respondents employing the journalists in a book to be kept by such
respondents for the purpose at their office. A copy of such entries
PROPRIETORS shall on application in writing by the General Secretary of the
organization or the secretary of the local district of the organiza- tion, made at any time or times after 30th June 1917, be furnished
AUSTRALIAN by the respondent employer to any officer of the organization ASSOCIATION. authorized in writing to receive it."
It was proved before the Magistrate that the appellant Company had failed to comply with the provisions of clause 16 (b) of the award, and there was evidence before him from which it appeared that the appellant Company was the assignee, and SO succeeded to the business, of Messrs. Morgans, Lovekin and Thiel, proprietors of the newspaper in question, at a date antecedent to the making of the award, but no evidence was given to prove the precise date of the transfer of the business. It appeared from the transcript of the proceedings in the Arbitration Court, which was put in evidence before the Magistrate, that during the proceedings attention was drawn to the transfer of this business to the appellant Company, and that thereupon an order was made in the presence of a repre- sentative of the appellant Company for the amendment of the plaint by adding the appellant Company as a respondent thereto, but apparently by some oversight the amendment was not made, and, as the record now stands, the appellant Company does not appear thereon as a party to the proceedings.
A number of objections were raised by the appellant Company, both before the Magistrate and on this appeal, with one only of which we find it necessary to deal, namely "The defendant (appel- lant) was not a party bound by the said award within the meaning of the Commonwealth Conciliation and Arbitration Act 1904-1918, and /or was incapable in law of being a party to the alleged industrial dispute in respect of which the same was made."
It is apparent from the facts stated above that the award does not purport directly to bind the appellant Company, which did not appear on the record as a respondent to the plaint, and the question for consideration is whether by force of sec. 29 of the Arbitration Act the award is made binding on the appellant Company SO as to render it liable to a penalty for a breach of the conditions of the award.