Were the representations false or misleading?
217 Since I have only found one of the five alleged representations was made, I turn now to consider whether that representation is properly characterised as false or misleading.
218 At the outset, it is important to note that the applicants only pressed the contention that the five representations were misleading, not that they were false. Counsel for the applicants made this clear in closing submissions. Accordingly, on the findings I have made, the question is whether the ACTU representation was misleading.
219 The first point to note, not specifically addressed by the parties, is that this representation concerned a future matter. It is well-established that, under the ACL and the TPA before it, the approach to whether a representation as to a future matter is misleading is different from the approach taken to a representation of a current matter: see Director of Consumer Affairs Victoria v Gibson [2017] FCA 240 at [198]-[202]. Under s 4(1) of the ACL, if a person makes a representation with respect to any "future matter", and the person does not have "reasonable grounds" for making that representation, the representation is taken to be misleading for the purposes of the ACL. Under s 4(2) of the ACL, a person is taken not to have had reasonable grounds for making the representation unless evidence is adduced to the contrary.
220 Plainly, representations as to what may occur in the future pose particular issues for the determination of whether they have the character of being false or misleading. To understand why a different approach might be required, it is necessary to go back to the TPA authorities prior to the introduction of the provisions which expressly mandated a different approach.
221 Prior to the introduction of s 51A into the TPA (which is the predecessor to s 4, although not an identical provision), statements about future conduct would only be caught if the representation was false or misleading about past or existing facts, or it could be proven that the person making the statement did not believe that it was true or was recklessly indifferent as to the truth of the forecast: see Thompson v Mastertouch TV Service Pty Ltd (No 2) (1977) 15 ALR 487 at 495 (Franki J).
222 In James v Australia and New Zealand Banking Group Ltd (1986) 64 ALR 347 at 372 Toohey J summarised the state of the law concerning future matters, just prior to the introduction of s 51A. His Honour's summary was:
…
(2) The mere fact that representations as to future conduct or events do not come to pass does not make them misleading or deceptive: Bill Acceptance Corporation Ltd v GWA Ltd (1983) 50 ALR 242.
(3) Nevertheless, a statement relating to the future may contain an implied statement as to present or past fact. It may represent impliedly that the promisor has a present intention to make good the promise and it may represent impliedly that he has the means to do so: Thompson v Mastertouch TV Services Pty Ltd (1977) 15 ALR 487.
(4) A statement involving the state of mind of the maker of the statement, eg promises, predictions and opinions, ordinarily conveys the meaning that the maker of the statement had a particular state of mind when the statement was made and that there was basis for that state of mind. If the meaning contained in or conveyed by the statement is false in that or in any other respect, there will have been a contravention of s 52: Global Sportsman Pty Ltd v Mirror Newspapers Ltd (1984) 55 ALR 25 Australian Ocean Line Pty Ltd v West Australian Newspapers Ltd (1984) 58 ALR 549.
223 Clearly, this was a difficult threshold. As Allsop J (as his Honour then was) set out in McGrath; in the matter of Pan Pharmaceuticals Ltd (in liq) v Australian Naturalcare Products Pty Ltd [2008] FCAFC 2; 165 FCR 230 at [162]ff (Emmett J agreeing; Stone J in dissent), the difficulties in threshold and proof were what the Parliament sought to address with the introduction of s 51A and the evidential burden in s 51A(2).
224 In s 345, it is clear the Parliament has sought to restrict contraventions to circumstances where a mental element, or particular state of mind, is present, in contrast to the terms of s 18. That is at least one indicator that s 345 is intended to capture representations as to future matters.
225 I note also that ss 349 and 678 of the FW Act contain provisions similar to s 345, but again without any qualifications about future matters, and without any evidentiary burden on the representor. On that basis it can safely be concluded that it would be inappropriate to impose any evidentiary burden on Australia Post in the present circumstances, such as that imposed on the maker of a representation under s 18 by s 4 of the ACL.
226 That leaves the question of the appropriate threshold the applicants must prove. To adopt Toohey J's language, must they prove, at May 2013, a present intention by Mr Fahour to make good on his promise that Australia Post would "conduct a future review of the APSS collectively with the ACTU" of its superannuation liabilities; and that Mr Fahour had "the means" to do so? By s 345, the applicants must prove a particular state of mind in Mr Fahour in any event. Given the state of mind requirement is express, it may be that there is little substantive difference between the pre s 51A approach and the "reasonable grounds" approach now contained in s 4(1) of the ACL (if one puts the evidential burden of s 4(2) to one side).
