How many contraventions of ss 355 and 417 of the FWA did the CFMEU engage in?
41 Section 557(3) of the FWA operates to exclude the CFMEU from the benefit of s 557(1). However, by reason of s 556, the CFMEU cannot be penalised twice for the same conduct where that conduct amounts to contraventions of two separate provisions. So, for example, the CFMEU cannot be penalised twice in relation to the conduct of Pauls at the Southpoint Project, even though Pauls contravened both ss 355 and 417 of the FWA.
42 Where the parties diverge is whether, by operation of s 793 of the FWA, the CFMEU is liable to a penalty for the contraventions by Pauls and another penalty for the contraventions by Steele in respect of each of the four projects at which they acted together.
43 The respondents argue that the CFMEU should be found to have contravened s 355 of the FWA once at each of the four sites that Pauls and Steele attended and to have contravened s 417 once at each of the three relevant sites they attended. The respondents submit that, applying s 556, and taking into account Bland's contraventions at two sites, a maximum of six penalties can be imposed upon the CFMEU.
44 The Commissioner submits that by the conduct of Pauls and Steele at the Southpoint, Velodrome, RMH and Newstead Projects, the CFMEU contravened s 355 of the FWA twice at each project. The Commission submits that, similarly, the CFMEU contravened s 417 twice in respect of the first three of those projects. The Commissioner argues that, taking into account s 556 of the FWA, there were four contraventions by Pauls, four contraventions by Steele and two contraventions by Bland that may be penalised. The Commissioner submits that, accordingly, a maximum of 10 penalties may be imposed upon the CFMEU.
45 The respondents' submission addresses the effect of s 793 of the FWA. However, the Commissioner's further amended statement of claim relies on s 793 only to establish the CFMEU's contraventions of s 417. The pleading relies on s 550 to establish the CFMEU's contraventions of s 355 and as a further or alternative basis to establish the CFMEU's contraventions of s 417. The respondents have not addressed the effect of s 550 upon their argument. I will consider the respondents' s 793 argument before considering the effect of s 550.
46 In Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Robinson [2016] 241 FCR 338, Charlesworth J held:
[48] Section 793 does not, of itself, fix upon a body corporate liability for contraventions found to have been committed by its officers, employees or agents. Rather, it attributes to the body corporate the conduct and state of mind of its officers, employees and agents in prescribed circumstances. The question of whether the body corporate has contravened the FW Act (and, if so, on how many occasions) must be answered by assessing the facts, namely the conduct and state of mind attributed to the body corporate, against the elements of the contravention said to have been committed by it.
…
[50] The second thing to be said about s 793 arises from my earlier observation that it does not directly operate to fix liability for a contravention on a body corporate; it is not to be regarded as a codification of the doctrine of vicarious liability: cf Trade Practices Commission v Tubemakers of Australia Ltd (No 2) (1983) 76 FLR 455 (at [474]-[475]), 47 ALR 719 (at 739) (Toohey J). The mere fact that two employees of the CFMEU have each contravened the FW Act does not of itself, demand the conclusion that the CFMEU is liable for two contraventions.
[51] The conduct attributed to the CFMEU by the operation of s 793(1) comprises the conduct of the Yarrawonga meeting and the words spoken there, together with the conduct of the Airport meeting and the words spoken there…
[52] The Director's pleaded case referred to the "Yarrawonga Industrial Action" and the "Airport Industrial Action" to delineate between the organising conduct of each individual respondent. However, on examining the CFMEU's conduct as a whole, I find that it organised a single instance of industrial action, namely, the O'Rourke employees' refusal to attend work on 19 June 2014…
47 In Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (The Yarra's Edge Case) [2016] FCA 772, Jessup J considered s 69 of the Building and Construction Industry Improvement Act 2005 (Cth) (the BCIAA), an equivalent of s 793 of the FWA. His Honour held:
[19] All of the organisers were employees of the CFMEU, and thus officers by the operation of s 69(3). Their conduct was attributed to the CFMEU. It does not follow, however, that the CFMEU contravened s 38 as many times as the organisers in total did. This provision had an effect which differed in an important way from s 48(2): it was the conduct, not each contravention, which was attributed to the building association (see Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Robinson [2016] FCA 525 at [50]). Having attributed the conduct, the question remains: did that conduct amount to engagement in unlawful industrial action within the meaning of s 38, and if so, to how many separate instances thereof? On the facts of the present case, it would, in my opinion, be artificial to regard the conduct of the CFMEU as having amounted to a separate engagement in industrial action in respect of the conduct of each of the five organisers concerned…I would hold, therefore, that the CFMEU contravened s 38 of the BCII Act once.
