The application to add CPM Reviews Pty Ltd as a party
67 Following its investigation into the allegations of misconduct made against Mr Dahler, CPM Reviews provided a report to the ACT. A copy of that report was tendered in evidence. The primary judge noted that the report made findings about Mr Dahler's conduct but no recommendations concerning action to be taken against him.
68 CPM Reviews, it will be recalled, was removed as a party on 21 October 2013. Reasons were given orally at the time and, it appears, have never been reduced to writing. Allegations were made about the investigation in the statement of claim. As I have already indicated, the spectre of re-joinder was first raised in the reply, which devoted a little over three pages to the subject of "[a]dding the third respondent". This section of the reply began at para 13. It reads:
As a consequence of and arising from the Statement of Claim and the Defence, the Applicant now names CPM Reviews Pty Limited as the Third Respondent because they were involved in the contraventions of sections 340 and 351 of the Fair Work Act pleaded at paragraph 27 of the Statement of Claim, pursuant to section 550 of the Act. The Applicant claims that the Third Respondent is taken to have contravened sections 340 and/or 351 of the Act because, in the process of conducting an investigation under the 'workplace behaviours' procedures of the Community Services Directorate Enterprise Agreement and producing draft and final reports, they -
(a) aided, abetted and/ or counselled Bronwen Overton- Clarke, Lois Ford and Maureen Sheehan in connection with the termination of the Applicant's employment;
…
(b) were, either directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the decision to terminate the Applicant's employment; and/or
…
(c) conspired with others to effect the termination of the Applicant's employment.
…
69 The passages which are omitted from this extract, designated by the ellipses, contain references to various paragraphs of the statement of claim in which "the facts alleged to constitute [the conduct]" are said to be "described" and to the paragraphs in the defence relating to them.
70 Quite why the pleader thought it appropriate to deal with this issue in this way is a mystery. But after the matter had been set down for interlocutory hearing, the Application in a Case formally seeking the company's joinder was filed. That application was not accompanied by an affidavit which explained the basis for the application, the delay in making it or what had changed since the time the primary judge had removed CPM Reviews as a party (a decision, I hasten to add, which was not the subject of any application for leave to appeal). Nor was the application accompanied by a draft amended statement of claim which would give CPM Reviews and the Court any understanding of the basis of the application. It will be recalled that, despite the Court's order for written submissions, none were filed.
71 The primary judge not only rejected the application, he also ordered that Mr Dahler pay CPM Reviews costs, which he fixed in the sum of $1661 in accordance with Schedule 1 of the Circuit Court Rules.
72 According to his Honour's reasons, Ms Keys made brief oral submissions. He summarised those submissions in this way:
In short, she said that it was a necessary inference from the conclusions in the CPM Reviews Report that adverse action was intended, and would be intended to be taken, against Mr Dahler.
73 His Honour said that he drew Ms Keys's attention to the decision of the Full Court in Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v Clarke (2007) 164 IR 299; [2007] FCAFC 87 ("Clarke") at [26] (Tamberlin, Gyles and Gilmour JJ), where the Court said of the provision relating to accessorial liability in s 4(8) of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth):
Regardless of the precise words of the accessorial provision, such liability depends upon the accessory associating himself or herself with the contravening conduct - the accessory should be linked in purpose with the perpetrators (per Gibbs CJ in Giorgianni v The Queen (1985) 156 CLR 473 at 479-480; see also Mason J at 493 and Wilson, Deane and Dawson JJ at 500). The words "party to, or concerned in" [which appeared in s 4(8)] reflect that concept. The accessory must be implicated or involved in the contravention (Ashbury v Reid [1961] WAR 49 at 51; R v Tannous (1987) 10 NSWLR 303 per Lee J at 307E-308D (agreed with by Street CJ at 304 and Finlay J at 310)) or, as put by Kenny J in Emwest Products Pty Ltd v Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union (2002) 117 FCR 588; 112 IR 388 at [34], must participate in, or assent to, the contravention.
