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Australian Workers' Union of Employees, Queensland v Etheridge Shire Council (No 2) [2009] FCA 58 (6 February 2009)
Last Updated: 9 February 2009
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Australian Workers’ Union of
Employees, Queensland v Etheridge Shire Council (No 2) [2009] FCA 58
COSTS – whether the usual order as to
costs should be made – whether the matter was one to which the Workplace
Relations Act
applied – held that each proceeding was a matter arising
under the Workplace Relations Act – held that the prohibition
against the
ordering of costs contained in s 824(1) of the Act applies in each the
proceedings – held that the fact that each
matter was something of a test
case would not require a departure from the ordinary rule as to costs – no
order as to costs
made
Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s
43
Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) s 824
Australian Workers’ Union of Employees,
Queensland and Others v Etheridge Shire Council and Another (2008) 171 FCR
102 – discussed
BGC Contracting v CFMEU (No 2) [2005] FCA 908; (2005) 143 FCR
409 – followed
R v Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and
Arbitration; Ex Parte Barrett [1945] HCA 50; (1945) 70 CLR 141 – referred to
Re
McJannet; Ex parte Australian Workers’ Union of Employees (Q) [No 2]
(19970 [1997] HCA 40; 189 CLR 654 – cited
Tristar Steering and Suspension Australia
Ltd v Industrial Relations Commissioner of New South Wales (2007) 159 FCR
274 - cited
THE AUSTRALIAN WORKERS' UNION OF EMPLOYEES,
QUEENSLAND and QUEENSLAND SERVICES, INDUSTRIAL UNION OF EMPLOYEES v ETHERIDGE
SHIRE COUNCIL,
WORKPLACE AUTHORITY DIRECTOR and STATE OF QUEENSLAND
(Intervener)
QUD 481 of 2006
STATE OF QUEENSLAND v ETHERIDGE SHIRE COUNCIL and WORKPLACE AUTHORITY
DIRECTOR
QUD 39 OF 2007
SPENDER J
6 FEBRUARY 2009
BRISBANE
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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THE AUSTRALIAN WORKERS' UNION OF EMPLOYEES,
QUEENSLANDFirst Applicant
QUEENSLAND SERVICES, INDUSTRIAL UNION OF EMPLOYEES Second
Applicant
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AND:
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ETHERIDGE SHIRE COUNCILFirst
Respondent
WORKPLACE AUTHORITY DIRECTOR Second Respondent
STATE OF QUEENSLAND Intervener
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- There
be no order as to costs.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of
the Federal Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using
eSearch on the Court’s website.
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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QUD 39 of 2007
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BETWEEN:
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STATE OF QUEENSLAND Applicant
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AND:
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ETHERIDGE SHIRE COUNCIL First Respondent
WORKPLACE AUTHORITY DIRECTOR Second Respondent
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JUDGE:
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SPENDER J
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DATE OF ORDER:
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6 FEBRUARY 2009
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WHERE MADE:
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BRISBANE
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
1. There be no order as to costs.
Note: Settlement and entry of orders is dealt with in Order 36 of the Federal
Court Rules.
The text of entered orders can be located using eSearch on the
Court’s website.
.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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QUD 481 of 2006
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BETWEEN:
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THE AUSTRALIAN WORKERS' UNION OF EMPLOYEES, QUEENSLAND First
Applicant
QUEENSLAND SERVICES, INDUSTRIAL UNION OF EMPLOYEES Second
Applicant
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AND:
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ETHERIDGE SHIRE COUNCIL First Respondent
WORKPLACE AUTHORITY DIRECTOR Second Respondent
STATE OF QUEENSLAND Intervener
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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QUEENSLAND DISTRICT REGISTRY
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QUD 39 OF 2007
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BETWEEN:
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STATE OF QUEENSLAND Applicant
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AND:
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ETHERIDGE SHIRE COUNCIL First Respondent
WORKPLACE AUTHORITY DIRECTOR Second Respondent
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JUDGE:
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SPENDER J
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DATE:
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6 FEBRUARY 2009
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PLACE:
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BRISBANE
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- These
reasons concern the question of costs in each of the principal proceedings. As
it turns out, there is a significant question
of statutory interpretation as to
what is a “matter arising under the Workplace Relations Act 1996
(Cth) (the Workplace Relations Act)” that is central to any award of
costs in each of the proceedings.
- On
20 August 2008, I delivered judgment in both of these matters, finding for the
applicants in each case: Australian Workers’ Union of Employees,
Queensland and Others v Etheridge Shire Council and Another (2008) 171 FCR
102; (2008) 250 ALR 485; and (2008) 175 IR 383. At that time, I indicated that
I would hear the parties as to costs in the matters.
- In
proceedings QUD 481 of 2006, the applicants filed a submission on costs on 27
August 2008. On 3 September 2008, the first respondent
filed submissions on
costs, and on 5 September 2008, the applicants filed a submission in reply.
