Background to the Case
Mr Kildey, Ms Kerr and Mr Browne (Applicants) were all employed by Technical and Further Education Commission (TAFE) until they were dismissed in June 2023 based on the findings of a workplace investigation into alleged conflicts of interest. The Applicants lodged unfair dismissal proceedings seeking reinstatement.
Relevantly, Ms Kerr and Mr Browne were de facto partners. Mr Kildey is the nephew of Ms Kerr.
TAFE commenced a workplace investigation following a complaint in February 2021, alleging that Mr Browne was involved in improperly recruiting and managing Mr Kildey’s employment (who was the nephew of his de facto partner, Ms Kerr). Following some preliminary enquiries, additional concerns were raised that Ms Kerr was involved in improperly assisting to hire Mr Kildey’s former partner and Mr Browne’s daughter at TAFE. TAFE engaged an external investigator to conduct an investigation into the complaint in April 2021.
It was not until September 2021 that the Applicants were first informed of the investigation and suspended from employment. In breach of TAFE’s policies, no risk assessment was conducted before suspending the three employees.
The Applicants were asked to provide initial responses to the allegations in October 2021, however, when the investigator conducted witness interviews between October 2021 and August 2022, none of the Applicants were formally interviewed.
The final report was provided to TAFE on 6 September 2022. The independent investigation relevantly found that each Applicant failed to complete a conflict of interest form declaring their personal relationships in relation to internal recruiting, management and hiring practices at TAFE. This was found to be inconsistent with the TAFE Code of Conduct and applicable legislation.
All three employees were eventually dismissed in June 2023 – more than two years after the external lawyers were initially engaged to carry out the investigation.