Introductory Info
Date introduced: 4 July 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Industrial Relations
Commencement: The day after Royal Assent.
History of
the Bill
The Fair
Work (Registered Organisations) Amendment (Ensuring Integrity) Bill 2017
(the Previous Bill) was introduced into the House of Representatives on 16 August
2017.[1]
The Bill was passed by that chamber and introduced to the Senate on 17 October
2017, but did not progress. The Previous Bill lapsed when the Parliament was
prorogued on 11 April 2019.
The Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Amendment (Ensuring Integrity)
Bill 2019 (the Bill) which was introduced
into the House of Representatives on 4 July 2019, is in ‘substantially similar
terms’ to the Previous Bill[2]—although
there are some differences. A Bills Digest was prepared in respect of the Previous
Bill.[3]
Whilst much of the material in this Bills Digest has been sourced from that
earlier one, where there are differences between the Bill and the Previous
Bill, these are noted and explored.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Bill, like the Previous Bill, is to
respond to certain recommendations made by the Royal Commission into Trade
Union Governance and Corruption (RCTUGC) and ‘community concern’ to ‘ensure the
integrity of registered organisations and their officials, for the benefit of
their members’ and subject proposed amalgamations of registered organisations
to a public interest test by amending the Fair Work
(Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (the FWRO Act) to:
- include
serious criminal offences punishable by five or more years’ imprisonment as a
new category of ‘prescribed offence’ for the purposes of the automatic
disqualification regime which prohibits a person from acting as an official of
a registered organisation
- allow
the Federal Court to disqualify officials from holding office where they have:
- contravened
a range of industrial laws
- are
found in contempt of court in relation to industrial laws or certain other
circumstances
- repeatedly
fail to stop their organisation from breaking the law or
- are
otherwise not a fit and proper person to hold office in a registered
organisation
- make
it an offence for a person to continue to act as an official or in a way that
influences the affairs of an organisation once disqualified
- allow
the Federal Court to deregister an organisation (or make alternative orders) where
there is:
- unlawful
or otherwise improper conduct of the affairs of the organisation
- serious
criminal offences committed by the organisation
- repeated
breaches of a range of industrial laws by its members or
- the
taking of obstructive unprotected industrial action by a substantial number of
members
- allow
applications to be made to the Federal Court for alternative orders, including
suspending the rights and privileges of an organisation, an individual or a
branch or division of an organisation, instead of making an order deregistering
an organisation.
- expand
the grounds on which the Federal Court may order remedial action to deal with
governance issues in an organisation and expressly provide that the Federal
Court may appoint an administrator to an organisation or part of an
organisation as part of a remedial scheme and
- introduce
a public interest test for amalgamations of registered organisations, which
will allow relevant matters to be taken into account, such as each
organisation’s record of compliance with industrial laws.[4]
Structure of
the Bill
The Bill is divided into five Schedules:
- Schedule
1 deals with disqualifying people from holding office in a registered organisation
- Schedule
2 deals with the deregistration of registered organisations, alternative
orders to deregistration and related matters
- Schedule
3 deals with the administration of dysfunctional registered organisations
- Schedule
4 proposes a public interest test for amalgamations of registered
organisations and
- Schedule
5 contains minor and technical amendments.
Background
Organisations registered under the FWRO Act have
certain rights under the Fair Work Act 2009
(FW Act) and other legislation, including in relation to bargaining for enterprise
agreements. Registered organisations that represent the interests of employees
include trade unions and professional associations, whilst registered organisations
that represent the interests of employers or an industry are referred to as
employer organisations.
Registered organisations (organisations) occupy a unique
position within Australia's workplace relations system. Whilst they represent
the interests of their members, organisations also seek to advance their own
interests, and can have a significant impact on the economy (or segments of
it).
There are differing views about appropriate governance
structures and standards for organisations.[5]
One view is that organisations are more akin to incorporated associations then
corporations, and therefore the regulation of organisations should be more like
that imposed on incorporated associations.[6]
Another view is that organisations are more like
companies, and therefore should be regulated in a manner similar to how
corporations are regulated.[7]
This was the view accepted by the RCTUGC which concluded:
An approach that denies the equivalence of unions and
companies and concludes therefore there should be no changes to statutory
duties imposed on officers is an illogical and unthinking approach.[8]
The Bill proceeds on the basis of the above and responds
to the recommendations made by the RCTUGC in relation to the integrity of
organisations and their officials, responsiveness to members’ interests and the
deregistration of organisations in certain circumstances.[9]
The Bill also seeks to give effect to the Government's commitment to
‘effectively deal with registered organisations that are dysfunctional or not
serving the interests of their members and to provide that registered
organisations’ amalgamations are subject to a public interest test’.[10]
Royal
Commission into Trade Union Governance and Corruption recommendations
The RCTUGC made a number of recommendations that the Bill
seeks to implement. Specifically those recommendations are 36, 37 and 38.[11]
These are briefly discussed below.
Amending
definition of ‘prescribed offence’ for the purposes of the disqualification
regime
Recommendation 36 of the RCTUGC was:
The definition of ‘prescribed offence’ in s 212 of the Fair
Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (Cth) be amended to include an
offence under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or Territory, or another
country, which is punishable on conviction by a maximum penalty of imprisonment
for life or 5 years or more.[12]
Proposed paragraph 212(aa) of the FWRO Act,
at item 8 of Schedule 1 to the Bill is consistent with this
recommendation, and has not changed materially from the Previous Bill.
New
criminal offence for holding office whilst disqualified
Recommendation 37 of the RCTUGC was:
The Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (Cth)
be amended to make it a criminal offence for a person who is disqualified from
holding office in a registered organisation to continue to hold an office. The
offence should be an offence of strict liability with a maximum penalty of 100
penalty units or imprisonment for two years, or both.[13]
Whilst proposed section 226 of the FWRO Act,
at item 11 of Schedule 1 to the Bill is consistent with this
recommendation, the quantum of the penalty is inconsistent with principles
guiding the creation of strict liability offences set out in the Guide
To Framing Commonwealth Offences, Infringement Notices And Enforcement Powers, which
provides:
- a
strict liability offence will generally only be considered appropriate where it
is punishable by a fine of up to 60 penalty units for an individual and
- is
not punishable by imprisonment.[14]
Proposed section 226 of the FWRO Act has not
changed materially from the Previous Bill. In the context of that Bill, the
Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills raised concerns about the
imposition of strict liability in this provision (discussed below).[15]
In addition, a number of stakeholders previously noted the proposed penalty –
whilst consistent with the RCTUGC recommendation – was double the penalty applicable
to directors for the comparable offence under the Corporations Act at
that time[16]
(the penalty being 50 penalty units or imprisonment for one year, or both).[17]
However, since the passage of the Treasury Laws
Amendment (Strengthening Corporate and Financial Sector Penalties) Act 2019
the penalty for the comparable offence in the Corporations Act is now five
years imprisonment. This means that the situation has reversed since the
Previous Bill was introduced: the penalty applicable to company directors for
holding office whilst disqualified is currently more than double that proposed by
the Bill for officials of registered organisations.[18]
New
disqualification regime
Recommendation 38 of the RCTUGC was:
The Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009
(Cth) be amended by inserting a new provision giving the Federal Court
jurisdiction, upon the application of the registered organisations regulator,
to disqualify a person from holding any office in a registered organisation for
a period of time the court considers appropriate. The court should be permitted
to make such an order if the conditions set out in paragraph 190 are
satisfied.[19]
(Emphasis added)
The regime proposed by the Bill differs from the above
recommendation in a number of ways, as discussed in detail below in the Key
Issues and provisions parts of this Digest.
Previous
Committee Consideration
The Previous Bill was considered by two Senate Committees,
as noted below.
Senate
Education and Employment Legislation Committee
The Previous Bill was examined by the Senate Education and
Employment Legislation Committee. Details of the inquiry and report are on the inquiry
homepage.
The majority of the Committee recommended that the Previous Bill
be passed.[20]
Labor and the Greens both issued dissenting reports, recommending that the
Senate reject the Previous Bill.[21]
Labor considered the Previous Bill to be a ‘politically driven attack on the
democratic functioning of unions’.[22]
The Greens described the Previous Bill as ‘politically motivated’ and
‘reflective of the Coalition’s continued efforts to reduce workers’ rights and
undermine unions’.[23]
Both Labor and the Greens were concerned with the perceived lack of
consultation on the Previous Bill.[24]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
raised a number of concerns about the Previous Bill including:
- that
the proposed disqualification powers were insufficiently defined
- the
inclusion of strict liability offences and the quantum of the penalties
associated with those offences
- the
reversal of the evidential burden of proof in some circumstances and
- the
proposed immunity from civil liability for administrators of organisations.[25]
Those concerns were reiterated in relation to the Bill.[26]
These concerns are explored in detail below in the Key Issues and provisions
parts of this Digest.
Committee
consideration
Senate
Education and Employment Legislation Committee
The Bill has been referred to the Senate Education and
Employment Legislation Committee for inquiry and report by 25 October 2019.
Details of the inquiry are on the inquiry
homepage. The Committee recommended that the Bill be passed.[27]
The Opposition and Greens issued dissenting reports and recommended that the
Bill not be passed.[28]
The Centre Alliance recommended in their additional comments that the Bill not
be passed without amendments.[29]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
considered the Bill in its third report of 2019, stating:
The committee commented on a similar bill in the previous
Parliament ... The committee does not have any additional comments regarding the
matters it raised in relation to that bill.[30]
As noted above the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny
of Bills considered the Previous Bill. That consideration (taking into account
any differences between the Bill and Previous Bill) and the Committee’s
comments regarding the penalty for the proposed criminal offence of holding
office whilst disqualified is examined below in the Key Issues and
provisions parts of this Digest.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
The Labor Party and Greens oppose the Bill.[31]
The Centre Alliance, whilst opposing the Bill in its current form has indicated
support for the Bill with certain amendments relating to application threshold
issues, persons with standing to commence disqualification proceedings, the
range of factors to be considered by the courts and the removal of the proposed
amalgamation regime.[32]
At the time of writing, the position of other
non-government parties and independents on the Bill was not clear.
Position of
major interest groups
The Australian Council of Trade Unions (ACTU) has
indicated its opposition to the Bill on the basis that its provisions are incompatible
with Australia’s commitments under two conventions of the International Labour
Organisation (ILO), namely the:
The International Centre for Trade Union Rights (ICTUR)
also opposes the Bill on the basis that it breaches Australia’s commitments
under the two ILO conventions above and also because:
- it
‘conflates criminal fraud and other serious crimes with minor infractions of
industrial laws’ and by ‘distilling such a broad spectrum of unlawful activity
into the same category of offence’ the Bill would ‘permit equal punishments for
unlawful acts that are not of comparable gravity’ and this would ‘lead to
unacceptably disproportionate outcomes’
- it
‘blurs the liabilities of trade union officials and the organisations they
represent and work for’ and would permit ‘sanctions against the entirety of a
union's membership for the acts of individual officers’ as well as against
specific officers ‘for the acts of members or other officers not under their
control’ and
- the
proposed sanctions will have the practical effect of threatening ‘to destroy
the careers of individuals or the very existence of workers' organisation’.[35]
The Previous Bill was opposed by trade unions[36]
and some other stakeholders including Professor Bradon Ellem, the Australian
Conservation Foundation, Australian Youth Climate Coalition, Friends of the
Earth Australia, Getup!, Greenpeace Australia, Nature Conservation Council of
Australia and Solar Citizens.[37]
The current Bill is opposed by trade unions,[38]
a range of other non-registered organisation entities,[39]
legal academics[40]
and religious associations.[41]
The Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry (ACCI) supports
the Bill, arguing that it:
is needed to deal with persistent, entrenched, and
unacceptable conduct by some unions and their officials which continues to grab
headlines.[42]
The Bill is also supported by the Australian Mines and
Metals Association (AMMA), Master Builders Australia (MBA), Australian Industry
Group (AIG), Housing Industry Australia (HIA) and Australian Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (ACCI). [43]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that the Bill will have
no financial impact on the Commonwealth.[44]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. Whilst the
Government considers that the Bill is compatible,[45]
the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights (PJCHR) raised concerns about
the Previous Bill’s compatibility with a number of human rights, as discussed
below.
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
In its third report of 2019 the PJCHR noted that the Bill
has ‘been reintroduced in relevantly substantially similar terms to those
previously commented on’ and further:
the committee notes that while there have been a number of
changes to the bill including relating to matters the committee previously
commented on, these do not fully address the committee's initial concerns.[46]
(emphasis added)
The Previous Bill was considered in the PJCHR’s ninth and 12th
reports of 2017.[47]
At that time the PJCHR noted the measures proposed by the Bill would impact on
a number of recognised human rights, including the right to freedom of
association and the right to just and favourable conditions of work. The PJCHR noted
that those rights are informed by various International Labour Organization
(ILO) treaties to which Australia is a signatory. Further, those ILO treaties
also provide additional rights including:
- the
right of workers to autonomy of union processes (including electing their own
representatives in full freedom)
- organising
their administration and activities without interference and
- formulating
their own programs without interference.[48]
Various ILO treaties also protect unions from being
dissolved, suspended or de-registered and protect the rights of workers to form
organisations of their own choosing.[49]
The PJCHR noted that various measures contained in the Bill would limit the
ability of unions to govern their internal processes and therefore engage and
limit those rights. The specific issues raised by various provisions contained
in the Bill in relation to human rights concerns and compatibility with ILO
conventions, are discussed below.
After considering the Minister’s response to its concerns
on the Previous Bill, the PJCHR concluded:
- the
proposed disqualification regime and ‘public interest test’ for amalgamation of
registered organisations is ‘likely to be incompatible with the right to
freedom of association’[50]
and
- the
proposed deregistration regime and proposed administration regime for
‘dysfunctional’ registered organisations ‘may be incompatible with the right to
freedom of association’.[51]
Key issues and provisions: disqualification of officials
As noted above, the RCTUGC formed the view that the
governance requirements of organisations should be more like those imposed on
corporations than incorporated associations. To give context to the proposed
amendments a brief outline of the:
- disqualification
regime applicable to company directors in the Corporations Act
2001 and
- Australia’s
relevant human rights obligations and international standards and how they
relate to the disqualification of officers of registered organisations
is provided below.
Disqualifying directors of companies
The Corporations Act contains a number of provisions
which provide for the disqualification of directors. This includes:
- automatic
disqualification
- disqualification
by court processes and
- disqualification
by the regulator (the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC))
in limited circumstances.
Importantly however, none of the processes as described
below allow the Minister, shareholders or other stakeholders in the corporation
or other corporations to seek to have directors disqualified. Only ASIC has
this power.
In contrast, the regime proposed by Schedule 1 of the Bill
will enable the Registered Organisations Commissioner (ROC), the Minister or ‘a
person with sufficient interest’ (which could potentially include an employer
or employer association) to seek a court order disqualifying a person from
being an official of a registered organisation.[52]
Automatic disqualification
Section 206B of the Corporations Act automatically
disqualifies a person from being a director of a corporation, if they are
convicted of serious criminal offences or are an undischarged bankrupt.[53]
Section 206B provides that a person is automatically disqualified from being a
director of a company if:
- they
are convicted (by either an Australian or foreign court) of an offence that
concerns the making, or participation in the making, of decisions that affect
the whole or a substantial part of the business of the company, or concerns an
act that has the capacity to significantly affect the corporation's financial
standing
- they
are convicted for a contravention of the Corporations Act punishable by
imprisonment for a period of greater than 12 months
- they
are convicted of either an Australian or foreign offence that involves
dishonesty and is punishable by imprisonment for a period of at least three
months
- they
are convicted by a foreign court of an offence punishable by imprisonment for a
period of greater than 12 months.
Disqualification by court order
Part 2D.6 of the Corporations Act provides the court
with power to disqualify directors in a range of circumstances, including:
- where
a director has contravened certain civil penalty provisions in the Corporations
Act (section 206C)
- where
a director is involved in repeated corporate insolvencies and non-payment of
debts (section 206D)
- where
a director has repeatedly been involved in contraventions of the Corporations
Act, and failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the contraventions (section
206E)
- to
give effect to a disqualification order made under the Competition and
Consumer Act 2010 (CCA) or the Australian Securities
and Investments Commission Act 2001 (ASIC Act) (sections 206EA
and 206EB)
- where
a person has been disqualified from being a director of, or being concerned in
the management of, a foreign company under a law of a foreign jurisdiction (section
206EAA) and
- where
a person, as an officer or director of two or more corporations, has a track
record of involvement in contraventions of the Corporations Act and
insolvencies where:
- the Fair
Entitlements Guarantee scheme has inappropriately funded the payment of
outstanding employee entitlements and
- there
has been a minimal return to the Commonwealth (section 206EAB).[54]
The grounds of disqualification most relevant to the regime
proposed by the Bill are briefly examined below.
Contraventions of civil penalty provisions contained
within the Corporations Act
Section 206C gives the court the power to disqualify a
director for any period it considers appropriate where the director breached
various civil penalty provisions contained within the Corporations Act
and the court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified. Such
proceedings can only be commenced by ASIC – not by other stakeholders (such as
shareholders or creditors) or the Minister. Nor can other corporations seek
such orders.
Repeated involvement in corporate insolvencies is
insolvent and non-payment of debts
Section 206D gives the court the power to disqualify a director
for up to 20 years if:
- within
the last seven years, the director was an officer of two or more failed
companies and
- the
court is satisfied that the manner in which the corporation was managed was
wholly or partly responsible for the corporation failing and
- the
disqualification is justified.
Importantly however, applications for a disqualification
order under section 206D can only be made by ASIC, not by other stakeholders
(such a creditors or shareholders) or the Minister. Nor can other corporations
seek such orders.
Repeated contraventions of the Corporations Act
Section 206E provides the court with power to disqualify a
director for any period it considers appropriate where:
- the
director has at least twice been an officer of a company that contravened the Corporations
Act and the director failed to take reasonable steps to prevent a
contravention or
- the
director contravened the Corporations Act at least twice while they were
director of the company or
- the
director was an officer of a body corporate and did something that would have
contravened subsection 180(1) or section 181 (which require directors of
corporations to exercise their powers and discharge their duties with care,
diligence, good faith and for a proper purpose) if the body corporate had been
a corporation and
- the
court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
Again however, applications for disqualification under
section 206E can only be made by ASIC, and not by the Minister, shareholders,
creditors, other stakeholders or other corporations.
Disqualification under a law of a foreign jurisdiction
Section 206EAA provides the court the power to disqualify a
director for any period it considers appropriate where the person is
disqualified under the law of a foreign jurisdiction from:
- being
a director of, or being concerned in the management of, a foreign company (or
carrying on substantially similar activities) and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
Again however, applications seeking disqualification under
section 206EAA can only be made by ASIC, and not by the Minister, shareholders,
creditors, other stakeholders or other corporations.
Disqualification by ASIC
Section 206F gives ASIC the power to disqualify a director
for up to five years. ASIC may give notice to a director under section 206F if:
- within
the last seven years they were an officer of two or more companies
- when
the person was an officer, or within 12 months after the person ceased to be an
officer of those corporations, each of the corporations was wound up and
- the
liquidators lodged reports under section 533(1) about the inability of the
company to pay its debts.[55]
The notice gives the person an opportunity to demonstrate
why they should not be disqualified as a director, and to be heard on the
question.[56]
Once ASIC has considered the director’s response to its
notice, it can disqualify the director for up to five years. Importantly, ASIC
can disqualify a director under section 206F without the need to show breaches
of commercial morality or gross incompetence. It is sufficient that the
director was the subject of two or more reports that were lodged by liquidator
under section 533 of the Corporations Act.[57]
Human rights issues related to disqualifying officials of
registered organisations
Both the right to freedom of association and the right to
just and favourable conditions of work include the right to form and join trade
unions. These rights are protected by Article 22 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) and Article 8 of the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR) to which
Australia is a signatory.[58]
Those rights are informed by International Labour Organization (ILO) treaties,
including ILO Convention 87 and ILO Convention 98.[59]
Contents of ILO
Convention 87
ILO Convention 87 provides that workers have the
right to autonomy of union processes, which includes:
- selecting
their own representatives ‘in full freedom’ (that is, without interference)
- freedom
to organise their administration and activities without interference and
- formulating
their own programs without interference.[60]
The disqualification of officers of registered organisations
therefore raises human rights concerns as it can amount to an interference with
the autonomy of unions, by (for example) depriving them of the right to elect
their own representatives ‘in full freedom’. The PJCHR referred to comments
from international supervisory mechanisms of the ILO in relation to the human
rights engaged by the disqualification regime:
The right of workers' organizations to elect their own
representatives freely is an indispensable condition for them to be able to act
in full freedom and to promote effectively the interests of their members. For
this right to be fully acknowledged, it is essential that the public
authorities refrain from any intervention which might impair the exercise of
this right, whether it be in determining the conditions of eligibility of
leaders or in the conduct of the elections themselves.[61]
When can
freedom of association be limited?
The PJCHR noted that the right to freedom of association
may be subject to permissible limitations, provided certain conditions are met.
Generally a justifiable limitation on the right in question (in this case, to
freedom of association) must:
- address
a legitimate objective
- be
rationally connected to that legitimate objective and
- be
a proportionate way to achieve the legitimate objective.[62]
The PJCHR specifically noted that Article 22(3) of the ICCPR
and Article 8 of the ICESCR expressly provide that ‘no limitations are
permissible’ on the right to freedom of association if they are inconsistent
with the guarantees of freedom of association and the right to collectively
organise contained in ILO Convention 87, to which Australia is a
signatory.[63]
As such, a key issue is whether or not the
disqualification regime is inconsistent with the guarantees of freedom of
association and the right to collectively organise contained in ILO
Convention 87. In relation to disqualification of officials and its impacts
on the autonomy of union processes the ILO Committee of Experts on the
Application of Conventions (CEAC) has noted:
- legislation
which establishes excessively broad ineligibility criteria such as by means of
a long list, including ‘acts which have no real connection with the qualities
of integrity required for the exercise of trade union office’ is incompatible
with the Convention[64]
- not
every contravention of industrial relations legislation, nor every violation of
a judicial order to stop a strike nor every conviction for a criminal offence
will necessarily constitute acts of such a nature as to be prejudicial to the
performance of trade union duties[65]
and
- conviction
on account of offences that do not call into question the integrity of the
person and are not prejudicial to the exercise of trade union functions should
not constitute grounds for disqualification.[66]
Is there a legitimate objective?
The PJCHR noted that the objective of the measures
identified in the Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights contained in the
Explanatory Memorandum is ‘improving the governance of registered organisations
and protecting the interests of members’, including by ensuring the leadership
of unions act lawfully.[67]
On the basis of this explanation, the PJCHR concluded that
the measure is likely to constitute a legitimate objective for the purposes of
international human rights law.[68]
In contrast however, the ICTUR viewed the Bill as going well beyond the pursuit
of a legitimate objective and argued:
While its effects on unions can be expected to be deeply
harmful, it is important to acknowledge that it is also without any tangible
benefit to employers, to the broader community, or to the maintenance of
peaceful industrial relations. The proposed legislation invites a greater
bureaucratic and juridical burden on industrial relations, without usefully
addressing the root causes of the problems it is ostensibly meant to resolve.[69]
Is the disqualification regime rationally connected to the
legitimate objective?
The PJCHR noted that it was unclear from information
provided in the statement of compatibility contained in the Explanatory
Memorandum, how the breadth and impact of the disqualification regime is
rationally connected to the stated objectives of improving the governance of
organisations and protecting the interests of members.[70]
Further, the PJCHR questioned whether the measure was the
least rights restrictive way of achieving the objectives, as required in order
to be a proportionate limitation on the rights in question (discussed below).[71]
Is the disqualification regime a proportionate way to
achieve the legitimate objective?
