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Fair Work Ombudsman v Fortcrest Investments Pty Ltd [2010] FMCA 18 (18 January 2010)
Federal Magistrates Court of Australia
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Fair Work Ombudsman v Fortcrest Investments Pty Ltd [2010] FMCA 18 (18 January 2010)
Last Updated: 19 January 2010
FEDERAL MAGISTRATES COURT OF AUSTRALIA
FAIR WORK OMBUDSMAN v
FORTCREST INVESTMENTS PTY LTD
|
|
INDUSTRIAL LAW – Takeaway business
underpaying an employee – also failing to provide the employee with pay
slips and failing
to keep adequate records of superannuation contributions
– liability admitted – assessment of penalties.
|
Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth),
ss.149(e), 178(20, 178(4) 182(1), 513, 208(2), 719(4), 846(2) Workplace
Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005 (Cth) Workplace Relations
Regulations 2006 (Cth), rr.19.20, 19.13, 14.4, 19.21 Workplace
Relations Regulations 1996 (Cth), rr.132A, 131H Retail Wholesale and
Distributive Employees (NT) Award, cl.13, 21
|
|
Respondent:
|
FORTCREST INVESTMENTS PTY LTD ACN 070 865
824
|
REPRESENTATION
Counsel for the
Applicant:
|
Mr Liveris
|
Solicitors for the Applicant:
|
Clayton Utz
|
Counsel for the Respondent:
|
Mr O'Loughlin
|
Solicitors for the Respondent:
|
TS Lee & Associates
|
ORDERS
IT IS DECLARED THAT:
(1) The Respondent has, by failing between 30 June
2003 and 28 March 2008 to pay Naomi Atkinson (the employee) the minimum wage and
the District Allowance to which she was entitled contravened:
(2) The Respondent has, by failing between 30 June 2003 and 28 March 2008 to
provide payslips to the employee, contravened regulation
132A of the Workplace
Relations Regulations in force prior to the enactment of the Workplace
Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005 (“the pre-reform
Regulations”) and Regulation 19.20 of the Workplace Relations
Regulations 2006 (“WR Regulations”);
(3) The Respondent has, by failing between 30 June 2003 and 28 March 2008 to
keep records of superannuation contributions made on
behalf of the employee in
accordance with the requirements of the regulations, contravened regulation 131H
of the pre-reform Regulations
and Regulation 19.13 of the WR
Regulations.
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
(4) The Respondent pay a penalty of:
- (a) $10,000.00
in respect of the contravention of s.149(e) and
s.182(1) of the legislation
(failure to pay a minimum wage or basic period rate of pay);
- (b) $10,000.00
in respect of the contravention of s.149(e) and s.513 of the legislation
(failure to pay a District Allowance);
- (c) $1,100.00
in respect of its contravention of rr.132A and 19.20 of the regulations (failure
to provide pay slips); and
- (d) $1,100.00
in respect of its contravention of rr.131H and 19.13 of the regulations (failure
to keep records of superannuation paid
on behalf of the employee as prescribed
by the legislation).
(5) The penalties referred to in (4) above be paid to the Commonwealth
Consolidated Revenue Fund by 4.00pm on 18 April
2010.
FEDERAL MAGISTRATESCOURT OF AUSTRALIA
ATDARWIN
|
DNG 4 of 2009
Applicant
And
FORTCREST INVESTMENTS PTY LTD ACN 070 865
824
|
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
Introduction
- On
30 June 2009 the Workplace Ombudsman commenced proceedings against the
respondent seeking the imposition on it of civil penalties
for alleged breaches
of its obligations to:
- pay its employee
Naomi Atkinson the requisite minimum wage;
- pay her a
District Allowance;
- provide her with
pay slips; and
- keep proper
records of the superannuation payments it made on her behalf.
- It
was alleged that the breaches began on 7 January 2002 when Ms Atkinson’s
employment began, and continued until 28 March 2008
when she resigned. However
the relevant legislation provides that an application for a civil penalty must
be filed no later than
six years after the date of an alleged breach. The
Workplace Ombudsman therefore sought to have penalties imposed for breaches
which
occurred between 30 June 2003 and 28 March 2008.
- After
being served with the application the respondent
co-operated with the
applicant in the preparation of an agreed statement of facts and the matter was
listed on 4 November 2009 for
submissions as to penalty.
- Pursuant
to an order made by consent on 16 September 2009 the Fair Work Ombudsman was
substituted as the applicant in the proceedings.
Background facts
- The
following background facts are taken from the agreed statement of facts filed on
28 October 2009.
- The
respondent is a company which has been incorporated since 1995. At all material
times it operated a takeaway shop, “Lips
Café” in the Oasis
Shopping Centre in Palmerston.
- The
respondent is a very small company. Ms Lisa Tchong has been its director since
2000, and her husband Mr Lip Heng The is the manager
of the business.
