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Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology v National Tertiary Education Industry Union [2011] FCA 34 (2 February 2011)
Last Updated: 4 February 2011
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology v
National Tertiary Education Industry Union [2011] FCA 34
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Citation:
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Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology v National Tertiary Education
Industry Union [2011] FCA 34
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Appeal from:
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Magistrates’ Court Of Victoria (Industrial Division) (oral
decision)
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Parties:
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ROYAL MELBOURNE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY v
NATIONAL TERTIARY EDUCATION INDUSTRY UNION
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File number:
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VID 130 of 2010
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Judge:
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LANDER J
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Date of judgment:
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2 February 2011
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Catchwords:
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INDUSTRIAL LAW – breach of contract
– interpretation of industrial agreement – whether employee entitled
to on-call allowance
– whether on-call requirement was
initiated – whether “roster” infers a system or list
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Cases cited:
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Place:
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Adelaide (heard in Melbourne)
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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 Appellant:
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Solicitor for the Appellant:
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Williams Winter
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Counsel for the Respondent:
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Ms J Bornstein
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Solicitor for the Respondent:
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Maurice Blackburn Lawyers
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IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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ON APPEAL FROM THE MAGISTRATES’ COURT OF
VICTORIA (INDUSTRIAL DIVISION)
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ROYAL MELBOURNE INSTITUTE OF
TECHNOLOGYAppellant
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AND:
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NATIONAL TERTIARY EDUCATION INDUSTRY
UNIONRespondent
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DATE OF ORDER:
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WHERE MADE:
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ADELAIDE (HEARD IN MELBOURNE)
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THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
- The
appeal be allowed.
- The
orders made in the Industrial Division of the Magistrates’ Court of
Victoria on 8 February 2010, except order 1, be
set aside.
- In
lieu thereof, there be an order dismissing the complaint by the National
Tertiary Education Industry Union.
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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VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY
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FAIR WORK DIVISION
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VID 130 of 2010
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ON APPEAL FROM THE MAGISTRATES’ COURT OF VICTORIA (INDUSTRIAL
DIVISION)
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BETWEEN:
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ROYAL MELBOURNE INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY Appellant
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AND:
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NATIONAL TERTIARY EDUCATION INDUSTRY
UNION Respondent
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JUDGE:
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LANDER J
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DATE:
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2 FEBRUARY 2011
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PLACE:
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ADELAIDE (HEARD IN MELBOURNE)
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
- This
is an appeal from a decision of a Magistrate in the Industrial Division of the
Magistrates’ Court of Victoria in a proceeding
in which the appellant was
the respondent.
- An
appeal lies to this Court pursuant to s 853(1) of the Workplace
Relations Act 1996 (Cth) (the Act). The appellate jurisdiction of this
Court in relation to a judgment of a court of summary jurisdiction is to be
exercised
by a single judge unless otherwise provided: Federal Court of
Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s 25(5).
- Mr
Nigel Phelan was at the relevant time a member of the respondent, the National
Tertiary Education Union (NTIEU). He was also
an employee of the appellant, the
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT). On 15 June 2009 the NTIEU
brought an action in
the Magistrates Court against RMIT for monies it alleged
were owned to Mr Phelan under his employment contract by reason of RMIT’s
failure to pay on-call allowances due under the relevant industrial
agreement.
- On
29 January 2010 the Magistrate published his reasons and on 8 February 2010 the
following orders were made in favour of NTIEU.
- RMIT
was ordered to pay $79,145.77 to Nigel Phelan within 30 days, being the amount
found to be owed as a result of underpayment
of the on-call allowance between
16 November 2005 and 30 June 2008. That sum was ordered to be paid in
addition to the sum
of $64,905 paid by RMIT over the relevant period by way of
overtime. RMIT was also ordered to pay a penalty of $13,200 to the NTIEU
within
30 days pursuant to s 179 of the Act.
- RMIT
appeals from the whole of the judgment.
- The
NTIEU and RMIT are bound by the Royal Melbourne Institute of Academic and
General Staff Agreement 2005-2008 (the Agreement) which
came into force on 16
November 2005 when it was certified by the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission pursuant to s 170LT
of the Act.
- Clause
10 of Schedule 1 of the Agreement provides for the payment of On-Call Duty
Allowance:
10. ON-CALL DUTY
10.1 The on-call requirement is initiated by RMIT where there is a requirement
for service to be available 24 hours per day, seven
days per week. On-call
requirements will be based around a roster system and will require the
employee’s agreement.
10.2 The “on-call” allowance will be a flat rate, which compensates
an employee for their readiness to work. On-call
allowance rates
are:
a) Monday to Friday - $65.88 per day;
b) Saturday, Sunday or Public Holiday - $104.32 per
day.
10.3 On-call allowance rates will be increased on the dates and by the
percentages specified for the salary increases detailed in
Clause 20 –
Salary Increases.
10.4 Shift penalties do not apply to on-call duty.
10.5 Where an employee is required to work remotely for a continuous period
exceeding one hour, they will be paid at appropriate
overtime rates. Provisions
in sub clause 8.12 will not apply as remote access work is not considered recall
to duty.
10.6 Where an employee is recalled to duty more than twice a month, the employee
will be paid subsequent rostered re-call to duty
in that month as
TOIL.
10.7 Prior to on-call work being undertaken, the supervisor and employee can
agree to payment of overtime as TOIL. A maximum of
40 hours TOIL may be
accumulated at any time and must be taken within eight weeks of that work being
performed. TOIL will be taken
following approval by the supervisor. TOIL that
falls outside of 40 hours will be waived and the equivalent overtime payment
will
be made instead.
