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Visscher v The Honourable President Justice Giudice [2009] HCA 34 (2 September 2009)
Last Updated: 2 October 2009
HIGH COURT OF AUSTRALIA
GUMMOW, HEYDON, CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ
TIMOTHY VISSCHER
APPLICANT
AND
THE HONOURABLE PRESIDENT
JUSTICE GIUDICE & ORS
RESPONDENTS
Visscher v The Honourable President Justice Giudice
[2009] HCA 34
2 September 2009
S30/2008
ORDER
- Special
leave to appeal granted.
- Appeal
treated as instituted, heard instanter and allowed.
- Set
aside the orders of the Full Court of the Federal Court made on 21 December 2007
and in lieu thereof order that:
- a
writ of certiorari issue to the Australian Industrial Relations Commission
quashing:
- the
decision of the Full Bench of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission
dated 9 October 2006 in matter C2006/132; and
- the
decision of Commissioner Redmond of the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission dated 5 May 2006 in matter U2004/2387; and
- a
writ of mandamus issue to the Australian Industrial Relations Commission,
directing it to hear and determine matter U2004/2387 in
accordance with
law.
On appeal from the Federal Court of Australia
Representation
J T Gleeson SC with N J Owens for the applicant (instructed by Yeldham Price
O'Brien Lusk Lawyers)
G J Hatcher SC with B K B Cross for the second respondent (instructed by Deacons
Lawyers)
Submitting appearance for the first respondents
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal
revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth Law
Reports.
CATCHWORDS
Timothy Visscher v The Honourable President Justice
Giudice
Industrial law – Contract of employment – Where employee promoted to
Chief Officer but promotion later sought to be rescinded
by employer –
Where employee continued to perform duties and receive salary equivalent to that
of Chief Officer – Whether
rescission of promotion effective to terminate
contract of employment.
Contract – Contract of employment – Repudiation – Where
employer repudiated contract of employment – Whether
acceptance of
repudiation by employee necessary to terminate contract of employment –
Relevance of distinction between contract
of employment and employment
relationship – Whether employee estopped from denying that repudiation
effective to terminate
contract of employment.
Industrial law – Certified Agreement – Where annexure to Certified
Agreement listed gradings of employees – Whether
grading listed in
Certified Agreement conclusive as to employee's position.
Words and phrases – "at the initiative of the employer", "contract of
employment", "employment relationship", "repudiation",
"termination".
Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth), ss 170CD(1B), 170CE(1)(a),
170CH(3).
- GUMMOW
J. The appellant (Mr Visscher) is an experienced merchant naval officer.
On 9 March 2004 he filed an application
to the Australian Industrial
Relations Commission ("the AIRC"). He sought reinstatement in response to what
he maintained was the
harsh, unjust or unreasonable termination of his
employment by the second respondent, Teekay Shipping (Australia) Pty Limited
("the
employer"). Following a hearing on 1-2 March 2006, on 5 May
2006 the application was dismissed by Commissioner Redmond.
After a hearing on
23 July 2006, an application for leave to appeal to the Full Bench was
dismissed on 9 October 2006
by the President, Senior Deputy President Drake
and Commissioner Bacon.
- From
this Court Mr Visscher now seeks special leave to appeal against the
dismissal by the Full Court of the Federal Court (Ryan,
Madgwick and
Buchanan JJ[1])
of his application, commenced in this Court but remitted by consent to the
Federal Court, for mandamus and certiorari directed to
Commissioner Redmond and
the Full Bench. These members of the AIRC together comprise the first
respondent in this Court.
- At
the heart of Mr Visscher's case for mandamus and certiorari are the
contentions that jurisdictional error attended the dismissal
by Commissioner
Redmond of his application to the AIRC and that the Full Bench therefore erred
in refusing him leave to appeal; he
submits that his employment had been
terminated at the initiative of the employer, within the meaning of the
legislation, and that
to hold to the contrary was to fall into jurisdictional
error.
- The
Full Court correctly approached the application for relief under s 75(v) of
the Constitution on the footing that no question of the exercise by the Full
Bench of its powers arose unless it was first shown that
Commissioner Redmond
had fallen into jurisdictional error.
- The
phrases "jurisdictional error" and "jurisdictional fact" take their content from
the particular terms of the conferral of authority
on the decision-maker in
question. Even where that authority is conferred in terms of "satisfaction"
that a stipulated state of
affairs exists, it will still attract review under
s 75(v)[2].
The present dispute does not fall in that category. Rather, the jurisdiction of
the AIRC was enlivened only if, in the statutory
sense, Mr Visscher was an
employee whose employment had been terminated at the initiative of the employer.
The legislation
- The
first task is to construe the relevant statutory provisions. These appeared
principally in Pt VIA, Div 3 Subdiv B of the Workplace
Relations Act 1996 (Cth) ("the Act") as it stood at 22 February
2004[3], which,
as outlined later in these reasons, is the date on which Commissioner Redmond
found Mr Visscher to have resigned. Part VIA was headed "Minimum
entitlements of employees" and Div 3 (ss 170CA-170HI) "Termination of
employment". Subdivision B (ss 170CE-170CJ)
was headed "Application
to [AIRC] for relief in respect of termination of employment". Further,
Pt VIB (ss 170L-170NI) provided for "Certified agreements". Part VIB
had been introduced into the Act in
1996[4].
- Mr Visscher
was an "employee" for the purposes of the termination of employment provisions
because he was a "Federal award employee"
employed by a "constitutional
corporation" (s 170CB(1)(C)). The expression "Federal award employee"
includes "an employee any
of whose terms and conditions of employment are
governed by ... a certified agreement" (s 170CD(1)).
- The
relevant certified agreement in force on 22 February 2004 was the "Teekay
Shipping Australia/Australian Maritime Officers
Union (Deck Officers) Sea-Going
Officers Agreement 2001", which had come into force from 5 May 2002 ("the
2001 Certified Agreement").
Mr Visscher was at all relevant times a member
of the union ("the AMOU") and the 2001 Certified Agreement was expressed by
cl 3 to be binding upon him (and other Masters and Deck Officers), the
AMOU, and the employer. Accordingly, they were bound
to the 2001 Certified
Agreement by force of s 170M. As a matter both of law and practical
reality, it would not have been open
to the employer to deal with matters of
promotion and seniority of Masters and Deck Officers contrary to provisions of
the 2001 Certified
Agreement.
- Section 170CE(1)
relevantly provided that "an employee whose employment has been terminated by
the employer may apply to [the
AIRC] for relief in respect of the termination of
that employment ... on the ground that the termination was harsh, unjust or
unreasonable
...". The word "termination" means "termination of employment at
the initiative of the employer" (s 170CD(1)).
- Section 170CE(1)
thus both creates a new right in the employee and confers jurisdiction on the
AIRC[5]. The
functions of the AIRC include those conferred on it by the Act (s 8A).
- By
his application to the AIRC, Mr Visscher sought the remedy of
"reinstatement". This was an invocation of the power of the
AIRC, if it
considered it appropriate, to make an order requiring the employer to reappoint
him "to the position in which [he] was
employed immediately before the
termination" (s 170CH(3)(a)).
The statutory framework
- Before
turning to the particular circumstances of the litigation, something more should
be said respecting the statutory framework.
It will be apparent that
Mr Visscher did not claim any common law remedy and that, rather, he sought
from the AIRC the statutory
remedy of reinstatement on the ground that the
alleged termination of his employment was, in the terms of the statute, "harsh,
unjust
or unreasonable". The reinstatement which he sought was to his position.
But the terms and conditions of his employment were to
a significant degree
governed by the 2001 Certified Agreement.
