The joint judgment in Fish had referred with implicit approval to the decision of the High Court in Stevenson v Barham [1977] 136 CLR 190 where the majority had stated:
The relevant jurisdictional factor to be established in the Commission was that 'if the contract is one which leads directly to a person working in an industry it has the requisite industrial character - it is a contract 'whereby a person performs work in any industry' ... . (at [27]).
9 In Mitchforce Pty Ltd v Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales (2003) 57 NSWLR 212, reference was made to the judgment of Mahoney JA in Production Spray Painting & Panel Beating Pty Ltd v Newnham (1991) NSWLR 644, namely, that it would not be sufficient for the application of what is now s 106 that the performance of relevant work would be merely contemplated or envisaged as a possible consequence of the transaction. The section looked at the purpose of the transaction itself and whether the purpose of the transaction was that relevant work be performed. It was not sufficient if work was merely an accidental incident or consequence of the transaction. Further, in Production Spray Painting, Priestley JA and Handley JA drew the distinction between a contract which led directly to the performance of work in an industry on the one hand and, on the other, a contract that did so only indirectly or in a remote or consequential manner.
10 It was submitted that the purpose of a lease was to give a tenant the right to exclusive possession of land for specified periods. In Mitchforce, Spigelman CJ had referred to the obligations of the lessee under the lease in question in that case and to various provisions that contemplated that the lessee would be physically active on the premises. The mere contemplation that some type of work would be performed was not enough to satisfy the test of jurisdiction. In Mitchforce, the lease contained no express term obliging the lessee to conduct the business but it was observed that, even if such a term did exist, it would not be determinative of the issue of jurisdiction. Thus, the obligation for the repair and maintenance of the premises in Mitchforce was insufficient to attract jurisdiction - the obligation did not lead directly to the performance of work.
11 In Awad v World Best Holdings Pty Ltd (2005) 146 IR 9, a Full Bench of the Commission referred to the provisions of a lease requiring physical activity, namely, the lessee being obliged to conduct his business on the premises and to keeping the premises open during such days and hours as were regular for that type of business in the trade areas of the Sydney Metropolitan district. The Full Bench observed that this provision on its own did not lead directly to the performance of work. The obligation on the lessee to conduct his business on the premises was, in effect, a negative covenant preventing the lessee from operating the business beyond the boundaries of the premises. Also, an obligation to keep the business open during such days and hours as were regular could not be said to lead directly to the performance of work.
12 The applicant's Amended Summons in the present matter alleged that, pursuant to the lease, the applicant was required to perform work in the car parking industry. Clause 8.1 of the lease, however, was a negative stipulation requiring that the lessee must not use the premises other than as a car park - it did not require the performance of work but merely contemplated that work would be done which was insufficient to invoke the Court's jurisdiction. This was a similar clause, it was submitted, to the lease in Awad where the lessee was not permitted to use the premises other than for the sale of takeaway foods pursuant to a menu that was to be approved by the lessor.
13 Item 6 of the Appendix to the lease laid down the permitted use of the premises as a car park. This provision was no different from Clause 8.1.
14 Clause 8.6 of the lease dealt with signage at the premises and, while it may contemplate work, by itself that was insufficient. That requirement as to signage did not lead directly to performance of work under the contract.
15 Clause 8.7 of the lease dealt with the weight of vehicles allowed on the premises and, again, did not directly lead to the performance of work. Clauses 8.5 and 13.1 of the lease firstly placed prohibitions on the lessee's use of the premises, hours of access and signs and, secondly, contained lessee's covenants (including a requirement that the lessee must ensure that, at all times during the operating hours, the business conducted in the premises was conducted in an efficient, proper and businesslike manner; that the lessee was to use its best endeavours to procure that the best return obtainable was derived from the business conducted in the premises; and, was to ensure that all employees, agents or contractors engaged by the lessee in connection with the operation of the business carried out their duties to the highest standards and complied with any directions from time to time given by the lessor). The premises were not to be used for any other purpose than car parking. The car park was to be conducted to a standard reasonably required by the lessor and the lessee could not alter or amend the operating hours without written approval of the lessor. It was submitted that none of these clauses (consistent with the judgments in Mitchforce and Awad) required the performance of work or led directly to the performance of work. Similarly, Clauses 6.3(g) and (h) regarding compliance by the lessee with applicable regulations, did not lead directly to the performance of work.
