THE ELLIOTT MEMORANDUM
161 Mr Robert Elliott was the National Secretary of the HSU between 1996 and 2002. In 2005 he became an employee of the Victoria No 1 Branch. Between 2007 and 2010 he worked for the Victoria No 3 Branch as a consultant.
162 In early 2010 the proposed merger between the New South Wales Branch and the Victoria No 1 and No 3 Branches was in contemplation. Branch officials from each of these Branches had gathered in Sydney. On 25 February 2010 the Branch Committees of Management of the New South Wales Branch and the Victoria No 3 Branch endorsed the merger.
163 In the course of that day Mr Elliott told Mr Williamson that he (Mr Elliott) needed to be "looked after" following any merger. Mr Elliott said he wanted a contract to work for the new HSU East Branch. He wanted to be paid $150,000 per year. Mr Williamson responded that it was too late for such a contract to be entered into because all the branches had voted to merge. Mr Elliott then told Mr Williamson that the Victoria No 1 Branch Committee of Management was yet to vote and that the members of that Committee would not vote on the merger until Mr Elliott had been "looked after". Mr Williamson reluctantly agreed to enter into a contract but made it a condition that Ms Jackson had also to sign on behalf of the Union. What became known as the "Elliott Memorandum" was quickly prepared and executed.
164 The manner in which the agreement was prepared, negotiated and signed is not entirely clear. At some time, later on 25 February 2010 a written agreement was prepared. Ms Jackson deposed that, as she was passing Mr Williamson's office on that day, he called her in and invited her to sign the document. She read, considered and signed it within five minutes. She said that she thought, at the time, that she was signing as a witness.
165 The contract was termed a "Memorandum of Agreement". It identified the parties as being Mr Elliott and the Union. It recited that they intended to create a binding legal agreement between them. The terms of that agreement were:
"Term of agreement
1. This agreement shall commence on the coming into effect of the HSU Branch created by the amalgamation of the Victoria No 1, Victoria No 3 and NSW branches of the HSU (HSU East") and will operate for 4 years from the date.
Salary and superannuation
2. Rob Elliott shall be employed by the HSU at an initial annual salary of $150,000 per year
3. On the 1st October of each year that the agreement is in operation the annual salary paid shall be adjusted by a percentage amount equivalent to the consumer price index change for the preceding year to the 30th June.
4. The HSU shall pay a sum equivalent to 9% of Rob Elliott's salary to a superannuation fund nominated by him.
Nomination to HESTA Board
5. The HSU shall continue to nominate Rob Elliott to be one of the HSU's nominee directors to the board of the Health Employees Superannuation Trust of Australia ("HESTA"). Rob Elliott shall retain all and any directors' fees or associated payments paid in respect to his role as HESTA director.
Duties
6. Rob Elliott is employed to provide strategic and policy advice, counsel and support and consultancy to HSU East on:
• National health and community services policy issues
• Superannuation matters and retirement incomes policy
• Corporate governance and rules matters
• National industrial relations policies and direction
Accumulated entitlements
7. Rob Elliott shall be credited all unused sick leave and annual leave accumulated in his employment with the Victorian Nos 1 and 3 branches since his resignation from the position of National Secretary of the HSU. Additionally Rob Elliott shall be credited with 1.71 weeks of long service leave for every year since his resignation from the office of National Secretary of the HSU and will be credited 1.71 weeks long service leave for every year of the operation of this agreement."
There was also a "Non-compete" clause. The agreement was signed by Mr Elliott and "on behalf of the HSU". Ms Jackson signed as:
"National Secretary Health Services Union
Branch Secretary, Victoria No 3 Branch Health Services Union
Executive President Nominate, HSU East".
and Mr Williamson as:
"National President, Health Services Union
Branch Secretary, Health Services Union NSW Branch
General Secretary Nominate, HSU East".
Adjacent to each of the signatures was the date: 25 February 2010.