- It
is well settled that, in those circumstances, the relationship between the 2001
Certified Agreement and the terms of any contract
between Mr Visscher and
the employer, was that the former controlled the relationship as to all matters
to which it
applied[6]. The
result is that the "employment", the termination of which Mr Visscher
complained pursuant to s 170CE(1), was a relationship
which represented a
compound of statutory elements (by operation of the Act upon the certified
agreements) and of the common law of contract, but the statutory elements
predominated. The employer correctly
submits that it would be a distraction to
construct and apply an hypothesis of what would have been the contractual
relationship
between the parties in the absence of the legislation.
- This
consideration received no adequate response in the submissions of
Mr Visscher to this Court. He sought to show that in
the events that
happened there had been a contractual repudiation by the employer. However, as
Buchanan J, who gave the leading
judgment in the Full Court, pointed out,
whatever Mr Visscher's position under the general law may have been in a
legislative
vacuum, the general law was subordinated to the superior operation
of the 2001 Certified Agreement from the time it came into operation
on
5 May 2002. Accordingly, the treatment of the general law respecting
unaccepted repudiation of employment contracts by this
Court in Automatic
Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v
Watson[7] and
the House of Lords in Rigby v Ferodo
Ltd[8] cannot
be determinative of the application of the Act in the present case.
Factual findings
- The
Full Bench agreed with the construction of the material events accepted by
Commissioner Redmond. Mr Visscher was qualified
for employment as Chief
Officer on the oil tankers operated by the employer. In March 2000
Mr Visscher commenced casual employment
and in March 2001 he was offered
permanent employment as a Third Mate. At that time the relationship between
Mr Visscher and
his employer was governed by two industrial instruments
given force and effect by the Act in the sense described above. They were the
Maritime Industry Seagoing Award 1998 and the Teekay Australia/AMOU (Deck
Officers)
Agreement 1998 ("the 1998 Certified Agreement"). It follows that the
relationship between Mr Visscher and the employer was
not formed in
circumstances in which it was governed exclusively by the general law respecting
employment contracts.
- Early
in September 2001 Mr Visscher accepted an offer of promotion on merit from
Third Mate to Chief Officer. The 1998 Certified
Agreement had provided for
positions to be filled "on merit, performance, experience and service", subject
to qualification which
in Mr Visscher's case was satisfied. However, the
AMOU protested against the promotion of Mr Visscher and at least one
other
promotion. On 7 September 2001 the employer notified a dispute and sought
the assistance of the AIRC to avoid industrial
action. Thereafter, as
Buchanan J remarked, Mr Visscher appears to have been caught up in a
process where his personal
interests were of little apparent importance to the
other parties.
- The
AMOU had sought the holding open of vacancies for permanent First Mate positions
to allow permanent deck officers to obtain masters'
certificates (as already had
Mr Visscher) and so become eligible for appointment as permanent First
Mates. The dispute was
listed before Commissioner Raffaelli and on
11 September 2001 he issued a statement. This was critical of the making
of the
promotions and recommended that the employer rescind them. The
Commissioner recommended that "the parties continue their enterprise
bargaining
discussion generally and in particular in respect of the Promotions Policy".
- On
20 September an officer of the employer wrote to Mr Visscher. The
letter referred to a statement by a member of the
AIRC which was critical of the
promotion of Mr Visscher. It continued:
"Because of the threat of protected action by the AMOU and the commissioners'
recommendations, [the employer has] decided to capitulate
and rescind the
promotions. This is extremely unfortunate as the promotions were made in good
faith by the company and accepted
in good faith by the individuals.
What this will mean for you at this present time is still a little unclear.
[The employer does] need to discuss the issue with
the AMOU. Until the
[Enterprise Bargaining Agreement ('EBA')] is agreed and registered, it means
that no permanent promotions can
be effected. It does not mean that you will
not be promoted in the future. Also, [the employer is] committed to any
promotions
that are made after the registration of the new EBA, all promotions
will be backdated to the effective date of the vacancy
occurring."
- The
2001 Certified Agreement was the product of negotiations which then were
conducted between the employer and the AMOU. Clause 23
made detailed
provision for the filling of positions on merit, performance, experience and
service. But cl 23 also contained
provisions to assist officers who "due
to lack of sea-time" did not have the necessary certificate; they were allowed a
period in
which to complete requirements for the certificate and to obtain
promotion instead of those already qualified.
- Significantly
for the situation of Mr Visscher, cl 23.4 stated:
"The grading (or rank/service) list attached will be the basis for future
promotions/transfers, etc."
Item 36 of the "Deck Officers Grading List", as at 15 February 2002, which
was Appendix A, listed Mr Visscher as "3rd
Officer", whose employment at that grade had commenced on 23 March
2001.
- The
context in which the Certified Agreement was negotiated, including the letter to
Mr Visscher of 20 September 2001,
as well as the express terms of
cl 23.4 and Item 36, make it plain that this instrument laid down the
basis upon which
thereafter the gradings of currently serving officers was to be
considered under the promotions system for which it provided.
- i In
the Full Court, Buchanan J remarked:
"To the extent that it imposed obligations which were inconsistent with the
position at common law (ie under Mr Visscher's contract
of employment) [the
employer] was bound by the superior legal force of the [2001] Certified
Agreement (operating through [the Act])."
The treatment by the employer of Mr Visscher as holding a position other
than that which accorded with the grading system in
the 2001 Certified Agreement
would be at odds with its statutory force given by the Act. It is not a matter
simply of asking whether this grading system is conclusive as to the position of
Mr Visscher; the question
is to be answered by acceptance of the binding
and paramount operation of the relevant law of the Commonwealth which is given
by
covering cl 5 of the
Constitution[9].
- Thus,
in Ansett Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v
Wardley[10],
Stephen J, with reference to Amalgamated Collieries of WA Ltd v
True[11],
considered that a right to terminate the defendant's employment upon reasonable
notice would conflict with the termination provisions
in cl 6B of the
relevant certified agreement under the Act. His Honour went on, with the other
members of the majority, to decide the central issue in the case by holding that
there was no
inconsistency, in the sense of s 109 of the Constitution,
between the certified agreement and the Equal Opportunity Act 1977
(Vict).
- The
further significance of the 2001 Certified Agreement and the events which
followed, were explained by Buchanan J as follows:
"There are three provisions in [the 2001 Certified Agreement] which are of
particular significance for the present proceedings.
They are:
'5.1 This agreement is binding on the employer, the officers and the AMOU.
This agreement will be registered under division 2
of the Certified
Agreement provision of the Act.
5.4 The parties agree that no officer, including Deck Cadets, shall be
employed other than [on] the terms of this agreement.
23.4 The grading (or rank/service) list attached will be the basis for future
promotions/transfers, etc.'
Appendix A ... (the 'list attached') showed Mr Visscher ranking
36th in the seniority order of [the employer's] Deck
Officers. He was shown as a Third Officer. At this time there were three
positions
of Chief Officer which were being held open for other officers who,
unlike Mr Visscher, were not immediately qualified for permanent
appointment as Chief Officer. It appears from the evidence that, at all
relevant times thereafter, three or four positions as Chief
Officer were held
open for various other officers on this basis.
Mr Visscher was, on 5 July 2002, offered permanent promotion to the
position of Second Mate. Mr Visscher's evidence
is that he rebuffed this
as unnecessary in view of his continuing contract of employment as Chief Officer
but it appears to have
formed the basis for payment arrangements to him, with
his salary thereafter being calculated on the basis of the pay of a Second
Mate
plus a higher duties allowance to Chief Officer.
On 26 June 2003 Mr Visscher was advised that [the employer] had
finally reached an agreed position with the AMOU 'regarding
the Mate's grading
list'. As part of this agreement the 'agreed 12 month qualifying period
for Second Mates to attain their
Masters Certification was increased to
20 months'. This arrangement appears to have further blocked
Mr Visscher's permanent
promotion to Chief Mate although throughout the
relevant period, as was earlier noted, Mr Visscher continued to sail as
Chief
Officer in receipt of a higher duties allowance.