227 When Mr Fahour represented, as I have found he did, that Australia Post would conduct a future review of the APSS collectively with the ACTU, this was in terms expressed as a future plan for Australia Post - that is, something it intended to do, if the enterprise agreement was approved. Mr Fahour states that "once an Agreement is finalised", then Mr Fahour "will work" with the ACTU on the matters he then refers to.
228 If the question is framed in the way I have outlined at [226] above, reflecting the pre s 51A position, I consider the applicants have not discharged their burden of proving it was misleading.
229 Alternatively, if a similar approach is taken to future matter representations in s 345 as is taken in relation to s 18 (excluding the evidentiary burden imposed by s 4(2) of the ACL), then the question is whether Mr Fahour had reasonable grounds for that representation. The applicants have not discharged their burden of proving he did not. Forensically, to prove he had no reasonable basis was always going to be difficult when he was not called as a witness by either party.
230 As I have found based on Ms Rivers' evidence, the 24 May Staff Update was drafted by others, but Mr Fahour endorsed and adopted its contents, and was content for it to be presented to employees as a communication from him as CEO on behalf of Australia Post. By this time, on Ms Sebire's evidence, investigations were under way about the cause of the hyperinflation of Australia Post's superannuation liabilities, but her team's work on identifying six options for constraining growth of those liabilities did not occur until shortly after the enterprise agreement had been approved.
231 I accept Australia Post's submissions that Ms Sebire's evidence establishes the following sequence of events:
Her team in Corporate Superannuation began investigating the cause of superannuation hyperinflation in around October 2012, however their focus was then still on outsourcing the internal operations of the APSS.
Her team was not aware of the FAS Freeze proposal until shortly before it was communicated to employees and it was not their proposal.
Although Ms Sebire personally had thought about a "simpler" alternative to the FAS Freeze proposal, involving reducing the accrual rate of Australia Post's superannuation liabilities, and she had mentioned this to a colleague, there had not been any formal examination of such options and certainly no reporting of them to Australia Post management.
The work that Ms Sebire and her team did undertake on options for constraining APSS growth (what she described in her evidence as the "six levers") did not occur until July 2013.
It was not until around 6 August 2013, that Ms Sebire decided to recommend the removal of AWOTE indexation as an option to the Superannuation Committee. This was a week or so after the Fair Work Commission had approved the enterprise agreement.
232 This being the case, the applicants have not laid a sufficient evidentiary foundation for the Court to infer that at the time he made the 24 May 2013 statement, Mr Fahour had any knowledge of the AWOTE indexation removal proposal; nor any knowledge or intention that Australia Post would present a "fait accompli" about removal of AWOTE indexation to the ACTU and the other unions in December 2013 which could not meet the description of conducting a review "collectively" with the ACTU.
233 It is clear that Mr Fahour, and the rest of Australia Post's management, were aware of and most concerned about the hyperinflation of the company's superannuation liabilities. There is no basis to infer any decision had been taken on how that problem would be addressed by 24 May 2013. Nor is there any basis to infer that Mr Fahour did not intend to "make good" on the representation to conduct a review of Australia Post's superannuation liabilities collectively with the ACTU.
234 It a reasonable inference, and one I am prepared to draw, that given the known importance of superannuation entitlements to the Australia Post workforce, and given the opposition to the FAS Freeze proposal, Mr Fahour understood in May 2013 that he needed to work with union representatives on any alternative means to constrain superannuation liabilities. Presumably the ACTU was nominated in the Staff Update as Australia Post's "counterpart in [the] APSS", given that cl 12 of the Deed requires consultation with the ACTU for amendments to be made to the Deed.
235 On 13 August 2013, the Superannuation Committee of Australia Post met. The minutes of that meeting, with irrelevant redactions, are in evidence. The Committee's function, as explained by Ms Sebire, is to consider enterprise-wide strategy, policies and decisions in respect of superannuation and to endorse (or not) recommendations put to it by the Head of Corporate Superannuation. The minutes record the following:
S20: Processes and implications for the removal of AWOTE and reduction of time period for accrual during periods of Leave Without Pay.
1.1 The Committee agreed that AP will seek to remove indexing, but that scope exists to replace current AWOTE indexing with the EBA rate depending on the nature of the ACTU discussions.
1.2 The Committee agreed that indexing change will apply from a date to be nominated, pending ACTU discussions, and one superannuation salary will be maintained for the calculation of future superannuation benefits.
[Emphasis added.]
