CONTRAVENTION OF THE WORKPLACE RELATIONS ACT
12 Mr Carr alleged that Mr Van Kempen terminated his employment because of his age.
13 Mr Carr's claim to have been discriminated against on the ground of age is founded on some statements he said were made by Mr Van Kempen in the course of their conversation on or about 26 November 2008. According to Mr Carr, Mr Van Kempen told him that Vestas had advised that Blade Repairs "had to let three blokes go" and that Vestas "don't want young blokes working on the wind farms anymore."
14 Mr Van Kempen denied saying anything about Vestas not wanting "young blokes" working on its wind farms. The word "bloke" was not part of his normal vocabulary. He said that what he told Mr Carr was that, due to a reduction in work available under its contract with Vestas, Blade Repairs had to lay off a team and that unfortunately, Mr Carr was to be one of those laid off. Mr Van Kempen also told Mr Carr that he would be in touch with him as soon as he got back to Warrnambool and that he would pay Mr Carr all his entitlements.
15 The Applicant claimed that, in terminating his employment, Blade Repairs had contravened s 659(2)(f) of the Act. The section, of which this subparagraph forms part, prohibits termination of employment for one or more proscribed reasons, including an employee's age. Pursuant to s 659(2) of the Act, it is unnecessary that a proscribed reason be the sole reason for termination. It is sufficient for the proscribed reason to be one of a number of reasons for termination, whether proscribed or not. An applicant is not required to establish that his or her termination was motivated, in whole or in part, by a proscribed reason. Pursuant to s 664 of the Act, the respondent bears the onus of proving that the termination was for a reason or reasons that do not include a proscribed reason.
16 Mr Van Kempen deposed that his decision to terminate Mr Carr's employment was not made because of Mr Carr's age, but because of "genuine operational reasons and redundancy". This situation arose from the advice from Vestas that it did not need a fourth team any more. Nobody from Vestas had ever said to him that that company did not want young blokes working on its wind farms. Mr Van Kempen made the decision to lay off a team that was "least experienced in blade repair work, based on the length of employment with [Blade Repairs], previous relevant employment and quality of work". Mr Van Kempen deposed that there were four other employees who were younger that Mr Carr. Of these, two were laid off at the same time as Mr Carr. The other two were retained in employment. The nature of the work (which involves climbing turbines and undertaking repairs 65-75 metres above the ground) tended to favour the employment of young people. Mr Van Kempen said that he "always prided [himself] on giving younger employees an opportunity." He claimed that, apart from one other employee, Mr Carr had less experience in relation to fibreglass blade inspections, and that his work was of lesser quality, than any of the other employees working on Vestas' wind farms as blade technicians.
17 Under cross-examination both Mr Carr and Mr Van Kempen adhered to the accounts of the conversation between them on or about 26 November 2008 which they had given in their affidavits. Mr Carr agreed that, during the conversation, Mr Van Kempen had said that there was a downturn in work and that Mr Carr's pay would be fixed up on the next pay day. Mr Carr said that Mr Van Kempen had promised him a bonus and that the possibility of Mr Carr attending the firm's Christmas party was discussed. Mr Carr could not remember saying anything in particular himself. He did not make a contemporaneous record of the conversation. Mr Van Kempen had not said anything to suggest that his termination was related to his work performance. Mr Van Kempen had said that he "had to let go a team of workers." Despite Mr Van Kempen having said that Mr Carr had been chosen as one of those to be terminated because Mr Van Kempen had to let "young blokes" go, Mr Carr did not think that this was the real reason. He attributed his selection to the fact that he didn't "knock around" with other team members and "drink and smoke dope".
18 When he was cross-examined Mr Van Kempen said that he did not find the standard of Mr Carr's work to be unacceptable; it was just not as good as the work of all but one of the other blade technicians. He had formed this view through observing the work of the various employees. He maintained that Mr Carr had been "terminated for quality of work and nothing else." The decision had been made quickly.
19 Blade Repairs submitted that Mr Carr's evidence about being told that he had been chosen for termination because Vestas didn't want "young blokes" working on its farms any more should be rejected. It was contended, first, that Mr Van Kempen's denial that he used the words "young blokes" should be accepted. He did not use this phrase in conversation with anyone.
20 Secondly, it was contended that it was unlikely that Mr Van Kempen would terminate Mr Carr's employment because of his age given the nature of the working environment experienced by blade technicians and the fact that workers who were younger than Mr Carr had been retained after Mr Carr had been dismissed. Emphasis was also placed on Mr Van Kempen's desire to give young employees an opportunity to work in the industry.