In November 2003 an incident occurred between Mr Visscher and the then
Master of the Samar Spirit which Mr Visscher, on his evidence, found
to be unacceptable. When the voyage was complete Mr Visscher informed [the
employer]
that he did not wish to remain on the ship for future voyages. This
led to various communications, both oral and written, which
brought the question
of Mr Visscher's status to a head. Mr Visscher then sailed a voyage
as Chief Officer on the Broadwater. He subsequently sailed one further
voyage on the Broadwater as Chief Officer, without prejudice, before his
relationship with [the employer] finally
ended."
The events of 2004
- Mr Visscher
contends that from 7 September 2001 he was permanently employed as a Chief
Officer. The employer accepts that
Mr Visscher was promoted to such a
position on that date but says that on 20 September 2001 it rescinded his
promotion.
Even if the rescission would have constituted a repudiatory breach
of his contract of employment, the employer argues that it would
have been
effective to bring any contract of employment with Mr Visscher as a
permanent Chief Officer to an end.
- Mr Visscher
continued to carry out the duties of a Chief Officer for Teekay after
20 September 2001. He says he did so
as a permanent Chief Officer. The
employer says he was only acting in the position. As Buchanan J noted,
after an incident
in November 2003, matters came to a head. Mr Visscher
left his employment with the employer. He says he did so because the
employer
again demoted him from the position of permanent Chief Officer and, on this
occasion, he accepted the repudiation of his
contract of employment. The
employer says that Mr Visscher resigned. It stresses the finding by
Commissioner Redmond that
the employer did not intend to end the employment
relationship, and, to the contrary, it wished the relationship to continue.
- On
8-9 January 2004 there were conversations between Mr Visscher and
Mr Bray, the employer's personnel officer. The
Full Bench was prepared to
accept the account given by Mr Visscher. This was that after his current
tour of duty on the MV
"Samar Spirit" he was to join MV "Broadwater" for a
single tour of duty, thereafter, he would be sailing as Second Mate. With that
latter proposal Mr Visscher disagreed.
- On
22 February 2004, Mr Visscher wrote to his employer (by e-mail)
recording that it had required him to sail as Second
Mate. He continued, in a
manner which the Full Bench described as pre-emptive, by saying:
"This constitutes a demotion from my position of Chief Officer and it is
unacceptable. Demotion is a constructive termination of
our contract of
employment by [the employer]. I will therefore consider my employment as being
terminated by [the employer] upon
leaving the MT Broadwater on or about
26 February 2004.
At your earliest convenience please pay into my bank account all
entitlements."
The employer responded on 24 February that he had "never been graded Chief
Officer" and was "currently graded Second Mate",
and continued:
"You have a contract of employment with [the employer] as a Deck Officer. You
were originally employed as a Third Mate. [The employer]
does not consider a
demotion in rank for any officer to constitute constructive dismissal.
On this basis [the employer] is treating your email as a
resignation."
- Commissioner Redmond
found that the actions of the employer had not repudiated the contract of
employment, that there was no
termination at the initiative of the employer and
that Mr Visscher had brought his employment to an end on 22 February
2004 by his resignation. It followed that he had no right conferred by
s 170CE(1) to apply to the AIRC and the application
had to be dismissed for
want of jurisdiction.
Conclusions
- There
was no termination of the employment of Mr Visscher at the initiative of
the employer. It may be accepted that "termination"
for the purpose of
s 170CE(1) may include a "demotion in employment" which involves a
significant reduction in the remuneration
or duties of the demoted employee
(s 170CD(1B)). However, from its commencement the 2001 Certified Agreement
had specified
the place of Mr Visscher in the Deck Officers Grading List at
a rank lower than that of Chief Officer.
- Mr Visscher
had been paid as a Second Mate with a higher duties allowance to Chief Officer
and had performed those duties.
But the employer correctly submits that, given
the predominant operation which must be accorded to the 2001 Certified
Agreement,
whilst Mr Visscher was acting in the position of Chief Officer
he was not permanently engaged as such. To construe the course
of events by
reference to no more than what in the absence of the Act would be the operation
of the common law of contract would
be to apply the remedial provisions of
Pt VIA (in particular, of ss 170CE-170CJ) without giving effect to the
certified
agreement provisions of Pt VIB.
- The
relationship between the employer and Mr Visscher came to an end following
his unjustified assertion by the 22 February
2004 email of "demotion from
my position of Chief Officer" as constituting "constructive termination of our
contract of employment".
- The
employer properly denied that there had been any demotion in Mr Visscher's
current grade, and Commissioner Redmond correctly
concluded that the
jurisdiction of the AIRC under s 170CE(1) had not been attracted.
Orders
- Special
leave to appeal should be granted but the appeal should be dismissed.
Section 347 of the Act makes special provision
respecting costs in a
matter, including an appeal, "arising under" the Act, and the general provision
in s 26 of the Judiciary Act 1903 (Cth) is to be read
accordingly[12].
No order under s 347 is sought, and, in any event, this would not be a case
for an order under that section.
- HEYDON,
CRENNAN, KIEFEL AND BELL JJ. In proceedings before the Australian Industrial
Relations Commission ("the AIRC") the applicant,
Mr Visscher, claimed that
his employment with the second respondent, Teekay Shipping (Australia) Pty
Limited ("Teekay") had
been terminated and that the termination was harsh,
unjust or unreasonable within the meaning of s 170CE(1)(a) of the
Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) ("the
WRA")[13]. He
sought reinstatement by appointment to the position in which he had been
employed immediately before the alleged
termination[14].
- It
was Mr Visscher's case that in January 2004 Teekay required him to
undertake the role of a Second Mate on vessels in its
fleet when his permanent
position was that of a Chief Officer (also referred to as First Mate or Chief
Mate). Teekay's response
was that Mr Visscher had briefly been promoted to
that position in September 2001 but that the promotion had been rescinded
shortly thereafter, with Mr Visscher returning to the position of Third Mate.
It had subsequently promoted him to Second Mate.
However Mr Visscher continued
to perform the duties of a Chief Officer and receive the same amount by way of
salary as a Chief Officer.
At a meeting in March 2004 a representative of
Teekay said that Mr Visscher had only been acting in that role.
- Mr Visscher
regarded Teekay's requirement of him to sail as a Second Mate as a repudiation
of his contract of employment. On
his case the termination of the employment
relationship was "at the initiative of the
employer"[15].
Alternatively, Teekay's requirement could be viewed as a demotion.
Section 170CD(1B)[16],
by implication, treated a demotion as a termination of employment where it
involved a significant reduction in the remuneration
or duties of the employee.
On either approach it was necessary for the AIRC to consider whether
Mr Visscher was employed as
a Chief Officer when the acts which resulted in
the cessation of his employment occurred.
- Mr Visscher
was not successful in his application before Commissioner Redmond nor on appeal,
before the Full
Bench[17] of
the AIRC[18].
The Full Court of the Federal Court dismissed his application for writs of
mandamus and certiorari, which had been brought under
s 75(v) of the
Constitution to this Court and remitted to that
Court[19].
- The
Full Court concluded that Mr Visscher was unable to establish the fact upon
which his allegation of jurisdictional error
on the part of the AIRC depended,
namely that a contract whereby he was appointed a Chief Officer continued in
existence in
2004[20]. Two
grounds were given for that conclusion. It held that Teekay's actions in
September 2001 were effective to "terminate
Mr Visscher's employment
as a permanent Chief
Officer"[21].
This appears to have also been the view of the Full Bench of the
AIRC[22] and
was likely to have been influential in the decision reached by Commissioner
Redmond. The second ground identified by the Full
Court had regard to the terms
of a Certified Agreement which came into force on 5 May 2002 ("the
Certified
Agreement")[23].
The Court held that Mr Visscher, as a Deck Officer who was a member of the
Australian Maritime Officers Union ("the AMOU")
and employed by Teekay, was
bound by the terms of the Certified
Agreement[24].
