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Federal Court of Australia |
Last Updated: 14 October 2019
FEDERAL COURT OF AUSTRALIA
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Pattinson [2019] FCA 1654
File number:
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Judge:
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Date of judgment:
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Catchwords:
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INDUSTRIAL LAW – pecuniary
penalties – agreed contraventions – false or misleading
statement about an obligation to engage in “industrial activity”
– application of “no ticket, no start” philosophy –
contravener knew statement was misleading, or was reckless
as to that fact
– analysis of the nature, gravity, character and seriousness of the
contraventions – whether history
of contravening conduct should inform the
court’s assessment of how objectively serious the agreed contraventions
were –
application of “course of conduct” and
“totality” principles – appropriateness of declaratory
relief
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Legislation:
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Conciliation and Arbitration Act 1904 (Cth) ss 5, 9
Crimes Act 1914 (Cth) s 4AA
Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (Cth)
Industrial Relations Act 1988 (Cth) s 170DF
Universal Declaration of Human Rights Art 20
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Cases cited:
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A & L Silvestri Pty Limited v
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2008] FCA 466
Ainsworth v Criminal Justice Commission [1992] HCA 10; (1992) 175 CLR 564
Athens v Randwick City Council [2005] NSWCA 317; (2005) 64 NSWLR 58
Auimatagi v Australian Building and Construction Commissioner [2018] FCAFC 191; (2018)
363 ALR 246
Aussie Airlines Pty Ltd v Australian Airlines Ltd (1996) 68 FCR
406
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Barker [2017]
FCCA 1143
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (“Cardigan Street
Case”) [2018] FCA 957
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (Aldi and Altona North
Case) (No 2)
[2019] FCA 1667
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (Geelong Grammar School
Case) (No
2) [2019] FCA 1498
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (No 2) [2018] FCA 1968
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (Syme Library Case)
(No 2)
[2019] FCA 1555
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (The Bendigo Theatre
Case) (No
2) [2018] FCA 1211
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (The Laverton North
and Cheltenham
Premises Case) (No 2) [2019] FCA 973
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (The Nine Brisbane Sites
Appeal)
(2019) 286 IR 336
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union [2019] FCA 468
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2017] FCAFC 53; (2017) 249 FCR 458
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2017] FCAFC 113; (2017) 254 FCR 68
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (The Quest Apartments Case) (No
2) [2017] FCA 163; (2018)
358 ALR 725
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (Werribee Shopping Centre Case) [2017] FCA
1235
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v D’Arcy &
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union [2019] FCCA 563
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Hassett [2019]
FCA 855
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Moses & Ors
[2017] FCCA 2738
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Powell [2019]
FCA 972
Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Yazaki
Corporation (2018) 262 FCR 243
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v ACN 117 372 915 Pty
Limited (in liq) (formerly Advanced Medical Institute Pty Limited) [2015]
FCA 1441
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Francis [2004] FCA 487; (2004) 142
FCR 1
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v MSY Technology Pty Ltd
& Ors [2012] FCAFC 56; (2012) 201 FCR 378
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Reckitt Benckiser
(Australia) Pty Ltd (2016) 340 ALR 25
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v TPG Internet Pty
Ltd [2013] HCA 54; (2013) 250 CLR 640
Australian Ophthalmic Supplies v McAlary-Smith [2008] FCAFC 8; (2008) 165 FCR
560
Bob Jane Corporation Pty Ltd v ACN 149 801 141 Pty Ltd [2016] FCA
1129
Commonwealth v Director, Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate
[2015] HCA 46; (2015) 258 CLR 482
Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Australian
Building and Construction Commissioner (The Broadway on Ann
Case) [2018]
FCAFC 126
Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Australian
Building and Construction Commissioner (The Non-Indemnification
Personal Payment
Case) [2018] FCAFC 97; (2018) 264 FCR 155
Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Australian
Building and Construction Commissioner [2018] HCASL 380
Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Milin
Builders Pty Ltd [2019] FCA 1070
Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v Australian Competition
and Consumer Commissioner
![]() ![]() Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union v Stuart-Mahoney
[2011] FCA 56
Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (No 2) [2015] FCA 1462
Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction,
Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (No 2) [2016] FCA 436
Fair Work Ombudsman v Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and
Energy Union (the Hutchison Ports Appeal) [2019] FCAFC 69
Flight Centre Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (No
2) [2018] FCAFC 53; (2018) 260 FCR 68
Hamersley Iron Pty Ltd v National Competition Council [2008] FCA 598; (2008) 247 ALR
385
Lifeplan Australia Friendly Society Ltd v Ancient Order of Foresters in
Victoria Friendly Society Limited (No 2) [2017] FCAFC 99
Markarian v The Queen [2005] HCA 25; (2005) 228 CLR 357
NW Frozen Foods v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
[1996] FCA 1134; (1996) 71 FCR 285
Ogawa v Attorney-General (No 2) [2019] FCA 1003
Parker v Australian Building and Construction Commissioner [2019] FCAFC 56; (2019)
365 ALR 402
Radisich v McDonald and Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union
[2012] FMCA 919
Radisich v Molina & Ors (No 2) [2011] FMCA 66
Royer v Western Australia (2009) [2009] WASCA 139; 197 A Crim R 319
Singtel Optus Pty Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission
[2012] FCAFC 20; (2012) 287 ALR 249
Smith v Comcare (2014) 64 AAR 205
Stuart-Mahoney v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union &
Anor (No 2) [2008] FMCA 1015
Tobacco Institute of Australia Ltd v Australian Federation of Consumer
Organisations Inc (No 2) [1993] FCA 105; (1993) 41 FCR 89
Trade Practices Commission v CSR Ltd (1991) ATPR 41-076
Transport Workers' Union of Australia v Registered Organised
Commissioner (No 2) [2018] FCAFC 203; (2018) 363 ALR 464
Truth About Motorways Pty Ltd v Macquarie Infrastructure Investment
Management Limited (2000) 200 CLR 591
Veen v The Queen [1979] HCA 7; (1979) 143 CLR 458
Veen v The Queen (No 2) [1988] HCA 14; (1988) 164 CLR 465
Victoria International Container Terminal Ltd (t/as VICT) v Maritime
Union of Australia [2017] VSC 762
Warramunda Village v Pryde [2001] FCA 61; (2001) 105 FCR 437
Wong v The Queen [2001] HCA 64; (2001) 207 CLR 584
Yates Property Corporation Pty Ltd v Boland (1998) 89 FCR 78
Yazaki Corporation & Anor v Australian Competition and Consumer
Commission [2018] HCATrans 215
Creighton B and Stewart A, Labour Law – an introduction (3rd
ed, Federation Press, 2000)
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Registry:
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Victoria
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Division:
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Fair Work Division
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National Practice Area:
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Employment & Industrial Relations
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Category:
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Catchwords
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Number of paragraphs:
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Solicitor for the Applicant:
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Minter Ellison
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Counsel for the Respondents:
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Mr P Boncardo
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Solicitors for the Respondents:
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2 April 2019 - 24 July 2019 – Construction, Forestry, Maritime,
Mining and Energy Union
From 25 July 2019 – Slater and Gordon |
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ORDERS
THE COURT ORDERS THAT:
SNADEN J:
(1) Everyone has the right to freedom of peaceful assembly and association.
(2) No one may be compelled to belong to an association.
BACKGROUND
LEGISLATIVE PROVISIONS
349 Misrepresentations
(1) A person must not knowingly or recklessly make a false or misleading representation about either of the following:
(a) another person’s obligation to engage in industrial activity;
(b) another person’s obligation to disclose whether he or she, or a third person:
(i) is or is not, or was or was not, an officer or member of an industrial association; or
(ii) is or is not engaging, or has or has not engaged, in industrial activity.
Note: This subsection is a civil remedy provision (see Part 4-1).
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if the person to whom the representation is made would not be expected to rely on it.
363 Actions of industrial associations
(1) For the purposes of this Part, each of the following is taken to be action of an industrial association:
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(b) action taken by an officer or agent of the industrial association acting in that capacity;
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(d) action taken by a member of the industrial association who performs the function of dealing with an employer on behalf of the member and other members of the industrial association, acting in that capacity;
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(3) If, for the purposes of this Part, it is necessary to establish the state of mind of an industrial association in relation to particular action, it is enough to show:
(a) that the action was taken by a person, or a group, referred to in paragraphs (1)(a) to (e); and
(b) that the person, or a person in the group, had that state of mind.
(4) Subsections (1) to (3) have effect despite subsections 793(1) and (2) (which deal with liabilities of bodies corporate).
