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Vicarious liability in Australia is the legal principle that makes an institution answerable for the wrongful acts of its employees, provided those acts occur within the scope of employment. The Civil Liability Amendment Bill 2026, introduced in the Queensland Parliament, represents the most significant recalibration of this doctrine in over a decade, reshaping how victims of institutional wrongdoing can pursue compensation and how defendant organisations must prepare their defences. Whether you are a survivor of institutional abuse weighing your options, a claimant solicitor mapping litigation strategy, or in-house counsel stress-testing your organisation’s exposure, the reforms demand immediate attention.
Parallel shifts across federal anti-discrimination enforcement, state limitation-period extensions, and the continuing fallout from High Court authority on the boundaries of employer liability mean that the landscape for suing institutions in Australia is changing on multiple fronts simultaneously. Industry observers expect these changes to produce a measurable rise in institutional claims filed during the second half of 2026 and into 2027.
Vicarious liability is a form of strict, no-fault liability that allows an injured person to hold an employer or principal legally responsible for a tort committed by an employee or agent, even though the employer did not personally commit the wrongful act. In plain language, if someone harms you while doing their job, their employer can be made to pay.
The Australian Human Rights Commission describes vicarious liability as arising where there is a sufficient connection between the employment relationship and the wrongful conduct, noting that employers may be liable for acts of harassment or discrimination committed by their staff unless the employer can demonstrate it took “all reasonable steps” to prevent the conduct (Australian Human Rights Commission, Vicarious Liability Guidance).
Australian courts assess vicarious liability by reference to three interconnected elements. Each must be established on the balance of probabilities before an institution can be held responsible:
These elements have been refined repeatedly by the High Court of Australia. The most recent authoritative treatment, discussed in detail below, has narrowed the scope of what qualifies as a relationship “akin to employment” and tightened the connection required between the wrongful act and the employment itself.
The Civil Liability Amendment Bill 2026 was introduced in the Queensland Parliament with the stated purpose of modernising the statutory framework governing institutional exposure to claims arising from the wrongful conduct of employees and agents. The Bill addresses several dimensions of vicarious liability that had been left unresolved by the common law, and its likely practical effect will be felt across both government and private-sector defendants in Queensland, with flow-on implications for harmonisation efforts in other states.
The headline changes that the civil liability amendment bill introduces can be summarised as follows:
| Date | Action | Practical Effect |
|---|---|---|
| 2024 | Bird v DP [2024] HCA 41 decided by the High Court | Restricts vicarious liability to traditional employment relationships; raises the threshold for “akin to employment” claims and prompts legislative review |
| May 2026 | Civil Liability Amendment Bill 2026 introduced (QLD Parliament) | Clarifies institutional vicarious liability exposure; introduces pre-action disclosure and codifies non-delegable duties |
| Ongoing 2026 | Parallel federal and state reforms (anti-discrimination, employment, consumer protection) | Broadens institutional accountability across multiple regulatory channels; creates intersecting avenues for victims to pursue claims |
The Bill’s territorial scope is Queensland, but early indications suggest that other states are monitoring the reforms closely. New South Wales and Victoria have both flagged harmonisation as a policy objective in their respective attorneys-general communiqués. For claimant lawyers operating nationally, the practical effect is that Queensland-based claims filed after commencement will benefit from the enhanced disclosure regime, while claims in other jurisdictions may still need to rely on existing common-law tests and state-specific procedural rules.
The High Court of Australia’s decision in Bird v DP [2024] HCA 41 is the most important recent authority on vicarious liability in Australia. The case addressed whether an institution could be held vicariously liable for the criminal acts of a person who was not a traditional employee but who occupied a role closely integrated into the institution’s operations. The High Court held that vicarious liability should be confined to relationships that are properly characterised as employment relationships, or relationships that are so closely analogous to employment that the same policy rationale, the employer’s control over the worker and its ability to manage risk, applies with equal force (Clayton Utz, 2023 case commentary; Kennedys Law, 2024 workforce analysis).
