Industrial activity
21 The Commissioner's case in relation to the alleged contraventions of ss 346(b) and 348 depends upon him establishing that BPM engaged in "industrial activity" within the meaning given to that phrase by s 347(b)(iv) or (v) of the FW Act.
22 Following the amendment of its defence, the CFMEU filed a supplementary written outline of submissions by which it contended that s 347 had no application to the circumstances of the case. In particular, it was said that Division 4 of Part 3-1 of the FW Act is concerned only with the protection of a person's freedom of association and participation or non-participation in the activities of industrial associations. It was noted that the protections all related to the right to be members or officers of industrial associations and the right to participate in lawful activities. It was contended that paragraphs (i)-(v) of s 347(b) were designed to protect participation in the activities of industrial associations, and were not about action more generally by industrial associations against employers. The CFMEU noted that other provisions of the Act are directed to protecting employers against such actions. The CFMEU drew heavily on the Explanatory Memorandum to the Fair Work Bill 2008 (Cth) ("Explanatory Memorandum") to support its preferred construction of s 347.
23 In support of its contention that compliance or not by any person with any request of a union would amount to engaging in "industrial activity" for the purposes of s 347(b)(iv), the Commissioner relied upon the judgment of Jessup J in Esso Australia Pty Ltd v The Australian Workers' Union [2015] FCA 758. In that case Jessup J accepted a submission that a company had engaged in "industrial activity" within the meaning of s 347(b)(iv) by not complying with a request made by a union to enter into an enterprise agreement. At [198]-[199] his Honour explained:
[198] Prior to the enactment of the FW Act, provisions that bear some resemblance to those of Divs 3 and 4 of Pt 3-1 of that Act were to be found in Divs 4 and 6 of Pt 16 of the WR Act. But the provisions were subject to wholesale recasting in the FW Act, as a matter both of drafting and of content. Generally, the protections are now much broader - in scope and in the generality of the terms in which they are expressed - than they were. The prohibitions in the WR Act tended to be organised by reference, as it were, to who did what and to whom. In a situation analogous to the facts of the present case, for example, s 796 dealt with the subject, "industrial associations acting against employers". But neither this provision nor any other in Divs 4 or 6 of Pt 16 of the WR Act made it unlawful for such an association to take action against an employer on account of the latter being able to make, or proposing to make, a workplace agreement (see now s 341(2)(e) of the FW Act).
[199] More directly to the point of the respondent's present submission, there was, in the WR Act, nothing which provided any protection for an employer engaging in industrial activities. In this respect, ss 346 and 347 of the FW Act must be regarded as substantive instruments of law reform. Through the operation of s 347(b)(iv), it is now recognised that any person may "[engage] in industrial activity" if he or she does not comply with a request made by, or with a requirement of, an industrial association. In particular situations, there may be an area of overlap as between this provision and s 341(2)(e), but each, in my view, is a substantive provision to which effect must be given. I can see no sign of any legislative intention that, as a matter of construction, s 347(b)(iv) was to have no operation where the request or requirement was to make an enterprise agreement, at all or on particular terms.
24 The Commissioner also pointed to a number of other decisions of this Court in which it was said to have been held that circumstances unrelated to the activities of members within an industrial association may fall within the definition of industrial activity, however in only one of those cases was the Court required to so hold: Director of Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (The Red & Blue Case) [2015] FCA 1125 at [118]-[119] (Jessup J).
25 To that authority may be added a more recent decision of Jessup J, decided after the close of argument in the present proceeding. In Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Australian Manufacturing Workers' Union (The Australian Paper Case) [2017] FCA 167, Jessup J engaged in a more comprehensive consideration than that which his Honour had undertaken in Esso on whether an employer had engaged in "industrial activity" within the meaning of s 347(b)(iv) by not complying with an industrial claim made by a union. That judgment included consideration of the Explanatory Memorandum and confronted a similar argument to that made by the CFMEU in this case, that insufficient attention had been given to the Explanatory Memorandum by the judgment of Jessup J in Esso.
26 Each party was given an opportunity to make and made additional submissions addressing The Australian Paper Case.
27 In that case, at [180]-[181], Jessup J engaged in an historical analysis of the relevant predecessor provisions to Div 4 of Part 3-1 of the FW Act. In particular, his Honour noted that all of s 5 of the Conciliation and Arbitration Act 1904 (Cth), ss 334(1)(h)-(j) of the Industrial Relations Act 1988 (Cth), ss 298L(m)-(n) of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) ("WR Act") and ss 793(1)(n)-(o) of that Act following the 2005 Work Choices amendments were specifically limited to conduct done as a member, or as an officer or member, of a union. As he alluded to in Esso, his Honour considered the removal of any such limitation with the passage of the FW Act as being indicative of a significant exercise in law reform.
