Benchmark WA Industrial Relations Case Database

Alexander Doran v Beijer Ref Holdings Australia Pty Ltd

[2025] FWC 3106 Fair Work Commission 2025-01-01
Source
Deputy President Farouque
Not yet cited by other cases
Applicant: Alexander Doran
Respondent: Beijer Ref Holdings Australia Pty Ltd

Ratio

The application was dismissed because the applicant was employed by Ready Staff Pty Ltd (a labour hire provider), not by Beijer. The statutory definitions of 'dismissed' (s.386) and 'protected from unfair dismissal' (s.382) both presuppose an employment relationship between the person and the alleged employer. Since Beijer was never the applicant's employer, the applicant could not have been dismissed by Beijer and was not a person protected from unfair dismissal, rendering the application invalid.

Outcome

Against applicant dismissed_jurisdiction

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 · 6

  • Applicant lodged unfair dismissal application under s.394 naming Beijer as respondent
  • Beijer lodged Form F3 objecting that applicant was not dismissed and not employed by Beijer
  • Employment Agreement ('On-Hire Casual') between applicant and Ready Staff Pty Ltd identified Ready Staff as employer
  • Beijer was a labour hire provider to which applicant was allocated from Ready Staff
  • Applicant performed work at Beijer's premises on allocation from Ready Staff
  • Beijer was not party to the Employment Agreement between applicant and Ready Staff

Factors

For
  • Applicant performed work at Beijer's workplace under labour hire arrangement
Against
  • Employment Agreement identified Ready Staff as the employer, not Beijer
  • Beijer was not party to the Employment Agreement
  • Labour hire allocation does not establish employment relationship with end-user
  • s.386 and s.382 presuppose an employment relationship between applicant and the alleged employer
  • Applicant cannot be 'dismissed' by an entity that is not the employer

Legislation referenced

  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.394
  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.386
  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.396
  • Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth) s.382

Concept tags · 5

[P]Unfair dismissal (federal) [P]Employee v independent contractor [P]Jurisdictional objection [S]Joint employer / multi-entity employment [S]Standing to bring application

Principles · 2

articulates para 8
If an unfair dismissal application is filed against an entity which is not the employer, the application is not validly made because the person cannot have been 'dismissed' by the alleged employer and is not a 'person protected from unfair dismissal' under s.382.
articulates para 10
A labour hire allocation whereby a worker performs work at an end-user's premises is not sufficient to establish an employment relationship between the worker and the end-user.
Archived text (759 words)
1 Fair Work Act 2009 s.394—Unfair dismissal Alexander Doran v Beijer Ref Holdings Australia Pty Ltd (U2025/9483) DEPUTY PRESIDENT FAROUQUE MELBOURNE, 16 OCTOBER 2025 Unfair dismissal application – jurisdictional objection – Applicant not an employee – jurisdictional objection upheld – application dismissed [1] Mr Doran has lodged an unfair dismissal application under s 394 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (Cth). The Form F2 application names Beijer Ref Holdings Australia Pty Ltd (Beijer) as the respondent. [2] Beijer has lodged a Form F3 in which it is has indicated, amongst other things, that the applicant was not dismissed and that the applicant was not employed by Beijer. [3] Under s 394 of the Act, “a person who has been dismissed” may apply for an unfair dismissal remedy. Section 386 of the Act defines “dismissed” and sub-section (1) is in the following terms: Meaning of dismissed (1) A person has been dismissed if: (a) the person's employment with his or her employer has been terminated on the employer's initiative; or (b) the person has resigned from his or her employment, but was forced to do so because of conduct, or a course of conduct, engaged in by his or her employer. [4] Relevantly, both sub-paragraphs 386(1)(a) and (b) pre-suppose an employment relationship. This is evident from the reference to “his or her employer” in both sub-paragraphs. [5] Under s 396 of the Act, the Commission must decide certain matters relating to an application before considering the merits of the application. One of those matters is “whether the person was protected from unfair dismissal”. [2025] FWC 3106 DECISION [2025] FWC 3106 2 [6] Section 382 identifies when a “person is protected from unfair dismissal” and is relevantly in the following terms: When a person is protected from unfair dismissal A person is protected from unfair dismissal at a time if, at that time: (a) the person is an employee who has completed a period of employment with his or her employer of at least the minimum employment period; and (b) one or more of the following apply: (i) a modern award covers the person; (ii) an enterprise agreement applies to the person in relation to the employment; (iii) the sum of the person's annual rate of earnings, and such other amounts (if any) worked out in relation to the person in accordance with the regulations, is less than the high income threshold. [7] Sub-section 382(a) also pre-supposes an employment relationship. This is also evident from the reference to “his or her employer” in the sub-paragraph. [8] Consequently, if an unfair dismissal application is filed by a person against an entity which is not the employer, the application is not validly made. This is because the person cannot have been “dismissed” by the alleged employer, as that entity is not the person’s employer. The person filing the application is therefore not “a person who has been dismissed” for the purposes of s 394(1). Furthermore, the person filing the application cannot be a person “protected from unfair dismissal” within the meaning of s 382 as the alleged employer is not the person’s employer. [9] In the present matter, Beijer has provided the Commission a document entitled “Employment Agreement (On-Hire Casual)” between Mr Doran and an entity named Ready Staff Pty Ltd (Ready Staff). The Employment Agreement constitutes a contract of employment and clearly identifies Ready Staff as the employer. It created an employment relationship between Mr Doran and Ready Staff. The Employment Agreement was the relevant instrument under which Mr Doran performed work at Beijer. Beijer is not and never was party to the Employment Agreement. Therefore, Beijer is not and never has been the employer of Mr Doran. [10] Beijer’s Form F3 discloses that Ready Staff was a labour hire provider to Beijer pursuant to the contractual agreement between those entities. Mr Doran performed work for Beijer on allocation from Ready Staff. This is not sufficient to establish an employment relationship between Mr Doran and Beijer. [11] Therefore, Mr Doran’s unfair dismissal application must fail. Because Mr Doran was not an employee of Beijer, he was not “dismissed” within the meaning of s 386. Therefore, his [2025] FWC 3106 3 application under s 394(1) is not validly made. Furthermore, because Mr Doran is not an employee of Beijer, he is not a “person protected from unfair dismissal” as required by s 382. [12] Therefore, I order that Mr Doran’s application to the Commission under s 394 of the Act be dismissed. DEPUTY PRESIDENT Printed by authority of the Commonwealth Government Printer <PR792718>