- Clause
20 of the Agreement provides for the indexation of the on-call allowance.
- An
on-call allowance is not the same as payments made for overtime worked. An
on-call allowance is paid to an employee for the employee
being ready, willing
and available to work when and if required. Overtime payment is a payment for
work actually performed.
- Clause
46 of the Agreement relates to “Disciplinary Procedures”. It allows
a senior officer of RMIT to consider any
allegation of misconduct/serious
misconduct, both of which concepts are defined. It is not necessary to set out
Clause 46 which
is quite lengthy or to further analyse the clause because, for
reasons which contradict the Magistrate’s reasons and which
I will express
later, Clause 46 is not relevant in determining the issue in this case.
- Prior
to the Agreement coming into force on 12 November 2001, RMIT’s Vice
Chancellor had approved and caused to be implemented
an on-call allowance model.
The background to the implementation of that model was described by the then
Director, People Services:
Both ITS and DLS have been exploring options of how best to provide extended
hours coverage for many of the IT systems that they
operate and support. This
is necessary given that the operational and commercial requirements of the
University now extend beyond
the traditional working hours and days. These IT
groups now need to resource these areas 24 hours a day seven days a week.
However,
given the “incident-based” ad-hoc and increasing unorthodox
nature (eg via remote access) of servicing IT systems, traditional
General
(PACCT) staff overtime conditions as now contained in the RMIT Academic and
General (PACCT) Staff Enterprise Agreement 2001
(the EA), do not fit with the
nature and type of work that needs to be undertaken. If anything, EA
application would make the extended
hours coverage costly, difficult to
administrative and restrictive in terms of the type and number of HEW level
staff that could
be used. One viable option would be the implementation of a
locally developed OCA, which would not only overcome the issues noted
above, but
also be flexible and cost-effective.
- The
“On-Call Allowance” model was available in Information Technology
groups within RMIT to provide 24 hour, 7 day a
week coverage. The model
provided:
The “On-Call Allowance” will be a flat rate, which compensates a
staff member for their readiness for work. The allowance
is a flat rate and
therefore, regardless of HEW level, all rostered staff required to be
“On-Call” will receive the same
flat rate. Should a rostered staff
member be re-called to the workplace then the re-call to duty provisions
contained in the RMIT
Academic and General (PACCT) Staff Enterprise Agreement
2000 (Enterprise Agreement) will apply.
- The
“On-Call Allowance” model did not assume that staff would be working
at all times but was designed to compensate
them for their readiness to work.
The model assumed that most of the work which staff would be called upon to do
would be done remotely.
The model allowed for the accumulation of TOIL as an
alternative to overtime payment but to a maximum of 40 hours which needed to
be
taken within 8 weeks. The model continued:
- In
context of the above, it is assumed that the on-call requirement (both remote
and on-site) will on average, be up to 12 hours per
week in each of the
respective areas.
- The
On-Call requirement will be based around a roster system and will require the
agreement of staff. Staff in the respective areas
would be invited to express
their interest in participating in the arrangement. It should be noted that,
only rostered staff will
receive the “On-Call Allowance”.
- Staff
not rostered to be on-call and required to work overtime will be paid the
appropriate overtime rate(s) in accordance with the
Enterprise Agreement, and
will not be eligible for the on-call allowance for such overtime.
- Mr
Phelan is presently a member of the respondent NTIEU but has only been a member
since 20 May 2008.
- He
commenced casual employment as a security guard at RMIT in June 2000 but became
permanently employed from about February 2001.
- Mr
Phelan was employed as a Security Technical Officer in Property Services, later
classified as a Systems Administration Officer,
from November 2004 until 30 June
2008.
- On
2 March 2005 RMIT wrote to Mr Phelan enclosing an employment contract and the
position description for which he was employed.
His contract provided that he
commence his employment on 7 March 2005, notwithstanding he had been employed
since November 2004.
Nothing turns on the delay in the provision of the
contract of employment.
- The
letter of 2 March 2005 stated:
A copy of the position description outlining the duties and responsibilities of
the role is attached. The position description will
not form terms of your
contract of employment and may be varied by the University following
consultation with you.
- Clause
3 of the position description described Property
Services:
Property Services has in excess of 120 staff and has the responsibility to
operate, maintain and enhance the buildings owned and
leased by RMIT University,
oversee construction projects and ensure the provision of physical facilities
services. The Group has
an operating budget in excess of $29m and current
capital projects are significant. RMIT’s built environment involves
approximately
110 buildings spread across all of RMIT’s campuses and
sites. The capital stock of the University is diverse and valued at
$900m and
includes heritage and other classifications.
Property services currently consists of the following
areas:
▪ Executive Director’s Office
▪ Project Delivery
▪ Corporate & Client Services
▪ Facilities Services
▪ Space Management
▪ RMIT Gallery
- The
job summary was addressed in Clause 4:
To manage and be responsible for all information technology, ARES Tecom Access
Control Systems, the administration of the access
control cards, DVR and/or CCTV
Systems and tasks, and address other computer related issues within the Security
Branch, including
systems design and development. As and when required, the
position will also be required to undertake duties of both Senior and
Security
Officers on a short term basis due to operational needs as detailed by the
Manager, Security. The successful applicant
will need to be available at all
hours, however penalty rates apply for overtime as determined by the Manager,
Security. A Rostered
Day Off is also offered.
- The
position description addressed “Specific Accountabilities”. Clause
6.8 of the job description relevantly stated
as one of the Position
Accountabilities:
Provide 24 hour backup and call out service to clients, in the event of hardware
and/or software failure.
