Bringing the common law into line with the position under the Workplace Relations Act 1996 (Cth) for compensating workers who have been unfairly dismissed. Do you agree?

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As we approach its centenary, the time has come for the High Court to review the House of Lords decision in Addis v. Gramophone Co Ltd [1909] AC 488 and recognise that damages can be recovered for the manner in which an employment contract is brought to an end. This would then bring the common law into line with the position under the Workplace Relations Act  1996 (Cth) for compensating workers who have been unfairly dismissed.

Do you agree? Critically evaluate this statement, illustrating your argument with references to relevant case law.

Almost a century ago, the House of Lords in Addis v. Gramophone Co Ltd  confirmed the proposition that a wrongfully dismissed employee cannot obtain damages for injured feelings or distress suffered as a result of a wrongful dismissal. In that time ‘there has been a fundamental change in legal culture’ and in the nature of employment. Employment is no longer premised on the notion of ‘master and servant’ but on an ongoing interpersonal relationship. The employment market is less secure and ‘the pace of work has intensified’ to such an extent that ‘the incidence of psychiatric injury due to excessive stress has increased’. Statutory regimes have been introduced, providing for specialist tribunals to hear disputes regarding employment relationships. These statutory regimes have emerged from a recognition of the changes in the nature of the employment environment and have sought to grant remedies that reflect current industrial and commercial reality. Constrained by the historical evolution of the law of employment, in Australia, the common law has struggled to maintain its currency with regard to the damages available to an employee wrongfully dismissed, despite moves in other jurisdictions to cast away the shackles of Addis.

Addis v. Gramophone

Mr Addis was employed as Gramophone Co Ltd’s manager in Calcutta. As stipulated in his contract of employment, Gramophone Co terminated his employment with six months notice, appointing another manager and preventing him from carrying out his duties as manager. Treating the contract as at an end, Mr Addis went back to London and commenced proceedings for wrongful dismissal. At trial, Mr Addis was awarded damages which exceeded the amount of his salary for the period of notice to which he was entitled. The case went on appeal before the House of Lords. Whilst there has been much debate as to the true facts and ration of Addis, Addis is generally regarded to stand for the proposition that ‘damages for wrongful dismissal are not awarded to compensate an employee for any loss arising from the manner of the wrongful dismissal’. Compensation, Lord Loeburn LC stated, ‘cannot include compensation either for the injured feelings of the servant, or for the loss he may sustain from the fact that his having been dismissed of itself makes it more difficult for him to obtain fresh employment’. 

The effect of this decision by the House of Lords was that an employee could not claim compensation over and above the wages the employee had foregone within the relevant notice period. The decision has been widely criticised as ‘being in conflict with general principles of contract law’, with the ratio of the case being confused and applied too broadly .

Some have argued that Addis can be criticised for treating the employment contract the same as any other commercial contract without considering the ‘interpersonal relationship that employment contracts establish’. Others have argued that the House of Lords differentiated between employment and commercial contracts, ‘importing incidents which the law has imposed on the master – servant relationship into the contract of employment’.

Despite this criticism, the courts, in England and Australia, have been loath to tackle the inadequacies of Addis head on. Alternative methods have been used by the courts to circumvent Addis to the point that it remains, in Australia, good law.

Burazin v. Blacktown City Guardian

In Burazin, the Full Court of the Industrial Relations Court was given the opportunity to consider the continuing application of the rule in Addis to Australian law. Ms Burazin was forcibly removed from the premises of her employment by two police officers, who had been called by the employer, after having her hours of work reduced. Ms Burazin argued that ‘both in calling the police [and]… suffering them actually to remove a perfectly respectable employee, were unnecessary, humiliating and hurtful’. She claimed ‘that the compensation payable…..for [wrongful dismissal] ought to include compensation for distress, humiliation and disappointment’.  

The Full Court approached the affirmation of Addis by upholding the principles and history of the award of damages by drawing on the principles of Hadley v. Baxendale stated in Butler v. Fairclough which stated per Griffith CJ:

The measure of action for breach of contract is well settled. It is such loss as may fairly and reasonable be considered as arising according to the usuals course of things or may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of the parties at the time of making the contract as the probable result of the breach.’

They went on to state that on the basis of subsequent cases, distress or disappointment of mind was not something ‘arising according to the usual course of things’ from a breach of contract or damage that may reasonably be supposed to have been in the contemplation of the parties at the time they made the contract. This reflected the approach of the High Court, in affirming Addis (with some exceptions) in Baltic Shipping Co v. Dillon when considering a similar issue in relation to contracts the purpose of which was ‘enjoyment, relaxation or freedom from molestation’.

In deciding on this issue the Full Court stated:

‘As it seems to us, the High Court rejected the opportunity in Baltic Shipping to throw over the constraints imposed by Hamlin  and  Hadley v. Baxendale and their successors. It approved the awarding of damages for distress only in a limited range of cases. Although there was some difference in the precise formulations put forward by their Honours, none was broad enough to cover distress resulting from a wrongful dismissal. If such damages are to be awarded, it must be after rejection, at High Court level, of the Addis conclusion that employment contracts are to be treated like other commercial contracts for the purposes of the rules in Hadley v. Baxendale.’

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However, on Addis, the court did says this:

‘If Addis is open to criticism, in our view it must be on the ground that the House failed to consider, whether, in the case of breach of contract of employment by a wrongful dismissal, distress was a loss that might fairly be considered as arising according to the usual course of things, or at least might reasonably be supposed to have been in the parties’ contemplation when they made the contract. The House of Lords treated contracts of employment as being the same as other commercial contracts, without reference to ...

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