- On
7 January 2002 the respondent employed Ms Atkinson, then
19 years of age, to
work in the business on a casual basis as a kitchen hand and food service
attendant. Ms Atkinson’s employment
or at any rate the breaches of the
relevant legislation continued until 28 March
2008.[1]
- The
respondent fixed on a rate of pay for Ms Atkinson by talking to other shop
owners. No inquiries were made with any relevant authority
or organisation about
the appropriate rate of pay for Ms Atkinson.
- Ms
Atkinson’s employment was in fact covered at all material times by the
Retail Wholesale and Distributive Employees (NT) Award 2000. The minimum
rate of pay for an employee of Ms Atkinson’s classification was prescribed
in cl.3 of the Award, and pursuant
to cl.21 of the Award Ms Atkinson was
entitled to be paid a District Allowance because of the location of the business
in which she
worked.
The underpayment of wages
- As
at 30 June 2003 when the breaches relevant to this application commenced, the
respondent was obliged pursuant to s.149(e) of the Workplace Relations
Act (“the WR Act”) as it was in January 2001 (the pre-reform
Act), to pay Ms Atkinson an hourly rate of pay which was at
least equal to the
minimum payable under the award.
- As
a result of the enactment of the Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices)
Act 2005 the respondent’s obligations to pay Ms Atkinson a minimum
wage changed as of 28 March 2006.
- As
of that date pursuant to s.208(2) of the WR Act the minimum terms and conditions
of Ms Atkinson’s employment were prescribed
by:
- the
Retail Wholesale and Distributive Employees (NT) Award 2000; and
- a
preserved Australian Pay and Classification Scale derived from the award
(preserved APCS).
- Pursuant
to s.182(1) of the WR Act the respondent was obliged to pay Ms Atkinson a basic
period rate of pay for each of her guaranteed
hours (in the case of Ms Atkinson
being the number of hours which she was requested to and did work each
week).
- On
every occasion between 30 June 2003 and 28 March 2006 the weekly amount the
respondent paid Ms Atkinson was below the minimum wage
or basic period rate of
pay to which she was entitled.
The non-payment of a District Allowance
- Pursuant
to clause 21 of the Award, s.149(e) of the pre-reform Act and s.513 of the WR
Act Ms Atkinson was entitled to be paid a District
Allowance of 0.4368 cents per
hour. At no time between 30 June 2003 and 28 March 2008 was Ms Atkinson ever
paid the District Allowance.
The total underpayment between 30 June 2003 and 28 March 2008
- Between
30 June 2003 and 28 March 2008 Ms Atkinson was underpaid, when wages and
District Allowance are combined, a total $24,526.50
gross.
The provision of pay-slips
- Pursuant
to reg.132A of the Workplace Relations Regulations 1996 in force prior to
the enactment of the Workplace Relations Act (Work Choices) Act
(“the pre-reform Regulations) and Regulation 19.20 of the Workplace
Relations Regulations 2006 (“WR Regulations”), the respondent
was required to provide Ms Atkinson with a pay slip for each payment made to
her.
- The
respondent kept a wages book which Ms Atkinson was obliged to sign each time she
was paid but at no time between 30 June 2003
and 28 March 2008 was Ms Atkinson
ever given a payslip.
The obligation to maintain superannuation records
- Pursuant
to reg.131H of the pre-reform regulations and reg.19.13 of the WR Regulations
the respondent was required to keep records
of the superannuation contributions
made on behalf of Ms Atkinson.
- The
agree statement of facts records that the respondent “failed to keep a
record of the superannuation contributions made by the respondent on behalf of
Ms Atkinson.”
- It
was conceded that the respondent had in fact paid superannuation for Ms
Atkinson, and during submissions on 4 November 2009 the
respondent’s
counsel produced an exercise book containing some records in relation to Ms
Atkinson’s superannuation. The
Applicant’s counsel accepted that the
book was not a recent invention.
- The
exercise book lists the amount paid to Ms Atkinson for each pay period, the tax
withheld, net pay and, under a heading “Super
(9%)” a single entry
each quarter being the superannuation payable for that quarter.
- The
records do not comply with the regulations insofar as they do not include
information about the amount actually paid from time
to time, the date on which
it was paid and the name of the fund to which it was paid.
Ms Atkinson’s complaint and its investigation
- Ms
Atkinson lodged a complaint with the Workplace Ombudsman via the internet on 11
March 2008. On 28 March 2008 she resigned from
her employment.
- A
Workplace Inspector had a number of meetings with Mr The, and as a result it was
determined that Ms Atkinson had been underpaid
an amount of $29,055.20 gross for
the period 7 January 2002 to 28 March 2008. A Breach Notice was issued to Mr
The.