16 The complaint of the applicant was that the rent payable under the lease was so high that it could not make a profit. The applicant submitted that, in effect, it was therefore required to remunerate the first respondent by doing work and providing services for the first respondent for which the applicant was unpaid. This characterisation of the operation of a lease was rejected by the majority in Mitchforce, where Spigelman CJ stated:
[52] A contract or arrangement which was not at the outset a contract 'whereby a person performs work in any industry' cannot subsequently be transformed into one by reason of a change in economic or commercial circumstances.
17 The thrust of that submission was supported by the second respondent Cape Bouvard. The second respondent was the current owner of the premises at North Sydney. The first respondent Yamamoto was the owner of the premises prior to the second respondent. Ownership of the premises was transferred to the second respondent in late October 2004. The lease that was the subject of the applicant's Amended Summons was entered into between the first respondent (the owner of the premises at the time) and the applicant in relation to the premises in late February 1998. By operation of ss 117 and 118 of the Conveyancing Act 1919 (NSW) the second respondent became the lessor in place of the first respondent under the lease when it became the owner of the premises in late October 2004. This was not in dispute.
18 The second respondent submitted that it was plainly desirable to determine the question of jurisdiction at a preliminary stage because the absence of jurisdiction was clear. This was the approach taken in Euphoric Pty Ltd v Ryledar Pty Ltd (2002) 117 IR 1. It was submitted that the provisions of the lease were sufficient to resolve the issues at this early stage. The applicant had clearly invoked the jurisdiction of the Court on the basis of the terms of the lease as the relevant contract for the purposes of s 105 of the Act. Unlike Mitchforce Pty Ltd v Starkey (No 2) (2003) 130 IR 378, no other basis for jurisdiction other than the lease was alleged by the applicant.
19 The applicant had relied on four particular clauses of the lease in asserting that it was required to perform work in the car parking industry. It was submitted that the present case was factually indistinguishable from the factual matrix involved in Mitchforce (No 2).
20 The second respondent drew heavily on the facts found in Mitchforce (No 2) noting that in that case there were factors that more strongly pointed to work being performed as a direct consequence of entering the lease. The common purpose was that the applicant would conduct the business of a hotel from the tavern the subject of the lease; part of the consideration for the lease was tied to the continued operation of the lease and one clause provided that the quantum of rent would be proportional to the turnover of the tavern. There was some evidence that the lessor had a real interest in the ongoing performance of work at the tavern. Despite these factors, the majority of the Full Bench went on to draw a distinction in the situation where the applicant would operate a business from the premises and thus perform work, a transaction which directly led to the performance of work. The majority held that this distinction was important - it ultimately served to support the finding made by the majority that the transaction represented by the lease was a transaction the applicant had entered into for the purpose of receiving a return on a capital asset: the respondent entered the lease in order to obtain use of the capital asset from which it could conduct a business. In the Court of Appeal, Spigelman CJ found that Hungerford J was correct in saying that the lease contemplated the performance of work by or on behalf of the lessee and that the tavern was a purpose built structure the value of which depended on the maintenance of the licence attached to the premises. Notwithstanding these findings, Spigelman CJ went on to find that the purpose of the agreement was to provide one part of the means for conducting a business by the lessee.
21 The lease in the present case simply transferred the right to occupy a business space on particular terms and conditions from the lessor to the lessee. It provided only one of the necessary components required by the applicant to operate its business. In this respect, it was indistinguishable from the lease in Mitchforce. It was submitted that it was difficult to conceive a commercial lease leading more directly to the performance of work than the lease considered by the Court of Appeal and the Full Bench of this Court in the Mitchforce litigation.
