Introduction
1 This appeal is from a number of orders made by a judge of this Court on 7 October 2011. The case concerned unlawful industrial action by certain employee respondents on eight days in October 2008 by failing to attend for work at Woodside Energy Ltd's Phase V Expansion Project at the Burrup Peninsula in Western Australia on one or more days on which they were rostered to work.
2 CBI Contractors Pty Ltd (CBI) was under contract with Woodside Energy Ltd to provide mechanical construction services at the Burrup Peninsula. The individuals referred to later in these reasons are as follows. Ms Luskan was the CBI Administration Manager, Mr Marcano was the CBI Project Manager and Mr Stuurstraat was the CBI Construction Manager. Mr Upton, the second appellant, was a Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (CFMEU) delegate. Mr Johnson was an Australian Manufacturing Workers Union (AMWU) delegate and Mr Brown was a building employee and industry participant, CBI employees representative. Mr Windus was an AMWU organiser.
3 As a result of legislation enacted after the commencement of these proceedings, an official known as the Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate has become the successor to the original applicant in the court below and the original respondent to the appeal, the Australian Building and Construction Commissioner. With the consent of the parties, we earlier made an order amending the name of the respondent to the appeal accordingly.
4 The questions on appeal are whether the primary judge erred in finding that the second appellant (Mr Upton) was involved in a contravention of s 38 of the Building And Construction Industry Improvement Act 2005 (Cth) (the BCII Act) and s 494(1) of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) (the WR Act) and whether, as a consequence, the first appellant (the CFMEU) contravened those provisions and contravened clauses 8(4) and 9 of the CFMEU Collective Agreement and, in relation to the latter contravention, was thereby liable to a penalty under s 719 of the WR Act?
5 Because the question of any penalties remained to be determined by the primary judge the orders were interlocutory and leave to appeal was required.
6 The respondent consented to leave to appeal being granted. Applying the principles in Décor Corporation Pty Ltd v Dart Industries Inc (1991) 33 FCR 397 to guide the exercise of our discretion, we grant leave to appeal on the basis that the judgment below is attended with sufficient doubt to warrant its reconsideration and substantial injustice to the appellants would result if leave were refused and the judgment was wrong. We also grant the necessary extension of time so as to permit the filing of the "Notice of Appeal" on 31 October 2011.
The Notice of Appeal
7 The grounds of appeal, as refined in the course of oral submissions, were as follows:
The learned Judge erred in applying s 48(2) of the BCII Act by finding that Upton and thereby the CFMEU:
(a) aided and abetted the employee respondents to engage in unlawful industrial action by Upton's conduct in making the Statement at the meeting with CBI officers on 13 October 2008;
(b) by making the Statement at a meeting with representatives of CBI on 13 October 2008 linked himself in purpose to the employee respondents' Threat;
in that the learned Judge otherwise found that:
(i) the Threat made by the employee respondents on 13 October 2008 did not contain a specific timeframe;
(ii) the Threat was not one being made by Upton or the CFMEU;
(iii) Upton mentioning the Threat to the CBI employers and later on 13 October 2008 was not an act to assist what had been threatened;
(iv) Upton took it upon himself to make the Statement even though he had not been asked to do so by the CFMEU members he represented;
(v) although the employee respondents took unlawful industrial action on 14 October 2008, Upton did not organise a meeting of the employee respondents on 14 October 2008, he did not tell the employee respondents anything they did not already know, nor did he conduct the meeting to facilitate a vote of the employee respondents on whether to engage in industrial action on 14 October 2008;
(vi) Upton did tell the employee respondents to return to work at their meeting on 14 October 2008.
The respondent filed no notice of contention. The notice of appeal adopts two terms, "Statement" and "Threat", which were defined in the pleadings and later adopted by the primary judge in His Honour's reasons for judgment. We set out below at [9] and [10] under the heading "The pleading" extracts from the Further Amended Statement of Claim which contain the definitions of these terms.
8 The relevant paragraphs of the reasons for judgment of the primary judge were:
Upton and CFMEU
[60] The Commissioner submits that the "better inference" is that, between 1 and 10 October 2008, Upton informed his superior Kevin Reynolds in Perth that a threat of industrial action had been made on 1 October 2008 and that accordingly, the CFMEU agreed to Upton's participation in the employees meeting on 13 October 2008 in the knowledge by Reynolds that industrial action was in contemplation. I would not draw such an inference. Upton did not make the Threat. The employees had not made the Threat.
