Consideration
24 I reject the Club's argument on the constitutional issue. It was common ground that the Club was a national system employer and Mrs Leggett a national system employee so that the Fair Work Act applied to this matter.
25 For the purposes of s 109 of the Constitution, a State law is invalid to the extent that it is directly or indirectly inconsistent with a Commonwealth law. Direct inconsistency occurs if the State law alters, impairs or detracts from the operation of the Commonwealth law. Indirect inconsistency occurs if a law of the Commonwealth is construed as expressing the intention of the Parliament that it will "cover the field" or "cover the subject-matter with which it deals" or that it states "completely, exhaustively, or exclusively, what shall be the law governing the particular conduct or matter to which its attention is directed": Work Health Authority v Outback Ballooning Pty Ltd (2019) 266 CLR 428 at 446-447 [31]-[33] per Kiefel CJ, Bell, Keane, Nettle and Gordon JJ and the cases there cited. However, French CJ, Gummow, Heydon, Crennan, Kiefel and Bell JJ said in Jemena Asset Management Pty Ltd v Coinvest Ltd (2011) 244 CLR 508 at 525 [42], that while the two tests, of direct and indirect inconsistency, recognise different aspects of inconsistency, they are "directed to the same end, are interrelated and in any one case more than one test may be applied in order to establish inconsistency for the purposes of s 109". They said that all tests for inconsistency "for the purpose of s 109 are tests for discerning whether a 'real conflict' (see, eg, Collins v Charles Marshall Pty Ltd (1955) 92 CLR 529 at 553) exists between a Commonwealth law and a State law".
26 Part 5 of the Workers Compensation Act deals with, among other matters, the right to claim damages against an employer for negligence "in respect of an injury caused by the negligence or other tort of the worker's employer even though the damages are recovered in an action for breach of contract or any other action" (s 151E(3)). In particular, ss 151E, 151F and 151G make clear that the only damages that can be awarded in respect of, relevantly, an injury to a worker caused by the negligence or other tort or breach of contract of his or her employer are for past and future economic loss calculated so as not to exceed the limits that that Act prescribes.
27 In contrast, the Parliament expressed s 545(1) and (2)(b) of the Fair Work Act to give a plenary power to this Court (and the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia) when satisfied that a person has contravened, or proposes to contravene, a civil remedy provision. That power authorises this Court to "make any order the court considers appropriate" including "an order awarding compensation for loss that a person has suffered because of the contravention" (emphasis added). A legislative provision conferring jurisdiction or granting powers to a court should not be construed "by making implications or imposing limitations which are not found in the express words": The Owners of the Ship "Shin Kobe Maru" v Empire Shipping Co Inc (1994) 181 CLR 404 at 421 per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron and McHugh JJ.
28 It is a commonplace that, as a result of an injury caused by negligence or another tort of an employer, a worker's contract of employment can be terminated. Relevantly, s 26(2)(b)(v) of the Fair Work Act provides that an Act of a State or Territory that applies to employment generally and has a main purpose of "providing for rights and remedies connected with the termination of employment" will be inoperative in respect of a national system employee. The clearest case is if the worker dies or becomes so impaired as a result of the injury that he or she cannot continue the employment, as s 26(2)(b)(v) of the Fair Work Act contemplates. Here, Mrs Leggett accepted the Club's repudiation of her contract of employment on 15 March 2017 (see the principal reasons [128], [160]-[163]). When unaware of the constitutional issue and the effect of ss 26 and 27 of the Fair Work Act, I held wrongly, at [163] of the principal reasons, that s 151E(3) of the Workers Compensation Act could apply to Mrs Leggett's rights and remedies, by saying that Mrs Leggett:
is entitled to substantial damages for the Club's breach of contract. However, those damages must be assessed taking into account Mrs Leggett's psychiatric injury and s 151E(3) of the Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW).