- At
a subsequent meeting Mr The admitted to the Workplace Inspector that the
respondent’s record keeping was not good. He requested
however that when
calculating the underpayment it be taken into consideration that Ms Atkinson had
received free meals, drinks of
$10.00 per day provided to Ms Atkinson and
additional benefits such as jewellery, used furniture and interest free loans.
- Ms
Atkinson stated that she only occasionally received free goods, and in any event
it was explained to Mr The that the items he referred
to could not be taken to
have been accepted in lieu of wages.
- On
7 July 2008 a final notice was issued to Mr The advising him that unless the
respondent took action within seven days to rectify
the breaches and pay Ms
Atkinson the amount of $29,055.20 gross, the respondent might be subject to
legal action seeking to recover
the outstanding amount and seeking the
imposition on it of penalties for breaches of the legislation.
- The
breaches were not rectified and nor was Ms Atkinson paid the outstanding amount
rather on 1 August 2008 Mr The sent a letter to
the Workplace Ombudsman
enclosing an invoice to Ms Atkinson for $23,050.40 for meals, drinks and paid
leave allegedly provided to
her by the respondent throughout her
employment.
- On
5 September 2008 however Mr The participated in a record of interview and on 8
September 2008 he delivered to the office of Workplace
Ombudsman a cheque for
$25,597.00 which was the underpayment of $29,035.29 less tax of $3,458.29.
- Mr
The was advised that the Workplace Ombudsman reserved the right to take legal
action to seek penalties in respect of serious breaches
of the legislation. On
30 June 2009 the Workplace Ombudsman commenced legal proceedings seeking the
imposition of civil penalties
on the respondent.
The applicable penalties
- Although
the respondent committed multiple breaches of each of the provisions concerning
the payment of a minimum wage, payment of
the District Allowance, provision of
pay slips and the keeping of adequate records of superannuation payments, s.719
of the WR Act
and its predecessor s.178(2) of the pre-reform Act both state
that:
- “where:
- (a) 2 or
more breaches of an applicable provision are committed by the same person;
and
- (b) the
breaches arose out of a course of conduct by the person;
- the
breaches shall, for the purposes of this section, be taken to constitute a
single breach of the term.”
- The
parties agreed that the respondent had committed four breaches of the
legislation, as follows:
- failure
to pay Ms Atkinson a minimum hourly rate of pay;
- failure
to pay Ms Atkinson the District Allowance;
- failure
to provide pay slips;
- failure
to keep the prescribed records in relation to superannuation paid on Ms
Atkinson’s behalf.
- Pursuant
to s.178(4) of the pre-reform Act, the maximum penalty which could be imposed
for a breach of a term of an award (the failure
to pay the minimum wage and the
failure to pay the District Allowance) by a body corporate was $10,000.00 until
10 August 2004 and
thereafter and until 28 March 2006 was 300 penalty units or
$33,000.00.
- Pursuant
to s.719(4) of the WR Act, in force from 28 March 2006, the maximum penalty
which can be imposed on a body corporate for
failing to pay a minimum wage and
failing to pay the District Allowance is also 300 penalty units or
$33,000.00.
- The
failure to provide payslips and to keep records of superannuation payments are
breaches of the WR Regulations.
- Pursuant
to reg.132A of the pre-reform regulations, the maximum penalty for the failure
by an employer to provide a payslip was $1,000.00.
The maximum penalty for
failing to keep superannuation records was also $1,000.00.
- Pursuant
to reg.14.4 of the WR Regulations and s.846(2) of the WR Act the maximum penalty
which may be imposed on a body corporate
post 28 March 2006 for a contravention
of the regulations is 50 penalty units or $5,500.00.
The applicant’s submissions
- The
applicant relied on written and oral submissions.
- The
applicant submitted that the respondent, in failing to comply with its
obligations the respondent acted with “complete disregard and wilful
ignorance as to its statutory obligations.”
- The
respondent made no effort to find out about the correct rate of pay from any
government authority, rather it simply made inquiries
with other shopkeepers
about the appropriate rate of pay. It made no inquiries about its record keeping
obligations.
- Ms
Atkinson was 19 when she commenced employment with the respondent in January
2002 and as a result of her age and lack of experience
in the workforce was a
vulnerable employee.
- Ms
Atkinson was underpaid in an amount which (for the purposes of these
proceedings) totalled $24,560.00 gross. The weekly amounts
of the underpayments
varied but Ms Atkinson was frequently underpaid amounts in excess of $100.00 per
week gross, which were significant
amounts for a low paid
worker.[2]
- The
respondent did not immediately admit liability after the investigation commenced
and it was not until nearly five months later,
and three months after a final
notice requiring payment was given to the respondent, that the underpayment was
rectified. The respondent
first attempted to avoid liability by delivering a
bill to Ms Atkinson for $23,050.40 for meals, drinks and paid leave allegedly
provided to her during her employment.
