Pioneer Concrete (Australia) Pty Ltd v Marra, Joe
[1981] FCA 265
•14 Oct 1981
IN THE FEDERAL COURT CF AUST?&LIA
)
| VICTOEIA DISTRICT REGISTRY | ) VG No. 172 of 1981 |
| 1 | |
| GZNERAL, DIVISION | ) |
| In the matter of The Trade | - | Practices |
| Act 1974. |
Between: PIONEER CONCRETE (AUSTRALIA)
PTY. LTD.
(Applicants)
| And: JOE MARRA & ORS. | - | - |
(Respondents)
| - | Coram: Smithers | J. |
| 14 October | 19el |
| Melbourne |
REASONS FOR JUDGXEMT
| In this case I feel satlsfied that the case | for the |
applicant hzs been established. It rlepends on the followmg
| line of reasoning. Whar: the applrcants have | CO establlsh is that |
| the respondents | !lave engaged in conduct | of a particular k m d and |
| it has to be conduct that hindered the acquisitlon | of goods by |
the potential customers of the applicant (Ploneer) from Ploneer. See Section 45i)(1) of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (the Act).
2 .
Broadly the situation seems to be that there is a
dispute between the Cartage Contractors Association (C.C.A.) with the respondents as owner/drivers and to require them, if
and Pioneer and between the former owner/drivers'of Pioneer with
| they desired continued engagement, to | xcept engagement as |
| employees. | The respondents and the C.C.A., being | unwillmg to agree |
| to this change | of terms of engagement, refused the offer that |
| I | the respondents be employees and | In due course the respondent |
ceased to have any relationship with Pioneer because Pioneer
determined that relationship.
| The C.C.A. and the respondent2 dld | know that the |
| 32ilderc l e ! x ~ z e r Fcdsration | (2.Z.f. | ) hsd E pGlicy tkt si12 |
| members of the | B.L.F. would never handle goods which had ?asses |
| a picket hne. C.C.A. | had had some doubt as to whether they |
| themselves, that is the | C.C.A., | would be regarded by the B.L.F. |
as an organization whose picket lines would be regarded as being
within this policy. That was a matter which apparently Mr. Davld
had resolved satisfactorily to the C.C.A. ic some conversation
| with the secretary | of the B.L.F. who led him to believe |
| that a picket line for the purposes of this policy | of the R.L.F., |
| although the C.C.A. was | an organization of people who being |
| owner/drivers were r!ot | technically employees. |
| In those circumstances | it would seem that the policy |
vas adopted by the C.C.A. and implemented by the respondents that,
with respect to various customers of Pioneer, a picket line
would be set up and that the operations of the plcket line would
involve those in the picket explaining to drivers of Pioneer trucks,
| carrying concrete | on its way to customers, having a conversation |
| with the drivers of those trucks and indicating to them that it | was |
| their desire that the concrete should not be delivered | to the |
customer. They would explain to the drivers that they were a picket
| line and were fighting for thelr lobs, and | on the whole, | would |
carry their picketing no further than that.
| It seems to me that if in response | to such a |
communication from somebody in the picket line the driver of the truck refrained from going to the premises of the customer wlth
| the load there would have been | an interference with supply. |
It seems to me that there would also, just as clearly, have been
| an interference with the acquisicion by the customer | of the |
| concrete, the subject | of that particular load. But by and large |
| that did not happen. By and large the drivers | of the trucks |
went on to the premises of the customers, were there willing
| to deliver the concrete to the customers, but the customer | was |
unable to take delivery because his servants, and the only servants
| available to him for that purpose, were members of the | B.L.F., |
who, In accordance with the policy mentioned, would sinply noc
| handle the concrete at all | - and so the customer was deprived |
| of it. |
If one looks, in that scenario, for conduct that
hindered the acquisition of the goods rather than the supply,
| and if one concentrates | one’s attentlon on the physical act |
4 .
| or acts relative to the giving | of delivery and the receiving |
| of the goods, the giving of delivery to and the receiving | of the |
| goods by the customer, | I find difficulty in seeing that the conduct |
| of the respondents, | so described was conduct | of the kind referred |
to in the section, namely conduct thar. hlndered the acquisltivn
of the goods by the customer.
| The B.L.F., | were not, it seems to me, actlng in |
| concert with the | C.C.A. | The B.L.F. in taking the action that |
| it took to3k it by reason of its own policy, apparently | a fairly |
| firm policy, that its members | do not handle goods which have |
passed a picket line. The fact that the respondents knew that
| the 9.L.F . | members would probably act | in accordance with that |
| policy does not seem to me to make the | B.L.F. action action in |
concert with the action of the respondents. Therefore, if hindering
the acquisition of goods by the customers from the Pioneer Company
referred only to those physical acts in the performance of contracts
| between the customers and Pioneer, | I would have thought that the |
interference with acquisition was brought about by conduct of
the B.L.F.
