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Deva v University of Western Sydney (Includes Corrigendum dated 11 March 2011) [2011] FCA 199 (9 March 2011)
Last Updated: 11 March 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Deva v University of Western Sydney
[2011] FCA 199
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Citation:
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Deva v University of Western Sydney [2011] FCA 199
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Appeal from:
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Deva v University of Western Sydney [2010] FWAFB 7362 Deva v University
of Western Sydney [2010] FWAFB 8438
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Parties:
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PRADEEP DEVA v UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN
SYDNEY
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File number:
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NSD 1567 of 2010
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Judge:
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PERRAM J
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Date of judgment:
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Corrigendum:
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11 March 2011
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Catchwords:
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INDUSTRIAL LAW – Workplace Relations – Termination of
employment – appeal from Fair Work Australia Full Bench – first
instance
decision of Australian Industrial Relations Commission – effect
of Fair Work (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 2009
(Cth) and Workplace Relations Regulations 2006 (Cth) regulation
7.4.13 – appeal out of time - whether appeal from Fair Work Australia Full
Bench could be brought in Federal Court of Australia -
application for unlawful
termination - whether application for unlawful termination properly brought in
Federal Court of Australia
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Appeal – appeal from Fair Work
Australia Full Bench – first instance decision of Australian Industrial
Relations
Commission – appeal out of time – Workplace Relations
Act 1996 (Cth) – effect of transitional provisions – Fair
Work (Transitional Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 2009 (Cth) -
Workplace Relations Regulations 2006 (Cth) regulation 7.4.13 –
whether writs of mandamus and certiorari available
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Appeal – appeal from Fair Work
Australia Full Bench – first instance decision of Australian Industrial
Relations
Commission – jurisdiction – no appeal from Fair Work
Australia Full Bench to Federal Court of Australia
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Legislation:
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Cases cited:
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Date of last submissions:
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10 February 2011
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Place:
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Sydney
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Division:
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FAIR WORK DIVISION
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Counsel for the Applicant:
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The applicant appeared in person
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Mr S Prince
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Lander & Rogers
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FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Deva v University of Western Sydney [2011] FCA 199
CORRIGENDUM
- In
paragraph 16 of the reasons for judgment, omit “First, s 45(1)(c) of
the Act was repealed”, substitute “First,
s 45(1)(a) of the Act
was repealed”.
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I certify that the preceding one (1) numbered paragraph is a true copy of
the Corrigendum to the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable Justice
Perram.
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Associate:
Dated: 11 March 2011
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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AND:
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UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN
SYDNEYRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
application be dismissed.
- The
applicant pay the respondent’s 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
Federal Law Search on the Court’s website.
IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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NEW SOUTH WALES DISTRICT REGISTRY
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FAIR WORK DIVISION
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NSD 1567 of 2010
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BETWEEN:
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PRADEEP DEVA Applicant
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AND:
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UNIVERSITY OF WESTERN SYDNEY Respondent
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JUDGE:
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PERRAM J
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DATE:
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9 MARCH 2011
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PLACE:
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SYDNEY
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- Mr Deva
was dismissed from the service of the University of Western Sydney on
13 January 2005. He had been employed there
as a systems administrator
since 1995. Aggrieved by that action against him, Mr Deva commenced a
proceeding against the University
in the then Australian Industrial Relations
Commission claiming his dismissal was harsh, unjust or unreasonable which, at
the time,
was a ground for seeking relief under the former Workplace
Relations Act 1996 (Cth) (the WR Act). This he did on 28 January
2005.
- Mr
Deva’s claim was eventually arbitrated by Commissioner Lawson on
21 June 2005. The learned Commissioner rejected all
of
Mr Deva’s contentions and concluded that his dismissal had not been
harsh, unjust or unreasonable. Consequently, he
dismissed the application:
Deva and University of Western Sydney (2005) AIRComm PR959203
(unreported, 22 June 2005, Lawson C).
- Over
five years later, Mr Deva filed an appeal with the present Federal
industrial tribunal which, for now, travels under the
title Fair Work Australia
(FWA). This he did on 5 July 2010. A Full Bench of FWA was convened to
deal with Mr Deva’s
application which consisted of Hamberger SDP,
Hamilton DP and Simpson C. In two published decisions – Deva v
University of Western Sydney [2010] FWAFB 7362 and Deva v University of
Western Sydney [2010] FWAFB 8438 – the Full Bench determined not only
that Mr Deva had been obliged to file his appeal within 21 days
of
Commissioner Lawson’s original decision of 22 June 2005 but that it had no
power to extend that time after it had expired.