28 While his Honour considered, by virtue of the operation of s 15AB(1) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) ("AI Act"), that he was not entitled to have regard to the Explanatory Memorandum, he nevertheless did consider the submission made about the Explanatory Memorandum on its merits. It is convenient that I set out his Honour's reasons for rejecting that submission in full:
[184] Of the provisions on the memorandum on which counsel for the respondents relied, it is sufficient to refer to the following:
1338. The principal protections in Part 3-1 have been divided into protections relating to workplace rights (which can be broadly described as employment entitlements and the freedom to exercise and enforce those entitlements) and engaging in industrial activities (which encompasses the freedom to be or not be a member or officer of an industrial association and to participate in lawful activities, including those of an industrial association).
…
1400. Division 4 provides protections in relation to a person's freedom of association and participation or non-participation in industrial activities. The protections in the Division revolve around the right to engage or not engage in certain industrial activities - namely, being a member or officer of an industrial association or engaging in activities of industrial associations. The Division prevents adverse action, coercion and misrepresentations in connection with these industrial activities. It also prevents inducements to be, or not be, a member of an industrial association.
1401. All of the protections relate to industrial associations. Industrial association is defined in clause 12. The definition covers unions and employer associations (whether or not registered or recognised under a law), and also covers employees and/or independent contractors who come together informally in the workplace for a purpose which includes protecting and promoting their interests in matters concerning their employment.
Illustrative example
Andrea works at the Bouncy Bluebell Childcare Centre. The manager, Bernadette, has been asking child care workers to put away heavy equipment at the end of each day while also watching the children. This requires the staff to leave the children without supervision. Andrea is concerned that this breaches the relevant government regulations. She suggests to a number of her co-workers that they meet after work to talk about whether they should take a collective approach on this issue, including reporting the issue or contacting the union. If the other employees agree to the meeting, they will be an industrial association within the meaning of clause 12.
Clause 346 - Protection
Clause 347 - Meaning of engages in industrial activity
Clause 348 - Coercion
Clause 349 - Misrepresentation
Clause 350 - Inducements - membership action
1402. The industrial activity provisions protect:
• being or not being a member or officer of an industrial association;
• participation or non-participation in other lawful industrial activity;
• non-participation in unlawful industrial activity.
…
1414. Clauses 346, 348 and 349 likewise protect persons from adverse action, coercion and misrepresentation in relation to participation and non-participation in lawful industrial activities (the activities set out in paragraph 347(b)).
1415. Subparagraphs 347(b)(i) to (v) provide that a person engages in industrial activity if she or he does or does not:
• become involved in establishing an industrial association (subparagraph 347(b)(i));
• organise or promote a lawful activity for, or on behalf of, an industrial association (subparagraph 347(b)(ii));
• encourage or participate in a lawful activity organised or promoted by an industrial association (subparagraph 347(b)(iii));
• comply with a lawful request made by, or requirement of, an industrial association (subparagraph 347(b)(iv)); or
• represent or advance the views, claims or interests of an industrial association (subparagraph 347(b)(v)).
1416. Subparagraphs 347(b)(i) to (v) can broadly be described as 'participation protections' and cover a broad range of lawful participation activities including:
• carrying out duties or exercising rights as an officer of an industrial association; and
• participating in union discussions at the workplace where a union has exercised a right of entry for this purpose.
The protections operate in a wide range of situations. For example:
• an employee is protected from adverse action by their employer because they are involved in establishing an industrial association;
• an independent contractor is protected from action taken by an industrial association with intent to coerce the contractor to comply with a direction given by the industrial association; and
• a person is protected from a false or misleading representation about the obligation to pay a bargaining services fee on which the person could be expected to rely.
[185] It must be said that the respondents derive some assistance from at least some of the things stated in the Explanatory Memorandum, most notably from the description of subparas (i)-(v) of s 347(b) as "participation protections". However, their submission also encounters a number of problems.
[186] The first problem, it needs hardly to be said, is that the submission flies in the face of the actual words of subpara (iv). That is not fatal to the submission, of course, since the respondents' very point is that these wide words could not have been intended to be read literally. But, if one thing is clear about the drafting of the FW Act, it is that a great deal of attention was given to its every word. It is a detailed and prescriptive piece of legislation. Further, as mentioned above, it is clear that Div 4 of Pt 3-1 departed from previous legislation, and did so as a matter of conscious policy.
