Carrying on a business?
11 There was no real dispute between the parties about the principles relevant to the operation of s 2A of the Competition and Consumer Act. Reference was made to the decision of Emmett J in JS McMillan Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1997) 77 FCR 337, in which his Honour said at 356-7:
The Parliament was intending to limit the extent to which the Commonwealth would be bound by the Trade Practices Act. It could have chosen the same touchstone as is chosen for s 52, namely conduct engaged in in trade or commerce. It did not. Rather the Parliament chose to limit the application of the Act to the Commonwealth, in so far as it carries on a business.
I consider that that expression signifies that the Commonwealth is to be bound only where the conduct complained of is engaged in, in the course of carrying on the business. In other words, persons dealing with the Commonwealth in relation to the actual conduct of a business will have the same protection as when dealing with a private trader who is carrying on such a business but will not have protection when entering into other dealings with the Commonwealth. That appears to me to be consistent with the reason for the introduction of s 2A as explained by the Minister on the second reading of the Bill for the amendment which introduced s 2A (House of Representatives, Debates, 3 May 1977, p 1447) as follows:
"Government Commercial Operations
I announced last December that the Government had decided in principle that its commercial operations should be subject to the same restraints of the Trade Practices Act as apply to like operations of private enterprise. I then informed this House that the Government was studying the detailed implementation of this decision. This Bill gives effect to that decision in clause 4 which provides that the Act is to apply to all business undertakings of the Commonwealth Government and its authorities."
The conduct of the Commonwealth in issuing the request for tender and in dealing with prospective tenderers was not actively engaged in in carrying on the business which has hitherto been carried on by the Commonwealth, in the guise of the DAS, under the name AGPS. The conduct complained of is that of officers of the Commonwealth who have had nothing to do with the day-to-day operations of the AGPS. It is conduct quite divorced from the carrying on of that business.
While some entities might be thought to engage in the business of selling capital assets, it was not contended by McMillan that the Commonwealth is engaged in a business of selling assets. A one off decision to cease engaging in the activities of AGPS, to dispose of the plant and equipment relevant to those activities, to undertake not to engage in those activities in the future and, in the capacity of client, to invite private enterprise to take on those activities, is not conduct in the carrying on of a business: nor is the conduct of offering plant and equipment for sale and offering the opportunity to perform package 3 activities for government departments the carrying on of a business. I conclude, therefore, that s 2A does not have the effect of making the Trade Practices Act applicable to the conduct about which complaint is made by McMillan in these proceedings.
In light of the factual findings which I have made, that is unfortunate. However, it is for the Parliament to determine the extent to which the Trade Practcies Act binds the Commonwealth. One might harbour a wish that in the circumstances, the Commonwealth would remedy the effect of the conduct which I have found misleading. However, it is not bound to do so.
Argument was also addressed to me on the possible application of s 2C of the Trade Practices Act. Section 2C has the effect that certain activity does not, for the purposes of s 2A, amount to carrying on a business. Having regard to the conclusion which I have reached in relation to s 2A, it is not necessary for me to deal with the submissions in relation to s 2C.
12 In addition, reference was made to the summary of principles in Murphy v Victoria (2014) 313 ALR 546; [2014] VSCA 238 at [46]-[47]:
[46] First, the judge considered that the following propositions were relevant and likely to be of assistance:
(a) For activities to constitute "carrying on a business", the activities must be undertaken in a commercial enterprise or as a going concern. The activities must constitute trade, or commercial transactions or engagements. A business activity is an activity which takes place in a business context and which, of itself, bears a business character.
(b) The expression "carry on a business" signifies a course of conduct involving the performance of a succession of acts with system and regularity, not the effecting of a solitary transaction. The less commercial the character and objectives of an organisation, the greater the degree of system and regularity required to establish that it carries on a business.
(c) On the other hand, mere repetitiveness is insufficient. It does not necessarily follow that one who engages in transactions of the same kind systematically or regularly is carrying on a business in those transactions (for example regular deposits into a bank account). Absence of a system and regularity might deny that a business is being carried on but their presence does not necessarily establish that it is.
(d) There is a distinction between those functions of a government which are purely governmental or regulatory and those functions which entail the carrying on of business. To carry on some part of "the business of government" is something different from carrying on a business in the relevant sense.
