The alternative approach in respect to the first hypothetical Scenario would:
have the total of $3,000 for wages being taken into account for the first of the two fortnights and $1,500 not thereafter being also able to be brought to account for the second of the fortnights; and
have the employee being entitled to receive only one JobKeeper payment, namely that payment for the second fortnight - that being a fortnight during which the employee performed no work and thus was not entitled to be paid any amount - and also in fact receiving the second half of the $3,000 for the work performed during the previous fortnight.
On this alternative approach, the employee would again receive a "windfall" of $1,500.
45 This approach to construction, when applied to Scenario 2, would yield no different outcome to that of the concluded correct construction of s 789GDA(2)(b).
46 The temptation is to construe s 789GDA(2)(b) in such a manner which may be perceived as conferring more of a subsidy upon the employer and less of a windfall upon the employee. But that temptation it to be resisted. The task of the Court is to construe legislation according to its terms and not in a manner which a Court may subjectively perceive as achieving a more equitable (or less anomalous) result. Any anomaly must be "very serious … before the court is justified in using that anomaly as a reason for rejecting what otherwise seems the correct construction… [and] [w]ere courts to act otherwise, they would risk taking over the function of making policy choices which properly belongs to the legislature": cf. Ganter v Whalland [2001] NSWSC 1101 at [36], (2001) 54 NSWLR 122 at 131 per Campbell J. See also: ConnectEast Management Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation [2009] FCAFC 22 at [41], (2009) 175 FCR 110 at 119 per Sundberg, Jessup and Middleton JJ.
47 Notwithstanding any temptation to construe s 789GDA(2)(b) in a manner different to the normal and ordinary meaning of the words employed, the temptation is to be rejected. Notwithstanding the fact that the construction settled upon as being correct may in some circumstances confer a "windfall" upon an employee, the terms of s 789GDA(2)(b) - it is concluded - permit of no other construction. Even on a different construction to s 789GDA(2), anomalies persist.
48 Each of these Scenarios, it will readily be appreciated, exposes but a variation on a theme - that theme being:
the term "payable", both when employed in the phrase "the total amount payable" and the subsequent phrase "the amounts payable", is to be given the same meaning, that meaning being "the amount payable" in accordance with a contractual or other entitlement to payment, and not meaning "payable … irrespective of when the amount is in fact paid"; and
the application of s 789GDA(2) depending upon a calculation of "the amounts payable" to the employee during a particular fortnight for work in fact performed "during the fortnight".
49 Senior Counsel for both Qantas and the Unions readily accepted that idiosyncratic situations could be presented and yield to perhaps unexpected (or at least potentially unanticipated) results. The casual employee who prior to the JobKeeper Scheme received a fortnightly sum of $500 would - after the introduction of the JobKeeper Scheme - be in receipt of $1,500 per fortnight. Irrespective of whether that was an outcome envisaged by the Parliament or whether it could be characterised as an unintended "windfall" for the casual employee, who remains "far better off" after JobKeeper than he ever was before, such is the manner in which s 789GDA(2) operates.
50 In submissions more directed to the facts of the present case, the written submissions filed on behalf of the Qantas parties maintain that s 789GDA(2) does not dictate the payment of $1,500 in fortnights where an employee:
does not perform any work during a particular fortnight but nevertheless receives (for example) "$2,500 … payable in wages in respect of work performed prior to that fortnight" - the Qantas position being that "the amount specified by paragraph (2)(b) is $2,500, because that is the amount payable to the employee during the fortnight". On the approach of the Unions (so Qantas submits) "the amount specified by paragraph (2)(b) is nil, because no amounts were earned from the performance of work during the fortnight, and s 789GDA(2) would require the employer to pay $1,500 pursuant to paragraph 2(a)".
This is the hypothetical Scenario 3.
51 Whatever other idiosyncratic situations may be presented for consideration, the statutory language employed in s 789GDA(2) remains unambiguous.
52 Section 789GDA(2) - applied to the facts
53 Written submissions and tables were filed by the parties attempting to set forth the manner in which their competing constructions of s 789GDA(2)(b) were to be applied to the facts. But those competing tables, in particular, contained - with respect - confusion (or at least occasioned confusion) as to the manner in which differing amounts of payments were being described. There was no certainty as to how particular amounts had been quantified. There was also, most significantly, no agreement as to the basic facts to which the legislative provisions were to be applied.
54 The tables have nevertheless been employed in an attempt to demonstrate how the construction of s 789GDA(2) is to be applied to the following employees, namely:
Mr Steven Wayne Harris, Customer Service Agent employed by Qantas Airways Limited;
Ms Lisa Evans, Freight Operations Agent employed by Qantas Airways Limited;
Mr Liam Dwayne Delaney, Airline Services Operator employed by Qantas Airways Limited; and
Mr Brett Peter Langford, Baggage Handler employed by Qantas Ground Services Pty Ltd.
The following tables set forth what can be regarded as no more than an assumed factual position in relation to each of these employees. The amounts stated cannot be regarded as findings of fact as to the contractual entitlements of these employees. At best, they are intended to provide some assistance as to the manner in which the construction of s 789GDA(2) can be applied, once the basis facts have been agreed.
Mr Steven Harris
55 Subject to the necessary qualification that the primary facts employed in the following table have been assumed to be correct, the manner in which s 789GDA(2) is to be applied to Mr Harris can be summarised as follows:
JobKeeper fortnight Amount earned during fortnight Amount contractually payable by Qantas during the fortnight (irrespective of JobKeeper but excluding amounts earned pre 30 March) Amount earned in the fortnight and payable in the fortnight Total amount payable to employee for fortnight
1 (30 March to 12 April) $2,512.86 $215.42 $215.42 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
2 (13 April to 26 April) $873.03 $2,406.90 $430.85 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
3 (27 April to 10 May) $2,297.59 $791.69 Not specified - but assume less than $1,500 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
4 (11 May to 24 May) $430.85 $2,492.31 $430.85 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
5 (25 May to 7 June) $2,097.54 $236.13 Not specified - but assume less than $1,500 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
6 (8 June to 21 June) $474.23 $2,424.62 $440.30 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
7 (22 June to 5 July) $215.43 $147.15 Not specified - but assume less than $1,500 $1,500 (JobKeeper)
Total $8,901.53 $8,714.22 N/A as not all amounts specified $10,500