Were the actions of the CASC and Brookfield Australasia respondents at the Midland project site on 18 July 2013 industrial in character?
133 The relevant respondents submit that the Director has adduced no evidence as to what they did on 18 July 2013, beyond being absent from work.
134 The CASC respondents say there is an imputation that they may have attended a rally, but there is no evidence that they did so. In fact, they say there is no evidence that any of the CASC respondents were even aware that a rally was being organised or held that day. While evidence is given by Mr O'Neill that a meeting was conducted at the site on 16 July 2013 by Mr Joseph McDonald, they say there is no evidence that any of them attended that meeting. Furthermore, they say Mr O'Neill admits that he does not know what was said at that meeting, and that there is also no evidence that any of the relevant respondents were aware of the Facebook post annexed to the affidavit of Mr Stanley dated 29 February 2016 at CRS-2. They also contend there is no evidence that any of the CASC respondents were members of the CFMEU, and note that Mr Used specifically stated that he could give no evidence about what any of the CASC respondents did that day, except to say that they were absent from work.
135 These respondents submit that, in view of the lack of evidence, it is equally open to the Court to conclude that each of the relevant respondents was absent from work because they took action that was not industrial in character. They say the Court simply could not draw an inference as to what the CASC respondents did on 18 July 2013 on the basis of the available evidence.
136 Additionally, they note that Mr Used states that there were no industrial issues or disputes between CASC and the CASC respondents at that time. They say there is therefore no evidence to suggest that their absences from work were in pursuit of any disputation between CASC and the CASC respondents; that is, within the context of the employer/employee relationship to which, they say, the prohibition in s 417(1) is directed.
137 In that respect, these respondents submit that the facts of this proceeding are distinguishable from Adams. In Adams, it was found that it was open to the Court to infer that the employees in that case had attended a rally about pay and conditions of work, or had been motivated by a dispute over whether they would be docked pay due to a late start, and that they had been aware of those disputes.
138 By contrast, these respondents submit, in this case the evidence in relation to the rally on 18 July 2013, is that it concerned a dispute between the CFMEU and John Holland at the Perth Children's Hospital site. They say there is no evidence before the Court that the dispute between the CFMEU and John Holland was known to, or had any relevance to, the CASC respondents. They note that despite extensive video and photographic evidence, no attempt has been made by the Director to identify any of the relevant respondents at the rally. They say there is no evidence in this case that could allow inferences to be drawn in the same manner as in Adams, and that, even if the Court was somehow able to draw the inference that some of the CASC respondents attended the rally, the rally was not industrial in character because it was not a dispute that fell within the bounds of employer/employee disputation.
139 Finally, these respondents say the Director has not given any notice in writing to the CASC respondents under s 98 of the Evidence Act of his intention to adduce or rely on coincidence evidence. Accordingly, they say it is not open to the Court to draw any inference from the fact that each of the CASC respondents were absent from work on the same day. They submit that the evidence must be assessed in relation to each of the CASC respondents separately and individually, paying no regard to the evidence or facts in relation to other respondents.
140 For these reasons, the CASC respondents submit that the Court cannot be satisfied that the actions of the CASC respondents on 18 July 2013 were industrial in character so as to found a contravention of s 417(1).
141 The respondents referred to above as the Brookfield Australasia respondents make similar submissions. They also contend that the Director has failed to prove that they took action that was industrial in character.
142 These respondents say the Director has adduced no evidence as to what they did on 18 July 2013, save for Mr McCullough.
143 They say there is an imputation that they may have attended a rally, but there is no evidence that they did so, save for Mr McCullough.
144 As do the CASC respondents, they say, in view of the lack of evidence, it is equally open to the Court to conclude that each of them was absent from work because they took action that was not industrial in character. They say the Court simply cannot draw an inference as to what they did on 18 July 2013, on the basis of the available evidence.
145 They make the same submissions in relation to Adams as do the CASC respondents.
146 They further contend that even Mr McCullough's attendance at the rally cannot be considered industrial in character because it was not taken in the context of a dispute between him and his employer.
147 Finally, they too say the Director has not given any notice under s 98 of the Evidence Act in relation to coincidence evidence and it is not open to the Court to draw any inference from the fact that each of the Brookfield Australasia respondents were absent from work on the same day or that Mr McCullough attended the rally (except as against him). They submit that the evidence must be assessed in relation to each of them separately and individually, paying no regard to the evidence or facts in relation to other respondents.
148 They submit the Court cannot be satisfied that their actions on 18 July 2013 were industrial in character, so as to found a contravention of s 417(1).
