CTHFCA
Rumble v The Partnership trading as HWL Ebsworth Lawyers
[2019] FCA 1409
Federal Court of Australia|2019-09-03|Before: Perram J
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Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2019-09-03
Before
Perram J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (10 paragraphs)
[1]
- The application be dismissed. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
[2]
- Introduction 1 The applicant is Dr Gary Rumble, a solicitor. The respondent, the Partnership trading as HWL Ebsworth Lawyers ('the Firm'), is a firm of solicitors practising nationally. On 22 July 2011, Dr Rumble accepted an offer of casual employment as a consultant to the Firm in its Canberra office. It was determinable by either party on three months' notice. His employment was to commence on a mutually convenient date which, as events transpired, was in October 2011. Under his written contract, Dr Rumble was to perform up to 60 hours of promotional work for the Firm each year in return for which he would be paid an annual retainer of $30,000. For additional work done outside the scope of that retainer, such as any billable work, the Firm also agreed to pay him $250 per hour. In addition to these entitlements, he was to receive the statutorily mandated contribution to his nominated superannuation fund of 9%. Both his hourly rate and his retainer payment were to be increased by 5% on 1 May of each year. 2 After some years working as a consultant for the Firm Dr Rumble received, late on the evening of Monday 20 February 2017, an unwelcome email from the managing partner of the Firm, Mr Juan Martinez. This email told Dr Rumble that his employment was terminated and that the Firm would pay out the three month notice period to which he was entitled so that its effect was immediate. 3 Dr Rumble contests the legality of this action. By his proceeding in this Court, he alleges that he was unlawfully dismissed for querying why the Firm had failed to increase his retainer payment or his hourly rate by the agreed annual rate of 5%. He also alleges that the Firm dismissed him from its service because of his political opinion and that this was unlawful. Dr Rumble further contends that prior to his termination, the same impermissible discrimination against him because of his political opinion had led the Firm to take other unlawful action against him: first, by decreasing the amount of work which it gave him; secondly, by instructing him not to attend the Firm's 2016 Canberra Christmas Party; and, thirdly, in singling him out by not giving him a $299 gift card which he alleges was given to all other employees as a Christmas gift the same year. 4 Each of these allegations is pursued as a statutory claim for compensation under the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) ('the Act') for taking what the statute terms 'adverse action' against him for unlawful reasons. The alleged proscribed unlawful reasons were discrimination because of his political opinion and the fact of his having made an inquiry as to what had become of his 5% annual remuneration increase. 5 Dr Rumble also brings a common law claim. He alleges that the same factual constellation described above means that the Firm breached an implied term of good faith in his employment contract by terminating his employment, in failing to provide him with work opportunities and in failing to implement the annual 5% uplift in a timely manner. 6 Dr Rumble claims compensation for hurt feelings and also for economic loss largely said to flow from the damage done to his reputation by the fact of his dismissal by the Firm. 7 The Firm rejects these allegations. Its primary defence is that it did not dismiss him either for his political opinion or for querying why it had failed to honour the 5% annual remuneration increase to which he was entitled. It says it was entitled to terminate him without cause which was what it had done. Although it initially contended that his employment was terminated because there was insufficient work for him to do, it emerged later that it had terminated the employment relationship because it had a policy in place that required employees not criticise clients of the firm. The actions which Dr Rumble now relies upon as expressions of his political opinion were in fact criticisms of, inter alia, the Department of Defence and the Department of Veterans' Affairs, both of whom were clients of the Firm. His criticisms stemmed from an inquiry he had conducted (with two other lawyers from the Firm) on behalf of the Department of Defence into historical sexual assault in the military. Dr Rumble felt that the Government was not doing enough to implement the inquiry's recommendations and he made a number of public remarks to that effect. 8 These actions irritated Mr Martinez and Dr Rumble was told to desist from public criticism of the Firm's clients. Further, in 2014 the Firm put in place a written policy requiring its partners and staff not to engage in criticisms of the Firm's clients without the permission of Mr Martinez. Dr Rumble believed that he was entitled to make these comments publicly without Mr Martinez's approval and he therefore continued to do so from time to time. The Firm says that it was this that eventually caused Mr Martinez to press the send button on the email he sent Dr Rumble at 10.57 pm on Monday 20 February 2017 terminating his employment. It also says that it did not have enough work for him. 9 In relation to Dr Rumble's querying of the Firm's failure to honour its agreement to increase his remuneration by 5% each year, the Firm accepted that it had not originally paid him the 5% increase in some, but not all, of the years alleged by Dr Rumble. It denied, however, that Dr Rumble's inquiries as to why he had not been paid the 5% increase had anything to do with its subsequent decision to terminate his employment. In any event, it had since accepted its liability to him for the increase and had paid what was due. 10 So far as the Christmas Party was concerned, the Firm denied that Dr Rumble had been instructed not to attend but, even if it did, it said that had nothing to do with his political opinion. It said that the joint head of its Canberra office, Mr Will, had asked him to reconsider whether he would attend the Christmas Party because Mr Martinez had said that if Dr Rumble was going to attend then he was not going to attend. It was in that circumstance Dr Rumble who had chosen not to attend. Mr Martinez's position that he would not attend if Dr Rumble did was said to be driven by the fact that Mr Martinez found Dr Rumble most aggravating given that he had defied his authority that very day by again criticising two of the Firm's clients, the Department of Defence and the Department of Veterans' Affairs. But so to regard him was not to be seen as discrimination against him on the basis of his political opinion. 