An aspect of the right to freedom of association includes
the right to strike – a right specifically acknowledged and protected under
international law. Further, the PJCHR noted that the existing restrictions on taking
industrial action under Australian law (that is the framework in relation to
‘protected’ and 'unprotected' industrial action) have been criticised by
various international oversight organisations.[72]
The PJCHR noted that because the proposed disqualification
regime as provided for in the Bill could lead to union officials being
disqualified for conduct that may be protected under international law, it
further limits the right to strike and therefore the right to freedom of
association. Further, the PJCHR noted the breadth of conduct (including
non-serious matters) that could potentially lead to a union official being
disqualified raises questions about the rational connection of the
disqualification regime to the stated objective of protecting the interests of
members of unions, where those members may be of the view that taking
particular forms of industrial action (such as unprotected industrial action)
are in their best interests.[73]
The PJCHR noted that whilst:
it is a relevant safeguard that disqualification orders are
to be made by the Federal Court, this alone is insufficient to ensure that the
measure constitutes a proportionate limitation. The court's discretion in
determining that a ground for disqualification exists and that it would not be
unjust to make such an order does not address the breadth of the grounds for
disqualification in the proposed legislation that the court will apply... The
expanded basis for criminal offences to constitute a ground for either
mandatory or discretionary disqualification also raises a concern that some of
these offences may be unrelated to a person's capacity or suitability to
perform functions in union office.[74]
The ICTUR argued:
Disqualification from union office should certainly not arise
on grounds related to a minor or trivial offence, or as an externally imposed
punishment following perceived failings in internal democracy... Crucially, there
is no requirement that legal infractions be of a nature that impugns upon the
moral character of the officers concerned. While trade unionists can claim no exemption
from the ordinary application of the law it is unclear why even relatively
minor legal infractions – particularly those by an organisation rather than the
individual themselves – might bar them from office. Not even the conditions for
nomination to the Senate and the House of Representatives contain such
standards (these only bar from nomination candidates serving a prison sentence
of 12 months or more). Imposing these standards for trade union officials is
thus totally disproportionate to the existing standards for holding public
office.[75]
Summary of human rights concerns regarding the
disqualification regime
After considering the Minister’s response to the issues it
had raised, the PJCHR stated:
...it appears that the scope and extent of the limitation on
holding union office goes beyond what is permissible as a matter of
international human rights law.[76]
The PJCHR therefore concluded that the proposed
disqualification regime ‘is likely to be incompatible with the right to freedom
of association’.[77]
The ICTUR and Community and Public Sector Union (SPSF Group) (CPSU) argue that the
proposed disqualification regime directly breaches the right to freedom of
association.[78]
Disqualifying officials of
registered organisations
The Bill contains two mechanisms by which officials of
registered organisations can be disqualified:
1. proposed Division 3 of Part 4 of Chapter 7 of the FWRO Act (at item
11 of Schedule 1 to the Bill) and related amendments: this deals with
disqualification orders generally (and includes the ‘fit and proper person’
test as a potential ground for disqualification) and
2. the making of a disqualification order as an alternative to
deregistration of a registered organisation.[79]
Importantly the two mechanisms are separate to each other.
For the purposes of this Digest the ‘disqualification regime’ will refer to proposed
Division 3 of Part 4 of Chapter 7 and its related amendments and the ‘alternative
disqualification mechanism’ will refer to disqualification as an alternative
order to the deregistration of a registered organisation.
Key concepts
and definitions underpinning the disqualification regime
Designated findings and
designated laws
Proposed subsection 9C(1) of the FWRO Act,
at item 2 of Schedule 1 to the Bill, defines a designated finding
as a finding in criminal proceedings that a person has committed an
offence under a designated law; or in any civil proceedings, that
the person has contravened, or been involved in a contravention of:
Proposed subsection 9C(2) defines designated
laws as the following:
- the FWRO Act and FW Act
- the BCI Act and
- the WHS Act and each related state or territory OHS law within the meaning
of the FW Act.
As discussed below, the PJCHR and some stakeholders
expressed concerns about the breadth (and appropriateness) of the types of
conduct captured by the definition of designated finding and
regulated by the designated laws that could then serve as a basis
for disqualifying registered organisation officials – and in particular
concerns about minor or administrative offences and those linked to legitimate
trade union activity being captured.
Changes from
previous Bill
Effect of removal of ‘wider criminal findings’
As noted in the Digest
to the Previous Bill, a wider criminal finding was defined in
the Previous Bill as a finding (other than a designated finding)
in any other criminal proceeding against the person that the person
committed an offence against any law of the Commonwealth, a state or territory.
That is, it applied to criminal findings beyond industrial laws. In turn the
Previous Bill provided that a ground for disqualification was:
- that
a wider criminal finding is made against a person and
- the
person engaged in the conduct to which the wider criminal finding
relates in the course of (or purportedly in the course of) performing functions
in relation to any organisation.
For example, committing assault whilst performing functions
as an official would have constituted a ‘wider criminal finding’ for the
purposes of disqualifying an official under the Previous Bill. This had the
practical effect of ensuring that a person with a wider criminal finding
made in relation to their conduct whilst performing functions as an official
for organisation ‘A’ and who subsequently left that organisation, could
nonetheless be disqualified from being an official for organisation ‘B’.
The effect of removing ‘wider criminal findings’ as an
explicit ground for disqualification from the Bill is that grounds for
disqualification will, subject to the discussion below, have to be connected to
‘core’ workplace laws. Nonetheless the PJCHR and some stakeholders raised
concerns about the breadth (and appropriateness) of the types of conduct
captured by the Bill that could lead to the disqualification of registered
organisation officials – and in particular concerns about minor and
administrative offences and offences linked to legitimate trade union activity
being captured. These concerns are discussed below.
Disqualification
orders
The Bill proposes to introduce a significantly revised
disqualification order regime. Currently the FWRO Act does not provide a
comprehensive mechanism by which the regulator (or any other persons) can apply
to have an official disqualified. In contrast the Corporations Act
allows the regulator (ASIC) to apply for an order to disqualify a director. The
regime proposed by the Bill will enable the ROC, the Minister, or any other
person with ‘sufficient interest’ to apply to the court for an order to
disqualify an official of a registered organisation.[81]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that ‘sufficient interest’
has been interpreted as ‘an interest beyond that of an ordinary person and
includes those whose rights, interests or legitimate expectations would be
affected by the decision’.[82]
This would appear to allow members of registered organisations, and potentially
parties affected by the actions of those organisations (for example employers,
employer associations or other registered organisations) to apply for orders to
disqualify an official. In this regard, the regime proposed by the Bill differs
substantially from the current regulatory regime imposed on corporations.
Further, the Bill differs from recommendation 38 of the RCTUGC, which
recommended that the FWRO Act:
... be amended by inserting a new provision giving the Federal
Court jurisdiction, upon the application of the registered organisations
regulator, to disqualify a person from holding any office in a registered
organisation for a period of time the court considers appropriate. The court
should be permitted to make such an order if the conditions set out in
paragraph 190 are satisfied.[83]
(Emphasis added)
That is, the RCTUGC specifically recommended that only the
ROC have standing to seek disqualification orders. This would mirror the
situation with respect to ASIC and company directors under the Corporations
Act. To illustrate the differences between the model recommended by the
RCTUGC and that proposed by the Bill, Table 2 in the Appendix to
this Digest sets out in detail the conditions proposed by the RCTUGC and those
proposed by the Bill, and their differences.
Concerns
about persons with standing to seek disqualification orders
As noted above the Bill will enable the ROC, the Minister,
or any other person with ‘sufficient interest’ to apply to the court for an
order to disqualify an official of a registered organisation[84]–
whereas the RCTUGC specifically recommended that only the ROC have standing to
seek disqualification orders.
A number of stakeholder raised concerns about the breadth of
persons granted standing to seek disqualification orders, arguing that the
relevant provisions would breach Australia’s obligations with respect to
freedom of association and the autonomy of trade union processes. The ICTUR stated:
The range of actors who can initiate any of these processes
is problematic, including the Minister, Commissioner or any person with a
‘sufficient interest’... And we reiterate our concern that the legislation
establishes a pathway for ‘interested’ parties (s. 222(1)) to initiate
disqualification proceedings against trade unionists in relation to any
breaches of the criminal law, however trivial.[85]
The CPSU SPSF Group likewise stated that in relation to
disqualification orders the Bill would mean:
Any employer in an industry in which a union operates could
have a “sufficient interest” even though they may not have been directly
affected by the conduct of an organisation. Also, customers of enterprises
effected by actions of a union could have a “sufficient interest.” The great
expansion in the class of persons who can bring proceedings under the Bill
reinforce an argument that it breaches our international obligations relating
to free association ... [and] that a union be “protected” from interference in
their functioning by employers, employer associations or their proxies.[86]
When
can a disqualification order be made?
In relation to disqualification orders, the RCTUGC noted:
Subject to specific situations where the registered
organisations regulator should be entitled to disqualify an officer because of
certain easily verifiable objective matters, it is preferable that the power to
ban be conferred on a court. First, any decision by the regulator would be
subject to judicial review and the reviewing court would be able to review the
jurisdictional facts supporting the regulator’s decision. In practice, this
would often lead to increased delays, cost and expense. Secondly, the judicial
process provides a greater safeguard against the possibility of the power being
misused. Thirdly, ASIC only has the power to issue a banning notice in limited
circumstances.[87]
The RCTUGC noted that ‘having regard to the problems
identified by the Commission, the Federal Court should be permitted to make an
order disqualifying a person from holding an office within a registered
organisation or branch’[88]
where:
- a
ground for disqualification is made out (discussed below) and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.[89]
Table 2 in the Appendix to this Digest sets
out in detail the grounds justifying disqualification proposed by the RCTUGC
and those proposed by the Bill, and their differences. However, in contrast to
the RCTUGC’s recommendation, proposed subsection 222(2) of the FWRO
Act, at item 11 of Schedule 1 to the Bill provides that the
Court may make a disqualification order where a ground is made out and
the court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the
person after ‘having regard to’:
- the
nature of the matters constituting the ground (noting that these will have had
to occur after the commencement of the amendments in the schedule)
- the
circumstances and the nature of the person’s involvement in the matters
constituting the ground and
- ‘any
other matter that the court considers relevant’.
The grounds for disqualification proposed by the Bill
(discussed below) are more expansive than that proposed by the RCTUGC. Professionals
Australia argued that the difference in the drafting between the Bill and that
recommended by the RCTUGC ‘has the practical effect of effectively shifting the
onus onto the defendant to satisfy the Court why the order is unjust if a
ground is made out’ rather than the applicant satisfying the court that because
a ground is made out, disqualification is justified.[90]
Further, a number of stakeholders argue that a number of
potential grounds for disqualification breach Australia’s obligations with
respect to freedom of association and the autonomy of trade union processes
(also discussed below).
Differences
between the Corporations Act and the Bill’s disqualification regime
The differences between the disqualification regime proposed
by the Bill and that contained in the Corporations Act can be briefly
summarised. First, the disqualification regime proposed by the Bill is more
expansive in its application than that contained in the Corporations Act
because:
- it
proposes that not being a ‘fit and proper person’ (the proposed test that takes
into account certain civil and criminal findings and ‘any other event the Court
considers relevant’)[91]
be a ground for disqualification – the Corporations Act applies no
equivalent test
- the
range of persons who can seek to apply to have an official disqualified
includes the Commissioner, the Minister and any person with a ‘sufficient
interest’ – the Corporations Act only provides standing to ASIC, not the
Minister, directors, shareholders or creditors (all persons roughly analogous
to a person with a ‘sufficient interest’ in a registered organisation) and
- the
Bill does not contain any provisions that prevent frivolous or vexatious
applications to disqualify officials – the Corporations Act does contain
provisions that operate to prevent certain frivolous or vexatious applications
(but not in relation to disqualification of directors, as standing is reserved
for ASIC alone).[92]
Summary
of grounds for disqualification
Proposed section 223 of the FWRO Act, at item
11 of Schedule 1 to the Bill sets out the grounds for
disqualification. They are:
- a designated finding is made against the person or the person is found to
be in contempt of court in relation to an order or injunction made under a designated
law
- the
person is found in contempt of court in relation to conduct whilst performing (or
purportedly performing) functions in relation to any organisation
- the
person was involved in multiple failures to prevent contraventions by the
organisation and failed to take ‘reasonable steps’ to prevent the conduct
- the
person committed an offence or contravened a provision related to directors
duties or was disqualified from managing a corporation under Part 2D.6 of the Corporations
Act or
- the
person is not a fit and proper person to hold office in an organisation.
These are briefly discussed below. Table 2 in the Appendix to this Digest sets out in detail the differences between these
grounds for disqualification and those originally proposed by the RCTUGC. As
noted above, the grounds for disqualification proposed by the Bill are more
expansive than that proposed by the RCTUGC and have been argued to breach
Australia’s obligations with respect to freedom of association and the autonomy
of trade union processes.
A designated finding is made against the person and
certain contempt findings
Two grounds for disqualification are that:
- a designated finding is made against the person or
- the
person is found to be in contempt of court in relation to an order or
injunction made under a designated law.[93]
The breadth of conduct captured by these grounds was of
substantial concern to the PJCHR and a number of stakeholders and is discussed
under the heading ‘Breadth of conduct captured by definitions of designated
findings and laws’ below.
The person is found in contempt of court in certain circumstances
Proposed subsection 223(2) provides that a ground for
disqualification is where a person is found in contempt of court in relation to
an order or injunction made under any law of the Commonwealth, a state or
territory and the person engaged in the conduct to which the contempt of court
finding relates in the course of (or purportedly in the course of) performing
functions in relation to any organisation.
Multiple
failures to prevent contraventions by the organisation
A ground for disqualification is where at least two of the
following findings are made against any organisation in relation to
conduct engaged in whilst the person is an officer of the organisation:
- a designated finding or
- a
finding that the organisation is in contempt of court in relation to an order
or injunction made under a designated law.[94]
In the Previous Bill, this ground included a ‘wider
criminal finding' and a finding that the organisation is in contempt of court
in relation to an order or injunction made under ‘any law of the Commonwealth,
a state or territory’.[95]
As such the Bill somewhat (noting concerns about the breadth of conduct
captured by designated findings) restricts the range of conduct to those
related to industrial laws, rather than broader criminal conduct unrelated to
the operation of a registered organisation.
Importantly however this ground of disqualification only
applies where the official failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the
conduct covered by the findings.[96]
In relation to the Previous Bill, the Scrutiny Committee noted the Minister’s
response that the reasonable steps defence to a failure to prevent
contraventions by an organisation:
- entails
an objective test, involving the consideration of whether the steps taken
accord with those a prudent and reasonable person would take in the particular
circumstances
- that
as what constitutes taking reasonable steps will vary depending on the
circumstances of each case, it is neither appropriate nor possible to provide
specific guidance in legislation as to the types of conduct that might avoid
disqualification and
- even
where grounds for disqualification exist, it will be for the Federal Court to
determine whether disqualification is justified in the circumstances
and requested that the key information provided by the
Minister be included in the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill.[97]
The PJCHR noted that because of the breadth of the concept
of a ‘designated finding’ this ground of the disqualification regime means it is
possible that where a union has engaged in two or more relevant contraventions
(which may be minor in nature) the entire elected leadership of a union could
be subject to disqualification.[98]
The PJCHR specifically noted that this could occur regardless of whether or not
the union members in question had agreed to participate in the conduct which
led to the 'designated findings’ and whether they considered the relevant
conduct to be in their best interests.[99]
Breaches
of directors duties and the Corporations Act
A ground for disqualification is where a person is found in
any criminal or civil proceedings, to have committed an offence against, or
contravened a provision of, Division 1 of Part 2D.1 of the Corporations Act
(this relates to directors duties) or the person is disqualified from managing
a corporation under the Corporations Act.[100]
This will ensure that where a person commits certain
criminal offences or breaches of directors duties that are similar in nature to
those imposed on officials of organisations, they can be disqualified. The
Explanatory Memorandum argues:
A finding that a person has previously contravened their
duties as an officer in relation to a corporation may be indicative that the
person is not a suitable person to hold office in an organisation or branch of
an organisation.[101]
Likewise, where a person is disqualified as a director proposed
subsection 223(4) will allow the person to be disqualified from acting as
an official. The Explanatory Memorandum notes that ‘the types of conduct that
form the grounds for disqualification under Part 2D.6 of the Corporations
Act’ mean where a person is disqualified as a director, the ‘suitability of
the person to hold office in an organisation’ comes into question, and hence ‘such
disqualification should properly be a ground for disqualification of an
official’.[102]
The person is not a fit and proper person to hold office
in an organisation
The final ground for the disqualification of an official is
where, after having regard to certain events, that person is not a fit and
proper person to be an official in a registered organisation.[103]
Proposed subsection 223(6) sets out the events that are indicative of
not being a fit and proper person to be an official in a registered
organisation. The events are:
- the
person is refused an entry permit, or an entry permit held by the person is
revoked or suspended under the FW Act
- a
person is refused a WHS entry permit, or a WHS entry permit held by the person
is revoked or suspended under the WHS Act (or under a state or territory
OHS law)
- in
any criminal or civil proceedings against the person, or any action against the
person by an agency of the Commonwealth, state, or territory, the person is
found to have engaged in conduct involving fraud, dishonesty,
misrepresentation, concealment of material facts, or a breach of duty
- in
any criminal proceedings against the person, the person is found to have:
- engaged
in conduct involving the intentional use of violence towards another person,
the intentional causing of death or injury to another person or the intentional
damaging or destruction of property or
- committed
an offence against any law of the Commonwealth or a state or territory that is
punishable by imprisonment for two years or more.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that various rights of
entry provisions in the FW Act and WHS legislation that grant
significant rights and privileges to permit holders to access premises are
subject to the permit holder being a fit and proper person.[104]
The Government argues that these rights should only be exercisable by persons
who demonstrate appropriate regard for the law.[105]
The Government argues that the types of conduct covered by the events above
include behaviours that may indicate that a person is neither fit nor proper to
hold office in a registered organisation.[106]
The Government notes the FWRO Act places duties on
officials of registered organisations including to act with appropriate care
and diligence, to act in good faith and not to misuse their position or
information gained as a result of holding office. As such, it argues that an
official who has been found in any relevant proceedings to have engaged in
conduct involving fraud, dishonesty, misrepresentation, concealing material
facts or a breach of those duties may be a person who cannot uphold the duties
imposed on an official, and is therefore not a suitable person to hold office
in a registered organisation.[107]
In this regard, there appears to be a degree of overlap
with existing sections 212 and 215 of the FWRO Act. This was noted by
the ICTUR:
We recall that, in any case, powers for disqualification in
relation to serious criminal offences already exist, under the Fair Work (RO)
Act 2009, s. 212.[108]
This is because under these provisions a person is
automatically disqualified from being an official if they are convicted of an
offence involving fraud or dishonesty punishable by imprisonment for a period
of three months or more – that is, conduct involving fraud, dishonesty,
misrepresentation, concealing material facts and so forth. However, whilst
there is a degree of overlap, nonetheless the proposed amendment would allow
persons with the requisite standing to seek the disqualification of an official
in circumstances where (for whatever reason) automatic disqualification
had not occurred (or been enforced) under the existing automatic
disqualification provisions of the FWRO Act.
Finally, the Government notes that where a person has been
convicted of an offence involving the intentional use of violence towards
another person, the intentional causing of death or injury of another person or
the intentional damaging or destruction of property, such findings may indicate
that the person is not suitable to be an official in a registered organisation.
This is ‘due to significant and important functions and powers that exercisable
by officers’.[109]
Criticisms
of the ‘not a fit and proper person test’
A number of stakeholders were critical of the inclusion of
the proposed ‘not a fit and proper’ person test as a ground for
disqualification.[110]
The ACTU argued:
No equivalent test is imposed on company directors or
officers of incorporated associations under state legislative regimes. The
expansive range of grounds is a significant overreach and invites undue
political, corporate and regulatory interference in the democratic and
autonomous functioning and control of registered organisations.[111]
(Emphasis added)
The Victorian Government was also critical of the fit and
proper person test, noting:
There is also no general ‘fit and proper person test’ for
company directors under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth). The proposed
disqualification provisions create an unjustifiable inequality of standards for
registered officials compared to company directors.[112]
The effect of proposed paragraph 223(6)(e) is that
a person can be found to not be a fit and proper person where they are found to
have engaged in certain conduct, or to have committed a criminal offence
punishable by two or more years imprisonment, but are not convicted of the
offence. In this regard the Queensland Law Society (QLS) noted:
We are concerned that the current drafting of these
provisions leaves it open to the possibility that a person could be acquitted,
or have a hung jury yet still fall within the language of “found to have
engaged in”. For instance, a judge might make a finding of fact that an accused
person committed an act of violence, but acquits them because they have raised
a defence or because the proceeding ends for another reason. It would seem more
appropriate that there should be a conviction before the disqualification
provisions can be invoked.[113]
In addition, another effect of proposed subparagraph
223(6)(e)(ii) is that a person can be found to not be a fit and proper
person where they have been found to have committed a criminal offence
punishable by two or more years imprisonment – including offences not
necessarily related to the ‘core’ roles and responsibilities of officials of
organisations (whether convicted or not of the offence).[114]
In this regard the QLS noted:
The scope of behaviour captured by the proposed grounds for
disqualification under the bill are wider than that recommended by the Royal
Commission report. They may also overlap with existing disqualification
provisions under the Fair Work Act and create uncertainty about the
interaction between the relevant laws.[115]
As such, for the reasons discussed below appears that the
breadth of conduct captured by the proposed disqualification regime, whilst
somewhat narrower than the Previous Bill, nonetheless creates the potential for
official to be disqualified in circumstances that are prohibited by Australia’s
international legal obligations in relation to freedom of association and
autonomy of union processes.
Other
matters that may be considered
As noted previously proposed subsection 222(2) the court
may make a disqualification order where a ground is made out and
the court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the
person after ‘having regard to’, amongst other things, ‘any other matters the
court considers relevant’.[116]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes:
Other matters may include consideration of the best interests
of the organisation’s members and whether other action has been taken to
address the conduct.[117]
Differences
to the Previous Bill
There are two main differences between the Previous Bill’s
disqualification regime and that proposed by the Bill.
First, as noted earlier the Bill removes the concept of
‘wider criminal findings’, including as an explicit ground for
disqualification. This means, subject to the previous discussion above
regarding the breadth of conduct captured, grounds for disqualification will
have to be connected to breaches of ‘core’ workplace laws.
Second, the Bill alters the range of grounds that could
serve as a basis for finding that a person is not a ‘fit and proper’ person to
hold office in an organisation. In the Previous Bill, proposed section 223
provided that the Court could determine that a person was not a fit and proper
person hold office in an organisation, having regard to:
- whether,
in any criminal proceedings against the person, they were found to have engaged
in conduct involving the intentional use of violence towards another person,
the intentional causing of death or injury to another person or the intentional
damaging or destruction of property or
- any
other event the Court considers relevant. (emphasis added)
Given the breadth of ‘any other event’, the Previous
Bill would have allowed a court to consider a wide range of conduct in relation
to determining if a person was not a fit and proper person to hold office in an
organisation. It could be argued that ‘any other event’ would have been read in
the context of the section as a whole and therefore linked to criminal conduct
or proceedings. However, it may also have been that the section could have been
interpreted as allowing the court to consider events more broadly, including
those unrelated to criminal conduct or proceedings, when determining if a
person was not fit and proper to hold office in an organisation.
