2) A person is involved in a contravention of a civil remedy provision if, and only if, the person:
(a) has aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or
(b) has induced the contravention, whether by threats or promises or otherwise; or
(c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or
(d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.
The section, by its terms, thus provides that a "person" who is "involved in a contravention" is "taken to have contravened" that provision.
49 For the purposes of this provision, there is no difficulty in giving content to s 550(2)(c). With reference to s 75B of the Trade Practices Act, Mason ACJ, Wilson, Deane and Dawson JJ in Yorke v Lucas (1985) 158 CLR 661 at 670 concluded that "a person cannot be knowingly concerned in a contravention unless he has knowledge of the essential facts constituting the contravention". Their Honours further observed that the "proper construction of par. (c) requires a party to a contravention to be an intentional participant, the necessary intent being based upon knowledge of the essential elements of the contravention".
50 The same approach has been applied in respect to s 550(2)(c): Fair Work Ombudsman v Maritime Union of Australia [2017] FCA 1363 at [100] per Jagot J. Section 550 acts "to protect the public by making each entity or person that is responsible for the unlawful conduct accountable for their conduct and separately penalised": Fair Work Ombudsman v NSH North Pty Ltd trading as New Shanghai Charlestown [2017] FCA 1301 at [154] per Bromwich J.
51 Section 793 of the Fair Work Act is not expressed in such simple terms as s 550. And the purpose of s 793 is different to that served by s 550. Section 793 is directed to identifying those circumstances in which a body corporate is to be "taken … to have been engaged" in conduct pursued by (for example) "an officer, employee or agent". The heading to that section is "Liability of bodies corporate". It is thus a section clearly directed at sheeting home to a body corporate "liability" for the conduct of others. That section provides in relevant part as follows:
Liability of bodies corporate
Conduct of a body corporate
(1) Any conduct engaged in on behalf of a body corporate:
(a) by an officer, employee or agent (an official) of the body within the scope of his or her actual or apparent authority; or
(b) by any other person at the direction or with the consent or agreement (whether express or implied) of an official of the body, if the giving of the direction, consent or agreement is within the scope of the actual or apparent authority of the official;
is taken, for the purposes of this Act and the procedural rules, to have been engaged in also by the body.
State of mind of a body corporate
(2) If, for the purposes of this Act or the procedural rules, it is necessary to establish the state of mind of a body corporate in relation to particular conduct, it is enough to show:
(a) that the conduct was engaged in by a person referred to in paragraph (1)(a) or (b); and
(b) that the person had that state of mind.
Meaning of state of mind
(3) The state of mind of a person includes:
(a) the knowledge, intention, opinion, belief or purpose of the person; and
(b) the person's reasons for the intention, opinion, belief or purpose.
…
(5) In this section, employee has its ordinary meaning.
Section 793, unlike s 550, is expressed in terms of identifying those circumstances in which a "body corporate" is "taken" to have been engaged in "conduct" engaged in on its behalf.
52 A number of questions arise in respect to liability sought to be ascribed to a body corporate pursuant to either s 550 or s 793 by reason of the conduct of "an officer, employee or agent" and the liability which may be assumed by a principal for the conduct of another at common law.
53 Of present concern are two interrelated difficulties, namely:
whether an individual who contravenes a provision of the Fair Work Act can be found to be an accessory to the same contravention by reason of the vicarious liability of the CFMEU; and
whether the CFMEU can be found liable pursuant to ss 550 and 793 of a contravention of a provision, such as s 500, which focuses on the conduct of an individual, being a permit holder.
54 The former difficulty was addressed, albeit with reference to the legislative scheme set forth in the Trade Practices Act, in Wright v Wheeler Grace & Pierucci Pty Ltd [1988] ATPR 40-865. When considering s 75B of that Act French J, when sitting as a Judge of this Court, concluded that an individual could not be an accessory to the conduct of a body corporate whose liability arises solely by reason of the conduct of the individual. His Honour there concluded (at 49,376 to 49,377):
This raises a question whether a natural person can be accessory to a corporate principal whose liability arises from the act of that person. There could be a case where a natural person engages in preliminary conduct of an accessorial character followed by distinct conduct attributable to a corporation as principal. But where the conduct upon which liability is founded is the only relevant conduct, it is difficult to see how it can also bear that accessorial character. This difficulty was recognised by the High Court in Yorke & Anor v. Lucas (1985) ATPR ¶40-622; (1985) 61 A.L.R. 307. The point in issue there related to the requirement that a person involved in a contravention by reason of sec. 75B have knowledge of the essential matters making up the contravention. However, at ATPR p. 47,057; A.L.R. p. 313, in the joint judgment of Mason A.C.J., Wilson, Deane and Dawson JJ. the following observation is found:
"It follows from what we have said that both the trial Judge and the Full Court were, in our view, correct in concluding that, upon the facts as found, Lucas was not a person involved in the contravention of sec. 52 constituted by the false representations and that he was, therefore, not liable in damages under sec. 82. We would only add, lest it be thought that it has escaped our attention, that the appellants may, even if knowledge were not necessary to involvement under para. (a) or under para. (c) as 'party to', have encountered difficulty in establishing that Lucas was involved within the meaning of sec. 75B in the contravention constituted by the making of the false representations, having regard to the fact that the representations, albeit made on behalf of the Lucas company, were made by Lucas himself. As Dixon J. observed in Mallan v. Lee (1949) 80 C.L.R. 198, at p. 216:
'It would be an inversion of the conceptions on which the degrees of offending are founded to make the person actually committing the forbidden acts an accessory to the offence consisting in the vicarious responsibility for his acts.'"