74 His Honour said that Ms Keys did not respond to his invitation to "consider" Clarke or to make any submissions about it and that she did not refer to any relevant authority to support her application.
75 His Honour noted that the conduct of CPM Reviews did not meet the description in s 342 of the FW Act of the circumstances in which it could be said that a person has taken "adverse action" against another. He also held that in producing the report CPM Reviews did not advise, encourage, incite or take any action with intent to coerce the ACT to take adverse action within the meaning of s 362 of the Act. He then referred to the terms of s 550 and to Clarke and said that "mere involvement" was insufficient to "attract" the terms of s 550. His Honour also referred to another Full Court decision (Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v Director, Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate (2012) 209 FCR 448), which concerned s 48 of the Building and Construction Industry Improvement Act 2005 (Cth) and which, unlike s 4(8) of the Workplace Relations Act, was in relevantly identical terms to s 550. The Court held (at [38]) that "the putative accessory must intentionally participate in the contravention and to form the requisite intent he must have knowledge of the essential matters which go to make up the contravention".
76 His Honour noted that nothing had changed since he ordered the removal of CPM Reviews back in October 2013. He described the joinder application as misconceived. He said that nothing in the report suggested any conspiracy between CPM Reviews and any of the respondents or any relevant intent to be involved in any adverse action against Mr Dahler. He also said that nothing in the report suggested that CPM Reviews had aided or abetted the action ultimately taken by the respondents against Mr Dahler. And he noted that Ms Keys confirmed that in neither the originating application nor the statement of claim (nor, for that matter, the reply) was any relief sought against CPM Reviews.
77 It was for all these reasons that his Honour dismissed the application.
78 In substance, this was a decision that the re-joinder application had to be dismissed because the claim as formulated had no reasonable prospects of success.
79 Having regard to the draft notice of appeal, I should add that his Honour referred to a submission by Ms Keys that it was difficult to prepare the matter against CPM Reviews because it was a company and should have been represented by a lawyer. The non sequitur aside, his Honour noted that Ms Brennan, who signed the submissions on behalf of CPM Reviews and, I infer, also appeared for the company on its application to remove it as a party, was a registered legal practitioner, authorised by the company to make the submissions. He described Ms Keys's submission as "improper", being "without legal or factual foundation".
80 The primary judge ordered that Mr Dahler pay the costs of the application because it had been made "without reasonable cause" (s 570(2)(a)) and/or Mr Dahler's "unreasonable act caused [CPM Reviews] to incur the costs" (s 570(2)(b)). In reaching this conclusion, his Honour referred, amongst other things, to the Court's earlier removal of CPM Reviews as a party and the fact that Mr Dahler had never sought (and still did not) seek any relief against CPM Reviews.
81 The alleged errors in the draft notice of appeal dealing with this part of the judgment are:
(1) failing to acknowledge that at the time he removed CPM Reviews as a party he told Mr Dahler he could join the company at a later time (for instance, after pleadings).
(2) taking into account the contents of the report from CPM Reviews when it was "untested 'evidence'"; concluding that CPM Reviews was contracted by the ACT to undertake a review of Mr Dahler's conduct; applying Clarke and requiring Mr Dahler to establish a direct link with the purpose of the perpetrators and participation in or assent to the contravention;
(3) finding that counsel's submissions regarding the representation of CPM Reviews were improper, "such biased error infect[ing] his consideration of their joinder"; and
(4) exceeding his powers under the FW Act to award costs to CPM Reviews, making an order for costs in the absence of an application by CPM Reviews and failing to have regard to whether any costs had actually been incurred.
82 Ms Keys submitted that his Honour erred in applying Clarke and requiring Mr Dahler to establish a direct link with the purpose of the perpetrators. She contended that was only "possible" after evidence had been adduced by the employer perpetrator and any named accessories, and after that evidence had been tested. She submitted that "[a]t a preliminary stage prior to any hearing, the reasons for the adverse action are peculiarly within the knowledge of the employer (and accessories) and consequently an employee/applicant is not required to establish a 'direct link' between the claimed reasons and the adverse action - it is sufficient if an applicant employee proves the existence of objective facts which are said to provide a basis for the adverse action [see Rojas v Esselte Australia Pty Ltd (No. 2) [2008] 177 IR 306 at [49] to [51]; and the statutory presumption embodied in section 361 of the Fair Work Act.]"