149 The Director, in the case of not only the CASC respondents but also in relation to the employees he describes as the Brookfield Midland respondents, the Brookfield Murdoch respondents, the FCL Midland respondents and the FCL Murdoch respondents, says that each did not attend for work or perform work on 18 July 2013 by reason of, and in the context of there being, that day, the rally conducted by the CFMEU at the Perth Children's Hospital project site.
150 The Director accepts that, with the exception of the first respondent, Mr McCullough, there is no direct evidence that any of the individual respondents attended the rally, or an explanation of why they did not attend for work. Rather, the Director submits that the Court ought to draw an inference that the respondents did not attend for work by reason of, or in the context of, there being the rally. In Mr McCullough's case, it is submitted, he did not attend for work plainly for that reason.
151 The Director refers to the circumstances in which a court can draw an inference as set out by the High Court in Luxton v Vines (1952) 85 CLR 352; [1952] HCA 19; Strong v Woolworths Limited and Another (2012) 246 CLR 182 at [34] (French CJ, Gummow, Crennan and Bell JJ); [2012] HCA 2; and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Metcash Trading Ltd and Another (2011) 198 FCR 297 at [30]-[32] (Buchanan J); [2011] FCAFC 151. In Luxton, Dixon, Fullagar and Kitto JJ said, in relation to drawing inferences in civil proceedings, quoting the High Court's judgment in Bradshaw v McEwans Pty Ltd (1951) 217 ALR 1, at 358:
The difference between the criminal standard of proof in its application to circumstantial evidence and the civil is that in the former the facts must be such as to exclude reasonable hypotheses consistent with innocence, while in the latter you need only circumstances raising a more probable inference in favour of what is alleged. In questions of this sort, where direct proof is not available, it is enough if the circumstances appearing in evidence give rise to a reasonable and definite inference: they must do more than give rise to conflicting inferences of equal degrees of probability so that the choice between them is mere matter of conjecture: see per Lord Robson, Richard Evans & Co. Ltd. v. Astley (footnote omitted). But if circumstances are proved in which it is reasonable to find a balance of probabilities in favour of the conclusion sought then, though the conclusion may fall short of certainty, it is not to be regarded as a mere conjecture or surmise: cf. per Lord Loreburn (footnote omitted).
152 The Director submits that the Court ought infer that each of the individual respondents did not attend for work on 18 July 2013 by reason of, and in the context of there being that day, the rally. This inference, the Director submits, in his written submission, is available to be drawn, and is the more probable inference, by reason of the following factors:
(1) On 16 July 2013, Mr McDonald attended the Midland project site and addressed the employees. Mr McDonald is a senior CFMEU official who later attended the rally.
(2) On 17 July 2013, Mr McCullough had a conversation with Mr O'Neill on the Midland project site during which Mr O'Neill asked Mr McCullough, "what was going on with the rally being held at the children's hospital". In response to being so asked, Mr McCullough told Mr O'Neill that "Dave Noonan is attending and the workers were congregating at 6 am". Mr McCullough also told Mr O'Neill "that the nurse, the nipper and the gateman would be attending site on the 17th to keep the site open for other trades". The Director says this conversation makes it clear that Mr McCullough was of the view that the Midland project site employees would not be attending work on 18 July 2013 by reason of the rally.
(3) Mr McCullough was the CFMEU delegate at the Midland project site, and Branch President of the CFMEU Construction and General Division, Western Australia Divisional Branch. He was in a position of authority and a representative of the construction employees on the Midland project site. The Director says Mr McCullough's views about the site being shut, and why, ought to be given significant weight.
(4) On 17 July 2013, there was on the CFMEU WA's Facebook website, a reference to the rally which included the words: "This Thursday morning July 18th at 6am - all CFMEU members welcome - be there." [emphasis added]
(5) None of the Brookfield Australasia respondents, the FCL Midland respondents, the FCL Murdoch respondents or the CASC respondents attended work at the Midland project site and Murdoch project site that day. The Director says the alternative explanation for all of these employees not attending work by reason of or in the context of the rally, is that, by mere coincidence, none of the respondents happened to attend for work that day for various other reasons. He says this is inherently improbable.
(6) The CFMEU did, in fact, conduct the rally on 18 July 2013. Mr McCullough attended the rally. At the rally, Mr Buchan and Mr Noonan both discussed wages, penalty rates, and safety on John Holland's sites. The Director says these are clearly industrial matters.
153 In oral submissions, counsel for the Director accepted that there was no evidence that any of the respondents, apart from Mr McCullough, was a CFMEU member or that any of them had had regard to the Facebook page referred to in (4) of the preceding paragraph.