PECUNIARY PENALTIES
General principles
Checklists of this kind can be useful providing they do not become transformed into a rigid catalogue of matters for attention. At the end of the day the task of the Court is to fix a penalty which pays appropriate regard to the circumstances in which the contraventions have occurred and the need to sustain public confidence in the statutory regime which imposes the obligations.
Nature, character and seriousness of the contravening conduct
Significance of the Union’s history
...deliberate abuse of [its] privileged position as a registered organisation in the Federal industrial relations system [and emphasised] the need for general and specific deterrence to weigh most heavily in the process of instinctive synthesis in which the Court engages when determining civil penalties.
...
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(1) While any prior contravention is a factor which may be taken into account in determining quantum, it cannot be given such weight as to lead to the imposition of a penalty which is disproportionate to the gravity of the instant contravention.
(2) The maximum penalty available under statute must be reserved for the worst category of cases. However, this does not mean that a lesser penalty must be imposed because it is possible to envisage a worse case.
(3) The Federal Circuit Court and this Court should not, without giving the parties proper notice and an opportunity to be heard, disregard the submissions of the regulator and impose a penalty in excess of what the regulator seeks.
(4) While the formulation of the quantum of an appropriate penalty usually involves, in the final analysis, an “instinctive” synthesis of competing factors, the process leading to that synthesis is not instinctive.
(5) The outcomes arrived at by courts in prior cases can be used to help ensure reasonable consistency in the application of principle and as a yardstick for the determination of appropriate penalties.
... the antecedent [contravening] history of [a contravener] is a factor which may be taken into account in determining the [penalty] to be imposed, but it cannot be given such weight as to lead to the imposition of a penalty which is disproportionate to the gravity of the instant [contravention]. To do so would be to impose a fresh penalty for past [contraventions] ... . The antecedent [contravening] history is relevant, however, to show whether the instant [contravention] is an uncharacteristic aberration or whether the [contravener] has manifested in his commission of the instant [contravention] a continuing attitude of disobedience of the law. In the latter case, ... deterrence ... may ... indicate that a more severe penalty is warranted. It is legitimate to take account of the antecedent [contravening] history when it ... shows a need to impose [a] condign [civil penalty] to deter the [contravener] and other [contraveners] from committing further [contraventions] of a like kind.
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...It is a fundamental principle, at the core of the judicial power to impose a penalty, that the imposition is for the contravention in question. Prior contraventions, even so many and often so serious as the Union may have engaged in in the past, is a factor which may be taken into account in determining the appropriate quantum for the contravention; it cannot be taken to lead to a penalty that is disproportionate to the gravity of the instant contravention. The maximum is for the worst category of cases. See the points of principle set out in the reasons of Bromwich J (dissenting in the result, but not in point of principle) in Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Australian Building and Construction Commissioner (Broadway on Ann Case) [2018] FCAFC 126 at [93] and [102]–[110], and see Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union v Australian Building and Construction Commissioner (Non-Indemnification Personal Payment Case) [2018] FCAFC 97 at [22].
Veen (No 2) also provides valuable guidance as to the role of the maximum penalty. The High Court’s observations at 478 make it clear that the maximum penalty is reserved for contraventions falling within the worst category of cases for which that penalty is prescribed. This does not require characterisation as the worst possible case. However, a case is not in the worst category merely by reason that the contravener has a history of prior contraventions, although that history may assist in the proper characterisation of the instant contravention. Considerable caution may be required to avoid blurring this distinction.
As the above discussion of Veen No 2 demonstrates, while the role of past conduct informs the need for deterrence, that cannot be used to change the character of the instant contravention.
The well settled principles most recently expressed in Parker call for a structured approach to the imposition of a penalty on a contravener with a history of contraventions, the object of which is to ensure that the contravener does not “suffer the fate of being sanctioned anew for past contraventions” (at [341]). First, the Court must identify the applicable range of penalties for that contravention without regard to the contravener’s prior history of contraventions. Having done that, the Court should then take into account that history in assessing where, within the applicable range, the penalty should fall.
I accept the submission made on behalf of the CFMEU respondents that the prior record of a contravener does not permit the imposition of a penalty that is disproportionate to the offending conduct for which the penalty is to be imposed. But [Veen (No 2)], the reasons of Tracey J and Logan J in the Broadway on Ann case, and the reasons of the members of the Court in Parker support the idea that past contraventions may be relevant in assessing the seriousness of the instant contraventions. A history of contraventions may affect a number of features of the instant contraventions, including whether the instant contraventions are a manifestation of a continuing attitude of disobedience to the law. For this reason, and when all the background circumstances and other features of a contravention are considered, what might in isolation and superficially be a minor contravention may take on the complexion of a much more serious contravention...
