The original news item states 2 main claims by ACCC:
1. “The ACCC claims that Qantas kept selling tickets for the flights that were scheduled to depart between May and July 2022 for an average of more than two weeks after the cancellation of the flights — and in some cases, up to 47 days.”
2.”The competition watchdog also alleges Qantas failed to notify existing ticketholders their flights had been cancelled for an average of 18 days, and up to 48 days, for more than 10,000 flights set to take off between May and July 2022.”
Frankly the bag of rights defence only apply for Claim 2 and ACCC would always have to work hard to prove this case. BTW the biggest impact of Omicron variants upon air travel was in early Dec 2021 to March 2022, so how it can affect flight 6 months later is just a red herring, and I am not sure it was specifically raised as a reason by the QF defence AFAIK other than under the overalL umbrella COVID-19 reason.
But if the ACCC can get enough evidence to prove Claim 1, and keeping in mind whether QF had intentionally did so knowing the scheduled flights were not happening is actually immaterial, then they can get to sufficient level of proof to cross the threshold.
Of course, if that prove includes that elusive correspondence that management knew the scheduled flights were not happening or impossible to fulfill, and yet they either did nothing to stop ongoing sale of tickets to these services, or worse, tell sales department to keep selling, then this will actually help elevate both claim 1 and 2 in terms of impact upon the ticket holders To the bundle of rights (not pax until they are on a service)
we can argue to death about claim 2, but it was always the weaker of the 2, subject to the court interpretation of QF’s T & Cs. Some may argue that QF should stop fighting Claim 2 as the defence does more damage as it meant the QF ticket holders have no better rights to any LCCs like their very own JQ. But I will submit the court of opinion here that for the majority public, their memory is still fairly short and not follow through their legal arguments as much as we do in the forum.
obviously their internal legal team and management feels that if they lost Claim 2 the splash on the daily rag and ongoing references for years to come would have a worse impact on QF’s reputation