balance of convenience
46 McCain has indicated a preparedness to maintain the employment of Lavery pending the hearing and determination of the trial. That preparedness is conditional on Lavery being suspended from carrying out his work. Accordingly, the issue for determination is whether the balance of convenience favours the resumption by Lavery of his duties at work.
47 In favour of that resumption are two matters upon which the applicants relied. The first is that Lavery should have access to the inherent non-pecuniary values and benefits of useful employment. As Callinan and Heydon JJ said in Blackadder v Ramsey Butchering Services Pty Ltd (2005) 221 CLR 539 at [80]:
It may be that in modern times, a desire for what has been called "job satisfaction", and a need for employees of various kinds, to keep and to be seen to have kept their hands in by actual work have a role to play in determining whether work in fact should be provided.
48 The loss of access to non-pecuniary benefits is a prejudice not easily compensable by an award of damages. That loss has been recognised as an appropriate consideration to weigh in the discretionary exercise in which I am here involved: Quinn v Overland (2010) 199 IR 40 at [101]-[103] (Bromberg J); Automotive, Foods, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union v Eaton Electrical Systems Pty Ltd (2005) 139 IR 260 at [13] (Moore J); and Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v BHP Coal Pty Ltd (2011) 212 IR 306 at [29] (Logan J).
49 The concerns raised by McCain in relation to Lavery's return to work are not about the performance by him of his work. As I have said, Lavery was recently acknowledged to be a valuable employee. That circumstance diminishes one of the usual basis for a court's reluctance to order reinstatement and in any event that traditional reluctance has eased in recent years: Quinn at [97]-[104] (Bromberg J); Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal and Allied Services Union of Australia v Dee Vee Pty Ltd [2012] FCA 988 at [27]-[28] (Tracey J): Transfield Construction Pty Ltd v Automotive, Food, Metal, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union [2002] FCA 1413 at [28] (Merkel J). Further, the relief contemplated by s 545(2) specifically includes an order for reinstatement. The discretionary power to grant final relief is ordinarily exercised in favour of reinstatement as the primary remedy: Lewis Construction v Martin (1986) 70 ALR 135 at 142 (Gray J with whom Woodward and Jenkinson JJ agreed). As Wilcox, von Doussa and Finkelstein JJ said in Patrick Stevedores Operations No 2 Pty Ltd v Maritime Union of Australia (1998) 77 FCR 478 at 489:
When the legislation contemplates relief of that type [reinstatement] then there is no reason why interlocutory relief which may have the same practical effect should not be available to an employee whose rights have been arguably unlawfully infringed.
50 Second, the applicants rely upon the prejudice that will be caused by Lavery's absence from his role as an AMWU delegate. The interests of the AMWU and its members at McCain in being represented by an effective delegate is a matter which may properly be weighed in the balance. The AMWU has other delegates at the Ballarat site including a delegate who worked in tandem with Lavery on the dayshift in the Prepared Food Plant. However, Lavery is said to be the most experienced and effective delegate on dayshift in the Prepared Food Plant and the AMWU's ability to represent its members may be significantly diminished in his absence. The capacity to find a replacement for Lavery, including a delegate willing to take up the industrial issues that Lavery was pursuing, may well be diminished in circumstances where Lavery has just been dismissed including for the way in which he behaved whilst a delegate.
51 In its opposition to Lavery's return to work, McCain principally relies upon its concern for the well being of Blackamore. It is concerned about the potential ill-effect upon Blackamore's health resulting from further interactions between Lavery and Blackamore. That is a matter which deserves very serious consideration.
52 I am not in a good position to properly assess the risk to Blackamore's ill health for a number of reasons, including because the nature of Lavery's former behaviour in meetings is in serious contest.
53 There are a number of observations that may be made which tend against according significant weight to McCain's expressed concern for Blackamore's health:
The evidence does not suggest that Lavery's behaviour is new. To the contrary, the evidence suggests that the way in which Lavery conducts himself in meetings has been a constant for many years. Despite that, there is no evidence of anyone raising a heath and safety concern (or at least a concern that was acted upon by McCain) prior to the complaint made by Blackamore;
Blackamore himself did not raise any complaint for some three months after he says he first experienced ill health as a result of his contact with Lavery;
Blackamore's complaint was made on the same day that the making of a bullying complaint against him was foreshadowed;
The ill-effects upon Blackamore are described by Blackamore as stress related symptoms such as chest pains, shortness of breath and loss of sleep. His evidence is not supported by any medical evidence. Blackamore deposes that he saw a doctor on 4 September 2012 but gives no evidence of the diagnosis made. There is no indication that any medication was prescribed and no indication that the doctor regarded his continued exposure to Lavery as detrimental to his health. Blackamore told LKA that his stress is based on a combination of work related factors;
Despite the complaint raised by Blackamore, McCain did not take any steps to address any concern for Blackamore's health between 5 July 2012, the date of Blackamore's complaint against Lavery, and 3 September 2012 when Lavery was stood down - a period just short of two months; and
Despite McCain receiving the LKA report on or about 9 August 2012, no action was taken to address McCain's asserted concern for Blackamore (or any other employee) for nearly a month, during which time Lavery continued to work.
