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LIABILITY ISSUES FOR COAL MINE SURVEYORS

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LIABILITY ISSUES FOR COAL MINE SURVEYORS Australian Institute of Mine Surveyors Seminar Catherine Bolger Association of Professional Engineers, Scientists and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LIABILITY ISSUES FOR COAL MINE SURVEYORS


1
LIABILITY ISSUES FOR COAL MINE SURVEYORS
  • Australian Institute of Mine Surveyors Seminar
  • Catherine Bolger
  • Association of Professional Engineers, Scientists
    and Managers, Australia

2
Sources of Liability Include
  • NSW
  • Occupational Health Safety Act 2000 NSW (OHS
    Act NSW) and associated regulations
  • Coal Mines Regulation Act 1982 NSW (CMRA) and
    associated regulations
  • (soon to be replaced by the Coal Mine Health
    Safety Act 2002)

3
Sources of Liability Include
  • QLD
  • Coal Mining Safety Health Act QLD 1999 and
    associated regulations

4
The Gretley Case
  • Prosecuted under NSW Occupational Health Safety
    Act 2000 (OHS Act)
  • Summons issued against individuals in 2000
  • Decision handed down in 2004
  • Mine Managers Surveyor found guilty of offences
    under the OHS Act
  • Penalty handed down in 2005 of 30,000 against
    Surveyor
  • Under Appeal .

5
Why was Gretley Groundbreaking?
  • First prosecution in Coal Mining Industry using
    OHS Act not Coal Mining specific legislation
  • First test of scope of concerned in the
    management of the corporation to staff
  • Highlighted deeming provisions
  • Highlighted weakness of available defences for
    staff
  • Will test validity of appeals provisions
    capacity of criminal court to determine criminal
    penalties

6
What did Gretley Consider?
  • S26 Offences by corporations - liability of
    directors and managers
  • (1) If a corporation contravenes, whether by act
    or omission, any provision of this Act or the
    regulations, each director of the corporation,
    and each person concerned in the management of
    the corporation, is taken to have contravened the
    same provision unless the director or person
    satisfies the court that
  • (a) he or she was not in a position to influence
    the conduct of the corporation in relation to its
    contravention of the provision or
  • (b) he or she, being in such a position, used all
    due diligence to prevent the contravention by the
    corporation.

7
What did Gretley Consider?
  • The Scope of s26 of the OHS Act
  • In considering the meaning of the phrase
    concerned in the management of the corporation
    Justice Staunton commented

8
What did Gretley Consider?
  • What would appear to be a common and
    understandable factor in all the authorities to
    which I was taken was the persons decision
    making powers and/or authority going directly to
    the management of the corporation. That decision
    making role or authority on behalf of the
    corporation may involve advice given to
    management encompassing a participation in its
    decision making processes and the execution of
    those decisions going beyond the mere carrying
    out of directions as an employee. That decision
    making role or authority and the responsibilities
    inherent in them must be such as to affect the
    corporation as a whole or a substantial part of
    the corporation. In saying that, it does not mean
    that the person must be at the highest levels of
    management. The structure and size of the
    corporation is relevant as is the role of the
    person within the corporation relevant to his/her
    decision making powers on behalf of the
    corporation.

9
Other Authorities Since
  • Morrison v Powercoal Pty Ltd and Anor 2004
    NSWIRComm 297 on 18 November 2004 (the Powercoal
    decision)
  • In the Powercoal decision the Full Bench did not
    provide a summarised view or set of criteria
    which may assist in determining if a particular
    manager is subject to s26, and stated

10
Other Authorities Since
  • There are no authorities directly in point as to
    the scope of what is encompassed by the term
    persons concerned in the management of the
    corporation as that phrase is used in the
    Occupational Health and Safety Act and in
    interpreting the phrase it is necessary to have
    regard to the normal rules governing statutory
    construction, which would include an examination
    of the context in which the expression is used
    and the objects of the Act. It is permissible,
    however, as an aid to interpretation, to have
    regard to how the phrase or similar working has
    been construed in other statutory contexts. at
    171

11
Other Authorities Since
  • In the Powercoal case, the court reviewed another
    case Griggs v Australian Securities Commission
    1999 SASC 405, which considered the term
    concerned in the management of
  • Management of a company may take place at many
    levels. It is reasonably clear from the section
    that management is not confined to matters
    performed by the directors or a managing director
    of a company, nor is it limited to the
    formulation of policy and direction of the
    company. As Ormiston J pointed out in Bracht at
    829, there must be the exercise of some decision
    making powers. The question is how far down the
    management line does the definition extend.
    Bleby J at 41.

