Was this an enterprise agreement within the meaning of the Act?
67 The position of the CFMEU, succinctly put, is this. The jurisdiction of Fair Work Australia depends on the making of an enterprise agreement within the meaning of the Act, since its statutory duty under s 186(1) to approve an agreement that meets the requirements of ss 186 and 187 of the Act is contingent on there being a valid enterprise agreement. There could only be a valid enterprise agreement if the agreement was made with employees "employed at the time who will be covered by the agreement". This agreement was not made with such a body of employees. Therefore there was no valid application for approval before the Full Bench, the order for approval was ineffective, and no enterprise agreement came into existence: Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v Australian Industrial Relations Commission and Others (1999) 93 FCR 317 at [128].
68 The CFMEU also argued that Fair Work Australia could not have the requisite satisfaction for approval of the agreement under ss 186(2)(a) and 188 because the agreement was not made in accordance with ss 180(2), (3) and (5) and 182(1). Section 180(2) imposes an obligation on the employer to take all reasonable steps to ensure that during the access period for the agreement "the employees … employed at the time who will be covered by the agreement" are provided with copies of the text of the agreement and any material incorporated by reference in it, and have access throughout the period to a copy of those materials. Section 180(3) requires the employer to take all reasonable steps to notify such employees of the time and place of the vote and the voting method. Section 180(5) requires the employer to take all reasonable steps to ensure that the terms of the agreement and its effect are explained to those employees in an appropriate manner taking into account their particular circumstances and needs. Section 182(1) relevantly provides that an enterprise agreement is made when a majority of those employees who cast a valid vote approve it.
69 The first question, then, is what is meant by the expression "who will be covered by the agreement", more particularly what "will" means in this context.
70 The starting point is to construe the words according to their ordinary meaning having regard to their context and legislative purpose. Context includes the existing state of the law and the mischief it was intended to remedy. See Alcan (NT) Alumina Pty Ltd v Commissioner of Territory Revenue (Northern Territory) (2009) 239 CLR 27 at [14]; CIC Insurance Ltd v Bankstown Football Club Ltd (1997) 187 CLR 384 at 408. The words should be read by reference to the language of the statute as a whole: Project Blue Sky Inc v Australian Broadcasting Authority (1998) 194 CLR 355 at [69].
71 The majority interpreted "will" in the expression to mean "future likelihood" (which the majority apparently took to be synonymous with an expression of present intention). The CFMEU submitted that the more appropriate meaning of "will be covered" in context is that coverage of the employees employed at the time the agreement is made is a necessary result of the agreement being made, intimating that such an interpretation provided the required degree of certainty. In any event, the CFMEU submitted that, even if the majority were correct, in this case it could not be said that it was intended that the employees who are employed at the time will be covered by the agreement if there is a clear indication in the agreement itself that they may not be. Thus, it was said, the employees who are employed at the time and participate in the vote for the agreement might be covered by it; it cannot be said they necessarily will be covered.
72 The majority's interpretation reflected one of the meanings given to the auxiliary verb in the Macquarie Dictionary:
indicating future likelihood: I will take a taxi; she will meet us there; do you think it will rain?; you will be surprised.
73 The CFMEU's contention reflects one of the meanings given in the Oxford English Dictionary:
expressing a determinate or necessary consequence (without the notion of futurity).
74 In my view, the construction which the CFMEU espouses is the preferable one. It more accurately reflects the sense in which the expression is used in the statute. But I do not think that this is determinative of the question of validity.
75 In ascertaining the meaning of the statutory words an examination of the existing state of the law has proved unhelpful. Section 327 of the Workplace Relations Act (now repealed) provided:
An employer may make an agreement (an employee collective agreement ) in writing with persons employed at the time in a single business (or part of a single business) of the employer whose employment will, or would but for the operation of an ITEA that has passed its nominal expiry date, be subject to the agreement.
76 I have been unable to find any authority that considered the meaning of the expression "will … be subject to the agreement" in that section. Certainly, my attention was drawn to none.
77 Notwithstanding what the majority appear to have thought, the Explanatory Memorandum is also unhelpful on this question. They referred to paragraph 683, which states:
The use of the phrase 'employees who will be covered by the agreement' in clause 172 is intended to make clear that the employees covered by the agreement are not limited to those employees who were employed at the time the agreement was made. An agreement covers all employees whom it is expressed to cover (clause 53). This includes persons employed at the time the agreement was made and persons employed at a later time provided that they fall within a class or group of employees who are expressed to be covered by the agreement.
78 The majority said of this passage:
This makes clear that the phrase "employees who will be covered by the agreement" refers to the class or group of employees who are expressed to be covered by the agreement. It does not restrict how the agreement specifies that class or group. As with any other term of an agreement it is a matter for the parties to decide what they agree about (subject to meeting the specific requirements contained in ss. 186 and 187).
[Emphasis in original.]
79 In essence, all the majority picked up from paragraph 683 was the reference to clause 53 (now s 53 of the Act). In my view, whatever the intention of the draftsperson may have been, the use of the expression "employees who will be covered by the agreement" in s 172 does not make it clear "that the employees covered by the agreement are not limited to those employees who were employed at the time the agreement was made", but may also include employees employed at a later time as long as they fall within the specified class. On the contrary, s 172 is concerned with the making of an enterprise agreement and the employer can hardly make an enterprise agreement with employees not yet employed, even if some time in the future they may be covered by the agreement. Objectively, the intention of the legislature in using the expression was to ensure that the employer could only make an agreement with those employees who were named or described in the agreement and whom the agreement purported to cover.
