Gibbs, J.L. v Cooney, J.A

Case

[1986] FCA 607

12 Nov 1986

No judgment structure available for this case.

I n orcier tn

zuccrod under

S .

1 4 1 of

the Conclllstlon

and hrbitrltion

Act 1 9 0 4 , an sppllcsnt has

to Satlsi-:?

the

'courr, that the respondent aqalnst, xhom an order 1s ssuqnt

1s

a p?rson -2ho 1:

under an oblicration to perform o r nbser-ie the

rl-lles Oi the regl~tered

Grqsnization t S. 14Lt IGI

I . The vords

''%hgse

cules" In that sub-sectlon refer to the partlcular

rules the subject of the. proceeding and not to

the rules In

~qeneral; that 1 s to say they r e t e r to the rules In respect of vhlch the court 14 asked to make an order gvlnq directions

f o r thelr pertormance or observance.

In this ca3e It

Is contended that th? respondent,

as

Federal 3ecretar:r of the Royal Australian Nurslnq Federatlon.

,

-.

has a duty. under rule

l 3 t f r , to "serve a Notice of

Meeting

gn esch F?deral Counclllor at least tyenty-elght

( 2 8 )

da::s

bef-.re the dat? set

for

such Meetlnq", referring

to the

lneetlnu s-hlcn the pr?sent applicant

has declded should be

held on 11 January of next :Jew.

-

13n chc facts Yhlch have been admitted by counsel

fo r

the applicant

( f o r the purposes

o t

these proceedlngzJ ,

It

zeems to me to be clear that the respondent

1s not at present

l.ind?t' a duty to p?rform or Dbserve rule L Z r f ) ty servlng a notlcr oi the proposed special Meetmq or Federal L'ouncll. I ha:-e rormed that oplnlon txause or 9 number or matters.

colnmenclng uith the declslon

or the Federal Councll, on

22

June 1386, "to grant the respondent leave

of absence from 22

June 1986 to 3 Februar:;

1387". On 2 2 June 1986, it also

r ~ s ~ l ~ d "to authorise the Executive Committee of the Federal Councll to address the matter

of the lea-;?

of the Federal

Secretar:; and the aFpolntment of 9 person to fulfil the dutle5 or the Federal Secretary". The authsritg conferred on the E:iecutice Committee =as exerclsed on 30 June 1396. xhen it "empowered Enld Jenkins to perrorm the tunctlons of

Federal

Secretary durmq the

absence on leave or the

respondent or untll such time

as the Executive Committee

should determine" (those three passages are taken from

the

document or "sdmitt?d facts" ITlven

to the

court

by

the

sppllcant 5 counsel).

-

' I . . .

the Federal Councll further requested

that I 3sk :IOU

to refraln trom an:J

rurther

.actllrltles 6 3 the Federal Secretary during

your absence on leave."

In my oplnlon. In the light

of those matters. ~t

is

qulte plaln, despit? the re3ourceful arguments ad7anci.d by

Or I Buchanan Q . C . .

on Dehalf of

the applicant, that at

the

present tune the dut:; !under

rule 1 8 t i ) does not devolve upon

the respondent.

Sne IF currently on leave

of absence from

her

duties as Federal Secretary, having been granted that

leave or absence by the Federal Councll which had the express power to do 30. as appears from rule 26(ci; that sub-rule, so

far a3 material. states that:-

"The Secretar17 snall be

...

allowed such

leave of sbsence a3 the Federal Councll may

determlne.

'I

That power havlng been

exercised, the respondent 1 s on

leave

and 1n my opinion

1 s not !under any duty to glve the

notice

which, by reason o t

the pronslons of rule 18(f). she would

otherwise be requlred to qlve.

I perhaps should say that

if, contrary to the

o p l n l o n

!ust expressed. Yhlch I quite tirml:J hold, there 1 s

nonetheless a

dut:;

!upon

the respondme to exercise that

iunctlnn Iunder

rule

L B < f t , a

qllcstlon

would ar~se 1s

t 3

;heth.?r the

court, ~n the exercise c11 ~ t s

discrftlon. should

make thc orders sought: matters

wnlch xould

be relevant

to

that discretion are that the r5spondent

1'5 on les7e of

.-

sbsence. that a person has been appolntsd

to perform the

function o t Federal Sxretary durlnu her absence on

Leave.

and that the respondent has been asked by the appllcant,

at

the directlon of:

the Federal Councll.