In contrast, the Bill adopts a slightly narrower
test. First, the first limb of this element from the Previous Bill is adopted
without change. However, the second limb (‘any other event ...’) is amended to
instead refer to circumstances where:
...in any criminal proceedings against the person, the person
is found to have...committed an offence against a law of the Commonwealth
or a State or Territory that is punishable by imprisonment for 2 years or more.
(emphasis added).[118]
Whilst – as noted above – this allows criminal conduct not
related to an official’s duties to serve as a basis for disqualification, it
nonetheless represents a narrowing of the fit and proper person test by
imposing a requirement that the relevant offences in both limbs were actually
proved (rather than a person merely being charged, which the Previous Bill may
have captured). Whilst the Bill still requires the Court to have regard to ‘any
other matters’, this applies not in regards to establishing where a ground for
disqualification exists, but rather in determining whether disqualifying an
official would be unjust.
The combined effect of those changes is to reduce the
scope of conduct that could serve as grounds for disqualification to more
serious (and proved) conduct, albeit including conduct that may be ‘completely
unrelated to a person’s role working as a union official’.[119]
Breadth of conduct captured by definitions of designated
findings and laws
The PJCHR noted that the effect of the broad definitions
of designated finding and designated law is that the range of
conduct that could result in the disqualification of an official is extremely
broad. This is because a 'designated finding’ includes a contravention of
various industrial laws, and therefore includes contraventions that are
potentially of a less serious nature (including the taking of unprotected industrial
action).[120]
The PJCHR noted that the right to strike is an aspect of
the right to freedom of association – and that the right to strike is
specifically protected and permitted under international law.[121]
Further, the PJCHR noted that the existing restrictions on taking industrial
action under Australian law (that is the framework in relation to ‘protected’
and 'unprotected' industrial action) have been ‘consistently criticised by
international supervising mechanisms as going beyond what is permissible’.[122]
The PJCHR concluded that because of the broad application of
the concept of a ‘designated finding’, union officials could be disqualified
for conduct that may be protected under international law.[123]
As such, it noted that the disqualification regime appears to limit the right
to strike and raises questions about the rational connection of this aspect of
the disqualification regime to the stated objective of protecting the interests
of members of unions, where those members may be of the view that taking
particular forms of industrial action (such as unprotected industrial action) is
in their interests.[124]
The ICTUR also expressed concerns about the range of conduct
captured by the definition of ‘designated finding’ arguing that it conflates
failure to comply with the duties ordinarily placed on the officers of
corporations, infractions of industrial law (including ‘potentially even minor
technical aspects’) and ‘the potentially arbitrary concept of an individual’s
‘fitness’ for office’ with ‘serious crime’[125]
and that:
The conflation of these very different grounds is deeply
problematic... Of particular concern in relation to several of the potential
grounds for disqualification is the definition (s. 9C) of ‘designated finding’
(which draws even trivial infractions of industrial law within the ambit of s.
223(1) and s. 223(3)). As per the definition set out in s. 9C, a ‘designated
finding’ could include minor or technical failures such as late lodgement of a
union’s financial reports with the regulator (a requirement under the Fair Work
(RO) Act 2009, s. 268) and other routine aspects of industrial law, which are
an entirely different class of legal infraction to incidents of theft or
violence – and such minor cases of non-compliance are unjustifiable as grounds
for disqualification.[126]
The CPSU expressed similar concerns, arguing that:
A number of these bureaucratic or procedural civil penalty
provisions can be cobbled together to form a pattern of “unlawfulness” to support
a case for an order for disqualification, deregistration, administration or to
deny an amalgamation. The combination of a low threshold for standing to bring
applications, together with the relatively low-level matters as grounds invites
speculative and strategic applications by employers, and employer associations.
The prospect of strategic lawfare against unions or their officials by
employers, brought for reasons other than to enforce compliance, is a
compelling reason to recommend this Bill be withdrawn.[127]
Automatic disqualification of
officials
Currently Chapter 7, Part 4, Division 2 of the FWRO Act
deals with the automatic disqualification of officials. In simple terms,
under sections 213 and 215 if an official has been convicted of a prescribed
offence, they are automatically disqualified from holding office in a
registered organisation for a certain period of time. A prescribed offence
is currently defined as:
- an
offence under a law of the Commonwealth, a state or territory, or another
country, involving fraud or dishonesty and punishable on conviction by
imprisonment for a period of three months or more
- an
offence under the FWRO Act related to registered organisation elections,
criminal breaches of an official’s duties of good faith, use of position and
information, and criminal offences related to reprisals against whistleblowers
- any
other offence in relation to the formation, registration or management of an
association or organisation or
- any
other offence under a law of the Commonwealth, a state or territory, or another
country, involving the intentional use of violence towards another person, the
intentional causing of death or injury to another person or the intentional
damaging or destruction of property.[128]
As noted by the ICTUR the FWRO Act currently
provides ‘powers for disqualification in relation to serious criminal offences’
and that such provisions are – from an international law perspective – ‘relatively
uncontroversial’.[129]
However, the ICTUR noted:
It is notable that this existing Australian framework already
draws within its ambit a wider range of offences, and less serious offences,
than most of the disqualification frameworks we have looked at for comparative
purposes for this report, but this is tempered by a right to apply for leave to
hold office (ss. 216 – 218).[130]
Expansion of
offences justifying automatic disqualification
Proposed paragraph 212(aa), at item 8 of Schedule
1 to the Bill, will expand the definition of prescribed offence in section
212 to include an offence under a law of the Commonwealth, state or territory,
or another country, punishable upon conviction by imprisonment for life or a
period of five years or more. This is consistent with recommendation 36 of the RCTUGC.[131]
Item 17(1) of Schedule 1 provides that automatic
disqualification will not apply to a conviction for an offence of the type
listed in proposed paragraph 212(aa) if the conviction is in relation to
conduct engaged in before the commencement of Schedule 1. This means proposed
paragraph 212(aa) will not operate retrospectively in that respect. Further
a person convicted after commencement in relation to conduct engaged in before
the commencement of Schedule 1 will also not be subject to automatic
disqualification under proposed paragraph 212(aa).
Comparison
to disqualification of company directors
It is worth noting that directors of companies are automatically
disqualified for up to five years where they are convicted of an offence
against the law of a foreign country or an offence under the Corporations
Act punishable by imprisonment for a period of greater than 12 months.[132]
In contrast, the Bill proposes that an official will only be automatically
disqualified where they are convicted of an offence against the law of a
foreign country (other than the specific types of offences discussed above)
punishable by imprisonment for a period of greater than five years.[133]
In that regard the Bill arguably imposes a more lenient
threshold for automatic disqualification of officials of registered organisations
on the basis of breaching laws of a foreign country that do not relate to fraud
or dishonesty than the Corporations Act imposes in relation to directors
of companies. In contrast the Bill imposes a stricter threshold for automatic
disqualification of officials of registered organisations on the basis of
breaching laws of a foreign country that relate to the use of violence or
damaging property. This is because the Bill provides that any conviction
will lead to automatic disqualification, regardless of the punishable period of
imprisonment. In contrast the Corporations Act only captures such
offences where punishable by imprisonment for a period greater than 12 months.[134]
Under the Bill and the Corporations Act, both
directors of companies and officials of registered organisations are automatically
disqualified where they are convicted of an offence that involves
dishonesty that is punishable by imprisonment for at least three months.[135]
Further, the automatic disqualification regimes in the Corporations Act
and FWRO Act apply where a director or official is convicted of any
offence that involves the management of the entity concerned.[136]
Concerns
about range of conduct justifying automatic disqualification
The PJCHR and some stakeholders expressed concern about
the expansion of the definition of prescribed offence in section 212 by proposed
paragraph 212(aa).
The PJCHR noted that ‘the bill would expand the categories
of offence where a person may be subject to automatic disqualification’ and
after discussing the impact of the expanded grounds for both automatic
disqualification and disqualification under the proposed disqualification
regime, concluded that due to the breadth of conduct captured, the measure is
‘likely to be incompatible with the right to freedom of association’.[137]
In discussing the various pathways for disqualification
(including automatic disqualification) the ICTUR noted:
Crucially, there is no requirement that legal infractions be
of a nature that impugns upon the moral character of the officers concerned.
While trade unionists can claim no exemption from the ordinary application of
the law it is unclear why even relatively minor legal infractions –
particularly those by an organisation rather than the individual themselves –
might bar them from office.[138]
In this regard it is again worth noting the CEAC has stated
that convictions for offences ‘that do not call into question the integrity of
the person and are not prejudicial to the exercise of trade union functions’
should not constitute grounds for disqualification.[139]
In this regard it is worth noting that proposed paragraph
212(aa) would allow officials to be disqualified for offences that may not
call into question the integrity of the person or are not prejudicial to the
exercise of trade union functions, and hence may pose a risk of placing
Australia in breach of its international legal obligations in relation to
freedom of association and autonomy of union processes.
Offences
related to disqualified officials
Proposed Division 4 of Part 4 of Chapter 7 of the FWRO
Act contains amendments that provide that a person disqualified from being
an official in an organisation may commit an offence if they are a candidate
for office, hold office, or act as if they hold office, in an organisation.[140]
Definition
of disqualified official
Proposed section 225 defines a person disqualified
from holding office in an organisation as:
- a
person who is not eligible to be a candidate for election to, or to hold an
office in, an organisation under subsection 215(1) as amended by item
9 of Schedule 1 (that is, a person who has been convicted of a prescribed
offence as defined in section 212, discussed above under the heading ‘Automatic disqualification’)
- a
person disqualified from holding office in an organisation under an order made
under proposed section 28M, at item 4 of Schedule 2
to the Bill, or proposed section 222. (Proposed section 28M
allows the Federal Court to disqualify a person from holding office in an
organisation when an application has been made under proposed sections 28
or 28A seeking the cancellation of a registered organisation's
registration or alternative orders and the Court determines that a ground set
out in the application is established wholly or mainly because of the conduct
of officers, including the specified person.)[141]
The note to proposed section 225 states that a person
disqualified from holding office in an organisation is also disqualified from
holding office in a branch of an organisation.
Offences related to disqualified officials
Proposed section 226 contains three offences, all of
which are punishable by a fine of up to 100 penalty units ($21,000),
imprisonment for up to two years, or both.[142]
The first offence is where a person is a candidate for
election to an office in an organisation and the person is disqualified from
holding office in an organisation. The second offence is where the person holds
office while disqualified. If the person is disqualified because they committed
a prescribed offence and were in office at the time of the conviction, they
will commit the second offence if they continue to hold office in an
organisation or a branch of the organisation either 28 days after their
conviction or when the Federal Court refuses their application for leave to
hold office despite the prescribed offence (see subsections 215(2) and (3),
216(3) and 217(3) of the FWRO Act for details).
The third offence is where a person is disqualified from
holding office in an organisation and the person acts as if they hold office. Proposed
subsection 226(3) has a number of elements that are required to be met to
prove that a disqualified person is acting as an official. The first element is
that the person is disqualified from holding office in a registered
organisation. In addition the person must also:
- exercise
the capacity to significantly affect the financial standing or other affairs of
an organisation or part of an organisation (for example a branch) or
- give
directions (not including advice given by the person in the proper performance
of functions that relate to the person's professional capacity) to the
management committee of an organisation or part of an organisation.[143]
In the case of a person giving directions to the management
committee of an organisation or part of an organisation, proposed paragraph
226(3)(c) provides that the person must know that the committee of
management is accustomed to act in accordance with the person's directions or
intend that it will do so.
Proposed subsection 226(4) provides that strict
liability applies to the physical element of the offences; that is, that the
person is disqualified from holding office in a registered organisation, if the
person is disqualified under an order made by the Federal Court under proposed
sections 28M or 222 of the FWRO Act (discussed above). The Explanatory
Memorandum notes that section 206A of the Corporations Act provides a
comparable offence in relation to disqualified directors that also applies
strict liability to the circumstance of whether or not a person is disqualified
from being a director.[144]
The Government argues that, as with the Corporations Act
offence, strict liability is appropriate in the circumstances as the Federal
Court will have made an order disqualifying a person from holding office under proposed
sections 28M or 222. The Government argues that applying a fault
element, whether intention, knowledge, recklessness or negligence, would
unnecessarily weaken the deterrent effect of proposed sections 28M and 222
because a person who has been disqualified by Federal Court order will be aware
that they have been disqualified.[145]
Importantly however, the imposition of strict liability does
not apply to disqualification under section 215 of the FWRO Act (automatic
disqualification). The Government notes that this is appropriate as there may
be questions as to whether a person was aware of the automatic
disqualification, in the absence of court order.[146]
The Scrutiny Committee noted the penalties proposed for
the offences in proposed section 226—100 penalty units or imprisonment
for two years, or both. This has not altered from the Previous Bill. Whilst
previously the proposed penalty was double that applying to the comparable
offence in existing 206A of the Corporations Act, the situation has
changed.[147]
This is because, as noted earlier in this digest, the Treasury Laws
Amendment (Strengthening Corporate and Financial Sector Penalties) Act 2019
increased the penalty for the comparable offence in the Corporations Act to
five years imprisonment. This means that the penalty applicable to company
directors for holding office whilst disqualified is currently more than double
that proposed by the Bill for officials of registered organisations.[148]
The Scrutiny Committee also reiterated its long-standing
view that ‘it is inappropriate to apply strict liability in circumstances where
a period of imprisonment may be imposed’.[149]
Application of amendments
Item 17 of Schedule 1 to the Bill deals with how the
proposed amendments to the disqualification regime will apply. Generally, the
amendments will apply upon commencement of the provisions in the schedule.
However, subitem 17(1) has the effect of providing that the automatic
disqualification regime will only apply to offences of the type listed in proposed
paragraph 212(aa) where the conviction relates to conduct engaged in after
the commencement of the amendments contained in Schedule 1. The only exception
to this will be where the offence covered by proposed paragraph 212(aa) was
already covered by existing section 212.
This will ensure that the changes to the automatic
disqualification regime will not apply retrospectively.
Item 17(2) relates to the disqualification regime
contained in proposed section 222. It provides which conduct or events
the court may consider when determining whether any of the grounds for
disqualification under proposed section 223 apply to an official.
Generally, the effect of item 17(2) is that grounds for disqualification
can only be established by conduct or events that occurred after the
commencement of the amendments (in other words the amendments will not operate
retrospectively).
However there is an important qualification to the operation
of item 17(2). Item 17(3) provides the court may have
regard to matters that occurred before the commencement of the amendments for
the purposes of proposed paragraph 222(2)(b); that is, in determining
whether it would be unjust to disqualify the person, having regard to:
- the
nature of the matters constituting the ground
- the
circumstances and the nature of the person’s involvement in the matters
constituting the ground and
- any
other matter that the court considers relevant.
As such item 17(3) will allow the court to consider ‘matters
that occurred prior to the commencement of this Schedule for the purposes of
determining whether it would be unjust to disqualify the person from holding
office’.[150]
Alternative disqualification mechanism
The amendments contained in Schedule 2 will provide that the
Court can, instead of cancelling the registration of an organisation, make
various alternative orders where the grounds for cancellation have been made
out because of the conduct of the officials or members of a particular part of
an organisation.[151]
Importantly, this includes disqualification of officials via a court order
issued as an alternative order to deregistration of a registered organisation –
the ‘alternative disqualification mechanism’.
As the de-registration regime is examined in detail later in
this Digest, only a brief summary of the differences between the grounds for
disqualifying an official under the alternative disqualification mechanism and
the Bill’s proposed disqualification regime and changes to automatic
disqualification are examined.
Grounds for
disqualifying an official under the alternative disqualification mechanism
Broadly speaking the grounds that can serve as the basis for
disqualifying an official under the alternative disqualification mechanism
relate to what would be colloquially understood as unlawful or otherwise
improper conduct by the organisation, its officials, or members.[152]
Whilst those grounds are examined in detail later in this
Digest, concerns about the compatibility of specific grounds with Australia’s
human rights obligations were raised.[153]
Interference
with the autonomy of union processes
Proposed subsection 28C(1) provides that a ground for
making an order to disqualify an official includes where the affairs of the
organisation or part of the organisation have been or are being conducted in a
manner resulting in the organisation or part, or officers or members of the
organisation or part, having a record of not complying with designated laws. Proposed
section 28G provides that a ground for making an order to disqualify an
official includes where obstructive industrial action (defined to exclude
protected industrial action) is organised or engaged in by the organisation (or
part of it), or a substantial number of members (or a class of members) of the
organisation .
The PJCHR noted that as many of the grounds for cancellation
(and therefore disqualification as an alternative order):
... could relate to less serious contraventions of industrial
law or to taking unprotected industrial action such that it is unclear how the
cancellation of union registration would necessarily be in the interests of
members or would guarantee the democratic functioning of the organisation. For
example, union members may have democratically decided to take unprotected
industrial action and hold the view it is in their best interests to do so...
restrictions on taking industrial action in Australian domestic law have been
subject to serious criticisms by international treaty monitoring bodies as
going beyond permissible limitations on the right to strike as an aspect of the
right to freedom of association.[154]
(emphasis added).
The ICTUR was also critical of allowing the
disqualification of officials ‘on matters of internal union democracy’[155]
(which members voting to take unprotected industrial action is an example of).
Disqualifying
officials for conduct they had no involvement in
Proposed sections 28D and 28E provide that a
ground for making an order to disqualify an official includes where the
organisation has committed serious offences, or where there have been multiple
designated findings against a substantial number of the members of the
organisation, a part of it or a class of members. The ICTUR argues that this:
... makes disqualification of an official possible on grounds
of conduct attributable not to that person but to the organisation.[156]
Limitations on alternative disqualification mechanism
Proposed section 28L provides that before the court
makes a disqualification order under proposed section 28M the Court must
be satisfied that the relevant ground justifying deregistration of the
organisation or making alternative orders was established wholly or mainly
because of the conduct of:
- officers
of a particular part of the organisation or
- members
of a particular class of members or of a particular part of the organisation.[157]
However, proposed paragraph 28L(2)(b) and subsection
28L(3) provide that before making an order to disqualify an officer,
exclude certain members or suspend rights, privileges or capacity the court
must be satisfied that it would not be unjust to make the order having regard
to:
- the
circumstances and nature of the officers’ or members’ involvement in the
matters constituting the ground and
- any
other matters the Court considers relevant.
Whilst it is possible that a ground for disqualification
could exist because of the conduct of members of the organisation with which an
official had no involvement, it would appear that proposed subparagraph
28L(2)(b)(i) may make such outcomes unlikely. Whilst lacking a ‘reasonable
steps to prevent the conduct’ defence such as that found in proposed
paragraph 223(3)(b), nonetheless the Court must specifically consider the
‘circumstances and nature’ of the officials ‘involvement in matters
constituting the ground’.
As such, in circumstances where an official was not
involved in the relevant matter, or (for example) was either unaware of the
matter or took steps to prevent it, it would appear unlikely that the Court
would disqualify them. However, the inclusion of a ‘reasonable steps’ defence
may clarify the issue.
Views of
members not considered
Proposed subsection 28L(4) specifically provides
that the organisation (rather than its members) must be given an opportunity to
be heard by the court before it makes an alternative order. Professionals
Australia criticised this aspect of the Bill on the basis that a court should
not determine what is in the best interests of an organisation’s members ‘with
no requirement to hear from or take into consideration’ their views.[158]
Likewise United Voice argued:
Workers decide what is in their collective interest - there
is no place for an external determination of this interest. It is both
paternalistic and an undue interference in the internal affairs of workers’
organisations.[159]
In that regard it is worth noting that the view of the
organisation (taken to mean the officials controlling it) may be different from
those of the members who either opposed the conduct supporting a ground for
disqualification or who caused it.
Key issues and provisions: deregistration of organisations
Currently Chapter 2, Part 3 of the FWRO Act deals
with the cancellation of registration of organisations (‘deregistration’).
Schedule 2 of the Bill contains a number of amendments to the existing
regime in the FWRO Act that are intended to expand the grounds for, and
streamline the processes related to, deregistration of organisations by the
Federal Court.
In addition, the amendments contained in Schedule 2 will
provide that the Court can, instead of deregistering an organisation, make
various alternative orders where the grounds for cancellation have been made
out because of the conduct of the officials or members of a particular part of
an organisation. In other words, the Court will have a range of options
available to it from the disqualification of officials (discussed earlier under
the heading ‘Alternative disqualification mechanism’) through to
cancellation of registration of a registered organisation.[160]
Grounds
for cancelling the registration of an organisation
The effect of the amendments proposed by Schedule 2 is
that the Federal Court can cancel the registration of an organisation when
certain grounds are established. Broadly speaking, those grounds relate to what
would be colloquially understood as unlawful or otherwise improper conduct by
the organisation, its officials, or members. Those same grounds may also form
the basis for alternative orders – such as disqualifying particular officials,
altering eligibility rules to exclude certain members, and suspension of rights
and privileges of the organisation and its members.[161]
Effect
of deregistration
To give context to the analysis of deregistration
provisions, a brief summary of the impacts of deregistration is provided below.
First, what deregistration does is remove the rights and
privileges accorded to the organisation by the Fair Work Act and other
legislation. This includes:
- automatic
standing to appear in FWC proceedings to represent the interests of members or
potential members, without having to seek formal permission[162]
- the
capacity to object to the registration of any competing association on the
basis that members of that association ‘could more conveniently belong’ to it
and that it would ‘more effectively represent those members’[163]
- automatically
being recognised as ‘bargaining representatives’[164]
in relation to proposed enterprise agreements and – as protected industrial
action is only available in relation to certain types of proposed enterprise
agreements – the ability to take protected industrial action[165]
- being
eligible to apply for right of entry permits under Part 3-4 of the Fair Work
Act and exercise the powers provided by those permits (including entering
workplaces to investigate possible breaches of the law or to hold discussions
with members) and
- enjoying
any rights and benefits provided by a modern award, order of the FWC or
enterprise agreement that binds the organisation or its members.[166]
As noted by the ICTUR, deregistration:
... deprives the targeted union of the capacities to perform
its basic functions, and effectively deprives its members of the freedom to
organise to defend their interests.[167]
Second, deregistration whilst removing the rights and
privileges noted above, does not (usually) end the existence of the
organisation. Unlike companies formed under the Corporations Act, the
separate legal personality of registered organisations is not always solely
dependent upon registration under the FWRO Act. This is because many
registered organisations are formed as separate legal entities under other
legislation (for example, incorporated associations) prior to registration
under the FWRO Act.
As such, the cancellation of registration of an
organisation does not always end the existence of the organisation as a
separate legal entity in the same way that liquidation under the Corporations
Act does in relation to companies formed under that Act.[168]
Further, paragraph 32(a) of the FWRO Act specifically provides that
deregistration does not cause an organisation to ‘cease to be an association’ –
only an association lacking the rights and privileges noted above, and hence
significantly constraining its ability to perform the purposes for which it was
established.
Applications to cancel the registration
of an organisation
As with the proposed disqualification regime, proposed
sections 28 and 28A of the FWRO Act, at item 4 of Schedule
2 to the Bill, provide that any of the following persons may apply to the
court for an order cancelling the registration of an organisation or
alternative orders:
- the
Commissioner
- the
Minister or
- a
person with a ‘sufficient interest’.
Wider
standing granted than in relation to liquidation of companies
The proposed amendments provide standing to a wider range
of person who might seek to have the registration of the organisation cancelled
than those with standing to wind up a company.
