Integrated Maintenance Services Pty Ltd v Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union

Case

[2003] FCA 760

16 JULY 2003


FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

Integrated Maintenance Services Pty Ltd v Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union [2003] FCA 760

INTEGRATED MAINTENANCE SERVICES PTY LTD  v  AUTOMOTIVE, FOOD, METALS, ENGINEERING, PRINTING AND KINDRED INDUSTRIES UNION and OTHERS (IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE SCHEDULE OF RESPONDENTS ANNEXED HERETO)

V 543 of 2003

RYAN J
16 JULY 2003
MELBOURNE


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY

V 543 of 2003

BETWEEN:

INTEGRATED MAINTENANCE SERVICES PTY LTD
Applicant

AND:

AUTOMOTIVE, FOOD, METALS, ENGINEERING, PRINTING AND KINDRED INDUSTRIES UNION
First Respondent

AND:

OTHERS (IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE SCHEDULE OF RESPONDENTS ANNEXED HERETO)
Second to Forty-Sixth Respondents

JUDGE:

RYAN J

DATE OF ORDER:

16 JULY 2003

WHERE MADE:

MELBOURNE

THE COURT ORDERS:

1.THAT by 18 July 2003 the first respondent prepare and distribute to its members employed by the applicant at the Holden V6 site at Port Melbourne (“the site”) a notice in writing (“the notice”) signed by Brendan Whelan and Steven Dargavel advising them of the making of the Order of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission (“the Commission”) of 12 June 2003 as extended by further order of the Commission of 11 July 2003 and directing them to:

(i)immediately cease and refrain from engaging in industrial action in the form of any strike or any restriction, ban or other limitation on the performance of work;

(ii)make themselves available for work and perform work as the applicant may reasonably require.

2.THAT copies of the notice be handed or otherwise made available to the members of the first respondent at the site and be posted by prepaid ordinary post to each of the second to forty-sixth respondents inclusive at his or her address as shown in the schedule annexed to the application herein.

3.THAT liberty be reserved to any party to apply on not less than 48 hours notice in writing to the other parties.

4.THAT there be a further directions hearing herein on a date and at a time to be fixed by the docket Judge.


IN THE FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA

VICTORIA DISTRICT REGISTRY

V 543 of 2003

BETWEEN:

INTEGRATED MAINTENANCE SERVICES PTY LTD
Applicant

AND:

AUTOMOTIVE, FOOD, METALS, ENGINEERING, PRINTING AND KINDRED INDUSTRIES UNION
First Respondent

OTHERS (IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE SCHEDULE OF RESPONDENTS ANNEXED HERETO)
Second to Forty-Sixth Respondents

JUDGE:

RYAN J

DATE:

16 JULY 2003

PLACE:

MELBOURNE

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT

  1. There is before the Court an application for interlocutory relief pursuant to an application made by the applicant, Integrated Maintenance Services Pty Ltd, for an injunction under s 127 of the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) (“the Act”), and for the imposition of penalties under s 170NF of that Act and under s 178 of the same Act for breaches of an order made under s 127 by the Australian Industrial Relations Commission (“the Commission”).

  2. The evidence discloses that an order was originally made in the by Whelan C on 12 June 2003 (“the Order”).  The Order was extended for a further month by order of Williams SDP on 11 July 2003.  The Order was directed to the first respondent, the Automotive, Food, Metals, Engineering, Printing and Kindred Industries Union (“the AMWU”) and, so far as is relevant, provided;

    ‘4.1The AMWU and the employees must, whether by themselves, their servants, their agents, or otherwise howsoever immediately cease and desist from engaging in industrial action with respect to the site in relation to the following awards and/or certified agreements.

    4.1.1.The Integrated Maintenance Services Holden V6 Plant Project Agreement 2002.

    4.1.2The National Metal and Engineering On-Site Construction Industry Award 2002.

    4.2Each of the employees must immediately make themselves available for work and must perform work as their employer may reasonably require.

    4.3The AMWU, whether by its agents, officers, employees or otherwise, must take any and all steps necessary and available under the rules of the AMWU to ensure that the employees comply with this order.

    4.4Without limiting the generality of 4.3, the AMWU must take all reasonable steps available to them to advise the employees orally and/or in writing that the employees should comply with this order and that in compliance with such orders, they should cease any industrial action, and not commence any further industrial action prior to the expiry of this order.

    4.5The AMWU is to advise the Commission and IMS - the applicant - through its solicitors, Clayton Utz, in writing by midday on 13 June 2003, of what action it has taken to comply with 4.4 of this order. 

  3. The evidence further discloses that, after the making of the further order of Williams SDP, industrial action was taken at the site on 15 July this year by members of the AMWU employed there, when approximately 50 members of the AMWU attended a meeting.  After the meeting, which occupied some 30 minutes, an officer of the applicant noted that the members did not perform any work, but left the site.  Shortly afterwards, an AMWU delegate advised the site manager that the employees were going home.  The meeting had been attended by Mr Whelan, an organiser employed by the AMWU, and Mr Dargavel, its assistant secretary, who, according to Mr Whelan's affidavit, sworn today, informed the members that they should not take industrial action.  Mr Whelan also indicated that he and Mr Dargavel had informed the members of the applicant of the making of the further order by Senior Deputy President Williams.