- The
employment contract provided under the heading of “General
Conditions”:
The general terms and conditions of your employment, to the extent that they are
not set out in detail in either your letter of offer
or this Employment
Contract, will continue to be regulated by:
(a) the relevant Enterprise Agreements which may apply to such staff; and
(b) RMIT University Policies, Procedures and Regulations as determined and
amended from time to time.
PROVIDED THAT
such Agreements, Policies, Procedures and Regulations shall not form terms of
your Contract of Employment
SAVE AND EXCEPT
that it shall be a term of your employment that you will be subject to, and
required to comply with every obligation or duty imposed
upon an employee or
member of union respondent to such an Agreement, and RMIT University Policies,
Procedures and Regulations as
varied from time to time, or any other regulatory
instrument made pursuant to the Workplace Relations Act 1996 from time to time,
binding on RMIT University and applicable to your
position.
- At
a general level the University required the property services department to be
available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. Mr Phelan
was the only person in the
department whose position description required him to be available 24 hours a
day.
- On
16 June 2008 his job title and position description was changed and he was
thereafter known as the Systems Administration Officer,
which is the position he
was occupying at the time of the trial.
- His
role as Security Technical Officer was within the Security Branch which is
contained in the Facilities Services which is part
of Property Services.
- The
Security Branch consisted of the Security Branch Manager, the Systems Support
Officer, the Security Technical Officer, Senior
Security Officers and Security
Guards. There was also a Customer Services Officer who performed reception
duties. There was a specific
Security Supervisor position of the Bundoora
Campus of RMIT.
- As
Security Technical Officer, Mr Phelan had the sole responsibility for
administering and maintaining the University’s electronic
security system
over 100 buildings owned by RMIT and its campuses in Swanston Street, Bourke
Street, Brunswick, Bundoora and Hamilton.
He had the sole responsibility for
ensuring that that hardware, software and mechanical systems were working and
for repairing those
systems in the event that they ceased working. He had the
responsibility for engaging external contractors to install and maintain
parts
of the electronic security system. When he was on-call his principal task was
to respond to all security system failures including
hardware, software and
mechanical. If an electronic system ceased to function, ordinarily they needed
to be fixed immediately because
the failure of the systems left people,
buildings and property vulnerable to security risks.
- Between
about 2000 and 30 June 2008, the RMIT security procedure required Security
Guards to contact the Security Technical Officer
in the event of security system
defaults which the Security Guards could not fix them themselves.
- It
was Mr Phelan’s evidence that when he accepted the appointment as Security
Technical Officer he read the position description
to which I have referred and
he understood it to be a requirement of his position that he be available
on-call on a 24 hour, 7 day
a week basis. He said in his evidence that that
understanding was reinforced by a conversation he had with Mr Laurence Hill,
Security
Branch Manager, shortly after he commenced in the acting position in
November 2004 when Mr Hill said to him words to the effect that
he was required
to be on-call 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
- He
said that when he was employed for the substantive position as Security
Technical Officer he was interviewed by a panel which
included Mr Hill, and a Mr
Thorne, who was the Security Support Officer for the Security Branch and
immediately subordinate to Mr
Hill. In that interview he said Mr Hill said to
him words to the effect, that it was a requirement of the position to provide 24
hours a day, 7 days a week on-call service.
- He
said he was provided with a mobile phone and a laptop with remote access so that
he could be contacted outside of ordinary working
hours. The laptop allowed Mr
Phelan to log on to the security system and to perform computer functions
remotely.
- His
evidence was that he provided on-call service at all times, including while on
sick leave, annual leave, parental leave and other
leave. He instanced one
occasion when he provided four hours of on-call service during his
brother’s “buck’s night”
in March 2005.
- He
said that during his 2007 annual leave he travelled overseas for three weeks to
the United States and during that time Mr Wright
provided some on-call
assistance. However, he said that he was still required to be on-call for
back-up assistance during that period
and, indeed before he went on leave, Mr
Hill said to him that he had to be available to provide back-up assistance to Mr
Wright whilst
he was on leave. During that leave RMIT arranged for his mobile
phone to be placed on “international roaming” so that
he might be
contacted. In fact, he was contacted on more than 12 occasions during the three
week vacation in the United States.
He carried his RMIT laptop with him when he
went overseas and logged in remotely to perform work.
- He
said there were rare occasions when he was physically unable to attend at an
RMIT premise, perhaps six in all. However, on all
of those occasions he
remained on-call and carried his RMIT mobile phone and laptop in order to log in
remotely.
- Mr
Phelan exhibited an email he received from Mr Bell who was the Associate
Director, Facilities Services dated 15 May 2008. In
the email Mr Bell
wrote:
You need to be aware that the Pay Office has contacted us recently questioning
hours of work, RDO’s, and overtime on your time
sheets. The reason for
this is that the claims, in their opinion, are becoming excessive from the
aspect of overwork and stress
which you corroborate. We need to discuss
this.
We understand perfectly that Laurie gave you a large degree of autonomy in the
running of the security system. However, as the workload
increases via Capital
Projects and the general expansion of ARES and CCTV the workload will increase
exponentially which causes me,
Sai and indeed yourself to think that the number
of tasks at hand will become unmanageable.
I recognise your statement that your health is being affected in accordance with
above and again recommend that you discuss your
issues with Sai and me with a
view to disclosing and improving your work
outcomes.
I recognise that you have remained on call throughout this time and are
supporting the University through it. However, as I have
mentioned before, I
suggest you consider consulting the Employee Assist Program and discuss your
health issues with them. This can
be done regardless of the substantive work
issue.