The Corporations Act provides standing to a range
of persons (shareholders, liquidators, creditors and ASIC) seeking to have a
company liquidated, who must have a degree of interest in the affairs of the
entity.[169]
The Bill allows a range of persons to apply to have an organisation
deregistered. It is expected that some of these are analogous to the range of
persons with standing to apply to have a company wound up, for example:
- the
Commissioner (equivalent to ASIC)
- an
official (equivalent to a director)
- member
(equivalent to a shareholder) or
- an
administrator of the organisation (analogous to a liquidator in some
circumstances)
as they are likely to be persons with a ‘sufficient
interest’. Other persons that may have standing to apply to have the
organisation deregistered arguably have no analogy under the Corporations
Act, including:
- another
registered organisation such as another union or an employer organisation (analogous
to a non-related or competing company)[170]
- an
employer that is a party to an enterprise agreement negotiated with the
organisation (analogous to an employer of a company, or a subcontractor of the
company) or
- the
Minister (no equivalent).
In noting these differences, Professionals Australia
expressed the view:
... the regime for the cancellation of registration of an
organisation contained in the Bill is far more expansive than the regime for
the winding up of companies in the Corporations Act. Further, the amendments
regarding cancellation of registration were not recommended by the Heydon
Report. There is no policy explanation for why they are appropriate or evidence
of any extant policy issue that they address.[171]
The ICTUR expressed concern at the breadth of standing
granted in relation to seeking deregistration orders and noted that deregistration
proceedings can:
... be initiated not only by the State but also by the
Minister, or indeed by any ‘person with sufficient interest’, which seems
openly to invite employers and lobby groups with an anti-union agenda to seek
to initiate this process at any opportunity. As drafted, this section is not a
recipe for industrial peace, and seems recklessly to seek to create an opportunity
for employers and other parties ‘with a sufficient interest’ to attempt to push
trade unions out of the formal industrial relations framework. In operation it
turns the current system of registration into one under which the basic purpose
of freedom of association – which should be guaranteed without restriction or
impairment – may be severely curtailed on minor grounds, at the initiation of
employers or other parties hostile to organised labour.[172]
Grounds for cancelling registration or making alternative
orders
The grounds for cancelling the registration of a registered
organisation, or making alternative orders, are:
- unlawful
or otherwise improper conduct of the affairs of the organisation
- a
serious offence committed by an organisation
- multiple
findings against members
- non-compliance
with orders or injunctions and
- obstructive
industrial action.[173]
These are discussed below.
Changes from previous Bill
Effect of
removal of ‘wider criminal findings’
The Bill removes ‘multiple findings against organisation’
as a ground for deregistration of an organisation. This included two or more
‘wider criminal findings’. This means that the grounds for deregistration will
– subject to the discussion below – have to be connected to ‘core’ workplace
laws. Nonetheless the PJCHR and some stakeholders raised concerns about the
breadth (and appropriateness) of the types of conduct captured by the Bill that
could lead to trade unions being deregistered for minor or administrative
offences, or offences linked to trade union activity considered legitimate at
international law. These concerns are discussed below.
Unlawful or
otherwise improper conduct of the affairs of the organisation
Proposed section 28C provides that a ground to deregister
an organisation or to make alternative orders is the unlawful or otherwise
improper conduct of the affairs of the organisation. More specifically, the three
forms of unlawful or otherwise improper conduct include:
- where
officers of the organisation or part of it have acted in their own interests
rather than the interests of members of the organisation or part as a whole (‘acting
in self-interest’)
- where
the affairs of the organisation or a part of it are conducted in a manner that
is:
- oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against, a member or a
class of members or
- contrary
to the interests of the members of the organisation or part as a whole (‘oppressive
or improper conduct’) or
- where
the affairs of the organisation or part of the organisation have been or are
being conducted in a manner that results in the organisation or part, or
officers or members of the organisation or part, having a record of not
complying with designated laws (‘history of non-compliance’).
Acting in
self-interest
Proposed paragraph 28C(1)(a) provides that a ground
for deregistration exist when officers of the organisation or a part of it
have:
... acted in affairs of the organisation or part in their own
interests rather than in the interests of the members of the organisation or
part as a whole.
This replicates proposed paragraph 28C(1)(d) of the
Previous Bill – with one notable change, the removal of the ‘substantial number
of officers’ requirement (discussed below).
This ground appears to reflect the fiduciary duties of
officials of registered organisations to avoid a conflict of interest between
their personal interests and any duties they have to the organisation or its
members discussed below under the heading ‘Relevance of fiduciary duties of
union officials’.[174]
Whilst not stated in the Explanatory Memorandum, it would
appear likely that determining whether officials had acting in their
self-interest would involve considering the conduct of the officials in light
of their statutory and fiduciary duties to both the organisation and its
members. This is because, as noted by the RCTUGC, one aspect of the fiduciary
duties of organisation officials is to avoid a conflict between their personal
interests and any duties they have to the organisation or its members, not to
make any secret profit from their position, to exercise their powers bona fides
and for a proper purpose, and to exercise their powers for purposes honestly
and reasonably believed to be in the best interests of the members of an
organisation as a whole.[175]
This would appear to suggest that where officers of an
organisation had breached their fiduciary duties, related statutory duties or were
otherwise acting in their self-interest instead of in the interests of the
members, this finding is likely to be established.
Oppressive
or improper conduct
Proposed paragraph 28C(1)(b) provides that a ground
to deregister an organisation or to make alternative orders is where the
affairs of the organisation or a part of the organisation have been conducted
in a manner that is:
- oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against, a member or a
class of members (proposed subparagraph 28C(1)(b)(i)) or
- contrary
to the interests of the members of the organisation or part as a whole (proposed
subparagraph 28C(1)(b)(ii)).
This ground is broadly consistent with section 461 of the Corporations
Act, and the Explanatory Memorandum notes it is adapted from paragraphs
461(1)(e) and (f).[176]
That section allows the winding up of a company on various grounds including
that the directors have acted in affairs of the company in their own interests
rather than in the interests of the members as a whole. However, unlike proposed
section 28C, section 461 of the Corporations Act does not provide a
stand-alone basis for disqualifying directors. Those differences aside the
grounds in the Corporations Act for winding up a company on the basis of
oppressive or improper conduct must be considered in the context of the duties
placed on company directors. The questions to be answered are:
- what
duties are owed by company directors and
- to
whom are they owed?
The duties may be broadly described as fiduciary duties,
common law duties and statutory duties.
About
fiduciary duties
Directors of corporations have duties in equity called fiduciary
duties and statutory duties specified in the Corporations Act.
Similarly the officials of a registered organisation have fiduciary as well as
statutory duties.
Fiduciary duties are obligations of trust
and confidence which equity will attach to one party in certain relationships
whereby the party owing the duty, the fiduciary, is bound to place the interest
of his principal ahead of his own.[177]
Essentially, equity will not allow the fiduciary to enter
into any engagement in which he or she has, or could have, a personal interest
conflicting with that of his principal.[178]
Nor will it allow him to retain any benefit or gain obtained or received by
reason of his fiduciary position or through some opportunity or knowledge
resulting from it.[179]
The fiduciary duties require directors to act in good faith in the company’s
best interests and to exercise their powers for a proper purpose.[180]
The courts have considered that the fiduciary duty
of company directors is owed, broadly speaking, to the company itself rather
than to individual shareholders or groups of shareholders. As noted in one
case:
Sectional interest may have to be taken into account and
balanced. In this respect I adopt the comment in Heydon JD, 'Directors' Duties
and the Company's Interests' in Finn P, 'Equity and Commercial Relationships'
(1987), 134 - 135:
The duty which is owed to the
company is not to be limited to, or to be regarded as operating alongside, a
duty to advance the interests of shareholders. There is no superadded duty
to shareholders ... And the directors' duty to the company is not to be
limited to the duty to consider shareholders ... To consider only the
short-term interests of the present shareholders would mean that every dollar
available for dividend should be paid out; that no attempt to re-invest funds
or expand the company's market by price cutting could be allowed...
This is where the relevant distinction arises. It is, in
my view, incorrect to read the phrases 'acting in the best interests of the
company' and 'acting in the best interests of the shareholders' as if they
meant exactly the same thing. To do so is to misconceive the true nature
of the fiduciary relationship between a director and the company... it does
not follow that in determining the content of the duty to act in the interests
of the company, the concerns of shareholders are the only ones to which
attention need be directed or that the legitimate interests of other groups can
safely be ignored.[181]
(emphasis added)
Essentially, the courts have determined that the fiduciary
duties owed by the director of a company are to the company itself and are not
limited to advancing the interests of shareholders.
This is consistent with the comments by the RCTUGC that generally
officials of registered organisations owe their fiduciary duties to the
entity itself rather than the members as a whole. However, there are
circumstances where officials owe fiduciary duties to the members as a whole in
addition to, or instead of, the organisation as a separate entity.[182]
Interpretations
of common law and statutory duties of directors
The starting point for the common law duties of company
directors is the consideration of the interests of shareholders:
It may be readily accepted that directors and other officers
of a company must act in the interests of the company as a whole and
that this will usually require those persons to have close regard to how
their actions will affect shareholders. It may also be readily accepted
that shareholders, as a group, can be said to own the company.[183]
[emphasis added]
However, there will be exceptions to this general rule.
Under the common law in some circumstances directors may act in what they
consider to be the best interests of the company as a separate entity from its
members (shareholders) even though this may not be in the best interests of
shareholders at that time.[184]
However, in most situations the interests of the company as a separate
entity from its owners (the shareholders) will coincide with that of
shareholders:
In my view the interests of shareholders and the interests of
the company may be seen as correlative not because the shareholders are the
company but, rather, because the interests of the company and the interests of
the shareholders intersect.[185]
These common law duties are overlaid by statutory duties.
The Corporations Act sets out the duties of directors in terms of ‘the
best interests of the corporation’ and provides for criminal or civil penalties
for a breach of those duties.[186]
Importantly the ‘business judgment rule’ in subsection
180(2) of the Corporations Act provides that a director is taken to have
exercised their powers with the necessary degree of care and diligence if they
made a ‘business judgment’. This requires the director to act in good faith and
for a proper purpose, to not have a material personal interest in the subject
matter at hand, be informed about the subject matter to the degree determined
reasonably appropriate, and hold a rational belief that the judgment is in the
best interests of the entity. In other words, the business judgment rule
ensures that directors are not liable for decisions made in good faith, with
due care and in the best interests of the entity.
In this way the business judgement rules largely reflects
the discharge of the fiduciary duties owed by directors discussed
above. The business judgment rule therefore essentially allows the discharge of
those fiduciary duties by a director to effectively act as defence against
alleged breaches of the statutory duties imposed by the Corporations Act,
which can, for example, serve as a basis for disqualifying a company director.
What the
Bill does
Whilst it is clear that the officials of registered
organisations, as is the case with company directors, owe fiduciary, common law
and statutory duties, proposed paragraph 28C(1)(b) changes who they
are owed to. It does that by imposing statutory duties on registered
organisation officials which place the interests of the members of the
organisation (or members of part of the organisation) as a whole over the
interests of the organisation as a separate entity. This would allow for the
deregistration of the organisation or disqualification of officials in
circumstances where the interests of members differ from those of the
organisation as a separate entity and where officials choose to act in the best
interest of the organisation as a separate entity at that time.
Importantly, the amendment overrides those circumstances
where there are fiduciary duties owed by officials to the members as a whole in
addition to, or instead of, the organisation as a separate entity. This means
that in relation to the measures proposed by the Bill, it is at least
theoretically possible that an official could:
- be
acting in the best interests of the registered organisation as a separate
entity from the members as whole for an honest, bona fide purpose at a
particular time, but
- those
actions may not necessarily be in the (short term) interests of the membership
as a whole, or part of the membership.
What the
Bill does not do
Whilst it has been argued that registered organisations
should be regulated in the same way as corporations a fundamental element is
missing—the Bill does not include an overarching safe harbour for officials of
registered organisations such as the ‘business judgment rule’ found in the Corporations
Act. The CFMEU noted that the idea that it is necessarily:
... improper for a union or official to elevate the interests
of one group of members over another is a nonsense. Trade union affairs involve
balancing what are often complex and competing needs and interests of a diverse
membership group. Officials are called on to make decisions about pursuing
certain claims on behalf of members, including unmeritorious ones, about
prioritising scarce union resources and about general policy positions. Not all
decisions will satisfy every member or group of members. That does not make
those decisions ‘corrupt’ or even ‘oppressive’ or ‘unfairly prejudicial’. By
joining a union, most members accept that the merit of union decision making is
best judged at the ballot box, not through complex and costly court processes.[187]
Unions NSW argued that ‘the nature of unions requires them
to balance the needs and interests of individuals against those of the broader
collective’ and that therefore ‘it is impossible to simultaneously meet the
interests or members collectively and individually’.[188]
The ACTU made a similar point:
For most widely representative unions, it is almost a daily
duty to conduct affairs in a manner that may arguably discriminate unfairly
between classes of members or part of the organisation. For example, a decision
whether to press for and accept a flat rate pay increase instead of a
percentage pay increase involves discrimination in favour of the lower-paid
members. Almost every contested negotiation – be it about a pay structure,
about a redundancy selection process, about conditions or employment or
trade-offs – involves the sometimes difficult elevation of the interests of one
group of members over those of another.[189]
In such circumstances the Bill may allow either the
organisation to be deregistered, or the officials in question to be
disqualified despite the fact that they may have made a genuine judgement as to
how to fairly balance the types of conflicting interests noted by the CFMEU and
ACTU at that point in time and had, as part of determining how to balance those
conflicting interests, decided it was preferable to act:
- in
the interests of the organisation as separate entity or
- in
the interests of one class of members over another (which could be viewed as
oppressive or discriminatory to certain other members).
This is because as drafted the Bill does not provide that
acting fairly between different classes of members or parts of the organisation
in such circumstances is permitted—as courts have held can, in some
circumstances, be the case for directors of companies.[190]
Likewise, unlike the position under the Corporations
Act the Bill does not contain a ‘business judgment rule’ linked to a
rational belief that the relevant conduct or decision was in the best interests
of the company.[191]
This means that under the Bill where the interests of members differ from those
of the organisation as a separate entity, officials who act in the best
interest of the organisation (and therefore in accordance with their fiduciary
duty to the organisation) will have no defence with respect to deregistration
or alternative orders proceedings (such as disqualification of officials) under
the FWRO Act.
In contrast the Corporations Act provides that in
some circumstances, acting in the rationally perceived best interests of the
company as a separate legal entity (rather than in the interests of
shareholders) and therefore in accordance with their fiduciary duty to the
company itself may provide a defence for alleged breaches of statutory
directors’ duties and in turn, disqualification orders being made under that
Act.
Removal of
‘substantial number of officers’ requirement
Proposed section 28C has been significantly altered
from the version that appeared in the previous Bill. One notable change is that
Bill not only removes references to corrupt conduct, perverting the course of
justice and abusing their position as officers, but also the qualifying words
‘a substantial number of the officers’ included in the Previous Bill.
Under the Previous Bill, a ground for disqualification
existed where ‘a substantial number of the officers of the organisation or a
part of the organisation’ or two or more ‘senior officers of the organisation
or a part of the organisation’ engaged in corrupt conduct, as defined in in proposed
paragraphs 28C(a) to (e) of the Previous Bill. This included,
for example, where a substantial number of officers or two or more senior
officers had acted in their self-interest rather than in the interests of
members.[192]
As the Bill removes the qualifying words ‘a substantial
number of the officers’` entirely from proposed section 28C, this means
an organisation can potentially be deregistered where only a few officers have:
- acted
in their own self-interest or
- engaged
in oppressive or improper conduct.
As such, this would represents a widening of the grounds for
deregistration on the basis of unlawful or otherwise improper conduct of the
affairs of the organisation, at least as it relates to those two limbs. This is
because proposed paragraph 28C(1)(a) and (b) now examine the
conduct of the organisation or part and/or the conduct of its officers, rather
than whether the conduct relates to a ‘substantial number’ of officers of the
organisation or part.
This means that it is the existence of unlawful or
otherwise improper conduct, rather than how widespread such misconduct is that
serves as a ground for deregistration. This means a small group of officials
who operate or conduct the affairs of the organisation improperly, in their own
interests or in a manner that results in designated laws not being complied
with by themselves, the organisation or a part of it could potentially serve as
grounds for de-registration.
History of
non-compliance
The Previous Bill provided that a ground for deregistration existed
where two or more designated findings or wider criminal findings had
been made against the organisation.[193]
That provision has been removed.
Proposed paragraph 28C(1)(c) of the Bill instead provides
that a ground to deregister an organisation or to make alternative orders exists
where the affairs of the organisation or part of the organisation have been or
are conducted in a manner resulting in:
- the
organisation or part of it or
- officers
or members of the organisation or part
having a record of not complying with designated laws.
Proposed subsection 28C(2) then provides that a court
must have regard to the incidences and age of occurrences of non-compliance
with designated laws to assess whether there is a record of non-compliance.
Whilst subitem 11(1)(a) of Schedule 2 provides
that instances of non-compliance are limited to those related to conduct that
occurred after commencement of the Schedule, subitem 11(2) provides that
once a ground has been established, a court may have regard to matters
occurring before or after commencement in determining whether it is unjust to
make a cancellation and/or alternative order.
The removal of the wider criminal findings from
this ground for deregistration means that the Bill somewhat narrows the range
of conduct that can justify deregistration, by confining it largely to ‘core’
workplace laws. However, as noted previously, concerns remain about the breadth
(and appropriateness) of the types of conduct captured by the Bill that could
lead to trade unions being deregistered for minor or administrative offences,
or offences linked to trade union activity considered legitimate at
international law.
Human
rights concerns related to deregistration for a history of non-compliance
In the Previous Bill, the ground for deregistration based
on multiple findings having been made against the organisation was set out in
proposed section 28D, which does not appear in the current Bill. The PJCHR
expressed concern about that provision, which may be applicable to the ground
in paragraph 28(1)(c) in the current Bill. The PJCHR, noting that where
deregistration related to designated findings of a less serious nature, or to
taking unprotected industrial action, stated:
it is unclear how the cancellation of union registration
would necessarily be in the interests of members or would guarantee the
democratic functioning of the organisation. For example, union members may have
democratically decided to take unprotected industrial action and hold the view
it is in their best interests.[194]
The PJCHR also noted that the existing restrictions on
taking industrial action in Australian domestic law have been subject to
‘serious criticisms’ by international treaty monitoring bodies that concluded
that they go beyond the permissible limitations on the right to strike as an
aspect of the right to freedom of association.[195]
The PJCHR concluded that cancelling the registration of a
registered organisation for undertaking conduct captured by designated findings
(especially in relation to less serious contraventions of industrial law or
taking unprotected industrial action) would further limit the right to freedom
of association. The PJCHR also noted that as a potential alternative order to
deregistration is excluding particular members from membership of the
organisation, such orders would ‘appear to undermine’ the rights of those
individuals ‘to be part of a union of their choosing’.[196]
The PJCHR further noted that the breadth of the proposed power to deregister an
organisation 'raises specific questions about whether it is sufficiently
circumscribed with respect to [the] stated objectives '.[197]
The PJCHR noted that the statement of compatibility with
human rights contained in the Explanatory Memorandum 'provides some arguments
about the proportionality of the measure’ and the ‘availability of certain
safeguards’ including that:
1. deregistration orders may be limited to a part of an organisation that
is undertaking the relevant conduct justifying deregistration and
2. workers will still be entitled to be represented by a union.[198]
However, the PJCHR concluded that ‘the role of the court
may not be sufficient to ensure that the limitation is the least rights
restrictive way to achieving its stated objectives, in view of the breadth of
the grounds for cancellation of union registration'.[199]
The concerns expressed by the PJCHR were echoed by some
stakeholders. The ACTU argued that ‘there are no equivalent provisions’ in the Corporations
Act that ‘allow for companies to be wound up due to a history of
non-compliance with law by the company, its directors or the members (that is,
shareholders)’ and as a result ‘a company can repeatedly rip off consumers, put
workers lives at risk, illegally dump toxic chemicals or produce dangerous
products and not be wound up’ but the amendments would allow a union to ‘have
its registration cancelled if a small group of members take unprotected
industrial action’.[200]
The ACTU also argued:
These amendments allow the actions of what may be a very
small part of an organisation or its membership to be sheeted home to the whole
of the organisation with orders for deregistration or the suspension of rights
and privileges etc. It is difficult to conceptualise any way in which such an
outcome could be fair to, or properly serve the interests of, members who may
find themselves denied certain or all of the benefits of representation by a
registered organisation because of conduct in which they had no involvement.[201]
It appears that the above concerns are equally applicable
to proposed paragraph 28C(1)(c).
Evidence
that can be used to establish unlawful or improper conduct
Proposed subsection 28C(5) provides that a finding of
fact in proceedings before any court (this would not include Fair Work
Commission decisions, as it is a tribunal, not a court) relating to the grounds
for cancelling registration or alternative orders set out in proposed
section 28C (such as disqualification of officers), are admissible as prima
facie evidence of that fact.
This means proposed subsection 28C(5) operates to
allow an applicant to use a finding of fact in another proceeding as evidence
of the fact that a ground for deregistration occurred. However, it will not
prevent the respondent from establishing the contrary by leading their own
evidence. The Explanatory Memorandum notes the purpose of proposed section
28C(5) is ‘to expedite’ applications made under proposed sections 28
and 28A where ‘relevant factual findings have been made in other
proceedings’.[202]
Serious offence committed by an organisation
Proposed section 28D provides a ground to cancel the
registration of a registered organisation or to make alternative orders exists
where the organisation is found, in criminal proceedings against it, to:
- have
committed an offence against a law of the Commonwealth or a state or territory
and
- the
offence is punishable upon conviction by a penalty for a body corporate of (or
equivalent to) at least 1,500 penalty units ($315,000).
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the threshold quantum
of penalty units (1,500) establishes ‘the gravity of the offence for a body
corporate’ as it is ‘equivalent to 5 years imprisonment for a natural person’.[203]
Further, the Explanatory Memorandum notes the use of the words ‘or equivalent
to’ in proposed paragraph 28D(b) are necessary as:
... not all States and Territories utilise the concept of
penalty units and some instead express penalties as fixed amounts. In such a
case where the fixed amount is equivalent to the monetary value of at least
1,500 penalty units, it will be sufficient to provide a ground for
cancellation.[204]
Multiple findings against members
Proposed section 28E provides a ground to cancel the
registration of a registered organisation or to make alternative orders exists
where designated findings have been made against a ‘substantial number’
of members of:
- the
organisation
- a
part of the organisation or
- a
class of members of the organisation.
The phrase ‘substantial number’ is not defined in the
Bill, nor does the Explanatory Memorandum provide any guidance as it its
meaning. Despite this, it would appear reasonable, based on its ordinary
meaning and case law in other areas of law, to conclude that a 'substantial
number 'of members of the organisation will be a number that is ‘considerable’
and more than ‘significant’.[205]
As such, what constitutes a ‘substantial number’ of members against which
designated findings have been made will turn on a case-by-case basis, and will
be based on various facts such as the total number of members in the
organisation, part of the organisation or class of members of the organisation
compared to the number of members against which relevant designated findings
have been made. As designated findings may be made against a substantial number
of:
- members
of a small part of the organisation overall or
- a
class of members that are a very small proportion of the overall membership of
the organisation
the ACTU expressed concern that the effect of proposed
section 28E would be that ‘the actions of what may be a very small part of
an organisation or its membership’ may be used as a basis for orders for
deregistration or the suspension of rights and privileges.[206]
The ICTUR also argued:
For less serious offences, or in the case of technical
non-compliance with industrial law (s. 28E and s. 28C (i)(c)), the rationale
for serious punitive action against a union and its entire membership, through
deregistration, is highly questionable.[207]
The Victorian Government raised a similar concern about
the use of the phrase ‘a substantial number’ in this ground for deregistration:
The Victorian Government is concerned about the lack of
clarity around what will amount to a ‘substantial number’ of members and the
possibility of an organisation, and a majority of members of that organisation,
being penalised for the actions of a smaller group of members who may be acting
in their own interests, without the support of the organisation more broadly.
