$200,000 in penalties after cook sacked by text message

The former owner-operator of an Indian restaurant in Perth has been penalised more than $200,000 after paying an overseas cook nothing for almost four months’ work then sacking him by text message for taking a day of sick leave.

Simon Peter Mackenzie, who owned and ran The Curry Tree restaurant in Nedlands before it burnt down in 2014, has been penalised $34,815 – and his company, Siner Enterprises Pty Ltd, has been penalised an additional $174,075.

The penalties, imposed in the Federal Circuit Court, are the result of legal action by the Fair Work Ombudsman.

In addition to the penalties, the Court has ordered Mackenzie and his company to pay the exploited worker a total of $32,661 in outstanding wages and compensation for the economic loss the worker suffered as a result of being sacked.

The worker is an Indian national, who was aged 24 and in Australia on a bridging visa when he started work as a cook at The Curry Tree in 2012 after responding to a job ad on Gumtree.

He was paid $200 cash for his first few days of work but then worked six evenings per week for the next four months without receiving any pay.

The worker was reluctant to complain because he had hoped Mackenzie’s company would sponsor him on a work visa, which would allow him to remain in Australia.

When the worker sent Mackenzie a text message saying he would not attend work because he was unwell and would provide a medical certificate the following day, Mackenzie responded with a series of text messages terminating his employment.

Mackenzie initially texted the worker saying “dont come back”.

Then a short time later Mackenzie sent the worker a text message saying, “Dont expect any sympathy, pls don’t my lawyer sue you for defamation of/mycharacter. Pls return key today”.

Mackenzie then sent a follow-up text message stating, “If you dont answer i will ring the police and say you possession of my keys to my business and I want them bak. they will come to your house and arrest you for theft”.

The worker lodged a complaint after being dismissed – and the Fair Work Ombudsman commenced an investigation and then legal action.

At a contested hearing in the Federal Circuit Court, Mackenzie denied committing any contraventions of workplace laws, but the Court found Mackenzie and his company had committed all contraventions alleged by the Fair Work Ombudsman.

In addition to underpayments of basic entitlements and providing false records to Fair Work inspectors, the Court found that Mackenzie and his company had contravened workplace laws that prohibit taking adverse action against an employee, such as dismissing them for accessing a workplace entitlement such as sick leave.

Judge Antoni Lucev described the contraventions as “egregious” and found that the “deliberateness of the contraventions is plainly proven”.

“The conduct in relation to the termination of employment of [the worker] is, in the Court’s view, more egregious because of the manner in which it was carried out,” Judge Lucev said.

Judge Lucev was also highly critical of Mackenzie’s conduct in Court, saying he had displayed “sheer belligerence” and directed “hostility” towards the worker and the Fair Work Ombudsman’s legal representatives.

“Mr Mackenzie went so far as to suggest that (the worker) might have somehow had an involvement in events, or events which led to, the burning down of the restaurant, an assertion which was simply not the subject of any evidence whatsoever,” Judge Lucev said.

Judge Lucev also found that Mackenzie had displayed no remorse, noting that Mackenzie told the court that “there will be no apology at all”.

“Mr Mackenzie’s attitude as evidenced at the penalty hearing is cause for serious concern in relation to any possible future employment by him or by any company with which he is associated,” Judge Lucev said.