  4. Mr Whelan further deposed that this morning, 16 July 2003, he attended the site and had a further meeting with members of the AMWU employed there, who then decided to return to work.  Despite that return to work, the applicant has pressed for interlocutory relief, contending that, in contravention of the Order of the Commission as extended, the AMWU has not taken any and all steps necessary and available under its rules to ensure that employees comply with the Order. 

  5. It has been suggested that further steps which could, and should, have been taken include the terminating of a bargaining period which had been initiated by notice dated 3 July 2003, the holding of a meeting of the National Council of the AMWU to pass a resolution calling on the members to cease engaging in industrial action and immediately make themselves available for work and perform work as the applicant may reasonably require, a direction requiring the Victorian State Council of the AMWU to give a similar direction to the members at the site and a requirement that the Victorian State Council issue a publication to that effect. The suggestion is further made that the Victorian State Council should call a meeting of members employed at the site for the purpose of reinforcing the directions to which I have already referred.  It is sought that an order be made that, in the event that the members do not return to work, the AMWU deal with those members for breach of the rules of the AMWU, pursuant to r 36, subr 2 (2) of those rules.

  6. In support of the application for interlocutory relief, Mr O'Grady of Counsel for the applicant referred to the judgment of Merkel J in Transfield Construction Pty Ltd v AMWU (2002) FCA 1413, and the judgment of Beaumont J in BHP Steel (AIS Pty Ltd) v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (2000) 102 IR 275. In the latter case, his Honour, at 295 drew on the principle that:

    ‘Where an injunction is mandatory, it is the duty of the party bound by the injunction to discover the proper means of obeying the order.’

  7. That was a quotation from Halsbury's Laws of England, 4th Edn, Vol 9(1) par 472.  His Honour also referred to Attorney General v Walthamstow Urban District Council (1895) 11 TLR 533, where Chitty J said it was:

    ‘The duty of the defendants to find out the proper means of obeying the order.  If a defendant was not merely doing his best, but also taking proper measures to comply with the order, the court would suspend the sequestration where a corporation was concerned, in order to give to the corporation some opportunity of finding means of dealing with the subject of complaint.  It was, however, no part of a plaintiff's duty to point out to a defendant the proper means to remedy the nuisance.  It was the defendant's duty to find out the proper mode of complying with the order.’

  8. I am not persuaded by the evidence on this interlocutory application which is necessarily incomplete that all of the steps suggested on behalf of the applicant as appropriate to be taken by the AMWU are necessary and available under the rules of the AMWU to ensure that its members comply with the Order of the Commission made pursuant to s 127 of the Act. However, I do consider that the Order contemplated that, in addition to the conveying of oral advice at a meeting of the members at the site, it might have been necessary for the AMWU to advise its members, in writing, to the same effect. Whether that be so or not, I am persuaded, at all events, that it is appropriate today to order that such notification in writing be given.

  9. Accordingly, I shall order:

    1.That by 18 July 2003 the first respondent prepare and distribute to its members employed by the applicant at the Holden V6 site at Port Melbourne ("the site") a notice in writing (“the notice”) signed by Brendan Whelan and Stephen Dargavel advising them of the making of the Order of the Australian Industrial Relations Commission ("the Commission") of 12 June 2003 as extended by further order of the Commission of 11 July 2003 and directing them to:

    (i)immediately cease and refrain from engaging in industrial action in the form of any strike or any restriction, ban or other limitation on the performance of work;

    (ii)make themselves available for work and perform work as the applicant may reasonably require.

    2.That copies of the notice be handed or otherwise made available to the members of the first respondent at the site and be posted by prepaid ordinary post to each of the second to forty-sixth respondents inclusive at his or her address as shown in the schedule annexed to the application herein.

    3.That liberty be reserved to any party to apply on not less than 48 hours notice in writing to the other parties.

    4.That there be a further directions hearing herein on a date and at a time to be fixed by the docket Judge.

I certify that the preceding nine (9) numbered paragraphs are a true copy of the Reasons for Judgment herein of the Honourable Justice Ryan.