22 The applicant did not provide any evidence to show how the standardised commercial lease in the present case was the type of contract which would, unlike the Mitchforce lease, lead directly to the performance of work. The applicant did not plead any collateral arrangement or overall arrangement in the present case and the only contract pleaded within the meaning of s 105 of the Act was the lease. As it stood, the lease in the present case was not a contract whereby work was performed in an industry.
23 It was further submitted that, even if the lease was within jurisdiction, the orders sought by the applicant had nothing to do with the performance of work - the orders sought operated only to reduce the rent payable under the lease. It was submitted that the payment of rent was within the "heartland" of the traditional usage of land purpose of a lease and could not have any bearing on the performance of work.
24 The applicant argued that the attack on jurisdiction by the respondents was premature and that, in accordance with the views strongly expressed by the Full Bench in Nagle v Tilburg (1993) 51 IR 8, the motions should be dismissed. In the present case, the essential facts were not settled and the respondent's arguments rested solely on the terms of the lease and ignored the fact that the lease was a contract to manage and operate a parking station for the respondent.
25 In Majik Markets Pty Ltd v Brake and Service Centre Drummoyne Pty Ltd & ors (1992) 28 NSWLR 443, Kirby P at 446 noted that, when a challenge to jurisdiction was made when the evidence had not yet been adduced in the substantive proceedings, while it was often convenient to do so to avoid the inconvenience of a protracted hearing, threshold relief of the kind sought was to be conserved to a clear case where it was plain that the invocation of the jurisdiction impugned was wholly misconceived or, upon analysis, lacked an arguable legal foundation. The claim for such relief had to demonstrate that no order could be made which would be within jurisdiction and that burden was a heavy one.
26 In relation to the reliance on the judgments in the Mitchforce litigation, it was submitted that there the lessor owned the licence and the lessee operated the hotel. One of the interests of the landlord was that, when he got the hotel back at the end of the lease, the licence would still be valuable to him and would still be in force. Mitchforce was to be understood in that context and the provisions of the lease were not provisions where one person did work for another - they were designed to ensure the property rights (being the hotel licence) were maintained. In the present case, the applicant's landlord was not merely its landlord: the respondents were the landlord of a building and one of the services they offered to its tenants was parking. That was something the respondents could have done themselves - they could have operated the parking station, complied with the various lease requirements and kept it open for tenants' parking. Instead, the respondents engaged in a contractual relationship with the applicant as a result of which they obtained the benefits of the management of the car park in the respondent's building. It was submitted that this was, in every sense, work done by one person for another. In all the debates in the authorities about the operation of this section of the Act, it has never been doubted that at the heart of the section is the provision of work by one person for another.
27 The early cases under s 88F of the Industrial Arbitration Act dealt with owner drivers, where a truck driver would be enticed to buy a truck and operate it under the contract carrying the goods of another party - as the contract operated, the base rates became uneconomical. The contract or arrangement was varied under the section so as to give an owner driver reasonable remuneration.
28 In deciding where this lease lay in terms of the debate about jurisdiction it was appropriate to consider the provisions of Clause 13. Under this clause, the lessor played a prominent part in the conduct by the lessee of its activities, reflected in the fact that the applicant was running the parking station, managing it effectively under this document for the respondent. Clause 13 required the lessee to conduct its business in good faith and in accordance with the best method of conducting a car park and to a standard reasonably required by the lessor. The lessee was required to keep the premises open, the hours could not be altered without the written approval of the lessor - that is, the lessor told the applicant when it could open and close. The lessee could not amend or alter the terms, conditions or provisions of any contract of parking without the written approval of the lessor. The fees were to be determined in consultation with the lessor and those fees were to be determined for distinct car parking spaces: there would be different fees for reserved and non-reserved parking spaces to a level that met the satisfaction of the lessor. It was submitted that these provisions were indicative of a classic contract whereby one person performed work for another.