166 After this agreement was signed an appendix was added. Relevantly, the appendix provided that:
"The parties acknowledge that although the agreement is one for the employment of Rob Elliott his role will be in effect one of consultant to the Branch.
As such his time will be costed at $2000 per day so that, in any given year, Rob Elliott shall be available to the union for 75 days per year.
Rob Elliott will be based in Melbourne and work from the Melbourne offices of HSU East.
The parties shall agree the pattern of hours or days in which Robert Elliott shall be available to do work for the HSU; for example whether on the basis of regular weekly hours, in blocks of days or weeks, or a combination of the two."
The appendix was signed, on the same day, by Mr Elliott, Ms Jackson and Mr Williamson. Ms Jackson and Mr Williamson purportedly signed in the same capacities in which they had signed the original agreement.
167 This contract was particularly beneficial to Mr Elliott. At the time the memorandum was signed Mr Elliott was receiving $442.24 per day for his work with the Victoria No 3 Branch. The memorandum increased his daily rate to $2,000. That salary was to increase annually with movements in the consumer price index. Mr Elliott was not required to work to obtain the remuneration provided for under the contract. He was only required to be available to work for up to 75 days per year. Accumulated and proposed long service leave and payment in lieu of sick leave and annual leave were to be paid at the new rate of $2,000 per day.
168 Another curious feature of the agreement was that the provisions relating to the appointment of Mr Elliott to the board of the HESTA Superannuation Fund and his right to retain director's fees required decisions of the National Council or the National Executive of the Union. Neither Mr Williamson nor Ms Jackson had power to confer these entitlements.
169 The HSU East Branch came into existence on 24 May 2010 and continued in existence until it was dissolved by order of this Court on 8 June 2012. An administrator was appointed on 21 June 2012: see Brown v Health Services Union (2012) 205 FCR 548 at 602-614 (Flick J).
170 In the course of his administration the administrator raised questions relating to the employment and payment of Mr Elliott. In November 2012, whilst investigations were still in progress, Mr Elliott asserted that the administrator had repudiated his contract and accepted that repudiation as terminating the contract. Despite the administrator advising Mr Elliott that his employment had not been terminated, Mr Elliott commenced the New South Wales proceeding in this Court. That proceeding was ultimately settled. It was a term of the settlement that the Union pay $40,073 to Mr Elliott.
171 The HSU contended that Ms Jackson had misused her positions in the Union to gain an advantage for Mr Elliott or to cause detriment to the Union. It contended that she had executed the memorandum without authority, that she had done so in breach of the financial governance procedures and that she had purported to bind the Union to make excessively generous payments to Mr Elliott by way of remuneration and other conditions of employment.
172 Ms Jackson denied each of these allegations. It will be convenient to deal with them separately.
173 Ms Jackson sought to justify her execution of the Elliott Memorandum on a number of bases. She asserted that:
In executing the memorandum she was acting for and on behalf of the Victoria No 3 Branch and Mr Williamson was acting for and on behalf of the New South Wales Branch.
"The execution of the Elliott Memorandum … was the business of the Victoria No 3 Branch and the NSW Branch as branches that were in the process of amalgamating."
"… she occupied the office of Secretary of the Victoria No 3 Branch and, after amalgamation, was to occupy the office Executive President of HSU East Branch …"
She "genuinely believed that she had power and authority, as Branch Secretary of the Victoria No 3 Branch, one of the three amalgamating branches, to execute the Elliott Memorandum."
174 Each of these defences must be rejected. They fail because Ms Jackson had no authority, in her capacity as Secretary of the Victoria No 3 Branch, to fix the terms and conditions of employment of Mr Elliott as an employee of the, yet to be created, HSU East Branch. This power rested exclusively with the Committee of Management of the new Branch which had yet to be formed: see Rule 52(e).
175 For the same reasons Ms Jackson did not have power to execute the memorandum as Executive President nominate of the HSU East Branch.
176 Ms Jackson did not dispute that she lacked authority to enter into the contract, on behalf of the HSU, in her capacity as National Secretary. Ms Jackson did not report the execution of the contract or the contents of the memorandum to either the National Council or the National Executive of the Union.
