Danny Domenico Paris v Rasier Pacific Pty Ltd t/a Uber
Deputy President Saunders
Not yet cited by other cases
Applicant: Danny Domenico Paris
Respondent: Rasier Pacific Pty Ltd t/a Uber
Ratio
An unfair deactivation application was dismissed under s536M of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) on the ground that the applicant unreasonably failed to comply with directions requiring him to file witness statements, documents and submissions by the specified date, and demonstrated no intention to pursue the application.
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 · 11
- Mr Paris was deactivated by Rasier Pacific Pty Ltd t/a Uber
- Mr Paris was subsequently reactivated by the Respondent
- Mr Paris lost income during the period between deactivation and reactivation
- At a directions hearing on 22 April 2025, Mr Paris expressed reluctance to proceed with the application, stating 'forget about it', 'end this', and 'this is a waste of time'
- Mr Paris declined to withdraw the application and said he wanted it to 'sit there'
- Deputy President explained that the application could not remain on foot without proceeding to hearing
- Mr Paris hung up and departed the directions hearing
- Directions issued on 22 April 2025 required Mr Paris to file witness statements, documents and submissions by 4pm on 6 May 2025
- Mr Paris failed to comply with the filing direction
- The Respondent applied to dismiss the application for non-compliance
- Mr Paris did not respond to the Respondent's dismissal application
Factors
For
- Mr Paris failed to comply with directions requiring filing by specified deadline
- Mr Paris demonstrated no genuine intention to pursue the application
- Mr Paris stated the application was 'a waste of time'
- Mr Paris did not respond to the Respondent's dismissal application
- Mr Paris declined to formally withdraw, preventing procedural closure
Against
Legislation referenced
- Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.536LU
- Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.536M
Concept tags · 4
Principles · 2
articulates para 2
An unfair deactivation application cannot remain on foot without proceeding to a hearing or having other procedural steps taken in relation to it.
articulates para 7
The Deputy President has discretion under s536M of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) to dismiss an unfair deactivation application where an applicant has unreasonably failed to comply with directions and demonstrates no intention to pursue the claim.
Archived text (482 words)
1 Fair Work Act 2009 s.536LU - Application for an unfair deactivation remedy Danny Domenico Paris v Uber Australia Pty Ltd (UDE2025/25) DEPUTY PRESIDENT SAUNDERS NEWCASTLE, 20 MAY 2025 Application for an unfair deactivation remedy – application dismissed [1] Mr Paris has filed an unfair deactivation application against Rasier Pacific Pty Ltd t/a Uber (Respondent). [2] Mr Paris attended a directions hearing, by telephone, before me on 22 April 2025. During the directions hearing Mr Paris explained that he had been reactivated by the Respondent but he lost income in the period between his deactivation and his reactivation. I asked Mr Paris what outcome he was seeking and whether he wished to proceed with his unfair deactivation application against the Respondent. I outlined the process that would be followed and the directions that would be made to prepare the matter for hearing if Mr Paris wished to proceed to a final hearing to have his unfair deactivation application heard and determined. Mr Paris variously stated, “forget about it”, “end this”, and “this is a waste of time”. I then asked Mr Paris whether he wished to withdraw/discontinue his unfair deactivation application, to which he said “no” and he just wanted the application to “sit there”. I explained to Mr Paris that it was not possible for his unfair deactivation application to remain on foot and not proceed to a hearing or have anything else done in relation to it. Ultimately, Mr Paris hung up and departed the directions hearing. [3] On 22 April 2025, I issued directions requiring that, by 4pm on 6 May 2025, Mr Paris file in the Fair Work Commission and serve on the Respondent all the witness statements, documents and submissions on which he wishes to rely in support of his claim that he was unfairly deactivated and the remedy he seeks for being unfairly deactivated. [4] Mr Paris has not complied with the direction requiring him to file and serve material by 4pm on 6 May 2025. [5] The Respondent has applied to have Mr Paris’s unfair deactivation application dismissed on the basis that he unreasonably failed to comply with the directions made on 22 April 2025. Mr Paris was given an opportunity to respond to this application. He did not do so. [2025] FWC 1387 DECISION [2025] FWC 1387 2 [6] I am satisfied that Mr Paris has unreasonably failed to comply with the directions made on 22 April 2025. Mr Paris has not given any indication that he wishes to pursue his unfair deactivation application against the Respondent. [7] Having regard to all the circumstances, I consider it appropriate to exercise my discretion under s 536M of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) to dismiss Mr Paris’s unfair deactivation application against the Respondent. [8] Mr Paris’s unfair deactivation application against the Respondent is dismissed. DEPUTY PRESIDENT Printed by authority of the Commonwealth Government Printer <PR787460>