80 In its application to Fair Work Australia for approval of the agreement Newlands, when asked to specify the group of employees who will be covered by the agreement, answered this way:
The agreement covered all employees who were operationally or organisationally distinct as production and trade employees engaged in classes of work included in the Black Coal Mining Industry Award 2010, other than those employees who were not legally able to be covered as they were covered by an Australian Workplace Agreement that had not reached its nominal expiry date, or who elected in writing not to be covered by the agreement.
81 There was no evidence that anyone had elected in writing not to be covered by the agreement before the application was made to Fair Work Australia. Indeed, the case was conducted below and in this Court on the common understanding that employees could, and if so disposed would, make that election after the agreement was approved.
82 There are no statutory limits on the class of employees who may be covered by an agreement save for those imposed by ss 186 and 187. Section 53 states that an employee is covered if "the agreement is expressed to cover (however described)" him or her. Section 256A(2) enables the agreement to specify employees by class or name. In the case of descriptions by class, s 256A(4) provides some examples but expressly does not purport to limit the way this can be done. The opt out clause is not at odds with s 256A. It is merely a device for limiting the membership of the chosen class. The class is described by inclusion and exclusion. The terms of s 256A allow for the implicit exclusion of certain employees and the Act clearly contemplates that not all employees will be covered by an enterprise agreement. The CFMEU accepted that employees covered by AWAs and ITEAs could validly be excluded. Thus, the mere exclusion of a group of employees would not mean that there is no valid enterprise agreement. Nor, in my view, would the fact that the identity of those who might later be excluded is unknown at the time the agreement is made. The membership of the class will be fluid. At that time all that can be known for certain is that those employees who voted on the making of the agreement will be covered by it for as long as they remain within the class.
83 The purpose of the relevant provisions in Part 2-4 is to facilitate the making of a democratic and informed decision on whether the agreement should be made. I do not see the opt out clause as inconsistent with this intention. Section 172(2) enables employers to make enterprise agreements with those employees employed at the time the agreement is made and who will be covered by the agreement. The combined effect of ss 180-182 is that such employees - those current employees whose terms and conditions of employment will be affected by the proposed agreement - are provided with the opportunity to vote on it, and the agreement is made when a majority of them cast a valid vote in favour of it. In this case they were the employees engaged at the Newlands Surface Operations in the classes of work included in Schedule A of the relevant award who had not elected in writing not to be covered by the agreement. If the employees who voted on the agreement answered that description, then they also answered the statutory description of employees named by class. Thus, those employees who will be caught by its terms had the opportunity to vote for or against it. If, before the agreement was made, any of these employees had elected in writing not to be covered by the agreement they would not have been entitled to participate in the vote because the agreement excluded them. There is no lack of clarity or certainty about who will be covered by the agreement at the time it is made or, indeed, at any later time. The fact that at a later date employees who had voted on the agreement may choose not to be covered by it does not mean that at the time the agreement was made it was not a necessary consequence of its terms that they were covered by it.
84 The Act does not demand that those employees are covered in perpetuity by the agreement. That would be absurd. After all, as the majority observed, employees may come and go. Some may die. Some may retire or be dismissed or retrenched. Some may leave the mine for other jobs. It is true that these people would no longer be employees. Some, however, will leave the class but remain in Newlands' employ, such as those who accept promotions to positions outside the class. Yet, at the time the agreement is made or approved, their identities will be unknown. That contingency does not signify that there is no enterprise agreement within the meaning of the Act. The CFMEU sought to equate the position of an employee who accepted a promotion with that of an ex-employee. It argued that in law a change of duties or classification leads to a termination of the old contract of employment and the making of a new one (referring to Brackenridge v Toyota Motor Corporation Australia Ltd (1996) 142 ALR 99 at 106). That case, however, turned on its own facts. Concut Pty Ltd v Worrell (2000) 103 IR 160 at [18]-[20] and [44], to which Newlands referred, suggests a different interpretation. Whatever the position, however, these people remain employees.
85 Even so, the CFMEU submitted that the position of employees transferred to other positions was accommodated by the Act. It relied on s 53(6) which provides that a reference in the Act to an enterprise agreement covering an employee is a reference to the agreement covering the employee in relation to particular employment. But, as Newlands pointed out, s 53(6) has nothing to do with this situation. Its purpose is to deal with a situation where an employee has more than one job. It ensures that the terms of the agreement cover only the job to which the agreement refers. There are similar provisions relating to comparable references to modern awards (ss 47(3), 48(5)). If there is any doubt about that, it is removed by what is said in paragraph 205 of the Explanatory Memorandum:
This means that, if a national system employee has more than one job, each job is treated separately in determining the effect of an award or agreement on the employee's entitlements in relation to each job. For instance, the rule that only one enterprise agreement can operate in relation to a person at a particular time (see clause 58) does not mean that two agreements cannot cover, or apply to, an employee in relation to two different jobs.
86 I agree that Fair Work Australia is not empowered to approve an agreement unless it is made in accordance with the terms of ss 180(2), (3) and (5) and s 182(1) of the Act but I am not persuaded that this is an agreement that was not made in accordance with those terms.