29 More importantly for the present issue, one main purpose of Pt 5 of the Workers Compensation Act is to provide for and regulate rights and remedies connected with conduct that adversely affects an employee in his or her employment within the meaning of s 26(2)(b)(vi) of the Fair Work Act. An employee can sustain a psychological injury, as defined in s 11A(3) of the Workers Compensation Act, as a consequence of how he or she is treated or what he or she experiences (including being exposed to traumatic situations) in his or her employment, such as being, or perceiving that he or she is being, bullied or harassed by a person for whose conduct the employer is legally responsible. The Workers Compensation Act, in s 151F, prohibits a court from awarding damages contrary to Div 3 of Pt 5. That Division "applies to an award of damages in respect of … an injury to a worker … being an injury caused by the negligence or other tort of the worker's employer" (s 151E(1)) and provides that damages are limited to past and future economic loss of earnings and earning capacity, as constrained by ss 151H, 151I and 151J.
30 Here, the Club's contraventions of s 340(1)(a)(ii) of the Fair Work Act caused and or aggravated Mrs Leggett's psychiatric injury (see [137]-[159] of the principal reasons), entitling her to a remedy under s 545.
31 The expressions used in s 545(2)(b) "compensation" and "loss that a person has suffered" are not defined in the Fair Work Act. But the provision creates a causal link that the loss for which compensation may be awarded must arise "because of the contravention" of that Act. Many contraventions of civil remedy provisions as defined in s 539 do not result, or necessarily result, in economic loss. For example, a misleading representation in a document given to an employer by an organisation seeking to be covered under an enterprise agreement will contravene s 179(1) and or (5) and render an employee, a bargaining representative and or an inspector liable for a civil remedy. A person who is the subject of adverse action in contravention of the general protections provisions in Pt 3-1 may, but need not necessarily, suffer an economic loss because of the contravention, for example, if the person is an employee or prospective employee, discriminated against in relation to how other persons in his or her actual or prospective position would be treated (eg, items 1 and 2 in s 342(1)).
32 Importantly, item 1 in s 342(1) of the Fair Work Act provides that an employer takes adverse action against an employee if, among other actions, the employer "(a) dismisses the employee; (b) injures the employee in his or her employment" (emphasis added). A loss caused by an injury to an employee in his or her employ can extend beyond pure economic loss and, of course, include other damages to him or her caused by personal injury.
33 In Murphy v Overton Investments Pty Ltd (2004) 216 CLR 388 at 403 [31], 407 [44]-[45], 408-409 [47]-[52], Gleeson CJ, McHugh, Gummow, Kirby, Hayne, Callinan and Heydon JJ explained that the statutory nature of the remedies for a person who suffered loss or damage in ss 82 and 87 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth), now renamed the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), could not be construed as limited to damages recoverable under the general law. Likewise, the broad remedial purpose evinced in s 545(1) and (2)(b) cannot be construed as confined to compensation for economic loss. While the remedy of common law damages is a different form of relief from the statutory right to compensation created by s 545(1) and (2)(b), in the present context, both are directed to restoring the injured employee to the position he or she would have been in had the employer not been negligent or contravened the civil remedy provision.
34 The Parliament evinced the intention in s 26(1) and (2) of the Fair Work Act (subject to the exceptions in s 27) that that Act would apply to the exclusion of any State or Territory industrial law that had, as a main purpose, providing for rights and remedies connected with conduct that adversely affects an employee in his or her employment. The Workers Compensation Act deals with the non-excluded matter of workers compensation within the meaning of s 27(1)(c) and (2)(b) of the Fair Work Act. Relevantly, s 27(1)(c) creates an exception to the field covered by s 26 by providing, in respect of non-excluded matters (as defined in s 27(2)), that s 26 "does not apply to a law of a State or Territory so far as … (c) the law deals with [workers compensation]".