- There
was a dispute as to whether Mr Phelan was the only person available to provide
services and the appellant contended that there
was evidence that other persons
provided assistance. In cross-examination Mr Phelan accepted that a Senior
Security Officer who
might be on duty at the time could attend to a system
failure.
- The
appellant contended that whilst Mr Phelan was provided with a mobile phone in
order to facilitate the carrying out of his duties
he did not give evidence that
he was required to carry it at all times. The appellant also pointed to the
fact that Mr Phelan had
always been told that he was not entitled to an on-call
allowance and that Mr Hill never told him that he was entitled to such an
allowance. There was no sanction, Mr Phelan conceded in cross-examination, if
he did not take a call while outside his normal working
hours although he is
theoretically subject to Clause 45 of the Enterprise Agreement. It was the
appellant’s case that Mr Phelan
was not obliged to modify his social or
home life and that it would not have been regarded as misconduct if he were not
capably being
communicated with at any particular time.
- Mr
Phelan was paid overtime for the time he was recalled to duty, rounded up to the
hour. The overtime provision for recall to duty
for other employees was rounded
up to the quarter hour.
- The
Magistrate gave an ex tempore judgment. The reasons which were transcribed have
unfortunately never been settled. The transcript
of the reasons include a
number of references to “indistinct” where the transcriber could not
hear or understand what
was said. It would have been preferable if the
Magistrate had been asked to attend to settling the reasons so that this Court
had
a clearer understanding of his reasons.
- The
Magistrate found that Clause 10 prescribed four things. First, an initiation by
RMIT of the requirement; secondly, that the
initiation occurs where there is a
requirement for service to be available 24 hours per day, 7 days per week;
thirdly, that the on-call
requirements would be based around a roster system;
and fourthly, that they require the employee’s agreement.
- The
Magistrate found that the position description itself did not form part of the
employment contract however, the duties, obligations
and accountabilities
specified in the position description were terms of the contract of employment
because of the provision in the
contract that stated so.. He held that Mr
Phelan was “theoretically subject and answerable to the unsatisfactory
performance
component of discipline comprised in Clause 46 of the
Agreement”.
- The
Magistrate found that the initiation was triggered by the very requirement that
service be available 24 hours a day, 7 days a
week. There was no specific mode,
instrument or time of initiation required for the initiation to be invoked.
- The
Magistrate concluded that the initiation was made by RMIT in the position
description provided to Mr Phelan and its implementation
by the direction from
his supervisor that he be available.
- The
Magistrate found that there was evidence to establish that Mr Phelan had been
directed by his supervisor Mr Laurence Hill to
be on-call at all times, 24 hours
a day, 7 days a week. The Magistrate found that Mr Phelan had been provided
with a mobile phone
and a laptop with remote access for this purpose. The
Magistrate found that by continuing to require Mr Phelan to be ready for work
at
all times after 16 November 2005 RMIT had initiated the on-call
requirement.
- The
Magistrate said:
The relevant obligation of a duty imposed on Mr Phelan were those directions
proven on the evidence, namely: 1. Mr Hill’s
evidence that he told Mr
Phelan that he was required to be on call at all times, 24 hours a day seven
days a week. 2. Looked at
objectively, the evidence of each of Messrs Phelan,
Hill and Bell was, in my view, consistent with the giving of such a direction,
namely to provide 24 hour back-up and call-out service, and which accordingly
became a term of Mr Phelan’s contract of employment.
3. The email of Mr
Bell to Mr Phelan dated 15 May 2008, in my view, is consistent with this
direction forming part of Mr Phelan’s
contract of
employment.
- Although
he found that the email from Mr Bell dated 15 May 2008 was consistent with a
direction having been given by the contract
of employment, he did not say how
that was so.
- It
may be inferred that the Magistrate was relying upon Mr Bell’s
statement:
I recognise that you have remained on call throughout this time and are
supporting the University through it.
- The
Magistrate also found that Mr Phelan was the only employee rostered and he was
rostered at all times. As such, the Magistrate
considered that a formal roster
system was neither necessary nor required.
- The
Magistrate considered that the agreement required by the clause was the
agreement to the initiation of the on-call provision,
and not an agreement to
the roster system. The Magistrate found that Mr Phelan agreed to be
on-call.
- Thus,
the Magistrate found that all four requirements prescribed by Clause 10 had been
fulfilled.
- In
his reasons the Magistrate commented:
I note that Janet Burton was not called by RMIT in relation to her email of
6 February 2006. That seems to me to go to the
very heart of the issue of
whether or not there was required to be specific invoking of Clause 10. Hence
it follows, in my view,
that there has been an initiation of the requisite duty
in order to compensate the employee for his readiness to
work.
- There
was no other reference to Ms Burton’s email in the Magistrate’s
reasons. That email stated:
The following message applies to all Property Services Staff working under the
PACCT Award.
Dear All,
A number of enquiries have been received from staff in relation to Clause 10
of the new Enterprise Bargaining Agreement (EBA) and
I am writing to provide
clarification in this regard. Advice from People and Culture is that Clause 10
has to be specifically invoked
by RMIT and that any overtime or TOIL in respect
of Property Services staff should continue to be treated under Clause 8 of the
EBA.
This means that there is no change in the current arrangements regarding
payment or any other aspects of overtime.
If you have any questions in this regard, please don’t hesitate to
contact your manager.