Accordingly, it dismissed his
application.
- Mr
Deva’s first contention in this Court is that this conclusion was
incorrect as a matter of law and the Full Bench did, in
fact, have the power to
extend the time to permit him to bring his appeal. Mr Deva argued that he
was entitled to apply for
permission to appeal to the Full Bench of FWA under
s 604 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) which is in these
terms:
604(1) A person who is aggrieved by a
decision:
(a) made by FWA (other than a decision of a Full Bench or the Minimum Wage
panel); or
(b) made by the General Manager (including a delegate of the General Manager)
under the Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act
2009;
may appeal the decision, with the permission of
FWA.
- The
difficulty with this submission is that Mr Deva is not aggrieved by a
decision of FWA. FWA was established by s 575(1)
of the Fair Work
Act and that occurred on 26 May 2009: see s 2 Fair Work
Act. It follows that it could not have been FWA which dismissed his
application on 22 June 2005 because it would not exist for
another four
years.
- In
fact, history records that the body which was then charged with operation of the
WR Act was the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission (the Commission).
Because s 604 says nothing about decisions of the Commission it cannot
apply to Mr Deva’s
case and I reject his submission that it
does.
- That,
however, is by no means the end of the matter. Prior to the coming into effect
of the Fair Work Act the WR Act had been in force and it was that Act
which, at least historically, had regulated Mr Deva’s right of
appeal.
- For
present purposes one needs to know that the whole of that Act (with the
exception of ss 1, 2 and Schedules 1 and 10) was repealed
on 1 July 2009 by
the combined operation of: (a) Schedule 1 to the Fair Work (Transitional
Provisions and Consequential Amendments) Act 2009 (Cth) (the Transitional
Act) which repealed all of the WR Act except ss 1, 2 and Schedules 1 and 10; (b)
s 3 of the Transitional
Act which gave Schedule 1 effect; and (c)
s 2(1) of the Transitional Act which tells one that Schedule 1 came into
force on
1 July 2009. The benefits of this style of legislative drafting
over other, perhaps more direct modes of expression (such as,
for example,
“The Workplace Relations Act 1996 is repealed with effect from
1 July 2009”) are not at once obvious.
- Having
then ascertained that the WR Act ceased to exist on 1 July 2009 (apart from
ss 1, 2 and Schedules 1 and 10) one then
needs to alight upon Schedule 2 to the
Transitional Act. It commenced on 1 July 2009 (largely for similar
reasons). Item 11(1)
of Schedule 2 provides:
The WR Act continues to apply, on and after the WR Act repeal day, in relation
to conduct that occurred before the WR Act repeal
day.
- I
interpolate that the WR Act repeal day is very helpfully defined in item 2 of
Schedule 2 to the Transitional Act as “the
day on which the WR Act repeal
commences” and the same item also tells one that the “WR Act
repeal” means “the
commencement of Schedule 1”. Any one who
has endured this far knows – from s 2 – that this was, of
course,
1 July 2009. A perhaps less tortuous version of item 11(1) might
simply have read “The Workplace Relations Act 1996 continues to
apply to conduct taking place before its repeal”.
- Item
11(1) applies to conduct. Does “conduct” include orders made by the
Commission? One does not need to answer this
because of item 11(2) which is
these terms:
To avoid doubt, the WR Act continues to apply, on and after the WR Act repeal
day, in relation to orders made under that Act, including
as it continues to
apply under subitem (1).
- One
should take from this, I suppose, that the WR Act continued to govern
Commissioner Lawson’s original orders (which it would have done, by force
of s 8 of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth), anyway).
Comforting no doubt as that is, the difficulty remains that the Commission
itself had ceased to exist, Part 3 of the WR
Act having been repealed, and
accordingly was no longer available even if the WR Act in some disembodied way
was.
- Since,
however, as a matter of law the Commission was no more, item 12(1) of Schedule 2
therefore usefully transferred any functions
it would have had by reason of the
disinterred WR Act – including appeals – to FWA. It provided
relevantly in subclause
(b) that on or after 1 July 2009 (not the actual
words, of course, but a useful enough English
translation):
an appeal to the Commission that could have been instituted because of item 11
may be instituted only as an appeal to FWA;
- It
is that provision which conferred upon FWA an entitlement to hear
Mr Deva’s appeal.