In the agreement he was listed as a Third Officer (or Third Mate), and
subsequently as a Second Mate, but never as a Chief Officer.
The Certified
Agreement was taken to be conclusive as to his
position[25].
That conclusion is not correct as a matter of construction of the Certified
Agreement, for the reasons which follow. Further,
the approach of the Full
Court and the AIRC to the rescission of Mr Visscher's contract as a Chief
Officer proceeded upon a wrong
assumption of law.
The facts
- Mr
Visscher commenced casual employment with Teekay in March 2000. In
March 2001 he accepted an offer of permanent employment
as a Third Mate.
It was found by Commissioner Redmond that in August 2001 Mr Visscher
was offered a promotion to the position
of a Chief Mate, which he accepted on
7 September 2001. It does not appear to have been disputed that
Mr Visscher satisfied
the requirements of the Certified Agreement of 1998,
then in force, for promotion to such a position.
- An
industrial dispute arose between Teekay and the AMOU concerning, relevantly, the
promotion. The AMOU demanded that Teekay hold
open vacancies for permanent
positions as Chief Officer in order to allow employees with longer service to
obtain the necessary qualifications.
The Commissioner who dealt with the
dispute recommended, on 11 September 2001, that "promotions recently made" be
rescinded. Teekay
notified Mr Visscher on 20 September 2001 that it
intended to comply with the recommendation and that his "recent promotion
to
permanent 1st Mate is unfortunately rescinded". Mr Visscher did not accept
the rescission. The Full Bench of the AIRC observed
that he "thereafter
maintained that it was of no legal
effect"[26].
However he remained in Teekay's employ, continuing to undertake the role and
duties of a Chief Officer and receiving an amount
equal to the salary of a Chief
Officer, as earlier mentioned.
- On
5 March 2002 the AIRC certified the Certified Agreement. It was to take
effect from 5 May 2002 and remain in force
until 1 July 2004. It was
expressed to be binding on employees of Teekay who were members of the AMOU and
engaged as Masters
or Deck Officers on vessels defined as the "fleet" operated
or managed by Teekay. It dealt with a number of subjects including "Employee
Performance & Career Progression". Clause 23.4 provided that the
"grading (or rank/service) list attached will be the basis
for future
promotions/transfers etc". That was a reference to Appendix A to the Agreement,
which comprised a "Deck Officers Grading
List", and which was stated to be: "As
at 15th February 2002". Mr Visscher was there listed as a "Third Officer",
that is
Third Mate. The Commissioner found that the gradings list was available
to employees on a monthly basis. It may be assumed that
Teekay updated the list
when changes to staff or gradings occurred.
- On
5 July 2002 Teekay wrote to Mr Visscher and offered him a permanent
position as a Second Mate. His evidence was that
he rejected the offer as
unnecessary, given his existing contract of employment as a Chief Officer.
Subsequent to this letter Mr Visscher
appeared in the gradings list as a
Second Mate.
- At
the time of his promotion to a Chief Officer Mr Visscher was engaged on the
"Samar Spirit" and he continued to perform the
duties of a Chief Officer on that
vessel until early January 2004. The evidence before the Commissioner was
that, from the
time of the AIRC's recommendation that promotions be rescinded,
Mr Visscher's payslips showed that he was paid a higher duties
allowance,
in addition to his pay which was at the rate of a Third Mate and later as a
Second Mate.
- On
8 and 9 January 2004 Mr Visscher had conversations with another
employee of Teekay, Mr Bray. They concerned the
position in which
Mr Visscher would work after the conclusion of his current tour of duty on
the "Samar Spirit" and a further
tour of duty on the "Broadwater". Different
accounts were given by Mr Visscher and Mr Bray as to what was said.
In his
email to Teekay of 22 February 2004, Mr Visscher claimed that
Mr Bray had said that he, Mr Visscher, would be
required to sail as a
Second Mate. Mr Bray's evidence was that he said Mr Visscher would have to
do so if no position as a
Chief Officer was available and that Mr Visscher
did not react negatively to that prospect. Commissioner Redmond did not make
findings as to what was said. He made a general statement that he accepted
Teekay's evidence as relevant to its belief about the
employment relationship
continuing but, as the Full Bench of the AIRC correctly observed, little
reliance could be placed upon such
a statement as findings concerning the events
of 8 and 9 January
2004[27].
- In
his email of 22 February 2004 to Teekay, Mr Visscher said that the requirement
to sail as a Second Mate constituted a demotion
and that he considered his
employment as terminated by Teekay upon his leaving the "Broadwater", the vessel
upon which he was currently
serving. Teekay responded by letter dated
24 February, expressing surprise at his comment about demotion. It said
that he
was currently graded as a Second Mate and had never been graded as a
Chief Officer. It also said that it did not consider a demotion
in rank for any
officer to constitute constructive dismissal. Mr Visscher filed his
application with the AIRC on 11 March
2004.
- Mr Visscher
undertook further work for Teekay for some months after his claim of termination
of employment. The basis upon
which he did so has not been the subject of
findings in the AIRC. Teekay raised an issue before the Commissioner as to
whether Mr Visscher's
employment was terminated, or whether he resigned in
June 2004, but the Commissioner made no determination and the issue does
not appear to have been pursued in the following appeals.
The contract of employment
- Commissioner
Redmond did not make any findings as to what resulted from Teekay's notification
of the rescission of Mr Visscher's
contract as a Chief Officer on
20 September 2001. He noted that Mr Visscher advised Teekay that he
did not accept it,
but went on to find that Mr Visscher must have
appreciated that he was not graded as a Chief Officer and that it must have been
evident to him from his payslips what his ordinary rate of pay was and that he
was in receipt of a higher duties allowance. This
suggests that the
Commissioner considered Teekay's repudiation effective to bring the contract to
an end, with Mr Visscher continuing
his employment in a Third Mate
position. This is the view the Full Bench formed of the Commissioner's
reasons[28].
Nothing in the Commissioner's reasons suggests that he regarded the Certified
Agreement as conclusive of the question of Mr Visscher's
position. He may
have viewed it as confirming the demotion which had been achieved by Teekay.
- The
Commissioner's reference to Mr Visscher's knowledge about his grading and the
basis of his pay is consistent with a view that
Mr Visscher understood that
he had been demoted. But the Commissioner made no findings about statements by
Mr Visscher
or conduct on his part following receipt of the notice of
rescission which might have suggested his acceptance of what Teekay sought
to
do. The finding, that Mr Visscher had advised Teekay that he did not
accept that his promotion had been rescinded, appears
to the contrary of an
election on his part to treat the contract as discharged by Teekay's
breach[29].
However it is perhaps unwise to read too much into this finding. It stated the
fact of the communication by Mr Visscher,
not a conclusion about an
election on his part. Plainly the Commissioner was not engaged upon such a
determination, because he considered
Teekay's notice of rescission to have been
effective without more.
- The
members of the Full Bench of the AIRC were of the same view concerning the
ability of Teekay to rescind the promotion. They
determined that the
conversations in January 2004 could not amount to a demotion constituting a
termination of employment within
s 170CD(1B) of the WRA because "the
relevant demotion occurred in September
2001"[30].
- The
Full Court did consider the legal consequences of Teekay's notice.
Buchanan J, with whom Ryan and Madgwick JJ agreed,
held that Teekay's
letter of 20 September 2001 amounted to a breach of
contract[31].
However, his Honour considered that it had the effect in law of bringing
Mr Visscher's employment as a Chief Officer to an
end, even though Teekay's
conduct was
wrongful[32].
This consequence followed upon Mr Visscher being unable to insist upon
performance of his
contract[33].
Buchanan J said that many of the legal principles applicable to contracts
generally apply to contracts of employment, but
because they are contracts for
personal service they have some special features. His Honour gave as one
example "the principle that
employment (or an employment relationship) may be
effectively discharged by wrongful termination of a contract of
employment"[34].