236 To this point, the Committee's understanding of what would occur was consistent with what Mr Fahour had told employees in May 2013, and with the alleged representation. It is also consistent with Ms Sebire's oral evidence that the Committee "was open to further feedback, depending on the nature of those discussions [with the ACTU]".
237 At the end of 2013, Australia Post did correspond with the ACTU. A letter was sent from Catherine Walsh, General Manager Human Resources at Australia Post to Tim Lyons, Assistant Secretary of the ACTU, which relevantly stated:
During the Enterprise Agreement process, our management team outlined the significant business challenges we are facing, and that Australia Post is also attempting to manage a significant and growing superannuation liability that is having an impact on our ability to invest in our business, reward our people and remain profitable.
We considered and shared with staff during the EBA discussions proposed changes to ensure the protection and an ongoing viability of the APSS, and many staff made clear to us that the APSS was an important benefit which is highly valued.
As a result, the New Agreement delivered for Award employees a commitment to keep the APSS defined benefit fund running for existing members and that the full pay rate (maximum) of 10.5 per cent flow into superannuation.
We also indicated that on approval of the Agreement, we would work with the ACTU as our counterpart in the APSS to review the APSS and discuss how we can collectively manage Australia Post's growing liability and develop a plan to strengthen its performance to enable it to remain viable for the benefit of Members.
As such, I write to inform you that Australia Post intends to implement two changes to the APSS prior to 30 June 2014.
1. Removal of indexing superannuation salary to Average Weekly Ordinary Time Earnings (AWOTE)
Processing changes introduced to the APSS in 2003 stated that where an Award level employee's superannuation salary does not grow between each birthday, or if the growth is less than the salary increases in the current Australia Post Fair Work Agreement, AWOTE indexation is applied.
AWOTE indexation occurs in situations where an employee has previously received higher duties or allowances have reduced or are no longer being paid, leaving their superannuation salary remaining at the higher level than their current salary level (because superannuation salary can never decrease). The application of the AWOTE indexation (currently 4.9% as calculated by the Australian Bureau of Statistics) then further increases the gap between superannuation salary and current salary level.
The removal of the AWOTE indexation will seek in the longer term, to bring superannuation salary more in line with actual salary level. This will bring greater equity for all members and support the viability of the APSS scheme, while maintaining the guarantee that no one's superannuation salary will decrease.
The change will apply prospectively only and will be implemented prior to 30 June 2014.
…
Tim, as you know it is imperative for Australia Post to manage the growing superannuation liability prudently to enable the ongoing provision of the APSS to existing members. We believe that these two changes are fair in that both changes only impact employees who are already receiving benefits that are in excess of the general population at Australia Post and significantly in excess of the benefits provided to the general population across Australia.
238 There were some redactions in the letter as it was tendered, relating to the second proposed change, but the parties accepted the redacted parts were not material to the matters in issue. The contents of this letter from Ms Walsh are again consistent with what was said to employees by Mr Fahour during the enterprise bargaining process. What she says in this letter, in particular, about consultation with the ACTU, reflects what was in the 24 May 2013 Staff Update. On the evidence, there was no response from the ACTU to this letter.
239 Meetings were held between the ACTU, the CEPU and Australia Post in February 2014. At the meeting on 4 February 2014, Ms Walsh, Ms Rivers and Ms Sebire met with Mr Dwyer, as well as representatives from the ACTU and CPSU. Ms Sebire's evidence, which was not challenged on this point, was that the ACTU representative, who ran the meeting, did not give an opinion either way on the proposed measures, but did seek further information on the proposals.
240 Further information was sought and exchanged. In a letter dated 17 February 2014, Ms Walsh said to Mr Lyons, amongst other things:
For the employees receiving AWOTE indexing, the excessive benefits of this is heavily skewed towards a few hundred people. These are employees whose superannuation salary is more than 100% of actual salary. These cases appear to have arisen through contract managers taking up Award level roles, and so moving from a base salary of $120k to a salary of $50 - $60k For the majority of employees, we expect actual salary to catch up with superannuation salary within one to two years.
241 A subsequent meeting was held with Ms Sebire, Mr Lyons and other Australia Post and union representatives to discuss the contents of the letter of 17 February.
242 There was no evidence whether these kinds of assertions by Australia Post influenced the attitude of the ACTU. The evidence does not reveal any specific protests or arguments from the ACTU after this correspondence, nor any indication the ACTU was determined to oppose the implementation of AWOTE indexation removal. That is despite such evidence being, one would have thought, critical for the applicants' case in this respect. No witness from the ACTU was called by the applicants. I am prepared to infer that the state of evidence reveals that, at least by the end of February 2014, the ACTU was not actively and directly opposing the removal of AWOTE indexation.