- The
respondent was certainly a small employer, but this did not absolve it from
responsibility for complying with the law, nor should
it be given any great
weight when penalty was assessed.
- The
applicant submitted that specific deterrence was a relevant consideration. This
was particularly so when there was no evidence
that the respondent had improved
its systems since the events which occurred between 2002 and 2008 and nothing to
demonstrate that
it now had a better understanding of its obligations as an
employer.
- General
deterrence was also an important consideration in this case.
It was of grave
concern that the respondent had acted on information from other shopkeepers
about its payment obligations which proved
to be incorrect.
- The
applicant submitted that there should be no discount of penalty simply because
the respondent had made good the underpayment in
full and had admitted liability
and saved the public the cost of a hearing, in circumstances where, in the
applicant’s view,
the respondent had made no apology and shown no
contrition.
- The
applicant submitted that a limited discount if any should be given to the
respondent for its eventual admission of liability and
rectification of the
underpayment. It submitted that the offences were serious, and that the need
for specific and general deterrence
was strong, and that a mid-range penalty
should be imposed for each of the four breaches.
- Using
as a yardstick the maximum penalty currently applying for each of the breaches,
the applicant submitted that the penalties should
be:
- for
failure to pay Ms Atkinson a minimum hourly rate of
pay:
$10,000.00 to $15,000.00;
- for
failure to pay Ms Atkinson the District Allowance:
$10,000.00 to
$15,000.00;
- for
failure to provide pay slips:
$2,000.00 to $3,000.00.
- for
failure to keep prescribed records in relation to superannuation:
$2,000.00 to $3,000.00.
- On
a summation of the above figures the total penalty applicable would be between
$24,000.00 and $36,000.00.
- The
applicant conceded that the court needed to step back at this point and consider
whether the total amount arrived at by a summation
of the four penalties was
disproportionate to the offence.
- The
applicant made no submissions about whether the penalty should be reduced by
application of the totality principle but submitted
that if the court was minded
to reduce the penalty it should not be reduced below
$20,000.00.
The respondent’s submissions
- The
respondent did not file any affidavit material but filed written submissions and
made oral submissions.
- The
Court was informed that the director and manager of the respondent were East
Timorese refugees and had a poor command of English.
The take-away business was
their first business and it was submitted that the failure by the respondent to
pay Ms Atkinson the requisite
minimum wage was due to simple ignorance, not to
deliberate defiance of the law.
- In
written submissions it was said on the respondent’s behalf
that:
- “As
to the underpayment, the respondent had no knowledge of an applicable award or
that there was regime which imposed minimum
wages. The directors merely spoke
with other shopkeepers to identify what was an accepted hourly rate to pay
staff.”
[3]
- The
respondent, it was claimed, did not “have the resources and means of a
larger company to identify all the statutory requirements
associated with
employing
staff.”[4]
- It
was submitted that while the respondent did not provide payslips to Ms Atkinson,
it did keep a wages book which Ms Atkinson signed
on each occasion she was paid,
and Ms Atkinson being aware of the book could have asked to inspect it at any
time. In any event Ms
Atkinson was provided with group certificates and
therefore did not suffer any detriment as a result of the “technical
breach”
of failure to give her weekly pay slips.
- The
breach of the record keeping requirements in respect of superannuation was also
a technical breach, as the respondent did keep
some records and had paid the
superannuation contributions.
- The
respondent submitted that its “record keeping was not excellent but was
maintained on good faith and to the best of the
respondent’s
ability.”[5]
- The
respondent’s counsel tendered an article from a local newspaper which made
reference to the Court proceedings against the
respondent, and submitted as
follows:
-
“Note the Ombudsman’s own press release indicated that more than 50%
of the businesses did not comply with the Act.
It is possible that all these
businesses are flagrantly breaching the Act but the better theory is that a
number of employees (sic),
like the respondent, are simply not aware of the
provisions.”[6]
- One
inference contained in this submission as I understand it is that the respondent
should not be singled out for harsh treatment
when there is widespread
non-compliance with the law. However the respondent also submitted that the
publicity given to the proceedings
to date had had adverse consequences for it
and its office-holders already and that was a punishment in itself which should
be taken
into account when penalty was assessed.
- It
was submitted that the respondent had improved its systems and now paid award or
above award wages, paid the District Allowance,
kept proper records and provided
payslips. It was submitted that the respondent had “learned a lesson
and will have to pay legal
expenses.”[7]
It was submitted that there was “no likelihood of the respondent
re-offending.”
- The
respondent admitted the breaches following the complaint to the Workplace
Ombudsman and made payment to Ms Atkinson for the full
amount of the underpaid
wages from 7 January 2002 to 28 March 2008.