177 Ms Jackson sought to defend her position on the additional ground that the HSU East Branch or the State registered union, known as HSU East, had later ratified her conduct. There is no evidence to support her claim of ratification by the HSU East Branch once it was formed. The State registered union was an entity separate from the HSU and could not, even if it had wished to do so, ratified Ms Jackson's conduct as an officer of the HSU. In any event, there was no evidence that it had done so.
178 Under the HSU's Financial Governance Procedures, the National Secretary was authorised to make and/or commit to expenditures within the context of normal operations. The National Secretary was also authorised to make expenditure up to $10,000 provided it was within the annual budget and reported to the Finance Committee as soon as practicable. If not within the annual budget, prior approval by the Finance Committee was required. The procedures required that expenditure over $50,000 must be approved by the National Executive prior to the expenditure being incurred, or, in urgent and unforeseen circumstances, jointly by the National Secretary and the National President, provided that such payments shall be immediately reported to the members of National Executive by email and to the next meeting of the National Executive following the expenditure.
179 The Elliott Memorandum did not deal with a normal operating expense of the Union. The appointment of Mr Elliott was not part of the systematic, repetitive and continuous business of the union. Further, there was no evidence that the financial commitments, made to Mr Elliott, had been provided for in the Union's budget. The terms of the memorandum were not reported by Ms Jackson to the Finance Committee. It was not approved by the Finance Committee. The circumstances in which the memorandum came into existence were neither urgent nor foreseen. Mr Elliott remained employed in the Victoria No 3 Branch and his future employment by the new Branch could have been considered once it had been formed.
180 The terms and conditions of employment of Mr Elliott provided for in the memorandum were significantly more beneficial to him than those which had previously obtained when he was working for the Victoria No 3 Branch. Whether or not these new terms and conditions were "excessive" need not be determined by the Court. Suffice it to say that, had it been a valid contract, the HSU would have been committed to providing Mr Elliott with benefits in excess of $1 million over the four year life of the contract. Such a commitment would have imposed considerable demands on the finances of the Union and, to that extent at least, would have constituted a detriment to it.
181 Once the Branch was formed Ms Jackson kept no records of the days and times that Mr Elliott worked, if, indeed, he did any work.
182 Ms Jackson used her position as an officer of the HSU improperly to gain an advantage for Mr Elliott and, in doing so, caused detriment to the organisation.
183 The Union is prima facie entitled to compensation for the losses incurred by reason of Ms Jackson's conduct.
184 The Union claimed a total loss of $432,725.09. This figure was made up as follows:
Mr Elliott's salary between 24 May 2010 and 3 December 2010 - $80,769.36 plus superannuation of $7,269.23. These payments were made by the HSU East Branch.
His salary of $262,499.58 plus superannuation of $7,528.92 paid between 4 December 2010 and 31 August 2012. These payments were made by the New South Wales State registered union pursuant to a resolution of the HSU East Branch on November 2010 that "the payment of wages and employment entitlements will as an administrative convenience be undertaken by HSU East on behalf of both entities". Further an earnings report covering the period of July 2011 to August 2012 recorded "the earnings of Elliot paid by the New South Wales Registered Union".
His salary of $31,730 plus superannuation of $2,855 paid between 1 September 2012 and 16 November 2012. These payments were made by the Victoria No 3 Branch.
The settlement sum of $40,073 paid by the Union to settle Mr Elliott's claim.
185 Mr Neil Bowker has, since February 2013, been the Finance and Services Manager of the Victoria No 3 Branch. He examined the financial records of the Branch both before and after the merger with the New South Wales and Victoria No 1 Branches. These records confirmed that Mr Elliott had been paid a total of $88,038.59 (inclusive of superannuation) in the period between 25 May 2010 and 3 December 2010. The Union contended that the references in the payslips and pay records to the 'Health Services Union - Victorian No 3 Branch' and to the 'Health Services Union - Health Prof' should be interpreted as a reference to the merged branch, i.e. the HSU East Branch. This is because, at that time, the Victorian No 3 Branch had ceased to exist.