(e) The carrying out of a function of government in the interests of the community, such as the performance of a statutory function (including one in respect of which fees may be charged), is not the
… carrying on of a business. That the purpose of the activities is the provision of governmental services will tend against a conclusion that they amount to the carrying on of a business.
(f) There must be present some element of commerce or trade such as a private citizen or trader might undertake.
[47] With respect we do not disagree. It is, however, also necessary to bear in mind, as counsel for the appellant submitted, that the word "business" is an "etymological chameleon" which takes its meaning from the context in which it appears and from the purpose of the statute in which it is found. Thus, as the majority observed in NT Power Generation Pty Ltd v Power and Water Authority, "business" in the context of s 2A of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) was a wide and general word which was further widened by the inclusion in the definition of "business" in s 4(1) of "a business not carried on for profit". Ultimately, its meaning was informed by the purpose of s 2A of that Act which was to ensure that the Commonwealth Government should, in its commercial activities, be subject to the same regime as corporations.
13 Another useful reference to which my attention was drawn was the decision of Sundberg J in Sirway Asia Pacific Pty Ltd v Commonwealth [2002] FCA 1152, in particular at [56] where his Honour summarised the different factual contexts in which courts had considered the operation of s 2A of the former Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth). His Honour said:
[56] Having identified the principles to apply when determining whether the Commonwealth (or indeed any entity) is carrying on a business, it is useful to summarise the earlier decisions. The AGPS, the Australian Telecommunications Commission, the Australian Postal Commission and the Australian Broadcasting Commission have all been held to be businesses of the Commonwealth: McMillan, Tytel Pty Ltd v Australian Telecommunications Commission (1986) 67 ALR 433, Suatu Holdings Pty Ltd v Australian Postal Commission (1989) 86 ALR 532 and Sun Earth Homes Pty Ltd v Australian Broadcasting Commission (1990) 98 ALR 101. The Commonwealth has been held not to be carrying on a business by engaging in the following activities:
• operating detention centres: Corrections Corp
• inviting tenders to be submitted and dealing with prospective tenderers: McMillan, Corrections Corp
• providing pharmaceutical, sickness and hospital benefits and medical and dental services in its administration of the National Health Act 1953 (Cth): Saitta
• operating the Trade Practices Commission: Thomson Publications (Australia) Pty Ltd v Trade Practices Commission (1979) 40 FLR 257; (1979) 27 ALR 551
• leasing and developing a site for the purpose of establishing Cabinet and Ministerial offices: National Management Services (Australia) Pty Ltd v Commonwealth (1990) 9 BCL 190.
Applying the analogous test in s 2B of the Act to the Crown in right of the State of New South Wales, the courts have concluded that the following activities do not constitute carrying on a business:
• managing a national park: Easts Van Villages v Minister Administering the National Parks and Wildlife Act (2001) ATPR (Digest) 46-211
• providing police and corrective services: Hamod v State of NSW [2001] FCA 157.
The State of New South Wales was found to be carrying on a business through the Ambulance Service of New South Wales by providing ambulance services at sporting events and first aid training for reward: Paramedical Services Pty Ltd v The Ambulance Service of NSW [1999] FCA 548.
14 The case the Commonwealth placed most reliance on, however, was the decision of Finkelstein J in Corrections Corporation of Australia Pty Ltd v Commonwealth [2000] FCA 1280; (2000) 104 FCR 448 (Corrections Corporation), in which his Honour dealt with a claim for misleading or deceptive conduct relating to the provision of immigration detention centres and a tender process into which the Commonwealth entered for the provision of services to those detention centres. After referring to the relevant principles relating to s 2A of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) at [12] and [13] in particular, his Honour said this at [14]:
It seems to me to be clear beyond argument that operating a detention centre is not a trading or commercial activity of the executive branch. It is no different from a government maintaining and operating a prison for convicted felons. Maintaining and operating a prison may be described by some as "government business", but it does not amount to the carrying on of a trading or commercial activity. When laws provide that a person should be held in custody, whether that person be a prisoner serving a sentence for the commission of an offence or a non-citizen pending his deportation, the government is not providing any service either to the department which has responsibility for those persons or to the person in prison or detention. Even if what is being done could be characterised as the provision of a service, by no use of the English language could it be described as the carrying on of a business.