Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union of Australia v Telstra Corporation Ltd

JurisdictionAustralia Federal only
Judgment Date24 October 2007
Neutral Citation[2007] FCA 1607
CourtFederal Court

FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union of Australia v Telstra Corporation Ltd

[2007] FCA 1607


INDUSTRIAL LAW – imposition and recovery of penalties – where certified agreement breached – where breaches arose from disputed and disputable construction of agreement – where breaches not flagrant, wilful or deliberate – whether penalty should be imposed – whether penalty should be paid to applicant organisation



Industrial Relations Act 1988 (Cth) ss 4(1), 178

Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) ss 4(1), 170LT, 717, 719, 824, 841, cll 1, 6 of Sched 7

Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth) s 21

Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005 Item 4 of Sched 4



Australasian Meat Industry Employees’ Union v Australia Meat Holdings (1998) 82 IR 76 cited

Clothing & Allied Trades Union of Australia v J & J Saggio Clothing Manufacturers Pty Ltd (1990) 34 IR 26cited

Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union of Australia v Telstra Corporation Limited (ACN 051 775 556) [2007] FCA 1515 referred to

CPSU, The Community and Public Sector Union v Telstra Corporation Limited (2001) 108 IR 228cited

Finance Sector Union v Commonwealth Bank of Australia (2005) 224 ALR 467applied

Gibbs v The Mayor, Councillors and Citizens of the City of Altona (1992) 37 FCR 216cited

Kelly v Fitzpatrick [2007] FCA 1080referred to

Mason v Harrington Corporation Pty Ltd[2007] FMCA 7cited

Seven Network (Operations) Pty Ltd v Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union (No 2) (2001) 110 IR 372 cited

Textile Clothing & Footwear Union of Australia v Lotus Cove Pty Ltd [2004] FCA 43 cited

Textile, Clothing and Footwear Union of Australia v Givoni Pty Ltd (2002) 121 IR 250cited

Victoria University of Technology v Australian Education Union (1999) 91 IR 96applied



COMMUNICATIONS, ELECTRICAL, ELECTRONIC, ENERGY, INFORMATION, POSTAL, PLUMBING AND ALLIED SERVICES UNION OF AUSTRALIA v TELSTRA CORPORATIONS LIMITED (ACN 051 775 556)

VID 312 OF 2007

GORDON J

24 OCTOBER 2007

MELBOURNE



IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY

VID 312 OF 2007

BETWEEN:

COMMUNICATIONS, ELECTRICAL, ELECTRONIC, ENERGY, INFORMATION, POSTAL, PLUMBING AND ALLIED SERVICES UNION OF AUSTRALIA

Applicant

AND:

TELSTRA CORPORATIONS LIMITED (ACN 051 775 556)

Respondent

JUDGE:

GORDON J

DATE:

24 OCTOBER 2007

PLACE:

MELBOURNE


REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

INTRODUCTION

1 This proceeding concerned the Telstra Enterprise Agreement 2005 – 2008 between Telstra Corporation Limited (“Telstra”), the Communications, Electrical, Electronic, Energy, Information, Postal, Plumbing and Allied Services Union of Australia (“the CEPU”), the Community and Public Section Union (“the CPSU”) and others (“the 2005 Enterprise Agreement”) and its relationship with the Telstra Redundancy Agreement 2002 (“the TRA”).

2 The principal issue was whether Telstra breached the 2005 Enterprise Agreement by failing to pay an employee, William McDonald, a member of the CEPU (“Mr McDonald”), his previous rate of salary after he was redeployed to, and later accepted a redundancy package from, a lower paying position. The answer to that issue turned on the proper construction of cl 17.4 of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement and, in particular whether cl 17.4 of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement permitted the application of cl 15.3 of the TRA to Mr McDonald.

3 On 2 October 2007, I concluded that Telstra had breached the 2005 Enterprise Agreement by failing to pay Mr McDonald his previous rate of salary after he was redeployed to, and later accepted a redundancy package from, a lower paying position: see [2007] FCA 1515 (“the Primary Reasons”). The facts resulting in that conclusion are set out in paras [3] to [38] of the Primary Reasons. I do not propose to repeat them. These reasons for decision should be read with the Primary Reasons. I adopt the same defined terms in these reasons for decision.

4 The parties accept that as a result of the Primary Reasons, Telstra committed the following two breaches:

(1) a breach of cl 17.4 of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement, by not paying Mr McDonald at the higher rate of pay after his redeployment in April 2006; and

(2) a breach of cl 9.1 of the TRA, by not paying Mr McDonald severance pay at the higher rate of pay after Mr McDonald took voluntary redundancy in October 2006.

