and was thus absent from his employment for eight days. The respondent did not in fact give any consent to this absence, and required the apprentice to make up the time SO lost before proceeding to the next year of his apprentice- ship, which carried higher pay.
Held, by Knox C.J., Gavan Duffy and Starke JJ. (Isaacs, Higgins and Rich JJ. dissenting), that it was not established by the facts that the respondent had "penalized the apprentice, within the meaning of sec. 134 of the Defence Act 1903-1918, since it was doubtful whether those acting for the respondent exercised any discretion, or whether they merely did what they considered they were bound to do under the indenture, and also whether any disadvantage was sustained by the apprentice by reason of the act of the respondent.
APPEAL from a Court of Quarter Sessions of New South Wales.
At the Central Police Court, Sydney, before a Stipendiary Magistrate, an information was heard whereby Frank Elwyn Wells charged that in or about the month of April 1925 the English Electric Co. of Australia Ltd., the employer of Neville Alec Palmer, did penalize in his employment the said Neville Alec Palmer, its apprentice under indenture of apprenticeship dated 5th April 1921, for attending camps of instruction appointed to be held by the Head-Quarters of the Second Military District at Liverpool during the months of March 1924 and March 1925, inasmuch as the Company treated Palmer as if every day's attendance by him at such camps was a day's absence during the term of his apprenticeship from attention to the trade, art, business or occupation described in the indenture of apprenticeship without proper consent.
By the indenture Palmer bound himself apprentice "for the space of five years and for SO many additional days as is hereinafter provided for such term to be computed from 5th January 1921." He further agreed " that he will at no time absent himself' from the business "without proper consent,
and that for every day's absence during the said term from attention to the said trade, art, business or occupation without such consent he shall serve one day at the end of each year of his apprenticeship, and such year shall not be considered complete until the said additional day or days shall have been served." The Company agreed that it would duly teach and instruct Palmer, or cause him to be taught and instructed, in the trade of fitting and turning and would endeavour to make him skilled and expert therein, and also agreed that it would make