The arrival on site - an invitation to enter
16 The events which preceded 6 June 2013 assume marginal relevance - but should briefly be mentioned.
17 The Respondents do not rely upon these preceding events as the basis for the "invitation" which they contend had been extended to Messrs Bragdon and Kong to enter the site. Nevertheless, these events do have some relevance to the extent to which the concerns over safety that Messrs Bragdon and Kong later expressed were soundly based in fact.
18 It is sufficient to trace events back to 31 May 2013 when Mr Vicente arrived on site as an organiser of the CFMEU. The Abigroup Safety Co-ordinator, Mr John Campanaro, met Mr Vicente and introduced him to Mr Tozer, the Abigroup Project Manager. A complaint had been made about the way form tables were being moved on site with the use of forklifts. This problem, however, had already been noticed and instructions had been issued the previous day to address the problem.
19 Messrs Campanaro, Vicente and Tozer moved onto the site and observed the movement of the form tables. Mr Vicente expressed his satisfaction with the procedures now being implemented.
20 On 4 June 2013 there were a number of meetings. Mr Vicente was invited to attend. Members of a safety committee were elected. Mr Gregoriou was appointed as the health and safety representative. A number of related documents were apparently thereafter signed in the main office of Abigroup on site by Mr Gregoriou and Mr Tozer. After these documents had been signed, Mr Vicente showed Mr Campanaro a 200-page document titled "Work Health & Safety - Training Courses - Entry Permit Holder". That document, later referred to by Mr Vicente as his "bible" regarding industrial rights, was indeed a detailed document. With reference to the need for an entry permit holder to "not delay, hinder or obstruct any person or disrupt work", the document stated in part as follows:
Court and tribunal decisions dealing with similar prohibitions under industrial relations and occupational health and safety laws have found an entry permit holder had contravened the right of entry provisions of the now repealed Commonwealth Workplace Relations Act 1996 by intentionally and unreasonably hindering and obstructing persons from carrying out concrete pouring at the workplace.
A little later, when addressing the need for a permit holder to act reasonably, the document further provided as follows:
… Relevant considerations in determining whether or not the disruption caused by the entry would be unreasonable could include:
• Whether the consultations would disrupt the whole or a substantial part of the work. For example, consultation with all workers at a workplace at the same time, in particular if the PCBU has put forward alternative arrangements which enable consultation to occur in a staged manner which minimises or eliminates disruption to work.
• Whether the consultations will impact on time critical work (e.g. concrete pours), particularly busy working periods (e.g. a bank at lunch time) or result in failure to meet contractual deadlines (e.g. the dispatch and delivery of a product).
21 On 5 June 2013 Mr Vicente again visited the site and an inspection was carried out in the company of Mr Wagstaff (the Site Manager) and Mr Gregoriou. A number of issues were noted and addressed. But no concern was expressed by Mr Vicente during that inspection and, in particular, no concern was expressed in respect to an issue which was later to assume significance - namely, a concern with the stretcher stairs from the car-park.
22 Although there emerged some suggestion that a "standing invitation" to enter the site may have been extended during one or other of these meetings to enter the site, Messrs Bragdon and Kong during submissions shunned any such suggestion.
23 The invitation relied upon is said to have been extended upon their arrival on site on 6 June 2013. The conduct thereafter - including the absence of any request that they leave the site - is said to be only consistent with the invitation to enter the site never being withdrawn.
24 Of central importance to the invitation relied upon is the following conversation between Mr Campanaro and Mr Vicente immediately upon their arrival. Mr Vicente introduced Mr Bragdon and Mr Kong - but Mr Campanaro did not then "catch" Mr Kong's name. It was only after they had left the site that Mr Campanaro learnt of his identity. It was nevertheless after the introductions that the following conversation occurred:
Vicente : "They've come to look at the site."
Campanaro: "OK, Tony you know that Abigroup has a policy about PPE on site. Do you have safety gloves and glasses?"
Mr Bragdon and Mr Kong stated that they had gloves but did not have gloves. The conversation continued:
Campanaro : "Ok that's fine, just stay here (in the car park) and I'll get you some gloves and we'll walk in (to the site) together."