[187] Secondly, there are indications in the memorandum that suggest that the kind of participation in the affairs of associations for which the respondents contend was no more than an instance, or example, of what would fall within the terms of the legislation. Here I have in mind para 1338, in which it is stated that industrial activities covers "the freedom … to participate in lawful activities, including those of an industrial association" (emphasis added); the second bullet point in para 1402, which is not limited in the way for which the respondents contend; the reference in para 1416 to the protections operating in a wide range of situations; and the fourth bullet point in para 1416 - the independent contractor example - which might have application in an internal participatory context but which, in its most obvious setting, would be unlikely to do so.
[188] Thirdly, this is not a case in which the intention of the legislature, differing from the literal, grammatical reading of the provision in question, is self-evident. Save to say that Div 4 was limited to "protections to a person's freedom of association and participation or non-participation in the activities of industrial associations", and to submit that nothing in the facts of the present case engaged s 347(b)(iv) as properly construed, counsel was unable to articulate how this subparagraph should be limited. When I put to him the case of a shop steward complying with a request by another industrial association (ie not the one of which he or she was a member) to convene a meeting of all workers at lunch time (ie not involving any stoppage of work), counsel was forced to concede that that would not be industrial activity within the meaning of s 347(b)(iv) and, if the shop steward were dismissed for having done so, that would not amount to a contravention of s 346 on the part of the employer.
[189] It is, I accept, possible that the drafter of s 347 understood that he or she was engaged in the task of setting out instances of conduct by way of participation in the affairs of industrial associations. It is possible that he or she did not realise what was the potential reach of para (b)(iv), if read and applied literally. But what the drafter had in mind, subjectively, is not the point: Certain Lloyd's Underwriters v Cross (2012) 248 CLR 378, 390 [25]. The point is the intention of the legislature to be discerned in the words used, having regard to history, background and context, and to such materials as are properly available conformably with s 15AB of the AI Act.
[190] At base, the respondents' problem is that pointing to participation as the limiting context for s 347(b)(iv) does not take them the distance required. Read literally, that provision may indeed appear to travel beyond the kind of situations which the legislature had in mind, but the court does not know what it would have done about the problem had it been drawn to its attention.
29 At [193], Jessup J observed that in a number of single judge decisions of this Court, s 347(b)(iv) has been applied to situations not confined to matters of participation in the affairs of the requesting industrial association. Whilst accepting that in those proceedings the application of the provision to circumstances of that kind was not placed in contest, Jessup J considered that it would not be right for him as a single judge to depart from prior authority in circumstances where he regarded the strength of the respondents' argument to be "respectable more so than compelling".
30 Whilst Esso was the subject of an appeal to the Full Court (Esso Australia Pty Ltd v Australian Workers' Union (2016) 245 FCR 39 (Siopis, Buchanan and Bromberg JJ) ("Esso Full Court")) and a further appeal to the High Court (Esso Australia Pty Ltd v Australian Workers' Union [2017] HCA 54) the proper construction of s 347(b)(iv) was not in contest. A request to enter into an enterprise agreement was, however, referred to as an example of a lawful request within the meaning of s 347(b)(iv) in a passing observation in the reasons of Kiefel CJ, Keane, Nettle and Edelman JJ at [57].
31 The facts of Esso and those of The Australian Paper Case are not relevantly distinguishable from those at hand. As the CFMEU accepted, I should only depart from the conclusion applied by Jessup J to s 347(b)(iv) if I am persuaded that his Honour was plainly wrong.
32 Whilst I am not persuaded that Jessup J was plainly wrong, for the reasons that follow I am persuaded that the better view is that the request or requirement of which s 347(b)(iv) speaks is a request or requirement made by an industrial association of another person to participate in the activities of the industrial association.
33 It is clear from the result in The Australia Paper Case that Jessup J must be taken to have rejected the construction of s 347(b)(iv) which I prefer. That however does not appear to be the construction of s 347(b)(iv) which was put to and expressly rejected by Jessup J. His Honour describes the contention that was put on behalf of the respondents in that case at [179] as "that s 347(b)(iv) was to be read down to be applicable only to requests and requirements which related to the participation of members of industrial associations in the affairs of those associations".
34 In my respectful view, Jessup J was correct to reject participation or non-participation as a member of an industrial association in the affairs of that association as the limiting criterion for s 347(b)(iv). Insofar as Jessup J rejected the participation or non-participation of a person (whether a member or not) in the activities of the industrial association as the limiting criterion for s 347(b)(iv) I would respectfully disagree.