...insistence upon the deterrent quality of a penalty should be balanced by insistence that it “not be so high as to be oppressive”. Plainly, if deterrence is the object, the penalty should not be greater than is necessary to achieve this object; severity beyond that would be oppression.
If contravention of a law is visited with penal outcomes which are demonstrably inadequate to achieve the purpose of the law, it might as well not be a law at all. It is in this sense, in my view, that the principle of proportionality is amply reflected in the imposition of a penalty which takes due account of the importance of specific deterrence.
It is one thing to say that the principle of proportionality precludes the imposition of a sentence extended beyond what is appropriate to the crime merely to protect society; it is another thing to say that the protection of society is not a material factor in fixing an appropriate sentence. The distinction in principle is clear between an extension merely by way of preventive detention, which is impermissible, and an exercise of the sentencing discretion having regard to the protection of society among other factors, which is permissible.
...there is no opposition between the imposition of a sentence of life imprisonment with the object of protecting the community and the proportionality principle. The court imposes a sentence of life imprisonment on taking account of the offender’s record, his propensity to commit violent crime, the need to protect the community and the very serious offence of which he stands convicted, imprisonment for life being a penalty appropriate to very serious manslaughter when it is attended by the additional factors to which I have referred.
[Veen (No 1), 369 (Mason J)]
...the antecedent criminal history of an offender is a factor which may be taken into account in determining the sentence to be imposed, but it cannot be given such weight as to lead to the imposition of a penalty which is disproportionate to the gravity of the instant offence. To do so would be to impose a fresh penalty for past offences: Director of Public Prosecutions v. Ottewell... The antecedent criminal history is relevant, however, to show whether the instant offence is an uncharacteristic aberration or whether the offender has manifested in his commission of the instant offence a continuing attitude of disobedience of the law. In the latter case, retribution, deterrence and protection of society may all indicate that a more severe penalty is warranted. It is legitimate to take account of the antecedent criminal history when it illuminates the moral culpability of the offender in the instant case, or shows his dangerous propensity or shows a need to impose condign punishment to deter the offender and other offenders from committing further offences of a like kind.
Application
(1) it favours a policy of “no ticket, no start” and holds that philosophy (if not the achievement of its industrial objectives more broadly) as preferable to the law of the land—see Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (Werribee Shopping Centre Case) [2017] FCA 1235, [23], [28] (Tracey J);
(2) it appears to be wholly unmoved by the prospect that it might be forced yet again to dig into its members’ “big pots of gold” in the name of “fight[ing] the good fight”—to use the terminology that features in Victoria International Container Terminal Ltd (t/as VICT) v Maritime Union of Australia & Anor [2017] VSC 762, [23] (McDonald J); and
(3) it regards doing so as an acceptable cost of the way that it conducts its affairs—the misconduct in this case is but the latest example of the Union’s strategy “...to engage in whatever action, and make whatever threats, it wishes, without regard to the law, and then, once a prosecution is brought, to seek to negotiate its way into a position in which the penalties for its actions can be tolerated as the price of doing its industrial business”: Director of the Fair Work Building Industry Inspectorate v Construction, Forestry, Mining and Energy Union (No 2) [2016] FCA 436, [142] (Mortimer J).
...general deterrence is of particular relevance in respect of an individual who is an office holder or employee of an organisation such as the CFMMEU. The penalty imposed should be effective as a general deterrent for any other officer or employee to engage in similar contraventions. It should demonstrate to such persons that this Court will not tolerate that conduct and that significant penalties will be imposed irrespective of whether the conduct has been condoned by others including that person’s employer.
I respectfully adopt his Honour’s observations.
Involvement of senior officials
Contrition and cooperation
The respondents are entitled to some discount for their admissions at a very early stage. However, there is no apology, no contrition, no remorse, no expression of regret and no submission or evidence to suggest that the [Union] has done anything, or intends to do anything, to reduce or eliminate the prospect of similar contraventions occurring in the future.
