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Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales |
New South Wales Industrial Relations CommissionLast Updated: 3 April 2009
NEW SOUTH WALES INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMISSION
CITATION :
Williams v. Usher, trading as Platinum Fencing [2009] NSWIRComm
1018
FILE NUMBER(S):
IRC 2367
HEARING DATE(S):
31/03/2009
EX TEMPORE DATE:
31 March 2009
PARTIES:
APPLICANT
Reginald Keith Williams
RESPONDENT
Raymond Usher,
trading as Platinum Fencing
CORAM:
Connor C
CATCHWORDS: termination of employment - claim of unfair dismissal -
allegation that the claim was lodged out-of-time - casual employment
falling
outside jurisdiction - claim without merit - failure of applicant or his
representative to appear at the hearing - application
dismissed for want of
prosecution - application for costs by respondent rejected
LEGAL
REPRESENTATIVES
APPLICANT
Katie Foreman
R and M Legal, Solicitors
and Attorneys
RESPONDENT
Mark McDonald
Maguire and McInerney
Lawyers
CASES CITED:
Attorney General v. Wentworth (1988) 14 NSWLR
491
Brady v. Kennedy, trading as "Sardines" (1999) 91 IR 258
Hurrell v.
Queensland Cotton Corporation Limited (2003) 125 IR 145
Killington v. News
Limited (1993) 51 IR 307
Luke v. Handicapped Children's Centre -
unreported
Ryde-Eastwood Leagues Club Limited v. Taylor [1994] NSWIRComm 112; (1994) 56 IR
385
Skelly v. Prouds Jewellers Pty Limited (1994) 53 IR 3
Tseros v.
Valudev Pty Limited - unreported
Zonneveld v. South Eastern Sydney and
Illawarra Area Health Service [2008] NSWIRComm 1119
LEGISLATION CITED:
Industrial Relations Regulations 1996
TEXTS CITED:
JUDGMENT:
INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS COMMISSION OF NEW SOUTH WALES
CORAM: CONNOR C
Tuesday, 31 March, 2009
Matter No IRC 2367 of 2008
Reginald Keith
Williams and Raymond Usher, trading as Platinum
Fencing
Application under S.84 of the Industrial Relations Act,
1996
DECISION
[2009] NSWIRComm 1018
Introduction
1 Pursuant to the provisions of Part 6,
Unfair Dismissals, of Chapter 2, Employment [Ss.83 to 90] of the 1996 Industrial
Relations Act, Mr R K Williams lodged an application concerning the termination
of his services as a fencing labourer with Mr Raymond Usher, trading
as Platinum
Fencing. Mr Williams has sought monetary compensation in his Part 6 application.
The matter was initially allocated to Murphy C who proposed a teleconference on
Friday, 13 January, 2009 but Mr Usher's
legal representative, with the
concurrence of Mr Williams' legal representative, requested that the matter be
reallocated so that
it could be dealt with regionally, ie in the Commission's
premises at 90 Crown Street, Wollongong.
2 The matter was therefore
reallocated to me and I set it down for a preliminary hearing on Monday, 19
January, 2009 for conciliation
in Wollongong. I adjourned the proceedings for a
mention on Tuesday, 27 January, 2009 but vacated those proceedings to permit
further
discussions between the parties in an effort to settle the matter. I set
the matter down for a further mention on Tuesday, 3 February,
2009. An offer had
been made by Mr Usher to Mr Williams for a monetary settlement of his claim but
that offer was rejected by Mr
Williams. I programmed the matter for
arbitration.
3 There were two threshold jurisdictional issues raised on
behalf of Mr Usher - the delay in Mr William's lodging his Part 6 application
and the casual nature of his employment, viz:
* Mr Williams asserts in his Part 6 application that his services were terminated on Thursday, 25 September, 2008 after twelve months of employment. That is the last day that Mr Williams actually worked for Mr Usher. On that basis, Mr William's Part 6 application, which was not lodged until Friday, 19 December, 2008, was outside the 21 day time limit prescribed by S.85(1).
