*THE
WORKER*
Brisbane
October 20, 1894.
Compulsory
Arbitration.
In
the course of an address on the subject of “Industrial Conciliation
and Arbitration” Dr. Garran, who is an ex-editor of the Sydney
Morning Herald,
was also chairman of the late N.S.W. Council of Arbitration, said:
There is a
widespread opinion that seems to have grown up naturally that what
needs to be done to make arbitration more generally useful is to
insist on having the merits of all important disputes investigated.
At present the consent of both parties is necessary. The natural
step, therefore, seems to be to cause the inquiry to be made on the
application of one party alone, that is of the party anxious to make
the inquiry, and which, if not the more convinced of the rightous of
its cause, is at least sufficiently so to challenge investigation. In
our civil courts in case of non-appearance the judgement goes by
default. As a matter of fact, a non-appearance is the exception. When
an inquiry has become inevitable a defendant has generally faith
enough in his own case to see that a defence is better than no
defence. We may reasonably presume that it would be the same with
regard to trade disputes, and that it would be the exception when
either party would voluntary stand aloof from the inquiry. It would
be unfortunate should it prove to be otherwise. All who have
practical acquaintance with civil trials know that expert evidence
when unchallenged has a very limited value, and I am quite sure that
a court of arbitration would be very sorry to have adjudicate on a
trade dispute if only one side had been heard and there had been no
cross-examination. It will be very desirable, therefore, in case of
an obstinate refusal to attend, that somebody should be provided to
represent the absent party – some one interested in the defendant's
side of the question, and with sufficient knowledge of the trade to
be able to cross-examine with effect. It must be admitted, however,
that a one-sided inquiry would, even at its best, be unsatisfactory.
In such a case the award would simply go for what it was worth. It
would be based on the evidence so far as it was obtainable, and so
far as it could be sifted, and it would not pretend to be more than
that. The arbitrators would do their best possible, and would not
pretend that they had done the impossible.
Let us admit that it
will be a novelty to set up a system of adjudicating on trades
disputes at the instance of one party only; but under the
circumstances novelty is unavoidable. We are feeling our way towards
a better state of things, and in doing so we have to make
experiments. There is no sound political objection to such
experiments, so long as there is a fair presumption in their favour,
and so long as no fundamental rights or principles are infringed.
This proposal to force a hearing of the merits of trade disputes is
not in any way a revolutionary proposal. It in no way tends to
discourage enterprise or hamper industrial energy; it in no way
detracts from the liberty of the employer or wounds the self-respect
of the employe'. When a strike or lockout is imminent, it simply
calls a halt, and endeavours to ascertain what is the justice of the
case. What person, what principle, is injured by such an attempt?
But there is one
general conclusion to be drawn from the study of the situation, and
it is this – that Parliament is justified in making such further
arrangements as will enable a qualified board to get at the rights of
every industrial dispute of any magnitude, so far as it can do so
without infringing on the liberty of the subject. We may fairly say
that we have reached the stage at which our experience has made this
clear, and if so, the next forward movement is no longer doubtful.
* *
*
The
Sydney Daily
Telegraph approves
of Dr. Garran's utterances. The Brisbane press in all liklihood would
condemn them. When it is a question of industrial conciliation or
arbitration in this province, the Queensland Fat Man editors write in
a “how not to do it” strain.
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