54 The following factors can be expected to ameliorate the concern for Blackamore's health (and that of any other employee) should Lavery resume his duties:
Assuming that Lavery's prior behaviour was inappropriate, it occurred in circumstances where Lavery had not been warned that its continuance would put his job at risk. He is now well aware of the risk;
Lavery has deposed that he was not aware that his behaviour had resulted in adverse health consequences for any employee and that he certainly did not intend any such effect. Lavery is now aware of the health concerns raised and their alleged relationship to his behaviour;
In the two month period between being informed of Blackamore's complaint and being stood down, Lavery deliberately avoided contact with Blackamore and was largely successful in doing so by raising industrial issues through other managers. There were no complaints raised as to Lavery's behaviour during that period; and
Blackamore was promoted in mid-May of 2012 to the role of Prepared Foods Plant Production Manager. Thereafter, the need for Blackamore to come into contact with Lavery in relation to his work as a cleaner was substantially reduced. Lavery cannot recall any such contact between the date of Blackamore's complaint and when Lavery was stood down.
Finally, and in my view significantly, Lavery is prepared to underake to submit to and abide by a workplace protocol which would regulate the way in which industrial meetings in which he is involved will be conducted.
55 Whilst McCain resists the prospect of Lavery resuming his duties, its alternative position is that orders with that effect should only be made if Lavery agrees to abide by a workplace protocol. With that possibility in mind, both the applicants and McCain have put forward a proposed protocol. Whilst there is some difference between the two proposals, they are substantially identical in substance and largely identical in form. The capacity of the parties to arrive at very substantial agreement as to the terms of a protocol is no doubt the product of some goodwill between them and suggests a capacity for that goodwill to continue and for a protocol to operate successfully pending the trial.
56 As Wilcox, von Doussa and Finkelstein JJ said in Patrick Stevedores Operations No 2 at 489:
…we are firmly of the view that if the parties behave in a fashion which accords with common sense and displays some element of good will then there should be no difficulty with the practical operations of the Labour Supply Agreements. If we are wrong in this belief then the Court is well able to remedy any problem at short notice.
See further Patrick Stevedores Operations No 2 Pty Ltd v Maritime Union of Australia (1998) 195 CLR 1 at [80].
57 I note that the proposed protocols have been put before the Court without any admission of liability and without prejudice to any other rights the parties have.
58 I have taken into account the submissions made by the parties as to the terms of any protocol. The terms of an appropriate protocol are attached to these reasons for judgment.
59 Having considered the factors relevant to the question of the balance of convenience in the context of the strength of the prima facie case, I have come to the view that the balance of convenience favours Lavery being permitted to resume work pending the trial. In coming to that view I have also taken into account that the applicants are prepared to give the usual undertaking as to damages. A further undertaking, in an appropriate form, will need to be given by Lavery to submit and abide by the protocol attached to these reasons.
60 Although the protocol does not mandate it, it may be expected that insofar as it is possible, industrial meetings between management and Lavery will not ordinarily include Blackamore. If they do, McCain will no doubt ensure that Blackamore's health and safety concerns are supported by the attendance of other managers. McCain nevertheless remains concerned that if Lavery resumes his previous position, he will be placed in close proximity to where Blackamore works and that will necessarily bring him into contact with Blackamore.
61 If a convenient opportunity to avoid the frequency of that kind of contact is available, it ought to be taken up unless outweighed by the potential prejudice to the position of the applicants. As part of the alternative position McCain has proffered, it has suggested that Lavery resume work in the French Fries Plant pending the trial. That proposal would avoid Lavery and Blackamore working in the same plant. There are two positions that can be made available to Lavery, one of which is a similar role to Lavery's former role as a cleaner in the Prepared Food Plant. No financial disadvantage would be experienced by Lavery if he were to be reinstated into either position. I presume that McCain's proposal is based upon Lavery taking up whichever of the two positions he prefers. McCain made this proposal on the basis that Lavery could continue to represent the AMWU as its delegate including in relation to duties performed for employees in the Prepared Food Plant.
62 I accept that placing Lavery in a different plant some 300m away from the members he has been elected to service is of some potential prejudice to the AMWU and those members. Much of the effectiveness of a shop-floor delegate is dependent upon being on the shop-floor. That is no doubt why unions supplement the representation provided by union organisers with the representation provided by delegates. However, there is in place a second delegate working on the dayshift on which Lavery worked. Relatively simple steps could be taken to facilitate the continued representation by Lavery of those members on the dayshift in the Prepared Food Plant, as well as the casual employees across the site who were also principally looked after by Lavery. McCain has indicated its preparedness to facilitate Lavery's capacity to continue that representation. That preparedness will need to accommodate the likely need for employees to urgently and confidentially communicate with Lavery. McCain's preparedness should be formalised so that the position is clear and well understood. If that were done, I would not regard as significant the short-term prejudice that may be occasioned upon the AMWU and its members by reason of Lavery working in the French Fries Plant, and I would order that, pending the trial, Lavery be reinstated to work in that plant in whichever of the two available positions he prefers.
63 There is some force in the applicants' point that Blackamore ought not be at work if his health is so fragile that the occasional contact with Lavery may cause him difficulty. However, it seems to me that the orders the Court makes should strive to facilitate the continued useful employment of both Lavery and Blackamore and that some compromise on the applicants' part to assist in best meeting that objective can and should be required.
64 I will direct the parties to bring in minutes of proposed orders which reflect these reasons and will list the matter so that any undertakings to be given, can be given in open court. At that time I will pronounce the orders the Court will make. Those orders will include liberty to apply on short notice.
I certify that the preceding sixty-four (64) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Bromberg.