What Sections 324, 325 & 326 of the Fair Work Act Say
The Fair Work Act 2009 contains three interlocking provisions that tightly control when and how an employer can make deductions from an employee's wages. Together, they create a near-absolute prohibition on employers docking pay for breakage, wastage, or damage to produce.
An employer may only deduct from an employee's wages if the employee has agreed in writing AND the deduction is principally for the employee's benefit; or the deduction is authorised by or under a law, a court order, or an order of the Fair Work Commission; or the deduction is authorised under the terms of an enterprise agreement or modern award.
An employer must not directly or indirectly require an employee to spend or pay an amount of their money if the requirement is unreasonable in the circumstances. Requiring workers to "pay for" dropped or damaged fruit falls squarely within this prohibition.
Even if an employee has signed an agreement allowing deductions, that term has no legal effect if the deduction is directly or indirectly for the benefit of the employer (or a related party) AND the deduction is unreasonable in the circumstances. This is the critical safety net — a signed consent form cannot override the law.