35 Part 5 of the Workers Compensation Act relevantly has a main purpose of providing for and limiting rights and remedies applying to employment generally for recovery of damages as defined in s 149(1). Part 5 limits the scope of what damages can be recovered and their quantum. But, the definition of "damages" in s 149(1) of the Workers Compensation Act makes clear that the word "damages", when used in Pt 5, includes any form of monetary compensation except, relevantly, compensation under the Workers Compensation Act itself. That evinces the State's legislative intention that, when Pt 5 deals with damages, its main purpose is not to deal with workers compensation but the different subject matter comprising other forms of compensation, including common law damages. It follows that "so far as" Pt 5 deals with "damages" as defined in s 149(1) and otherwise provides for rights and remedies connected with the termination of employment or conduct that adversely affects an employee in his or her employment (within the meaning of s 26(2)(b)(v) and (vi) of the Fair Work Act), the State law would have an operation beyond the excluded matter of workers compensation within the meaning of s 27(1)(c) and so Pt 5 is excluded from having any operation in respect of relief that is available under s 545 of the Fair Work Act by force of s 26(1).
36 Item 1 of s 342(1) of the Fair Work Act defines adverse action as including action where an employer "injures the employee in his or her employment". It follows that where a person suffers loss "because of the contravention" of a civil remedy provision of the Fair Work Act, s 545(1) and (2)(b) of that Act cover the subject-matter of all loss that the person suffers: Outback Ballooning 266 CLR at 450 [45]. That is because s 545(1) and (2)(b) provide "a rule to be observed" and so evince an intention to cover the subject matter of compensation for a loss that a person suffers because of a contravention of a civil remedy provision, by providing "exclusively what the law upon that subject-matter should be".
37 Part 5 of the Workers' Compensation Act provides for rights and remedies, including at least in respect of adverse action that caused a (psychological or psychiatric) injury to an employee in his or her employment, being conduct that adversely affects the employee in his or her employment. Mrs Leggett's two s 340 claims under the Fair Work Act created a constitutional matter (under s 76(ii)) so that, by force of s 26(2)(b)(vi), any of the parties' rights or remedies under the State law were inoperative.
38 Moreover, Pt 5 of the Workers Compensation Act cannot operate to command any court, State, territorial or federal, exercising federal jurisdiction in a matter that is conferred or invested in that court, as to the manner of the exercise of that federal jurisdiction. That is because a State Parliament has no legislative power over the matter. The Constitution vests the entire legislative power to make laws with respect to the conferral and exercise of federal jurisdiction in the Parliament of the Commonwealth: Rizeq v Western Australia (2017) 262 CLR 1 at 26 [61] per Bell, Gageler, Keane, Nettle and Gordon JJ, see too at 14 [15] per Kiefel CJ; Herron v HarperCollins Publishers Australia Pty Ltd [2022] FCAFC 68 per Lee J at [338], with whom Rares J at [85] and Wigney J at [233] agreed.
39 Accordingly, the provisions of Pt 5 of the Workers Compensation Act have no operation in relation to the assessment of compensation for any loss that Mrs Leggett suffered as a result of the Club's contraventions the subject of my findings on the first and second s 340 claims at [137]-[163] and [208]-[219] in my principal reasons. Clearly enough, in those reasons, I proceeded on the erroneous understanding that s 545 of the Fair Work Act was not inconsistent with Pt 5 of the Workers Compensation Act. Importantly, I found Mr Rudolph's bullying and intimidating conduct on 9 and 10 October 2016, that comprised the first s 340 claim was "the last straw" that led to her breaking down on that occasion and becoming permanently incapable of working: see [95]-[97], [144]-[147], [205]-[207], [214], [216]-[218]. Mr Rudolph's conduct constituting the second s 340 claim aggravated her injury: see at [148]-[150].
40 On this basis, Mrs Leggett is entitled to be compensated fully under s 545(2)(b) of the Fair Work Act, without regard to Pt 5 of the Workers Compensation Act, for her past and future economic loss that she has suffered because of the Club's contraventions of the Fair Work Act, the damage to her feelings and her loss of enjoyment of life.