This may lead to registered organisations being penalised for the industrial
action of members, even in circumstances where the action may not have been
supported by the organisation.[208]
Non-compliance with orders or injunctions
Proposed section 28F provides a ground to cancel the
registration of a registered organisation or to make alternative orders exists
where the organisation has failed to comply with an order or injunction made
under a designated law; or a substantial number of members of:
- the
organisation
- a
part of the organisation or
- a
class of members of the organisation
have failed to comply with an order or injunction made
under a designated law.
The represents a narrowing of the version of his ground
contained in the Previous Bill for two reasons. First, the Previous Bill
included where an organisation had failed to comply with an order or injunction
under ‘any law of the Commonwealth or a state or territory’. Further,
the definition of designated law has been narrowed from the Previous
Bill to capture only core industrial laws.
This means that in effect proposed section 28F
provides two narrower limbs for cancelling the registration of a registered
organisation, or making alternative orders under this ground than the Previous
Bill.
The first is where the organisation itself has failed to
comply with any order or injunction made under a designated law. The
second ground is where a substantial number of members of the organisation, a
part of the organisation, or a class of members of the organisation, have
failed to comply with an order or injunction made under a designated law.
That said, in relation to the second limb, this would only
apply breaches of designated law by a ‘substantial number’ of members of
the organisation, a part of it or a class of members (noting the criticisms of
the PJCHR, ACTU and ICTUR that this could still potentially mean that actions
of a very small part of an organisation or its membership may result in
deregistration of the entire union, with the resulting negative repercussions
for the broader membership not involved in the relevant breaches).[209]
As discussed above, what constitutes a 'substantial number
'of members will turn on a case-by-case basis.
Proposed subsection 28F(2) provides that a finding of
fact in proceedings before any court (this would not include FWC decisions, as
it is a tribunal, not a court) relating to the grounds for cancelling
registration or alternative orders set out in proposed section 28F is
admissible as prima facie evidence of the fact. This means proposed
subsection 28F(2) operates to allow an applicant to use a finding of fact
in another proceeding as evidence of the fact that a ground for
disqualification has occurred. However, it will not prevent the respondent from
establishing the contrary by leading their own evidence.
Evidence
that can be used to establish non-compliance with orders or injunctions
Whilst subitem 11(1)(d) of Schedule 2 provides
that instances of non-compliance are limited to failures to comply with orders
or injunctions made after commencement of the Schedule, subitem 11(2)
provides that once a ground has been established, a court may have regard to
matters occurring before or after commencement in determining whether it is
unjust to make a cancellation and/or alternative order.
Obstructive industrial action
Proposed section 28G provides a ground to cancel the
registration of a registered organisation or to make alternative orders exists
where the organisation or a ‘substantial number’ of members of:
- the
organisation
- a
part of the organisation or
- a
class of members of the organisation
engaged in certain types of industrial action. Proposed
subsection 28G(2) effectively provides that obstructive industrial
action is any industrial action (other than protected industrial action)[210]
that:
- prevented,
hindered or interfered with:
- the
activities of a federal system employer
- the
provision of any public service by the Commonwealth or a state or territory or
an authority of the Commonwealth or a state or territory or
- that
had, or is having or is likely to have, a substantial adverse effect on the
safety, health or welfare of the community or a part of the community.
Proposed subsection 28G(3) provides that a finding
of fact in proceedings before any court (this would not include FWC decisions,
as it is a tribunal, not a court) relating to the grounds for cancelling
registration or alternative orders set out in proposed section 28G is
admissible as prima facie evidence of that fact that the relevant ground
occurred.
This means proposed subsection 28G(3) operates to
allow an applicant to use a finding of fact in another proceeding as evidence
of the fact a ground for disqualification has occurred. However, it will not
prevent the respondent from establishing the contrary by leading their own
evidence. Likewise it will not prevent an applicant from leading evidence that
the organisation, a part of it, or its members engaged in obstructive
industrial action, even if there has been no judicial finding to that effect.
This means that evidence from FWC proceedings or other evidence could be used
to establish this ground, albeit such evidence would not be prima facie
evidence of the fact that obstructive industrial action had occurred. The PJCHR
noted:
... restrictions on taking industrial action in Australian
domestic law have been subject to serious criticisms by international treaty
monitoring bodies as going beyond permissible limitations on the right to strike
as an aspect of the right to freedom of association.[211]
Therefore the PJCHR concluded that cancelling the
registration of registered organisations for obstructive industrial action
‘further limits the right to freedom of association’.[212]
The ACTU was also critical of proposed section 28G on the basis that ‘a
union could have its registration cancelled if a small group of members take
unprotected industrial action’.[213]
The Victorian Government expressed a similar concern.[214]
Justifying non-deregistration of the organisation
Under proposed section 28J, if the court finds that
one of the above grounds is established it must deregister the
organisation unless the organisation can satisfy the court that it would
be unjust to cancel its registration having regard to:
- the
nature of the matters constituting that ground
- the
action (if any) that has been taken by or against the organisation or its
members or officers in relation to those matters
- the
best interests of the members of the organisation as a whole and
- any
other matters the court considers relevant.
The Queensland Law Society (QLS) noted that under current paragraph
28(3)(b) of the FWRO Act, in considering an application for cancellation
of registration, the Court must have regard to:
the degree of gravity of the matters constituting the ground
and the action (if any) that has been taken by or against the organisation in
relation to the matters.
The QLS went on to argue that as ‘there are significant
implications for an organisation in cancelling registration ... the court’s
discretion in these matters should remain as provided for in the Act’ but
further noted that ‘we do query whether the proposed change is in line with the
subject recommendations of the Royal Commission report.’[215]
Human rights
concerns regarding justifying non-deregistration of an organisation
Proposed subsection 28J(2) specifically provides
that the organisation must be given an opportunity to be heard by the court. In
its submission to the Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee in
relation to the Previous Bill, Professionals Australia noted that proposed
section 28J (as it now is) does not impose a ‘requirement to hear from or
take into consideration the views of the membership’ as a whole and argued that
as such the deregistration regime proposed by the Bill ‘potentially
contravene[s] Article 3 of ILO Convention 87’ as it:
... impact[s] significantly on the right of organisations and
their members to self-determination and to manage their own affairs without political
or industry interference.[216]
In effect, proposed paragraph 28J(1)(b) and subsection
28J(2) allow the organisation to point out to the court the nature of the
matter related to the ground for deregistration: a small group of members
acting in their own interests. The organisation could then point to any action
it had taken in relation to the matter constituting a ground for deregistration
(for example, disciplinary action against members who engaged in obstructive industrial
action) with a view to persuading the court that deregistration, in those
circumstances, would be unjust.
However, from a practical perspective it would appear that
despite the operation of proposed paragraph 28J(1)(b) and subsection
28J(2) deregistration of a union for the actions of a small group of
members acting in their own interests is a possible outcome. Unions NSW
criticised this potential practical outcome of proposed section 28J (as
it now is) and noted:
In this instance, if grounds have been established against a
union, it must stand before the Court and justify its very existence. In
considering if the deregistration is unjust, the Court must have regard to the
best interests of the members as a whole. The idea that a court would decide
what is in the best interests of union members, when considering whether or not
to effectively abolish a union, is offensive and misplaced. Unions are
democratic organisations whose membership hold the leadership accountable
through elections and internal union structures.[217]
(emphasis added).
In that regard it is worth noting that the ILO’s Committee
on Freedom of Association (CFA) has, in in relation to deregistration of trade
unions, noted:
To deprive many workers of their trade union organizations
because of a judgement that illegal activities have been carried out by some
leaders or members constitutes a clear violation of the principles of freedom
of association.[218]
Other powers related to deregistration
The Bill provides a range of additional orders that can be
made alongside an order to cancel the registration of a registered organisation
under proposed section 28K.
Proposed paragraph 28K(a) allows the court to
direct that an application by the de-registered organisation for registration
as an organisation is not to be dealt with before the end of a specified
period. The purpose of this section is to ensure that de-registration of an
organisation is effective, and cannot be undermined by the re-registration of
the organisation within a short period of time after deregistration is ordered.[219]
Proposed paragraph 28K(b) allows the court to
direct that an application for the registration of an organisation whose
officers are the same, or substantially the same, as officers of the
deregistered organisation is not to be dealt with before the end of a specified
period. The purpose of this section is to ensure that deregistration of an
organisation is effective and cannot be undermined by the re-registration of an
organisation that has the same, or substantially the same officers as those in
the organisation that was deregistered.[220]
Alternatives to deregistration
The Bill proposes that:
- where
a ground for deregistration has been established and
- the
court is satisfied that it would be unjust to cancel the registration of the
organisation
it may, as an alternative to ordering deregistration,
make various other orders (such as disqualifying officials).[221]
When can
alternative orders be made?
Proposed subsection 28L(2) provides that before the
court makes an order under:
- proposed
section 28M (the alternative disqualification mechanism)
- proposed
section 28N (exclusion of certain members), or
- exercises
power under proposed paragraph 28P(1)(a) (suspension of rights,
privileges or capacity) in relation to only part of an organisation or only
some members
the Court must be satisfied that the relevant ground justifying
deregistration of the organisation or making alternative orders was established
‘wholly or mainly because of the conduct of’:
- officers
of a particular part of the organisation or
- members
of a particular class of members or of a particular part of the organisation.[222]
However, proposed paragraph 28L(2)(b) provides that
before making an order to disqualify an officer, exclude certain members or
suspend rights, privileges or capacity the court must:
- after
having regard to the circumstances and nature of the officers’ or members’
involvement in the matters constituting the ground and any other matters the
Court considers relevant
- be
satisfied that it would not be unjust to make the order or exercise the power.
Proposed subsection 28L(3) provides that
before exercising the power under proposed paragraph 28P(1)(a)
(suspension of rights, privileges or capacity) in relation to the whole of an
organisation or all of its members the Court must be satisfied that it wold
‘not be unjust to exercise the power in that way’ having regard to:
- the
nature of the matters constituting the ground and
- any
other matters the Court considers relevant.
Proposed subsection 28L(4) specifically provides
that the organisation must be given an opportunity to be heard by the court.
Professionals Australia criticised this aspect of the Bill on the basis that a
court should not determine what is in the best interests of an organisation’s
members ‘with no requirement to hear from or take into consideration’ their
views.[223]
Likewise United Voice argued:
Workers decide what is in their collective interest - there
is no place for an external determination of this interest. It is both
paternalistic and an undue interference in the internal affairs of workers’
organisations.[224]
Criticism of interaction between alternative orders and
deregistration regime
The ICTUR was critical of the interaction between the
deregistration regime and the availability of alternative orders, noting that
deregistration as a form of sanction for union misconduct was ‘deeply alarming’
and:
Not only is it practically unheard of in industrialised
liberal democracies, but the section makes the ‘nuclear option’ of deregistration
the default response, rather than a last resort following the exhaustion of
alternative responses: if a finding is made under section 28 ‘the Federal
Court must cancel the registration’ (s. 28J, emphasis added). For the
default penalty to be tempered the accused organisation must demonstrate that
deregistration would be ‘unjust’, in which case the Court may consider imposing
a less severe sanction (s. 28L). This posits deregistration as the primary
response to alleged violations and makes lesser alternative sanctions subject
to the targeted union’s ability to appeal for clemency; such a legal structure
is highly questionable from both a policy and an international law perspective.[225]
The PJCHR expressed similar concerns, noting:
... there is no express requirement in the legislation that
the court only cancel registration as a last resort. Rather once a
ground for cancellation is established the court must cancel
registration unless it would be unjust to do so. While the court is required to
consider the interests of members in considering whether it would be unjust to
cancel registration, this is only one factor it must take into account.[226]
The PJCHR noted that it remained concerned that the role
of the court may not be ‘sufficient to ensure that the limitation is the least
rights restrictive way to achieving its stated objectives’ due to the breadth
of the grounds for cancellation of union registration.[227]
It further noted that as possible grounds for cancellation ‘could include two
or more relevantly minor breaches of industrial laws’ much would depend on ‘the
approach taken by the courts to their discretion not to cancel registration’.[228]
As such, it concluded:
the cancellation powers may operate in a manner that is not a
proportionate limitation on the right to freedom of association, given in
particular that cancellation of registration is not stated in the proposed
legislation to be a measure of last resort.[229]
Alternative
disqualification mechanism
Proposed section 28M provides the alternative
disqualification mechanism discussed earlier in the digest. In short it
provides that the court, as an alternative to deregistration of the
organisation, can disqualify officers of a part of the organisation that the
Court is satisfied is wholly or mainly responsible for the conduct justifying
deregistration, for a period the Court considers appropriate.
Proposed subsection 28M(2) provides that if the Court
does make an order disqualifying an officer, the officer is also disqualified
from holding office in a branch of an organisation.
Altering membership rules and excluding
certain members
Currently subsection 28(4) of the FWRO Act allows
the Court to alter the eligibility rules of the organisation to exclude certain
members, despite the effect of any membership agreement made under section 151
of the FWRO Act. Section 151 of the FWRO Act allows the rules of
an organisation to authorise the organisation to enter into agreements with
unions registered under state legislation to allow certain members of the state
union who are ineligible to be members of that union, to become members of the
registered organisation.
Proposed section 28N provides that where the Court
is satisfied of the relevant matters in proposed section 28L it may make
an order altering the eligibility rules of an organisation so as to exclude
from eligibility for membership of the organisation persons belonging to the
part of the organisation, or the class of members, mentioned in proposed
subparagraph 28L(2)(a)(ii) (that is, members of a certain part of the
organisation wholly or mainly responsible for the conduct establishing the
ground for deregistration). The Court can make an order excluding people
belonging to such a part or class of the membership despite any membership
agreement made under existing section 151 of the FWRO Act.
Where an order is made to alter the rules of eligibility,
those changes take place on the date of the order or a date specified in the
order.[230]
Proposed subsection 28N(3) provides that where the
Court makes an order to alter the eligibility rules to exclude certain members
it may make an additional order prohibiting an organisation, for a specified
period of time, from seeking consent under section 158 of the FWRO Act to
alter the organisation’s eligibility rules in such a manner as to have the
effect of restoring eligibility to the persons who were excluded by the order.
Suspension
of rights and privileges
Section 29 of the FWRO Act deals with making
alternative orders where deregistration of an organisation is deferred.
Currently subsection 29(2) of the FWRO Act allows the Court to make
orders suspending the rights, privileges or capacities of the organisation or a
part of the organisation, or of all or any of its members under various
legislation (or order made under such legislation), an enterprise agreement or
modern award. Further, the Court may also:
- give
directions as to the exercise of any rights, privileges or capacities that have
been suspended and
- make
orders that restrict the use of the funds or property of the organisation or a
part of the organisation, and orders for the control of the funds or property
for the purpose of ensuring observance of the restrictions.
Proposed subsection 28P(1) is consistent with the
above.
As with current subsection 29(4), proposed subsection 28P(2)
provides that an order under proposed section 28P will have effect
despite anything in the rules of the organisation, or part of the organisation,
concerned. Likewise as provided for in current subsection 29(5), proposed
subsection 28P(3) provides that any orders made under proposed section
28P:
- may
be revoked by an order of the Court upon the application of a party to the
proceedings or
- expire
on the date specified in the order.
Currently subsection 29(3) of the FWRO Act provides
that the court must reconsider the question of whether to deregister an
organisation once the relevant alternative orders (such as disqualifying
officials or excluding members) cease to operate, or upon application of a
party to the proceedings (whichever is earlier).
Proposed subsection 28P(4) is largely consistent with
existing subsection 29(3), as it provides that the Court must reconsider an
application to deregister an organisation once either:
- any
orders made under proposed section 28P cease to be in force or
- one
of the existing parties makes an application requesting that the Court consider
whether it is just to determine the substantive issues in the application
having regard to the evidence given in relation to compliance with any orders
made under proposed section 28P or any other relevant circumstances.
However, unlike existing subsection 29(3), proposed
subsection 28P(4) also applies to applications for alternative orders to
deregistration made under proposed section 28A.
Human rights concerns raised by the alternative orders
regime
The PJCHR and other stakeholders expressed a number of
concerns about aspects of the alternative orders regime proposed by the Bill.
First, the PJCHR it noted that empowering the court to
exclude particular members from union membership (as an alternative to
deregistration) 'appeared to undermine the capacity to be part of the union of
their choosing'.[231]
Second, the PJCHR noted that whilst deregistration orders
may be limited to the part of an organisation that had been undertaking the
conduct justifying the deregistration, employees 'will still be entitled to be
represented by union' as a matter of international law and therefore it appears
that the alternative orders regime is not be the least rights restrictive way
to achieve the Bill’s stated objectives (this is because of the breadth of the
grounds justifying the deregistration of an organisation).[232]
The ICTUR noted that the ILO’s supervisory bodies have
consistently articulated:
... due to the impact on workers’ capacity to exercise their
fundamental rights, procedures for deregistration of a union should be imposed
only as a last resort – after all reasonable alternatives have first been
exhausted.[233]
The ICTUR concluded that as standing to commence
deregistration proceedings is granted to ‘all and sundry’, a ground for
deregistration ‘may arise from the actions of certain members or union
leaders’ and ‘deregistration is a first – not a last – resort’ then given
that deregistration ‘would deprive the entire membership of the
industrial relations functions of their union’ it could be concluded:
... the CFA would also adjudge these entirely novel and
lamentable provisions on deregistration in the Ensuring Integrity Bill as
tantamount to dissolution, and therefore a violation of Convention No. 87.[234]
Key issues and provisions: administration of dysfunctional
organisations
Currently section 323 of the FWRO Act provides for
applications to be made to the Court for a declaration in relation to an
organisation or any part of it. If a declaration is made, the Court may approve
a scheme for the taking of action to resolve the matters to which the
declaration relates, which could include appointing an administrator for a
period of time.
Item 4 of Schedule 3 to the Bill repeals
existing section 323 of the FWRO Act and replaces it with proposed
Part 2A, which deals with the administration of dysfunctional
organisations.
Who can apply to have an administrator appointed?
Proposed subsection 323(1) enables the Commissioner,
Minister, organisation, a member of the organisation and ‘any other person
having a sufficient interest’ to seek a court order under proposed
subsection 323(3) (discussed below).[236]
Proposed subsection 323(1) provides standing to a wider range of persons
seeking to have an organisation or part placed under administration in a wider
range of circumstances compared to the Corporations Act.
Circumstances that can lead to an administrator being
appointed
Proposed subsection 323(3) provides that the
circumstances that can lead to an administrator being appointed include where
the court is satisfied:
- that
an organisation or part of an organisation has ceased to function effectively
- one
or more officers of an organisation or part of an organisation have engaged in
financial misconduct
- a
substantial number of the officers of an organisation or part have acted in
their own interests rather than in the interests of members of the organisation
or a part as a whole
- that
affairs of an organisation or part are being conducted in a manner that is:
- oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against, a member or
class of members or
- in
a manner that is contrary to the interests of the members of the organisation
or part as a whole or
- that
an office or position in an organisation or part of an organisation is vacant
and there is no effective means under the organisation or part’s rules to fill
it.
These are briefly examined below.
The organisation or a part of it has ceased to function
effectively
Proposed paragraph 323(3)(a) provides that
circumstances that can lead an administrator being appointed include where the
court is satisfied that an organisation or part of it has ceased to function
effectively and there are no effective means under the rules of the
organisation or part by which the organisation or part can be reconstituted or
enabled to function effectively.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that proposed paragraph
323(3)(a) is ‘modelled on existing paragraph 323(1)(a)’ of the FWRO Act.[237]
Proposed subsection 323(4) provides that an organisation or a part is
taken to have ceased to function effectively where the court is satisfied
officers of the organisation or part have:
- on
multiple occasions, contravened designated laws
- misappropriated
funds of the organisation or part or
- otherwise
repeatedly failed to fulfil their duties as officers of the organisation or
part of the organisation.
However, this list is indicative only—it does not limit the
circumstances in which an organisation or part ceases to function effectively.
Due to the breadth of the definition of designated laws an administrator
could be appointed where officers have engaged in conduct leading to minor contraventions
of designated laws, a point raised by the PJCHR.[238]
One or more officers of an organisation or part have
engaged in financial misconduct
Proposed paragraph 323(3)(b) provides that
circumstances that can lead to an administrator being appointed include where
the court is satisfied that one or more officers of an organisation or part
have engaged in financial misconduct in relation to carrying out their
functions or in relation to the organisation or part (that is breaching various
financial management duties under the FWRO Act, false accounting or
misusing funds).
A substantial number of the officers have acted in their
own interests
Proposed paragraph 323(3)(c) provides that
circumstances that can lead to an administrator being appointed include where
the court is satisfied that a ‘substantial number’ of the officers of an
organisation or part have, in affairs of the organisation or part, acted in
their own interests rather than in the interests of members of the organisation
or part as a whole.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that proposed
paragraph 323(3)(c) is ‘adapted from paragraph 461(1)(e) of the Corporations
Act’.[239]
However that paragraph deals with applications to have a company wound up (that
is, liquidated) rather than appointing an administrator.
That said, section 232 and paragraph 233(1)(c) of the Corporations
Act provide that where the conduct of the company’s affairs are contrary to
the interests of the members as a whole or oppressive to, unfairly prejudicial
to, or unfairly discriminatory against, a member or members whether in that
capacity or in any other capacity, members or former members of a company (or
persons ASIC thinks appropriate)[240]
to apply to the court for an order regulating the conduct of affairs of the
company in the future, which can include replacing the existing board of a listed
company with a board chosen by the court[241]
(although this is very rare).
Oppressive conduct contrary to the interests of the
members of the organisation
Proposed paragraph 323(3)(d) provides that
circumstances that can lead to an administrator being appointed include where
the court is satisfied that the affairs of an organisation or part are being
conducted in a manner that is:
- oppressive
or unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against, a member or
members or
- contrary
to the interests of the members of the organisation or part as a whole.
The Explanatory Memorandum states that proposed
paragraph 323(3)(d) is ‘adapted from paragraph 461(1)(f) of the Corporations
Act’.[242]
However that paragraph deals with applications to have a company wound up (that
is, liquidated) rather than appointing an administrator.
That said, section 232 and paragraph 233(1)(c) of the Corporations
Act, as described earlier, allow a court to appoint a new board where the
conduct of the company’s affairs are contrary to the interests of the members
as a whole or oppressive to, unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly
discriminatory against, a member or types of members.[243]
Vacant office or position and no effective means of
filling it
Proposed paragraph 323(3)(e) provides that
circumstances that can lead to an administrator being appointed include where
the court is satisfied that:
- an
office or position in an organisation or part is vacant and
- there
is no effective means under the organisation or part’s rules to fill the office
or position.
Proposed paragraph 323(3)(e) reflects existing
paragraph 323(1)(b) of the FWRO Act.
Differences between appointing administrators under the
Corporations Act and Bill
As noted above, the RCTUGC formed the view that the
governance requirements of registered organisations were more like corporations
than incorporated associations. However the RCTUGC did not make any
recommendations nor provide any detailed commentary on the appointment of
administrators to oversee dysfunctional organisations. The Explanatory
Memorandum states that the amendments in relation to placing organisations
under administration are:
... modelled and adapted from broadly equivalent provisions of
the Corporations Act, [to] ensure that governance issues within an
organisation, or individual branches or divisions, can be addressed promptly
and transparently to ensure that the interests of members are protected.[244]
To give context to the proposed amendments a brief outline
of the regime applicable to the appointment of administrators of companies
under the Corporations Act is provided below.