154 But the Director submits that the overall inference is strengthened, and can be more confidently drawn, because the individual respondents themselves, who were able to reveal the true nature of the reasons why they did not attend for work, did not give evidence as witnesses in this proceeding, and there was no explanation for their absence. In this regard, the Director relies on the "rule" in Jones v Dunkel and Another (1959) 101 CLR 298; [1959] HCA 68, which can be applied, it is submitted, notwithstanding that this is a civil penalty proceeding. See Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Rich and Another (2009) 236 FLR 1 at [459]-[463]; [2009] NSWSC 1229; Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Universal Music Australia Pty Ltd and Others (2001) 115 FCR 442 at [33]; [2001] FCA 1800; Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (No 5) (ACN 002 594 872) and Another (2009) 264 ALR 201 at [101]; [2009] FCA 1586 (appeal allowed but not on this point); In the matter of Idylic Solutions Pty Ltd - Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Hobbs [2012] NSWSC 1276 at [1535]-[1537]; Chong & Neale v CC Containers Pty Ltd & Ors [2015] VSCA 137 at [206]-[229] (although in this last case, the Court did not have to definitively decide the issue).
155 The Director therefore submits that the Court can be satisfied the reasonable and definite inference (as distinct from conflicting inferences of equal degrees of probability), is that the respondents did not attend for work on 18 July 2013 by reason of, and in the context of there being, that day, the rally. Further, he says the rally was an industrial rally, dealing with industrial issues, thereby giving the failure to attend for work the industrial character referred to in Adams and BHP Coal.
156 The Director rejects the respondents' contention that it is not open to the Court to rely on "coincidence evidence" - to the effect it was no coincidence that the individual respondents failed to attend their workplace on the day of the CFMEU rally.
157 Following closing submissions, the Court invited the parties to make further submissions about the function and effect of s 98 of the Evidence Act, and the coincidence rule, in a case such as the present.
158 Section 98 of the Evidence Act provides:
(1) Evidence that 2 or more events occurred is not admissible to prove that a person did a particular act or had a particular state of mind on the basis that, having regard to any similarities in the events or the circumstances in which they occurred, or any similarities in both the events and the circumstances in which they occurred, it is improbable that the events occurred coincidentally unless:
(a) the party seeking to adduce the evidence gave reasonable notice in writing to each other party of the party's intention to adduce the evidence; and
(b) the court thinks that the evidence will, either by itself or having regard to other evidence adduced or to be adduced by the party seeking to adduce the evidence, have significant probative value.
Note: One of the events referred to in subsection (1) may be an event the occurrence of which is a fact in issue in the proceeding.
(2) Paragraph (1)(a) does not apply if:
(a) the evidence is adduced in accordance with any directions made by the court under section 100; or
(b) the evidence is adduced to explain or contradict coincidence evidence adduced by another party.
Note: Other provisions of this Act, or of other laws, may operate as exceptions to the coincidence rule.
159 The first question that arises is whether s 98(1) has application in the circumstances of this case.
160 Section 98(1), as the text set out above discloses, is concerned with the admissibility of evidence that two or more "events" occurred in order to prove that a person "did a particular act" or "had a particular state of mind" on the basis that, having regard to any similarities in the events or the circumstances in which they occurred, "it is improbable that the events occurred coincidentally".
161 In this case, it seems clear enough, despite the initial submission made on behalf of the Director that there is only one event - namely, the rally - there were, in fact, two or more events - being the failure of all the individual respondents to attend for work on the day the CFMEU had organised the rally.
162 The evidence is, therefore, in respect of "2 or more events".
163 There is no doubt, having regard to the submissions of the Director, that the Director wishes to rely on the similarity of the event of each of the individual respondents in not turning up to work on the same day that the CFMEU had organised the rally to support a finding that this was no coincidence, and that each respondent did not attend work because of the rally; that that was their state of mind in each case.
164 I consider the coincidence rule dealt with by s 98 applies in these circumstances. That means that the evidence sought to be relied on for the purpose of coincidence reasoning, is not admissible unless the provisos in (a) and (b) of s 98(1) of the Evidence Act are satisfied or, so far as (a) is concerned, a direction is made under s 100 or the evidence is adduced to explain or contradict coincidence evidence adduced by the respondents.
165 Proviso (a) requires that the party seeking to adduce the evidence, give reasonable notice to the other party of its intention to adduce the evidence. No formal notice was given in this case, in accordance with reg 6(3) of the Evidence Regulations 1995 (Cth). It is also noted that R 30.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011 (Cth) provides that a notice of intention to adduce evidence under s 98(1) of the Evidence Act must be in accordance with Form 65. No such formal notices were given.
