In this edition, Senior Investigator, Tom Henry explains the key lessons for employers from recent appeals and FWC cases relating to procedural fairness and an employer’s duty of care when conducting an investigation, taking action on offensive private social media posts by employees and the need for employers to act on complaints in inappropriate behaviour, regardless of how they are made.
Procedural Fairness: Emery vs City of Stirling in the Full Court
The Full Court appeal of this case is a fascinating example of how procedural fairness principles are the same, and need to be followed closely, whether in a court environment or in workplace investigation.
In the March 2018 edition of the Worklogic e-Newsletter, Associate Director Jason Clark reviewed a recent case, Emery vs City of Stirling [2018] FWC 914, where a beach inspector was dismissed for breaching Council policy. It was found that he had made unauthorised modifications to vehicles, which voided their warranties and therefore affected the Council’s capacity to provide life-saving services.
The employee was successful, however, in bringing an unfair dismissal case in the Fair Work Commission (‘FWC’), on the basis that the investigation process leading to his dismissal was flawed. Those flaws included a lack of rigour in the investigation itself (lack of documentation, and key evidence being ignored which gave the perception that there was a potential for bias) and the fact that the investigation was undertaken by one of the key witnesses in the case, which was a clear conflict of interest. Deputy President Melanie Binet held that Mr Emery should be reinstated and that he should be back paid since the date of termination.
We can now report however that the City of Stirling successfully appealed the findings to the Full Bench, which decision is set out below.
The Appeal
In City of Stirling v Mr Kevin Emery [2018] FWCFB 2279 (20 April 2018), the Full Bench overturned the original decision by Deputy President Melanie Binet. It held that DP Binet had herself denied the employer procedural fairness in the hearing, when she failed to allow it to respond to her conclusion that a key witness had “something to hide“.
The Full Bench found that her conclusions from the evidence went beyond even the employer’s own arguments. Those conclusions included that: the employer’s supervisor had a “clear motivation” for giving evidence denying that he authorised the modifications, and, that his failure to exclude himself as the investigator, the way the investigation was conducted, and, the way the evidence was collected, all suggested that he ‘had something to hide’.
It held that, by not allowing the employer to respond to these conclusions, natural justice was denied to the employer. In conclusion, they said:
“The deputy president’s inferences (or findings) that [the supervisor] had a motivation to deny authorising the modifications because he was on a final warning, and that he had something to hide, were not put to [him], and the City of Stirling had no notice of them. In our view, the City of Stirling was denied procedural fairness in this regard.”
Overturning the decision, the bench referred the matter to Commissioner Bissett for rehearing. This decision is of relevance because it illustrates, at a higher level, the sorts of reasoning that can hamper investigators at the coal face, in particular where such conclusions are not put to a party for a response.
Key Lesson
When conducting an investigation, make sure you ensure that you provide an opportunity for a respondent to comment on relevant contradictory evidence.
Duty of Care: Govier v The Uniting Church at the High Court
In a recent blog post , we discussed the implication of Govier v Uniting Church[1] case – that while an employer has a duty of care to provide a safe work environment to its employees during a workplace investigation, there is no separate duty of care to ensure that the way in which the investigation is carried out is safe (i.e. that the investigation itself does not itself create a risk to the health and safety of its employees).
The Appeal
Since that time, the employee appealed the decision to the High Court: Govier v The Uniting Church in Australia Property Trust (Q) [2018] HCA Trans 65 (13 April 2018).
The question to be examined: ‘does the employer have a specific duty of care for the way in which a workplace investigation is performed?‘
Given the rather unsettled nature of previous relevant cases, hopes were high that the High Court would clarify the state of the law. These hopes were not fulfilled. Five High Court judges actually revoked the grant of special leave to appeal on a technicality about what was included in documentary submissions to the High Court.
This left the decision of the Queensland Court of Appeal untouched. While employers can therefore continue to currently rely upon the decision of the Queensland Court of Appeal in Govier, there is a likelihood that the issue will again be tested by the Court in the future. Given the often inherently stressful nature of investigations, and the steps that can be taken to minimise such stress, there is the potential that a future court decision may extend the duty of care owed by an employer to employees who participate in investigations.
Key Lessons
Regardless of what the current situation is at law, we suggest you take a best practice risk management approach. This approach involves:
- Taking active steps to ensure that all workplace investigations are carried out sensitively, confidentially and fairly as between each of the parties in order to protect the mental well-being of all participants.
