Seldon v Clarkson Wright and Jakes: EAT 13 May 2014

EAT Age Discrimination – The Claimant alleged age discrimination against him because he had to retire at 65 from the solicitors’ practice (‘R’) in which he had been a partner. R was held by superior courts to have legitimate aims which it was appropriate to achieve by applying a rule requiring retirement at a fixed age – namely, retention of associate solicitors, workforce planning, and ‘congeniality’ (not blighting the inter-personal atmosphere by challenging a partner with evidence of declining performance at a time in his life when it might be more likely). The issue for the Employment Tribunal was whether the age of 65 was reasonably necessary to achieve this. It held it was. That decision was held to be within its entitlement to make – the fact that it could have been set a year later did not mean it was wrong in law to fix it at 65, which fell within a narrow range identified as proportionate (64 – 66) and it was appropriate to take into account other considerations such as the legislation at the time, and the default retirement age, in setting it at that point within the range.

Langstaff J P
[2014] UKEAT 0434 – 13 – 1305
Bailii
England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 10 November 2021; Ref: scu.534237