Implied term
59 The applicant pleads in [61] that it is implied into cl 43.18 of the 2018 UTS Enterprise Agreement, insofar as it applies between the applicant and the respondent, that terms as per those referred to in [60.1] and [60.2] applied because they "… are necessarily or properly implied by the language used in [cl 43.18] (in the context of the 2018 UTS Enterprise Agreement as a whole); were necessary for the reasonable and effective operation of the 2018 UTS Enterprise Agreement and [cl 43.18] in the circumstances of the case; or alternatively because those terms:
(a) Were in all circumstances reasonable and equitable;
(b) Were necessary to give business efficacy to [cl 43.18] or for the reasonable or effective operation of [cl 43.18];
(c) Are so obvious that it "goes without saying";
(d) Are capable of clear expression; and
(e) Do not contradict the express terms of the 2018 UTS Enterprise Agreement.
60 To that extent, the applicant pleads the requirements for the application of a term into a contract identified by Lord Simon of the Privy Council in BP Refinery (Westernport) Pty Ltd v Shire of Hastings (1977) 180 CLR 266, 282-283. The second requirement referred to by the applicant relating to business efficacy does not reflect accurately what his Lordship said, which was that for a term to be implied, amongst other things, "it must be necessary to give business efficacy to the contract so that no term will be implied if the contract is effective without it".
61 Further, on the issue of business efficacy, in Codelfa Construction Pty Ltd v State Rail Authority of New South Wales [1982] HCA 24; (1982) 149 CLR 337, 345-346 Mason J observed that the implication of a term is one which it is presumed parties would have agreed upon had they turned their minds to it such that the deficiency in the expression of the consensual agreement is caused by the failure of the parties to direct their minds to a particular eventuality and to make explicit provision for it.
62 It is against that background the respondent submits that it is not the role of courts to import or imply terms into an enterprise agreement. In the context of an award, Madgwick J in Kucks v CSR Ltd (1996) 66 IR 182, 184 observed that a court is not free to give effect to some anteriorly derived notion of what would be fair or just, regardless of what has been written into the award, and that deciding what an existing award means is a process quite different from deciding what might fairly be put into an award.
63 On that basis, the respondent submits that the construction of an enterprise agreement is not undertaken on the footing it is some form of bargain between agreeing parties but rather on the basis that an enterprise agreement has a legislative character: Toyota Motor Corporation Australia Ltd v Marmara [2014] FCAFC 84; (2014) 222 FCA 152, [88]-[89] (Jessup Tracey and Perram JJ); Australian Licensed Aircraft Engineers Association v Qantas Airways Ltd [2022] FCAFC 50, [28] (Besanko, Bromberg and Wheelahan JJ).
64 The applicant relies on Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union v Skilled Engineering Ltd [2003] FCA 260 and McAleer v University of Western Australia (No 3) [2008] FCA 1490; (2008) 171 FCR 499, [102]-[106] (Siopis J) and submits it remains arguable that a term may be implied into a certified/enterprise agreement either on contractual principles or otherwise.
65 I do not accept that submission insofar as it is directed at implication of terms on contractual principles. In Australian Licence Aircraft Engineers Association, Besanko J, with whom Bromberg and Wheelahan JJ agreed, said: at [28], [29]:
28 The Full Court of this Court observed in Transport Workers' Union of Australia v Coles Supermarkets Australia Pty Ltd [2014] FCAFC 148; (2014) 245 IR 449 (TWU v Coles) that, although the observations in Kucks were made in dealing with the construction of awards, they apply equally to industrial agreements subject to one additional observation. Enterprise agreements are agreements in name only and their construction should not proceed on the premise that they are a form of bargain between agreeing parties (TWU v Coles at [40]; Toyota Motor Corp Australia Ltd v Marmara [2014] FCAFC 84; (2014) 222 FCR 152 at [88]-[89]). In other words, because of the circumstances in which they are made and the consequences of contravention (i.e., penal consequences for contravention: s 50 of the FW Act), enterprise agreements have a legislative character.
29 The main guides to construction are text, context and purpose and there is utility in bearing in mind the facts as they are known at the time the instrument is drafted (Amcor Limited v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2005] HCA 10; (2005) 222 CLR 241 at [2] per Gleeson CJ and McHugh J; at [30] per Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ; at [64] and [96] per Kirby J; at [129]-[131] per Callinan J; TWU v Coles at [46]; see also Herzfeld P and Prince T, Interpretation (2nd ed, Lawbook Co, 2020) at [16.160] et seq)
66 The applicant submits that the pleading should stand as the law on the implication of a term of an enterprise agreement is unsettled. I do not accept that submission. There are at least three decisions of the Full Court of this Court which proceed on the basis that enterprise agreements have a legislative character; that they are agreements in name only; and their construction should not proceed on the premise they are a form of bargain between agreeing parties. Once that position is reached, the statement by Mason J in Codelfa Construction, to which I have referred above, excludes any possibility of a term being implied into an enterprise agreement on contractual principles.
67 Accordingly, I do not consider the claim for a term to be implied into the 2018 UTS Enterprise Agreement based on contractual principles is arguable and if pleaded is likely to be struck out. Accordingly, I am not prepared to grant leave to plead the implication of terms into cl 43.18 on that basis.
68 The applicant submits further that independently of contractual implications, the applicant's claim under the Enterprise Agreement is not limited to the implication of terms in the sense that at [63] it alleges a breach of cl 43.18 by the respondent failing to offer the applicant further employment. That is a pleading based upon the applicant's construction of the clause and is one which, subject to what I have said above about [60], I would be prepared to allow.