35 The task which confronted Jessup J and with which I am concerned is that of statutory construction. As French CJ, Hayne, Kiefel, Gageler and Keane JJ said in Thiess v Collector of Customs (2014) 250 CLR 664 at [22], that task involves the attribution of meaning to statutory text. It is a task which must begin with a consideration of the text itself but the meaning of the text must be construed by reference to context and the legislative purpose of the provision. As their Honours went on to say in Thiess at [23] (citations omitted):
Objective discernment of statutory purpose is integral to contextual construction. The requirement of s 15AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) that "the interpretation that would best achieve the purpose or object of [an] Act (whether or not that purpose or object is expressly stated …) is to be preferred to each other interpretation" is in that respect a particular statutory reflection of a general systemic principle. For :
"it is one of the surest indexes of a mature and developed jurisprudence not to make a fortress out of the dictionary; but to remember that statutes always have some purpose or object to accomplish, whose sympathetic and imaginative discovery is the surest guide to their meaning."
36 Similar guidance emphasising the need to discern the statutory purpose of a provision was given by Gageler J in SZTAL v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection [2017] HCA 34 at [39] where his Honour said that "integral" to the making of constructional choices "is discernment of statutory purpose". As his Honour said at [38], the constructional choice sometimes presented by statutory text read in context is, "between one meaning which can be characterised as the ordinary or grammatical meaning and another meaning which cannot be so characterised". That observation reflects those made by McHugh, Gummow, Kirby and Hayne JJ in Project Blue Sky v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355 who at [78] said this (citations omitted):
… the duty of a court is to give the words of a statutory provision the meaning that the legislature is taken to have intended them to have. Ordinarily, that meaning (the legal meaning) will correspond with the grammatical meaning of the provision. But not always. The context of the words, the consequences of a literal or grammatical construction, the purpose of the statute or the canons of construction may require the words of a legislative provision to be read in a way that does not correspond with the literal or grammatical meaning.
37 The point at which context should be considered and the scope of the context that may be considered was addressed by Brennan CJ, Dawson, Toohey and Gummow JJ said in CIC Insurance Limited v Bankstown Football Club Limited (1997) 187 CLR 384 at 408 (citations omitted):
[T]he modern approach to statutory interpretation (a) insists that the context be considered in the first instance, not merely at some later stage when ambiguity might be thought to arise, and (b) uses 'context' in its widest sense to include such things as the existing state of the law and the mischief which, by legitimate means such as those just mentioned, one may discern the statute was intended to remedy.
38 The continuing importance of the "modern approach" and of context as an aid to discerning the meaning of the statutory text was reinforced by Kiefel CJ, Nettle and Gordon JJ at [14] of SZTAL where their Honours said this (citations omitted):
The starting point for the ascertainment of the meaning of a statutory provision is the text of the statute whilst, at the same time, regard is had to its context and purpose. Context should be regarded at this first stage and not at some later stage and it should be regarded in its widest sense. This is not to deny the importance of the natural and ordinary meaning of a word, namely how it is ordinarily understood in discourse, to the process of construction. Considerations of context and purpose simply recognise that, understood in its statutory, historical or other context, some other meaning of a word may be suggested, and so too, if its ordinary meaning is not consistent with the statutory purpose, that meaning must be rejected.
39 The relevant context in which s 347(b)(iv) is found, includes the function served by s 347. The provision gives meaning to the phrase "industrial activity" used in s 346 and also s 348. Those sections are the operative provisions. The mechanism utilised in s 346 to provide the "protection" which its heading heralds is the prohibition on a person taking adverse action against another person "because" the other person:
(a) is or is not, or was or was not, an officer or member of an industrial association; or
(b) engages, or has at any time engaged or proposed to engage, in industrial activity within the meaning of paragraph 347(a) or (b); or
(c) does not engage, or has at any time not engaged or proposed to not engage, in industrial activity within the meaning of paragraphs 347(c) to (g).
40 The word "because" in s 346 focuses attention on the reasons for the taking of that action. For the action to be prohibited, the reason (or more accurately a reason for the action: s 360) must be one or other of the prescribed reasons identified in paras (a), (b) or (c) of s 346. Each of the prescribed reasons identifies a status or activity, the holding or not holding of which or the engagement or non-engagement in which, is the right or attribute the subject of protection. The protected attributes in s 346(a) are status-based and concern the holding or not of an office or membership in an industrial association. The protected attributes the subject of s 346(b) and (c) are activity-based and specified by s 347. What is thereby prohibited is the taking of adverse action against a person by reason of that person's engagement or non-engagement in one or more of the activities specified by s 347. For ease of reference I will refer to those activities specified by s 347 as the protected activities.