83 These submissions must be rejected. They are based, in part, on the misconception that the presumption in s 361 applies to accessorial liability under s 550. I interpolate that Mr Dahler did not rely on s 362. As Gilmour J observed in Fair Work Ombudsman v Offshore Marine Services Pty Ltd (No 2) [2013] FCA 943 at [156], the statutory presumption only applies to cases of direct liability, that is to say, where it is alleged in an application that a person took (or is taking) action for a particular reason or with a particular intent in contravention of Pt 3-1 of the FW Act. To succeed on his application Mr Dahler needed to persuade the Circuit Court that he had, at least, a reasonably arguable case that the company contravened the FW Act. To do that, in respect of each or any of the bases upon which it would be alleged that CPM Reviews was involved in the adverse action taken by Mr Dahler's employer, he needed to identify the basis upon which it would be put that CPM Reviews had the intention and/or knowledge which s 550 calls for. As a company has no mind of its own, he had to identify the person or persons whose conduct was to be attributed to the company: Fair Work Ombudsman v Offshore Marine Services Pty Ltd (No 2) at [157]. Nowhere in any of the documents before the court or in argument was there mention of the individual or individuals whose conduct was sought to be impugned. It was also necessary for Mr Dahler to identify with precision the particular acts of the individual(s) concerned which would be relied upon to make out a case under each or any paragraph of s 550. That was never done either. The references in the reply to paragraphs of the statement of claim were references to the conduct of the ACT, not CPM Reviews.
84 As for the other matters raised by the draft notice of appeal, it is neither here nor there that the primary judge may have indicated in October 2013 that it was open to Mr Dahler to apply to the court to add CPM Reviews at a later stage. Before he could do so, he had to be able to show that he had a reasonably arguable case against the company. He did not. He also had to show that something had changed since the company had been removed as a party. He did not do that either. Ms Keys denied that she confirmed to the court that she did not seek any relief against CPM Reviews but her denial was not accepted by CPM Reviews. As I was not taken to the transcript of argument, I am not prepared to accept that the primary judge erred in this respect.
85 I do not see why it was not open to the primary judge to have regard to the report of CPM Reviews for the purpose for which he did so.
86 The observation that Ms Keys's submission about CPM Reviews not being represented by a lawyer was "improper" is not indicative of bias against anyone, least of all Mr Dahler. Ms Keys claimed that she did not know that Ms Brennan was a lawyer. But it seems tolerably clear from his Honour's reasons that Ms Brennan had told the court on more than one occasion that she was a registered legal practitioner. In that event, the submission could fairly be described as improper in that it was made without any proper foundation and contrary to what Ms Keys actually knew or, at least, should have known. Even if Ms Keys honestly believed that Ms Brennan was not a lawyer, I fail to see how that could explain any difficulty Ms Keys had in preparing a case against CPM Reviews.
87 There is no reason to doubt the correctness of the primary judge's decision on the question of the joinder of CPM Reviews.
88 Finally, there is the question of the costs order.
89 There is no substance in the notion that the primary judge lacked the power to make an order for costs in the absence of an application from CPM Reviews. There was in fact an application. It was made in CPM Reviews's written submissions, as Ms Keys acknowledged in oral argument. In any case, the court's power to make a costs order is not dependent on an application. Where the Circuit Court Rules in a particular case are insufficient, that court is entitled to apply the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) in whole or in part and modified as necessary: FCCR, r 1.05(2). Rule 1.40 of the Federal Court Rules gives the court the power at any stage of a proceeding to exercise a power mentioned in the rules on its own initiative.
90 The proposition that there is no evidence that any costs were incurred must also be rejected. CPM Reviews filed written submissions.