Appointing administrators of companies
Voluntary administration involves the appointment of an
independent, registered insolvency practitioner (an ‘administrator’) to take
control of a company that the Board thinks is insolvent or is likely to become
insolvent, for a relatively short period of time.[245]
As not all corporate insolvencies are caused by dysfunctional administration
this means that voluntary administration only deals with insolvency or
potential insolvency, rather than dysfunctional corporate governance generally.
Directors may appoint an administrator where the directors
believe that the company is insolvent or is likely to become insolvent at a
future time.[246]
In most cases the decision to place a company into voluntary administration is
made by the directors, and does not require approval of the shareholders,
creditors, ASIC or the court. However, the Corporations Act also
provides that a company may be placed under voluntary administration by a
liquidator or a creditor who has a charge over the whole or substantially the
whole of the company's property.[247]
The aim of voluntary administration is to maximise the chances
of the company and its business remaining in existence and, failing that, to
achieve a better return to creditors than the immediate winding up of the
company would achieve.[248]
Directors of financially troubled or insolvent companies are able to initiate
voluntary administration (and certain other forms of external administration).[249]
There are a number of reasons why they may do so, such as:
- to
achieve a better outcome for shareholders and creditors than maintaining the
status quo or
- because
they are ‘encouraged’ to take such action by ‘a number of legislative
incentives’.[250]
As noted above, once appointed an administrator takes
complete control of the company. Further, the directors lose their power to
manage the affairs of the company, even though they retain their office.[251]
The Corporations Act imposes a number of requirements in relation to
administrators including:
- they
must be registered liquidators and
- they
must also be independent of the company, its officers, its creditors and the
company's auditor.[252]
One of the key duties of an administrator is to investigate
the financial position and circumstances of the company. The administrator must
form an opinion as to whether it would be in the creditors’ interests for the
company:
- to
enter into a deed of company arrangement
- end
the administration or
- wind
up the company.[253]
Court
orders to deal with dysfunctional companies
The Corporations Act contains mechanisms outside the
appointment of a voluntary administrator by which certain persons can seek
court orders to deal with dysfunctional management of a company (noting this
does not automatically correlate to actual or likely insolvency – a
dysfunctional company can be solvent, and not every insolvent or potentially
insolvent company is managed in a dysfunctional manner).
As discussed above, sections 232, 234 and paragraph
233(1)(c) of the Corporations Act effectively provide that where the
conduct of the company’s affairs is contrary to the interests of the members as
a whole, or oppressive to, unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory
against, a member or class of members, or former members of a company (or
persons ASIC thinks appropriate)[254]
may apply to the court for an order regulating the conduct of the affairs of
the company in the future. This can include replacing the existing board of a
company with a board chosen by the court.
In essence, this means that in certain situations the
administration of a company can be directed or supervised by the court, or the
court can (in effect) appoint such persons as it sees fit to manage the
corporation. Technically however, this is not voluntary administration per
se.
Summary
of differences between administration under the Bill and Corporations Act
From the above it can be seen that the range of persons with
the power to place a company into voluntary administration is limited to
directors and in some (limited) situations, a liquidator or a creditor.
Further, voluntary administration deals with insolvency or potential
insolvency, rather than dysfunctional management per se.
Importantly, under the Corporations Act neither ASIC,
the Minister nor shareholders have standing to initiate proceedings to place a
company into voluntary administration. In contrast, the regime proposed by
Schedule 3 of the Bill will enable:
- the
Commissioner, Minister and the organisation
- a
member of the organisation and
- ‘any
other person having a sufficient interest’
to seek a court order to place the organisation or a part
of it under administration.[255]
Whilst the Corporations Act does provide an alternative mechanism that
could be used to deal with dysfunctional corporate management, it is rarely
used, is not voluntary administration per se and standing to bring such
applications is effectively limited to members and former members of the
company or persons ASIC thinks appropriate.[256]
As such, whilst the Explanatory Memorandum notes that the
administration regime is modelled off that contained in the Corporations Act,
the provisions referred to in the Explanatory Memorandum relate to voluntary
administration (which deals with insolvency) rather than court orders to deal
with dysfunctional management in and of itself (which is distinct and separate
from insolvency). Hence the analogy between the processes proposed by the Bill
and those referred to in the Explanatory Memorandum appears somewhat inapt.
This is because the Bill provides:
- standing
to apply to the court for a declaration that may result in an administrator
being appointed to an organisation or part of an organisation to a wider range
of persons than the Corporations Act provides standing to, to appoint
either a voluntary administrator or to seek court orders to deal with
dysfunctional corporate management
- a
wider range of circumstances that may lead to appointing an administrator than
the appointment of a voluntary administrator under the Corporations Act
or court orders dealing with dysfunctional management and
- a
wider range of purposes and objectives for the appointment of an administrator
than that provided for the appointment of a voluntary administrator under the Corporations
Act.
Process to appoint an administrator
The process for appointing an administrator is as follows:
- a
person with the requisite standing applies to the court for a declaration
that the circumstances discussed above exist in relation to the organisation or
a part of it[257]
- the
court then determines whether to make the declaration.[258]
If it does make a declaration then the court must not make an order unless it
is satisfied that the order(s) would ‘not do substantial injustice to the
organisation or any member of the organisation’[259]
- if
the court determines it is appropriate to make an order, it may make any
such orders as it sees fit including:
- the
appointment of an administrator for the organisation or part of it
- types
of reports to be given to the Court under the scheme
- when
the scheme begins and ends and
- when
elections (if any) are to be held under the scheme.[260]
Proposed section 323B provides that such orders
made by the Court (and any action taken by an administrator or other person in
accordance with them) overrides anything in the FWRO Act or the rules of
the organisation or part to which it relates, as well as any previous direction
or exemption made under the FWRO Act. However, there are limitations to
the operation of orders made under proposed section 323A including:
- if
a scheme provides for its own end, the Court may only approve it where it provides
that it does not end unless the Court is satisfied that the circumstances it
aims to deal with have been resolved or no longer exist and
- if
a scheme provides for an election for an office, the Court may only approve it if
it provides for the election to be conducted by the Australian Electoral
Commission (AEC) in accordance with Chapter 7 of the FWRO Act.[261]
Proposed section 323D provides that administrators
must advise the court in writing of any interest that could conflict with the
proper performance of their duties as an administrator within 21 days of
acquiring or becoming aware of the interest.
Proposed section 323E provides that the court may
terminate the appointment of the administrator at any time, including where the
administrator has notified the court of a conflict of interest under proposed
section 323D.
Functions and powers of administrators
Once appointed by the Court proposed section 323F provides
the administrator has the power to:
- control
the property and affairs of the organisation or part and manage that property
and those affairs
- dispose
of any of that property and
- perform
any function, and exercise any power, that the organisation or part, or any
officers, could perform or exercise if it were not under administration.
In addition, proposed subsection 323G(2) provides
the administrator with the power to require a person to attend on the
administrator at such times and to give them any information about the
business, property, affairs and financial circumstances of the organisation or
part as reasonably required. In addition, proposed subsection 323H(3)
provides the administrator with the power to require a person by written notice
to deliver any books specified in the notice that the person possesses.
Finally, proposed section 323K provides that an
administrator or person acting under the direction of the administrator, is not
liable in any action or proceedings in relation to:
- an
act done, or omitted to be done
- in
good faith
- in
the performance or exercise, or purported performance exercise
- of
any function or power of the administrator as an administrator under proposed
part 2A.
Offences
related to administrators
As noted above, administrators have the power to require
certain persons (for example, officers or employees of the organisation or
part, or a person who has possession of books related to an organisation or
part) to provide information, books or attend on the administrator as
reasonably required.[262]
Where a person does not comply with those requirements to assist an
administrator, the person commits an offence punishable by penalty of up to 120
penalty units.[263]
Further, those offences are strict liability offences.[264]
In a criminal law offence the proof of fault (for example,
intent) is usually a basic requirement. However, offences of strict liability
remove the fault (mental) element that would otherwise apply.[265]
In relation to the offence of failing to help an
administrator, it is a defence if the person has a reasonable excuse, proposed
subsection 323G(5) provides that it is a reasonable excuse for a person to
refuse or fail to give information on the ground that to do so might tend to
incriminate the person or expose them to a penalty. As such, the Bill preserves
the privilege against self-incrimination. Further, proposed subsection 323G(6)
also preserves legal professional privilege. However, in relation to the
offence of failing to provide the books of the organisation or part (or
allowing the administrator to inspect and make copies of such books) no such
exceptions are provided. (Although the defence of mistake of fact is available
for both offences under sections 6.1 and 9.2 of the Criminal Code.)
Changes from
Previous Bill
Whilst the offences discussed above are unchanged the
penalties associated with them have been adjusted. The Previous Bill provided
that the offences of failing to help an administrator or provide an
organisation’s books to an administrator attracted a penalty of up to 12 months
imprisonment and/or a fine of up to 50 penalty units.
The Bill removes the possible jail term of up to 12 months
for failing to help an administrator or provide an organisation's books on
request, in favour of increasing the maximum fine to 120 penalty units.
Criticisms
of penalties imposed in relation to provision of books to an administrator
The above changes would appear to be a partial response to
criticism from the Scrutiny Committee which, in relation to the Previous Bill,
raised concerns about the strict liability offences including:
- it
is not evident that the strict liability elements are 'clear and
straightforward' (as claimed in the Explanatory Memorandum to the Previous Bill)
because the requirements are framed by reference to what the 'administrator
reasonably requires' (the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill is expressed in
the same terms)
- the
Guide
To Framing Commonwealth Offences, Infringement Notices And Enforcement Powers
states that strict liability is only considered appropriate where the offence
is not punishable by imprisonment and only punishable by a fine of up to 60 penalty
units for an individual, whereas the strict liability offences in question were
subject to up to 12 months imprisonment.[266]
As a result the Scrutiny Committee reiterated ‘its
long-standing scrutiny view’ that it ‘is inappropriate to apply strict
liability in circumstances where a period of imprisonment may be imposed’.[267]
Whilst the changes remove imprisonment as a potential penalty, they also
increase the maximum penalty amount from 50 to 120 penalty units. In regards to
this change the Scrutiny Committee noted:
The Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences states that the
application of strict liability is only considered appropriate where the
offence is not punishable by imprisonment and only punishable by a fine of up
to 60 penalty units for an individual... In this instance, the bill proposes
applying strict liability to offences that are subject to... 120 penalty units...
The explanatory memorandum provides no justification for including penalties
above what is recommended in the Guide to Framing Commonwealth Offences.[268]
Human
rights issues raised by the proposed administration regime
In addition to the concerns regarding the proposed strict
liability offences raised by the Scrutiny Committee, the PJCHR noted that by
allowing for unions to be placed into administration, the proposed
administration regime engages and limits the right to freedom of association
and in particular the ‘right of unions to organise their internal
administration and activities and to formulate their own programs without
interference’.[269]
The PJCHR stated that international supervisory mechanisms have noted:
'[t]he placing of trade union organisations under control
involves a serious danger of restricting the rights of workers' organizations
to elect their representatives in full freedom and to organise their
administration and activities'.[270]
The PJCHR noted that the statement of compatibility in the
Explanatory Memorandum states that the measure has:
... the sole objective of protecting the interests of members
and guaranteeing the democratic functioning of organisations under the stewardship
of officials and a membership that respects the law and thus maintains public
order.[271]
The PJCHR noted that this objective is the same as that used
to justify the measures pertaining to the deregistration of unions[272]
and further that as the statement of compatibility ‘appears to identify
multiple objectives’ it is unclear ‘whether each of these objectives addresses
a substantial and pressing concern as required under international human rights
law’.[273]
The PJCHR noted that matters identified in the statement of
compatibility do not address the proportionality of the measure ‘but rather
address the aims or goals’ of the proposed administration regime.[274]
The PJCHR noted that the test of proportionality is:
... concerned with whether a measure is sufficiently
circumscribed in relation to its stated objective, including the existence of
effective safeguards.[275]
In this respect, the PJCHR expressed concerns regarding
the scope of conduct that may lead a union to be placed into administration. This
was because ‘the potential breadth of the definition of 'designated laws'’ meant
that the proposed administration regime makes it possible for unions to be
placed into administration (or other orders made) because of less serious
breaches of industrial law or for taking unprotected industrial action[276]
and that this may have ‘significant consequences in terms of the
representational rights of employees and any current campaigns or disputes’.[277]
After considering the Minister’s response to its concerns,
the PJCHR concluded:
... given the scope of the grounds for a declaration there are
questions that remain about whether the measure is the least rights restrictive
approach in all circumstances. Accordingly, at least in relation to some
proposed grounds for placing a union into administration, the measure would not
appear to be a proportionate limitation on the right to freedom of association ...
the measure may be incompatible with the right to freedom of association. In
order to improve the human rights compatibility of the measure, the committee
recommends that the measure be amended so that prior to placing a registered
organisation into administration the court must be satisfied that it is in the
best interests of the members.[278]
(emphasis added)
However, the Bill has not amended the position under the
Previous Bill. As such, there remains no requirement that prior to placing a
registered organisation into administration the Court must be satisfied that it
is in the best interests of the members.
Key issues and provisions: public interest test for
amalgamations
In the second reading speech for the Bill the Minister
stated:
This bill also introduces a new public interest test that
must be satisfied before registered organisations can merge. The Fair Work Commission
will consider the likely impact of the merger and an organisation's record of
compliance with the law as well as other matters of public interest. Parties
with sufficient interest will have the opportunity to voice their opinions
about the proposed merger. Before corporations are able to merge, they must
satisfy the regulator that the merger would not substantially lessen
competition or is otherwise in the public interest, so it is appropriate that
registered organisations must simply do the same.[279]
(emphasis added)
With regards to how company mergers are dealt with, in
relation to the Previous Bill the then Minister stated:
When companies seek to merge, they must first satisfy a
regulator—the [Australian Competition and Consumer Commission] ACCC—such a
merger won't substantially lessen competition. This competition test is like a
public interest test for companies seeking to merge. By comparison, unions
and employer associations face no similar test. Currently, the Fair Work
Commission has very limited ability to do anything other than effectively
rubber stamp a merger approved by just a bare majority of members. There are no
general public interest considerations and there is very limited scope for
affected parties to raise any concerns about a proposed merger of registered
organisations... So this Bill introduces a new public interest test... which
will take account of the broader impact of a proposed merger and also the
record of the organisations in complying with the law.[280]
(emphasis added)
As the Government appears to infer that the proposed
public interest test is modelled (at least in part) off the competition test
regulating company ‘mergers’, to give context to the proposed reforms a brief
background to the current laws pertaining to registered organisation and
company ‘mergers’ as well as the current interpretation of the ‘public
interest’ within the industrial relations context is provided below.
Currently, Chapter 3 of the FWRO Act deals with the
amalgamation of registered organisations. Whilst the term ‘amalgamation’ has no
definite legal meaning, it implies the combination of separate things into a
homogenous whole.[281]
However, this is somewhat of a misnomer as the process of amalgamation under
the FWRO Act involves at least one registered organisation being
de-registered and ceasing to exist. Whilst it is true that its assets,
liabilities and (often) members will ‘merge’ with another registered
organisation, in reality one entity remains (often re-named) and the others
cease to exist.
Likewise, whilst in Australia, the terms ‘takeover’ and
‘merger’ are used somewhat interchangeably to refer to the acquisition of
control of one company by another, the use of the word ‘merger’ is also
somewhat of a misnomer—one company acquires the other company itself (and hence
control of it) and therefore acquires its assets, liabilities and business.
Whilst sometimes the ‘target’ company may cease to exist after a takeover or
‘merger’, unlike the case with union amalgamations, this is not a requirement
for the takeover or merger to succeed. The text box below provides a brief
summary of the comparative regulation of company and registered organisation
‘mergers’.
Summary
of comparison of company and registered organisation ‘mergers’
Summary of previous law in relation to amalgamations of
registered organisations
The Explanatory Memorandum refers to subsections 90(2)
(later 103(2)) of the Workplace
Relations Act 1996 (WR Act) and states:
Applying a public interest test to the mergers of
registered organisations is not a new concept. Under predecessor
legislation, the Australian Industrial Relations Commission was required to
have regard to the public interest in performing its functions under the
registered organisations provisions. The public interest test in this Bill is
more limited and will only apply when the FWC considers applications for the
amalgamation of registered organisations.[285]
(emphasis added)
The suggestion that previous Commonwealth industrial
relations legislation imposed a public interest test on the amalgamation of
registered organisations (that is, that an amalgamation deemed to be contrary
to the public interest could be prevented) appears to be incorrect. Subsection
103(2) of the WR Act provided:
103 Commission to take into account the public interest
... (2) To
the extent that the Commission is performing its functions in relation to
matters arising under the Registration and Accountability of Organisations
Schedule, the Commission must take into account the public interest,
and for that purpose must have regard to:
(a) Parliament’s intention in enacting
that Schedule; and
(b) the
state of the national economy and the likely effects on the national economy of
any order that the Commission is considering, or is proposing to make, with
special reference to likely effects on the level of employment and on
inflation. (emphasis added)
For the reasons discussed below, it appears that the AIRC
didn’t have any discretion to refuse to make an amalgamation order if the
statutory steps outlined in the WR Act had been complied with. Put
simply, the requirement to ‘take into account the public interest’ imposed by
section 103 did not appear to apply in such a way as to enable an amalgamation
to be refused by the AIRC on ‘public interest’ grounds for a number of reasons.
First, the provisions dealing with amalgamation approval
ballots provided that approval must be given if certain conditions were satisfied.
Importantly, those conditions did not include a specific requirement
that the amalgamation was ‘contrary to the public interest’ as a ground for
refusal to approve an amalgamation ballot, or that an amalgamation had to be
‘in the public interest’ for an amalgamation ballot to be approved.[286]
Secondly, the WR Act specifically provided:
If the members of each of the existing organisations
concerned in a proposed amalgamation approve the proposed principal amalgamation,
the proposed principal amalgamation is approved for the purposes of
this Part.[287]
(emphasis added).
This appears to be a self-executing provision, and as such
contained no basis for the AIRC to refuse the amalgamation as it specifically
provided that if the proposed amalgamation was approved by the members of the merging
organisations, it was approved for the purposes of the legislation. No
discretion was conferred on the AIRC and no other pre-conditions were imposed
at that point.
As such, the WR Act effectively provided that an
amalgamation had to be if it met the relevant conditions – none of which
imposed a specific requirement that the proposed amalgamation be in, or not
contrary to, the public interest. Therefore, the section 103 requirement in the
WR Act that the AIRC ‘must take into account the public interest’ and
‘have regard to’ certain matters when exercising its powers under the
Registration and Accountability of Organisations Schedule (Schedule 1 of the WRA
Act, which included proposed amalgamations) does not appear to have provided
grounds for the AIRC to refuse to give effect to an otherwise approved
amalgamation.
Put simply, provided the approval process and conditions in
the relevant Part of the WR Act were met, section 103 did not appear to
have provided a mechanism for the AIRC to refuse an amalgamation. As such, section
103 of the WR Act was – in operation – not a ‘public interest test’, and
certainly substantially different to what is proposed by the Bill. Finally, in
the apparent absence of any court decisions that have considered the issues
discussed above it is worth noting that a requirement for a regulator to ‘take
into account’ the public interest when performing its functions does not appear
to be the same as imposing a ‘public interest test’ as a pre-condition to
approving an amalgamation, as is proposed by the Bill.
Summary of
current law in relation to amalgamations of registered organisations
The amalgamation process involves:
- internal actions and decisions by the management committees of
the organisations concerned (thereby enlivening the fiduciary duties
of the officers concerned)
- an application to the FWC and
- a vote of the affected members.[288]
Relevance of fiduciary duties
of union officials
Putting aside specific statutory duties imposed by the FWRO
Act,[289]
at equity officers of a registered organisation (such as a trade union) have,
as noted by the RCTUGC, been recognised by the courts to be fiduciaries and
therefore have fiduciary duties.[290]
Fiduciary duties are obligations of trust and confidence
which equity will attach to one party in certain relationships whereby the
party owing the duty (the fiduciary) is bound to place the interest of his or
her principal ahead of his own.[291]
The gist of the fiduciary relationship is that equity will not allow the
fiduciary to enter into any engagement in which he or she has, or could have, a
personal interest conflicting with that of his or her principal.[292]
Nor will it allow the fiduciary to retain any benefit or gain obtained or
received by reason of his or her fiduciary position or through some opportunity
or knowledge resulting from it.[293]
Importantly (and as noted previously) as with company directors, union
officials owe their fiduciary duties to the registered organisation as a
separate legal entity directly.[294]
Because union officials are fiduciaries, an officer of an
organisation owes a number of important duties to the organisation. Most
importantly the common law also imposes a duty to act in good faith and
for a proper purpose. However, in addition to those common law duties
the FWRO Act imposes the following duties on union officials, but
only in relation to the financial management of the organisation:
- to
discharge their duties and exercise their powers:
- with
care and diligence[295]
- in
good faith and ‘in what he or she believes to be’ the best interest of the
organisation[296]
and
- for
a proper purpose[297]
- not
improperly use his or her position or information obtained because they are or
were an officer or employee of the union (or a branch) to:
- gain
an advantage for himself, herself or someone else or
- cause
detriment to the organisation or to another person.[298]
Further, officials are also bound by the rules of the
organisation of which they are a member.
Essentially this means that whether under the common law,
equity or the FWRO Act, officials must exercise their powers bona fide
for the benefit of the organisation (or what they believe to be the best
interests of the organisation) rather than for personal gain.
In relation to amalgamation, because there will be a
transfer of assets from one organisation to another (including for example,
membership fee income streams) union officials must be satisfied that it is in
the best interests of the organisation to proceed with the amalgamation.
Further, they must not proceed with the amalgamation for reasons primarily
related to person gain – the amalgamation must be in the best interests
of the organisation as a separate legal entity. No requirement that the
amalgamation must also be in the broader ‘public interest’ is currently imposed
under equity, the common law or the FWRO Act.
Application for amalgamation and role of FWC
Once the organisations have resolved to amalgamate, an
application must be lodged with the FWC. The application must contain:
- a joint application in writing[299]
- resolutions of each Committee of Management in favour of the
proposed amalgamation[300]
- a scheme for amalgamation[301]
and
- an outline of the scheme which contains sufficient information to
allow members of the organisations in question to make an informed decision.[302]
The organisations may also lodge:
- an application for exemption from a ballot which, if successful,
would mean that only the members of the smaller organisation would participate
in the vote[303]
- an application for a ‘Community of Interest Declaration’ (CID)
which, if successful, lowers the number of votes which have to be cast in
favour of amalgamation before the amalgamation is approved[304]
and
- Yes and No statements in relation to the amalgamation.[305]
If the FWC approves the application, a ballot of affected
members will be conducted by the Australian Electoral Commission.[306]
This will typically be a secret postal ballot and the ballot paper will be
accompanied by the outline of the scheme of amalgamation and any Yes or No
statements.[307]
Importance of a Community of Interest Declaration
The organisations seeking to amalgamate may apply to the FWC
for a CID under section 43 of the FWRO Act.[308]
When determining whether to make the CID, the FWC must be
satisfied that ‘there is a community of interest between the existing organisations
of employees in relation to their industrial interests’[309]
which in turn occurs where the FWC is satisfied that ‘a substantial number of
members of one of the organisations’ are:
- eligible to become members of the other organisation or each of
the other organisations
- engaged in the same work or in aspects of the same or similar
work as members of the other organisation(s)
- covered by the same modern awards as members of the other
organisation(s)
- employed in the same or similar work by employers engaged in the
same industry as members of the other organisation(s)
- engaged in work, or in industries, in relation to which there is
a community of interest with members of the other organisation(s)[310]
or
- there are other circumstances that satisfy the FWC ‘that there is
a community of interest between organisations in relation to their industrial
interests’.[311]
The effect of the FWC making a CID is that it lowers the
number of votes which have to be cast in favour of amalgamation before an amalgamation
can be approved to ‘more than 50%’ (that is, 50 per cent plus one vote) of
formal votes cast in the ballot, rather than the usual two-step test:
- 25% of eligible voters vote and
-
50% of those votes are in favour of the amalgamation.[312]
This means that having the amalgamation approved becomes an
easier task where a CID is in force.
