SERIOUS QUESTION TO BE TRIED
31 BOC does not dispute that there is a serious question to be tried. There is a slight difficulty in that, although Mr Daccache is seeking an injunction restraining BOC from dismissing him, the fact is that the employment relationship came to an end on 17 March 2020 before the urgent application was made. That delay was explained primarily by complications occasioned due to the difficulties with working since the COVID-19 outbreak. Such a delay, in my view, should not count against the granting of relief. Importantly, s 46PP(1)(a) of the AHRC Act is directed to maintaining 'the status quo, as it existed immediately before the complaint was lodged'. As at that date, on 16 March 2020, the employment relationship had not ended. Further, a similar 'difficulty' was put to one side in Carlsson.
32 However, BOC asserts that it has a strong defence to the claim. It relies upon s 21A of the DDA, which provides an exception if an applicant is unable to carry out the inherent requirements of the particular work, even if reasonable adjustments were to be made. BOC says that it operates in a safety sensitive industry and does not take risks on safety matters. It has acted on the basis of clear and current medical advice that Mr Daccache was not fit to perform his duties, even with any reasonable adjustments at the time his employment was terminated. BOC contends that it is clear that this exception will be made out. Further, there is the prospective application of s 21B on the basis that avoiding the discrimination would impose an unjustifiable hardship on BOC. BOC accepts, however, that ultimately those are matters to be tested in the course of the Commission dealing with the complaint and upon any subsequent hearing under s 46PO and cannot now be determined by the Court.
33 BOC contends that there is no possibility of any breach of the ADA. To be clear, no consideration of any claim under the ADA was advanced or considered in oral argument and this alternative claim does not arise in the course of my reasoning on the grant of interim relief.
34 BOC does contend, however, that damages would be an adequate remedy. The complaint to the Commission seeks reinstatement, together with unspecified 'damages for economic and non-economic loss'. If the matter ultimately results in an application under s 46PO of the AHRC Act, alleging unlawful discrimination, an order may be made requiring the reemployment of Mr Daccache under s 46PO(4)(c) and/or requiring the payment of damages under s 46PO(4)(d). BOC stresses that there is no reason why an order for damages, if made in due course, would not be an adequate remedy for Mr Daccache such that interim reinstatement is unnecessary.
35 BOC also contends that Mr Daccache is not a worker in the category of cases where the Court would, as a matter of common law, contemplate an order for specific performance of an employment contract because of the person's public profile and the need to be seen to continue working. It is submitted for BOC that courts have been traditionally reluctant to order the parties to an employment relationship to continue that relationship, favouring the view instead that the appropriate remedy is in damages: see the discussion in Sappideen C, Macken's Law of Employment, (8th ed, Thomson Reuters, 2016) (at [11.60] and [11.70]) and McIntosh (at [9]). BOC argues that the statutory power to order reinstatement and compensation under s 46PO is a sufficient safeguard for Mr Daccache's interests without warranting the grant of an interim injunction.
36 I will assume for present purposes (without deciding), as in Carlsson, that analysis of whether damages will be an adequate remedy is a consideration in this form of statutory relief. However, an 'adequate remedy' in an employment matter for someone of Mr Daccache's age and skill level is not necessarily something simply measured by money. Such a consideration is exacerbated by the prevailing economic and employment uncertainty that we are currently facing. I accept the contentions for Mr Daccache that the following factors weigh in favour of making the orders sought:
(a) the general personal importance of preserving a connection to employment for workers, particularly low skilled and older workers;
(b) the specific value of such connection to Mr Daccache, a reasonably long serving employee who enjoyed and valued his job;
(c) the particular value of retaining such a connection while the matter is resolved, given the current economic uncertainty;
(d) the forthcoming potential financial benefit for Mr Daccache in terms of access to federal wage subsidies, having regard to the foreshadowed package of Job Keeper legislation passed on the evening following the urgent hearing;
(e) the positive effect the order would have on supporting the complaints resolution process conducted by the Commission;
(f) by keeping the parties on an even playing field while the matter is conciliated (noting that the orders self-expire on termination or withdrawal of the complaint); and
(g) the general public interest in restraining, arguably, unlawful discrimination.
37 An award of damages, if it were to be made, only addresses some of these factors and, in my view, is not the preferable outcome.
38 In the course of the hearing, BOC submitted that much of the material going to the arguable case was irrelevant because BOC admitted the existence of the arguable case. I consider that the strength of the arguable case is important because, as indicated at the outset, a strongly arguable case may not require that the balance of convenience factors be overwhelmingly in favour of an applicant in order for relief to be granted. In my view, on the evidence as it presently stands, and I stress that this is only a provisional view on the basis of the present evidence, the arguable case is reasonably strong.
39 This conclusion is based on the fact that:
(1) Section 5 of the DDA defines direct disability discrimination as including:
(a) s 5(1). treating or proposing to treat a person with a disability less favourably than a person without the disability in circumstances which are not materially different;
(b) s 5(2), failing to make reasonable adjustments for a person with a disability, which failure leads to the person being treated less favourably than a person without the disability in circumstances which are not materially different.
(2) Section 15 of the DDA provides that it is unlawful for employers to discriminate against an employee because of their disability by dismissing them. As with other discrimination cases, the central question is one of causation. Is the real reason or a real reason for the discrimination, the disability: see, for example, the discussion in Purvis v New South Wales (2003) 217 CLR 92 per McHugh and Kirby JJ (at [166] and [169]).
(3) On the present evidence, there is little doubt that:
(a) Mr Daccache has a disability within the meaning of s 4 of the DDA, which includes a perceived disability;
(b) BOC has dismissed him because of that perceived disability; and
(c) given the absence of any other reason has done so in circumstances where it would not have dismissed him without the disability.