The decision of this Court in Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v
Watson[35]
was cited as authority for that proposition.
- Buchanan J
went on to say that the fact that Mr Visscher remained in employment and
sailed as a Chief Officer did not lead
to a different
conclusion[36].
In his Honour's view he continued under a new contract, in a demoted position,
as had the employee in Brackenridge v Toyota Motor Corporation Australia
Ltd[37].
However, as his Honour himself
observed[38],
there was no breach of the contract of employment by the employer in that case.
It was entitled to terminate the first contract
and the parties replaced it with
another[39].
- The
reasons of Buchanan J elide the concepts of termination of an employment
relationship and the discharge of a contract of
employment. The concepts are
different. It does not follow from the fact that a wrongful dismissal is
effective to bring the employment
relationship to an end that it thereby
discharges the contract of employment. In Byrne v Australian Airlines
Ltd it was said
that[40]:
"It does not appear to have been doubted in this country that a wrongful
dismissal terminates the employment relationship notwithstanding
that the
contract of employment may continue until the employee accepts the repudiation
constituted by the wrongful dismissal and
puts an end to the contract. That was
accepted by both the majority and minority in Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty
Ltd v Watson ...".
And in one of the passages from Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v
Watson to which reference was made in Byrne v Australian Airlines
Ltd, Latham CJ
said[41]:
"An employer terminates the employment of a servant when he dismisses him,
though, as I say hereafter, such a dismissal does not
put an end to the contract
between the parties. An argument that a dismissal because wrongful was a
nullity was raised and rejected
in both Williamson's
Case[42]
and Lucy's
Case[43]."
And Dixon J
said[44]:
"... there is nothing in the general law preventing the wrongful dismissal of a
servant operating to discharge him from service,
notwithstanding that he
declines to accept the dismissal as absolving him from further performance but
keeps the contract open and
remains ready and willing to
serve."
As was said in Byrne, the position was not always so clear in
England[45].
For a time the opinion was maintained that contracts of employment are sui
generis, in that certain forms of repudiation are effective
automatically to
terminate them without the need for their
acceptance[46].
But, as has been observed, the theory was later rejected in favour of the
"elective theory of
termination"[47].
Such an approach accepts as correct the general principle in contract law that
acceptance by the innocent party of a repudiation
is necessary to terminate a
contract[48].
- This
is not to say that in a case of dismissal there will ordinarily be anything to
be gained by employees refusing to accept the
repudiation. Even if they keep
the contract of employment on foot, they cannot receive remuneration after the
dismissal, because
the right to receive it is dependent upon services having
been
performed[49].
Further, historically the courts would not grant specific performance of a
contract of personal service, save in exceptional
cases[50].
This was largely because of perceived difficulties in supervision and because
the courts were unwilling to compel employers to
tolerate an individual employee
whom they considered
incompatible[51].
In Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson, Latham CJ
said[52]:
"... the wrongful dismissal determines the relationship of master and
servant created by the contract, even though the servant
may not have accepted
his dismissal as entitling him to regard the contract as discharged. Any other
view would in effect grant
specific performance of a contract of personal
service, a remedy which the courts have always refused in such a
case ...".
- It
was said in
Byrne[53]
that, for all practical purposes, the contract of employment will be at an end
upon dismissal. In the case of a wrongful dismissal,
the possible continuation
of it will rarely be of significance. In principle, however, it remains the
case that an unaccepted repudiation
does not terminate a contract. In the
circumstances of this case this assumes importance. To view it as automatically
discharged
would be to elevate a problem concerning remedies to a substantive
principle concerning the termination of contracts.
- This
is not a case involving dismissal, with a consequent destruction of the
employment relationship. The employment relationship
between the parties
continued after 2001, as Buchanan J
observed[54].
However his Honour assumed that that relationship continued by reference to a
new contract of employment, one by which Mr Visscher
was a Third Mate. It
may be inferred that it was his Honour's view that, even if Mr Visscher
said that he did not accept the
rescission of his promotion, Teekay could not be
required to permit him to perform his duties as a Chief Officer.
- It
is a feature of this case that the employment relationship continued with Mr
Visscher undertaking the duties of a Chief Officer
and being remunerated to the
same extent. He was never required to undertake the duties of a Third or Second
Mate, at least until
January 2004, on his evidence. No issue as to the
performance of the contract of 7 September 2001 arose.
- In
Rigby v Ferodo
Ltd[55] the
employer purported to reduce its employees' wages during the currency of the
employment relationship. The employees made it
clear that they were unwilling
to accept the reduction and never did accept it. Lord Oliver of Aylmerton
said[56]:
"Whatever may be the position under a contract of service where the repudiation
takes the form either of a walk-out by the employee
or of a refusal by the
employer any longer to regard the employee as his servant, I know of no
principle of law that any breach which
the innocent party is entitled to treat
as repudiatory of the other party's obligations brings the contract to an end
automatically.
No authority has been cited for so broad a proposition and
indeed [counsel for the appellant] has not contended for it. What he
has
submitted is that where there is a combination of three factors, that is to say,
(a) a breach of contract going to an essential
term, (b) a desire in
the party in breach either not to continue the contract or to continue it in a
different form and (c) no
practical option in the other party but to accept
the breach, then the contract is automatically brought to an end. My Lords, for
my part, I have found myself unable either to accept this formulation as a
matter of law or to see why it should be so. I entirely
fail to see how the
continuance of the primary contractual obligation can be made to depend upon the
subjective desire of the contract-breaker
and I do not understand what is meant
by the injured party having no alternative but to accept the breach. If this
means that, if
the contract-breaker persists, the injured party may have to put
up with the fact that he will not be able to enforce the primary
obligation of
performance, that is, of course, true of every contract which is not susceptible
of a decree of specific performance.
If it means that he has no alternative to
accepting the breach as a repudiation and thus terminating the contract, it begs
the question.
For my part, I can see no reason in law or logic why, leaving
aside for the moment the extreme case of outright dismissal or walk-out,
a
contract of employment should be on any different footing from any other
contract as regards the principle that 'an unaccepted
repudiation is a thing
writ in water and of no value to
anybody' ...[57]".
- Mr Visscher's
case is that he kept the contract alive by his refusal to accept the rescission
and that Teekay resiled from its
threat to demote him. Such an outcome is
possible, for when a contract continues on foot it remains in force for the
benefit of
both parties and a party's refusal to perform may be
withdrawn[58].
In Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson Dixon J
recognised the possibility that an employer might be induced to retract a
discharge, where the employee kept his contract
open, thereby allowing the
employee to resume his service without a new
contract[59].
- Neither
the Commissioner nor the Full Bench made express findings of an election, on the
part of Mr Visscher, to accept the
rescission. The Full Bench made a
statement that Mr Visscher had elected to continue his employment and this
statement requires
consideration. It
said[60]:
"We think the true construction of events, the one the Commissioner accepted,
is that the appellant elected to continue his employment
after
September 2001 in the full knowledge that the respondent had demoted him.
Only in February 2004 did he decide to 'recognise'
the demotion and characterise
it as a termination of employment."
The Commissioner made no finding of an election by Mr Visscher with respect
to Teekay's repudiation, which would be necessary
to bring the contract of
employment to an end, as discussed earlier in these reasons. This passage from
the reasons of the Full
Bench does not amount to such a finding. It is apparent
that the Full Bench used the word "elected" to describe a choice by
Mr Visscher
to remain in employment with Teekay after the demotion, rather
than in its legal sense, to describe a choice between inconsistent
rights. On
the approach taken by the Full Bench an election, in the latter legal sense,
would not arise, because it took the view
that Teekay's unilateral rescission
was effective to demote Mr Visscher. That approach was based upon a
misunderstanding of
the law.