21 Thirdly, Blade Repairs submitted that Mr Carr's evidence generally had been "less than forthright" and that, in particular, he had given fundamentally inconsistent versions of the critical conversation.
22 Mr Carr, on the other hand, urged the Court to prefer his recollection of the conversation. He submitted that the "somewhat incongruous" nature of the comment made it likely that he would recall it. It had been made at a time at which Mr Carr had just taken on responsibility as a provider for a young family. He had not deviated at any point in his account of what Mr Van Kempen had said about the need to let "young blokes" go.
23 Mr Carr also attacked Mr Van Kempen's credibility. He submitted that Mr Van Kempen had been "extremely unclear and contradictory" in his evidence as to what he had taken into account when deciding which employees should be terminated. He pointed to evidence from Mr Van Kempen which was inconsistent with Blade Repairs' pleaded position in relation to the significance of Mr Carr's probationary status, the alleged termination of the contract of supply between Blade Repairs and Vestas on 25 November 2008 and the timing of the completion of various types of work which Blade Repairs performed for Vestas.
24 I observed both Mr Van Kempen and Mr Carr carefully when they gave their evidence. Both were clearly in an unfamiliar environment and exhibited signs of mild discomfort. At times both were tentative in giving their evidence. Nonetheless, I formed the view that they both were doing their best to tell the truth. Both were prepared to make concessions against their interests and did so.
25 I have experienced great difficulty in seeking to determine which of the competing accounts of the telephone conversation between Mr Carr and Mr Van Kempen accurately represented what passed between them. It is clear enough that Vestas had advised Mr Van Kempen that it no longer required the services of one of the four teams of technicians. It would seem improbable that, in conveying this information to Mr Van Kempen, the Vestas employee concerned would have felt the need to make a comment about the employment of "young blokes" on its farms. Vestas had no obvious interest in the age of the workers supplied by Blade Repairs; Vestas's interests lay in having the repair work undertaken at an acceptable standard.
26 On the other hand, there is force in Mr Carr's assertion that such a statement by Mr Van Kempen would have resonated with him as a young person with a young family and would have made a strong impression on him. If the Vestas employee with whom Mr Van Kempen spoke a day or two earlier had, in fact, said words to the effect that Vestas didn't want "young blokes" working on its wind farms anymore, this would make it less surprising that Mr Van Kempen would repeat the words attributed to him even though he did not normally use them. His interlocutor was not called to confirm that he had not used the expression "young blokes".
27 Even if Mr Van Kempen used the words attributed to him, it does not follow, necessarily, that his statement truly reflected his reason for terminating Mr Carr's employment. It is, therefore, relevant to examine the age profile of Blade Repairs' employees generally and those selected for termination. It is true that two employees who were younger than Mr Carr were retained after Mr Carr was dismissed. It is also true, however, that the three employees who were terminated were among the five youngest employed by Blade Repairs to work on the wind farms. Only three years separated Mr Carr who was the oldest of the five from the youngest. This tends to suggest that Mr Van Kempen, in making his quick assessment, focussed attention on the younger employees. Even though their relative lack of experience may have been a relevant consideration, this does not exclude the possibility that their age was also a material factor in their selection for termination. The injunction, in s 659(2)(f) of the Act, that an employer must not terminate an employee's employment by reason of the "age" of the employee, can properly be understood to cover termination because the employee falls within a particular "age group": see Virgin Blue Airlines Pty Ltd v Hopper [2007] QSC 75 at [199].
28 Although Mr Van Kempen maintained that Mr Carr had been singled out because of the relative quality of his work, Mr Van Kempen did not complain about Mr Carr's performance during his employment and the only reason given by Mr Van Kempen for the termination in the letter, which he wrote in early December 2008, was that there had been a reduction of the contract work offered by Vestas.
29 In the end I am unable to determine which of the two accounts of the conversation is to be accepted. More broadly, I am not able to determine with sufficient certainty whether or not Mr Carr's age was a material and operative factor when Mr Van Kempen decided to terminate Mr Carr's employment. The consequence is that Blade Repairs has failed to establish a defence that Mr Carr's termination "was for a reason or reasons that do not include a proscribed reason" for the purposes of s 664 of the Act. Mr Carr, therefore, succeeds on his first claim.