Regards – Janet
- RMIT
identified 10 separate grounds of error by the Magistrate in its amended notice
of appeal. It is not necessary to set out those
separate grounds of which eight
went to the Magistrate’s construction of the Agreement. From my reading
of the notice of appeal,
grounds 1 to 7 (which includes ground 5 which has been
abandoned) and grounds 9 and 10 relate to the construction of the Agreement
and
the Magistrate’s findings to which I have already referred. Ground 8
relates to the Magistrate’s comment on the
failure to call Ms Janet
Burton. Ground 11, which is the 10th ground (having
regard to the abandonment of ground 5), relates to the Magistrate’s
finding that if Mr Phelan did not take calls
after hours he would be subject to
the unsatisfactory performance component and discipline comprised in Clause 6 of
the 2005 agreement
in circumstances where there was no evidence to support that
finding.
- On
this appeal the appellant RMIT contended that there was no initiation of the
on-call requirement.
- It
contended that the general requirement by the University that certain services
be available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week did
not of itself constitute an
initiation.
- It
contended that the position description did not form part of the contract, and
therefore could not amount to an initiation as
it did not impose an obligation
on Mr Phelan to provide serve 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. It contended that
as Mr Phelan was
the only employee required to provide 24 hour service, a
finding that the requirement was a contractual obligation would lead to
the
absurd result that Mr Phelan was contractually obliged to provide serve at all
times, even when on leave.
- It
further contended that Mr Hill’s direction to Mr Phelan did not constitute
an initiation because Mr Hill did not have the
authority to initiate the
requirement. It contended that even if Mr Hill did have the authority, the
requirement included in the
position description occurred before the Agreement.
It argued that a positive step of initiation needed to be taken after the
Agreement
was made.
- In
relation to the requirement of a roster, the RMIT contended that the Magistrate
erred in finding that because Mr Phelan was the
only employee on-call, a roster
was not required or necessary.
- It
contended that finding ignored the nature of being on-call, namely being ready,
willing and available to work if required.
- It
contended that the word “roster” ought be given its ordinary and
natural meaning, as defined in the Macquarie Dictionary
as “a list of
persons or groups with their terms or period of duty, any list, roll or
register”. It argued that a roster
requires some degree of formality, as
evidence by use of the word “system” in Clause 10.1.
- It
further argued that a construction of the word “roster” which
contemplates one person being on-call at all times is
incompatible with Clauses
10.6 and 10.7. Those subclauses provide for recall to duty while on-call to be
paid as TOIL. RMIT argued
that a person cannot be on-call and subject to a
requirement that they may be recalled to duty whilst that person is on
leave.
- RMIT
also argued that the reference to the “employee’s agreement”
refers to agreement to a roster.
- NTIEU
contended that the initiation of the on-call requirement occurs where there is a
requirement for service 24 hours per day,
7 days per week and does not require a
specific method. The requirement for service and the consequential initiation
by RMIT continued
after the certification of the Agreement, and was then
regulated by the Agreement.
- NTIEU
contended that Mr Phelan was subject to and required to comply with every
obligation and duty imposed upon him as an employee
and with every obligation
and duty imposed upon him by RMIT University policies.
- NTIEU
contended that the requirement for service to be available was established by
the terms of Mr Phelan’s contract of employment
by his obligation to
comply with his duties and obligations in the Position Description and by the
directions of Hill, and that the
on-call requirement was thereby initiated by
RMIT.
- It
contended that the word “roster” must be read in context and that
the language of the clause refers to “around
a roster system” and
does not specify the nature or contents of the roster system around which the
on-call requirements are
to be based. It contended that no formal system or
method is required.
- NTIEU
contended that a narrow construction of the clause would be inconsistent with
the language of the clause and with its industrial
context and purpose.
- It
further contended that the agreement of an employee refers to the agreement to
the on-call requirement.
- NTIEU
relied upon the Magistrate’s reasons for its contention that the appeal
should be dismissed. In addition however, NTIEU
filed a notice of contention in
which it contended:
- That
in so far as his Honour did not so find, his Honour should have found that at
all material times:
- Mr
Nigel Phelan (Phelan) was required under his contract of employment with
RMIT to comply with obligations, duties, accountabilities and directions imposed
upon him by RMIT;
- RMIT
imposed obligations, duties, accountabilities and directions upon Phelan to be
on-call 24 hours a day 7 days a week. Such obligations,
duties,
accountabilities and directions arose from the following:
- Phelan’s
Position Description as Security Technical Officer imposed obligations, duties,
accountabilities and directions to
“to be available at all hours”,
“provide 24 hour backup and call-out service to clients, in the event of
hardware
and/or software failure” and to “Provide efficient and
immediate response to customers’ queries and needs”;
and/or
- Phelan
was directed by RMIT, such directions being issued by his supervisor Mr Laurence
Hill, to be available 24 hours a day 7 days
a week; and
c. thereby the on-call requirement had been initiated by
RMIT.
- At
the time Mr Phelan assumed the substantive position as Security Technical
Officer in November 2004, the Agreement had not then
been certified by the
Australian Industrial Relations Commission. Indeed it was not certified until
16 November 2005.
- On
7 March 2005 Mr Phelan’s continuing employment was subjected to the
employment contract, which was enclosed with the letter
to him of 2 March
2005.
- That
employment contract set out the general conditions mentioned above and provided
the terms and conditions of his employment would
be regulated by “the
relevant enterprise agreements”, in this case being the Agreement and RMIT
University policies,
procedures and regulations.
- Those
general conditions provided that the Agreement and the policies, procedures and
regulations would not form terms of his contract
of employment as mentioned
above, save and except that he would be required to comply with every obligation
or duty imposed upon
an employer or member of a union responded to such an
agreement and RMIT University policies.
