HIGH COURT (1944,
that " work" in the regulation means the operation or labour per-
formed by the workers and not the commodity manufactured,
But it is, of course, a question of fact whether the work on which
females are or may be employed was usually performed by males _
or was within the establishment of the employer performed by males
at any time since the outbreak of war or was not immediately prior
to the outbreak of war performed in Australia by any person. And -
the determination of those questions of fact involves a comparison
of operations, the nature and character of the operations and their
relation to the commodities manufactured. It may be that some
of the work performed by the females concerned in the application
before the Board was not prior to the outbreak of war performed in
Australia by any person, and it seems likely that some of the work
was usually performed by males or was in the establishment of the
employer performed by males since the outbreak of the war. But
those are matters to be investigated by the Board and which it has
never yet investigated. The Board has asserted and exercised juris-
diction merely because the commodities made or manufactured,
scientific glass instruments, were never before produced in Australia.
The decision of the Board is therefore bad, but it is desirable to point
out instances of erroneous conclusions which the Board probably -
reached because it applied a wrong rule of law or of construction
to the facts. The decision provides rates of remuneration for
females engaged as glass cutters at ninety per cent of the base rate
prescribed by the Glass Makers' (State) Award, New South Wales,
and as sorters and packers at ninety per cent of the appropriate male
rate, although there is evidence that females had been employed to -
do work of this nature before the war. And there is evidence to the
same effect in some branches of the fabricating section of the prose-
cuting company. Another objection has also been taken to the
Board's decision, namely, that it does not sufficiently specify the
work to which the periods of probation and the rates of pay therein
set out are intended to apply. The decision classifies the work in
the fabricating section of the company's industry into three grades,
elementary, intermediate and advanced. But it nowhere defines
what work is elementary, intermediate or advanced. The company,
it is true, suggested this classification, and it made some suggestions
as to the nature of the work that was included in each grade. The
Board did not adopt these suggestions, but left it to be determined
by an appropriate industrial tribunal. Reg. 6 (7), however, pre
scribes that the Board shall, subject to the regulation, decide the ;
rates of payment to be made to females employed on the work,
that is, on the work specified in the application to the Board. No 4
such decision has been made by the Board : it is quite impossible to