33 Mr Booth sought to rely on my costs decision in Staal and Tupene and described the situation there as "closely analogous" to the circumstances in this case. With respect, I do not agree. While it is true that in both cases the dismissed applicants consistently sought reinstatement in the face of the employer's refusal to make any offers of settlement, the facts, circumstances and findings of the Commission in the cited decision were, in my opinion, very much different to those in evidence here. In Staal and Tupene the employer's steadfast stance was set against a backdrop of an investigation which was fundamentally flawed (if not illegal) and designed to entrap the employees into a minor infringement which was then elevated to allegations of misconduct of a most grievous kind. On the other hand, in the present case, despite some flaws in the investigation by Mr Pell, it was generally acknowledged that if the assault had taken place, then dismissal was the appropriate response. Viewed in this way, I do not consider that the facts and circumstances of the two cases lend themselves to the same outcome as to costs.
34 In some respects, the fact that reinstatement was the ultimate result of the Commission's hearing of the applicants' claims is really not the point. Most successful reinstatement cases do not result in costs applications and many others while successful, are often finely balanced or made on conditions. In other words, reinstatement is not a benchmark for a successful costs claim.
35 In any event, there were real difficulties attending both parties' evidentiary cases. The Commission said as much in respect to the applicant's evidence: see paras 212 to 214 of the decision. It is not as rosy or as clear-cut as Mr Booth had sought to paint when he highlighted Ms Anderson's admission of her case being presented "warts and all". As I observed at para 175 the "warts" were not confined to one side.
36 Notwithstanding that certain crucial evidence emerged during the course of the hearing, which may have weakened the respondent's evidentiary case, it most certainly didn't mean that the respondent's case was entirely hopeless or that it should have been abandoned at that point. This seems to be the thrust of Mr Booth's submission in that the respondent had not properly considered the relative strengths and weaknesses of its case, but more particularly failed to take such steps as might have altered its original decision to dismiss the applicants.
37 That being said, there was no evidence that the applicants, through Mr Booth or otherwise, had ever put a proposition to the respondent which did not include reinstatement. I consider this case to be one in which, as was said in Brunt, that "appropriate circumstances" justify the respondent not agreeing to make an offer of settlement where such an offer was always required by the applicants to include reinstatement. In one sense, the hard and steadfast stance taken by both parties, both of which seem perfectly understandable, cancel each other out.
38 I would wish to add that the suggestion that the respondent would not entertain any alternative to reinstatement in any circumstances, where the allegations concerned assault, does not sit comfortably with what had in fact happened during the course of proceedings involving Mr Booth and Mr Dorber and another dismissed employee of the Department.
39 It is also a relevant factor that the applicants were not without fault as my comments at paras 226 and 231 of the decision demonstrate and the fact that my orders as to back pay were not for full lost remuneration: see para 14 of Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union, on behalf of Mark Harrison and Keith Donaldson and Australian Co-Operative Foods Limited [2000] NSWIRComm 285.
40 It follows, that I am unable to be satisfied that the respondent unreasonably refused to settle the claims or that its conduct up to, and during the proceedings, evinced an unwillingness to settle the claims.
41 In addition, the proceedings do not display any of the characteristics of being 'unusual' or 'out of the ordinary' such as to justify an order for indemnity costs. Mr Booth's reliance on my comments at para 173 of the decision, were intended to demonstrate the serious results the applicants' dismissals had on their personal and professional lives. The comments were not intended to convey an impression that this was necessarily an "unusual" or "out of the ordinary" case, let alone serve as a green light to an application for indemnity costs.
42 The amended notice of motion filed on behalf of the applicants in matters IRC2833, 2834, 4102, 4103 of 2005 on 1 March 2007 is dismissed.
Peter J Sams, AM
Deputy President