41 Section 348 has already been set out. Its purpose is also to protect the choice to engage in the protected activities enumerated by s 347. That is done by prohibiting the organising or taking of any action against another person with an intent to coerce that person, or a third person, to "engage in industrial activity".
42 The structure of s 346 is mirrored by s 340 and also s 351. Each of those provisions also prohibit the taking of adverse action against a person and, in each case, that prohibition is limited to the taking of such action for a specified reason identified by the FW Act. In the case of s 340, the reason must be the holding (or not), the exercise (or not), or the proposed exercise (or not) of a "workplace right", the meaning of which is given in s 341. In the case of s 351 which is headed "Discrimination", the reason must be the attributes of race, colour, sex, etc as listed by that provision. Additionally, s 343 addresses coercion in a similar way to s 348 but is directed to protecting the "workplace rights" attributes specified by s 341.
43 What is apparent is that the FW Act is particular as to what attributes or activities are to be protected from adverse action or coercion. It is not the holding of or engagement in any attribute or activity that is protected but only those specified by the Act.
44 If s 347(b)(iv) is read literally, the attribute or activity the subject of protection is not specific but absurdly broad. An industrial association can make a lawful request about matters which have no material connection to workplace relations at all. It may be safely assumed that the FW Act does not intend to provide protection to attributes or activities which fall outside of its subject of workplace relations. It is necessary to identify the underlying subject within the realm of workplace relations at which s 347(b)(iv) is directed. This is a case where the objective discernment of statutory purpose is integral to contextual construction.
45 Returning to the structure of the FW Act in the recognition that the purpose of a statute "resides in its text and structure" (Lacey v Attorney General (Qld) (2011) 242 CLR 573 at [44] (French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ)), it is apparent that the protected attributes and activities have been grouped by subject matter. As the guide to Part 3-1 set out in s 334 states, Part 3-1 "provides general workplace protections" through the Divisions of that Part. The subject matters dealt with in the Divisions are then relevantly described as follows:
Division 3 [in which ss 340 and 343 are contained] protects workplace rights, and the exercise of those rights.
Division 4 [in which ss 346 and 347 are contained] protects freedom of association and involvement in lawful industrial activities.
Division 5 [in which s 351 is contained] provides other protections, including protection from discrimination.
46 Each of those protected subject matters is reflected in the objects of Part 3-1 specified in s 336(1) as follows:
336 Objects of this Part
(1) The objects of this Part are as follows:
(a) to protect workplace rights;
(b) to protect freedom of association by ensuring that persons are:
(i) free to become, or not become, members of industrial associations; and
(ii) free to be represented, or not represented, by industrial associations; and
(iii) free to participate, or not participate, in lawful industrial activities;
(c) to provide protection from workplace discrimination;
…
47 Given the subject matter specified for Division 4 of Part 3-1 and the fact that s 347(b)(iv) is there found, unless there was good reason for a contrary view, it may be assumed that s 347(b)(iv) is concerned with the protection of "freedom of association and involvement in lawful industrial activities", a composite expression to be read, consistently with the object specified by s 336(1)(b)(iii) as the protection of the freedom of a person to "participate or not participate in lawful industrial activities".
48 The freedom of individuals to associate, has been recognised as "one of the most fundamental rights in a free society": Toohey J at 91 of Kruger v Commonwealth (1997) 190 CLR 1, citing Re Public Service Employee Relations Act [1987] 1 SCR 313. It has been contemplated that a freedom of association may be implied by the Constitution as a corollary of the implied freedom of political communication: Wainohu v New South Wales (2011) 243 CLR 181 at [112] (Gummow, Hayne, Crennan and Bell JJ, with whom French CJ and Kiefel J agreed at [72]). Traditionally understood, the freedom entails not only a right of individuals to form groups, but also for those individuals to be represented by and to participate in the activities of those groups: Barclay v The Board of Bendigo Regional Institute of Technical and Further Education (2011) 191 FCR 212 at [14] (Gray and Bromberg JJ). In Canada, that has been said to be because "the purpose which [the Canadian constitutional freedom of association] is meant to advance is the collective action of individuals in pursuit of their common goals" (emphasis added): Dunmore v Ontario (Attorney General) [2001] 3 SCR 1016. It is this kind of purpose that ss 347(b)(iv) may be understood as being reflective of.
