The Decision
The Full Federal Court ultimately upheld the FWC decision and, on the basis that it considered the FWC acted within the scope of its powers under the FW Act, and that it was open to the FWC to consider the reasonableness of redeployment opportunities as including roles that were not vacant because they were occupied by contract workers.
The Court considered the broad nature of the wording of section 389(2) of the FW Act stating “if there were circumstances that were intended to be inapt to inform whether, in any given case, ‘redeployment would have been reasonable’, the legislature would not have used the qualifying phrase, ‘in all [of] the circumstances’”. Emphasising the breadth of the circumstances the FWC could consider under section 398(2), the Court found that this means the FWC could take into account whether employees can be redeployed into roles occupied by contractors when assessing a genuine redundancy.
In doing so, the Court emphasised that its role was to examine whether the FWC acted within its jurisdiction under section 389(2) – not whether it ultimately agreed with how the FWC assessed all of the circumstances. In this regard, it is noteworthy that Justice Raper of the Federal Court specifically commented that although the FWC has the power to take into account whether employees can be redeployed into roles occupied by contractors when assessing a genuine redundancy, ‘it would be a rare case indeed, where an applicant (seeking to avail him or herself of unfair dismissal protections) could satisfy the Commission, under this provision, that redeployment in such circumstances was reasonable’. This is because this would require the FWC to make orders which would in effect require an employer to terminate third party contractual arrangements and a fundamental change in the employer’s business model.
Therefore, theoretically while the Federal Court agreed the FWC could take into account redeployment into roles held by contractors, we interpret in its decision that it has cautioned that it is not necessarily the role of the FWC to interfere with third party contractual arrangements between employers and contractors in order to create a new position for redundant employees.
The matter has now been remitted to the FWC to determine remedies on the basis that the dismissals were not a case of genuine redundancy. The FWC has the power to award reinstatement (with backpay), or compensation capped at 6 months wages for the individual employee or half the high income threshold, whichever is lesser. Given Justice Raper’s comments above, it appears likely that the FWC will award compensation as opposed to reinstatement.