Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth
CourtHigh Court of Australia
Full case nameFair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth Holdings Pty Ltd [2015] HCA 45
Case history
Appealed fromFair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth Holdings Pty Ltd [2015] FCAFC 37
Court membership
Judge(s) sittingKiefel, Bell, Gageler, Nettle JJ.

Fair Work Ombudsman v Quest South Perth is a 2015 decision of the High Court of Australia. Quest, a company operating serviced apartment hotels across Australia, used a third-party labour hire company to change the employment status of two housekeepers and a receptionist from employees to independent contractors at its South Perth site. They would then no longer be owed the minimum workplace entitlements owed to employees in Australia. The Fair Work Ombudsman, an authority responsible for enforcing Australian workplace laws, initiated proceedings against Quest South Perth in the Federal Court of Australia.

The Fair Work Ombudsman alleged the conversion breached section 357 of the Fair Work Act 2009. This section prohibits employers from misrepresenting employment as an independent contracting arrangement. The Full Bench of the Federal Court of Australia found Quest South Perth had not contravened section 357 because it had used a third party to convert the employees to independent contractors. The Fair Work Ombudsman then appealed that finding to the High Court of Australia, asking it to find whether an employer can avoid contravening section 357 by introducing a third-party labour hire company into an agreement between itself and its employee. The High Court of Australia found that Quest South Perth had contravened section 357 of the Fair Work Act 2009.

Background[edit]

The Fair Work Act 2009 (the Act) contains a part headed "Sham Arrangements", within which is section 357. It prohibits an employer from misrepresenting employment as an independent contracting arrangement.[1]

Quest is a company that operates serviced apartments at sites across Australia. Quest South Perth was one such site, and it employed two housekeepers and a receptionist who were paid an hourly rate.[2] Quest held meetings with a third-party labour hire company, which told Quest it could "convert" the employees to independent contractors,[3] with the benefit of this being that they would be no longer entitled to the protections, rights, and conditions of Australian labour laws.[1]

The contracting company held meetings with the three employees and pressured them to become independent contractors, stating that it would be advantageous, without disclosing the disadvantages of losing their workplace rights.[1] The employees signed an agreement to work as independent contractors.[4] The Fair Work Ombudsman (the Ombudsman) then initiated proceedings alleging Quest South Perth had breached section 357 of the Act.[5]

Federal Court case[edit]

The case commenced at the Federal Court of Australia (Federal Court) before Justice Neil McKerracher. The Ombudsman argued two misrepresentations had been made: that the employees were dismissed only to be re-employed doing the same role as independent contractors, or that this is what was represented to the individuals when in fact they were employees. Both arguments, if proven, constituted a breach of section 357 of the Act.[5] Justice McKerracher dismissed the first argument, finding the workers consciously decided to convert from employee to independent contractor. On the second argument, Justice McKerracher found the Ombudsman was unable to prove the workers had remained employees.[5]

The Ombudsman appealed to the Full Court of the Federal Court, which was dismissed.[6] Justices Anthony North and Mordy Bromberg observed that "when determining whether a relationship is one of employment", it is necessary "to ensure that form and presentation do not distract the Court from identifying the substance of what has been truly agreed".[7] The decision constituted a way of avoiding a breach of section 357 of the Act by involving a third-party labour hire company.[8]

Appeal to the High Court of Australia[edit]

The High Court of Australia

The Ombudsman then appealed the Full Federal Court's decision to the High Court of Australia (High Court), with the appeal posing a key issue: whether an employer could avoid contravening section 357 of the Act by introducing a third-party labour hire company into an agreement between itself and its employee.[8] The High Court, in summary, held an employer could not.[9]

The High Court held that the Full Federal Court had interpreted section 357 of the Act with a narrow construction not supported by its text and that the section prevents an employer from misrepresenting to an employee that they work for a third party.[8] The High Court ruling means it is unlawful to use a third party to disguise a true employment relationship.[10]

In a joint judgment, the High Court majority consisting of Justices Susan Kiefel, Virgina Bell, Stephen Gageler and Geoffrey Nettle found that Quest's attempt to "convert" the employees to independent contractor status constituted a breach of section 357 of the Act and that "Who might be the counterparty to the represented contract for services, and whether that counterparty might be a real or fictional entity, is correspondingly immaterial to the operation of the provision".[11]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ a b c Kelly (2016), p. 111.
  2. ^ Kelly (2016), p. 112.
  3. ^ Pittard (2015), p. 62.
  4. ^ Kelly (2016), p. 113.
  5. ^ a b c Dawson (2015), p. 59.
  6. ^ Dawson (2015), p. 60.
  7. ^ Bomball (2019), p. 371.
  8. ^ a b c Dawson (2016), p. 142.
  9. ^ Dawson (2016), p. 143.
  10. ^ Pelly & Marin-Guzman (2021).
  11. ^ Waters (2015).

Bibliography[edit]

Literature
News articles