91 As to the question of the power to make the costs order, r 21.02(2)(a) of the Circuit Court Rules enables the court to set the amount of the costs. In any case, unless the court otherwise orders, a party entitled to costs in a proceeding (other than one to which the Bankruptcy Act applies) is entitled to costs in accordance with Parts 1 and 2 of Schedule 1: FCCR, r 21.10. Schedule 1 provides for a sum of $1,661 for an interim hearing. Presumably this is the source of the figure his Honour fixed upon. It is a fair inference that he set the sum to avoid any future argument.
92 Nevertheless, it is arguable that the primary judge did exceed his powers in this respect and that there is therefore doubt about the correctness of his Honour's decision to award costs to CPM Reviews. As Ms Keys pointed out, s 570 only refers to costs incurred by a party. At the time the order was made CPM Reviews was not a party. Ms Brennan, who appeared for CPM Reviews by leave before me, submitted otherwise. Her submissions, however, were unpersuasive. First, she relied upon authority for the proposition that the word "proceedings" should be given a broad meaning. That is beside the point. The question is what the word "party" means. Second, she referred to the statement on this Court's website that "parties" refer to "people involved in a court case". How that statement could affect the meaning of the term "party" in the FW Act was not explained.
93 The general power the Circuit Court has to award costs (contained in s 79 of the Federal Circuit Court of Australia Act 1999 (Cth)) is not limited to costs incurred by a party, but s 79(1) provides that the section does not apply to proceedings in relation to a matter arising under the FW Act.
94 Yet, I would not grant leave to appeal on this ground because I am not satisfied that any substantial injustice would result if leave were refused and the decision were wrong. I have formed that opinion for two reasons. First, the injustice adverted to was that Mr Dahler was impecunious and unable to meet a costs order at this stage. Assuming that to be a relevant injustice, interlocutory costs are not ordinarily payable immediately. Rule 21.02(1)(d) of the Circuit Court Rules enables the court to set a time for payment of the costs, which may be before the proceeding is concluded. Second, Ms Brennan gave an undertaking to the Court on behalf of the company not to enforce the costs order until the substantive application was disposed of.
The application to strike out parts of the applicant's statement of claim and reply
95 I referred above to the respondents' application to strike out large parts of the statement of claim. It was made by an Application in a Case filed on 18 March 2014, five days after the statement of claim had been filed and four days after the primary judge ordered that a defence be filed. The application to strike out the reply was made orally at the interlocutory hearing on 21 July 2014.
96 The primary judge held that r 16.02 of the Federal Court Rules was applicable in this case: FCCR, r 1.05(3).
97 Rule 16.02 states:
Content of pleadings - general
(1) A pleading must:
(a) be divided into consecutively numbered paragraphs, each, as far as practicable, dealing with a separate matter; and
(b) be as brief as the nature of the case permits; and
(c) identify the issues that the party wants the Court to resolve; and
(d) state the material facts on which a party relies that are necessary to give the opposing party fair notice of the case to be made against that party at trial, but not the evidence by which the material facts are to be proved; and
(e) state the provisions of any statute relied on; and
(f) state the specific relief sought or claimed.
(2) A pleading must not:
(a) contain any scandalous material; or
(b) contain any frivolous or vexatious material; or
(c) be evasive or ambiguous; or
(d) be likely to cause prejudice, embarrassment or delay in the proceeding; or
(e) fail to disclose a reasonable cause of action or defence or other case appropriate to the nature of the pleading; or
(f) otherwise be an abuse of the process of the Court.
(3) A pleading may raise a point of law.
(4) A party is not entitled to seek any additional relief to the relief that is claimed in the originating application.
(5) A party may plead a fact or matter that has occurred or arisen since the proceeding started.
