Registered Organisations Commissioner v Australian Workers' Union
[2020] FCA 1148
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2020-08-12
Before
Mr P, Australian J, Snaden J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (27 paragraphs)
Background facts 14 The following facts - the existence of all of which I accept - emerge without controversy from the SOAF.
The parties and the AWU's rules 15 The Commissioner has standing under s 310(1) of the FW(RO) Act to apply for the relief that is sought. The AWU is and, at all material times, was an organisation registered pursuant to the FW(RO) Act and its legislative predecessors. Prior to the enactment of the FW(RO) Act, the registration and governance of industrial organisations were regulated by sch 1 to the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) (hereafter, the "RAO Schedule"). 16 The AWU, like all registered organisations, operates pursuant to rules made under (and given force by) the FW(RO) Act. At all times material to this matter, those rules provided for the affairs of the AWU to be divided amongst branches (one of which being the Victorian branch of which Mr Melhem was the secretary) and administered (at least to an extent) by a national executive. That national executive consisted of a number of office bearers, as well as delegates appointed by each of the AWU's branches. Above the national executive in the AWU's administrative hierarchy sat a body that was convened only occasionally and known as the national conference. 17 From August 2006 until May 2013, Mr Melhem was the secretary of the AWU's Victorian branch. As the secretary of the AWU's Victorian branch, Mr Melhem was an officer of the AWU (within the meaning attributed to that term by s 6 of the FW(RO) Act and the equivalent provisions of its legislative predecessors). He was also the recognised head of the AWU in Victoria and was a member of the AWU's national executive. 18 Over the relevant period, the influence that each branch of the AWU wielded within the AWU's national executive and national conference was, at least to some degree, a function of the number of delegates that it could appoint to each body. That, in turn, was a function of how many members each branch boasted. Moreover, the voting power of each such branch delegate (within both the national executive and the national conference) was not uniform: the number of votes exercisable by each such delegate was dependent upon the size of his or her branch's membership. Delegates from branches with large membership bases exercised more votes (at each forum) than delegates from branches with small membership bases. In short, then, the more members a branch had, the more power it brandished within the AWU's national executive and national conference assemblies. 19 At all times, admission to membership of the AWU required at least three things. First, an aspiring applicant needed to complete a form (the design of which was approved, from time to time, by the AWU's national executive). Second, the aspiring applicant needed to satisfy the eligibility requirements for which the AWU's rules made provision (for example, by being employed within a particular industry or calling). Third, the aspiring applicant needed to pay to the AWU the membership subscription prescribed under the AWU's rules (or otherwise make arrangement for such payment by means of payroll deduction or direct debit payments). 20 The AWU's rules required, at all material times, that aspiring members be advised in writing (presumably immediately before, or at the time of, their admission to membership or the receipt of their application to that end) of the circumstances and manner in which they could resign their membership. 21 The AWU's annual membership subscriptions varied from time to time and according to the various membership types for which provision was made. The following table summarises the relevant amounts as set at various times over the period to which this proceeding relates. From 1 July 2007 From 1 July 2008 From 1 July 2011 From 1 July 2013 Adult $450.00 $450.00 $500.00 $550.00 Part Time $315.00 $374.40 $375.00 $390.00 Junior (under 21) $216.00 $324.50 $325.00 $325.00 Netball Players Association members - - $125.00 $200.00 Australian Jockeys Association members - - $125.00 $125.00