(3) Proper construction of s 553 of the FWA
28 What then is the proper construction of s 553 of the FWA and how does it apply to the facts and circumstances of the current proceeding?
29 First, the express words of ss 552-554 of the FWA: Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355 at 381-382 [69]-[71].
30 Section 553 is comprised of two sub-sections. Sub-section 553(1) has two further sub-sections. There is no dispute that the chapeau to s 553(1) is satisfied. These Federal Court proceedings against the CFMEU are proceedings for a pecuniary penalty order for a contravention of a civil remedy provision. The conduct the subject of the SCV proceedings is substantially the same conduct in relation to which the pecuniary penalty order would be made in this Court: s 553(1)(b). Put another way, the CFMEU has been convicted and fined for criminal contempt five times in the SCV (see [16] above) and the conduct that underpinned those convictions comprises part of the conduct the subject of these proceedings brought by the Director.
31 The phrase "criminal proceedings … for an offence" in s 553(1) is not defined. That is not surprising. The range of crimes and punishments for crime has expanded so that a single series of events can give rise to several different offences to which different penalties can attach: Pearce v The Queen (1998) 194 CLR 610 at 614-615. Moreover, the FWA is a Commonwealth act. Potential criminal proceedings would include offences in contravention of one or more of numerous State and Commonwealth laws and further or alternatively, the common law. The manner in which those proceedings are filed, prosecuted and disposed of varies between the Commonwealth and the States and between the States. In understanding what is meant by "criminal proceedings … for an offence" in s 553, it cannot and does not matter what process starts the proceedings: Lee v New South Wales Crime Commission (2013) 87 ALJR 1082 [72]. Those matters are not exhaustive but are indications of the wider proposition made by the High Court that there is no bright line between civil and criminal: Chief Executive Officer of Customs v Labrador Liquor Wholesale Pty Ltd (2003) 216 CLR 161 at [112]-[114] (per Hayne J) (Gleeson CJ at [1] and McHugh J at [3] concurring).
32 Section 553 does not sit alone. It forms part of Div 4 of the FWA which includes sections that appear in numerous Commonwealth Acts directed at a particular objective - ensuring that the rule or principle against double jeopardy is not infringed: for example ss 552 to 555 of the FWA. Those provisions were first inserted into the predecessor to the FWA by the Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005 (Cth), and became effective in March 2006. The provisions were considered necessary because of a debate about whether a civil penalty could be regarded as "punishment" for the purposes of double jeopardy. At that time, absent statutory provisions of this kind, Australian Courts had not extended common law double jeopardy protection to civil penalties. The Australian Law Reform Commission in Principled Regulation; Federal Civil and Administrative Penalties in Australia, Report No 95 (2002) at [11.37] addressed the applicability of the double jeopardy rule in civil penalty cases as follows:
These rationales [for the principle that a person should be protected against multiple punishments for the same conduct] appear no less applicable to parallel civil penalty and criminal liability (or multiple civil penalty liability) for the same conduct. It seems to follow that, if one of the rationales and aims of double jeopardy is to protect against double punishment, and if civil penalties are, at least to some extent, punitive in nature, double jeopardy protection should be extended to subsequent civil penalty proceedings for the same conduct. In the absence of any common law to this effect, this will require statutory intervention.
33 The double jeopardy principle has almost universal support but does not always have a single meaning: Pearce at 614-615. Moreover, the fact of double jeopardy can be and is spoken of at different stages of the process of criminal justice - for example, double prosecution, plea in bar and double punishment: Pearce at 614-622. In the present application, those considerations are not irrelevant. The provisions of the FWA are directed to address that concern and provide protection against double jeopardy for the same conduct. It is concerned with "a practice, if not a rule of law, that a person should not be twice punished for what is substantially the same act": R v Hoar (1981) 148 CLR 32 at 38 (Gibbs CJ, Mason, Aickin and Brennan JJ).
34 The question which then arises is whether the contempt proceedings in the SCV satisfy the balance of s 553.
35 In Witham v Holloway (1995) 183 CLR 525 at 530-531, the High Court (Brennan, Deane, Toohey and Gaudron JJ) described the distinction between civil and criminal contempt as follows:
In general terms, the distinction between civil and criminal contempt is that a civil contempt involves disobedience to a court order or breach of an undertaking in civil proceedings, whereas a criminal contempt is committed either when there is a contempt in the face of the court or there is an interference with the course of justice.
However, disobedience or breach of an undertaking amounts to a criminal contempt if it involves deliberate defiance or, as it is sometimes said, if it is contumacious … .
The basis of the distinction between civil and criminal contempt is said to lie in the difference between proceedings which are remedial or coercive in the interest of the private individual and proceedings in the public interest to vindicate judicial authority or maintain the integrity of the judicial process. …
(Citations omitted.)
36 Their Honours returned to that distinction at 534 and stated:
The differences upon which the distinction between civil and criminal contempt is based are, in significant respects, illusory. They certainly do not justify the allocation of different standards of proof for civil and criminal contempt. Rather, the illusory nature of those differences and the fact that the usual outcome of successful proceedings is punishment, no matter whether primarily for the vindication of judicial authority or primarily for the purpose of coercing obedience in the interest of the individual, make it clear as Deane J said in [Hinch v Attorney-General (Vic) (1987) 164 CLR 15 at 49], that all proceedings for contempt "must realistically be seen as criminal in nature". The consequence is that all charges of contempt must be proved beyond reasonable doubt. …
37 What matters, at least in the case of contempt, is that punishments are imposed. As the High Court said in Witham v Holloway at 534:
Punishment is punishment, whether it is imposed in vindication or for remedial or coercive purposes. And there can be no doubt that imprisonment and the imposition of fines, the usual sanctions for contempt, constitute punishment. And the same is true of a sequestration made in consequence of a company's failure to comply with an order or undertaking.