Standing of other persons
Submissions under the CID process may be made by a person
other than the applicants only with the leave of the FWC and only in relation
to any proposed alteration to the name or eligibility rules of an organisation
involved in the proposed amalgamation (subsection 54(3) of the FWRO Act and
Regulation 44 of the Fair
Work (Registered Organisations) Regulations 2009).
Standing of the Minister and related powers
Section 351A of the FWRO Act allows the Minister to
intervene in ‘proceedings before a court’ in relation to matters
arising the FWRO Act (including union amalgamations) if ‘the Minister
believes it is in the public interest to do so’. It should be noted however,
that this is only standing to intervene and make submissions. Although these
may be framed in terms of the broader effect of the amalgamation on the
community, the Minister’s standing does not of itself impose a ‘public
interest’ test on the proposed amalgamation.
However, the Minister has other powers that may allow them
to intervene in amalgamation cases. For example, section 604 of the Fair Work Act 2009
(FW Act) allows a ‘person aggrieved by a decision’ made by the FWC
(other than a Full Bench or Expert Panel decision) or the General Manager under
the FWRO Act to appeal that decision, with permission from the FWC.
Importantly, the phrase ‘a person aggrieved’ has been
broadly defined to extend to people beyond those who have a legal interest at
stake in the matter.[313]
This means that the Minister may be able to appeal any decision to approve an
amalgamation between two registered organisations, on the basis that they are a
‘person aggrieved by a decision’, provided the FWC grants permission.
Section 605 of the FW Act also allows the Minister to
apply to the FWC for a review to be conducted by the FWC of a decision, other
than that of a Full Bench or Expert Panel, if the Minister believes the
decision is ‘contrary to the public interest’. Subsection 605(3) allows the
Minister to make submissions to such a review. Again however, this is only
standing to request a review and then make submissions. Importantly, this does
not, of itself, impose a ‘public interest’ test on the proposed amalgamation.
Despite this however, the grounds for arguing against an
amalgamation are currently limited, and the range of matters and issues that
can be raised in submissions from persons given leave (including the Minister)
are substantially narrower than those proposed by the Bill.
Members
approval of the amalgamation
Assuming the members approve the amalgamation, after
consultation with the organisations, the FWC will fix ‘an amalgamation day’. On
that day:
- all but one of the amalgamating organisations are de-registered
- the eligibility rules of the amalgamating organisations are
merged and any rule changes set out in the scheme of amalgamation take effect
- any change of name of the amalgamated organisation takes effect
- members of a de-registered organisation become members of the
amalgamated organisation
- all assets and liabilities of a de-registered organisation become
assets and liabilities of the amalgamated organisation and
-
all pending proceedings involving a de-registered organisation are
deemed to instead involve the amalgamated organisation.[314]
It is the responsibility of the amalgamated organisation to
take such steps as are necessary to ensure that the amalgamation is fully
effective. The Federal Court can resolve any difficulties which arise.[315]
Summary of current law in relation to company ‘mergers’
and takeovers
In Australia, the term ‘takeover’ is often used to refer
generically to the acquisition of control of a publicly listed company.
However, the takeover rules apply to acquisitions of ASX-listed Australian
companies, ASX-listed Australian managed investment schemes (being investment
trusts), and also unlisted Australian companies with more than 50 shareholders.
Usually control of a company is obtained upon ownership of
more than half of a company’s voting shares. However, in some cases, control
can be obtained at a lower shareholding interest if, as a practical matter, a
person can determine the composition of a company’s board of directors.
Sometimes, the term ‘merger’ is used in lieu of ‘takeover’.
In Australia the term ‘merger’ is a commercial concept used to describe an
agreed acquisition of one company by another where the two companies are of
similar size. Unlike other jurisdictions (such as the United States), there is
no stand-alone process in Australia to effect a true merger which
results in the target company (as a separate legal entity) being subsumed into
the bidder company and the target company ceasing to exist. Instead, following
the transfer of assets and so forth to the bidder company, the target company
is wound up – but that process is separate to the takeover process itself
(which is about purchasing the target company, or enough of it, to gain control
over it).
In other words, the use of the word ‘merger’ is somewhat is
a misnomer – one company takes over the other, and acquires its assets,
liabilities and business.
Regulatory
framework regarding corporate takeovers
Takeovers in Australia are regulated by a combination of legislation
(Part 5.1 and Chapter 6 of the Corporations Act
2001) governmental policy (developed by the ASIC and the Takeovers
Panel, a specialist tribunal which resolves takeover disputes), and to a lesser
extent, the listing rules of the ASX. In addition, Australia has anti-trust
rules set out in the Competition
and Consumer Act 2010 (CCA) which are administered by the ACCC, foreign
investment rules set out in the Foreign
Acquisitions and Takeovers Act 1975 (FATA) and accompanying
Regulations, where proposed acquisitions requiring approval are examined by the
FIRB, and other rules specific to an industry (such as banking, broadcasting,
aviation and gaming) which may regulate or otherwise control ‘merger’ transactions.
The focus of this digest, however, is on the rules in the Corporations
Act, CCA and FATA as they pertain to company ‘mergers’.
Importantly however, currently company mergers are not automatically
subject to review unless the proposed merger:
- is
disputed by one of the parties or certain other persons
- raises
competition issues or
- involves
a foreign investor acquiring an Australian company.
As such, the majority of company takeovers in Australia are
not subject to any external review. In contrast Schedule 4 of the Bill proposes
for automatic review of all proposed amalgamations of organisations.
Policy underpinning
takeover rules in the Corporations Act
The takeover rules in respect of corporate entities reflect
policies that:
- the acquisition of control of companies takes place in an
efficient, competitive and informed market
- target shareholders have a reasonable time to consider a proposed
acquisition and are given enough information to enable them to assess the
merits of the proposal and
- target shareholders have an equal opportunity to participate in
the benefits of a change of control of a company (referred to as a control
transaction).[316]
There is no policy of automatically reviewing company take
overs/mergers or applying a public interest test to company takeovers in the Corporations
Act.
Takeover
structures
The most commonly used takeover structures are an off-market
takeover bid (for either a friendly or hostile deal), or a scheme
of arrangement (for a friendly deal only).[317]
The majority of friendly deals are affected via a scheme of arrangement
(largely because of their ‘all-or-nothing’ outcome).[318]
Takeover
bids
In simple terms, a typical takeover bid involves the making
of individual offers to purchase target securities (for example shares) at a
specified bid price. There are two types of takeover bid: an off-market bid and
a market bid. Virtually all takeover bids are off-market bids, because of the
ability to include conditions. Takeover bids are subject to various rules.[319]
When those rules are compared to the amalgamation process
for registered organisations, there are some similarities. For example, both
require a scheme/bid to be developed and information about the proposed
‘merger’ to be provided to members/shareholders.[320]
Importantly however, unlike the amalgamation of
organisations, where the takeover bid is not disputed by the parties, does not
raise any competition issues and does not involve foreign investment and the
process has complied with the relevant laws, the default position is
that takeover is approved without applying a public interest test.
Further, the ability of interested persons to prevent the merger from
proceeding are limited (discussed below).
Schemes
of arrangement
A scheme of arrangement can be used only for a friendly
acquisition of a company, and is frequently used to effect 100% acquisitions. A
scheme of arrangement is a shareholder and court-approved statutory arrangement
between a company and its shareholders that becomes binding on all shareholders
by operation of law.[321]
Schemes are subject to fewer prescriptive rules than
takeover bids and therefore can be more flexible, but are supervised by ASIC
and the courts. A standard scheme involves various steps, and overall has some
features in common with amalgamations of organisations: various matters are
agreed between the two entities, information is provided to the regulator for
review and also provided to shareholders/members, meetings are held and the
‘merger’ then proceeds.[322]
As with takeovers, the ability of interested persons to
prevent the scheme of arrangement proceeding and the resulting merger from
eventuating are limited to seeking declarations or orders from the Takeovers
Panel (discussed below).
No public interest test applied under the Corporations
Act 2001
From the above it can be seen that at no stage of a company
takeover/merger—be it by a takeover bid or a scheme of arrangement—is any form
of ‘public interest’ test automatically applied. Rather the only
automatic test that is applied is derived from the duties of the directors: the
takeover is in the best interests of the company as a separate legal entity.
However, certain types of ‘mergers’ may have other tests
applied by takeover regulators themselves, or by the regulators as a result of
applications by certain persons, as discussed below.
Company takeover regulators
The key takeover regulators are ASIC, the Takeovers Panel,
the ACCC and the FIRB.
ASIC
ASIC has general supervision of the Corporations Act
including the takeover rules, and has the power to modify and grant
relief from the Corporations
Act takeover rules (but not retrospectively).[323]
ASIC’s regulatory role in the administration and conduct of company takeovers
primarily involves:
- reviewing
and monitoring of documentation, disclosures and conduct in relation to bids to
ensure compliance with the takeover provisions and the purposes underlying
Chapter 6 of the Corporations Act
- providing
regulatory guidance and relief that improves commercial certainty and balances
the protections of Chapter 6 of the Corporations Act with the objective
of facilitating company takeover transactions and
- in
certain cases, taking enforcement action to protect the interests of investors
and promote their confident and informed participation in the takeover process
and financial markets generally.[324]
ASIC also has standing to apply to the Takeovers Panel for a
declaration of unacceptable circumstances or an order under section 657D or
657E of the Corporations Act (that is, to have the ‘merger’ blocked).
Takeovers
panel
The Takeovers Panel is established by Part 10 of the Australian
Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (ASIC Act) with
the powers conferred on it by the Corporations Act. The Takeovers Panel
is the primary forum for resolving disputes regarding company takeovers or
‘mergers’. It has the power to declare circumstances unacceptable (even if they
do not involve a breach of law) and to make remedial orders. In effect, the
takeovers panel can block a ‘merger’.
Subsection 657C(2) of the Corporations Act provides
that the bidder, target, ASIC or ‘any other person whose interests are affected
by the relevant circumstances’ may apply to the Panel for a declaration of
unacceptable circumstances under section 657A or an order under section 657D or
657E (that is, seek to have the ‘merger’ blocked). In turn, section 657A of the
Corporations Act provides that the Takeovers Panel can choose to make,
or decline to make, a declaration of unacceptable circumstances where it
‘is not against the public interest after taking into
account any policy considerations that the Panel considers relevant’.[325]
There is no definition of the term unacceptable
circumstances in the Corporations Act. Instead, the Takeovers Panel
is directed to use section 602, Chapter 6 of the Corporations Act and
the public interest as reference points to determine when circumstances are unacceptable.
Parliament considered that black letter law would be insufficient to deal with
all the possible circumstances that might defeat the policy of section 602.
Accordingly, it empowered the Takeovers Panel, as an expert body, to address
the issues by considering whether circumstances are unacceptable in terms of
those reference points.[326]
The Takeovers Panel is required to take the public interest
into account when considering whether or not to make a declaration of
unacceptable circumstances. Whilst ‘public interest’ is a difficult term to
define, the Panel takes its significance to mean that the Panel should not
merely consider the commercial interests and convenience of the parties and
their shareholders directly involved in a dispute before the Panel. Rather, the
Panel should consider wider issues such as: what signals its decision to make,
or not make, a declaration of unacceptable circumstances in an individual case,
will send to:
- the market and
- the wider investing community.
If such signals may improve the standards in the market and
the future efficiency of the market for control of companies in Australia,
consideration of the public interest in sending such signals may add weight to
the choice of making, or not making, a declaration of unacceptable
circumstances. Indeed, in some cases, it may sway an otherwise on-balance
decision definitely one way or another.[327]
Importantly however, declaration of unacceptable
circumstances blocking a merger will only be made by the Takeovers Panel when
it is not against the public interest. This means that a disputed merger
does not have to be in the public interest to be approved, only that it can be
blocked where it is against the public interest.
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
Section 50 of the CCA prohibits any direct or
indirect acquisition of shares or assets that would have the effect, or likely
effect, of ‘substantially lessening competition’ in a market in Australia (the
‘competition test’).
There are no mandatory pre-merger notification requirements
in the CCA. However, in practice, parties are encouraged to—and do—notify
the ACCC about proposed company mergers which may raise competition concerns. In
practice, the ACCC can conduct both informal
and formal
merger review processes.[328]
It has been suggested:
The ability of the ACCC to investigate any transaction and
the risks of court action to prevent a transaction from closing (or
post-closing court action for divestiture, declaration that a transaction is
void or penalties) have resulted in the practice in Australia of seeking
'informal clearance' from the ACCC where a proposed merger may raise
competition concerns in Australia. [329]
However, in regards to the informal clearance process it
does not provide assurances against subsequent third party litigation. Regardless
of the process used however, the parties to a merger or persons the Australian Competition Tribunal
(ACT) are satisfied have a ‘sufficient interest’ in the proposed merger are
able (in some circumstances) to have decisions relating to merger
authorisations made by the ACCC reviewed by the ACT.[330]
However, this digest does not consider the role of the ACT in detail.
Competition test
The factors to be taken into account in making a decision
about whether a proposed merger has, or is likely to have, the effect of
substantially lessening competition make the process an extremely complex one.
Readers are referred to the ACCC’s Merger
Guidelines[331]
and to the Bills Digest for the Competition and Consumer Amendment (Misuse of
Market Power) Bill 2016 for further information about the competition test.[332]
Whilst competition in the market is often cited as a factor
considered when determining the public interest, this does not mean that the
test applied by the ACCC to a particular ‘merger’ is a ‘public interest’ test per
se – it is not. Rather it is whether the ‘merger’ would have the effect, or
likely effect, of a substantial lessening of competition in a market in
Australia. This is a narrower test than the public interest, as competition is only
one aspect of the public interest.
Conduct of merger parties
The ACCC does not appear to apply a ‘history of lawlessness’
test per se when evaluating proposed mergers. However the ACCC’s merger
guidelines note that when applying the competition test it does consider the
conduct of the merger parties, especially in relation to prior coordinated
conduct between ‘merging’ businesses (that is, anti-competitive conduct and/or
breaches of the CCA) and:
Given the potential complexity of the assessment required, evidence
of prior coordinated conduct between firms in the relevant market may be highly
relevant, particularly if the merger is likely to reduce the number of
participants without undermining the conditions that facilitate coordinated
conduct.[333]
(Emphasis added).
This would appear to suggest that where one or both of the
‘merger’ parties has a prior history of breaching the CCA or there is
evidence of prior coordinated conduct between the merger parties that was
anti-competitive (but not tested in court) that factor is given substantial
weight within the competition test.
Summary of ACCC merger clearance
Whilst competition can be viewed as a part of the public
interest, the competition test itself is not equivalent to a broader public
interest test. However, the ACCC does appear to apply a ‘history of potential
or actual anti-competitive coordinated conduct’ test when assessing company
‘merger’ proposals, as part of the competition test.
In summary, the competition test applied by the ACCC,
whilst not automatically applied to every company merger and narrower than a
public interest test per se, nonetheless shares some similarities with proposed
subsections 72D(1) (record of compliance with the law) and 72D(3)
(impact of the merger on employers and employees in the industry or industries
concerned) of the FWRO Act, at item 7 of Schedule 4 to the
Bill, in terms of considering the issues of legal compliance and the economic
impact of the proposed merger on the industry, sector or economy.
Foreign Investment Review Board
Australia’s foreign investment review framework consists of
the FATA, the Register
of Foreign Ownership of Water or Agricultural Land Act 2015 and their
associated Regulations, and Australia’s Foreign Investment Policy (the Policy).[334]
Triggers for the exercise of the Treasurer’s powers under
the FATA
The FATA provides a legislative framework that
requires certain acquisitions proposed by foreign investors (such as purchasing
an Australian company) to be reviewed by the Treasurer (who receives advice
from the FIRB). The FATA also provides the Treasurer with a range of
powers, including the ability to order divestment of assets, to block proposals,
or to apply conditions to proposals, to ensure that they are not contrary to
Australia’s ‘national interest’.[335]
The national interest, and hence what might be contrary to
it, is not defined in the FATA. The FATA confers upon the
Treasurer the power to decide in each case whether a particular proposal would
be contrary to the national interest. The Government’s foreign
investment policy statements set out guidelines on national interest
matters in relation to foreign acquisitions (such as the purchase of a
controlling stake in an Australian company).[336]
Ordinarily a proposal that does not meet the requirements set out in the policy
would be regarded as being, prima facie, contrary to the national interest and
hence subject to rejection.
Whilst there are some similarities between the factors
considered in the ‘national interest’ test applied by the FIRB such as the
‘character of the investor’, competition and impact on the economy and the
community, and those factors are generally considered when determining the
‘public interest’, the two tests are not entirely the same and vary according
to the context in which they are used. This is because the public interest can
be viewed as domestically focused, whilst the national interest has
international aspects.[337]
Character of the investor
The FIRB policy document notes:
The Government considers whether the investor complies
with Australia’s laws, including following both the spirit and the letter
of Australian law, and acting in good faith in complying with any conditions
imposed by the Government.[338]
This includes, to use the Bill’s terminology, a ‘record of
compliance with the law’ aspect: a foreign investor with a history of breaching
Australian laws is likely to have their investment either rejected or subject
to stringent conditions. For example, the FIRB’s guidance
note on tax notes that ‘it is considered contrary to the national interest
if foreign investors operating in Australia do not meet their obligations imposed
under the tax laws’ and ‘compliance with Australia’s tax laws would be
determined by applying the usual legal principles and processes, including
reliance on objection or appeal rights by affected entities’.[339]
This means that being involved in disputes with the ATO
would not, of itself, lead to the national interest test being failed and the
investment being blocked – but failure to comply with the laws and failure to
comply with court orders once disputes are resolved would.
As such, it would appear that whilst the term ‘a history of
lawlessness’ is not specifically used, compliance with Australian laws is a
significant factor applied by the FIRB when determining if an acquisition is in
the ‘national interest’ (which as noted above, despite some differences,
overlaps at least in part with the ‘pubic interest’).
Summary table
The table below summarises the similarities and differences
between the current regime regulating the amalgamations of registered
organisations and those regulating company ‘mergers’.
Table 1: summary of registered organisation and
company merger processes and issues
Stage
|
Registered organisation |
Company |
Straight takeover[340] |
Competition issues |
Dispute: takeover panel involved |
FIRB clearance required |
Directors/Officers developing a ‘merger’ proposal
|
Directors and officials must act in best interests of the
company/organisation and therefore any actions to facilitate the merger must
be in the best interests of the company/organisation.
|
N/A if foreign company is developing proposal.
|
Directors/Officers considering a ‘merger’ proposal
|
Directors and officials must act in best interests of the
company/organisation and therefore any actions related to the consideration
of a merger proposal must be in the best interests of the company/organisation.
|
- Regulator
consideration or approval
|
Are the various matters set out in the FWRO Act
met?
Do the members approve the merger?
No public interest test applied.
|
Are the various matters set out in the Corporations Act
met?
Do the shareholders approve the takeover/scheme/sell the
required number of securities?
No public interest test applied.
|
Only applies where the merger raises competition issues.
Would the merger have the effect, or likely effect, of
substantially lessening competition in a market in Australia?
This involves considering any ‘history of potential or
actual anti-competitive coordinated conduct’.
No broader public interest test applied.
|
- Only
applies where there is a dispute between the takeover parties.
- Are
there unacceptable circumstances?
- This
requires the panel to take the public interest into account.
|
- Only
applies if merger involves foreign investor.
- Is the
transaction in the ‘national interest?’
- This
requires consideration of the ‘character’ of the investor, including whether
the investor complies with Australia’s laws.
|
Appeal of decisions / persons with standing to contest
decisions or approvals
|
Limited – but can extend to a ‘person aggrieved’ by the
decision’.[341]
|
Limited, but a ‘person whose interests are affected’ by
the relevant circumstances of the takeover can seek to have the merger
blocked by the Takeovers Panel.[342]
|
Generally limited to parties involved in the proposed
merger or a person ‘the Tribunal is satisfied’ has ‘a sufficient interest’ ,
without approval by the Australian Competition Tribunal.[343]
|
The Takeovers Panel is the main forum to resolve disputes
about company takeovers until the bid period has ended.[344]
Appeal rights are generally limited to the parties to the
takeover, ASIC and persons whose ‘interests are affected by’ the relevant
circumstances.[345]
ASIC, the Minister and certain other public office holders
and entities may commence court proceedings before the end of the bid period.[346]
|
No appeals or reviews are possible.
|
Key issue: new amalgamation regime for registered
organisations
Overview of proposed changes
The RCTUGC made no recommendations regarding amending the FWRO
Act in relation to the amalgamation of organisations. However, the
imposition of a public interest test on ‘mergers of registered organisations’
that would ‘allow relevant matters to be taken into account, such as the
organisations’ history of compliance with workplace laws’ was a Liberal Party
election commitment in both 2016 and re-stated as a Government commitment in 2018.[347]
Item 2 of Schedule 4 to the Bill and proposed
section 72A of the FWRO Act, at item 7 of Schedule 4,
require that the Full Bench of the FWC determine whether a proposed
amalgamation of two or more registered organisations is in the public interest,
before approving the amalgamation. Importantly, the application of the public
interest test is – unlike the case for most company mergers – automatic and
mandatory for all proposed amalgamations between organisations.
To give context to the proposed public interest test, a
brief overview of the interpretation of other public interest tests in
industrial relations legislation is provided below.
The public interest test in other industrial relations
contexts
Various parts of the FW Act require the FWC to apply
a public interest test. For example, subsection 189(2) of the FW Act
allows the FWC to approve an enterprise agreement that does not pass the better
off overall test if there are exceptional circumstances and doing so would not
be ‘contrary to the public interest’. It has been noted that whilst ‘is not
contrary to the public interest’ is a lower test than ‘in the public interest’[348]
the approach to determining both is the same.[349]
Further, when determining whether to terminate an enterprise agreement, section
226 of the FW Act provides that the FWC must be satisfied that the
proposed termination ‘is not contrary to the public interest’. In these (and
other) regards it has been held that in terms of the application of the FW
Act:
- the
expression ‘in the public interest’, when used in legislation, should be
treated as a term of art[350]
and is to be determined by making a discretionary value judgement on the
relevant facts that involves a balancing of interests including competing
public interests in a manner constrained only by the subject matter and the
scope and purpose of the legislation[351]
- the
public interest is broader than and distinct from the interests or views of
parties or persons directly affected (although there may be overlap between the
public interest and the interests of the parties) and refers to matters that
might affect the public as a whole[352]
- whilst
there is some overlap, the public interest does not embrace considerations
which are essentially derivative from the individual interests of the employer,
or employees. That is not to deny an individual interest may have an overlapping
public interest dimension, such as individual interests in freedom of
association or in freedom from certain kinds of discrimination[353]
- in
the context of enterprise agreements, the public interest may include ‘consideration
in maintaining a level playing field among employees in a particular industry
or sector’[354]
and in other contexts includes that the interests of employees are safeguarded,
ensuring that the businesses are able to efficiently operate without
unnecessary complications in their employment arrangements and facilitating
arrangements that permit and encourage the maintenance of employment in company
merger situations[355]
- the
public interest refers to matters that might affect the public more broadly as
a whole, such as the attainment of the objects of the relevant Act,[356]
the pursuit of desirable economic outcomes, or the maintenance of appropriate
industrial standards[357]
- consideration
of the public interest might involve balancing countervailing public interests[358]
that can include factors such as inflation, employment levels and maintenance
of proper industrial standards[359]
- all
of the relevant circumstances should be taken into account in considering what
is in the public interest, but the FWC should be guided by the likely
foreseeable consequences, rather than being guided by speculation about
possible consequences.[360]
Perhaps one of the best summaries of the notion of the
‘public interest’ within an industrial relations context (under the FW Act)
is provided in GlaxoSmithKline Australia Pty Ltd v Colin Makin:
The expression ‘in the public interest’, when used in a
statute, classically imports a discretionary value judgment to be made by
reference to undefined factual matters, confined only by the objects of the
legislation in question.[361]
As such it can be seen that the public interest test
applied in other contexts under the FW Act’s, confers wide discretion on
decision makers and involves considering various (sometimes competing) factors.