- The
amount attributable to unpaid District Allowance was quite small and the
underpayment in this regard had also been rectified.
- It
was the respondent’s case that it should get a discount for its admission
of liability and co-operation in the preparation
of an agreed statement of
facts, which had saved the costs of a contested hearing.
- The
respondent submitted that a reprimand or a low fine would be
appropriate.
Assessment of penalty
- In
Mason v Harrington Corporation Pty
Limited[8] Mowbray
FM identified “a non-exhaustive range of considerations to which regard
may be had in determining whether particular
conduct calls for the imposition of
a penalty, and if it does the amount of the penalty”. Tracey J in
Kelly v
Fitzpatrick[9]
adopted those considerations and described them as follows:
- The nature
and extent of the conduct which led to the breaches.
- The
circumstances in which that conduct took place.
- The nature
and extent of any loss or damage sustained as a result of the breaches.
- Whether there
had been similar previous conduct by the respondent.
- Whether the
breaches were properly distinct or arose out of the one course of
conduct.
- The size of
the business enterprise involved.
- Whether or
not the breaches were deliberate.
- Whether
senior management was involved in the breaches.
- Whether the
party committing the breach had exhibited contrition.
- Whether the
party committing the breach had taken corrective action.
- Whether the
party committing the breach had cooperated with the enforcement
authorities.
- The need to
ensure compliance with minimum standards by provision of an effective means for
investigation and enforcement of employee
entitlements and
- The need for
specific and general deterrence.
- There
was no dispute about the nature and extent of the conduct which led to the
breaches. Ms Atkinson was paid less than the requisite minimum wage or
basic period rate of pay week in and week out for the entire period
covered by
these proceedings, and was never paid the District Allowance. She was also never
provided with a pay slip, and the superannuation
records kept on her behalf do
not comply with the legislation.
- I
do not accept the argument that the failure to provide pay slips was a technical
breach, simply because there was a time and wages
book which Ms Atkinson could
have looked at if she had asked to do so.
- The
submission that the provision of a payment summary (called a group certificate
by the respondent) somehow makes up for the failure
to provide pay slips and
also helps to render the breach a technical breach raises a concern that the
respondent has still not had
a look at reg.19.21 of the WR Regulations. That
Regulation provides that the particulars which must be included on a payslip
are:
- (a) the name
of the employer;
- (b) the name
of the employee;
- (c) the date
on which the payment to which the pay slip relates was made;
- (d) the
period to which that pay slip relates;
- (e) if the
employee is paid at an hourly rate of pay:
- (i) the
ordinary hourly rate; and
- (ii) the
number of hours in that period for which the employee was employed at that rate;
and
- (iii) the
amount of the payment made at that rate;
- (f) ......
- (g) the
gross amount of the payment;
- (h) the net
amount of the payment;
- (i) any
amount paid that is an incentive-based payment, bonus, loading, monetary
allowance, penalty rate or other separately identifiable
entitlement the
employee has;
- (j) the
details in respect of each amount deducted from the gross amount of the payment
including the name, or the name and number,
of the fund or account into which
the deduction was paid;
- (k) if the
employer is required to make superannuation contributions for the benefit of the
employee:
- (i) the
amount of each contribution that the employer has made for the benefit of the
employee during the period to which the pay
slip relates, and the name of any
fund to which that contribution was made; or
- (ii) the
amounts of contributions that the employer is liable to make in relation to the
period to which the pay slip relates, and
the name of any fund to which those
contributions will be made.
- The
respondent did not keep superannuation records which complied with the
legislation and I do not accept that the breach of the
regulations in this
regard were technical breaches.
- As
to the circumstances in which the conduct took place, Ms Atkinson was 19
years of age when she commenced employment with the respondent. It was submitted
that she was a vulnerable employee,
but there is some difficulty with this
submission, as there was no evidence of Ms Atkinson’s work history or
personal circumstances,
and some 19 year olds have already had three or four
years experience in the workforce. I am not satisfied that there is evidence
that would allow me to conclude that Ms Atkinson was an especially vulnerable
employee.
- As
to the nature and extent of any loss or damage sustained as a result of the
breaches, as a result of the respondent’s conduct Ms Atkinson was
underpaid every single week for a period of nearly four years (considering
only
the period relevant to these proceedings).
On quite a number of occasions
she was underpaid in excess of $100.00 gross, a significant amount for a low
paid casual worker.
The total underpayment of wages and District Allowance
totalled $24,560.20 from the period 30 June 2003 to 28 March 2008.
- There
was no evidence that the failure to provide pay slips or the failure to keep
adequate superannuation records had resulted in
any loss or damage to Ms
Atkinson. The superannuation contributions for Ms Atkinson were in fact paid,
even though the records were
not properly kept.
- There
has been no similar previous conduct by the Respondent.
