Was the proceeding instituted without reasonable cause?
26 In short, no: I am not satisfied that the Union's institution of proceedings meets any of the tests set out in Baker / Corinthian or Leighton. The shortest way of reaching that conclusion is to ask, consistently with authority, whether - on the Union's version of the facts - it was clear that the Union must fail. The unequivocal answer is that it was not. The pleadings were internally consistent, did not rely on any obviously untenable propositions of law, and the facts alleged therein (if made good) would arguably have established a cause of action known to the law and given rise to an entitlement to relief. A more detailed analysis likewise reveals that the Union's case cannot be said to have been commenced without reasonable basis.
27 The Union alleges that Railway Company is primarily liable because it took adverse action against employees and because it underpaid various amounts. Mr Evans's submissions do not traverse many of these primary allegations. He alleges that the tripartite contract dated July 2013 was void ab initio so that Railway Company had no liability for entitlements accrued prior to that date. But, that allegation is (at best) arguable, and even if correct, that would not affect Railway Company's liability after July 2013. Further, while there is some issue as to whether the employees became employed by Masked Fox or continued in the employment of Railway Company, the Union's case (that they remained employees of Railway Company) is not so obviously untenable as to lack a reasonable basis and indeed it was accepted by Masked Fox in letters dated 20 March 2014 to the employees (Exhibit RE-9 to Mr Evans's affidavit). Mr Evans does not appear to dispute that in early 2014 some employees were paid at the Masked Fox Agreement rate (rather than the Railway Company Agreement rate), that Mr Power was not paid at all during January 2014, and that the subject employees were not paid at all after around 14 March 2014. He does not traverse the claim of constructive dismissal by Railway Company. As to its reason, while his affidavit paints a different picture of the conduct and motivations of persons involved to that alleged by the Union, I cannot say that one or other account is obviously untenable or lacks a reasonable basis nor could it be said that the adverse action claim predicated thereupon lacks a reasonable basis (especially in light of the presumption in s 361 of the FW Act). That being so, I would not hold that the Union's primary case as against Railway Company was without prospects of success or was instituted without reasonable cause.
28 The case against Mr Evans and Masked Fox was predicated on success in the primary case and was one of accessorial liability. Neither Mr Evans nor Masked Fox filed a defence, but I understand from Mr Evans's material that he hotly contests the veracity of the claim that he was guiding mind of Railway Company, that there was any scheme as contemplated by the Union's pleadings, or that in any event he or Masked Fox was party to it. Mr Evans has earlier and on similar grounds denied wrongdoing, as is apparent from exhibit RE-13 of his affidavit being a "Form F8A - Employer response to general protections application" dated 14 April 2014, which included this statement:
Ray Evans was not involved in any matter related to the staff in any way as an individual. He was uninvolved in matters relating to [Railway Company] as he was simply a train driver - another employee just like the staff. The Applicant alleges that Ray Evans was a Director of [Railway Company]. This is entirely false. As per the above and attached ASIC Extract, Pamela Lopez is and has always been the Director of [Railway Company].
29 Annexed thereto was the first page of an ASIC search showing the directorship of Railway Company, but not its shareholding. Exhibit RE-11 to Mr Evans's affidavit contained a letter to the Union's solicitors dated 25 March 2014, including this statement:
Ms Lopez and Mr Evans do share both maternal and paternal D.N.A., however, we are estranged and Ms Lopez ran her own companies, including [Railway Company], as her own and independently. I was simply an employee as a train driver.
30 Paragraph 11 of Mr Evans's affidavit dated 20 May 2015 contains a statement that his estrangement with Ms Lopez commenced as and from 6 January 2014 when she is alleged to have procured that Railway Company cease trading.
31 But, there are facts available on the face of the ASIC searches (annexed to the affidavits of Mr Burgio and Mr Marotta) that link Mr Evans and Masked Fox with Railway Company:
(1) Mr Evans was, from 26 February 2014 to at least April 2015, sole shareholder of Railway Company. It appears from the ASIC search at Exhibit MM-1 to the affidavit of Mr Marotta that the previous shareholder was Ms Lopez and that the change to the shareholding that had the effect of leaving Mr Evans as sole shareholder occurred with the lodgement of a Form 484N that was received, processed, and effective on 26 February 2014. Mr Evans was also, as and from 22 December 2013, sole director and secretary of Masked Fox (prior to that time it was Ms Lopez). A later search revealed that for the period April to July 2014 Mr R Hore was sole director, but that in July 2014 Mr Evans resumed his former directorship and that in August 2014 Mr Hore ceased to be a director.