- It
does not appear from the arguments put for Teekay, as recorded by the
Commissioner, that it contended that Mr Visscher was
estopped from denying
that the demotion was effective. It did not rely upon anything said, or not
said, by Mr Visscher as affecting
its belief as to the state of affairs
which existed. The references by Teekay in the AIRC proceedings to what
appeared in the payslips
and in the annexure to the Certified Agreement were
equivocal. They could have been relied upon to show that Teekay was acting in
a
manner consistent with its understanding of the contractual position, but this
would not demonstrate any acceptance, on the part
of Mr Visscher, to the
demotion.
- The
Commissioner made no finding about Mr Visscher's knowledge of the annexure
to the Certified Agreement, although there was
evidence that it was made
available to employees on a monthly basis. He did find that Mr Visscher
would have appreciated the
basis upon which he was paid and said that
Mr Visscher "at no time other than in the first instance contested the fact
that
he was receiving higher duties allowance." The background to this and
other findings was an assumption, on the part of the Commissioner,
that Teekay's
demotion of Mr Visscher was effective. The point which the Commissioner
was seeking to make was that Mr Visscher
must have appreciated that fact.
That assumption was incorrect.
- In
the Full Court Ryan J observed that it was open to the Commissioner to
conclude that Mr Visscher had acquiesced in the
decision of Teekay to
rescind his promotion, because he did not challenge it. In his Honour's view
that inference could be seen
as reinforced if it were found that
Mr Visscher was aware of what was in the payslips concerning his position
and how he had
been graded in the annexure to the Certified
Agreement[61].
- Acquiescence
is a term which is used in a number of senses. In the sense used by
Ryan J, it may refer to an estoppel of the
kind which would arise in this
case if Mr Visscher had stood by and done nothing when his rights were
being
violated[62].
However when Mr Visscher was advised of Teekay's purported rescission he
made plain that he did not accept it. On his case
Teekay thereafter did not
deny his contractual rights; rather it performed its obligations by maintaining
him in the position of
a Chief Officer at a remuneration referrable to it.
- That
leaves for consideration the question of Mr Visscher's silence when faced
with the payslips. The payslips themselves involved
no interference with
Mr Visscher's rights. His silence may possibly have conveyed to Teekay
something approaching an assent
to what was said about his position, although
again there does not appear to be any evidence that Teekay was led to such an
understanding.
In any event there are difficulties in the way of holding him
estopped on account of his conduct by his silence. In the first place
it would
be necessary for him to have been under some obligation to
speak[63]. It
would further be necessary that Teekay acted to its disadvantage or detriment on
the basis of what was conveyed to it by Mr Visscher's
conduct[64].
Teekay does not appear to have contended that it did so. It is neither
necessary nor appropriate to deal further with these questions.
They are among
the matters yet to be determined by the AIRC.
- Ryan J
alluded to another possible view of Teekay's position, which might also be
relevant to an assessment of the parties'
conduct. The view is consistent with
Mr Visscher's case, that Teekay was in fact performing its obligations
under the contract
appointing him a Chief Officer. His Honour observed that it
may have been open to the Commissioner to find that Teekay's "demotion"
of
Mr Visscher was "a sham contrived to placate the AMOU and those officers
with longer service with Teekay who had apparently
complained that
Mr Visscher [and another officer] had been promoted over
them"[65].
- The
questions whether Mr Visscher may be taken to have accepted Teekay's notice
of rescission at some point after his express
refusal to do so or whether
Teekay's actions showed that it resiled from its repudiation are not questions
which have been considered
in the AIRC. They are questions which require
findings of fact, in particular as to what was said and done by the parties
after
Teekay's notice of rescission and in connection with Mr Visscher's
continuing employment.
- For
the reasons which follow, the Certified Agreement provides no answer to
Mr Visscher's claims. It is therefore necessary
for the matter to be
remitted to the AIRC to determine what occurred concerning the contract of
employment, by which Mr Visscher
was appointed a Chief Officer, and the
basis upon which the employment relationship continued after 20 September 2001.
The failure
to determine these matters arose from a misunderstanding of the
legal efficacy of a repudiation of the contract of employment by
Teekay,
considered alone. In not addressing the question of the terms upon which the
employment relationship continued the Commissioner
and the Full Bench fell into
jurisdictional
error[66].
- Before
turning to the issue concerning the Certified Agreement it is necessary to refer
to one other aspect of the reasons of the
Full Bench. It said that if it were
wrong in its conclusion that Mr Visscher's demotion occurred in 2001, the
conversations
in January 2004 did not constitute a demotion, even on
Mr Visscher's version of what was said. The Full Bench
said[67]:
"In light of the history of formal correspondence in relation to changes in
classification, something more would be required than
the conversations referred
to. They were at most an indication of future intention on [Teekay's]
part."
The Full Bench said that it had proceeded on the basis that Mr Visscher's
version of events was correct, in the absence of findings
by the Commissioner as
to what was said. Mr Visscher's version, as recorded by the Full Bench,
was that Teekay's representative,
Mr Bray, said to him that after his tour
of duty with the "Broadwater" Teekay would sail him as Second Mate. The Full
Bench
could not therefore be suggesting that Teekay's intentions, as conveyed,
were unclear at this point. If the contract appointing
him a Chief Officer
remained on foot, Teekay did not intend to continue to carry it out. That would
be sufficient to constitute
a repudiation without more, which Mr Visscher
could
accept[68].
For the purposes of Mr Visscher's application, Teekay may have initiated
what resulted in the termination of his employment.
It is not clear whether the
"something more" that the Full Bench thought to be required was a requirement
that Teekay commit an
actual breach. It would not be correct to recognise that
such a requirement
existed[69].
And, if Mr Visscher's version of events is correct, which is a matter yet
to be determined in the AIRC, it is difficult to
see that formal correspondence
was necessary to confirm Teekay's stated intention.
The 2001 Certified Agreement
- The
Full Court held that, regardless of the contractual position, Mr Visscher's
interests were subordinated to the superior
legal force of the Certified
Agreement[70].
It is therefore necessary to turn to the legislative provisions respecting
certified agreements and to the terms of the Certified
Agreement in this
case.
- Buchanan J
referred to the Certified Agreement as having that superior legal force, because
of the provisions of the
WRA[71]. So
much may be accepted. An agreement which is certified by the
AIRC[72]
prevails over terms and conditions specified in a State law, award or employment
agreement[73]
and displaces conditions of employment specified in certain Commonwealth
laws[74], to
the extent of any inconsistency. Moreover an agreement made under Div 2 of
Pt VIB, as this agreement was, binds the employer and all persons whose
employment is, at any time when the agreement is in operation, subject
to the
agreement[75].
The terms of the Certified Agreement confirmed that to be so. In Amalgamated
Collieries of WA Ltd v
True[76]
Latham CJ pointed out that where there was an award the legal relations
between employer and employee are determined partly
by the award and partly by
the contract between them, but "[t]he award governs their relations as to all
matters with which it
deals."[77]
And in Byrne it was said that the contract of employment cannot derogate
from the terms and conditions of an award, which operates with statutory
force[78]. The
same may be said of a certified agreement. The question then is the extent to
which the agreement has effect with respect
to Mr Visscher's grading. That
question is to be determined as a matter of the construction of the Certified
Agreement, which
involves considering the subjects with which it was concerned
and its terms.
- In
submissions for Teekay it was suggested that the Certified Agreement was
connected with the previous dispute which arose as to
Mr Visscher's
promotion. If this were the case the Certified Agreement and its gradings might
be seen as directed to Mr Visscher.
It may well be that the agreement
resulted from a desire, on the part of the AMOU, to establish the system for
which it contended,
but it cannot therefore be assumed that it was directed
towards the subject of Mr Visscher's status. The matters with which
it was
concerned may be gleaned from its terms. It may be seen, by reference to those
subjects, that they were not concerned with
Mr Visscher and that the
Certified Agreement did not involve resolution of any dispute concerning
Mr Visscher.