98 The respondents submitted below that the critical issue in a case such as this is whether there is a causal nexus between the termination of the employee's employment and one or more of the alleged prohibited reasons for termination. They referred to authorities said to support the proposition that an inquiry into the validity of the steps leading to dismissal was not authorised. Consequently, they argued that the alleged facts concerning the process of investigation into Mr Dahler's conduct were not material and therefore offended r 16.02(1)(d). They submitted that sub-paras 28(a) and (b) which contained allegations that the investigation or report of CPM Reviews was "not impartial", "biased" or "improper" were evasive and embarrassing, stating conclusions, not facts. They also submitted that numerous other matters in the statement of claim were also not material because they did not relate to the critical issue. Others offended r 16.02(1)(a) because they were not divided into separate paragraphs each dealing with a separate matter. Others unnecessarily stated evidence or the terms of documents contrary to rr 16.02(1)(d) and 16.04. Full particulars of these matters appear in the respondents' written submissions below. Overall, the respondents submitted that the pleadings were prolix, evasive and embarrassing and did not give the respondents fair notice of the case they had to meet, contrary to rr 16.02(1)(b) and (d) and 16.02(2)(2)(c) and (d). As a result of all these defects, the respondents submitted that the pleadings amounted to an abuse of process and caused them prejudice in having to obtain instructions about, and plead to, "unnecessary matters" and in being unable to disentangle the material from the immaterial facts and evidence.
99 The respondents also submitted that, for various reasons, the reply was improperly pleaded.
100 His Honour accepted these submissions. He also held that the statement of claim and the reply were "replete with detailed matters of evidence", "prolix to a very significant degree" and also embarrassing because of their lack of clarity. For these reasons he ordered that paragraphs 1-6, 10-15, 18 and 21-28 of the statement of claim, and the whole of the reply, be struck out and that the statement of claim and reply be re-pleaded to comply with r 16.02 of the Federal Court Rules.
101 In the draft notice of appeal Mr Dahler alleges that the primary judge erred in striking out the various paragraphs of the statement of claim on the ground that the statement of claim was "replete with detailed matters of evidence" ("the finding") and when the respondents had filed a defence and after he had filed a reply. He contends that the finding was not "a fair reading of the Statement of Claim".
102 There is no merit in this ground. As I have already indicated, the finding was not the only reason his Honour gave. Furthermore, his Honour's decision was entirely justified. Indeed, had I been the primary judge I would have struck out the whole of the statement of claim with the reply.
103 Both the statement of claim and the reply reflect a lack of understanding of the basic rules of pleading.
104 The purpose of pleadings is to identify the issues and to give the other party or parties "fair notice" of the case they have to meet: Barclays Bank v Boulter [1999] 1 WLR 1919 at 1923 (Lord Hoffman). Pleadings also provide the parameters against which questions about the admissibility of evidence can be decided.
105 The obligation of the pleader is to state the material facts. That does not mean all the facts or all the relevant facts. A fact is material if it is essential to the cause of action. The expression refers to the fact or combination of facts that give rise to a right to sue: Do Carmo v Ford Excavation Pty Limited (1984) 154 CLR 234 at 245 per Wilson J. The applicant's pleadings did not plead material facts, nor was it as brief as the nature of the case permitted. The statement of claim was discursive. It offended the rule about pleading facts, not evidence. The primary judge was correct to describe it as "replete with detailed matters of evidence". Numerous paragraphs contained detailed extracts from correspondence. No attempt was made to summarise the effect of the correspondence or to relate it to one of the elements of the cause of action. Nor was any made to plead the material facts. Many of the allegations were peripheral to the cause of action. Where inessential facts are pleaded, they are liable to be struck out as prejudicial and embarrassing to the fair trial of the action: Bernard Cairns, Australian Civil Procedure, 10th edition, LawBook Co, 2014 ("Cairns"), [6.180]. The observations that Dawson J made in East West Airlines (Operations) Ltd v Commonwealth of Australia (1983) 49 ALR 323 at 326 ("East West") could equally have been made in the present case:
[E]ven if the statement of claim discloses a cause of action, it does so only in the course of pleading immaterial facts which at best are merely evidentiary and at worst are not relevant at all. The fair trial of the action would be delayed if the defendants were required to plead to these allegations and if other interlocutory procedures could be directed to them. There are also…matters pleaded which are embarrassing in that they are not susceptible of being pleaded to by the defendants.