29 The present case was to be distinguished from Awad, which related to a shopping centre and where the provision required the fruit shop proprietor to keep his premises open as a fruit shop. In running a shopping centre it was critical to the landlord to have a fruit shop on the premises so that shoppers who wanted fruit and vegetables when they came to the centre would be able to have their requirements fulfilled. The landlord was not selling fruit and vegetables and they were not sold for his particular purposes. Properly approached, the present lease arrangement did not operate in that way. The applicant was working for the respondents as the manager of the respondents' car parking station. This was a radically different situation to that dealt with in the Mitchforce litigation. Under this lease, there were a number of employees, the work was to be performed to the satisfaction of the lessor, the applicant was providing the service of a car park manager even though he was working under a lease. Notwithstanding the formalities that this was work under a lease, one aspect of this relationship was a contract of service between the landlord and tenant and the provision of car parking management services for the landlord. All of those relationships needed to be explored at trial to put the full details before the Court.
30 In the present case, the landlord had the benefit of work provided by the applicant so that it could comply with its contractual obligations to its tenants in that it had a service provided to its tenants, including the car park: the applicant stepped in to enable the landlord to perform that service. The applicant's employees who worked in the car park industry did so for the applicant's profit and also so that the landlord could comply with its own commercial legal obligations. In essence, this was a contract of management and the fact that the arrangement was contained within a lease in no way removed it from the jurisdiction of the Court.
31 When the evidence was adduced, the Court would then be seised of the detail of the relationship between the employees of the applicant, the nature of the employees who were working there and the relationship between the work performed as the manager of the car park and the income that the applicant received. After the lease was entered into, the conduct of the respondent made it unfair because that contract effectively painted the applicant into a corner where it had to comply with the provisions of the lease and had to do so without appropriate remuneration. That situation was like that of the owner driver but on a different scale.
DELIBERATION
32 There is considerable force in the submissions for the respondents in drawing attention to the terms of the Amended Summons and its concentration on numerous provisions of the lease agreement, (eg. see the extract from the Amended Summons annexed to the judgment). The original Summons filed in March 2005 was supported by a formal affidavit of a director of the applicant stating that the Summons had been read and attesting to the truth of the matters of fact contained within the Summons. The applicant had filed no further evidence and the respondents had each accepted that the matters set out in the Amended Summons were to be accepted for the purposes of dealing with the Motions, which effectively sought to strike out the proceedings for want of jurisdiction.
33 In the course of argument, the Court was taken to a number of reported decisions dealing with lease agreements and "commercial" contracts and pointing to the similarity between provisions that have been held to be outside the jurisdiction of the Court and the provisions particularly relied upon and set out in the Amended Summons by the applicant. Those cases included the various decisions in the Mitchforce litigation, Euphoric and Awad. The respondents' submissions, as they were developed, had an initial attractiveness and it appeared possible to determine the issue of jurisdiction by reference to the matters contained in the Amended Summons and by reference to the entire lease agreement put into evidence by the respondents. However, during the course of submissions for the applicant, it became clear that the issue of jurisdiction involved a somewhat more complex consideration of characterisation, with the applicant arguing that this was not simply a case of a challenge to the terms of a lease but that the essential issue was whether the arrangement between the parties could be properly characterised as an agreement whereby the applicant was to undertake the operation and management of the car park in the basement levels of the building on behalf of the respondents and that the agreement at least contemplated, if not required, the performance of work in an industry.