243 On 26 March 2014, Australia Post informed its employees about the removal of AWOTE indexation. In doing so, in the communication it published, it said:
Many staff made it clear that the APSS was an important and highly valued benefit. As a result, the Australia Post Enterprise Agreement 2013 included a commitment to flow the full pay rate increase of 10.5 per cent (maximum over the life of the Agreement) into superannuation. However, Australia Post also made a commitment to manage the APSS in a responsible way to ensure that the scheme remains sustainable into the future.
Following discussion with the ACTU, Australia Post is making some important and necessary changes to the APSS. These changes will contribute to the sustainability of the scheme and ensure that it is fairer and more equitable for members.
It is important to note that these changes apply only to members of the APSS defined benefit (generally, these are employee members who joined the APSS prior to 30 June 2012). They do not apply to members of the Commonwealth Superannuation Scheme (CSS) in the APSS, members of the AMP-managed Australia Post Superannuation Plan (APSP), or any other accumulation fund selected by an employee, and they do not impact Spouse, Rollover or Pension members in the APSS.
(Emphasis in original.)
244 Again, this (in particular the second paragraph) is consistent with what Mr Fahour had told employees in May 2013 would occur.
245 It is true, as the applicants submit, that the review headed up by Ms Sebire had no involvement from any person from the ACTU in that review, nor any person from the CEPU, although Ms Sebire did consult with persons she described as "different superannuation experts", and also obtained legal opinions, including from Corrs Chambers Westgarth. It is also true that on the evidence, and as Ms Sebire accepted in cross-examination, that Mr Fahour personally did not "work with" the ACTU, nor discuss the removal of AWOTE indexation with the ACTU. However, there was no representation in May 2013 about how the ACTU would be asked to work with Australia Post. Nor was there any representation that Mr Fahour would have any consultations personally with the ACTU. Any reasonable and ordinary employee would, I am satisfied, have realised that when Mr Fahour said that he would "work with" the ACTU, he was not suggesting he personally would do so. I consider that the correspondence and meetings disclosed by the evidence can comfortably be described as Australia Post "working with" the ACTU. It would appear, as the respondent submits, that the absence of any significant opposition by the ACTU to the removal of AWOTE indexation limited the amount of interaction from the ACTU.
246 Finally, there was much emphasis in the applicants' case on the footnote, to which I have referred at [41]-[46] above. This, as I have noted, did not appear in the document said to contain the representations, but rather was found in presentations made to bargaining representatives. That appears to be the applicants' point: the footnote, it was contended, contained an important qualification or clue, to Australia Post's intentions which was not conveyed to employees. It will be recalled that the substance of the footnotes was that if the FAS Freeze was not deliverable, then Australia Post would look for other ways to curtail its increasing superannuation liabilities.
247 I accept the respondent's submissions that a focus on the footnote does not advance the applicants' case for at least two reasons. First, in substance, the need to review how to contain and manage its superannuation liabilities was a component of the communications directly to employees in any event. While the text of the footnotes might have been more forceful, and some might say, couched as a warning, that is hardly remarkable in the heat of bargaining negotiations. Second, those present at these meetings were there in their capacity as the employee's representatives. Part of their duties involved communicating what they considered to be important from those discussions to their members. If Australia Post's message was clearer or more forcefully put during these negotiations, I fail to see how that advances a case that Mr Fahour's statements were misleading, and indeed it may tend against such propositions.
248 I am satisfied the representation was not misleading. The evidence establishes that Australia Post did work with the ACTU on the review of its superannuation liabilities and proposals to constrain them, including the AWOTE indexation removal proposal, although the "work" and consultation was at a minimum level. Perhaps, by December 2013 and early 2014, it would be possible to describe what occurred as presenting a "fait accompli" to the CEPU about removal of AWOTE indexation. As I have noted earlier in these reasons, that is certainly one inference that can be drawn from the terms of the correspondence to the CEPU. However, the applicants have elected to allege Mr Fahour's representation was misleading, not false and that means they need to prove what his state of mind was in May 2013 about making good on the promise to work collectively with the ACTU. They need to do this whether the future matter approach I have set out at [229] above is taken, or to establish the express state of mind which the terms of s 345 require. They have not done so, and what evidence there is suggests that what occurred was as Mr Fahour represented - that there were discussion with the ACTU, which can be described as working "collectively", and for reasons not apparent on the evidence, no opposition from the ACTU to the removal of AWOTE indexation, so that the discussions were not lengthy or complex.