In Brief

The last thing any employ­er wants is to be forced into rein­stat­ing an employ­ee after a messy gen­er­al pro­tec­tions dis­pute. Until recent­ly, most gen­er­al pro­tec­tions claims have result­ed in either the dis­missal of an employ­ee or an award of dam­ages and com­pen­sa­tion. How­ev­er the recent case of CFMEU v Pil­bara Iron Com­pa­ny (Ser­vices) Pty Ltd (No 3) [2012] FCA 697 high­lights the pos­si­bil­i­ty of rein­stat­ing employ­ees sub­ject­ed to adverse action.


Dar­ren Lam­berth (‘the Sec­ond Appli­cant’), who was a mem­ber of the CFMEU (‘the First Appli­cant’), was employed by Pil­bara (‘the Respon­dent’) under a fixed term con­tract of 12 months, but unlike most oth­ers in his posi­tion, was not offered per­ma­nent employment.

The Respon­dent was also found to have marked down his per­for­mance review from a pass” in the draft assess­ment to a fail” in the final assess­ment, and reject­ed his nom­i­na­tion as a Health and Safe­ty Representative.

The Fed­er­al Court reject­ed the Respon­den­t’s argu­ment that the fail­ure to extend the Sec­ond Appli­can­t’s con­tract was because of issues relat­ing to his atti­tude, com­mu­ni­ca­tion and behav­iour. The court instead agreed with the Appli­cants’ claim that the actions amount­ed to adverse action, actu­at­ed because of the Sec­ond Appli­can­t’s union mem­ber­ship, indus­tri­al activism and com­plaints and inquiries about work­place prac­tices — rea­sons which are pro­hib­it­ed by ss340 and 346 of the Fair Work Act.

In reach­ing this deci­sion, the Court applied an impor­tant ear­li­er deci­sion (cur­rent­ly before the High Court)1, which held that in deter­min­ing whether actions tak­en by an employ­er were unlaw­ful required a deter­mi­na­tion of the actu­al rea­sons as to why the action was tak­en, rather than the rea­sons assert­ed by the employer.

The Respon­dent was ordered to offer per­ma­nent employ­ment to the Sec­ond Appli­cant, after the Court found that there was no evi­dence which sug­gest­ed that re-employ­ment was imprac­ti­ca­ble. At the time of writ­ing this arti­cle, the Court has yet to decide whether a penal­ty will be imposed on the Respondent. 

What does this mean for employers?

Employ­ers who are found to have tak­en adverse action face severe con­se­quences, includ­ing sig­nif­i­cant penal­ties and even rein­state­ment of the employ­ee. It is there­fore our view that employ­ers exer­cise extreme cau­tion to ensure that dis­ci­pli­nary actions are not linked to unlaw­ful rea­sons, includ­ing union mem­ber­ship or com­plaints made by the employ­ee. We strong­ly rec­om­mend obtain­ing pro­fes­sion advice pri­or to exer­cis­ing any dis­ci­pli­nary actions.

1Bar­clay v The Board of Bendi­go Region­al Insti­tute of Tech­ni­cal and Fur­ther Edu­ca­tion [2011] FCAFC 14 

If you would like to repub­lish this arti­cle, it is gen­er­al­ly approved, but pri­or to doing so please con­tact the Mar­ket­ing team at marketing@​swaab.​com.​au. This arti­cle is not legal advice and the views and com­ments are of a gen­er­al nature only. This arti­cle is not to be relied upon in sub­sti­tu­tion for detailed legal advice.

Publications

Valid­i­ty, void­abil­i­ty and unen­force­abil­i­ty in con­tract law

If you have entered into a con­tract, you or the oth­er par­ty have draft­ed with­out legal assis­tance, you should con­sid­er some…

Nav­i­gat­ing Pri­or­i­ty Dis­putes under the PPSR: Path­ways and con­sid­er­a­tions for Secured Parties

The Per­son­al Prop­er­ty Secu­ri­ties Reg­is­ter (PPSR) serves as a vital frame­work for estab­lish­ing and pro­tect­ing inter­ests in per­son­al prop­er­ty in Aus­tralia…

Tis the Sea­son to Avoid Fol­ly: Work­place Christ­mas Par­ties (2024 Edition)

It’s that time of year. The ​‘Sil­ly Sea­son’. For many organ­i­sa­tions, the offi­cial employ­er Christ­mas par­ty is imminent.The start­ing point for…

In the News

CPD webinar/​online mod­ule for UNSW Edge (Law & Justice)

Recent cas­es have shown that expert evi­dence is not the only evi­dence that a Court will rely on in deter­min­ing whether…

Hol­i­day Office Clo­sure — 2024

The Swaab office will be unat­tend­ed over the hol­i­day and new year peri­od from mid­day Tues­day 24 Decem­ber 2024 re-open­ing…

Fixed term employ­ment con­tracts and work­place Christ­mas par­ties, Michael Byrnes appeared on Nights with John Stan­ley on 2GB and 4BC on 4 Decem­ber 2024 to discuss

Fixed term employ­ment con­tracts and work­place Christ­mas par­ties, Michael Byrnes appeared on Nights with John Stan­ley on 2GB and 4BC…

Sign up for our Newsletter

*Mandatory information