Application before his Honour
12 Before his Honour, Lend Lease sought injunctive relief and the imposition of penalties pursuant to s 421(3) of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (Fair Work Act) and further, or in the alternative, s 39 and s 49 of the Building and Construction Industry Improvement Act 2005 (Cth) (Building and Construction Industry Improvement Act) and s 23 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) (Federal Court of Australia Act). In particular, Lend Lease claimed:
1. The imposition of a penalty or penalties upon the respondents for contravening sections 38 and 44 of the Building and Construction Industry Improvement Act ("the unlawful conduct")
2. Orders the Court considers necessary to stop the unlawful conduct;
3. Orders the Court considers necessary to remedy the effects of the unlawful conduct.
13 Lend Lease also sought interlocutory relief in the following terms:
AND the Applicant claims by way of interlocutory relief the following orders:
1. Until the hearing and determination of this proceeding or until further order, the respondents whether by themselves, their officers, employees or agents be restrained from:
a. Counselling or procuring any employee or agent of, or person contracted to, Lend Lease Project Management & Construction Pty Ltd, not to work upon the site known as the Brisbane Supreme Court and District Court Project located at 419 George Street Brisbane Queensland (Corner of George, Roma and Herschel Streets, Brisbane) (site);
b. Counselling or procuring any person not to enter the said site;
c. Attending or organising or procuring any person to attend, within 100 metres of any entrance to the said site, save for such entry to the site as may be authorised by law, for the purpose of using a public road for reasons unconnected with the said site or for the purpose of complying with these orders.
2. Further directions as to the further conduct of the proceeding.
3. Costs be reserved.
14 In support of the application before his Honour Lend Lease relied upon an affidavit of Mr Seamus Kearney. It is not in dispute that this was the only material before his Honour at the hearing of 13 April 2011. Logan J summarised the evidence to which Mr Kearney deposed as follows:
12. Mr Kearney has been, since about September 2006, employed by Lend Lease as a foreman. More particularly since about November 2008 he has been the General Foreman (Structure) on the Law Courts Project site. Lend Lease has about 70 to 80 employees on that project site. On a day to day basis there are approximately 450 persons, including those Lend Lease employees, employed at the project site.
13. Mr Kearney deposes that on Monday of this week, 11 April 2011, he attended at the Law Courts Project site for work at about 5.55 am. Shortly thereafter, around 6 am, he attended a pre-start meeting of the Lend Lease employees at the site. He had some further discussions with managers on the project. At about 6.55 am that day he was situated on the ground floor, also known as the podium of the project. At about 7 am he noticed workers streaming back through the Roma Street pedestrian gate and entering the podium area to the stairs to the basement lunch rooms. It is in those lunch rooms that the workers' personal belongings are stored. He was informed, at about 7.15 am, that the workers were going home and out for 24 hours.
14. The following day, at about 5.55 am, Mr Kearney again attended for work at the Law Courts Project. At about 6 am on 12 April, and for the following 20 minutes, he attended a pre-start meeting. At about 6.30 am he put on his personal protection equipment and went to the podium area. At about 7 am he observed the workforce streaming through the Roma Street pedestrian gate and entering the podium area to the stairs to the basement lunch rooms. At about 5 minutes past 7 am, with a work colleague, he went to the pedestrian crossing on Roma Street, crossed over that road, and then went down that street to where a number of union organisers were standing. He recognised there two persons, a Mr Pearson and a Mr O'Doherty, and others who he observed had AMWU and ETU on their clothing. The AMWU, I note, is more likely than not, in terms of inference from known industrial terminology, not a respondent union. The ETU, on the other hand, is in all likelihood, a reference to a body associated with another union which is a respondent. In any event, a conversation transpired, the effect of which was that Mr Pearson informed Mr Kearney that the workforce was on strike and:
Anyone going up there would be scabs. There is a report-back meeting tomorrow morning.
15. Today again, at about 5.55 am, Mr Kearney attended the Law Courts project for work. Once again, at about 6 am, he attended a pre-start meeting for Lend Lease employees. At about 6.30 am he decided to go to the Roma Street gate to observe what was happening at the meeting of workers across the park adjacent to the project. I infer from that statement that there was a meeting of workers at the park adjacent to the project in progress at that time. At about 6.45 am Mr Kearney observed some Lend Lease employees standing near the Law Courts project traffic gate situated in Roma Street. He went over to where they were standing, spoke with some of them, the effect of the conversation being an inquiry by him as to what was happening today and if they were aware that a particular individual had resigned from the union.
16. From the position at that gate Mr Kearney could observe the meeting of the workers in the park opposite. He observed there a person, Mr Pearson, who he had met on previous occasions. At about 7.52 am he observed workers raising their arms into the air and he heard Mr Pearson say words to the effect:
Thank you very much.
17. At about that time he also received information from Mr O'Doherty who informed him, along with others with whom Mr Kearney was then in company, that the workers had gone out for 24 hours with a report-back meeting tomorrow, 14 April 2011. Shortly before 8 am Mr Kearney observed the workers dispersing from the meeting. He heard a loud cheer as this occurred. He saw them walking in the direction of Roma Street train station, across Roma Street, heading towards the Roma Street gates. He saw them going through those gates across the podium and towards the stairs of the basement and the lunch room. Mr Kearney deposes that work on the project was to have been undertaken today. Details of reinforcement and precast cement columns were programmed for today. Also, formwork was to have been undertaken, construction of decks, altering perimeter screens, installation of facades and fit-out work and services, and petitioning and ceiling work were also to have been undertaken.
18. Mr Kearney deposes that, because the project was not working today, a number of subcontractors have had to be informed that there were no facilities or services available to assist them. Further, contractors delivering precast columns and reinforcing work have had to be turned away. In addition, curtains have had to be delivered to another site. There were also scheduled service repairs and maintenance of men and materials hoists which were to have been undertaken on and from Monday of this week.
19. Mr Kearney deposes that if work had been undertaken on the site today he would have expected on-site a full complement of subcontractors. He would have expected that the workforce on the project would have been approximately 400 today.
20. At the meeting of the workers in the park which he observed Mr Kearney deposes to having identified Mr Pearson from the BLF which, again, I infer to be a reference to part of the union which is the first respondent and Mr O'Doherty from the CFMEU and also an ETU organiser that he had seen the previous day.
15 His Honour found that raised prima facie on Mr Kearney's affidavit was industrial action in terms of the Fair Work Act, and that in the circumstances this particular action was, in terms of a question raised seriously for trial, in defiance of the orders of Fair Work Australia. Accordingly his Honour was prepared to grant interlocutory injunctive relief sought (at [27]).