…
CBI employees meeting - 13 October 2008
…
Upton
[69] I have found that, prior to 13 October, Upton knew nothing of imminent strike action. He arranged for the issue of a Right of Entry Notice on 10 October 2008. He had been at the 1 October meeting when Windus made the Threat. He was, on his written evidence, and although he first denied it, also ultimately in his oral evidence upon cross-examination, asked to attend the 13 October meeting by Brown and others on the Site, for a reason which he no longer recalled. Brown well knew of the CBI employees claims in relation to the redundancy issue. That he did not mention to Upton why he and others wanted him to come to a meeting on the Site on 13 October is not credible. I do not accept Upton's evidence that he did not know the reason for calling the meeting. I find that he knew it was a meeting of CBI employees including CFMEU members concerning the redundancy issue but not that he knew that strike action was to be discussed. There was no evidence of communications between Upton and Windus, or anyone else, prior to or on the morning of 13 October, absent which, no inference of knowledge on the part of Upton of contemplated strike action could arise. However, I do not believe his oral evidence that after 1 October he had made enquiries and had thought that the redundancy issue had been resolved. He did not expand upon the nature of his enquiries. There is no evidence to support such a conclusion. He did not include this assertion in his written statement. All the evidence points in the opposite direction: CBI had at all times rejected the redundancy claim.
[70] The Commissioner also contends that Brown and Johnson knew before the meeting that it was likely to result in a resolution to strike if CBI did not meet the claim and that this is evident from the events concerning the arrival of Windus in Karratha.
[71] The meeting was about the redundancy issue and, as it transpired, related strike action. Upton arrived at the meeting place before anyone else. According to Upton the employees said that they wanted to be paid their redundancies and they wanted an answer by the end of the day or they were going out. However, he was adamant that the employees certainly did not specify a time frame for such strike action. I accept this evidence. No one else gave evidence of what occurred at the meeting. He said that several of the employees had a demand they wanted him to convey to CBI about the redundancy issue. The employees in attendance included AMWU and CFMEU members as well as non-union employees.
[72] When Upton gave evidence during his cross-examination that at this meeting he "… told them to return to work and that we will pass on your message and we will try and work through it and get it fixed" it was not put to him that this was false or somehow mistaken. I accept his evidence on this point. In fact the men did go back to work.
[73] Further, on the issue of the threatened strike, counsel for the Commissioner put it to Upton that he did not dissociate himself from the employees by walking away as follows:
"You didn't say to them, "What you're proposing is unlawful. I don't want any part of it," and walk away, did you?---I told them that the CFMEU is - that they're not to strike and they're to stay at work. That is a very firm position that all organisers are told to tell everyone that thinks of any industrial action."
[74] That evidence was not then challenged further by the Commissioner and accordingly I accept it.
[75] It is pleaded against Upton that he addressed this meeting in respect of the Claim and Threat. I find that whilst the Claim was raised at the meeting by some of the employees, Upton referred to the Threat only in the terms I have described, namely, in effect, that the employees should not carry it out.
…
Meeting with CBI officers 13 October 2008
[79] After that meeting with the CBI employees, a meeting was held attended by Upton, Brown, Johnson and CBI officers Marcano, Stuurstraat and Luskan.
…
[82] All three of those witnesses said that Upton threatened strike action if CBI did not agree to the demanded redundancy proposal by close of business that day. To that extent, and in context, it accords with the evidence of Upton. However, their evidence extends further. Although there are differences in some respects as between these three CBI witnesses, each made a written record that Upton threatened strike action involving a strike for a week, return to work for a day to negotiate, and a strike for another week if negotiations were unsuccessful.
…
[86] In cross-examination, Luskan agreed that at the 13 October 2008 meeting when Upton spoke of the CBI employees' Claim, in effect, as she understood it, Upton was just relaying what those employees had discussed at their morning meeting.
…
[91] In cross-examination, Stuurstraat too agreed that at the 13 October 2008 meeting when Upton spoke of the employees' Claim he understood him to be relaying what the employees had discussed at their morning meeting and that Upton did not say "The Union wants the boys' money paid". He also agreed that Upton did not say that the CFMEU fully supports the men going on strike if CBI did not give them an answer.
…
[95] …The Claim and Threat were conveyed by a Union representative but the Threat was not, as I have found, one being made by him or by the CFMEU.