- In
Byrne v Australian Airlines
Ltd[79]
McHugh and Gummow JJ said that the concept of an "industrial dispute" was
central to the legislation then under
consideration[80].
The prevention and settlement of disputes was a keystone of the
WRA[81].
Part VIB, Div 3 provided for the certification of agreements which may
be made on terms for settling matters in dispute, preventing further
industrial
disputes or preventing a situation giving rise to a
dispute[82].
In one sense it may be said that the Certified Agreement was addressed to the
possibility of further disputes, in the arrangements
it put in place for
promotions and transfers, but it also concerned wider aspects of the
relationship between Teekay and its officers.
- Another
stated aim of the WRA was to ensure that the responsibility for determining
matters affecting the relationship between employer
and employee rests with them
at the workplace or enterprise
level[83]. The
certified agreements referred to in Div 2 of Pt VIB were concerned with
"matters pertaining to the relationship" between an employer who is a
constitutional corporation and persons
whose employment is subject to the
agreement while it
operates[84].
- The
Certified Agreement had as its stated objective high standards of efficiency and
service and the aim "to ensure that all officers
are provided with a performance
based salary and satisfying, long term careers". Its subjects were "Agreement
Formalities", "Consultation
and Dispute Resolution", "Conditions of Employment",
"Employee Performance & Career Progression", "Leave", "Occupational Health
and Safety", "Employee Benefits", "Ship Operations" and "Claims and Ongoing
Matters". It was in the Part dealing with "Employee
Performance & Career
Progression" that reference to the Grading List appears.
- In
the earlier Part, "Agreement Formalities", and after the reference to the
binding nature of the Agreement, it was said that it
applied so that:
"5.3 An officer commencing their employment with Teekay after the date on which
this agreement comes into operation shall be employed
in accordance with the
terms of this agreement.
5.4 The parties agree that no officer ... shall be employed other than [on] the
terms of this agreement".
Under the heading "Collective Bargaining" it was said:
"6.2 The Terms [and] Conditions of this Agreement shall be a condition of
employment and copies of this Agreement will be made available
to all existing
and new employed officers."
- Mr Visscher
submitted that if the Certified Agreement had the effect of altering his grading
this would amount to an acquisition
of property contrary to s 51(xxxi) of
the Constitution; but he also argued that such an interpretation of the
Agreement would be contrary to the "no disadvantage" provisions of the
WRA[85]. It is
not apparent that those provisions have the protective effect claimed by
Mr Visscher, but it is not necessary to further
consider these submissions.
The matter falls to be determined by reference to the terms of the Certified
Agreement.
- There
is nothing in the Certified Agreement which suggests that its subject matter
included a reallocation of the positions of individual
officers. No reference
to such an intention to deal with that subject matter can be found in the body
of the Agreement. The only
statements concerning Mr Visscher and other
officers were made in the Grading List which was an annexure to the Agreement.
They stated a fact as to his employment, not a matter expressed to have been the
subject of the agreement of the parties to the Certified
Agreement. The fact,
as it was there stated to be, was that Mr Visscher was a Third Mate. It
may have been assumed, at least
by the AMOU, that that statement correctly
reflected the position achieved by Teekay's letter of 20 September 2001.
But if
it was wrong, there would be no impediment to its correction, along with
other changes to personnel made in the annexure and made
available to employees
on a monthly basis. The statement in the annexure did not constitute a term of
employment to which Mr Visscher
was bound.
- It
will also be recalled that the Grading List was said to be "the basis for future
promotions/transfers, etc". While this confirms
a view of that annexure as
containing a statement of officers' present positions, it also reveals it to be
an integer in determining
what promotions and transfers should be made in the
future. It does not reveal any intention to effect a change to the position
of
any officer upon the Certified Agreement coming into force. There is no
referential importation of the gradings into the contracts
of
employment[86].
- It
follows that if Mr Visscher was employed in January 2004 as a Chief
Officer under his contract of employment, nothing
in the Certified Agreement was
effective to alter that term.
Conclusion
- Teekay's
notice of rescission did not automatically bring the contract appointing Mr
Visscher a Chief Officer to an end. It was
necessary that Mr Visscher
accept the repudiation before the contract could be terminated. Nothing said in
Automatic Fire Sprinklers Pty Ltd v Watson suggests any different
contractual principle as applying to a contract of employment. In order to
decide whether Teekay had repudiated
Mr Visscher's contract of employment
in January and February 2004 it was necessary for the AIRC to determine the
true contractual
position between the parties at that time. It was necessary
then to determine whether what was said by Teekay at that time amounted
to a
repudiation such that the termination of the employment relationship could be
said to be at its initiative; or whether it amounted
to a demotion within the
meaning of s 170CD(1B). The correct legal starting point was not that
Teekay had rescinded the agreement.
Neither the Commissioner nor the Full Bench
of the AIRC asked the correct question, as to the contract under which the
parties continued
after September 2001. This was an error going to
jurisdiction.
Orders
- We
agree with Gummow J that special leave should be granted. However we would
allow the appeal. The orders of the Full Court
of the Federal Court dated
21 December 2007 should be set aside and in lieu thereof it should be
ordered that:
(a) A writ of certiorari issue to the Australian Industrial Relations Commission
quashing:
(i) the decision of the Full Bench of the Australian Industrial Relations
Commission dated 9 October 2006 in matter C2006/132; and
(ii) the decision of Commissioner Redmond of the Australian Industrial
Relations Commission dated 5 May 2006 in matter U2004/2387.
(b) A writ of mandamus issue to the Australian Industrial Relations Commission,
directing it to hear and determine matter U2004/2387
in accordance with
law.
[1] (2007) 170 IR 419.
[2] Minister for Immigration and
Multicultural Affairs v Eshetu (1999) 197 CLR 611 at 651-654
[130]-[136]; [1999] HCA 21.
[3] Reprint No 6.
[4] Workplace Relations and Other
Legislation Amendment Act 1996 (Cth), Sched 8, Item 19.
[5] See s 170CEA.
[6] Amalgamated Collieries of WA
Ltd v True (1938) 59 CLR 417 at 422-423; [1938] HCA 19; Ansett
Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v Wardley (1980) 142 CLR 237
at 254-255, 287-288; [1980] HCA 8; Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd
[1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 421; [1995] HCA 24.
[7] (1946) 72 CLR 435; [1946]
HCA 25. See Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd (1995) 185 CLR 410
at 426-429, 453-457.
[8] [1988] ICR 29.
[9] Lange v Australian Broadcasting
Corporation (1997) 189 CLR 520 at 563-564; [1997] HCA 25.
[10] [1980] HCA 8; (1980) 142 CLR 237 at 254-255;
[1980] HCA 8.
[11] [1938] HCA 19; (1938) 59 CLR 417.
[12] Re McJannet; Ex parte
Australian Workers' Union of Employees (Q) [No 2] (1997)
189 CLR 654; [1997] HCA 40. See also Re Commonwealth; Ex
parte Marks [2000] HCA 67; (2000) 75 ALJR 470 at 476-477 [25]-[28]; 177 ALR 491
at 498-499; [2000] HCA 67.
[13] Which ceased to have effect as
of 1 July 2009, see Fair Work (Transitional Provisions and
Consequential Amendments) Act 2009 (Cth), s 2 and Sched 1. The
relevant reprint of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) is
Reprint 6.
[14] Pursuant to the Workplace
Relations Act 1996, s 170CH(3).
[15] See Workplace Relations
Act 1996, ss 170CD(1), "termination" and 170CH(3).
[16] Added by the Workplace
Relations Amendment (Termination of Employment) Act 2001 (Cth), Sched
1, Item 9.
[17] President Justice Giudice,
Senior Deputy President Drake and Commissioner Bacon.
[18] See Workplace Relations
Act 1996, s 120 (Reprint 7) for matters in which an appeal lies to
the Full Bench.
[19] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419.