Section 75B of the Trade Practices Act is in similar terms to s 550 of the Fair Work Act in that both sections are concerned with what it means to be "involved in" a contravention.
55 The liability of an individual as an accessory to a contravention by a body corporate whose liability arises by reason of the conduct of that individual being deemed to be the conduct of the body corporate was considered in the context of the Fair Work Act in Fair Work Ombudsman v Australian Workers' Union [2017] FCA 528. Albeit in the context of an application for summary judgment, Bromberg J considered whether an individual (Davis) could be an accessory to the liability of the Australian Workers' Union where the liability of the Union only arose by reason of Davis' conduct being deemed to be the conduct of the Union pursuant to ss 363 and 793. In declining to strike out such a pleading, his Honour relevantly concluded:
[86] … the only conduct relied upon by the FWO as conduct of the AWU is the conduct of Davis himself. As Davis submitted, relying upon ss 363(1)(b) and 793(1)(a) the ASOC alleges that the AWU is liable for his conduct by reason of his acting as an officer or agent of the AWU within the scope of his actual or apparent authority. In that context, it was contended that the conduct of Davis relied upon by the FWO to establish both the derivative liability of the AWU and the accessorial liability of Davis is one and the same. It was further contended that where Davis' conduct as primary perpetrator is said to form the basis of the AWU's derivative liability, there is no cause of action available against Davis for accessorial liability under s 550.
[87] Davis relied on an observation made by Dixon J in Mallan v Lee (1949) 80 CLR 198 at 216 as follows:
It would be an inversion of the conceptions on which the degrees of offending are founded to make the person actually committing the forbidden acts an accessory to the offence consisting in the vicarious responsibility for his acts.
…
[89] … to my mind, the most relevant authority to which I was taken is Hamilton v Whitehead (1988) 166 CLR 121 where the Court (Mason CJ, Wilson and Toohey JJ) clarified the High Court's reference in Yorke v Lucas to the observations of Dixon J in Mallan. At 129-130, their Honours drew a distinction between a contravention committed by a corporate contravener as a consequence of being vicariously liable for the conduct of its servant (a circumstance in which, following Mallan, the servant is not capable of being an accessory) and a contravention committed by a corporate contravener as a consequence of actions undertaken by a person whose conduct is deemed to be the conduct of the corporation (a circumstance where the person is capable of being an accessory). Although not expressed, the apparent logic which supports that dichotomy is that in the first case the servant is the principal contravener whilst in the second case the principal contravener is the corporation.
[90] Whether the conduct alleged against Davis falls into the first or second category is a contestable proposition which the submissions of the parties did not address. There is, I consider, force in the proposition that neither s 363(1) nor s 793(1) impose vicarious liability on a body corporate or an industrial association. The terms of those provisions operate to deem the conduct of the officer or agent to be the conduct of the body corporate or the industrial association. If that is correct, Davis' asserted conduct is distinguishable from Mallan, and therefore Davis is capable of being held to have been an accessory to the AWU's primary contraventions.
Thus contemplated was the liability of an individual as an accessory to the conduct of the Union which arose by reason of the individual's conduct being deemed to be the conduct of the Union. The observations of Bromberg J, it is respectfully considered, are correct.
56 As to the latter of the two difficulties, namely whether ss 550 and 793 can expose the CFMEU to liability for a contravention of s 500 of the Fair Work Act, different issues and difficulties arise. Not the least of these difficulties is the fact that s 500 is drafted in terms which expose a "permit holder" to liability if he (inter alia) intentionally hinders or obstructs any person. An argument that neither s 550 alone or in combination with s 793 can expose an entity such as the CFMEU - which cannot be a "permit holder" - to liability cannot be summarily rejected.
57 The conclusion has previously been reached that the CFMEU may be found to have contravened such a provision: Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Upton [2017] FCA 847, (2017) 270 IR 190 at 237 to 239. In explaining the route by which that conclusion was reached, and the authorities relied upon, Barker J there said:
[224] In my view, it is, in the end not necessary to consider all the alternative means by which the CFMEU might be held liable for Mr Upton's contraventions of s 346(a), s 348 and s 500, because I find the CFMEU may be considered liable for Mr Upton's conduct under s 793 of the [Fair Work Act] in respect of the contraventions of s 346(a) and s 348, and under s 550 and s 793 in respect of the s 500 contravention.