- I
do not agree with the learned Magistrate that the position description which
accompanied that letter and the employment contract
became part of the terms of
the contract of employment.
- The
letter of 2 March 2005 made it clear that the position description was not to be
part of the terms of the contract of employment
and RMIT reserved to itself the
right to vary the position description “following consultation with
you”.
- I
do not agree that the words in the general conditions of the employment contract
have the effect of expressly incorporating into
the employment contract the
position description. In my opinion, the general conditions provide that the
position description will
not be included in the employment contract.
- I
also do not agree with the learned Magistrate that the words following the words
“save and except” in the general conditions
impliedly include the
position description in the contract of employment.
- The
conditions for the implication of terms into a contract were addressed by the
Privy Council in BP Refinery (Western Port) Pty Ltd v Hastings Shire
Council (1977) 180 CLR 266 at 272:
(1) It must be reasonable and equitable;
(2) It must be necessary to give efficacy to the contract, so that no term will
be implied if the contract is effective without
it;
(3) It must be so obvious that “it goes without
saying”;
(4) It must be capable of clear expression;
(5) It must not contradict any express term of the
contract.
- In
my opinion, it cannot be said that the job description which required in Clause
6.8 that Mr Phelan provide 24 hour back-up an
call out service to clients in the
event of hardware and/or software failure became part of his contract of
employment. That merely
described the job in which he was occupied.
- In
my opinion, the starting point to determine whether Mr Phelan was entitled to be
paid the on-call allowance after the certification
of the Agreement is the
Agreement itself and, in particular, Clause 10.
- There
was no dispute either before the Magistrate or on this appeal as to the manner
in which an industrial agreement of the kind
of this Agreement ought to be
approached. Both parties urged me to approach the construction in accordance
with the often cited
dicta of Madgwick J in Kucks v CSR Limited (1996) 66
IR 182, where his Honour said at 184:
It is trite that narrow or pedantic approaches to the interpretation of an award
are misplaced. The search is for the meaning intended
by the framer(s) of the
document, bearing in mind that such framer(s) were likely of a practical bent of
mind: they may well have
been more concerned with expressing an intention in
ways likely to have been understood in the context of the relevant industry and
industrial relations environment than with legal niceties or jargon. Thus, for
example, it is justifiable to read the award to give
effect to its evident
purposes, having regard to such context, despite mere inconsistencies or
infelicities of expression which might
tend to some other reading. And meanings
which avoid inconvenience or injustice may reasonably be strained for. For
reasons such
as these, expressions which have been held in the case of other
instruments to have been used to mean particular things may sensibly
and
properly be held to mean something else in the document at
hand.
But the task remains one of interpreting a document produced by another or
others. A court is not free to give effect to some anteriorly
derived notion of
what would be fair or just, regardless of what has been written into the award.
Deciding what an existing award
means is a process quite different from
deciding, as an arbitral body does, what might fairly be put into an award. So,
for example,
ordinary or well-understood words are in general to be accorded
their ordinary or usual meaning.
- The
provision under consideration must be considered in its context including the
whole of the instrument and any relevant history
relating to the provision or
the agreement itself: Federated Municipal and Shire Council Employees Union
of Australia v Shire of Albany (1990) 32 IR 470 per French J at 475.
- Regard
must be had to the industrial context and purpose in which the instrument came
into being: Amcor v CFMEU [2005] HCA 10; (2005) 222 CLR 241 at [2].
- Even
though Clause 10 is entitled “On Call Duty”, the on-call duty
provision recognises, as the Vice Chancellor’s
on-call allowance model
also recognised, that a person who is on-call is not expected to work during
their period on-call but only
if there is a requirement to work, and when the
employee is required to work that employee will be paid in accordance with
Clause
10.5 if that employee carries out that work remotely.
- I
do not disagree with the learned Magistrate’s finding that there were four
essential requirements before Clause 10 is engaged,
although I would list the
requirements in a different sequence to the Magistrate.
- First,
the initiation only can occur where there is a requirement for service to be
available 24 hours per day, 7 days per week.
That seems to me to mean that
on-call duty is only available to that part of RMIT’s organisation where
there is a requirement
for service to be available 24 hours per day, 7 days per
week. If a person is employed at RMIT where there is no such requirement,
that
person can never be eligible for the on-call allowance.
- Secondly,
there must be an initiation by RMIT in the circumstances predicated in Clause
10.1 “where there is a requirement
for service to be available 24 hours
per day, 7 days per week”. The initiation cannot come from staff or an
employee. It
must come from RMIT which would, of course, be through the medium
of the appropriate officer. The initiation for the on-call requirement
calls
for the happening of an event, being the initiation. The initiation is driven
by the need for an employee to be on-call.
- Thirdly,
the on-call requirements are based around a roster system. The clause assumes
that where RMIT has a requirement for service
to be available 24 hours per day,
7 days a week a roster system will be introduced and the initiation by RMIT for
the on-call requirement
will have regard to that roster system. The need for a
roster system means some sort of organisation so that the employees know
who is
to satisfy the on-call requirement at any time. A roster is a list which
indicates the order in which a group of persons
will take their turn to
discharge or do their duty. “Roster” is defined in The
Macquarie Dictionary as:
roster ... n. 1. a list of persons or groups with their
turns or periods of duty. 2. any list, roll, or register.
–v.t. 3. to put on a roster; to
list.
A “roster system” means in the context a system where on-call
requirements will be managed by a system designed about
a roster.