186 The Union contended that the New South Wales State registered union had paid Mr Elliott's salary and superannuation entitlements between 4 December 2010 and 31 August 2012 as agent for the Union. It claimed that it had sustained the loss as principal. In the alternative, the Union contended that, on the distribution of the combined assets of the State registered union and the branch in August 2012, it had suffered loss consisting of the diminution in the net equity of the amalgamated branch available for distribution.
187 The State registered union had not sought reimbursement from the HSU at the time of the trial. The HSU did not, therefore, sustain a loss to the full extent of the amounts paid by the State registered union to Mr Elliott. It did, however, suffer some indirect financial loss. This occurred in the course of the demerger of the HSU East Branch in the latter part of 2012.
188 An issue arose in the course of the demerger as to the appropriate distribution of the financial assets of the Branch to the three Branches which were to resume their separate existences. The administrator sought the advice of accountants. The accountants constructed a consolidated profit and loss statement for each of the demerging entities over the period during which the HSU East Branch existed. An attribution process was applied which produced the following assessed notional net asset/liabilities on demerger at 30 June 2012 as follows:
The State registered union - $1,258,938 (assets).
The New South Wales Branch - $33,300 (assets).
Victoria No 1 Branch - $1,439,913 (assets).
Victoria No 3 Branch - $1,111,995 (liabilities).
The total assets on demerger were, therefore, $1,620,156.
189 During the existence of the HSU East Branch, the Branch and the New South Wales Union were not treated as separate entities for accounting purposes. The financial affairs of the Branch were largely incorporated within the State registered union's ledger. Having examined the accounts the accountant recommended (and the administrator accepted) that the $1,620,156 should be allocated as follows as between the various entities:
The State registered union - $126,656 (7.81%).
The New South Wales Branch - $3,500 (0.22%).
Victoria No 1 Branch - $1,142,212 (70.50%).
Victoria No 3 Branch - $347,788 (21.47%).
92.19 % of the available funds were thus allocated to the balance sheets of Branches of the HSU.
190 The HSU argued that, had the unauthorised payments not been made to Mr Elliott by the State registered union, the total sum disclosed by the balance sheet would not have been $1,620,156 but $1,890,184.50 (that is $1,620,156 plus $262,499.58 salary plus $7,528.92 superannuation). It contended that it should be entitled to claim 92.19% of the difference between the two figures, that is, 92.19% of $270,028.50 or $248,939.27.
191 I accept this submission. Had the unauthorised expenditure not been made the amount divided between the State and Federal entities would have differed materially and an additional $248,939.27 would have been available to the Federal entity. Had there been any evidence to suggest that Mr Elliott had made any productive contributions to the Union during the relevant period I would have been minded to discount this sum when calculating compensation. There was, however, no such evidence.
192 Mr Bowker's researches disclosed that the Victoria No 3 Branch had again paid monies to Mr Elliott between 1 September 2012 and 16 November 2012. $34,585 was paid by way of salary and superannuation.
193 Ms Jackson's actions in relation to the execution and giving effect to the Elliott memorandum constituted a misuse of her position as National and Branch Secretary. She contravened s 287 of the FWRO Act and s 182 of the Corporations Act. As a consequence of Ms Jackson's actions in relation to the memorandum, the Union:
paid Mr Elliott $80,769.36 in salary and $7,269.23 in superannuation from 24 May 2010 to 3 December 2010.
would have been entitled to an additional $248,939.27 on the date of the demerger had the State registered union not made payments to Mr Elliott from 4 December 2010 to 31 August 2012.
paid $31,730 in salary and $2,855 in superannuation to Mr Elliott between 1 September 2012 and 16 November 2012.
paid $40,073 to settle Mr Elliott's claim.
194 The Union thereby suffered loss. A compensation order of $411,635.86 should be made.