Size, capacity and nature of the respondents
Impact of the conduct
...the impact of the contravention was to cause [the two SEA employees] not to work on the Project on 13 September 2018. There is, however, no evidence of any economic loss suffered by [those employees], their employer or anyone else. There is also no evidence that [those employees] were in fact misled by the misrepresentation. Why the misrepresentation prevented them from working at the Project is not set out.
Course of conduct and totality
...recognises that, where there is an interrelationship between the legal and factual elements of two or more offences with which an offender has been charged, care needs to be taken so that the offender is not punished twice (or more often) for what is essentially the same criminality. The interrelationship may be legal, in the sense that it arises from the elements of the crimes. It may also be factual, because of a temporal or geographical link or the presence of other circumstances compelling the conclusion that the crimes arise out of substantially the same act, omission or occurrences.
See: Royer v Western Australia [2009] WASCA 139; (2009) 197 A Crim R 319, 328 [22] (Owen JA, with whom Miller JA agreed in the result, Buss JA dissenting).
The principle recognises that where there are multiple contraventions arising out of a single course of conduct, there is a danger of a contravener being punished more than once for essentially the same offending conduct. However, the principle does not involve a simplistic transposition of multiple contraventions into one contravention, or, necessarily, the imposition of only one penalty. The court’s task is to evaluate the conduct and its course and assess what penalty is, or penalties are, appropriate for the contraventions: see Australian Building and Construction Commissioner v Construction, Forestry, Maritime, Mining and Energy Union (The Nine Brisbane Sites Appeal) [2019] FCAFC 59 at [10] – [12], [123] – [124] and [132]; Transport Workers’ Union Australia v Registered Organisations Commissioner [No 2] [2018] FCAFC 203 at [84] and [92]; and the authorities referred to therein. That may, but will not necessarily, result in a single penalty being imposed for multiple contraventions arising out of a course of conduct.
The CFMEU can be seen to have chosen to pay penalties in preference to obeying the law. It is not entitled to any leniency in the circumstances of the conduct complained of. The legislative purpose in the Act, of creating separate contraventions and imposing pecuniary penalties on organisations, such as the CFMEU, for conduct engaged in on the one occasion by their agents, will not be served by equating multiple contraventions by a recidivist as a wholly single course of conduct. Each separate contravention by the CFMEU’s officials and organisers on 22 October 2013 had a distinct effect and impact in making the blockade of a very large site effective. The Act contemplates that the Court can fix a high price, by way of aggregated penalties, on an organisation in circumstances such as the present to deter future repetition.
Penalties to be imposed
DECLARATIONS
...I accept that the court is able to grant declaratory relief as a means of marking its disapproval of conduct found to have been undertaken in breach of a statute. Alternatively, I accept that there might be circumstances where declaratory relief is appropriate to realise some broader educative or deterrent effect, or otherwise to vindicate or assist an applicant’s actions.
The purpose of a court order is, ordinarily, to give effect to a judgment. The judgment is not some kind of penumbral context surrounding the order. Rather the judgment is the source of the order. A court order derives from its originating judgment, as a transfer of land derives from the underlying contract.
It is impermissible, in my view, as well as being quite unrealistic, to attempt to read, that is, to understand an order in isolation from the context of the reasons for it being made. The Full Court of the Supreme Court of Queensland, in Australian Energy Ltd v Lennard Oil NL (No 2) [1988] 2 Qd R 230 held that, in interpreting an order framed in unambiguous language, regard should still be had to the reasons given by the Court for making the order because they form part of a context in which the order was made.
Other judges of this court have expressed similar views: Hamersley Iron Pty Ltd v National Competition Council [2008] FCA 598; (2008) 247 ALR 385, 399 (Weinberg J); Smith v Comcare (2014) 64 AAR 205, 218 (Robertson J); Bob Jane Corporation Pty Ltd v ACN 149 801 141 Pty Ltd [2016] FCA 1129, [13] (Moshinsky J); Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v ACN 117 372 915 Pty Limited (in liq) (formerly Advanced Medical Institute Pty Limited) [2015] FCA 1441, [53] (Moshinsky J).
CONCLUSION
(1) Mr Pattinson pay pecuniary penalties totalling $6,000.00—comprising two penalties of $3,000.00, one for each of his Agreed Contraventions; and
(2) the Union pay pecuniary penalties totalling $63,000.00—comprising two penalties of $31,500, one for each of its Agreed Contraventions.
Associate:
Dated: 14 October 2019
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