- Fourthly,
the roster system will require the employee’s agreement. That means that
when the roster is being considered an
employee may refuse either to be on a
specific roster or more generally to be on a roster. I disagree with the
Magistrate that the
agreement that must be sought from the employee is to the
on-call requirement. The employee’s agreement to the on-call requirement
is not relevant. The employee must agree however to the actual roster system
which is proposed by RMIT.
- Clause
10.5 recognises that a person who is rostered to be on-call may be called upon
to carry out that duty remotely.
- Clause
10.6 is important. It addresses the circumstances where an employee is rostered
to be on-call and who has been twice in the
same month actually recalled. That
employee will be “paid” his or her overtime rate if subsequently
recalled to duty
in the same month as TOIL. Thus an employee is not entitled to
be paid money for work performed on recall to duty after the first
two recalls
in the same month.
- Clause
10.7 allows the supervisor of RMIT to agree with the employee for the employee
to be “paid” in TOIL for work performed
on recall but not exceeding
40 hours of TOIL.
- In
my opinion, Mr Phelan was not entitled to the on-call allowance under Clause
10.2 for the whole of the period for which the claim
was made.
- At
no time after the Agreement came into force on 16 November 2005 did RMIT
initiate the on-call requirement. It could not have
initiated that on-call
requirement before the Agreement came into force so as to satisfy the terms of
the Agreement.
- The
position description which was provided to Mr Phelan on 2 March 2005 could not
have served to initiate the on-call requirement
for two reasons. First, it came
into existence before the Agreement came into force and when the question of
“On-Call Allowance”
was governed by the Vice Chancellor’s
on-call model. Secondly, at the time he was provided with the position
description,
he was told unambiguously that it was not part of the contract of
employment.
- The
conversation he had with Mr Hill and Mr Thorne when he was interviewed by the
panel did not amount to an initiation of the on-call
requirement for the purpose
of Clause 10. He was not then employed in the position.
- A
conversation of the kind deposed to could not thereby amount to an initiation of
the on-call requirement. How could RMIT initiate
an on-call requirement for an
employee who was not then employed in a position which required services to be
available 24 hours per
day, 7 days per week.
- His
evidence of the conversation he had with Mr Hill prior to taking annual leave
and travelling overseas again does not amount to
an initiation by RMIT of the
on-call requirement. That conversation was had in circumstances where Mr Hill
knew that Mr Phelan
would be absent from Australia. There was no
initiation to the on-call requirement because Mr Phelan could not return to duty
because
he would have been absent overseas. He could have, of course, carried
out part of the duties remotely, but insofar as he had to
return to duty, it was
known by the parties at the time the conversation occurred that Mr Phelan could
not respond.
- But
even if I am wrong about that and that conversation amounted to the initiation
of the on-call requirement, that initiation occurred
at that time and would not
have the effect, as the Magistrate found, of providing some sort of
retrospective initiation.
- Mr
Bell’s email of 15 May 2008 does not support a finding that RMIT initiated
the on-call requirement as at the date that the
Agreement came into force. The
email says nothing of the kind. At most, it addresses a period of time
referring to when the Pay
Office contacted Mr Bell relating to the hours worked,
rostered days off, and overtime on Mr Phelan’s time sheets.
- Clause
10 requires an actual initiation by RMIT before an employee can claim to be
entitled to any of the allowances under Clause
10.2. There was, on the
evidence, no such initiation and for that reason alone the claim should have
been dismissed.
- I
cannot accept that there could have been an initiation of the on-call
requirement at any time prior to the Agreement coming into
force on 16 November
2005. If however I am wrong about that or wrong about an initiation occurring
some time after 16 November
2005, Mr Phelan is still not entitled, in my
opinion, to the allowances in Clause 10.2.
- On
the best case put forward by the respondent, there was never a roster system in
place. As I have said, a system requires some
sort of organisational feature.
RMIT needs to draw up a roster for consideration by those who are proposed to be
on the roster.
A roster requires a list of persons who are to carry out their
duties at particular times.
- There
was no list at all. There was no system. The initiation was not on any
understanding based around a roster system.
- Even
if I am wrong about that, there was no evidence that RMIT or Mr Phelan discussed
his being on a roster, or the roster and obtaining
his consent as is required in
Clause 10 of the Agreement.
- The
evidence also discloses that the parties never proceeded upon the basis that
Mr Phelan was entitled to consider himself
to be or in fact claimed that he
was on a roster system and satisfying an on-call requirement throughout the
whole of the period
of the claim. If he was and he returned to duty during that
time more than twice within a month, he was not entitled to be paid
in money in
any event but only entitled to be paid by way of TOIL.
- During
the relevant period, neither RMIT nor Mr Phelan ever addressed his entitlement
to TOIL rather than to money for being on a
roster system and satisfying an
on-call requirement.
- For
all of those reasons, in my opinion, the Magistrate was wrong to conclude that
Mr Phelan had an entitlement to the allowances
under Clause 10.2 of the
Agreement because he satisfied the on-call requirement throughout the whole of
the relevant period of his
employment from 16 November 2005 to 30 June
2008.
- Because
I think the appeal should succeed for those reasons, I do not need to address
grounds 8 and 11 but I shall do so in case
the matter goes further.
- Ground
8 contains the appellant’s complaint of the Magistrate’s comment in
relation to the failure to call Ms Burton.
- It
is not clear from the Magistrate’s reasons how he used the failure of RMIT
to call Ms Burton. He did not refer to her email.
He made no finding as to who
had received the email and, in particular, whether the email was received by Mr
Phelan. He made no
finding as to Ms Burton’s authority to send the email.