5 The CEPU now seeks consequential relief for those breaches in the form of an imposition of a penalty under s 178 of the Industrial Relations Act 1988 (Cth) (“the IR Act”) or s 719 of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) (“the WR Act”) and additional declaratory relief. The Court has jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief under s 21 of the Federal Court of Australia Act 1976 (Cth).

ISSUES AND CONCLUSION

6 The application for consequential relief raises three issues:

(1) whether the IR Act or the WR Act applies;

(2) whether the Court should, in the exercise of its discretion, impose a penalty and if so, the quantum of any such penalty; and

(3) whether it is necessary and/or appropriate to grant the declaratory relief sought.

7 For the reasons that follow, although Telstra breached the 2005 Enterprise Agreement and the TRA, I consider that the Court, in the exercise of its discretion, should not impose a penalty. Any further relief is neither necessary nor appropriate.

ANALYSIS Relevant legislation – IR Act or WR Act?

8 As noted, there were two breaches by Telstra - one of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement and one of the TRA. The 2005 Enterprise Agreement was an agreement certified pursuant to s 170LT of the WR Act: see [10] of the Primary Reasons. Section 719(4) of the WR Act prescribes a maximum penalty of $33,000 for breach of a certified agreement.

9 The WR Act applies to the breach of cl 17.4 of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement: see s 719 of the WR Act read with cll 1 and 6 of Sched 7 to WR Act and s 717 of the WR Act. The primary breach is that relating to cl 17.4 of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement.

10 The breach of cl 9.1 of the TRA is entirely reliant upon, and arises out of, substantially the same course of conduct as the primary breach: Gibbs v The Mayor, Councillors and Citizens of the City of Altona (1992) 37 FCR 216. Accordingly, any penalty would be determined by reference to the “totality principle”: CPSU, The Community and Public Sector Union v Telstra Corporation Limited (2001) 108 IR 228.

11 For those reasons, it is strictly unnecessary for me to conclude whether the WR Act or the IR Act applies to the breach of cl 9.1 of the TRA. However, for the sake of completeness, I have concluded that the WR Act also applies to a breach of cl 9.1 of the TRA: see s 719 of the WR Act read with s 4(1) of the WR Act (definition of “award”) and Item 4 of Sched 4 of the Workplace Relations Amendment (Work Choices) Act 2005 and s 717 of the WR Act. (The TRA had the status of an award: see definition of “award” in s 4(1) of the IR Act and, subsequently, s 4(1) of the WR Act prior to its amendment in 2005.)

Principles to be applied

12 In Kelly v Fitzpatrick [2007] FCA 1080 at [14], Tracey J adopted the following “non-exhaustive range of considerations to which regard may be had in determining whether particular conduct calls for the imposition of a penalty, and if it does the amount of the penalty” (citing Mason v Harrington Corporation Pty Ltd[2007] FMCA 7):

“• The nature and extent of the conduct which led to the breaches.

• The circumstances in which that conduct took place.

• The nature and extent of any loss or damage sustained as a result of the breaches.

• Whether there had been similar previous conduct by the respondent.

• Whether the breaches were properly distinct or arose out of the one course of conduct.

• The size of the business enterprise involved.

• Whether or not the breaches were deliberate.

• Whether senior management was involved in the breaches.

• Whether the party committing the breach had exhibited contrition.

• Whether the party committing the breach had taken corrective action.

• Whether the party committing the breach had cooperated with the enforcement authorities.

• The need to ensure compliance with minimum standards by provision of an effective means for investigation and enforcement of employee entitlements and

• The need for specific and general deterrence.

13 Before moving to apply these considerations to the facts set out in the Primary Reasons, two further points must be made. First, the Court has a discretion whether or not to impose a penalty: s 719 of the WR Act and see also Australasian Meat Industry Employees’ Union v Australia Meat Holdings (1998) 82 IR 76 at 78 and Victoria University of Technology v Australian Education Union (1999) 91 IR 96 at [33] (which considered the discretion to impose penalty under s 178 of the WR Act prior to substantial amendments to the WR Act in 2005). In other words, there is no principle that a Court must, in all cases of proven breach, impose a penalty: Victoria University of Technology v Australian Education Union (1999) 91 IR 96 at [33].

14 Secondly, although there were technically two breaches by Telstra (one of the 2005 Enterprise Agreement and one of the TRA), as the analysis of the facts in the Primary Reasons demonstrate, this is a case where the breaches arose out of substantially the same conduct, being conduct that “impose[d] cumulative obligations or obligations that substantially overlap[ed]”: cf Gibbs v The Mayor, Councillors and Citizens of the City of Altona (1992) 37 FCR 216 at 223 and Clothing & Allied Trades Union of Australia v J & J Saggio...

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