49 The text of s 347(b)(iv) states that its scope is confined to a "lawful" activity and participation or non-participation in that activity is the criterion for its engagement. The sub-paragraphs that surround it (sub-paragraphs (i)-(v)) bear that same character as being concerned with participation or non-participation in a "lawful" industrial activity of an industrial association. That those sub-paragraphs were intended to give expression to the object specified by s 336(1)(b)(iii) of protecting freedom of association by ensuring that persons are "free to participate, or not participate, in lawful industrial activities", seems to be an irresistible inference. Nothing in the structure of the FW Act provides any support for the idea that the underlying subject matter of s 347(b)(iv) extends beyond freedom of association and in particular the freedom of persons to participate or not participate in the lawful activities of an industrial association.
50 That underlying subject of the provision, and thus its statutory purpose and the mischief that it was intended to remedy, is confirmed by the Explanatory Memorandum.
51 Before turning to the Explanatory Memorandum I should record why I consider it appropriate that resort may be made to it. As French CJ, Hayne, Crennan, Bell and Gageler JJ said in Federal Commissioner of Taxation v Consolidated Media Holdings Limited (2012) 250 CLR 503 at [39] "context includes legislative history and extrinsic materials". However, as French CJ, Gummow, Hayne, Crennan and Kiefel JJ said in Saeed v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2010) 241 CLR 252 at [33] "it is erroneous to look at extrinsic materials before exhausting the application of the ordinary rules of statutory construction". That observation and the terms of s 15AB of the AI Act suggest that the text of a provision and its immediate context as found in the statute itself must be examined first. Where the legal meaning of the text of a provision construed by reference to its immediate context is ascertainable, s 15AB(1)(a) of the AI Act enables that meaning to be confirmed by reference to extrinsic material. Conversely, where the text construed by reference to its immediate context reveals that its meaning is "ambiguous or obscure" (s 15AB(b)(i)) or would produce "manifestly absurd or unreasonable" results (s 15AB(b)(ii)) resort to extrinsic material is also permissible.
52 In this case, I take the view that the text of s 347(b)(iv), construed by reference to its immediate context, reveals that a limitation consistent with the purpose of protecting the freedom of association of a person to participate or not participate in the lawful industrial activity of an industrial association was intended to restrict the potential reach of the text of s 347(b)(iv) if read literally. Section 15AB(1)(a) enables that construction to be confirmed by reference to extrinsic material. Recent cases confirm that the use of an explanatory memorandum is permissible to confirm the purpose of a provision and the interpretation arrived at from text and immediate context: Maritime Union of Australia v Minister for Immigration and Border Protection (2016) 259 CLR 431 (French CJ, Bell, Gageler, Keane and Nettle JJ) and Comcare v Martin (2016) 258 CLR 467 at [46] (French CJ, Bell, Gageler, Keane and Nettle JJ).
53 There are observations made in the Explanatory Memorandum (the relevant content of which is set out at [28] above) which confirm three things. First, that s 347(b)(i)-(v) is a grouping of closely related provisions. Second, that the nature of the protections conferred is common and may be characterised as protection of participation or non-participation in the lawful activities of an industrial association. Third, that the purpose of those provisions is the protection of that aspect of freedom of association described by s 336(1)(b)(iii).
54 At [1400] of the Explanatory Memorandum, Div 4 is said to provide protection "in relation to a person's freedom of association and participation or non-participation in industrial activities". Those protections are then said to revolve around "the right to engage or not engage in certain industrial activities - namely, being a member or officer of an industrial association or engaging in activities of industrial associations" (emphasis added). At [1414]-[1417] each of sub-paragraphs (i)-(v) of s 347(b) are grouped together under the heading "Participation and non-participation in lawful industrial activities". At [1416] this is said:
Sub-paragraphs 347(b)(i) to (v) can broadly be described as 'participation protections' and cover a broad range of lawful participation activities …
55 At [1335] of the Explanatory Memorandum it is stated that Part 3-1 of the FW Act "incorporates and streamlines the following WR Act protections". One of the protections there identified is "freedom of association". That is a reference to Part 16 of the WR Act, which was headed "Freedom of association". The Explanatory Memorandum (at [1336]) then said this:
The consolidated protections in Part 3-1 are intended to rationalise, but not diminish, existing protections. In some cases, providing general more rationalised protections has expanded their scope.
56 With that expression of intent in mind and recognising that legislative history may provide a contextual aid to statutory construction, I turn to consider the legislative predecessor of s 347(b)(i)-(v).