- As
to whether the breaches were properly distinct or arouse from one course of
conduct, the respondent argued in its written submissions that although
there had been a breach of four different provisions of the workplace
legislation, the breaches in their totality represented one course of
conduct.
- It
was not made clear by the respondent’s counsel whether the intent of this
submission was to persuade the Court to impose
one penalty rather than four
penalties, but in any event I do not accept the submission
- Certainly
the four breaches all occurred in respect of one employee, they all covered
exactly the same time span, and they all occurred
in relation to the payment of
wages and keeping of employment records for this one employee. However the
respondent breached four
separate and distinct provisions of the legislation and
in my view it is entirely appropriate to treat the respondent as having
committed
four breaches of the legislation and not as having committed one
course of wrongdoing.
- This
is not even a case where there is some overlap in the breaches.
In
particular, there is no overlap between the breach of the requirement that a
minimum wage be paid and the breach of the requirement
that the District
Allowance be paid. These are quite separate obligations on an employer, as all
employees doing the same work as
Ms Atkinson are entitled to be paid a minimum
wage, but only those working in certain locations are entitled to be paid the
District
Allowance.
- As
to the size of the business enterprise involved, the information
available suggests that the respondent is a very small company. One director and
one manager (husband and wife)
were identified and it was not suggested that the
respondent ran any businesses other than “Lip’s Cafe”
in Palmerston.
- However
in Kelly v
Fitzpatrick[10]
Tracey J observed that:
- “No
less than large corporate employers, small businesses have an obligation to meet
minimum employment standards and their employees,
rightly, have an expectation
that this will occur. When it does not it will, normally, be necessary to mark
the failure by imposing
an appropriate monetary sanction. Such a sanction must
be imposed at a meaningful level.”
- In
Rajagopalan v BM Sydney Building Materials Pty
Ltd[11] Driver FM
remarked:
- “Employers
must not be left under the impression that because of their size or financial
difficulty that they are able to breach
an award. Obligations by employers for
adherence to industrial instruments arise regardless of their size. Such a
factor should be
of limited relevance to a Court's consideration of
penalty.”
- In
my view however some regard must be had to the size of the respondent, because
corporations range widely in size, from large listed
companies such as BHP,
which has levels of management and operations and employees all over Australia,
to companies such as the respondent
which is run effectively by two people and
operates one small outlet. A penalty in an amount necessary to both punish and
deter from
re-offending a very large company could be excessively harsh if
imposed on a very small corporation.
- I
must consider whether the breaches were deliberate.
- The
Applicant submitted that the respondent “deliberately and
intentionally” underpaid Ms Atkinson. There was however no evidence
that the Applicant underpaid Ms Atkinson well knowing that it was doing
so.
- It
was however reckless in the extreme of the director and manager of the
respondent, in circumstances where they had never run a
business before and
intended to set up business in a country with whose laws they were not familiar,
to fail to make any inquiries
with any relevant authorities about their
obligations concerning paying employees and their record keeping
obligations.
- I
must consider whether the respondent has exhibited contrition.
- There
was no evidence that the respondent had ever apologised to the Applicant, but it
did, after some attempts in initial discussions
with a workplace inspector to
avoid its obligations, pay Ms Atkinson in full the amount she had been
underpaid.
- The
respondent submitted that it was evidence of its contrition that it had no ill
feeling toward Ms Atkinson and had given her a
good reference when she applied
for a job with Woolworths. Although this submission was perhaps not felicitously
expressed, I take
it to mean that the respondent accepts full responsibility for
its actions in underpaying Ms Atkinson and failing to keep adequate
records, and
I am prepared to accept that the respondent has shown some contrition.
- As
to whether the respondent has taken corrective action, the respondent
submitted that since the events of 2008 it had improved its record keeping
practices and paid its employees at or
above the award rate. There was no sworn
evidence to support this submission but certainly there was no evidence of any
ongoing concern
by the authorities about the respondent’s practices as an
employer.
- I
must consider whether the respondent cooperated with the enforcement
authorities and I am satisfied that in the end it did. Certainly this was
not without letting some time pass and not without attempting to get
out of the
underpayments by making claims about Ms Atkinson having received free goods, but
in the end Mr The took part in a record
of interview and paid in full the not
insignificant sum owing to Ms Atkinson.
- I
must consider the need for specific and general deterrence and in my view
there is a need for both in this case.
- The
respondent’s conduct occurred over a period of six and a half years (in
reality) and over a period of nearly five years
(the period with which these
proceedings are concerned). Not once during that period did the respondent make
any effort to acquaint
itself with its obligations by means of recourse to an
employer body or a government authority.
- The
respondent continues in business and it is important that a penalty be imposed
at a sufficient level to deter the respondent from
acting so recklessly in the
future when it comes to properly acquainting itself with its obligations as an
employer.