This is consistent with a definition of ‘public interest’ provided in a legal
dictionary:
A concern common to the public at large, or a significant
portion of the public, which may or may not involve the personal or proprietary
rights of individual people.[362]
Importantly however, the public interest is generally
broader than the issues of parties to a matter under the FW Act, although
there can be a degree of overlap. Hence in relation to the Bill it could be
argued that the impact of a proposed amalgamation on employees or employers in
a particular industry (for example) is both an example of a public interest
consideration but is also a consideration that may go to the individual
interests of affected persons (for example, the unions seeking to merge,
employers that may be impacted by the merger and the employees of companies in
the industry as a whole).
Standings of persons to make submissions
Proposed section 72B of the FWRO Act, at item
7 of Schedule 4, provides that the FWC must hold a hearing into the
proposed amalgamation and:
- it
must receive submissions in relation to the record of compliance with the law
of the organisations seeking to amalgamate and
- where
an amalgamation is not automatically blocked due to the history of
non-compliance with the law of the organisations seeking to amalgamate, the FWC
must receive submissions in relation to whether the amalgamation is in the
public interest.
Proposed subsection 72C(1) provides the following
persons and entities with standing at the hearings in relation to the record of
compliance with the law of the organisations seeking to amalgamate:
- the
existing organisations
- any
other organisation that represents the industrial interests of employers or
employees in the industry or industries concerned or that may otherwise be
affected by the amalgamation
- a
body other than an organisation that represents the interests of employers or
employees in the industry or industries concerned
- the
Commissioner
- the
Minister and a Minister of a referring state (within the meaning of the FW Act),
or of a territory, who has responsibility for workplace relations matters in
the state or territory and
- any
other person with a sufficient interest in the amalgamation.
Where an amalgamation is not automatically blocked due to
the history of non-compliance with the law of the organisations seeking to
amalgamate, standing is granted to the above persons and entities in relation
to whether the amalgamation is in the public interest.
Bill provides standing to a wider range of persons than
other regimes
Compared to the application of the competition test by the
ACCC in relation to company mergers that pose potential competition issues and
the range of persons with standing to commence proceedings with the Takeovers
Panel, the Bill explicitly confers standing on a wider range of persons.
The Corporations Act allows persons whose ‘interests
are affected by’ the relevant circumstances of the takeover to seek a
declaration of unacceptable circumstances and/or orders that would prevent the
company takeover in question from proceeding. Persons whose ‘interests are
affected by’ the relevant circumstances of the takeover could encompass the
parties to the proposed company merger, other companies, registered
organisations (both employee and employer) associated with the industry or
industries impacted by the proposed company merger, and potentially the
Minister. As a result, they are comparable to the range of persons and entities
granted standing in proposed subsection 72C(1).
This means that the standing provisions in relation to
matters before the Takeovers Panel and that proposed by the Bill are roughly
analogous. However, the merger regime overseen by the ACCC (which the second reading
speech to the Previous Bill referred to[363])
as noted above, confers standing on a narrower range of persons – essentially
only the merger parties and a person the ACT is satisfied has a ‘sufficient
interest’ in the proposed merger. Importantly, unlike the Bill, the merger
clearance regime under the CCA does not confer automatic standing on the
Minister. Further, the merger clearance processes imposed by the CCA are
not, unlike the regime proposed by the Bill, automatic and mandatory processes
that are applied to every proposed company merger – they only apply
where the takeover in question raises competition issues. The same is true for
the FIRB clearance process – it only applies where a company acquisition
involves a foreign investor and then only involves the Minister and relevant
parties – no standing to make submissions is granted to any other persons.
Human rights concerns raised by the proposed public
interest test
The PJCHR noted that the proposed public interest test
engages and limits the right to freedom of association, and ‘particularly the
right to form associations of one's own choosing’.[364]
Further the PJCHR stated:
International supervisory mechanisms have noted concerns with
measures that limit the ability of unions to amalgamate stating that '[t]rade
union unity voluntarily achieved should not be prohibited and should be
respected by the public authorities'.[365]
After considering the justification for the inclusion of a
public interest test, and the Minister’s Response, the PJCHR concluded that ‘the
measure is likely to be incompatible with the right to freedom of association’.[366]
In addition, some stakeholders raised concerns about the
imposition of a public interest test on amalgamations of registered
organisations. For example, in its submission to the Committee Inquiry into the
Previous Bill, the ACTU argued:
The current amalgamation regime is consistent with the
emphasis in international law on the self-determination of industrial
organisations and the intention of the [FW]RO Act to provide for their
democratic functioning and control. The amendments in Schedule 4 are an
egregious interference in the internal affairs of industrial organisations.[367]
Further, the ACTU argued that the proposed public interest
test ‘is far broader than the competition test’ imposed by the CCA and
that under the regimes applicable to company mergers:
Corporations can have an extensive record of not complying
with the law, including tax avoidance and wage theft, and not be prevented from
merging.[368]
Whilst that is true to a certain extent, as noted above
the history of a company complying with various laws is a factor considered by
the ACCC when applying the competition test, and by the FIRB when applying the
national interest test. Further, it is conceivable that – given the breadth of
factors that the Takeovers Panel can consider – that the history of a company
complying with various laws may be a factor considered by the Takeovers Panel
when determining whether to make a declaration of unacceptable circumstances or
to make various orders, which may have the effect of blocking a merger.
When is the public interest test applied?
Proposed subsection 72A(2) allows the FWC to
determine whether a proposed amalgamation is in the public interest ‘any time
after an application’ for amalgamation is lodged with the FWC. Further, the
effect of item 13 of Schedule 4 to the Bill is that the
amendments will apply to proposed amalgamations already being dealt with by the
FWC prior to the amendments commencing. The ACTU argued:
... the public interest test can be applied at any time after
the application is made, including before, during or after the ballot of the
organisations’ respective memberships. This drafting is nonsensical, because
the public resources expended by the AEC and the resources expended by the
organisations in the preparation and conduct of the ballot are wasted if the amalgamation
then fails the public interest test.[369]
Elements of the public interest test
Proposed section 72D sets out the public interest
test. The public interest test contains two elements:
- the
record of compliance with the law of the organisations seeking to amalgamate
- other
matters of public interest.
These are outlined below.
Record of compliance with the law
Proposed subsection 72D(1) provides that the FWC must
have regard to any compliance record events that have occurred in each of the
existing organisations that seek to amalgamate. Proposed subsection 72D(2)
provides that if:
- having
regard to the incidence and age of compliance record events in relation to each
of the amalgamating organisations the FWC considers that the organisation has a
record of not complying with the law then
- the
FWC must determine that the amalgamation is not in the public interest
(therefore preventing the amalgamation from proceeding).
Proposed subsection 72D(2) provides that the FWC is
to have regard to 'the incidence and age’ of compliance record events when
determining whether the organisation has a record of not complying with the
law. Whilst the Explanatory Memorandum is silent on the matter, the ACTU argues
that the FWC is:
not permitted to consider the nature or seriousness of the
'compliance record events' (only the 'incidence and age'), let alone the
relevance of the events (if any) to the merits of the proposed amalgamation.[370]
An alternative interpretation could be that the phrase
'having regard to' does not restrict the FWC from considering other factors
such as those mentioned by the ACTU. It could be argued that the phrase simply
requires that the FWC considers the number and age of compliance record events
as part of the overall process of determining whether the organisations seeking
to amalgamate have a record of compliance with the law.
Compliance record events
Proposed section 72E defines what constitutes a compliance
record event. A compliance record event occurs where:
- a designated finding is made against the organisation
- a
finding of contempt of court is made against the organisation relating to an
order or injunction made under a designated law or
- the
organisation, part of the organisation or a class of members of the
organisation organised or engaged in obstructive industrial action as
defined in proposed subsection 28G(2).[371]
A compliance record event also includes where:
- a designated finding is made against a person who was an officer of the
organisation at the time of the conduct to which the finding relates
- a
finding of contempt of court is made against a person in relation to an order
or injunction under any law of the Commonwealth, or a state or territory if the
person:
- was
an officer of the organisation at the time of the conduct to which the finding
relates and
- the
conduct was in the course of, or purportedly in the course of, performing
functions in relation to the organisation
- a
person is disqualified from holding office in an organisation while an officer
in the organisation.[372]
The definitions of ‘officer’ and ‘office’ in sections 6 and
9 of the FWRO Act respectively mean that references to officers of an
organisation includes officers of branches of organisations. As noted by the
Explanatory Memorandum this means:
... a finding that an officer of a particular branch of an
organisation organised or engaged in obstructive industrial action is a
compliance record event relevant to the FWC’s overall decision about an
organisation’s compliance record.[373]
The effect of linking the definition of a compliance
record event to designated findings is to capture a wide array of
conduct related to core industrial laws, or conduct related to the performance
of an official’s duties. As noted previously, due to the definition of designated
finding this mean compliance record events capture conduct that has
not necessarily attracted a court imposed penalty, or a criminal conviction.
Further a compliance record event can occur when a substantial number of
members engage in the relevant conduct and also where only a small part of the
organisation or a small class of members organises or engages in 'obstructive
industrial action'.
Other matters of public interest
Proposed subsection 72D(3) provides that where an
amalgamation is not blocked on the basis of the record of non-compliance with
the law of one or more of the amalgamating organisations, the FWC must have
regard to whether the amalgamation is otherwise in the public interest. In
making this determination, the FWC is to have regard to the impact the
amalgamation is likely to have on:
- employees
in the industry or industries concerned and
- employers
in the industry or industries concerned.
Proposed subsection 72D(4) then provides that the FWC
may have regard to 'any other matters it considers relevant'. The ACTU argues
that as drafted the public interest test is 'focused on economic considerations
and the commercial interests of industry and employers'.[374]
However, proposed subsection 72D(3) also imposes a requirement on the
FWC to consider the economic and commercial interests of employees in the
industry or industries concerned, not just employers. Further, whilst the
Explanatory Memorandum suggests that under proposed subsection 72D(4)
other relevant matters ‘could include the likely impact upon the industry or
industries concerned or the economy or an important part of it’,[375]
it confers on the FWC wide discretion to consider a range of matters, which, as
discussed above, is a common feature of a public interest test.
Changes from Previous Bill
The Previous Bill defined compliance record events as
including where wider criminal findings were made against the
organisation or an officer engaged in conduct purportedly in the course of
performing functions in relation to the organisation. It also captured where findings
of contempt of court were made against the organisation relating to an order or
injunction issued under any law of the Commonwealth, a state or territory,
rather than in relation to a designated law.
The effect of the removal of wider criminal findings
and restricting contempt findings against organisations to designated laws
is to capture a narrower array of conduct than the Previous Bill. Nonetheless,
for the reasons noted elsewhere in this Digest, due to the breadth of conduct
captured by the definition of designated laws, amalgamation could be
refused where minor or technical breaches of industrial laws have occurred.
What happens
when the public interest test is failed?
Proposed section 72F provides that where the FWC
decides that an amalgamation is not in the public interest:
- the
FWC must not fix an amalgamation day for the amalgamation and
- the
amalgamation does not take effect.
Further, proposed subsection 72F(2) provides that
where the FWC decides that an amalgamation is not in the public interest the
FWC must not approve the submission of the proposed amalgamation to a ballot of
the members of the organisations in question.
Changes apply to amalgamations commenced before amendments
commence
The effect of item 13 is that the amendments
contained in Schedule 4 of the Bill will apply to a proposed
amalgamation already being dealt with by the FWC prior to the amendments
commencing. Further, item 13 also provides that a reference to a
compliance event includes events that occurred before the commencement of the
Bill.
Whilst this means that when applying the public interest
test, the FWC will be required to consider compliance events that occurred
before the amendments took effect, it would appear that the effect of the
requirement imposed by proposed subsection 72D(2) to consider the age of
the compliance record events would allow the FWC some discretion when
considering the weight to give compliance events that occurred before the
amendments commenced.
Exercise of amalgamation powers only by Full Bench of FWC
Item 4 of Schedule 4 repeals and replaces
section 37 of the FWRO Act. Proposed subsection 37(1) provides
that the powers of the FWC in relation to the amalgamation of organisations are
exercisable only by a Presidential Member of the FWC (that is, the President, a
Vice President or Deputy President). However, proposed subsection 37(2)
provides that the public interest test for amalgamations function of the FWC is
exercisable only by a Full Bench of the FWC.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the effect of
requiring that the public interest test be applied only by a Full Bench of the
FWC is that a decision of a Full Bench on the question of the public interest
of a proposed amalgamation is not subject to merits review.[376]
The Government states:
The intent is not to restrict the right of organisations
affected by a decision to fair decision-making about whether an amalgamation is
in the public interest. Rather, the requirement for a Full Bench protects the
integrity of the decision-making process by ensuring that a decision on the
question of an amalgamation is made by a number of senior members of the FWC.
This would not be a new exclusion from merits review, rather, decisions on the
public interest test for amalgamations would simply fall into the existing
exclusion from merits review that applies to all decisions of the Full Bench of
the FWC under the Act and the FW Act.[377]
Further, the Explanatory Memorandum notes that the changes
contained in proposed section 37 do not exclude a right of judicial
review to the Federal Court or High Court, and hence decisions by a Full Bench
of the FWC will remain reviewable by the High Court under section 75(v) of the Constitution
or the Federal Court under section 39B of the Judiciary Act 1903.[378]
The ACTU was critical of the changes proposed by item 4,
arguing that other provisions in the FWRO Act ‘ensure that the powers
are exercised by a senior member of the FWC’ whilst still allowing parties
access to merits review ‘by way of an appeal to the Full Bench’ and:
It would be preferable and in the interests of access to
justice if s 37 did not distinguish powers in relation to applying the public
interest test and all FWC powers under Chapter 3, Part 2 of the [FW]RO Act
were exercisable only by a presidential member.[379]
This was because, the ACTU argued, judicial review is
‘expensive, time consuming and only available on limited grounds’.[380]
Changes
to when amalgamation can take effect
Currently section 73 of the FWRO Act provides that where
the FWC is satisfied that the members have approved the proposed amalgamation and
satisfied about certain matters, it must fix an amalgamation day (in effect,
the day the amalgamation occurs). Paragraph 73(2)(c) provides that one of the
current matters that the FWC must be satisfied about before fixing an
amalgamation day is that:
c) there
are no proceedings (other than civil proceedings) pending against any of the
existing organisations concerned in the amalgamation in relation to:
(i) contraventions of this Act,
the Fair Work Act or other Commonwealth laws; or
(ii) breaches of modern awards or
enterprise agreements; or
(iii) breaches of orders made under this Act, the
Fair Work Act or other Commonwealth laws
The drafting of the current paragraph 73(2)(c) is somewhat
internally inconsistent.[381]
It requires that there are not any proceedings ‘other than civil proceedings’
pending against the organisations under various laws. In other words, there are
no criminal proceedings pending against the organisations seeking to
amalgamate. Importantly however, breaches of modern awards or enterprise
agreements do not currently attract criminal penalties – they only attract
civil penalties (in earlier laws breaches of what are now termed modern awards
or enterprise agreements did attract criminal penalties).[382]
As such the internal inconsistency is between an apparent purpose of only
considering criminal proceedings, whilst specifically including certain
proceedings that are civil proceedings only in paragraph 73(2)(c)(ii).
Proposed paragraph 73(2)(c), at item 10 of Schedule
4, provides that one of the matters that the FWC must be satisfied about
before fixing an amalgamation day is that ‘there are no proceedings of the
kind’ contained in proposed subsection 73(2A) against the organisations
seeking to amalgamate. Proposed subsection 73(2A), at item 12 of Schedule
4, then provides that the relevant types of proceedings are:
- criminal
proceedings in relation to contraventions of the FWRO Act, the Fair Work
Act or any other law of the Commonwealth
- breaches
of orders related to criminal proceedings for contraventions of the FWRO Act,
the Fair Work Act or any other law of the Commonwealth and
- civil
proceedings for a contravention of a provision mentioned in a subparagraph of
paragraph (b) of the definition of a designated finding in proposed
subsection 9C(1) (at item 2 of Schedule 1). The relevant
provisions are: a civil penalty provision of the FWRO Act, FW Act,
Building and Construction Industry (Improving Productivity) Act 2016, a WHS
civil penalty provision of the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 or a
related a state or territory Occupational Health and Safety (OHS) law within
the meaning of the FW Act.
The Government argues that amendments made by item 12
to section 73 of the FWRO Act are:
required to clarify the scope of pending proceedings against
organisations which the FWC is satisfied of in determining whether to fix an
amalgamation day.[383]
However, after setting out the legislative history of
section 73 of the FWRO Act the ACTU argued:
the provision’s original intention, and the evident intention
of the existing provision, was to include only criminal proceedings and to
exclude civil proceedings.[384]
The ACTU argued that the amendment proposed by item 12
‘fundamentally alters the provision by extending its scope to civil
proceedings’ in a way that ‘is not even limited to breaches of awards or
enterprise agreements’ and therefore ‘significantly expands the scope of s
73(2)(c)’.[385]
Human rights
issues relating to the public interest test for amalgamations
As noted elsewhere in this Digest, various ILO conventions
also protect unions from being dissolved, suspended or de-registered and –
relevantly to the proposed public interest test for amalgamations – protects
the rights of workers to form organisations of their own choosing.[386]
The PJCHR referred to comments from international supervisory mechanisms of the
ILO in relation to the human rights engaged by the disqualification regime:
International supervisory mechanisms have noted concerns with
measures that limit the ability of unions to amalgamate stating that '[t]rade
union unity voluntarily achieved should not be prohibited and should be
respected by the public authorities’.[387]
The PJCHR noted that the right to freedom of association
may be subject to permissible limitations, provided certain conditions are met.
Generally a justifiable limitation on the right in question (in this case, to
freedom of association) must:
- address
a legitimate objective
- be
rationally connected to that legitimate objective and
- be
a proportionate way to achieve the legitimate objective.[388]
In relation to the proposed public interest test for
proposed amalgamations, the PJCHR, after considering the Minister’s response
concluded:
While it is a relevant safeguard that the decision as to
whether an amalgamation is in the 'public interest' is to be made by the FWC,
this alone appears to be insufficient to ensure that the measure constitutes a
proportionate limitation. As outlined above, the measure appears to be overly
broad such that it does not appear to be the least rights restrictive approach ...
the measure is likely to be incompatible with the right to freedom of
association.[389]
Appendix: Differences between the disqualification regimes
proposed by RCTUGC and the Bill
Table 2: Differences between
the disqualification regimes proposed by the RCTUGC and the Bill
RCTUGC model |
The Bill’s model |
Notes |
Paragraph 190(a)(i):
- the
person has or has been found to have contravened a civil remedy provision of
the FW Act, or a civil penalty provision of the FW(RO) Act or
the Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (Cth), and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
|
Proposed paragraph 223(1)(a) and 222(2)(b):
- a designated
finding is made against the person, and
- the
Court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the person.
|
Definition of designated finding – specifically the
inclusion of the BCI Act – means the Bill’s model applies to a slightly
broader range of conduct than that proposed by the RCTUGC, but narrower than
that put forward in the Previous Bill.
Bill provides that the court must be satisfied that it
would not be unjust to disqualify the person, arguably a lower
threshold than disqualification being ‘justified’.
|
Paragraph 190(a)(ii):
- the
person has been found liable for contempt, and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
|
Proposed paragraphs 223(1)(b), 223(2)(a), (b) and 222(2)(b):
- the
person is found to be in contempt of court in relation to an order or
injunction made under a designated law (proposed paragraph 223(1)(b)),
or
- the
person is:
- found
to be in contempt of court in relation to an order or injunction made under
any law of the Commonwealth or a state or territory (other than a designated
law); and
- the
person engaged in the conduct to which the finding relates in the course of
(or purportedly in the course of) performing functions in relation to any
organisation, and
- the
Court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the person.
|
Broadly comparable, however the Bill provides that the
court must be satisfied that it would not be unjust to disqualify the
person, arguably a lower threshold than disqualification being ‘justified’.
|
Paragraph 190(a)(iii):
- the
person has been at least twice an officer of a registered organisation that
has, or has been found to have, contravened a provision of the FW Act
or the FW(RO) Act or
- has
been found liable for contempt while the person was an officer and
- each
time the person failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the contravention
or the contempt, and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
|
Proposed subsection 223(3) and 222(2)(b):
- more than
one of the following findings is made against any organisation in relation to
conduct engaged in while the person is an officer of the organisation:
- a designated
finding
- a finding that the
organisation is in contempt of court in relation to an order or injunction
made under a designated law, and
- the
person failed to take reasonable steps to prevent the conduct, and
- the
Court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the person.
|
Definitions of designated finding means the Bill’s
model applies to a broader range of conduct than that proposed by the RCTUGC.
However, the removal of wider criminal findings means it applies to a
narrower range of conduct than the Previous Bill.
Bill provides that the court must be satisfied that it
would not be unjust to disqualify the person, arguably a lower
threshold than disqualification being ‘justified’.
|
Paragraph 190(a)(iv):
- the
person has, or has been found to have, at least twice contravened a provision
of the FW Act or the FW(RO) Act, and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
|
Proposed paragraph 223(1)(a) and 222(2)(b):
- a
designated finding is made against the person or
- the
person is found in contempt of court in relation to an order or injunction
made under any law of the Commonwealth, a state or territory and the conduct
engaged in relates to the persons performance or duties for any organisation,
and
- the
Court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the person.
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Definition of designated finding and the
requirement that only one designated finding is required to trigger this
ground (compared to two contraventions required in the model proposed by the
RCTUGC) means the Bill’s model applies to a broader range of circumstances
than that proposed by the RCTUGC.
The contempt provisions potentially capture a broad range
of conduct outside of core industrial laws, and hence are broader than what
was recommended by the RCTUGC.
Bill provides that the court must be satisfied that it
would not be unjust to disqualify the person, arguably a lower
threshold than disqualification being justified.
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Paragraph 190(a)(v):
- the
person is otherwise not a fit and proper person to hold office within a
registered organisation or branch, and
- the
Court is satisfied that the disqualification is justified.
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Proposed subsections 223(5) and (6), paragraph
222(2)(b):
- having
regard to any events mentioned in subsection (6),[390]
the person is not a fit and proper person to hold office in an organisation,
and
- the
Court does not consider that it would be unjust to disqualify the person.
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Whilst somewhat more directive than the model proposed by
the RCTUGC, the models are broadly comparable other than the fact that the
Bill provides that the court must be satisfied that it would not be unjust
to disqualify the person, arguably a lower threshold than disqualification
being justified.
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Source: RCTUGC, Final
report, vol. 5, RCTUGC, Canberra, 28 December 2015, Recommendation 38;
para 190; relevant provisions of the Fair Work (Registered Organisations)
Amendment (Ensuring Integrity) Bill 2019 and the Library’s own analysis.