[2013] FWC 1327

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FAIR WORK COMMISSION

DECISION

Fair Work Act 2009
s.122 - Transfer of employment situations that affect the obligation to pay redundancy pay

Datacom Systems Vic Pty Ltd
v
Rasiq Khan; Siddharth Desai
(C2012/5814)

VICE PRESIDENT LAWLER

SYDNEY, 4 MARCH 2013

Variation of redundancy pay.

[1] This is an application by Datacom Systems Vic Pty Ltd (Datacom) for an order pursuant to s.120 of the Fair Work Act 2009 reducing the amount of the redundancy entitlement otherwise payable to two employees, Mr Khan and Mr Desai, whose employment by Datacom was made redundant.

[2] Section 119 of the Act is part of the National Employment Standards and sets out the NES minimum entitlement of employees to redundancy pay. Section 119 provides:

[3] There is no issue that the redundancies in this case were genuine and that the two employees were made redundant in accordance with s.119(1). General Electric (GE) had outsourced certain IT functions to Datacom some time ago. GE made a decision to “insource” that work back into GE. Mr Khan and Mr Desai were among the Datacom employees working on the GE account. GE gave the required contractual notice to terminate the Datacom service contract. GE advertised various positions to perform the work involved in the “insourced” functions. Mr Khan and Mr Desai were successful applicants for substantially similar to roles they had performed as employees of Datacom (in each case their roles include the functions they were performing at Datacom but also include additional duties within their skills and competence).

[4] There was no gap in their employment: Mr Khan and Mr Desai finished work for Datacom on one day and commenced work with GE on the following working day. There was close liaison and cooperation between GE and Datacom in relation to the “insourcing”.

[5] Mr Desai’s new position with GE was at a higher base salary than the base salary for his old Datacom position. Mr Khan’s base salary was slightly less than the base salary for his old Datacom position. In addition, Mr Khan had been able to earn significant additional income as an employee of Datacom by undertaking additional project work over and above his standard duties for his base salary. Mr Khan does not have access to that additional project work at GE.

[6] Datacom seeks a reduction in the redundancy entitlement payable to Mr Khan and Mr Desai under s.119 and relies on s.120 which provides:

[7] There is no doubt that the condition in s.120(1)(a) is met in this case. There is no issues about the capacity of Datacom to pay the amount. The issue is whether Mr Khan and Mr Desai’s new employment with GE was “other acceptable employment” and whether it had been “obtained” by Datacom.

“Other acceptable employment”

[8] In NUW v Tontine Fibres [2007] AIRCFB 1016 (Tontine) a Full Bench of the AIRC considered the meaning of the expression “acceptable alternative employment” in a redundancy provision in an enterprise agreement. It was common for enterprise agreements to reflect award provisions and contain redundancy entitlements that could be reduced if the employer obtained acceptable alternative employment (or some variant of that expression). The Full Bench observed:

[9] Other employment does not cease to be “acceptable” merely because it is on terms that are less advantageous to that of the terminating position. Tontine makes it clear that there are matters of degree involved.

[10] “Obtains”

[11] Mr Khan in particular argued that because GE advertised the positions publically and his engagement was pursuant to an application submitted in response to that advertisement, it could not be said that Datacom ‘obtained’ Mr Khan’s employment with GE such as to satisfy the precondition in s.122(1)(b)(i).

[12] In my view, the word “obtains” in s.122(1)(b)(i) should be given a very broad interpretation consistent with the purposive approach mandated by s.15AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901. Datacom worked closely with GE to facilitate the ‘in-sourcing’ of the relevant work. That role was, in my view, sufficient to satisfy the relevant requirement. It would be peculiar indeed if an ‘in-sourcing’ of the present type did not attract at least some reduction in the amount otherwise due under s.119.

Assessing an appropriate reduction

[13] It is trite that the purpose of the redundancy entitlement in s.119 is relevant to assessing an appropriate reduction.

[14] In 1984 the Full Bench of the AIRC heard a test case that dealt with a claim for an entitlement to redundancy pay to be introduced into a number of federal awards. The Full Bench determined a standard redundancy clause for inclusion in those awards in Termination, Change and Redundancy Case (1984) 294 CAR 175 (TCR No. 1). The Full Bench explained the basis for the new award standard as follows:

[15] In the Redundancy Case 2004 (PR032004), the Full Bench of the AIRC expanded upon the basis for the redundancy entitlement now embodied in s.119 of the NES. The Full Bench referred to the above passage and said:

[16] The Full Bench added a further level of redundancy benefit for employees with 10 years or more of service that provided 4 weeks less than the benefit for 9 years of service (12 weeks vs. 16 weeks). The Full Bench gave the following explanation and rationale based on the presence of an entitlement in the standard federal award clause to pro rata payment of long service leave after 10 years – the benefit was reduced to prevent double counting.

[17] Section 119 is a statutory enactment of the TCR principles and the Parliament must be taken to have endorsed the rationale and purposes explained by the Full Bench in enacting s.119. That rationale and purpose ought inform the proper construction of the expression “other acceptable employment” in s.120(1)(b)(i)” and the exercise of the ultimate discretion as to the appropriate reduction in the redundancy entitlement conferred by s.120(2).

[18] Section 122(1) is part of the broader statutory context in which the construction of s.120(1)(b)(i) must be considered:

[19] The exception created by s.122(2) is not operative in this case because s.22(5) does not apply in this case. Section 22 deals with the meaning of “service” and “continuous service”. Section 22(5) provides:

[20] Subsections 22(6) - (8) provide:

[21] The expression associated entity is defined in s.9 and “has the meaning given by section 50AAA of the Corporations Act 2001.” That provision is complicated. However, it is clear that Datacom and GE and not “associated entities”.

[22] Subsections 22(6) and (7) reinforce the notion that where there is a “transfer of employment” – a concept defined broadly in s.22(7) and present in this case –recognition of service with the outgoing employer by the incoming employer should disentitle the employee to the NES redundancy payment. That is consistent with the rational in the TCR No 1 Case and the Redundancy Case 2004 because where there is such recognition, there is no “loss of non-transferrable credits” of the sort that is one of the principal, if not primary, matters to which the redundancy entitlement in s.119 is directed.

[23] In summary:

[24] In this case there was no continuity of employment and no recognition by GE of service with Datacom for the purposes of long service leave and other non-transferable credits. Accordingly, the employees should be entitled to a substantial portion of the entitlement notwithstanding the fact that Datacom had relevant hand in facilitating their employment with GE. The hardship factor does not weight heavily because each of the two moved directly into their new jobs. The disadvantage suffered by Mr Khan in terms of a slightly lower salary and the loss of the possibility (but not the right) of additional project work cannot justify a substantial reduction but I have still make a modest allowance for that factor. I also consider that there should be some minor allowance made for the retention payment made by GE to each of the employees. Although that payment was made by GE for its own purposes (ensuring that it retained its capacity to perform the contract with GE through to its conclusion by retaining relevant staff until that time), it was nevertheless a payment associated with the in-sourcing transition that benefited Mr Khan and Mr Desai.

[25] In all the circumstances I determine that the amount due to Mr Khan under s.119 should be reduced by the equivalent of 1.5 weeks and the amount due to Mr Desai should be reduced by the equivalent of 2 weeks. This will leave them each with the majority of entitlement of 6 weeks specified in s.119 for employees with their duration of service.

[26] A Determination reflecting this decision will issue.

VICE PRESIDENT

Appearances:

R Paule and N Ashton-Smith on behalf of the Applicant.

R Khan on his own behalf.

S Desai on his own behalf.

Hearing details:

2013.

Melbourne:

January 8

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