34 The applicant's characterisation point is easily lost or capable of being overlooked because of the extensive concentration of the Amended Summons upon particular provisions of the lease agreement. Notwithstanding this concentration, there are several paragraphs in the Amended Summons that refer to the applicant entering a lease with the respondents to operate and manage the basement level car park and to do so in furtherance of the respondents' obligations to conduct such a car park. Those allegations are to be found in paragraphs 11, 12, 19, arguably in 21, in 24, 25, and in particular in sub-paragraphs of (c) and (j) of the paragraph dealing with "Matters of Law". The Amended Summons also asserted in paragraph 20 that, pursuant to the lease, the applicant was required to perform work in the car parking industry and further alleged that, in substance, the applicant was required to remunerate the first respondent for doing work and providing services for the first respondent for which the applicant was unpaid. Consideration of those paragraphs of the Amended Summons indicates that the applicant was placing characterisation of the lease agreement and the substance of the arrangement at the heart of its case, although the force of those allegations was somewhat overwhelmed by the extensive references to particular clauses of the lease agreement. The form and content of the Amended Summons is therefore to be taken to squarely raise the issue of characterisation of the arrangement and as denying that the contract, in its widest definition, was simply limited to the terms of the lease agreement or some similar commercial agreement. It may properly be stated that the characterisation argument is one of substance, identifiable within the Amended Summons and not merely a forensic flourish made by counsel in a forlorn bid to give life to proceedings that were clearly fatally flawed.
35 The applicant submits that, in order to make good its characterisation case, the Court will need to be in possession of all of the evidence and that it is premature to determine the question of jurisdiction at a stage when nothing more has happened than the filing of an Amended Summons supported by a formal affidavit. The respondents, however, have raised an issue of substance having regard to the terms of the Amended Summons. The applicant's case considered at this early stage could not be regarded as being as strong as the circumstances dealt with by the Full Court in Wirraway (NSW) Pty Ltd and anor v Ultra Tune Australia Pty Ltd [2006] NSWIRComm 300. The applicant's case may be regarded as somewhat more borderline, but, as Handley JA noted in relation to franchise agreements in McDonald's Australia Holdings Ltd v Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales (2005) 223 ALR 78:
[ 102] Characterisation of a contract to determine whether it is within the jurisdiction of the Commission under s 106 will raise questions of fact and degree in franchise cases near the borderline and the decision may not be an easy one .
36 The applicant's characterisation of the arrangement may prove to be unsustainable, but, at this stage, it requires considerable evidence in order for the point to be fully fleshed out: that is a risk the applicant takes for, if it fails to make out that case at the full hearing of the matter, or when all its evidence is filed, it will be liable for considerable costs. It is accepted, without hesitation, that the respondents have a legitimate interest in avoiding a protracted hearing by having a jurisdictional point determined at an early stage, but it has long been understood that when that stage is "appropriate" needs to be determined in each case. For instance, it is to be noted that in Edwards v Kingsmede Pty Ltd and anor [2004] NSWIRComm 82, Marks J was able to determine an interlocutory strikeout application in s 106 proceedings because of the manner in which the Summons had been framed and the fact that all of the evidence in-chief in support of the applicant's claim had been filed. Similarly, in Taouk v Fairline Corporation Pty Ltd (2005) 147 IR 365, Boland J determined that he had sufficient material at the interlocutory stage of a challenge to jurisdiction in a s 106 application to determine that issue. The Mitchforce cases, indeed, were decided after a full hearing and the making of final orders.
37 In Majik Markets Pty Ltd v Brake and Service Centre Drummoyne Pty Ltd (1991) 28 NSWLR 443, the Court of Appeal dealt with the principles to apply when the Court entertained a challenge to jurisdiction in a preliminary or threshold application. While noting that such a course was often sensible, it was stated that any threshold relief of that kind was to be conserved to a clear case where it was plain that, "... the invocation of the jurisdiction impugned is wholly misconceived or, upon analysis, lacks an arguable legal foundation" (per Kirby P at 446).
38 In dealing with the task of the Court of Appeal where prerogative relief was sought, Mahoney JA dealt with a general principle of relevance to the current proceedings when he stated:
Insofar as prerogative relief is sought on the ground that the arrangement which has been made does not fall within s 88F, it is in principle necessary that this court know what the arrangement in question is so that it can determine whether that arrangement is one which falls within s 88F. Ordinarily, what the arrangement is can be determined only after the whole of the evidence has been given before the Commission and the Commission has made the findings of fact necessary to determine what the arrangement is. (at 455).