* Mr Usher has claimed that, in fact, Mr Williams ceased working for him in the middle of 2008 on a full time basis but he was engaged on a casual basis from time to time after that date, sometimes accepting work offered to him and sometimes rejecting it. According to Mr Usher, on Friday, 19 December, 2008 Mr Williams was offered work but he did not accept it on that occasion.
Those jurisdictional issues were scheduled for hearing on Tuesday, 31 March,
2009.
The Alleged Delay in Lodging the Part 6
Application
4 S.85(1) provides as follows:
"Any application under this Part must be made not later than 21 days after the dismissal."
Nevertheless, under S.85(3) members of the
Commission hold a discretion to accept an out-of-time Part 6 application if they
consider that there is sufficient reasons for doing so [Brady v.
Kennedy, trading as "Sardines" (1999) 91 IR 258].
5 In his Part 6
application Mr Williams has asserted that Mr Usher had not informed him of his
dismissal and he was totally unaware of the time limit
imposed for the lodgement
of Part 6 applications. As I indicated in my unreported preliminary decision of
Wednesday, 12 November, 2008 in Zonneveld v. South Eastern Sydney and
Illawarra Area Health Service [Matter No.IRC 1409 of 2008 at p.5]
"...The rights of employees to pursue claims for unfair dismissal, and the 21 day time limit for such claims, have been a feature of the industrial landscape for at least seventeen years. I would therefore expect that by this time the general nature of the unfair dismissal regime would be common knowledge. But the legal maxim ignorantia juris quod quisque scire tenetur non excusat (ie ignorance is no defence) has not been accepted as a factor in the Part 6 jurisdiction [Hurrell v. Queensland Cotton Corporation Limited (2003) 125 IR 145 at p.148.
That having been said, I would still regard, as the prima facie position, that Part 6 applicants be obliged to follow the 21 day time limit prescribed by S.85(1): it is a clear instruction of the legislature that such a time limit be imposed and to depart from it there must be some material upon which to exercise the discretion in favour of an out-of-time Part 6 applicant [Skelly v. Prouds Jewellers Pty Limited (1994) 53 IR 3 at p.5]. Otherwise the time limit in S.85(1) would be meaningless..."
6 It would appear to me that Mr Williams is seeking with his Part 6 application to preserve full-time employment with Mr Usher. According to Mr Usher, that full-time employment for Mr Williams ended in the middle of 2008. It is not something which may be preserved with his Part 6 application at this late stage, particularly in view of the jurisdictional restrictions of S.85(1). Such a claim would be over four months outside the 21 day time limit imposed by S.85(1). Since the middle of 2008 Mr Williams has apparently accepted employment with Mr Usher on a casual basis, sometimes accepting work and sometimes rejecting it. It is the employment at the point of the termination of Mr Williams' services which is relevant in this hearing.
7 And, whilst Mr Williams claims in his Part 6 application that the last
occasion he actually worked for Mr Usher was Thursday, 25 September, 2008, I do
not regard that as the
date of the termination of his services. The fact remains
that on Friday, 19 December, 2008 Mr Usher had offered Mr Williams employment,
which he declined. That must mean that there was an ongoing employment
relationship between the two men at that time, albeit one
of a very casual
nature indeed. Mr Williams actually lodged his Part 6 application on Friday, 19
December, 2008. It must follow therefore that it is not
out-of-time.
Casual Employment
8 But what was the actual
nature of the employment relationship between Mr Williams and Mr Usher at the
point when that employment
relationship actually ended? A casual employee may
still have something in the nature of an ongoing employment relationship with
a
former employer to constitute a dismissal for the purposes of Part 6 when the
employer unilaterally brings that contract of employment to an end
[Killington v. News Limited (1993) 51 IR 307 and Ryde-Eastwood
Leagues Club Limited v. Taylor [1994] NSWIRComm 112; (1994) 56 IR 385 at p.399]. But I do
not see Mr Williams' contract of employment with Mr Usher in that light.
Frankly, the employment relationship
between Mr Williams and Mr Usher at the
point of its termination was so casual as, in my opinion, to fall entirely
beyond the scope
of Part 6.