11 As a fall-back position in relation to Dr Rumble's political opinion case, the Firm submitted that in fact it was not unlawful to terminate Dr Rumble's employment because of his political opinion even if it had done so. This was because at the time Dr Rumble was terminated, he was living in New South Wales at Nambucca Heads. Under the Anti-Discrimination Act 1977 (NSW) ('the NSW Act') it was not unlawful to discriminate against a person because of their political opinion. Whilst the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) made it unlawful to discriminate against a person because of their political opinion there was an exemption from its operation where the relevant conduct was lawful under the law of the place 'where the action is taken'. Although the Firm accepts that Dr Rumble was employed as a consultant in the Firm's Canberra office, it submitted that his employment had been terminated at Nambucca Heads in NSW. Consequently, even if it had terminated him because of his political opinion, it was not unlawful for it to do so. 12 So far as Dr Rumble's claim for breach of contract was concerned, the Firm denied that there was an implied term of good faith but said that even if there were it could not have the effect of circumscribing its right to dismiss Dr Rumble without cause on three months' notice. It also denied that a term of good faith could require it to give him work but submitted that it had not, in any event, failed to give him work as he alleged. 13 So far as damages were concerned, the Firm submitted that the claim for economic loss did not withstand scrutiny. First, assuming against it that one of its reasons for terminating had been a proscribed purpose, it had lawful reasons for terminating Dr Rumble's employment which had also actuated it. So, for example, if it really was the case that one of its reasons for terminating his employment had been because he had inquired about his 5% pay increase, it had also been lawfully entitled to act on his failure to comply with its media policy. In assessing his damages this meant that he had suffered little or no loss because even if the proscribed purposes were excised it was still entitled to terminate his employment and would have done so on 20 February 2017 or shortly thereafter. Secondly, even if that were not so the fact was that he had removed himself to Nambucca Heads in semi-retirement. Any damages to which he was entitled needed to take account of that fact and, so it was submitted, to the extent that Dr Rumble's reputation had been damaged this needed to be put in its correct context, namely, Dr Rumble's own actions in damaging his own reputation in government circles. 14 For the reasons which follow I conclude as follows: as to Dr Rumble's termination, I conclude that he was not terminated because of his political opinion as to which the Firm was at least indifferent and quite possibly in fact sympathetic. It terminated him because he repeatedly disobeyed a reasonable direction to cease from criticising the Firm's clients. The Firm did not require any legal basis to terminate Dr Rumble's employment which it could do without cause. There was nothing therefore unlawful in the Firm's dismissal of Dr Rumble because he refused to cease from criticising the Firm's clients. Nor do I accept Dr Rumble's contention that the Firm dismissed him for inquiring about his 5% pay increase. Although his final inquiry in relation to that topic was what finally spurred Mr Martinez in terminating his employment it was not the actual reason Mr Martinez had for doing so. The inquiry merely brought him back to Mr Martinez's attention. 15 As to the reduction in the work provided to him, I accept that Mr Martinez and Mr Will had come to the conclusion in around 2014 that they did not favour Dr Rumble being given more work and, to a limited extent, took steps which did reduce the amount of work he did. But other partners of the Firm continued to use Dr Rumble. I estimate that the actions of Mr Martinez and Mr Will reduced Dr Rumble's workflow by around 30%. That said, the reasons that Mr Martinez and Mr Will took these steps did not relate to his political opinion or the fact that he inquired from time to time about his 5% pay increase. It related to his continued criticism of the Firm's clients and a question mark about his value to the Firm. 16 As for the 2016 Christmas Party, I conclude that Dr Rumble was instructed not to attend the Christmas Party. However, I do not accept that this occurred because he had expressed political opinion. It occurred because he had infuriated Mr Martinez on the day of the Christmas Party by again disobeying his instruction not to criticise the Firm's clients. Nor was Mr Martinez actuated by Dr Rumble's inquiries about his 5% pay increase. Accordingly, I conclude that there was nothing unlawful about Dr Rumble being told to stay away from the 2016 Christmas Party. 17 As to the gift card, in the year in question the Firm had decided only to give the gift card to full time employees. The reason Dr Rumble did not receive a gift card was because he was a casual employee. It had nothing to do with his other activities. 18 As to the contract case, making the assumption that there was implied in the employment contract a term of good faith, I would not conclude that that term was breached. 19 Dr Rumble's case therefore fails and his application should be dismissed.