Payments in money
42 The analysis in the reasons of his Honour and the lengthy submissions put to this Court concerning authorities dealing with "earnings", "wages", "remuneration", "pay", "payment" and "income" against the backdrop of different legislation be it workers compensation, taxation or otherwise did not provide assistance in the resolution of the appeal. The proper construction is revealed by the text, context and the purpose underlying s 470 FWA.
43 I do not consider that the expression "payment to an employee" in s 470 should be construed narrowly. The words "payment" or "pay" are used variously in the FW Act in combination with other words which have a qualifying or confining effect: "payment of fees (s 30A(1))"; "the employer must pay the employee at the employee's base rate of pay for the employee's ordinary hours of work … (s 81(6))"; "the employer must pay the employee at the employee's base rate of pay for the employee's ordinary hours of work … (s 90(1))" and "payment of wages and other monetary entitlements (s 139(1)(f)(ii))". If Parliament had intended that in s 470 the prohibition be solely to the payment of "wages" or an amount "payable to the employee in relation to the performance of work" as is found, for example, in s 323(1) then it could have employed that language or language to that effect. It did not do so. Moreover, s 323(1) does not provide, contrary to the appellant's submission that "employees must be paid 'in money'". Rather, it provides relevantly, that an employer must pay an employee "amounts payable to the employee in relation to the performance of work … in money …". The relevant payment is thus qualified, which as I have observed is not the case with s 470(1).
44 The method of "payment" is not confined in the text of s 470(1). This, in my opinion, would extend where relevant to payment in kind. The Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed, online version, March 2012) defines "payment" as "a sum of money (or equivalent) paid or payable …". The underlying policy that the cost of the industrial action should be at employees' expense would be undermined if payment for the Accommodation for the Relevant Employees was not in contravention of s 470(1).
45 The appellant's submission, if accepted, would mean, where the provision of accommodation to an employee formed part of his or her wages, that payment of wages by that means was prohibited by s 470. However, where the provision of accommodation did not form part of an employee's wages, but was merely an entitlement, the payment for accommodation, whether to a third party or by way of reimbursement to the employee would not be prohibited. I find that a very unattractive result.
46 The physical accommodation was the property of Woodside. It is important to appreciate that the respondent "provided" the Accommodation by paying Woodside for the cost of the Accommodation used by the Relevant Employees. What actually happened on 28 April 2010 when the respondent ceased providing the Relevant Employees with the Accommodation at Searipple Village and Gap Ridge Village was that the respondent stopped making payments to Woodside for the Accommodation for the Relevant Employees. I infer that the respondent informed Woodside that it would not be responsible for paying for this Accommodation for the period of the industrial action in the same vein that it informed the Relevant Employees. The respondent did not prevent the Relevant Employees from staying at Searipple Village or Gap Ridge Village. The evidence was that the respondent, by letter dated 27 April 2010, informed those Relevant Employees living at Searipple Village that failure to vacate that Accommodation would render them liable for the costs of the Accommodation. However, those three Relevant Employees were also informed in the letter that they were at liberty to make their own arrangements with the management at Searipple Village. I was not taken to any similar letter concerning the fourth Relevant Employee, Mr Schwarz, who was living at Gap Ridge Village, Karratha. However, in Mr Schwarz's affidavit sworn 27 September 2010, which was in evidence below, he deposed that on 27 April 2010, Mr Malcolm Robinson, the respondent's Project Manager, at a meeting of all employees taking the protected industrial action gave him a letter which it seems was in the same terms as the letter I have described above albeit referring to Accommodation at Gap Ridge Village. Schwarz further deposed to an exchange which occurred between him and Robinson as follows:
Robinson was acting like he was surprised by the industrial action. The meeting proceeded with words to the effect:
Robinson: "If you go on strike, your accommodation will be removed and you will have to find your own accommodation."
Me: "What about if we still want to stay in camp."
Robinson: "If you want you can talk to Foster Wheeler Worley about staying in the camp, that's got nothing to do with us. But from Mammoet's point of view, we're not providing accommodation and you have to pack up and be out by 6.30am tomorrow.
47 That being so, there is no need to differentiate between the cessation of payment for the Accommodation and payment of an LAHA. Each constitutes the making of a payment for the purposes of s 470(1) of the FW Act. It is, for the same reason, unnecessary to characterise the "operative act", as the respondent submits, as the non-payment of the LAHA as distinct from the removal of provision of the Accommodation.
48 It would be an extraordinary result if, by virtue of s 470(1) FW Act, an employer was prohibited from making payment to its employees of amounts described in the notes to s 323(1) of the FW Act, namely, incentive-based payments and bonuses, loadings, monetary allowances, overtime or penalty rates and leave payments but such prohibition did not extend to payments made for accommodation for those employees during the period of protected industrial action. The amounts described in the notes to s 323(1) reflect the meaning attributed to "full rate of pay" in s 18(1). The Accommodation was provided to enable the employees to be in a position to perform their employment and earn their pay, not for their use whilst on strike. If that was the result, then it would be the respondent and not the employees who carried that cost of the industrial action. As I said, this would serve only to undermine the policy of the provision.
49 I do not consider that the use of the word "payment" in s 471, which concerns partial work bans, assists the appellant's construction. First, s 471 is neither mandatory nor prohibitory in character.
50 Relevantly, s 471(1) provides:
(1) If:
(a) an employee engaged, or engages, in protected industrial action against an employer on a day; and
(b) the industrial action is a partial work ban; and
(c) the employer gives to the employee a written notice stating that, because of the ban, the employee's payments will be reduced by a proportion specified in the notice;
then the employee's payments are reduced in accordance with subsection (2) in relation to the period (the industrial action period) referred to in subsection (5).
51 There is no obvious reason why reduced payments towards provision of accommodation or LAHA could not be made by an Employer. Moreover disputes as to the amount of any such reduction can be resolved by Fair Work Australia under the provisions of s 472 FWA.