- Identify if your staff who are currently conducting the investigations are sufficiently skilled in this “risk management” approach to investigations. Your staff should have up to date training (and ideally prior experience). They should also be able to demonstrate a sophisticated understanding of how to navigate the sometimes complex and difficult issues which arise during an investigation, including: capacity to participate, timeliness (and delays) in running an investigation, and how to deftly handling evidence and communication with all parties. If this is not the case, consider hiring an external workplace investigator.
Dismissal held for offensive private social media post: Colwell v Sydney International Terminals FWC case
In Luke Colwell v Sydney International Container Terminals Pty Limited [2018] FWC 174 (9 February 2018), Commissioner Donna McKenna of the FWC upheld the sacking of an employee after an investigation found that she shared a pornographic video via social media with ‘friends’ who included 19 male and female work colleagues.
The dismissal was upheld, even though the investigation did not follow any complaint but was employer-initiated.
The Case
After drinking six beers at a hotel on a Tuesday night during a rostered week off in July 2017, the wharfie employee continued drinking at home. There he received a message on Facebook Messenger from a female friend he had known from high school. The message contained a highly graphic and pornographic 10-second video, involving a naked female and graphic content of masturbation. He forwarded the image via Messenger to his Facebook friends, who included 16 male and three female work colleagues.
One of the recipient Friends, a female employee, replied via messenger the following day: “Are you serious? Mate don’t send me that shit“. He then posted an apology on his Facebook page.
It is noteworthy that the employer, Hutchison, had been encouraging women to take up stevedoring roles, increasing the number of females in its 200-strong Port Botany workforce from four to 32 since 2014.
The employee who re-sent the video claimed Hutchison had no basis to dismiss him over the video, because the post was made in his own time, to his friends, and therefore there wasn’t a sufficient connection to work.
While Commissioner McKenna noted that the dismissal was for “out-of-work conduct, not involving any work-related facilities, and involving the [wharfie] and employees … who had self-selected to be Facebook friends” she rejected the argument that the posts had insufficient connection with work. This was because it was the employment relationship itself which led to the employee “having 20 colleagues as his Facebook friends and sending the video to 19 of them by Messenger”. As a result of this connection, the employer was warranted in conducting an investigation and then dismissing the employee for misconduct.
Commissioner McKenna said this was “not a case of an employer…attempting to exercise supervision over the private [social media] activities of employees“. Rather, the employer “was trying to respond to what was understood to be the dissemination of pornography to employees” in the context of its Values and policies outlawing sexual harassment of female employees. As such, the employee’s activities negatively affected the employer and the employment relationship.
Key Lesson
This decision is of note as it is consistent with many previous ‘out of hours’ decisions. In these cases, dismissals of employees for even ‘private’ (as distinct from public) social media posts (i.e. only to their friends) have been held to have a sufficient connection to the workplace, where the interests or reputation of the employer, or the employment relationship, is damaged.
To mitgate against this risk:
- conduct refresher training on what conduct of your employees may constitute misconduct, particularly around the use of social media?
- Review and update your social media and sexual harassment policies.
Failing to act on bullying complaints: Watts vs Ramsay HealthCare FWC case
Finally it is worth remembering the implications from another importance case Watts v Ramsay HealthCare.[2] discussed in a recent blog post, where the FWC found that an HR advisor and a manager consciously and unreasonably decided not to investigate an employee’s bullying complaints. The HR advisor and manager had imposed their own subjective requirements on the information she had to provide before they would investigate.
Commissioner Bruce Williams found “no reasonable explanation” for the employer’s failure to act on the bullying complaints made by a catering assistant and was left in “no doubt” of the need to issue an order to prevent further bullying.
In fact, the Commissioner held that the decision not to investigate the employee’s claims of bullying itself was an incident of bullying.
Key Lesson
Once an employer is on notice of concerns of bullying, do not ignore them, or ask them to send in a “formal complaint” before taking any steps.
Learn more
Worklogic has written the definitive guide to conducting ‘Workplace Investigations’. Purchase the second edition, recently published by Wolters Kluwer, for a comprehensive guide to conducting effective workplace investigations. Buy now!
For those looking for an jam-packed one hour overview of the steps you need to undertake for investigations into bullying and sexual harassment, tune into Grevis Beard’s webinar presented by CCH Learning on Tuesday 19 June. Register now
Worklogic also offers an intensive one-day training courses on conducting Effective Workplace Investigations. Register now for our next session in Melbourne, or organise to run this course in-house.
[1] The judgment of the District Court, upheld by the Queensland Court of Appeal.