166 However, the Director submits that reasonable notice of his intention to adduce the coincidence evidence for the purposes of s 98(1)(a) was given when one takes together the content of the following documents:
(1) The statement of claim itself, which identifies the allegation that the individual respondents engaged in industrial action within the meaning of the term in s 19 of the Act, which required the absence from work to be "industrial in character".
(2) The affidavit evidence put on by the Director, which set out the evidence of the events and circumstances by which the Director intended to prove the absence from work was industrial in character. The Director conveyed the allegation that the individual respondents were motivated by the rally or by the fact that the rally was being conducted, and this was clear to the respondents. The affidavits, the Director says, included the date, time, place and circumstances of the events.
(3) The Director's opening outline of submissions set out the events, that is, that the individual respondents did not attend for work on 18 July 2013, and that this was one of a number of factors that supported an inference that tended to establish that the individual respondents were motivated by the rally, or the by the fact the rally was on, whether or not they attended it, in not attending for work.
167 The respondents submit that these documents taken individually, or together, do not provide notice of the intention to lead coincidence evidence, for the following reasons:
(1) The statement of claim is pleaded on the basis that "each of" the respondents contravened the Act by engaging in industrial action. While the Director uses categories for simplicity, there is no pleading to the effect that the respondents acted together or in concert. The case is pleaded that "each of" the respondents individually and separately engaged in industrial action. There is no suggestion, the respondents submit, that the Director will rely on the coincidental nature of the respondents' absences for the drawing of any inferences, including about the industrial character of the absences.
(2) The affidavit evidence concerning each respondent's absence from work is admissible against that particular respondent to prove absence from work and there is nothing in the affidavit evidence to indicate the evidence is to be used for a coincidence purpose.
(3) The Director's submission that none of the respondents attended for work, is no more than a submission that links the absence of each respondent to there being a rally on that day. No reference is made to reasoning that would have regard to improbability or coincidence. There was nothing to alert the respondents to an intention by the Director to rely on any particular evidence for a coincidence purpose.
168 In my view, the respondents' submissions concerning whether or not the materials provided prior to the hearing in substance put the respondents on notice of intention to lead the particular coincidence evidence, should be accepted. Nowhere was it explicitly, or in sufficiently unambiguous terms, made clear before the hearing that the Director was wishing to rely on evidence led in order to contend that it was not by coincidence that each of the individual respondents failed to attend work on the relevant day by reason of the holding of the rally. That specific proposition was only put in the written closing submissions of the Director at the conclusion of the cases of the parties.
169 Section 100(2), however, enables the Court, on the application of a party, to direct that the coincidence rule is not to apply to particular coincidence evidence, despite the party's failure to give notice under s 98.
170 Subsection 100(3) makes it plain that the application for this direction may be made "either before or after the time" by which the party would, apart from s 100, be required to give or to have given the notice. That makes it tolerably clear that it is open to the Director after the closing of the evidence to seek the direction. At the hearing of the further submissions concerning the application of s 98 in these proceedings, the Director made that application.
171 Subsection 192(2) of the Evidence Act provides that in deciding whether to grant leave or make a direction under the Evidence Act, the Court is to take into account a range of factors, including the extent to which it would be unfair to a party (para (2)(b)) and the importance of the evidence the subject of the direction (para (2)(c)).
172 It is plain that the probative value of any such evidence must be considered. A lack of probative value is a reason why the Court will not admit coincidence evidence, notwithstanding the satisfaction of para 98(1)(a), by virtue of para 98(1)(b).
173 Also relevant under s 192, is the nature of the proceeding (para (d)) and the power of the Court to adjourn the hearing or to make another order or to give a direction in relation to the evidence (para (e)).
174 In these circumstances, taking into account the probative value of the relevant evidence and the circumstances, I considered it was appropriate to make a direction under s 100(2) of the Evidence Act that the coincidence rule was not to apply to the particular coincidence evidence relied upon by the Director identified above, despite the Director's failure to give notice under s 98.
175 However, para 100(5)(b) requires a direction under that section to be given "either at or before the hearing" (emphasis added). As such, I resumed the hearing on 9 September 2016 in order to make the following orders:
1. I find that s 98 of the Evidence Act 1995 (Cth), that deals with the coincidence rule, applies in the circumstances of this hearing.