38 Next the punishment is consequent upon entry of a conviction: see, for example, Hinch v Attorney-General (Vic) (1987) 164 CLR 15 at 49. That conviction for contempt is a conviction of an offence which is criminal in nature: see, by way of example, Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v BHP Steel (AIS) Pty Ltd [2001] FCA 1758 at [29] (per Lee and Finn JJ); Attorney-General (NSW) v Whiley (1993) 31 NSWLR 314 at 320 and Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Sigalla (No 4) [2011] NSWSC 62 at [33]-[41]. As was stated in In Re Bramblevale Ltd [1970] 1 Ch 128 at 137, "[a] contempt of court is an offence of a criminal character. A man may be sent to prison for it. It must be satisfactorily proved".
39 Consistent with what the High Court said in Witham v Holloway, the CFMEU was charged with contempt in the SCV: see [12]-[13] above. The Attorney-General was joined as a plaintiff. At least from the time of the joinder of the Attorney-General, the "proceedings [were] in the public interest to vindicate judicial authority or maintain the integrity of the judicial process": Witham v Holloway at 531. The proceedings were instituted to punish the CFMEU for failing to obey Court orders. The relief sought was that the CFMEU "be punished for contempt": see [12]-[13] above. Under the Evidence Act 2008 (Vic), proceedings are civil or criminal. A criminal proceeding is defined in that Act relevantly to mean the prosecution for an offence: sch 2 to the Evidence Act 2008 (Vic). In the SCV, the CFMEU was prosecuted for an offence (that of contempt) and the SCV proceedings were conducted to the criminal standard: see [15] above and s 141 of the Evidence Act 2008 (Vic). The CFMEU was convicted of five criminal contempts and was punished for that disobedience by the imposition of fines: see [16] above. The fact that contempt proceedings are, for reasons explained in the authorities, tried summarily and not before a jury is immaterial. So too is the fact that the proceedings were commenced in the civil jurisdiction of the SCV. The fact that different procedures have been adopted for trying contempt charges does not alter the essential characteristic of the proceedings as criminal proceedings. The Director's submission that the contempt proceedings were civil proceedings when commenced because the charge did not plead that the conduct of the CFMEU was deliberate or contumacious should also be rejected. The proceedings were criminal because Grocon and the Attorney-General were seeking convictions and punishment for offences.
40 What then was the effect of the contempt proceedings in the SCV on the proceedings before the Federal Court? From the outset, it is at least arguable that the proceedings issued by the Director in the Federal Court were stayed against the CFMEU to the extent that they sought pecuniary penalty orders: s 553(1). The SCV proceedings were criminal proceedings for an offence. Although it is strictly unnecessary to decide that the SCV proceedings were from commencement criminal proceedings for the purposes of s 553 of the FWA, the fact that five criminal convictions have been entered against the CFMEU in relation to substantially the same conduct cannot be ignored. Upon the entry of those convictions in the SCV in relation to substantially the same conduct, the proceedings in this Court against the CFMEU, to the extent that they sought pecuniary penalty orders in relation to that conduct, stood dismissed: s 553(2).
41 Those conclusions are to be understood against the background of the following additional matters. First, the Federal Court proceedings were stayed and then stood dismissed against the CFMEU, not against the named individuals in the Federal Court proceeding. Second, the Federal Court proceedings for a pecuniary penalty order were only dismissed against the CFMEU to the extent that the conduct in the Federal Court proceedings was substantially the same as the conduct which was the subject of the criminal contempts. The balance of the proceedings against the CFMEU and against the individuals remained and remains unaffected. Third, the Federal Court proceedings were stayed and then stood dismissed against the CFMEU because the Director sought the imposition of a pecuniary penalty order. Indeed, the Federal Court cannot make a pecuniary penalty order against the CFMEU for a contravention of a civil remedy provision if the CFMEU has been convicted of an offence constituted by conduct that is substantially the same as the conduct constituting the contravention of the civil remedy provision: s 552 of the FWA. As we have said, to the extent that the proceedings sought other relief against the CFMEU in relation to the conduct that was substantially the same as the conduct which was the subject of the criminal contempts, those proceedings remained unaffected.
42 Judgment in the Civil and Criminal Appeals is reserved: see [4] above. The outcome of those appeals is not known. The possibility that the convictions might be overturned on appeal does not detract, legally or practically, from the primary judge hearing the trial of these proceedings on and from 11 August 2014. In the event that the CFMEU is found to have contravened the FWA in these proceedings, the Court would (as things now stand) be limited to considering relief comprising declarations and compensation orders in relation to the conduct that was substantially the same as the conduct which was the subject of the criminal contempts. In the event that the CFMEU is successful in overturning its convictions, then the Director may seek to resume these proceedings to seek a pecuniary penalty order in relation to the conduct that was substantially the same as the conduct which was the subject of the criminal contempts. We do not consider that this possibility creates any risk of prejudice to the CFMEU that would warrant vacation of the hearing.
43 It was for those reasons, that the Court made the following orders on 8 August 2014. The CFMEU was granted leave to appeal, the balance of the application for leave to appeal was otherwise dismissed and the appeal was dismissed.
I certify that the preceding forty-three (43) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justices Buchanan, Gordon and Wigney.