- In
proceedings QUD 39 of 2007, the applicant filed submissions on costs on 27
August 2008, and on 3 September 2008, the first respondent
filed submissions on
costs. Those submissions were the same as had been filed in the other
proceedings.
Proceedings QUD 481 of 2006
- The
applicants in these proceedings seek an order that the first respondent pay
their costs of the proceeding, to be taxed if not
agreed.
- In
these proceedings, the applicants sought various declarations from the Court.
The interest of each applicant was the same, and
both were represented by the
same counsel. The applicants were wholly successful, the Court granting the
relief which they sought.
The applicants submit that there is no special reason
for the Court to depart from the ordinary rule that costs follow the event,
and,
accordingly, the first respondent should pay the applicants’ costs.
- Further,
the applicants submit that they attempted to resolve the matter without
litigation, but the parties were unable to reach
agreement, the first respondent
not accepting the correctness of propositions put by the applicants that the
Etheridge Shire Council
was not a “constitutional corporation” and
therefore could not lodge the relevant workplace agreement. The applicants
contend they were therefore forced to commence litigation in respect of which
they were wholly successful, and which the respondents
vigorously, but
unsuccessfully, defended.
- The
first respondent seeks to avoid the “usual order as to costs” on two
bases.
- The
first relies on s 824 of the Workplace Relations Act which
provides:
824 Costs only where proceeding instituted vexatiously
etc.
(1) A party to a proceeding (including an appeal) in a matter arising under this
Act (other than an application under section 663) must not be ordered to pay
costs incurred by any other party to the proceeding unless the first-mentioned
party instituted the proceeding
vexatiously or without reasonable
cause.
(2) Despite subsection (1), if a court hearing a proceeding (including an
appeal) in a matter arising under this Act (other than
an application under
section 663) is satisfied that a party to the proceeding has, by an unreasonable
act or omission, caused another party to the proceeding to incur
costs in
connection with the proceeding, the court may order the first-mentioned party to
pay some or all of those costs.
(3) In subsections (1) and (2):
costs includes all legal and professional costs and disbursements
and expenses of witnesses.
- The
second basis on which the first respondent argues that no costs order should be
made is because the matter was a “test
case”, being, so the first
respondent argues, a vehicle to test the proposition that local governments were
constitutional
corporations. In this respect the first respondent draws
attention to the comments of Kirby J in Oshlack v Richmond Shire Council
[1998] HCA 11; (1998) 193 CLR 72 that where a matter is a test case, the Court may exercise
its discretion to refrain from following the usual principle that costs
follow
the event.
QUD 39 of 2007
- The
applicant in this proceeding submits that costs should follow the event and the
first respondent should be ordered to pay the
costs of the applicant in those
proceedings.
- The
first respondent in this proceeding makes the same submissions as it did in QUD
481 of 2006, but argues, in addition, that the
reliance by the State of
Queensland on the judgment in Tristar Steering and Suspension Australia Ltd v
Industrial Relations Commissioner of New South Wales (2007) 159 FCR 274 is
distinguishable, it being said that that matter involved the invocation of s 109
of the Australian Constitution in the determination as to
costs.
QUD 481 of 2006 & QUD 39 of 2007
- In
each proceeding, s 43 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) is
the basis for any order as to costs:
(1) ... the Court or a Judge has jurisdiction to award costs in all proceedings
before the Court (including proceedings dismissed
for want of jurisdiction)
other than proceedings in respect of which any other Act provides that costs
shall not be awarded.
...
(2) Except as provided by any other Act, the award of costs is in the discretion
of the Court or Judge.
- The
first respondent submitted in each proceeding that it ought not to be ordered to
pay costs because each proceeding was “a
matter arising under the
[Workplace Relations] Act” and therefore the specific exemption provided
in s 824(1) applied.
- That
submission is determined by whether each of these proceedings is a matter
arising under the Workplace Relations Act.
- The
applicant in each proceeding submits that that proceeding is not a proceeding
“arising under” the Workplace Relations Act and that
therefore s 824 has no application. Each of the applicants relies on Re
McJannet; Ex parte Australian Workers’ Union of Employees (Q)[No 2]
[1997] HCA 40; (1997) 189 CLR 654 (McJannet), which, the applicants assert, contains
the relevant test. The High Court in McJannet said, at 656, that the
test was “whether the right or the duty that is sought to be enforced
owes its existence to a provision of the Act.” The applicants submit
that, as they sought declarations to the effect that the first respondent had no
right under the Workplace Relations Act, to act as it did, s 824 has no
application. The applicants do not address the contention by the first
respondent in each proceeding, that the first respondent
had a right pursuant to
the Workplace Relations Act to enter into a Workplace Agreement with its
employees, and register it pursuant to the Workplace Relations Act.