12
Other Authorities Since
  • That definition does not require that management
    be exclusively vested in one person. Different
    persons may undertake different aspect of
    management.
  • That involvement must be more than passing, and
    certainly not of a kind where merely clerical or
    administrative acts are performed. It requires
    activities involving some responsibility, but not
    necessarily of an ultimate kind whereby control
    is exercised. Advice given to management,
    participation in its decision-making processes,
    and execution of its decisions going beyond the
    mere carrying out of directions as an employee,
    would suffice. Ormiston J in Bracht at 832-833

13
APESMA Action SinceGretley
  • Successfully lobbied NSW Government to change s26
    deeming provisions when there is a workplace
    fatality, to create a new offence of Reckless
    conduct causing death at a workplace by person
    with OHS duties.
  • Key Improvements
  • The onus of proof is on the prosecutor,
  • Appeal Rights to Criminal Court
  • Must be reckless conduct.
  • Criminal Standard of proof
  • But greater penalties.

14
APESMA Action SinceGretley
  • New Provision states
  • A person
  •  (a)               whose conduct causes the
    death of another person at any place of work, and
  • (b)               who owes a duty under Part 2
    with respect to the health or safety of that
    person when engaging in that conduct, and
  • (c)               who is reckless as to the
    danger of death or serious injury to any person
    to whom that duty is owed that arises from that
    conduct,
  • is guilty of any offence.

15
How is Gretley Relevant to QLD?
  • There is a similar provision at s262 of the Coal
    Mining Safety Health Act QLD 1999 and
    prosecutions could be bought under this
    provision.
  • The scope of Executive Officer at S 262 could
    potentially extend to Surveyors, depending on the
    facts of the case.

16
Definition of Executive Officer
  • Executive Officer of a corporation means a
    person who is -
  • (a) a member of the governing body of the
    corporation or
  • (b) concerned with, or takes part in, the
    corporations management, whatever the persons
    position is called and whether or not the person
    is a director of the corporation.

17
S262 Coal Mining Safety Health Act QLD 1999
  • Executive officers must ensure corporation
    complies with Act
  • (1) The executive officers of a corporation must
    ensure that the corporation complies with this
    Act.
  • (2) If a corporation commits an offence against a
    provision of this Act, each of the corporations
    executive officers also commits an offence,
    namely, the offence of failing to ensure that the
    corporation complies with this provision.
  • Maximum penalty for ss2 - the penalty for the
    contravention of the provision by an individual.

18
S262 Coal Mining Safety Health Act QLD 1999
  • (3) Evidence that the corporation has been
    convicted of an offence against a provision of
    this Act is evidence that each of the executive
    officers committed the offence of failing to
    ensure that the corporation complies with the
    provision.
  • (4) However, it is an defence for an executive
    officer to prove
  • (a) if the officer was in a position to
    influence the conduct of the corporation in
    relation to the offence - the officer exercised
    reasonable diligence to ensure the corporation
    complied with the provision or
  • (b) the officer was not in a position to
    influence the conduct of the corporation in
    relation to the offence.

19
Liability - Is there a Magic Answer?
  • Assuming you take all reasonable steps but an
    incident happens what could be your liability? IT
    IS NOT CLEAR.
  • This is an emerging area of law
  • Each prosecution is giving some guidance but each
    case turns on its facts
  • We can get legal advice to minimise risk, but the
    Acts are interpreted by the judiciary, not the
    lawyers giving advice.

20
Liability - What can you do?
  • Surveyors should lobby for changes to the Acts
  • Qld surveyors should look at the recent NSW
    changes.
  • Surveyors should be actively involved in
    reviewing the Act and Regulations, and each
    decision as it is decided.
  • Surveyors should consider legal advice on
    Standards etc .

21
Disclaimer
  • This is not legal advice !
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