- How
was FWA to hear such an appeal? Unfortunately, the WR Act makes no mention of
FWA, instead cussedly only referring to the now
non-existent former Commission.
At this point item 12(2) of Schedule 2 to the Transitional Act lurches into view
and we learn that
any reference in a Commonwealth law (which, I note, includes
the WR Act) to that which item 12(2) helpfully refers to as a “WR
Act
body” is to be taken to be a reference to FWA. Only a naïve person
would think that that expression was defined in
the Dictionary in item 2 of
Schedule 2 (as all the other terms up to this point have been). It is, of
course, defined in Schedule
18 by item 7(1) which, without laying all of its
mysteries at once bare, at least tells one that the Commission was such a body.
It follows that the WR Act continued to apply to Commissioner
Lawson’s orders save that the role that the former Commission would have
had was now to be
filled by FWA.
- We
know from above that items 11 and 12 of Schedule 2 revived the WR Act for the
purposes of Mr Deva’s appeal. The question
now arises: which of the
very many historical versions of that Act would apply? At the time of
Commissioner Lawson’s decision
the right to appeal his orders was
conferred by s 45(1)(c). I am not, at this stage, going to set out
s 45(1)(c). This
is because on 27 March 2006 it was renumbered as
s 120(1)(b). This occurred in two easy-to-follow steps. First,
s 45(1)(c)
of the Act was repealed: see s 3 and item 21 of Schedule 1
to the Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005 (Cth). This
had the effect of making s 45(1)(c) the second rather than third
subclause of s 45(1). Secondly, the heavily amended bulk of the WR
Act was then renumbered by force of s 3 and Schedule 5 to the Workplace
Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act. After that procedure, that which
had been s 45(1)(c) was reborn as s 120(1)(b).
- Only
a pedant would want to know whether Mr Deva’s appeal lay under
s 45(1)(c) or s 120(1)(b). Fortunately,
it does not matter. This is
because the time limits for such an appeal were not specified in either
provision. They were instead
to be found far away in a regulation. Regulations
matter because item 3(2) of Schedule 2 to the Transitional Act makes clear that
the concept of the WR Act includes not just the WR Act (in its final moments)
but also the regulations which accompanied it into
the legal afterlife where
repealed legislation lingers (specifying “a reference to the WR Act
includes a reference to regulations
made for the purposes of the WR
Act...”). One of those regulations was regulation 7.4.4(2) of the
Workplace Relations Regulations 2006 (Cth). It
provided:
Despite the amendment of the pre-reform Act by the Work Choices Act, but subject
to regulation 4.13, an appeal to a Full Bench in
relation to a decision
mentioned in paragraph 45(1)(c) of the pre-Reform Act:
(a) may be instituted within the period mentioned in regulation
4.13...
- Regulation
7.4.13 is the dead heart of the matter. It provides
(relevantly):
(1) The period within which an appeal may be instituted under a provision of
this Division that allows appeals to be instituted after
the reform commencement
is:
(a) 21 days after the date of the award, order, decision or declaration appealed
against (whether the date of the award, order or
decision was before or after
the reform commencement); or
...
(2) The Commission must not grant an extension of time for the institution of an
appeal under this Division.
- The
Full Bench of FWA reasoned that reg 7.4.13(2) operated as an unavoidable
prohibition on extending the time in which Mr Deva
might be permitted to
appeal. The provision is certainly capable, in an appropriate case, of
potentially working injustice –
what, for example, of the employee who has
been in a coma or otherwise incapacitated (perhaps by reading these transitional
provisions)
– but the words are plain enough and both the concept and its
blunt effect not unfamiliar. It seems to me that the Full Bench’s
reasoning about reg 7.4.13(2) is, with respect, inescapable.
- I
have considered whether that conclusion might not be thwarted by rule 11(2) of
the former Australian Industrial Relations Commission Rules 1998 (Cth)
which did, in fact, authorise the Commission to extend the appeal time.
Assuming rule 11(2) survived the coming of the Workplace Relations Amendment
(Work Choices) Act – I cannot find any provision which repeals it
– nevertheless it is plainly inconsistent with regulations 7.4.4 and
7.4.13
which, therefore, operate as an indirect express amendment even if rule
11(2) continued to exist: Kartinyeri v Commonwealth [1998] HCA 22; (1998) 195 CLR 337
at 353-354 [9] per Brennan CJ and McHugh J, 369 [48] per Gaudron J, 375-376
[67]-[68] per Gummow and Hayne JJ, 421 [174] per Kirby J; Goodwin v Phillips
[1908] HCA 55; (1908) 7 CLR 1 at 7 per Griffith CJ, 14 per O’Connor J.