(2) The registered office for Railway Company (54 Alma Terrace, Newport (Alma Terrace)) was the same as the address given as Mr Evans' address in his capacity as director and shareholder in the Masked Fox search, and was the same as the registered office of Masked Fox and its holding company Masked Fox Group Pty Ltd (MFG) from January 2014 to February 2014. A later search showed that Alma Terrace had again become Masked Fox's registered office (from November 2014) and its principal place of business (from August 2014). Alma Terrace was also the registered office of the company Regional Port Enterprizes (Aust) Pty Ltd (Regional Port Aust), the involvement of which (if any) was not explained but in regard to which an ASIC search was in evidence. Regional Port Aust's director from 12 April 2013 to at least 4 March 2014 (the date of the search) was Ms Lopez and its sole shareholder from 26 February 2014 to at least 4 March 2014 was Mr Evans.
(3) The principal place of business for Railway Company ("Gate Lot 93 Rear" Unit Railway, 424-432 Footscray Road, West Melbourne) was the same as the principal place of business for Regional Port Aust (whose sole shareholder was Mr Evans), and was at the same street address as the principal place of business (from November 2012) of Regional Port (of which Mr Evans was sole director, secretary, and shareholder). In Regional Port's case the address was described as "Railway Lot 93 Gate F" 424-432 Footscray Road.
(4) The addresses 54B Albemarle Street, Williamstown North, and 54A Albemarle Street, Williamstown North, appear in a number of contexts in the ASIC searches. 54B Albemarle was given as Mr Evans's address in his capacity as shareholder of Railway Company and of Regional Port Aust. 54A Albemarle was given as Masked Fox's registered office (for the period February 2014 to November 2014) and its principal place of business (for the period August 2013 to July 2014), MFG's registered office and principal place of business (from August 2013 to January 2014 and from February 2014), and as the registered office and principal place of business of a once sole shareholder of MFG, the company Don Diego Holdings Pty Ltd. I accept that 54A Albemarle and 54B Albemarle are different addresses, but they suggest to me at least some connection.
32 Certainly it would be wrong to attempt to determine Mr Evans's involvement in Railway Company on this application. But, I will say that Mr Evans's statements to the Commission in April 2014 and to the Union's solicitors in March 2014 that he was just an employee of Railway Company is difficult to reconcile with the fact that at the time of making those statements he was the beneficial holder of 100 per cent of the issued share capital in that company. Similarly, his statement to the Commission that he was not a director of Railway Company, while true, conceals by omission that he was at that time sole shareholder (as did the annexing of only the first page of the ASIC search). Also, the fact that the transfer of all issued shares in Railway Company from Ms Lopez to Mr Evans occurred in February 2014 is not, on its face, consistent with his statement that as from January 2014 he had been estranged from her. Further, Mr Marotta deposed that he was in attendance at meetings wherein Mr Evans purported to speak as to what would happen to employees of Railway Company were the Masked Fox Agreement to be made (statement of claim [32(b)(i)]; affidavit [9(b)]), and he deposes that the allegation that Mr Evans was controlling mind of Railway Company was based on his meetings with employees of Railway Company and that he genuinely believes the allegation to be true and correct (affidavit [9(a)]). It may well be that Mr Evans has answers to all of those matters. But they seem to me to take the allegation that Mr Evans was the controlling mind of Railway Company out of the category of the unsustainable and into the category of the arguable even if ultimately disproved. The allegation may or may not have stood to scrutiny at trial, but it was not without foundation.
33 It is appropriate to deal specifically with Mr Evans's submission that the Union had only advanced "mere allegations of fact" in support of its application relating to costs, by which he meant "unsupported by evidence." I reject that submission. The allegations were supported by affidavits of Mr Burgio (annexing ASIC searches and other documentary evidence) and an affidavit of Mr Marotta (setting out primary evidence, the basis of other allegations in the evidence of Union members, and annexing still more documentary evidence).
34 I am comfortably satisfied that there was an arguable evidentiary and legal basis for the allegations put against Mr Evans and against Masked Fox. The claim was not self-evidently doomed to fail, nor was it clear on the Union's version of the facts that it must have failed. I am satisfied that the claim was instituted with reasonable cause. The s 570(2)(a) criterion is not established. As to s 570(2)(b), for the same reasons given above, the maintenance of the proceeding was not unreasonable. So far as I am aware, no new information came to light during the course of the proceeding that demonstrated or tended to demonstrate the falsity of the Union's allegations and rendered the continuance of the proceeding unreasonable. To the contrary, Mr Marotta's evidence was that he continues to genuinely believe in the truth of the allegations and that discontinuance was motivated by the respondents' conduct rather than perceived weakness in the applicant's case. Mr Evans also asserted that the Union had acted unreasonably in failing to evidence its claims. There are two short reasons why that submission should not be accepted: first, there was evidence before me that took the allegations out of the "without foundation" category; second, no defences having yet been filed and no orders having been made as to the filing of evidence, it was not yet necessary for the Union to have adduced comprehensive evidence in support of its allegations. The s 570(2)(b) criterion is not established.