Reeve v Ramsay Health Care Australia Pty Ltd
[2012] FCA 1294
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2012-11-21
Before
Barker J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (7 paragraphs)
summary judgment application by first respondent 1 By originating application filed 10 August 2012, the applicant (Ms Reeve) seeks a writ of certiorari to quash an order of the Full Bench of the second respondent (FWA) made 20 July 2012, as well as a writ of mandamus requiring the Full Bench to determine according to law the application she made under s 604 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (FW Act) which the Full Bench dismissed. 2 By interlocutory application filed 20 September 2012 (the summary judgment application), the first respondent (Ramsay) applies for an order for summary judgment in relation to the originating application on the grounds that Ms Reeve has no reasonable prospect of successfully prosecuting the proceeding and/or the proceeding is frivolous or vexatious. 3 The summary judgment application is supported by the affidavits of Nicholas David Ellery sworn 19 September 2012, 27 September 2012 and 31 October 2012. Ramsay also relies on certain documents contained in a bundle lodged by Ms Reeve with the originating application on 10 August 2012 and described by her as the "Appeal booklet". 4 Ms Reeve opposes the application relying on her affidavit filed in support of the originating application on 10 August 2012, other materials in the appeal booklet lodged with the originating application and her submissions.
background 5 In March 2011, Ms Reeve's employment with Ramsay ceased. 6 In 8 July 2011, Ms Reeve made an application to FWA to deal with a dispute under s 365 of the FW Act on the basis that she had been dismissed in contravention of Pt 3-1 of that Act. 7 Her application was well out of time. By s 366(1)(a) the application under s 365 had to be made within 60 days after the dismissal took effect or by subs (1)(b) within such further period as FWA allows under subs (2). 8 By s 366(2) the FWA may allow a further period if satisfied that there are "exceptional circumstances", taking into account: (a) the reason for the delay; and (b) any action taken by the person to dispute the dismissal; and (c) prejudice to the employer (including prejudice caused by the delay); and (d) the merits of the application; and (e) fairness as between the person and other persons in a like position. 9 On 18 August 2011, Commissioner Williams refused Ms Reeve's extension application as he was not satisfied that there were exceptional circumstances to allow it: Reeve v Ramsay Health Care Limited [2011] FWA 5349. Ms Reeve's subsequent appeal against this decision was dismissed by the Full Bench of FWA. 10 Ms Reeve then applied to the Federal Magistrates Court concerning unlawful termination purportedly under s 773 FW Act, but this application was also dismissed as no certificate had issued under s 777 of the FW Act: Reeve v Ramsay Health Care Limited [2012] FMCA 120. 11 Ms Reeve then made a second unlawful termination application under s 773 of the FW Act, this time to FWA. This application has led to the present proceeding in this Court. 12 Section 773 falls within Div 2 of Pt 6-4 of the Act and enables an employee to apply to FWA to deal with a dispute if an employer has "terminated an employee's employment in contravention of subsection 772(1)". 13 Section 772(1) provides: (1) An employer must not terminate an employee's employment for one or more of the following reasons, or for reasons including one or more of the following reasons: (a) temporary absence from work because of illness or injury of a kind prescribed by the regulations; (b) trade union membership or participation in trade union activities outside working hours or, with the employer's consent, during working hours; (c) non-membership of a trade union; (d) seeking office as, or acting or having acted in the capacity of, a representative of employees; (e) the filing of a complaint, or the participation in proceedings, against an employer involving alleged violation of laws or regulations or recourse to competent administrative authorities; (f) race, colour, sex, sexual preference, age, physical or mental disability, marital status, family or carer's responsibilities, pregnancy, religion, political opinion, national extraction or social origin; (g) absence from work during maternity leave or other parental leave; (h) temporary absence from work for the purpose of engaging in a voluntary emergency management activity, where the absence is reasonable having regard to all the circumstances. 14 In her application the applicant relied on (1)(e), namely, that a complaint against Ramsay alleging violation of laws (ie her whistle blowing) had led to her employment being terminated. 15 But s 774, like s 366, requires the application to be made within 60 days or in such further period as FWA allows under subs (2), which is in almost identical terms to s 366(2). 16 When Ms Reeve's extension application came before Commissioner Cloghan, like Commissioner Williams he was not satisfied that there were exceptional circumstances and refused it: Reeve v Ramsay Health Care Australia Limited [2012] FWA 3141. 17 Ms Reeve's further appeal application to the Full Bench of FWA was dismissed: Reeve v Ramsay Health Care Australia Pty Limited [2012] FWAFB 5601. It is that decision that Ms Reeve now seeks to quash, although she focuses on the decision of Commissioner Cloghan in doing so, alleging the Full Bench erred in not finding the Commissioner erred. Her main complaint though is that Commissioner Cloghan denied her natural justice by deciding the extension of time issue on the papers and without giving her a hearing.