- It
follows, as the Full Bench correctly concluded, that it had no power to accede
to Mr Deva’s appeal. That conclusion
disposes of the substance of
his first complaint. Other procedural problems stood in its way too and
although I need not strictly
decide them I will, for completeness, note what
they were. First, Mr Deva’s application to this Court was
styled as an appeal. The effect of item 11(2) of Schedule 2 to the Transitional
Act is probably that the source for such an appeal would need to be found
in the WR Act as it stood at the moment of its repeal (that is, amongst
the provisions dealing with appeals from the Commission even though the
orders
were made by FWA). Another view might be that the orders subject to appeal were
made by FWA, albeit under the WR Act. It is not necessary to resolve the
rather stupefying issues which arise. In neither case would this Court have any
such appellate
(as opposed to original) jurisdiction. FWA may refer a question
of law to the Federal Court (s 608 Fair Work Act) as could the former
Commission (s 122 WR Act), but nowhere in either statute is there a conferral of
appellate jurisdiction on this
Court from the decisions of either body in unfair
dismissal claims. Since decisions by either body in unfair dismissal claims do
not involve the exercise of judicial power, the non-existence of such appellate
architecture is hardly surprising: cf. Re Dingjan; ex parte Wagner
[1995] HCA 16; (1995) 183 CLR 323 at 360-361 per Gaudron J (Brennan J agreeing at 341,
Deane J agreeing at 342 and Toohey J agreeing at 355).
- Mr
Deva sought to re-characterise his application as one for prerogative relief
under s 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth). I make the assumption
in Mr Deva’s favour that s39B can apply to the decision in question. Even
if I had been minded in principle to grant the issue of a writ of mandamus and
an ancillary
writ of certiorari (and I am not), the absence of FWA as a party to
Mr Deva’s proceeding would have made that course quite
out of the
question. Since the writs are directed as commands to the officer whose
decision it is sought to review, that officer
must necessarily be a party to the
proceeding.
- Despite
that, FWA’s joinder, rather than the particular members comprising the
Full Bench, would have been appropriate for
two reasons. First, the decision
maker was FWA in the sense that the power was exercised by it and not the
members comprising it
on the particular occasion. Secondly, FWA as an
entity “consists” of all its members (s 575(2) Fair
Work Act) so that the decision maker is, as a matter of formality, all of
the members of the FWA. The Fair Work Act provides for the power of FWA
(that is, all of the members) often to be exercised by single members or full
benches but this should
not obscure the true identity of the repository of the
power. Consequently, an application for prerogative relief in a case such
as
the present requires the joinder of the decision maker – here all of the
members of the FWA for the time being. FWA is
both a convenient and statutorily
mandated shorthand for that group of officers of the Commonwealth. This, I
believe, underpins
the similar conclusion by McHugh J that the Refugee Review
Tribunal is the proper respondent in constitutional writ proceedings:
SAAP v
Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs [2005] HCA 24; (2005) 228
CLR 294 at 310 [43].
- In
any event, Mr Deva’s challenge to the Full Bench’s refusal to
hear his appeal must be dismissed.
- I
turn then to the second part of Mr Deva’s claims. He has filed in
this Court a claim for unlawful termination of employment
pursuant, apparently,
to s 663 of the WR Act as it stood immediately prior to its repeal. He has
also filed a claim alleging
dismissal in contravention of a general protection
under the Fair Work Act. Mr Deva requested that latter application be
disregarded if inconsistent with the first.
- This
Court has no jurisdiction to entertain either of these claims.
Mr Deva’s claim originally filed with the former
Commission was for
harsh, unjust or unreasonable dismissal.
- The
effect of item 11 of Schedule 2 to the Transitional Act is to require the
application of the WR Act, in its ultimate form, to
Mr Deva’s claim.
This is so even though at the time the claim was made (28 January 2005) the WR
Act was in a different
form. In this case, that has no material consequence
because the only relevant differences are ones caused by the renumbering brought
about by Schedule 5 to the Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act.
For completeness, at the time of Mr Deva’s original application
the relevant provisions were contained in Part VIA Division 3 of the Act; at the
time the Act was repealed they had migrated to Part 12 Division 4. The words
were the same.