The effect of Bird v DP has been to raise the evidentiary bar for claimants seeking to hold institutions liable for the acts of volunteers, independent contractors, foster carers, and other non-employee participants. The decision confirmed that the mere fact that an institution placed a person in a position of authority or trust does not, without more, create a relationship of employment or one sufficiently akin to employment. The Court emphasised the distinction between “scope of employment” and “mere opportunity,” noting that an institution is not liable simply because its operations gave the wrongdoer access to the victim.
| Relationship Type | Likelihood of Vicarious Liability | Practical Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Traditional employment | High, well-established | Clear control, integration, and mutual obligation indicators; standard payroll or contract-of-service arrangement |
| Akin-to-employment (e.g., foster carers, clergy, embedded volunteers) | Moderate, significantly narrowed by Bird v DP | Claimants must now demonstrate that the relationship bears the essential hallmarks of employment; control and integration are key factors |
| Independent contractor | Low, generally excluded | Institutions typically not liable unless a non-delegable duty applies or the contractor is a “deemed employee” under specific statute |
For victims and claimant lawyers, the practical consequence of this line of authority is clear: identifying the precise nature of the relationship between the wrongdoer and the institution is the first and most critical step in assessing whether a vicarious liability claim is viable. Where the relationship falls short of employment, alternative causes of action, including breach of non-delegable duty and direct negligence, must be considered.
Filing a claim against government in Australia introduces procedural requirements that do not apply to claims against private institutions. Each state and territory has its own statutory framework governing when and how the Crown or a government body can be sued, and failure to comply with these requirements can be fatal to an otherwise meritorious claim. Understanding these rules is essential when suing the state in Australia.
The Civil Liability Amendment Bill 2026 interacts with these existing requirements by imposing additional pre-action disclosure obligations on institutional defendants, including government bodies. The likely practical effect will be to level the playing field somewhat for claimants, who have traditionally faced significant difficulty obtaining relevant documents from government defendants at the pre-litigation stage.
Whether a claim ultimately proceeds under vicarious liability, breach of non-delegable duty, direct negligence, or a combination of these, the early preparatory steps are substantially the same. Time is the enemy of institutional claims: documents are destroyed, witnesses become unavailable, and limitation periods expire. The following checklist sets out the immediate actions that victims and their lawyers should take when suing institutions in Australia.
Successful claims for damages arising from institutional wrongdoing can result in substantial awards. The categories of recoverable loss in vicarious liability claims mirror those available in other tort claims, but the assessment is often complicated by the long delay between the wrongdoing and the commencement of proceedings, a delay that is characteristic of institutional abuse cases in particular.
Damages for institutional wrongdoing can also interact with statutory redress payments. Where a victim has already received a payment under the National Redress Scheme, any subsequent common-law award will typically be reduced by the amount of the redress payment to prevent double recovery.
Not every claim against an institution fits neatly within the vicarious liability framework. Claimant lawyers should consider whether parallel or alternative causes of action offer tactical advantages, particularly where the vicarious liability pathway has been narrowed by Bird v DP or where the nature of the harm is reputational rather than physical.
Vicarious liability defamation claims arise where an employee publishes defamatory material about a third party in the course of employment and the victim seeks to hold the employer liable. This scenario can intersect with institutional accountability claims where, for example, a state actor or government employee makes false or damaging public statements about a complainant. Key considerations include:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Peter Obrien at OBrien Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The reforms introduced by the Civil Liability Amendment Bill 2026, combined with the High Court’s evolving approach to vicarious liability in Australia, mean that victims and their legal advisers must act quickly and strategically. Every institutional claim is fact-specific: the nature of the relationship, the jurisdiction, the type of harm, and the limitation position will all shape the appropriate pathway.
For victims considering a claim, the single most important step is to obtain specialist legal advice as early as possible. A lawyer experienced in institutional liability can assess the viability of the claim, identify the correct defendant, preserve evidence, and advise on funding options. Global Law Experts maintains a directory of civil lawyers in Australia who can assist with institutional claims, and the broader lawyer directory allows searches by practice area and jurisdiction. Enquiries can be submitted directly through the Global Law Experts contact page.
For legal professionals seeking to join the network or access referral opportunities, the membership and referrals page provides details on how to participate.
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