57 Part 16 of the WR Act dealt with two aspects of freedom of association that are also addressed in Div 4 of the FW Act. First, the right to join and remain a member or officer of an industrial association, as well as the right not to do so, was the subject of protection from action of the kind that the FW Act now calls adverse action. Separate provisions addressed employer conduct (s 792) and conduct by an industrial association (ss 796-797). Coercion in relation to a person joining and remaining a member or officer of an industrial association or not doing so was also prohibited (s 789).
58 The second aspect of freedom of association dealt with by Part 16 of the WR Act is more of relevance to this discussion. Although the terms of ss 347(b)(i)-(v) are broader in their operation, s 793(1)(o) may be regarded as their predecessor provision. Section 793 of that Act set out the "prohibited reasons" for the taking by an employer of action in contravention of s 792. The interaction between those two provisions was similar to the interaction between s 346(b) and ss 347(a) and (b). Paragraph (o) of s 793(1) of the WR Act was in the following terms:
(1) Conduct referred to in subsection 792(1) or (5) is for a prohibited reason if it is carried out because the employee, independent contractor or other person concerned:
…
(o) as an officer or member of an industrial association, has done, or proposes to do, an act or thing for the purpose of furthering or protecting the industrial interests of the industrial association, being an act or thing that is:
(i) lawful; and
(ii) within the limits of an authority expressly conferred on the employee, independent contractor or other person by the industrial association under its rules; …
59 The similarity of subject matter with that of ss 347(b)(i)-(v) is apparent. However, the participation protections conferred by s 793(1)(o) of the WR Act were limited in three relevant respects. First, they only protected a right to participate and not a right not to participate in the activities of an industrial association. Second, the protections only related to adverse conduct of an employer in relation to its employees or a person in relation to an independent contractor. Third, the protection was only conferred upon employees and independent contractors who were officers or members of an industrial association. Participation by an employer in the affairs of an employer industrial association was not protected.
60 It is also important to observe that for the purposes of Part 16 of the WR Act an "industrial association" had to be either an association of employees, including independent contractors, or an association of employers that was registered or recognised as such under an industrial law, or an association of employees, including independent contractors, or an association of employers that had as its principal purpose the protection and promotion of its members in matters concerning employment or independent contractors: s 779(1).
61 In contrast, the definition of "industrial association" was extended by the FW Act to include associations formed "informally". By s 12, the term "industrial association" is given the following meaning:
(a) an association of employees or independent contractors, or both, or an association of employers, that is registered or recognised as such an association (however described) under a workplace law; or
(b) an association of employees, or independent contractors, or both (whether formed formally or informally), a purpose of which is the protection and promotion of their interests in matters concerning their employment, or their interests as independent contractors (as the case may be); or
(c) an association of employers a principal purpose of which is the protection and promotion of their interests in matters concerning employment and/or independent contractors;
and includes:
(d) a branch of such an association; and
(e) an organisation; and
(f) a branch of an organisation.
62 As [39] of the Explanatory Memorandum explains:
39. Paragraph (b) of the definition provides that an industrial association means an association of employees and/or independent contractors (whether formed formally or informally), a purpose of which is the protection and promotion of their interests in matters concerning their employment, or interests as independent contractors, as the case requires. This element of the definition differs from the pre-reform definition in subsection 779(1) of the WR Act in two respects:
• it now includes informal associations of employees and/or independent contractors; and
• the requisite purpose of protecting and promoting their interests does not need to be a principal purpose of the association.
63 Extending the coverage of protection to informal collectives of individuals may, in large part, explain the change made from the criterion focused upon the activities of a member or officer of a union to the more general activity-based criteria found in ss 347(b)(i)-(v). Persons involved in associations formed informally are unlikely to have formal status as "members" or "officers". It is evident that much more than a mere stylistic re-write was undertaken. The overall effect of what the Explanatory Memorandum called a "consolidation" or "rationalisation" is, as the Memorandum itself states, an expansion of the scope of the protections (at [1336]).
64 As a consequence, protections formerly limited in their application to the conduct of members or officers of unions acting as such, have now been expanded, not only to the conduct of participants in an informal employee association, but also to the conduct of participants in the activities of employer associations. Whereas the former participation protections provided by the WR Act were confined to action taken as an incident of the membership of the association in which the person victimised held membership, s 347 is not so limited. The common, essential and thus limitational element in each of ss 347(b)(i)-(v) is participation or non-participation in the activity of an industrial association. Whilst that essential element may include an act done (or not done) as an incident of formal membership of an association, it is not limited to the existence of that circumstance. For that reason I respectfully agree with the rejection by Jessup J in The Australian Paper Case of the contention that s 347(b)(iv) is to be read down to be applicable only to requests and requirements which related to the participation of members of industrial associations in the affairs of those associations.
