Benchmark WA Industrial Relations Case Database

Bonnie Giles v J.M Del Borrello & S.L Lee

[2026] FWC 977 Fair Work Commission 2026-01-01
Source
Deputy President Easton
Not yet cited by other cases
Applicant: Bonnie Giles
Respondent: J.M Del Borrello & S.L Lee

Ratio

Ms Giles' unfair dismissal application is dismissed because she has not satisfied the minimum employment period requirement under s.383 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) (less than 6 months employment). The s.587 power to dismiss on the Commission's own initiative was properly exercised as it was very clear that the applicant had no reasonable prospects of success and she was given a fair opportunity to demonstrate otherwise.

Outcome

Against applicant dismissed

Authority signal

Not yet cited by other cases Signal-weighted score: 0.0
Derived from how later decisions have treated this case. Dark green = leading authority, green = positively treated, grey = neutral or sparse data, amber = caution, red = treated negatively.

Key facts · 5

  • Ms Giles commenced employment with J.M Del Borrello & S.L Lee on 1 November 2025
  • Ms Giles was dismissed on 11 December 2025
  • Total period of employment was 1 month, 1 week and 3 days (less than 6 months)
  • Commission staff attempted to contact Ms Giles on 17 December 2025 and 9 January 2026 regarding the minimum employment period
  • Ms Giles did not provide information showing she had completed the minimum employment period

Factors

For
Against
  • Applicant employed for less than 6 months (1 month, 1 week and 3 days)
  • Does not meet minimum employment period threshold under s.383
  • Applicant provided no evidence or information to suggest she had completed the minimum period
  • Applicant had two opportunities to provide clarifying information but did not

Legislation referenced

  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.382
  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.383
  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.394
  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.587

Concept tags · 4

[P]Unfair dismissal (federal) [P]Dismissal during minimum employment period [S]Interlocutory summary dismissal application [S]Time limits for filing

Principles · 6

articulates para 7
The power under s.587 to dismiss an application on the Commission's own initiative should be used with caution, particularly if the matter involves complex questions of fact or law. An application should not be dismissed under s.587 unless it is very clear that there are no reasonable prospects of success.
articulates para 7
The power under s.587 is not available if there are disputed facts that could affect the outcome of the proceedings.
articulates para 8
Applicants must be given a fair opportunity to show that their application does in fact have some reasonable prospects of success.
articulates para 9
The Commission cannot consider the fairness of a dismissal until it is clear that the applicant is eligible to make an unfair dismissal claim.
cites para 7
The power under s.587 should be used with caution, particularly if the matter involves complex questions of fact or law. Protracted proceedings can be avoided when there is no reasonable prospect of an outcome other than the dismissal of the application.
cites para 11
Applicants must be given a fair opportunity to show that their application has reasonable prospects of success, particularly on matters material to the decision to dismiss under s.587.

Cases cited in this decision · 1

Cited
[2024] FWC 1302 — Alan Geoffrey Bond v Carbridge Pty Ltd T/A Carbridge
"…ble prospect of an outcome other than the dismissal of the application. [7] The power under s.587 should be used with caution, particularly if the matter involves complex questions of fact or law (see generally Bond...…"
Archived text (633 words)
1 Fair Work Act 2009 s.394—Unfair dismissal Bonnie Giles (U2025/19677) DEPUTY PRESIDENT EASTON SYDNEY, 23 MARCH 2026 Application for an unfair dismissal remedy – minimum employment period – dismissal under s.587(1)(c) at the Commission’s initiative - application has no reasonable prospects of success. [1] On 13 December 2025, Ms Bonnie Giles made an unfair dismissal application to the Fair Work Commission under s.394 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth). [2] For the following reasons I am satisfied that Ms Giles’ application has no reasonable prospects of success and should be dismissed. [3] In her Form F2 Unfair Dismissal Application Ms Giles indicated that she commenced employment with J.M Del Borrello & S.L Lee on 1 November 2025 and that her dismissal took effect on 11 December 2025. On the information provided by Ms Giles, she was employed for 1 month, 1 week and 3 days. [4] Sections 382 and 383 of the Act provide that a person is only eligible to make an unfair dismissal application if they have completed a minimum period of employment before their dismissal. Section 383 defines the minimum employment period to be either 6 months or 12 months, depending on whether the respondent was a small business employer at the time of the dismissal. On the information provided by Ms Giles the period of employment was less than 6 months. [5] Commission staff attempted to contact Ms Giles on 17 December 2025 and 9 January 2026 by telephone, SMS and email regarding the Minimum Employment Period. Section 587 – General Principles [6] Section 587 allows the Commission to dismiss an application on the Commission’s own initiative in the early stages of the proceedings. Protracted proceedings can be avoided when there is no reasonable prospect of an outcome other than the dismissal of the application. [7] The power under s.587 should be used with caution, particularly if the matter involves complex questions of fact or law (see generally Bond v Carbridge Pty Ltd T/A Carbridge [2024] FWC 1302 at [11]-[16] (Bond)). An application should not be dismissed under s.587 unless it [2026] FWC 977 DECISION AND ORDER [2026] FWC 977 2 is very clear that there are no reasonable prospects of success. As such the power under s.587 is not available if there are disputed facts that could affect the outcome of the proceedings. [8] Importantly, applicants must be given a fair opportunity to show that their application does in fact have some reasonable prospects of success. Does Ms Giles’ application have any reasonable prospects of success? [9] The Commission cannot consider the fairness of Ms Giles’ dismissal until it is clear that she is eligible to make an unfair dismissal claim. [10] The information provided by Ms Giles on her Form F2 application strongly indicates that she is not eligible to make an unfair dismissal application because she does not appear to have served the minimum employment period. [11] Ms Giles had the opportunity to provide information that could show that she had in fact completed the minimum employment period. However Ms Giles has not provided any information that is consistent with her having done so. Ms Giles has also had the opportunity to put her case for consideration on all matters material to the decision to dismiss the application under s.587 (see Bond at [15]-[16]). [12] I am satisfied that Ms Giles’ claim has no reasonable prospect of success within the meaning of s.587(1)(c), and that it is appropriate in the circumstances to dismiss her application on the Commission’s own initiative using the facility available in s.587(3)(a). I make the following order: A. The application under s.394 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) made by Ms Bonnie Giles on 13 December 2025 is dismissed. DEPUTY PRESIDENT Printed by authority of the Commonwealth Government Printer <PR797925>