[96] Upton denied that he had referred to any specific time frame for strike action. I do not accept this evidence. This does not mean that I rejected the totality of his evidence. I prefer the relatively contemporaneous version in the emails of Luskan, Stuurstraat and on this point also that of Marcano. The Threat [Statement], so far as it had become a threat to strike for specific periods, was made by Upton and therefore also by the CFMEU. It was not the message he was asked to convey by those he represented. Nonetheless in his capacity as a CFMEU organiser he did so.
…
The pleading
13 OCTOBER 2008
…
[100] I find that Upton mentioned the Threat but in a way that it was apparent that he was not making the Threat on behalf of the employees but merely informing the CBI officers that the employees had asked that the Threat be conveyed to CBI. This was not an act to assist what had been threatened. It was no more than an act of communication. It was so conveyed in the context of further discussion as to the Claim. I find however, that Upton took it upon himself to make the Statement although he had not been asked to do so by the CFMEU members he represented.
…
Meeting of CBI employees - 14 October 2008
[116] On 14 October 2008, at about 5.30 am, there was a meeting of CBI employees at the Bay Village camp site. Upton, Johnson and Brown attended. There was no work that day. The Commissioner submits that the proper inference is that the employees were told by Upton that CBI did not agree to the Claim and, pursuant to the employees' decision on 13 October 2008, they went on strike. I find it likely that Upton did tell them or rather he confirmed CBI's position. Before the meeting, the employees had already received the letter signed by Marcano dated 13 October 2008 setting out CBI's refusal to acknowledge that Phase V was finished or that redundancies would be paid.
…
The pleading
14 OCTOBER 2008
…
[117] Upton did not arrange the 14 October meeting. There was no direct evidence, apart from his own, as to what occurred at that meeting. He did not tell the employees anything that they did not already know. There is no evidence that he arranged a vote concerning a strike, or that, contrary to his evidence, he did not warn the employees that a strike would be illegal. There is no basis to infer the opposite.
[118] I accept his evidence that he advised the employees that they should allow him and the other representatives more time to speak with CBI management and that he told the employees to return to work. It was not put to him in cross-examination that he did not do these things.
[119] I find that whilst Upton attended this meeting, Windus did not. Upton did not conduct the meeting to facilitate a vote of employees on whether to engage in industrial action. Nor did he authorise Windus, obviously, to facilitate such a vote in respect of non-CFMEU employees. Upton did not say that the CFMEU would support them if they took industrial action.
[120] In any event, the employees, including Johnson, did take strike action on 14 October 2008.
…
Windus and the AMWU
…
[231] I have found that Windus made the Threat pleaded in the context of the Representation and Claim. However, there was then no contravention by the employees of a civil penalty provision for the purposes of s 48(2) of the BCII Act. Nor had they threatened a contravention to which, if it had been put into effect, the Threat could relate. The Threat, in that case, was not linked in purpose with the employees. Accordingly, Windus was not a "person who is involved" in such a contravention. Accordingly, neither he nor the AMWU cannot [sic] in those circumstances be liable. The other allegations pleaded were not established.
…
Upton and CFMEU
…
[237] I find that the only contravention by Upton and thereby the CFMEU was that he aided and abetted the employees to engage in the October industrial action by his conduct in making the Statement at the meeting with CBI officers on 13 October 2008. At that time and by that conduct he linked himself in purpose to the employees' Threat. None of the other alleged contraventions have been established. The CFMEU is deemed by s 69 of the BCII Act to have engaged in the same conduct. The employees had threatened an actual strike. The strike was imminent as the employees had stated that if they did not get a (positive) answer to their claim by the end of the day (13 October) they "were going out". Upton, Johnson and Brown each knew that to be the case: Sent v Jet Corporation [of Australia Pty Ltd (1984) 2 FCR 201].
We have annotated paragraph [96] of this excerpt with a change (the deletion of "Threat" and the insertion of "Statement") which, reading the passage as a whole and having regard to the terms defined in the pleadings, we consider truly reflects the finding his Honour intended to make but which has been misdescribed in the reasons for judgment.
In Sent v Jet Corporation of Australia Pty Ltd (1984) 2 FCR 201 at 207 Smithers J (Sweeney J concurring) said:
But it is clear that to be involved in a contravention consisting of misleading and deceptive conduct it is necessary not only that the person concerned should know that a party proposed to engage in a contravention but he should in some positive way, be associated therewith.