[20] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 423 [18] and 432
[59].
[21] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 431 [54].
[22] Visscher v Teekay Shipping
(Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 13 [21].
[23] The "Teekay Shipping
Australia/Australian Maritime Officers Union (Deck Officers) Sea-Going Officers
Agreement 2001".
[24] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 425 [32].
[25] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 432 [58].
[26] Visscher v Teekay
Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 8 [3].
[27] Visscher v Teekay
Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 10 [11].
[28] Visscher v Teekay
Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 13 [21].
[29] Craine v Colonial
Mutual Fire Insurance Co Ltd (1920) 28 CLR 305; [1920] HCA 64;
Agricultural & Rural Finance v Gardiner [2008] HCA 57; (2008) 83 ALJR 196 at
209 [58]; [2008] HCA 57; 251 ALR 322 at 336; [2008] HCA 57.
[30] Visscher v Teekay
Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 14 [25].
[31] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 427 [40].
[32] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 430 [49].
[33] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 430 [49].
[34] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 427 [42].
[35] (1946) 72 CLR 435; [1946] HCA
25.
[36] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 430 [50].
[37] [1996] IRCA 628; (1996) 142 ALR 99.
[38] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 430 [51].
[39] Brackenridge v Toyota
Motor Corporation Australia Ltd [1996] IRCA 628; (1996) 142 ALR 99 at 109.
[40] [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 427 per
Brennan CJ, Dawson and Toohey JJ; [1995] HCA 24.
[41] Automatic Fire Sprinklers
Pty Ltd v Watson [1946] HCA 25; (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 454; cited in Byrne v
Australian Airlines Ltd [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 427.
[42] Williamson v The
Commonwealth [1907] HCA 60; (1907) 5 CLR 174 at 185; [1907] HCA 60.
[43] Lucy v The Commonwealth
[1923] HCA 32; (1923) 33 CLR 229 at 237, 248, 249, 252 and 253; [1923] HCA 32.
[44] Automatic Fire Sprinklers
Pty Ltd v Watson [1946] HCA 25; (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 469; cited in Byrne v
Australian Airlines Ltd [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 427.
[45] Byrne v Australian
Airlines Ltd [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 427.
[46] See for example Vine v
National Dock Labour Board [1957] AC 488 at 500 per Viscount
Kilmuir LC; Sanders v Ernest A Neale Ltd [1974] EW Misc 1; [1974] ICR
565.
[47] McMullen, "A Synthesis of the
Mode of Termination of Contracts of Employment", (1982) 41 Cambridge Law
Journal 110 at 121, see also at 118; and see Gunton v
Richmond-upon-Thames London Borough Council [1980] ICR 755.
[48] Peter Turnbull & Co Pty
Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd [1954] HCA 25; (1954) 90 CLR 235 at 250
per Kitto J; [1954] HCA 25; Holland v Wiltshire [1954] HCA 42; (1954) 90 CLR
409 at 419 per Kitto J; [1954] HCA 42; Progressive Mailing House Pty Ltd
v Tabali Pty Ltd [1985] HCA 14; (1985) 157 CLR 17 at 48 per Brennan J; [1985] HCA 14;
Foran v Wight [1989] HCA 51; (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 395 per Mason CJ, 421 per
Brennan J, 441 per Dawson J; [1989] HCA 51; see also White and
Carter (Councils) Ltd v McGregor [1961] UKHL 5; [1962] AC 413 at 427 per
Lord Reid, 432 per Lord Morton of Henryton.
[49] Automatic Fire Sprinklers
Pty Ltd v Watson [1946] HCA 25; (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 465 per Dixon J;
Byrne v Australian Airlines Ltd [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 428 per
Brennan CJ, Dawson and Toohey JJ.
[50] McMullen argues that there
should be no strict rule, especially in the case of large corporations where the
personalised nature
of the contract assumes less importance: "A Synthesis of the
Mode of Termination of Contracts of Employment", (1982) 41 Cambridge Law
Journal 110 at 127.
[51] Freedland, The Contract of
Employment, (1976) at 273 and 275.
[52] Automatic Fire Sprinklers
Pty Ltd v Watson [1946] HCA 25; (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 451.
[53] [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 428.
[54] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 431 [54].
[55] [1988] ICR 29.
[56] Rigby v Ferodo Ltd
[1988] ICR 29 at 34-35.
[57] Citing Howard v
Pickford Tool Co Ltd [1951] 1 KB 417 at 421 per Asquith LJ.
[58] Peter Turnbull & Co Pty
Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd [1954] HCA 25; (1954) 90 CLR 235
at 250.
[59] Automatic Fire Sprinklers
Pty Ltd v Watson [1946] HCA 25; (1946) 72 CLR 435 at 465-466 (although the case his
Honour then discusses is an example of a new contract).
[60] Visscher v Teekay
Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 13 [21].
[61] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 420-421 [3].
[62] Ramsden v Dyson
(1866) LR 1 HL 129; Meagher, Gummow and Lehane's Equity Doctrines and
Remedies, 4th ed (2002) at [36-010] and [36-090].
[63] Thompson v Palmer
[1933] HCA 61; (1933) 49 CLR 507 at 547 per Dixon J; [1933] HCA 61.
[64] Grundt v Great Boulder
Pty Gold Mines Ltd (1937) 59 CLR 641; [1937] HCA 58; Thompson v
Palmer [1933] HCA 61; (1933) 49 CLR 507 at 547. See also Foran v Wight
[1989] HCA 51; (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 412 per Mason CJ, 436 per Deane J, 454 per
Dawson J.
[65] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 420 [2].
[66] Craig v South
Australia [1995] HCA 58; (1995) 184 CLR 163 at 179; [1995] HCA 58; Minister for
Immigration and Multicultural Affairs v Yusuf [2001] HCA 30; (2001) 206 CLR 323 at 351
[82] per McHugh, Gummow and Hayne JJ; [2001] HCA 30.
[67] Visscher v Teekay
Shipping (Australia) Pty Ltd (2006) 157 IR 7 at 14 [25].
[68] See Peter Turnbull & Co
Pty Ltd v Mundus Trading Co (Australasia) Pty Ltd [1954] HCA 25; (1954) 90 CLR 235 at
250 per Kitto J.
[69] Foran v Wight
[1989] HCA 51; (1989) 168 CLR 385 at 395 per Mason CJ, 416-417 per Brennan J, 433 per
Deane J, 441 per Dawson J.
[70] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 432 [58].
[71] Visscher v Australian
Industrial Relations Commission (2007) 170 IR 419 at 431 [56].
[72] Pursuant to the Workplace
Relations Act 1996, s 170LT.
[73] Workplace Relations Act
1996, s 170LZ(1).
[74] Workplace Relations Act
1996, s 170LZ(4).
[75] Workplace Relations Act
1996, s 170M(1).
[76] (1938) 59 CLR 417; [1938] HCA
19.
[77] Amalgamated Collieries of WA
Ltd v True [1938] HCA 19; (1938) 59 CLR 417 at 423.
[78] Byrne v Australian Airlines
Ltd [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 421 per Brennan CJ, Dawson and
Toohey JJ.
[79] [1995] HCA 24; (1995) 185 CLR 410 at 456.
[80] Industrial Relations Act
1988 (Cth).
[81] Workplace Relations Act
1996, s 3(h).
[82] Workplace Relations Act
1996, ss 170LO and 170LP.
[83] Workplace Relations Act
1996, s 3(b).
[84] Workplace Relations Act
1996, s 170LI. Such agreements, with organisations of employers (see
s 170LJ) or with employees (see s 170LK), require
approval of a valid
majority of the persons employed at the time and whose employment would be
subject to the agreement.
[85] See Workplace Relations
Act 1996, Pt VIE.
[86] Cf Ansett Transport
Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v Wardley [1980] HCA 8; (1980) 142 CLR 237 at 255; [1980]
HCA 8.
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