Associate:

Dated:             16 July 2003

Counsel for the Applicant: Mr C O'Grady
Solicitor for the Applicant: Clayton Utz
Counsel for the First Respondent: Mr Craig Dowling
Solicitor for the First Respondent: Maurice Blackburn Cashman
Date of Hearing: 16 July 2003
Date of Judgment: 16 July 2003

SCHEDULE OF RESPONDENTS

Respondent Name

Address

First Respondent The Automotive Food, Metals, Engineering Printing and Kindred Industries Union

Level 4
133 Parramatta Road
GRANVILLE NSW 2142

Level 4
440 Elizabeth Street
MELBOURNE VIC 3000

Second Respondent Abela, Angelo 21 Scherman Drive,
ALTONA MEADOWS VIC 3028
Third Respondent Ashe, Patrick 91 Jetty Rd,
CLIFTON SPRINGS VIC 3222
Fourth Respondent Bellis, Stephen 7 Saint Anthony Court,
LARA VIC 3212
Fifth Respondent Bottomley, Andrea 2/11 Parker Street,
PASCOE VALE VIC 3044
Sixth Respondent Brooks, Gary 35 Birch Street,
PRESTON WEST VIC 3072
Seventh Respondent Carter, Stephen 7 The Vineyard,
WAURN PONDS VIC 3216
Eighth Respondent Chatwin, Troy 53 Carnoustie Grove,
MORNINGTON VIC 3931
Ninth Respondent Collier, Robert 18 Norman Grove,
WERRIBEE SOUTH VIC 3030
Tenth Respondent Cullen, Michael 68 Bunbury Street,
FOOTSCRAY VIC 3011
Eleventh Respondent Danby, Rob 5 Amandi Terrace
HOPPERS CROSSING VIC 3029
Twelfth Respondent Dastol, Ron 10 Grazier Court,
WERRIBEE VIC 3030
Thirteenth Respondent DeGoldi, Russell 83 Jedda St,
BELL POST HILL VIC 3215
Fourteenth Respondent Dimech, Jason 9 Beaconhills Crescent,
CRAIGIEBURN VIC 3064
Fifteenth Respondent Esler, Travis 24 Aberdeen Heights,
PAKENHAM VIC 3810
Sixteenth Respondent Fairley, Frank 55 Deloraine Drive,
HOPPERS CROSSING VIC 3029
Seventeenth Respondent Forbes, Stephen 624 Neales Road,
ROCKBANK VIC 3335
Eighteenth Respondent Hamilton, Grant 15 Home Road,
NEWPORT VIC 3015
Nineteenth Respondent Hicks, Gloria 2 Morval Crt,
DEER PARK VIC 3023
Twentieth Respondent Hocking, Rod 2 Ulster Court,
HOPPERS CROSSING VIC 3029
Twenty-First Respondent Irvine, Stephen 24 Stonehaven Road,
NORLANE VIC 3214
Respondent Name

Address

Twenty-Second Respondent Kamprad, Justine 20 Dudley Street,
FOOTSCRAY VIC 3011
Twenty- Third Respondent Long, Gregory 12 Morval Court,
DEER PARK VIC 3023
Twenty-Fourth Respondent McDiven, Lyle 2/45 Staughton Street,
MELTON SOUTH VIC 3338
Twenty-Fifth Respondent McKechnie, David 98 Bungower Road,
MORNINGTON VIC 3931
Twenty-Sixth Respondent McLay, Raymond 2 Teal Court,
MELTON VIC 3337
Twenty-Seventh Respondent Mommers, Allan 48 Elphinstone Street,
WEST FOOTSCRAY VIC 3012
Twenty-Eighth Respondent Noye, Martin 72 Alma Tce,
NEWPORT VIC 3015
Twenty-Ninth Respondent Pamic, Tom 5 Highcombe Cres,
ST ALBANS VIC 3021
Thirtieth Respondent Pavlicic, Steve 7 Robinson Court,
DELAHAY, VIC 3037
Thirty-First Respondent Pijl, Ernest 17 Bacchus Marsh Rd.,
CORIO VIC 3214
Thirty- Second Respondent Plozza, John 1 Leith Crt.,
SUNBURY VIC 3429
Thirty-Third Respondent Powell, Lachlan 16 Fowler Street,
CHELSEA VIC 3196
Thirty-Fourth Respondent Pratt, Mark 50 Basin Road,
DRYSDALE VIC 3222
Thirty -Fifth Respondent Rackley, Peter 1 Langvale Crt,
MILL P ARK VIC 3082
Thirty-Sixth Respondent Rundell, Richard 36 Michael Street,
SCORESBY VIC 3179
Thirty-Seventh Respondent Shillingford, James 13 Sommers Drive,
ALTONA MEADOWS VIC 3028
Thirty -Eighth Respondent Spice, Garry 209 Patullos Road,
LARA VIC 3212
Thirty-Ninth Respondent Tame, Mark 313 Victoria Rd,
THORNBURY VIC 3071
Fortieth Respondent Thomas, Grant 52 Brow Top Road,
NARRE WARREN VIC 3805
Forty-First Respondent Traynor, Jim 29 Wyoming Avenue,
CORIO VIC 3214
Forty-Second Respondent Vetter, Dieter 165 Fenwick Street,
PORTARLINGTON VIC 3223
Forty-Third Respondent Webster, John 26 Adeney Street,
YARRA VILLE VIC 3013
Forty-Fourth Respondent Williams, Thomas 4 Counsel Court,
SUNBURY VIC 3429
Forty-Fifth Respondent Zammit, Max 161-169 Westcott Pde,
ROCKBANK VIC 3335
Forty-Sixth Respondent Zapata, Mario 1 Armaroo Grove,
BURNSIDE VIC 3023