"to refraln from any

further activities as the Federal Secretary

durmu

Cherl

absence on leave".

In those circumstances. I n my oplnion Lt woluld not

be

a proper exerclse of the court's dlscretlon to make

an order

qiviny directions to the respondent

to perrorm and observe

the 3uD-rule. 4 reference may be added, as to the pouer

ot

Federal Council to take

the actlon xhich It has. to one other

rule. namely, rule 13, zhlch pro7ldes that

:-

"The affairs of

the Assoclatlon shall be

manaqed by a federal Councll which shall be

the hiqhest deliberative body ~i? the

"

Association.

In addition.

Federal i'ouncll is. under

ule

15.

the

Committee of Management of the Assoc~~tion."

Accordingly I

do not think there can

be any doubt that It had the power to

act as it did; the proper

functioning of the reqistered

organization requlred that It should haye power to appomt

a

person

to

pertorm

the

dutles

o r the

offlce

of

federxl

3ecretar:r. lurlnq th? 3t43encp

on lea-;r

or the respondent.

For those reasons.

m mj- opmlon It 1 s clear that at

thls

rime the dut:; under

ru le 1 3 t f 1 no Lonuer

de-zolves on

the

respondent.

-

-\ccordlngly,

the

ru le to show cause, made

an

J

December L9Sb. vi11 be dlscharqed.

I re!ect

Mr. Falqenbaum S appllcatlon f o r costs.

The

FrlnclpleJ relatlny to the court S dlscretlonary power

under

5. 197k to order the payment

of costs by an applicant. on the

qrounii

that

he

had

Instituted

the

proceedlnq

vlthout

reasonable

cause, cjnre enunciated

In H

&

-J

Chr:rsler

Justralia Ltd.

( 1 9 7 6 ) 26 FLR

257 at 272-5.

That was

a

declslon ot CJorthrop J. In vhich he

applied, to such an

applicatlon. the prlnciples

lald doh? In cases such as

the

General Steel case

( 1 9 6 9 ) 112 CLR 125 at 138.

I rerer to the

well known dictum of Slr Gartield

Earwick as to the

clrcumstances In which

a

court may

summarily termmate an

actlon. Northrop

J. took the view that,havlng regard to the

pollcj . of

the

leglslature

enunciated

In S.

197B, It 1 s

necessary ior

a respondent seeking costs to

show that the

applicant 3 clam wa3 "manlfestly groundless" or , as It

has

been expressed elsewhere. "bad beyond argument". In

Llllev v

Mauru Coca1

Government

Councll

1 unreported -

delivered

21:11. 1973) I expressed

aqreement wlth that

3plnlon

of

Plorthrop ,J.

3ub3tantl-:e appllcstlon should fall, m my oplnlon It can not be said that the sppllcatlon vas "bad beymd argumrnt". In my opinion It was not ~nstltuted "xthout reasonable cause".

Having regard to the circumstance that the holdrng of the

meetlng in;rolved brlnglng the members 5f Federal L'ouncll to

Melbourne

from

all

States

and

the

T rritories.

at

considerable expense to the

tederal1:r

registered

organizstlon. ~t 7x1 understandable that the appllcant should

wlsh to

avoid.

l f possible. the

rlsk

of some

member

successtullp contendlnq after the meetlng that the

wrong

person had slgned the

notice and that it shoula have been

slgneci by the respondent.

I may add that vhen the court

ad~ourned

at lunchtime

lt, waLa likely that the matter

muld be ad~ourned

to next

Wednesday.

It =a3 only upon retlecting on the matter during

the luncheon adJournment, and looklnq at the rules In greater

detall than had been possible during the morning, that

1

tended to the conclusion that the appllcant's argument should

not be upheld.

However, it can not falrly be described

as

being "bad beyond argument"

30

I am not prepared to make an

order f o r the appl-v-nt +n pav the respondent 5 costs.

l

l

I c* : - - +... *.,

_ _

"

-. ~ *_

- L,.1

F

1.7 ' :he Phce

31'L'

. _I 'S ;:,P

1 . 1

cry.,

,f

t h ?

-

'

J

-:.?lC:l%

L

. . 1

:

c: I . , 1- ,.ouI'

Actions
Download as PDF Download as Word Document


Cases Citing This Decision

0

Cases Cited

0

Statutory Material Cited

0