40 BOC points out that s 15 of the DDA is subject to the s 21A defence, which provides an exception where the person, because of the disability, would be unable to carry out the inherent requirements of the work, even if reasonable adjustments were made for the person.
41 BOC has made clear that it relies on that defence to Mr Daccache's claim.
42 However, Mr Daccache says:
(a) first, that he is in fact fit to perform the inherent requirements of his job as expressly agreed by his treating orthopaedic surgeon and has also advised that a second medical opinion is forthcoming; and
(b) secondly and in the alternative, any incapacity could be cured by a way of reasonable adjustments in parallel to his claims of discrimination.
43 As to reasonable adjustments, see the discussion in Watts v Australian Postal Corporation (2014) 222 FCR 220 per Mortimer J, where her Honour, after discussing explanatory material (at [16]), said at [18]-[22]):
18 The definition of "reasonable adjustment" is critical to the disposition of the issues in this proceeding. The explanatory material (see Explanatory Memorandum, Disability Discrimination and Other Human Rights Legislation Amendment Bill 2008 (Cth) at [28]-[29], [35] (the 2008 Explanatory Memorandum)) acknowledges the concept of "reasonable adjustments" is drawn from the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities 2007, done at New York on 30 March 2007, although the term in the Convention is "reasonable accommodation". Article 2 of the Convention defines reasonable accommodation in the following terms:
"'Reasonable accommodation' means necessary and appropriate modification and adjustments not imposing a disproportionate or undue burden, where needed in a particular case, to ensure to persons with disabilities the enjoyment or exercise on an equal basis with others of all human rights and fundamental freedoms."
…
20 Although the phrase chosen by the Parliament is slightly different, it is clear that these amendments were made in pursuance of Australia's international obligations under the Convention. If there is a constructional choice, a construction of s 5(2), and those provisions designed to interact with it, which is consistent with those obligations should be preferred, insofar as the text and context otherwise allow: Minister for Immigration and Ethnic Affairs v Teoh (1995) 183 CLR 273 at 287 per Mason CJ and Deane J; Kartinyeri v Commonwealth (1998) 195 CLR 337 at [97] per Gummow and Hayne JJ; Plaintiff M70/2011 v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2011) 244 CLR 144 at [247] per Kiefel J; SZGIZ v Minister for Immigration and Citizenship (2013) 212 FCR 235 at [59].
21 This approach is important when the breadth of the statutory definition of "reasonable adjustment" is considered. Section 4 of the DDA defines "reasonable adjustment" in the following terms:
"an adjustment to be made by a person is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the person."
22 Thus, s 4 has effect as a deeming provision. The word "adjustment" is left undefined by the statute and is to be given its ordinary meaning as "an alteration or modification": Oxford English Dictionary (online edition). However, unlike other aspects of the DDA (see, for example, s 6) the statute does not leave it to the discriminator in the first instance and the Court in the second instance to determine whether an adjustment is "reasonable". Although the word "reasonable" is used, it has no qualitative character in its context. It is simply part of a term defined by legislative declaration of what is outside the term. All that Parliament declares to be outside the term is a modification or alteration which imposes unjustifiable hardship on a person, taking into account the considerations applicable to identifying hardship of that nature, which are set out in s 11 of the DDA.
44 At this preliminary stage, the only evidence is that first, a reasonable adjustment could, if necessary, be made and if necessary by reduction of Mr Daccache's income as he offered and secondly, that BOC rejected that suggestion without apparently giving it any genuine consideration. This is relevant to the strength of the arguable case.
45 Fundamentally relevant also is the degree of disability. I indicated earlier that I would say something about some potential difficulties concerning Dr Silbert's report. The medical evidence on which BOC relied to dismiss Mr Daccache, taken at its highest, does not demonstrate complete unfitness. Rather, Dr Silbert concluded only that Mr Daccache had some restrictions. The possibility of his purported incapacity being able to be overcome with reasonable adjustments by, for example, avoiding the more taxing areas of work, as other employees in his position do, or working part time, does not appear to have been considered at all by BOC. It is not a possibility which may be rejected. BOC has made no apparent enquiry into this, other than by blanket rejection without consideration of proposals advanced by Mr Daccache on 11 February 2020.
46 There is a contest between the parties as to whether any restrictions exist. The factual basis upon which Dr Silbert reached at least some of his conclusions, namely, that Mr Daccache had persistent neck pain and took Tramadol to manage this, are, on the evidence of Mr Daccache, wrong. In any event, the basis for the conclusions reached as to Mr Daccache's restricted capacity are unexplained and appear to be a sharp leap from the conclusions as to his actual physical condition. More specific difficulties are that it is clear, on the evidence, that BOC does not require the lifting of 20 kgs weights, which appears to be the test adopted by Dr Silbert in his report. According to Mr Daccache and the BOC Pre-employment Medical assessment pack, the weights usually required to be lifted are in the order of 5 kgs. More importantly, the problems in the right shoulder/neck adverted to by Dr Silbert do not occasion difficulty to Mr Daccache. A significant reason for this is that Mr Daccache is actually left handed.
47 In contrast to the report from Dr Silbert, Mr Daccache's treating doctor, Dr McCloskey, an orthopaedic spinal specialist, sees no issue at all with Mr Daccache returning to full duties. He identifies that Mr Daccache's work between 2012 and 2018, including the period after his car accident, caused no significant deterioration in his neck, in direct contrast to Dr Silbert's position. It will be recalled that Dr Silbert did not personally physically examine Mr Daccache on Mr Daccache's evidence and did not observe Mr Daccache satisfactorily performing, Mr Daccache says, tests carried out satisfactorily under the supervision of another person. In any event, as I say, BOC accepts there is an arguable case. As I view the evidence on its present weight, the arguable case is reasonably strong.