9 Reg.6 excludes from the Part 6
jurisdiction certain casual employees, viz:
"...employees engaged on a casual basis for a short period except employees who:
(i) are engaged by a particular employer on a regular and systematic basis for a sequence of periods of employment during a period of at least six months; and
(ii) would, but for the dismissal, have had a reasonable expectation of continuing employment with the employer..."
In my unreported decision in Tseros v. Valudev Pty Limited
[Matter No. IRC 1045 of 1999] I described Reg.6 (at pp.5 and 6) as
excluding:
"...a certain class of casual employees engaged for an undefined '...short period...' from Part 6 unless they fall into two exceptions which would then act to reverse the exclusion and bring them again within jurisdiction under Part 6: (i) where the casual employment is on a regular and systematic basis for at least six months and (ii) where the employee had a reasonable expectation of continuing employment. Those two conditions are cumulative and, as the linking word 'and' indicates, the exception from the exclusion to Part 6 is only available if both conditions are satisfied..."
Mr Williams' employment with Mr Usher at the point of the termination of his
contract of employment was far from "...regular and systematic..."
for the
purposes of Reg.6. It did it apply for a period of six months. Nor do I believe
that Mr Williams was entitled to have any
expectation of continuing employment
with Mr Usher. It must therefore fall outside the jurisdiction of Part
6.
Outcome
10 In the hearing on Tuesday, 31 March, 2009 Mr
McDonald represented Mr Usher. I had directed that he provide written
submissions by no later than Tuesday, 17 February. He provided those
written
submissions on Thursday, 26 February, 2009. Ms Foreman had represented Mr
Williams in earlier proceedings but she did not appear in the hearing on
Tuesday, 31 March, 2009. Nor did Mr Williams
or any other representative for him
appear in the hearing on Tuesday, 31 March, 2009. Although I have received no
confirmation of
the fact from Ms Foreman, Mr McDonald asserted
that she had informed him that she was ceasing to act for Mr Williams.
11 Written submissions from Ms Foreman were to be provided no later than
Tuesday, 10 March, 2009 (although, in view of the delay of
Mr McDonald to
provide written submissions on behalf of Mr Usher, some delay in her providing
written submissions in reply would have been expected
and was accepted by Mr
McDonald). But, in fact, no written submissions from her were
forthcoming. Consequently, on Friday, 27 March, 2009 Mr McDonald wrote to
Ms Foreman in the following terms:
"....Your client applicant was directed to have filed and served its submissions as to jurisdictional issues by Tuesday, 10 March, 2009 and to date those submissions have not been received. In accordance with the timetable, the matter had then been listed for hearing as to the jurisdictional issues on Tuesday, 31 March, 2009.
In view of your client's failure to provide any submissions as to jurisdiction, this is a matter that not only cannot proceed, but it is a matter in which we will be making application to the Commission to have the application struck out for want of prosecution..."
And Mr McDonald made an application that I dismiss Mr Williams Part 6
application. In the circumstances, I do so pursuant to Rule 146. I reject Mr
McDonald's subsequent application for costs against Mr Williams, however.
12 Costs in Part 6 proceedings fall under S.181(1)(2)(c), ie on the
basis of either an unreasonable failure to agree to a settlement of a claim or
where the claim was frivolous or vexatious.
As I indicated in my unreported
decision of Wednesday, 4 May, 1994 in Luke v. Handicapped Children's
Centre [Matter No.IRC 2586 of 1994 at p.5], I consider that an order for
costs on the grounds of an "unreasonable" failure to settle a matter
should be
contemplated only where there is an obdurate refusal to participate in
discussions to the extent of total frustration of
the conciliatory processes. It
must be remembered that any party has a right to have his case presented in
court without compromising
it.
13 And whilst I believe that Mr William's Part 6 application was entirely
without merit, I do not regard it as either frivolous or vexatious. In order to
bring a Part 6 application within the description of frivolous and vexatious it
is not sufficient merely to say that the applicant has no cause
of action. It
must appear that the cause of action is, on the face of it, clearly one which no
reasonable person could properly treat
as bona fide and contend that he
has a grievance which he was entitled to bring before the court [Attorney
General v. Wentworth (1988) 14 NSWLR
491].
P J
CONNOR
Commissioner
LAST UPDATED:
2 April
2009
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