Mr Campanaro maintained that they all agreed. Mr Campanaro then left them and went to the site office which is adjacent to the car park to collect some safety gloves
25 "PPE" is a reference to "personal protective equipment". In the present case, that included safety goggles and gloves. "Most builders", according to Mr Vicente, "use … safety goggles and gloves…". That was, he said, "a reasonable safety requirement". Mr Campanaro repeated in cross-examination that he was "content for them - subject to having PPE - [to] go on site and have a look around". Neither during that conversation, nor at any other point of time during their visit, did Mr Campanaro ask them to produce any entry permit or ask them to leave the site. Mr Campanaro also agreed that Messrs Bragdon and Kong had been asked by Mr Tozer to go to a meeting.
26 Given the importance sought to be attached by Messrs Bragdon and Kong to their being on site pursuant to an "invitation", it is perhaps curious that neither gave their own account of what was said upon their arrival. Perhaps they were content to rely upon the account given by Mr Campanaro. The most detailed reference given by either of these union representatives, being that of Mr Bragdon, was as follows in his re-examination:
Finally, you said in your evidence a number of times that you were invited on site. Who invited you onto the site? -- My memory serves me correct, it would have been the PM or - or the leading foreman on the site. I don't recall his name.
"PM" is a reference to the Abigroup Project Manager, Mr Tozer. It is also perhaps curious that it was put to neither Mr Campanaro nor Mr Tozer that either had "invited" Messrs Bragdon and Kong onto the site.
27 But such was the evidence of the "invitation" relied upon.
28 It is difficult to characterise this conversation as an "invitation" for Messrs Bragdon and Kong to enter the site. But Mr Campanaro unquestionably gave them permission to do so - provided they complied with the Abigroup policy of wearing personal protective equipment. It is also the case that they should also have waited for somebody from Abigroup to escort them onto the site. Although Mr Vicente was probably seeking to distance himself from the decision made by Messrs Bragdon and Kong to enter the site, it is reasonably apparent from the following exchange with his cross-examiner that Mr Vicente thought Messrs Bragdon and Kong should have waited for Mr Campanaro to return:
They should have waited, shouldn't they? -- As I said, their decision. I was with them and I wait in there as I walk into the first --
But they went straight into the site without the protective equipment, correct? -- That's correct.
They went straight into the site without any accompaniment from a management person from Abigroup, correct? -- Went upstairs, yes, correct.
Now, that was incorrect, I think you said, of them to do - to go unaccompanied, correct? --No, I'm not saying that. Just we wait on the gate and they went upstairs.
They should have waited for Mr Campanaro to return with the safety gear, correct? -- As I said, their decision. He should and he went upstairs with .....
And they should have waited for Mr Campanaro so he could take them upstairs, correct? -- Or somebody else.
Or somebody else. It's a building site they've never been to, correct? -- That's correct.
They've got no idea of the risks on the site, do they? -- Well ..... organisers and went upstairs and I was downstairs near the gate. As I'm walking near the first aid shed, I do recall on that.
And it was certainly not the intention of Mr Campanaro that Messrs Bragdon and Kong were to enter the site without more - but their entry whilst Mr Campanaro was securing some personal protective equipment precluded more being said. In his cross-examination, it was Counsel for Messrs Bragdon and Kong who elicited the following responses from Mr Campanaro:
We're talking about when you were in the car park you've been introduced to Bragdon and the other gentleman, whose name you can't recall catching, and you said to them, or you said in answer to some questions I asked you, were you quite content for them to go on site, and I think you said yes or words to that effect. Do you recall that? -- Yes, I did.
You did not say to the three gentlemen or to Mr Vicente that you were only content for them to go on site if Mr Vicente was with them, did you? -- No, what I wanted to actually say was that if they were to stay there and waited for me to get the PPE with them, I would have been with them.
29 It is concluded that there was no "invitation" or "permission" extended to either Mr Bragdon or Mr Kong to enter the site without wearing such equipment and to enter except accompanied by an Abigroup employee.
30 But that, perhaps, matters not.
31 What remains important to the case being advanced on behalf of the Respondents is the fact that Mr Campanaro did not require either Mr Bragdon or Mr Kong to produce an entry permit at the outset and did not require them to exercise any statutory right of entry.
32 Even if it were concluded that Mr Campanaro extended an unconditional "invitation" to enter the site at the outset, the facts quickly changed.