If one of your employees engage in unlawful conduct, is your business liable for those actions? An employer’s liability for an employee’s actions is referred to as ‘vicarious liability’. However, whether this also applies to independent contractor relationships has been uncertain.
The High Court case, Bird v DP [2024], has provided us with more answers, establishing a strict criterion to be considered when determining whether a business is liable for their worker’s unlawful actions.
The court rejected the notion of expanding the principle of vicarious liability to extend beyond this employment relationship; such as to extend to the acts of independent contractors. Ultimately, the Court quashed this suggestion and highlighted that vicarious liability is concerned with attribution of liability, not fault, and therefore it is wrong to infer risk or fault. As such, the Court held that a Diocese is not vicariously liable for the wrongful actions of its priests due to the absence of an employment relationship.
The respondent (DP) commenced proceedings in the Supreme Court of Victoria against the Catholic Diocese of Ballarat (‘Diocese’), alleging he was assaulted and sexually abused in 1971. The DP claimed that the Diocese should be considered vicariously liable for the assaults committed by the assistant priest, Father Bryan Coffey (Coffey), arguing that they were not exercising reasonable care to control and supervise Coffey and are therefore liable for negligence. The respondent sought to claim damages for the psychological injuries that were sustained as a result of this abuse and assault inflicted by Coffey. With this context, two key questions arose-
Ultimately, the Victorian Supreme Court ruled that the Diocese was vicariously liable for the priest’s abuse of DP, despite the absence of a typical employee/employer adjacent relationship between a Diocese and parish priests. DP’s negligence claim was unsuccessful as there was not enough sufficient evidence to support that in 1971 the Diocese knew or should have known that Coffey was posing a risk of harm.
The doctrine of vicarious liability refers to an employer being held legally responsible for the wrongful actions of their employees. In this case, the High Court reaffirmed the clear limitations on the use of agency and secondary liability based on attribution of liability. In Australia, an employer is vicariously liable for the wrongful acts of its employees if those acts are committed in the course of the scope of the employment or are closely tied with the employee’s duties.
In the Court’s decision, the judges examined three ways the Diocese could be held liable for the priest’s conduct.
Clergy are generally not employees at common law. The Court accepted that, despite:
a priest appointed under canon law does not have an employment relationship with the Diocese. This reinforces the long‑standing position that clergy occupy a sui generis, ecclesiastical office, rather than a contractual employment relationship.
Although the ruling in AA v. The Trustees of the Roman Catholic Church for the Diocese of Maitland-Newcastle [2026] established that priests and clergy are treated as employees. This only applies for historical abuse claims where the employer may be found to be vicariously liable.
The Court still rejected the argument that the relationship could be treated as:
Instead, it held that extending employment concepts beyond actual employment would create uncertainty and is a matter for Parliament, not the courts.
This landmark decision asserts that:
Understand your legal responsibilities before workplace issues become disputes. Contact our Senior Associate Antonia Tahhan on 1300 676 823 for strategic advice on employer liability and workplace compliance