[225] The terms of s 793 have been set out above …
[226] As I have found those contraventions proved, it follows that the CFMEU is taken to have been engaged in that conduct, and so also to have contravened s 346(a) and s 348.
[227] As to the liability of the CFMEU with respect to the s 500 contravention, in the recent decision of Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Huddy (No 2) [2017] FCA 1088, White J dealt with the submissions of the parties, not dissimilar to those outlined above, concerning the effect of s 793 in conjunction with s 550(2)(c) and the submission that thereby the CFMEU may be taken to have also contravened s 500 where an officer has been found guilty of contravention.
[228] At [32], White J found as follows:
In my opinion, the Represented Respondents' submission should not be accepted. It overlooks that s 793 operates as a form of deeming provision 'for the purposes of this Act'. Those purposes include s 500. Section 793(1) requires that the conduct to which it refers be taken to have been engaged in by the body corporate. In this case the conduct of Mr Huddy on 22 October 2013 is to be taken to have been the conduct of the CFMEU. Mr Huddy's knowledge on 22 October 2013 may be taken to have been the knowledge of the CFMEU.
[229] The judge, at [33], then said that the only question remaining was whether that conduct, with that knowledge, was sufficient to make the CFMEU a person "involved in" the officer's contravention of s 500. That was to say, the question was whether the CFMEU's conduct (albeit constituted by its officer's conduct), with its knowledge of the matters constituting the elements of that contravention of s 500 (albeit constituted by the officer's own knowledge), meant that it had been knowingly concerned in, or a party to, that contravention.
[230] At [34], White J then stated:
In my opinion, the statutory fictions indicate that this question should be answered in the affirmative. The CFMEU, with its separate legal personality, is deemed to have carried out the same actions as did Mr Huddy on 22 October 2013. Because Mr Huddy was exercising a right of entry pursuant to s 484, his actions constituted a contravention of s 500. As the CFMEU had no right of entry, its actions did not contravene s 500 but, together with its deemed state of mind, indicate that it was knowingly concerned in Mr Huddy's contravention. So much is apparent from Hamilton v Whitehead (1988) 166 CLR 121 at 128 in which the High Court regarded as 'plainly right' the submission that, because the imputed accessory was the actor in the conduct constituting the offences and had knowledge of all the material circumstances, he was "knowingly concerned" in the commission of the offences committed by the company constituted by his conduct.
[231] White J, at [35], agreed with what Charlesworth J said in Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v McDermott (No 2) [2017] FCA 797 at [21], to the effect that it did not matter that the deemed physical acts of the secondary participant are the same acts in fact engaged in by the primary contravener.
[232] White J, at [36], expressly rejected the respondents' submissions that, by legislative construct, the CFMEU had performed "the forbidden act" (the contravention of s 500). His Honour said that because it does not hold an entry permit, the CFMEU's conduct cannot amount to an act forbidden by s 500 of the FW Act. However, that, he considered, was not a matter of consequence in the consideration of accessorial liability. A person may be involved as an accessory in a contravention by another even if the contravention is of such a nature that the accessory could not have contravened the provision as a principal, referring to Maroney v The Queen (2003) 216 CLR 31 at [11]; [2003] HCA 63.
[233] His Honour added, at [37], that the case before him was not one in which the conduct of a person constituting a primary contravention by that person or by another whose liability arises from that conduct is then relied upon to establish the liability of the same person as an accessory. Thus, Mallan does not apply in this case.
[234] At [38], White J concluded:
In short, I consider that the statutory fictions established by s 793 mean that the conduct of an official of a body corporate may constitute a primary contravention by the official and accessorial conduct by the body corporate. I am satisfied that the CFMEU should be taken to have contravened s 500 by reason of it having been directly or indirectly knowingly concerned in Mr Huddy's contravention of s 500.
[235] Understanding that I should apply this reasoning unless I consider it to be plainly wrong, it follows that the CFMEU should be taken to have contravened s 500 by reason of it having been directly or indirectly knowingly concerned in Mr Upton's contravention of s 500, for the reasons contended for by the Commissioner as set out above.
Concurrence is expressed with the conclusions of both White J in Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Huddy (No 2) [2017] FCA 1088 and Barker J in Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Upton [2017] FCA 847, (2017) 270 IR 190.
58 Thus, by this route, the CFMEU may be taken to have been "involved in" the contravention of a provision such as s 500 (s 550) where the state of mind of an "officer, employee or agent" is attributed to the CFMEU as being the state of mind of the CFMEU itself (s 793(2)).