- The
need for general deterrence is also strong.
- Many
immigrants to Australia set up small businesses here and it is important that a
penalty be imposed sufficient to deter other
people in the director and
manager’s circumstances from acting in the same reckless fashion by
failing to make any inquiries
about their obligations as employers.
- It
is important that it be reinforced to all small business operators that they
have an obligation to meet minimum requirements concerning
pay and record
keeping and cannot simply determine for themselves the amount they will pay or
the records they will keep.
- At
the same time I bear in mind however the observations of Lander J in Ponzio v
B & P Caelli
Constructions[12]
when he said:
- “In
regard to general deterrence it assumed that an appropriate penalty will act as
a deterrent to others who might be likely
to offend: Yardley v Betts (1979)
22SASR 108. The penalty therefore should be of a kind that it would be likely to
act as a deterrent
in preventing similar contraventions by like minded persons
or organisations. If the penalty does not demonstrate an appropriate
assessment
of the seriousness of offending, the penalty will not operate to deter others
from contravening the section. However,
the penalty should not be such as to
crush the person upon whom the penalty is imposed or used to make that person a
scapegoat.”
Conclusion
- This
Court and other Courts have handed down many decisions in recent times imposing
penalties on employers for breaches of the requirement
to pay a minimum wage.
The applicant’s counsel referred me to some of those cases. However while
it is desirable that there
be consistency between decisions, the factual
circumstances in the reported cases vary widely.
- For
example in Fair Work Ombudsman & Bundy Meat
Markets[13] for
example a decision handed down on 8 October 2009, Jarrett FM imposed a penalty
of $13,000.00 on a company for failure to pay
one employee a minimum wage. Other
penalties were imposed for breaches of other provisions of the legislation.
- The
company had been operating two butcher’s shops. The total amount underpaid
was $1,272.92 and the underpayment occurred over
a period of about fourteen
months. The underpayment had been drawn to the company’s attention while
the employee was still
employed but it had failed to correct the situation. It
had not made good the underpayment (or paid other entitlements which were
owed
to the employee) although two years had passed since the employee had ceased his
employment and since an investigation had commenced,
and its officers were not
especially co-operative with the regulatory authorities. No previous civil
penalty contraventions were
alleged.
- In
Fair Work Ombudsman & Land Choice Pty
Ltd[14] a decision
handed down on 17 December 2009, Barnes FM imposed a penalty of $8,000.00 on a
company which failed to pay one employee
a minimum wage. Again, other penalties
were imposed for breaches of other provisions of the legislation.
- The
company ran a real estate business and had about six employees. The employee in
question was to all intents and purposes not
paid at all during a period of six
months and the total underpayment was $20,119.07. Only $5,000.00 of the
underpayment had since
been paid to the employee, although two years had passed.
- FM
Barnes considered that the underpayment had arisen out of a reckless breach of
the legislation (the employee was wrongly treated
as an independent contractor
rather than an employee). She had regard to the fact that the company had shown
contrition and had
co-operated with the authorities. No previous civil penalty
breaches were alleged.
- As
Moore J pointed out in Rojas v Esselte Australia Pty Ltd
(No.2):
- “while
general guidance as to the appropriate penalty may be obtained through an
analysis of comparable cases, it remains necessary
for the Court to give careful
consideration to the circumstances of the case before it (see also Australian
Ophthalmic Supplies Pty
Ltd v McAlary-Smith [2008] FCAFC 8; (2008) 165 FCR 560
at [12] per Gray J).
- In
the particular case before me, considerations which weigh in favour of penalties
at the lower end of the range being imposed are
that the respondent has
committed no previous civil penalty breaches, that it is a very small
corporation and therefore even a modest
penalty may be a significant punishment
and deterrent, it has suffered some punishment already in the form of legal fees
and adverse
publicity, it has after a fashion shown contrition and that it has
(significantly in view of the difficulty which seems to arise
with this in many
other cases) paid in full the amount of $25, 597.00 owing to Ms Atkinson.
- Considerations
which weigh in favour of a much higher penalty being imposed however are that
the conduct continued for nearly five
years, indeed continued until Ms Atkinson
made a complaint to the Workplace Ombudsman. The underpayment of wages and
District Allowance
had a significant impact on Ms Atkinson each and every week
during that period. There is some need for specific deterrence and there
is a
strong need for general deterrence, and in order to achieve the objective of
general deterrence in particular a penalty must
be imposed at a meaningful
level.
- In
my view the appropriate penalties for the failure to pay the minimum wage and
the failure to pay the District Allowance should
be:
- for
failure to pay the minimum wage :$10,000.00;
- for
failure to pay Ms Atkinson the District Allowance:
$10,000.00;
- Penalties
for the record keeping failures were relatively low for the first three years of
the five years of the offending and currently
stand at a maximum of $5,500.00.