Nor did he make any finding as to the meaning of the email.
- The
email was sent to all property services staff of which Mr Phelan was one by
Ms Burton, who was described as Acting Executive
Director, Property
Services. It stated that Clause 10 had to be specifically invoked by RMIT and
that any overtime or TOIL in respect
of property service staff should continue
to be treated under Clause 8 of the Enterprise Bargaining Agreement.
- There
is nothing on my reading of that email which would support the
respondent’s case that there had been an initiation of
the on-call
requirement.
- In
his reasons, the Magistrate commented upon the absence of Ms Burton and, as I
have said, did not indicate the consequences of
that failure. He did not refer
to Jones v Dunkel [1959] HCA 8; (1959) 101 CLR 298. Nor did he indicate any inference
that might arise because of the absence of that witness.
- He
did say after commenting on her absence that it follows that there had been an
initiation of the requisite duty in order to compensate
the employee for his
“readiness for work”, but I do not read that comment as to relate
directly to the failure to call
Ms Burton.
- I
think that comment is made as a consequence of all of the matters to which the
Magistrate had referred prior to his comment on
the absence of Ms Burton and the
absence of Ms Burton.
- I
would not be prepared to uphold the appeal on this ground if this were the only
ground relied upon by the appellant because it
is unclear as to the use put by
the Magistrate to the failure to call Ms Burton.
- Ground
11, which is the last ground relied upon, is against the Magistrate holding that
if Mr Phelan did not perform contractual
duties he was “theoretically
subject to and answerable to the unsatisfactory performance component of
discipline comprised
in Clause 46 of the agreement”.
- That
finding was made in circumstances where Mr Phelan conceded in cross-examination
that there were no sanctions if he did not take
a call and the evidence of Mr
Bell, who was the Deputy Director of Facilities Services at RMIT, that it would
not have been regarded
as misconduct within the meaning of Clause 45 of the
Agreement if Mr Phelan could not be reached at any particular time.
- There
was evidence from Mr Howden, the Principal Adviser Employee Relations at RMIT,
that RMIT had a specific form which an employee
was required to complete when
the on-call requirement pursuant to Clause 10 of Schedule 1 of the Agreement was
initiated. He said
the failure by an employer to be ready, willing and able to
undertake normal duties would amount to misconduct within the meaning
of Clause
46 of the Agreement such as to make an employee subject to disciplinary
procedures. That evidence was general in nature
and was directed to an employee
who had completed the form after the initiation of the on-call requirement. His
oral evidence was
to the same effect that if employees failed to carry out their
obligations then that employee could be subject to disciplinary
proceedings.
- However,
Mr Howden was never asked to address the circumstances which applied to Mr
Phelan who had not completed a form of the kind
to which Mr Howden
referred.
- The
respondent relied upon Mr Howden’s evidence for supporting the finding of
the Magistrate but, in my opinion, that evidence
falls short of that required
for the finding made by the Magistrate.
- The
evidence which was before the Magistrate did not support the finding that
Clause 46 had any application to Mr Phelan.
- However,
I am not sure that takes the matter very far. It is not clear how the
Magistrate used his finding that theoretically Mr
Phelan was subject to the
unsatisfactory performance component of discipline comprised in Clause 46 of the
Agreement. The Magistrate
has not explained the use of the finding and at its
highest it probably amounted to no more than the finding tended to confirm his
earlier expressed opinion. In my opinion, Clause 46 is of no assistance in the
determination of the issues before the Magistrate.
- As
I have mentioned, the respondent filed a notice of contention which I have
identified at [70].
- The
notice of contention claims that the matters referred to in subparagraphs (a)
and (b) of paragraph 1 had the effect of RMIT initiating
the on-call
requirement.
- In
fact, the matters contained in those paragraphs are not so far different from
the reasoning of the learned Magistrate as to amount
to different reasons for
the maintaining of the Magistrate’s decision.
- I
have already dealt with paragraph 1(a) in the course of these reasons.
Mr Phelan’s position description did require
him to be available at
all hours and I have referred to Clause 4 in [21] of these reasons which
asserts, as the notice of contention
does, that “the successful applicant
will need to be available at all hours ...”.
- However,
the position description did not form part of Mr Phelan’s contract of
employment, it having been specifically excluded
by RMIT’s letter of 2
March 2005.
- Moreover,
for the reasons I have already given, the position description was created prior
to the coming into force of the Agreement.
Also, the contract of employment
came into existence before the coming into force of the Agreement and, in my
opinion, those documents
cannot be relied upon as evidence of RMIT’s
initiation of the on-call requirement.
- However,
for the reasons already given, even if Mr Phelan was obliged to be on-call and
provide 24 hour back-up either by reason
of the position description or by
reason of a direction given to him by Mr Hill to which I have already referred,
that does not take
the matter anywhere because it does not address the absence
of any roster system which Clause 10 contemplated would be part
of the
initiation of the on-call requirement.
- Mr
Phelan did in fact do considerable work out of hours but a lot of that work was,
as RMIT contended, regular routine database maintenance
and for covering an
absent employee. The time which he worked out of hours was overtime and was not
any part of any on-call requirement.
The work to which I have referred was not
work to which Clause 10 was directed but simply overtime work.
- In
my opinion the appeal must be allowed. The orders made by the Magistrate on 8
February 2010, except order 1, should be set aside.
In lieu thereof there
should be an order dismissing the complaint by the National Tertiary Education
Industry Union.
I certify that the preceding one hundred and
thirty-four (134) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for
Judgment herein
of the Honourable Justice Lander.
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Dated: 2 February 2011
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