106 In East West paras 10-46 of the statement of claim was struck out, though not all the paragraphs were objectionable. Dawson J considered it was undesirable to try to "sift out" the necessary parts from the unnecessary and embarrassing passages.
107 One of the many difficulties presented by the statement of claim in the present case is the rolled-up way the two principal contentions giving rise to the claim for relief are dealt with. And it is not until para 27 that the allegation of adverse action emerges. That follows a lengthy narrative about Mr Dahler's work history with the ACT and a verbatim account of the contents of various items of correspondence which will presumably be tendered at the hearing.
108 Paragraph 27 reads:
The applicant was therefore dismissed from his employment with effect from close of business on 31 May 2013 ('adverse action') because of -
(a) his role or responsibility and/ or participation in a 'workplace behaviours' process under the Community Services Directorate Enterprise Agreement 2011-2013 (a workplace right), in contravention of section 340 of the Fair Work Act; and/ or
(b) his responsibilities as a carer (the attribute) in contravention of section 351 of the Fair Work Act.
109 This paragraph includes several allegations: that the appellant was dismissed, that the dismissal constituted adverse action, and that the dismissal was because of one or both of the reasons given.
110 Each of these matters should have been pleaded in separate paragraphs to enable the respondent to admit or deny them: r 16.02(1)(a). Furthermore, it was incumbent on Mr Dahler to identify the particular aspect of s 340(1) he was relying on. It was also necessary for him to plead the basis for his allegation that he had or had exercised a workplace right (in other words the particular aspect of s 341(1) he was relying on). These matters should have been clearly and succinctly stated in the statement of claim. They were not.
111 A pleading in the current form invites a simple denial which assists no-one. Fortunately the ACT did not respond in this way. But its defence and the lengthy reply demonstrate that it apparently misunderstood the critical allegations. For example, in its defence the respondents denied that Mr Dahler was a carer of a client in the place where he worked. In the reply, Mr Dahler contended that the respondents had wrongly assumed that his case was that his responsibilities as a carer were towards a family member. Similarly, in the reply Mr Dahler quarrelled with the respondents' understanding of that part of his claim based upon his asserted workplace right. That is unlikely to have happened if the case had been properly pleaded in the first place.
112 Another difficulty with the statement of claim is reflected in para 4:
At the same time, similar allegations were made concerning the conduct of the Burn House supervisor, Jan Pfitzner, and Bernie Roveta, and in separate actions, both Ms Pfitzner and Mr Roveta were suspended from duty at Burn Group House, pending an investigation being conducted by CPM Reviews.
113 The relevance of this matter to the appellant's cause of action is obscure. At best it is an indication that the appellant may seek to rely on tendency evidence. There is no place for an allegation like this in the statement of claim. It was rightly struck out.
114 The contention that the primary judge erred in making the order after the pleadings had closed and the case had been listed for trial goes to the exercise of the primary judge's discretion. Ms Keys did not point to any basis upon which it could be said that the discretion miscarried. Nor did she advert to the relevant principles set out in House v The King (1936) 55 CLR 499 which govern appellate interference with discretionary decisions.
115 In all these circumstances, there is no prospect of Mr Dahler establishing appealable error with respect to the decision to strike out the various paragraphs of the statement of claim.
116 Although Mr Dahler does not seek to appeal the decision to strike out the reply, some brief observations are called for. The reply was a misnomer. It was a submission, not a pleading. It was argumentative. It took issue with the defence. It also included the proposal to add CPM Reviews as a respondent. To the extent that it took issue with the defence, it was unnecessary. "Allegations in the defence are in issue by force of the defence": Cairns at [6.60]. The back-door proposal to add CPM Reviews via the reply was both ill-conceived and inappropriate.
117 Even if there were any merit in the draft grounds of appeal referable to this particular interlocutory application, I would refuse leave to appeal this part of the judgment. That is because the primary judge granted the applicant leave to re-plead. In those circumstances no substantial injustice could conceivably arise if leave were refused.