In light of the differences in the penalty during the relevant period in my view
an appropriate
penalty would be 20% of the current maximum, or:
- for
failure to provide pay slips:
$1,100.00;
- for
failure to keep prescribed records in relation to superannuation:
$1,100.00.
- This
would equate to a total penalty of $22,200.00.
- I
am required to consider the totality principle. In Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission v Australian Safeway Stores Pty
Limited[15]
Goldberg J expounded on this principle as follows:
- “The
totality principle is designed to ensure that overall an appropriate sentence or
penalty is appropriate and that the sum
of the penalties imposed for several
contraventions does not result in the total of the penalties exceeding what is
proper having
regard to the totality of the contravening conduct involved:
McDonald v R [1994] FCA 956; (1994) 48 FCR 555; 120 ALR 629. But that does not mean that a court
should commence by determining an overall penalty and then dividing it among the
various contraventions.
Rather the totality principle involves a final overall
consideration of the sum of the penalties determined. In Mill v R [1988] HCA 70; (1988) 166 CLR
59; 83 ALR 1 the High Court accepted the following statement as correctly
describing the totality principle:
- The effect
of the totality principle is to require a sentencer who has passed a series of
sentences, each properly calculated in
relation to the offence for which it is
imposed and each properly made consecutive in accordance with the principles
governing consecutive
sentences, to review the aggregate sentence and consider
whether the aggregate is “just and appropriate”. The principle
has
been stated many times in various forms: “when a number of offences are
being dealt with and specific punishments in respect
of them are being totted up
to make a total, it is always necessary for the court to take a last look at the
total just to see whether
it looks wrong”; “when ... cases of
multiplicity of offences come before the court, the court must not content
itself
by doing the arithmetic and passing the sentence which the arithmetic
produces. It must look at the totality of the criminal behavior
and ask itself
what is the appropriate sentence for all the offences”.
- This
approach was endorsed by the Full Court of the Federal Court in Australian
Ophthalmic Supplies Pty Ltd v
McAlary-Smith.[16]
- In
the circumstances of this case, and particularly given the length of time over
which the breaches occurred, the financial impact
of the breaches on a young
employee and the need for specific as well as general deterrence, I do not
consider that the total penalty
of $22,000.00 is excessive or should be
discounted.
- I
therefore intend to impose penalties as set out in paragraphs 110 and 111 of the
judgment.
- No
submissions were made about time to pay and the information given about the
respondent’s financial circumstances was limited
to bare assertions of one
or two sentences in its written submissions on penalty. I consider it reasonable
to order that the penalty
be paid to the Commonwealth within three months.
- For
all of the above reasons the orders of the Court are as set out at the beginning
of this judgment.
I certify that the preceding one hundred and
eighteen (118) paragraphs are a true copy of the reasons for judgment of Terry
FM
Associate: Barbara Cameron
Date: 18 January 2010
[1] In the Statement
of Claim and in the Applicant’s written submissions it is stated that Ms
Atkinson ceased working for the respondent
on 18 April 2008. In the Agreed
Statement of Facts it is recorded that Ms Atkinson resigned on 28 March 2008,
and the underpayments
itemised in the Statement of Claim ceased on 28 March
2008. The book which is Exhibit C also records the last payment to Ms Atkinson
by the respondent as having been made for week ending 28 March 2008.
[2] See detailed
breakdown of underpayments in the schedule attached to the Statement of Claim
filed on 30 June
2009
[3]
Respondent’s written submissions on penalty filed 4 November 2009
paragraph 25
[4]
Respondent’s written submissions on penalty filed on 4 November
2009
[5]
Respondent’s submissions filed 4 November 2009 paragraph
17
[6]
Respondent’s submissions filed 4 November 2009 paragraph
20
[7]
Respondent’s written submissions on penalty filed on 4 November 2009
paragraph 25
[8]
Mason v Harrington Corporation Pty Limited [2007] FMCA 7 at
[24]
[9] Kelly v
Fitzpatrick [2007] FCA 1080 at
[14]
[10] Kelly
v Fitzpatrick (2007) 166IR
14
[11]
Rajagopalan v BM Sydney Building Materials Pty Ltd [2007] FMCA 1412 at
[27-29]
[12]
Ponzio v B & P Caelli Constructions Pty Ltd (2007) 158 FCR
543
[13] Fair
Work Ombudsman & Bundy Meat Markets [2009] FMCA
994
[14] Fair
Work Ombudsman & Land Choice Pty Ltd [2009] FMCA
1255
[15]
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Australian Safeway Stores
Pty Limited (1997) 145 ALR 36 at
[53]
[16]
Australian Ophthalmic Supplies Pty Ltd v McAlary-Smith [2008]
FCAFC 8
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