- The
Etheridge Shire Council argues that it had asserted that it was “an
employer” within the meaning of the Workplace Relations Act and was
therefore entitled to register a Workplace Agreement with its employees pursuant
to that Act. It was the denial of that
asserted right by the respective
applicants that led to the proceedings being instituted. The Etheridge Shire
Council argues that
a party need not, in the end result, be successful
concerning a claim advanced by it, provided the claim advanced by it, or on
which
it relies, is a claim to a right that owes its existence to the provision
of Workplace Relations Act.
- The
Etheridge Shire Council refers, in particular, to the decision of French J (as
he then was) in BGC Contracting v CFMEU (No 2) [2005] FCA 908; (2005) 143 FCR 409 (BGC
Contracting), where his Honour found that s 824 applied.
- In
BGC Contracting, the applicant instituted proceedings seeking
declarations that representatives of the CFMEU, a state registered union, had no
right
under the Industrial Relations Act 1979 (WA) (the IRA) to enter a
construction site for an ammonia plant in Western Australia. The basis for that
application was that the
workers at the site were employed under Australian
Workplace Agreements made under the Workplace Relations Act. Rights of entry
created by that Act in respect of those employees were said to be inconsistent
with the IRA, and therefore rendered
inoperative the rights of entry conferred
under the IRA, in so far as they purported to apply to the construction
site.
- The
application was dismissed and the CFMEU sought an order for costs, which was
opposed by the applicants and the Minister. The
respondents contended that the
proceedings were proceedings in a matter arising under the Workplace Relations
Act and that the then s 347 of the Workplace Relations Act confined the
power to award costs to circumstances in which the proceedings had been
instituted frivolously or vexatiously. French
J concluded that the proceedings
were proceedings in a matter arising under the Workplace Relations Act, and, for
that reason, no order for costs should be made.
- In
addition to McJannet, Etheridge Shire Council also noted R v
Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration; Ex parte Barrett
[1945] HCA 50; (1945) 70 CLR 141, where Latham CJ said at 154, “If a right claimed
is conferred by or under a Federal statue, the claim arises under the
statute.”
- The
applicants seek to distinguish the BGC Contracting case submitting
that:
In BGC Contracting, the rights sought to be invoked were rights conferred
upon an employer bound by that Act, in respect of employees who were undoubtedly
the subject of regulation by that Act, by reason of the existence of AWAs
lawfully made under that Act.
- That
matter was, so the applicants submit, clearly one to which the Workplace
Relations Act applied. In this case, however, the applicants argue the
Workplace Relations Act had no application to the first respondent at all, and
the matter did not, therefore, arise under the Act.
- The
answer to these questions, in my judgment, relies on a precise identification of
the “matter” in the present case.
“Matter” in that
sense, means the judicial controversy between the parties.
- The
applicants asserted that the Etheridge Shire Council was not a constitutional
corporation, and was therefore not an “employer”
under the Workplace
Relations Act, and was therefore not entitled to register a Workplace Agreement
with its employees pursuant to the Workplace Relations Act.
- In
my judgment, each proceeding was a “matter arising under the Workplace
Relations Act”. The Etheridge Shire Council asserted that it was an
“employer” under the Workplace Relations Act, being a constitutional
corporation and therefore was entitled to register the Workplace Agreement,
pursuant to the Workplace Relations Act. The right claimed by the Etheridge
Shire Council, and denied by the respective applicants, was a right conferred by
an order of
the Workplace Relations Act, and therefore arose under that Act.
It follows that the prohibition against the ordering of costs contained in s
824(1) applies in each of the present proceedings.
- It
does not affect my conclusion that the exception referred to in s 824(1) is
directed at the “institution” of proceedings. The Etheridge Shire
Council did not institute either proceeding. It
therefore follows that it could
not have instituted either proceeding vexatiously, or have instituted either
proceeding without reasonable
cause. As a respondent in each proceeding, it has
an immunity from an order to pay costs, if either proceeding was a matter
arising
the Workplace Relations Act. In my opinion, each proceeding was such a
matter. That conclusion is consistent, in my view, with the conclusion and
reasoning
of French J in the BGC Contracting case.
- That
is sufficient to dispose of the application for costs.
- For
completeness, were my conclusion to be contrary to that expressed above, the
contention that each matter was something of a “test”
case, would
not be a basis on which I would refrain from following the usual principle that
costs follow the event.
- In
proceedings QUD 481 of 2006, the State of Queensland intervened. For that
reason also, I would not award costs to the State of
Queensland in that
proceeding. To do so would, in my opinion, go some way towards circumventing
the operation of s 78A of the Judiciary Act 1903
(Cth).
I certify that the preceding thirty (30)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Spender .
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Associate:
Dated: 6
February 2009
QUD 481 of 2006
Counsel for the Applicants:
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Solicitor for the Applicants:
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Hall Payne Lawyers
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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King & Company
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QUD 39 of 2007
Counsel for the Applicant:
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Mr AAJ Horneman-Wren
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Crown Law
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Solicitor for the First Respondent:
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King & Company
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Date of Last Submission:
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3 September 2008
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Date of Judgment:
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6 February 2009
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