Sut it is my opinion that the provisions of section
| 45D are wider than this. If one refers to the definition | of |
| ,I acquixe" in section | 4 , sub-section 1 of the Plct and to what is |
an expansion of that definition in section 4C, sub-section (b)
| of the Act, it seems | to me that when one talks about | hindermg |
| che acquisition | of goods by customers from entrepreneurs, what |
| is being talked about is | not only the | perfomance of contracts |
5.
which have been entered into, but extends to the entering into of
contracts.
| If the entering into of contracts | is hindered or |
| prevented and the contracts which are | so hindered and prevented |
| are contracts which would relate to the acquiring | by the custon?ers |
of goods from, in this instance, Pioneer, then if one finds-
conduct which has prevented those contracts being entered into,
| that is conduct which hinders and prevents the acquisition | of |
goods. The plain fact.is that at the end of the month or
| thereabouts durlng which all this conduct has been going | on, |
the evidence does disclose that there are potential customers
who desired to acquire concrete from Pioneer but who dld not say
so, who did not therefore acquire concrete which they would
otherwise in the ordinary course of events have acquired through
placing orders in the ordinary course of business.
| The question is whether | it was conduct of the respondents |
which caused the situation which caused potential customers to
refrain from ordering the goods and acquiring them in that sense.
| In connection with this problem it seems to me the situation | 1s |
| . different from when one | is considering the conduct relative to |
| the actual physical acts whlch were concernee in the delivery | a d |
receipt of the goods pursuant to contracts which had already been
made.
In this case other facts become relevant, namely that
| by reason of what occurred it was obvious to customers that | if they |
| ordered concrete they would | not receive | it. Their failure to |
order was therefore a direct consequence of their realisatlon of
that undoubted fact. What was the cause of that undoubted fact?
| Here it is | not a question | of findmg someone who acted in concert; |
| here the question seems to be one purely | of causation. |
| When one is looking to the cause | of the inability of |
| . | anybody, and these customers in particular, to acquire | |||
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important element in the total commercial circumstances which
| ||
| ||
| the ix+il.ity of anybciiy, end these customers to acqulre concrei-c, and to refrain from orderlng it, one starts with the creatlon | ||
| ||
| co-operation in the operation of the picket line. |
That was an act which was performed in the knowledge
| as to what this consequence would be. | I do not think that that |
| particular fact 1s vital. | It is not that they knew | it would occur |
| but that it did occur and looked | at objectively it was the |
| natural and probable consequence of the setting | up of the picket |
oine. Everything else flowed from that. Accordingly, once one
takes the view that thls section should be read in the broader
| way to which | I have referred then | it does not matter that the |
actual acquisition of the goods which were in fact proferred for
| delivery were not acquired because it was the | B.L.F. action Rot |
7 .
a
| D | .$ |
| t o | t a k e d e l i v e r y o f | them. |
| What | is | impor tan t | i s t h a t t h a t a c t i o n | was | t h e n a t u r a l |
| and | probable | consequence | of | t h e a c t i o n o f t h e | C.C.A. | and | t h e |
| respondents and led | t o | t h e w h o l e s i t u a t i o n w h i c h c r e a t e d i n t h i s |
| pa r t i cu la r commerc ia l | area | to be desc r ibed | as | one i n wh ich | it | was |
| imposs ib l e t o do bus iness w i th P ionee r | by | way | of order lng goods |
| because | such | a | c o n t r a c t | c o u l d n o t | b e c a r r i e d o u t . | The | consequence |
| of | t h a t | was | t h a t v a r i o u s c u s t o m e r s d i d n o t o r d e r | goods, | t h e r e f o r e |
| d id no t acqu i r e goods | t | h | a | t | they would otherwise have acquired, | and |
| t h a t was | t h e d i r e c t r e s u l t | of | t h e p i c k e t l i n e , | d i rect , | n o t | immediate |
| b u t | d i rec t | neve r the l e s s , ope ra t ing on t he va r ious e l emen t s | of |
| t h e | commercial | s i t u a t i o n w h i c h e x l s t e d . |
| Accordingly | it | seems | t o me | tha t t he s i t ua t i .Cn does |
| arise i n which | an | in junc t ion | should | go. | I should | mention | t h e |
| c o n t e n t i o n t h a t , | by | reason | of | t he fo rm | of | t h e c o n t r a c t u n d e r |
| which | the | respondents | had | prev | ious | ly | been | owner-dr | lvers | , | there |
| was | a | r e l a t i o n s h l p o f | master | and s e rvan t and no t o f p r inc ipa l |
| and independent contractor | between | Pioneer and the respondents . |
| T h a t p o s s i b i l l t y | was | f l o a t e d i n t h i s c a s e , b u t | it | i s now |
| conceded, | and | I | have no doubt | r igh t ly | conceded , | tha t | the | sugges t ion |
| t h a t t h e respondents were employees when | t h e y were owner-drivers |
unde r t he i r p rev ious con t r acc canno t be suppor t ed .
| The evidence as t o t h e a t t i t u d e | of | customers | and |
| as | t o t h e d e c i s i o n | of | customers not | o t o r d e r g o o d s a r i s i n g |
| o u t o f t h e d i f f i c u l t l e s w h i c h f a c e d c u s t o m e r s | i n | r e l a t i o n | t o |
| d e l i v e r y | i s | s u p p o r t e d i n | some | r e s p e c t s | by | evidence, | some | of | which |
| i s hearsay . | Had there | been | any | real | quedt ion | as | t o t h e v a l i d i t y |
".
and truthfulness of the statements which are made in the
hearsay evidence It would have been necessary to have given
the opportunity to have that evidence made direct rather
than by remain in hearsay form.
Again, however, cousel for the respondents, taking
| . | a very sensible view of the matter, has | not objected to the |
hearsay evidence. This is one of those cases where there
| can be | no real doubt as | to the validity and effectiveness | of |
what is szid by hearsay. Accordingly I have taken into
account both the hearsay and the direct evidence of the reason
| why customers failed during the month | of September and no doubt |
are still refraining, as to why they did refrain from ordering
| concrete fron Pioneer acccrdizg | :c th&: usLai custorn. |
| In those circumstances it seems to | me that an injunctlon |
| should issue. Respondents will pay the costs | of the proceedings |
including the proceedings for interlocutory relief.
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