48 Similarly, it is the conduct of Pauls, Steele and Bland that is attributed to the CFMEU by the operation of s 793 of the Act, not each of their contraventions. The Commissioner's pleading alleges that Pauls and Steele attended the Southpoint, Velodrome, RMH and Newstead Projects and organised meetings of the subcontractors' employees there and encouraged, organised for, instructed or counselled those employees to not perform work. The only differentiation drawn by the Commissioner's pleading between Pauls' and Steele's conduct is as to the words they used to explain why the industrial action was being taken, but I have found that distinction to be of no significance. It would be artificial to regard the conduct of Pauls and Steele at the four projects they attended as amounting to two separate contraventions by the CFMEU at each of those projects. I accept the respondents' submission that the CFMEU must be taken to have engaged in only one contravention at each of the four sites attended by Pauls and Steele to the extent that the Commissioner relies on s 793.
49 However, the Commissioner's further amended statement of claim relies on s 550 of the FWA to establish the CFMEU's contraventions of s 355 of the Act, not s 793. In respect of the CFMEU's contraventions of s 417, the Commissioner's pleading also relies "further or in the alternative" on s 550.
50 In relation to each contravention of ss 355 and 417 of the FWA by Pauls, Steele and Bland, the further amended statement of claim pleads that "the CFMEU was a person who was 'involved in' [the contravention] within the meaning of that term in section 550 of the FW Act" and that the CFMEU "is therefore taken to have committed the contraventions". The pleading does not particularise the way in which the CFMEU was "involved in" the contraventions. Importantly, under s 550(1), a person who was "involved in a contravention of a civil remedy provision is taken to have contravened that provision". Section 550(1) differs from s 793(1), which attributes conduct, not contraventions, to a party. The effect of s 550(1) is that that by being "involved in" the ten contraventions of s 355 engaged in by Pauls, Steele and Bland, the CFMEU is taken to have committed in the same ten contraventions.
51 As I have indicated, the Commissioner's reliance on s 550 of the FWA in respect of the CFMEU's contraventions of s 417 is expressed in its pleading to be "further or in the alternative" to the Commissioner's reliance on s 793. The respondents' amended defence does not say whether it admits its liability by the operation of s 550, or s 793, or both. There is no clear admission by the CFMEU that it was "involved in" Pauls', Steele's and Bland's contraventions of s 417. The Commissioner carries the onus of proving the contraventions he alleges. In view of the ambiguity of the CFMEU's admissions, and the absence of any other evidence as to how the CFMEU contravened s 417, I cannot find to the standard required under s 140(2) of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth) that the CFMEU contravened s 417 as a person involved in the contraventions under s 550. Instead, the liability of the CFMEU for contraventions of s 417 (established by the CFMEU's admissions that Pauls, Steele and Bland were its officials and that they engaged in the relevant conduct) arises by the operation of s 793.
52 In summary, the CFMEU is taken to have contravened s 355 of the FWA the four times it was contravened by Pauls, the four times it was contravened by Steele and the two times it was contravened by Bland. I find that the CFMEU engaged in ten contraventions of s 355 of the FWA.
53 There was a single contravention of s 417 by the CFMEU by reason of the conduct of Pauls and Bland at each of four sites they attended. There was a single contravention of s 417 by the CFMEU by reason of the conduct of Bland at each of the two projects he attended. I find that the CFMEU engaged in six contraventions of s 417.
54 It follows that the CFMEU is liable to a maximum of ten penalties.