2. I find the applicant has not given reasonable notice of intention to adduce coincidence evidence for the purposes of s 98(1)(a) of the Evidence Act, that coincidence evidence being, put generally, that the fact that numerous respondents failed to attend for work on the same day as the rally did not occur by coincidence.
3. The Court, noting that it has the power under s 100(2) of the Evidence Act, on the application of a party, to direct that the coincidence rule is not to apply to particular coincidence evidence despite the party's failure to give notice under s 98, and that under s 100(3) the application may be made either before or after the time by which the party would, apart from this section, be required to give, or to have given, the notice, and noting that the applicant has applied for such a direction at the hearing on 15 August 2016, and that under s 100(5)(b) the direction may be given either at or before the hearing, and noting also that the Court has taken into account in deciding whether to give a direction to the matters set out in s 192(2), directs that the coincidence rule is not to apply to the particular coincidence evidence stated in (2) above, despite the applicant's failure to give notice under s 98.
4. In these circumstances, the hearing will be adjourned pending the election of the respondents to call evidence dealing with the coincidence evidence in question, such election to be notified by a notice of election to be filed in the Court by Friday 30 September 2016.
5. In the event that the respondents elect not to call further evidence in relation to the coincidence evidence, the hearing will be at an end and judgment in the proceeding will be reserved.
6. In the event the respondents elect to call further evidence the hearing will be relisted on a date to be fixed.
176 The respondents elected to not call evidence in light of the direction made under s 100(2).
177 In my view, despite the fact that the relevant Midland CASC employees and Brookfield Australasia employees have not been shown by direct evidence to have been at the rally organised by the CFMEU, or to have read or have been aware of the Facebook encouragement of the CFMEU to attend the rally, or indeed to have been members of the CFMEU, the reasonable, if not irresistible, inference is, in all the circumstances, that the absence from work of each of them is reasonably to be inferred to have been because of the conduct of the rally by the CFMEU on 18 July 2013.
178 On 16 July 2013, Mr McDonald attended the Midland project site and addressed employees. About that there is no dispute. Mr McDonald was a senior CFMEU official and he later attended the rally.
179 Then the next day, 17 July 2013, Mr McCullough had a conversation with Mr O'Neill at the Midland project site during which Mr O'Neill effectively asked Mr McCullough "what was going on with the rally being held at the children's hospital". Mr McCullough said words to the effect that Mr Noonan was attending and the workers were congregating at 6am. He also told Mr O'Neill that the nurse, the nipper and the gateman would be attending site (that is, the Midland project site) on the 18th to keep the site open for other trades. This, in my view, is significant evidence.
180 I accept the submission made by the Director that this conversation makes it clear that Mr McCullough was of the view that the Midland employees, at least, would not be attending work on 18 July 2013 because of the calling and conduct of the rally.
181 At material times, Mr McCullough was the CFMEU delegate at the Midland project site. He was also a Branch President of the CFMEU Construction and General Division, Western Australia Divisional Branch - although I accept it is not proved other respondents knew this at material times. I accept the submission that he was in a position of authority and a representative of the construction employees on the Midland project site. His views about the site being shut, and why, are of significance when it comes to the drawing of an inference concerning the impugned action of relevant respondents at the Midland project site.
182 The rally was then held on 18 July 2013. Mr McCullough attended the rally and not work. At the rally, Mr Buchan and Mr Noonan of the CFMEU both spoke and discussed wages, penalty rates, and safety on John Holland's sites.
183 Given that none of the relevant respondents at the Midland project site attended for rostered work on 18 July 2013, the reasonable inference is open to be drawn that each chose not to attend for their rostered work on 18 July 2013 because of the rally. It is reasonable to add that the absence from work of each of these employees on the day of the rally, when considered in the context of the above evidence, was no coincidence and bolsters the finding that relevant employees were absent from work that day because of the rally. The fact that none of the relevant respondents went into evidence enables the Court more confidently to draw the inference. In this case, I draw the inference.
184 It is not necessary to lay down any hard and fast rules as to what hypothetical actions may or may not be within the proper construction of the expression "industrial action" as it appears in s 19(1) of the Act. As noted above, whether every form of "political strike", as it was envisaged by the Full Bench in the Age case and referred to by the Full Court in BHP Coal, falls within the expression, need not be decided here. What has to be decided here is whether, on the facts of this case, the failure of the relevant Midland respondents to attend rostered work on 18 July 2013, in accordance with the relevant enterprise agreements, had an industrial character to it.
185 I find that, on the material facts led by the Director, the action of the Brookfield Australasia respondents and the CASC respondents at the Midland project site in not attending for work on 18 July 2013, because of the rally, and its nature, was "industrial action".