65 However, it does not follow from the rejection of that construction of s 347(b)(iv) that the refusal by an employer of an industrial claim made by a union engages the criterion specified by ss 347(b)(iv) or (v). Without more, the rejection by an employer of an industrial claim of a union lacks any nexus with freedom of association. It involves no participation in or refusal to participate in a lawful activity of the industrial association. In those circumstances, the employer is not a participant or non-participant in an associative activity.
66 The context, the consequences of a literal construction, and the evident purpose of s 347(b)(iv) require the reference made to "a lawful request … or requirement" to be read as referring to a lawful request or requirement to associate in or with the industrial association. So construed, s 347(b)(iv) sits conformably with paragraphs (i), (ii), (iii) and (v) of s 347(b) as one of several categories of participatory activities taken or refused to be taken in common cause with an industrial association which have been designated as protected attributes to "protect freedom of association by ensuring that persons are … free to participate, or not participate, in lawful industrial activities": s 336(1)(b)(iii).
67 There is one other matter that, it seems to me, tells against the proposition that the reach of the protected activities specified by s 347 extends to a refusal by an employer to adhere to a claim made by a union for improved terms and conditions of employment.
68 Section 343 is in the following terms:
Coercion
(1) A person must not organise or take, or threaten to organise or take, any action against another person with intent to coerce the other person, or a third person, to:
(a) exercise or not exercise, or propose to exercise or not exercise, a workplace right; or
(b) exercise, or propose to exercise, a workplace right in a particular way.
Note: This subsection is a civil remedy provision (see Part 4-1).
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to protected industrial action.
69 Its terms are similar to those of s 348 which also deals with coercive conduct. As earlier indicated, s 343 is directed to protecting attributes or activities described as "workplace rights" while s 348 is directed at the protected activities described as "industrial activity". There is an important distinction between the two provisions. Section 343 includes an express qualification that the provision does not apply to "protected industrial action" (s 343(2)). Section 348 bears no such qualification.
70 The FW Act has carefully crafted a scheme for the taking of industrial action in furtherance of enterprise bargaining (see Part 3-3). The capacity for strike and lockout action to be taken in furtherance of the making of an enterprise agreement is fundamental to the scheme for collective bargaining for which the FW Act provides. Immunity from suit is provided by s 415 to industrial action taken in accordance with the scheme of the FW Act (see in particular ss 413 and 414). That action is called "protected industrial action".
71 It must have been appreciated that the attributes or activities described as "workplace rights" in s 341 could include protected attributes or activities which concern the making and rejection of industrial claims. That appreciation is correct. For example, a proposal not to make an enterprise agreement or, in other words, a refusal of a claim or demand that an enterprise agreement be made, is a protected activity. That is to say, that in the absence of anything more, a person would be prohibited from taking adverse or coercive action against another person for refusing a request or claim to make an enterprise agreement (see s 340(1)(a)(iii) and s 343(1)). It seems to me that s 343(2) has been included to confirm the supremacy of protected industrial action. Parliament's evident intent that the right to take protected industrial action has primacy over the protection that would otherwise have been provided for in relation to the refusal of a claim for an enterprise agreement explains the inclusion of s 343(2). That inclusion poses a question as to why the same qualification was not made in relation to s 348.
72 One possible response may be that it is unnecessary for s 348 to include any provision stating that the prohibition in that section does not apply to protected industrial action on the basis that such action could never be coercive. That is because, as I will discuss in more detail below, an element of an intent to coerce is that the conduct was unlawful, illegitimate or unconscionable in a way that protected industrial action could never be. However, that response does not explain the existence of s 343(2). If the draftsperson had that reason in mind, then s 343(2) should have been considered similarly unnecessary.
73 The evident policy of the FW Act does not suggest a basis for the distinction. What, it seems to me, explains the distinction is that there was no appreciation of any potential for conflation of the protected activities specified by s 347 and the taking of protected industrial action in furtherance of an industrial claim. To put the point squarely and by reference to s 347(b)(iv), there must have been no appreciation that a failure to accede to a lawful request or requirement made by an industrial association to make an enterprise agreement could engage s 348. In my view, that was not appreciated because it was not intended that such a failure would engage s 347(b)(iv).