- What
did Part 12 Division 4 require? It conferred upon a former employee a right to
apply to “the Court” in respect
of an unlawful termination:
s 663(1). “The Court” meant (by s 4) the Federal Court of
Australia. However,
the right conferred by s 663(1) was not unqualified
but was expressly made subject to s 663(5). Subsection (5) was in
these
terms:
(5) An application under subsection (1), (2), (3) or (4) in respect of an
alleged contravention of section 659, 660 or 661 may not
be made to a court
unless the
applicant:
(a) has received a certificate under subsection 650(2) regarding conciliation of
an application made wholly or partly on the ground
of the alleged contravention;
and
(b) has elected under section 651 to begin proceedings in that court for an
order under section 665 in respect of the alleged
contravention.
Only subsection (1) is material; ss 659, 660 and 661 are the unlawful
termination provisions.
- The
effect of s 663(5) is to impose two pre-conditions on the commencement of an
unlawful termination suit, namely, the existence
of a certificate and the making
by Mr Deva of a particular kind of election.
- There
is, it may be accepted, a certificate relating to Mr Deva in existence.
However, it is not a certificate “made wholly
or partly on the ground of
the alleged contravention”. Following the filing of Mr Deva’s
claim at the Commission,
for unfair dismissal, that matter was conciliated by
Senior Deputy President Cartwright with no success. He certified only that
Mr
Deva’s claim to have been subject to a termination which was harsh, unjust
or unreasonable could not reasonably be settled
by conciliation. The
certificate was not a certificate that a claim for unlawful termination
could not reasonably be settled by conciliation.
- A
remark should, in any event, be made about the certificate. It was issued
pursuant to s 170CF(2). It was not issued, as
s 663(5)(a) requires,
under s 650(2) no doubt because that section did not exist at the time the
certificate was issued.
However, this is presently of no moment. Even treating
the certificate, in Mr Deva’s favour, as having been issued under
s 650(2)
it is still not a certificate regarding the conciliation of an
unlawful termination claim.
- The
reasons for this are clear. Mr Deva never made an application to the
former Commission for unlawful termination, confining
himself instead to a claim
in respect of harsh, unjust or unreasonable termination. Having pitched the
claim that way there was
no claim for unlawful termination for the Senior Deputy
President to certify as being reasonably incapable of settlement by
conciliation.
Mr Deva sought to argue that he was told by various people
not to claim for unlawful termination as part of a “softly
softly”
approach to the litigation. He also claimed – and the University accepted
– that the topic “unlawful
termination” was mentioned during
the conciliation itself. But that is of no moment. Unless there is a
certificate under
s 663(5) certifying that all reasonable attempts to
settle the unlawful termination claim have failed, no application may be
made to
this Court. The words of s 663(5) are intractable to any other outcome.
- In
any event, however, Mr Deva is also unable to satisfy the second
requirement of s 663(5)(b) (set out above) which requires
him to show that
he has elected to pursue unlawful termination proceedings pursuant to
s 651. Mr Deva did make an election
under s 170CFA(1) to proceed
to arbitration in respect of his unfair dismissal claim. But he has never made
an election pursuant
to s 651 (or its predecessor s 170CFA) to pursue
court action for unlawful termination.
- In
those circumstances, he has satisfied neither of the requirements of
s 663(5) and his claim for unlawful termination cannot
be pursued in this
Court. It follows that it must be dismissed.
- That
leaves Mr Deva’s claim alleging dismissal in contravention of a
general protection. As I understood it, Mr Deva
only pursued this claim as
an adjunct to the two other claims and not if it was inconsistent with them. In
effect what Mr Deva
sought was that his unfair dismissal claim should be
referred back to FWA and his claim for unlawful termination should be heard
in
this Court or referred back to FWA contemporaneously. Howsoever one analyses
that suggestion, however, it is not one to which
I can accede. The unfair
dismissal claim is not before me so there is nothing for me to refer back. I
could not refer the unlawful
termination claim back to FWA, not only because it
is not lawfully before me but, more importantly, because FWA could not lawfully
hear such a claim which would involve the exercise of judicial power. In all
those circumstances, this claim must be dismissed.
- All
three claims fail. Costs must follow the event.
I certify that the preceding thirty-six (36)
numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the
Honourable
Justice Perram.
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Associate:
Dated: 9 March 2011
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