Citations:
[2001] UKEAT 0453 – 01 – 1712
Links:
Jurisdiction:
England and Wales
Employment
Updated: 24 April 2022; Ref: scu.204586
[2001] UKEAT 0453 – 01 – 1712
England and Wales
Updated: 24 April 2022; Ref: scu.204586
The claimant trade union contended that the defendant Fire and Rescue Authority had committed itself to an unlawful shift pattern at four fire stations in South Yorkshire; unlawful, says the FBU, because it cannot operate without the interested party breaching its obligations as the employer of firefighters under the Working Time Regulations 1998
Kerr J
[2018] EWHC 1229 (Admin)
England and Wales
Updated: 23 April 2022; Ref: scu.618104
(Grand Chamber) Framework Agreement On Fixed-Term Work – Judgment – Reference for a preliminary ruling – Social policy – Directive 1999/70/EC – Framework agreement on fixed-term work concluded by ETUC, UNICE and CEEP – Clause 4 – Principle of non-discrimination – Definition of ’employment conditions’ – Comparability of situations – Justification – Definition of ‘objective grounds’ – Compensation in the event of termination of a permanent employment contract on objective grounds – Lesser amount of compensation paid on expiry of a fixed-term ‘relief’ employment contract
ECLI:EU:C:2018:390, [2018] EUECJ C-574/16
European
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616996
Framework Agreement On Fixed-Term Work – Judgment – Reference for a preliminary ruling – Social policy – Directive 1999/70/EC – Framework agreement on fixed-term work concluded by ETUC, UNICE and CEEP – Clause 4 – Principle of non-discrimination – Definition of ’employment conditions’ – Comparability of situations – Justification – Definition of ‘objective grounds’ – Compensation in the event of termination of an employment contract of indefinite duration on objective grounds – No compensation on expiry of a fixed-term ‘interinidad’ contract
ECLI:EU:C:2018:393, [2018] EUECJ C-677/16
European
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616999
Fixed-Term Employment – Opinion – Request for a preliminary ruling – Social policy – Fixed-term employment – ETUC-UNICE-CEEP – Framework agreement on fixed-term work – Principle of non-discrimination – Interim civil servants and established civil servants within the meaning of Spanish law – Teachers employed as interim civil servants – Early dismissal at the end of the school term – Difference in treatment in relation to comparable permanent workers – Objective ground for different treatment
ECLI:EU:C:2018:365, [2018] EUECJ C-245/17 – O
European
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616989
Practice and Procedure – Striking-Out/Dismissal – The Tribunal erred in not taking the Claimant’s case at its highest for the purposes of determining whether to strike it out. There were clear disputes of fact which went to key issues relating to the period when the alleged harassment commenced, the date on which the line manager was allegedly informed about the harassment and, consequently, when the alleged protected act was done. The decision to strike out would therefore be set aside. However, the Tribunal’s alternative conclusion that the Claimant’s claims had little reasonable prospect of success, which was not the subject of the appeal, was correct. The matter would be remitted to the Tribunal to make the appropriate deposit orders having regard to the Claimant’s means.
[2018] UKEAT 0145 – 17 – 0903
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616883
Breach of Contract
1. This appeal concerns claims by former teachers in Wales for SEN allowance payable under their contracts. The Employment Tribunal held that the conditions for entitlement were satisfied in each case, and accordingly, that the failure to pay SEN allowance was a breach of contract.
2. The Employment Tribunal erred in so concluding in two respects. First, by construing the conditions of entitlement in paragraph 25.2(d) of the Document so as to give no effect to the requirement that the setting of a teacher’s work must be ‘analogous to a designated special class or unit’ to qualify, the Employment Tribunal erred in law. Secondly, the Employment Tribunal erred in its approach to condition (iii) in concluding that the ‘unit or service’ for the purposes of determining whether the claimants had ‘a greater involvement in the teaching of children with [SEN] than is the normal requirement of teachers throughout . . the unit or service’ was the whole education authority rather than the home tutoring service.
3. On a proper construction of the Document, and in light of the evidence, the Claimants are not entitled to be paid SEN allowance for the relevant periods because (a) home tutoring was not an analogous setting to a designated special class or unit; and (b) because they did not establish that they had a greater involvement in the teaching of children with SEN than is the normal requirement of teachers throughout the unit or service, when condition (iii) is properly understood and applied to the facts of their case.
4. The appeal is therefore allowed. Further, for the reasons explained in the judgment, their claims for breach of contract fail and are dismissed.
[2018] UKEAT 0253 – 17 – 0205
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616894
Equal Pay Act – Sex Discrimination – Indirect
The Claimant claimed indirect sex discrimination under provisions in the Respondent Police Force in that the only option for men taking leave after the birth of their child is shared parental leave (‘SPL’) at the statutory rate of pay whereas women have the option of taking maternity leave (‘ML’) on full pay. The Employment Tribunal did not err in holding that the claim was for indirect sex discrimination and not for equal pay within the meaning of Equality Act 2010 (‘EqA’) section 66. The exclusion in EqA Schedule 7 Part 1 paragraph 2 in relation to terms of work affording special treatment for women in connection with pregnancy or childbirth did not apply. Cross-appeal dismissed. The ET erred in adopting their reasons for rejecting women on maternity leave as a comparator for a direct discrimination claim for the purposes of the indirect discrimination claim. The identifying of a pool for testing disparate impact of a PCP on men and women in materially indistinguishable circumstances is a different exercise from that in a direct discrimination claim. Further the ET erred in failing to base their decision on the disparate impact relied upon : fathers have no choice but to take SPL at the statutory rate of pay whereas mothers have the option of ML at full pay. Appeal allowed. Claim of indirect sex discrimination remitted for rehearing to a differently constituted ET.
[2018] UKEAT 0139 – 17 – 0105
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616891
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Postponement or stay
The Employment Judge did not err in law in declining the Claimant’s application to adjourn these proceedings until after the completion of proceedings which she had brought against the United Reformed Church in 2012.
[2018] UKEAT 0300 – 17 – 0504
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616887
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Extension of time: reasonably practicable
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Extension of time: just and equitable
An Employment Tribunal was entitled to find, on the evidence before it, that it had not been reasonably practicable for a Claimant to have served proceedings within the relevant time limit, that he had done so within a reasonable period after learning of the time limits.
[2018] UKEAT 0019 – 18 – 1004
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616886
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Appellate jurisdiction/reasons/Burns-Barke
The Employment Judge’s reasons for refusing an application for interim relief did not sufficiently explain his decision to meet the legal standard for reasons. Al Qasimi v Robinson UKEAT/0283/17 at paragraph 59 applied.
[2018] UKEAT 0053 – 18 – 0404
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616888
PART TIME WORKERS
A worker employed under an associate lecturer’s contract of employment described by the Employment Tribunal as a zero-hours contract, was employed under the same type of contract as a lecturer on a full-time contract for the purposes of Regulation 2(2) and 2(4)(a)(i) Part-time Workers (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations 2000.
The Employment Tribunal had erred in concluding that Wippel v Peek and Cloppenburg GmbH and Co KG [2005] IRLR 211 ECJ led to the conclusion that the Claimant and his full-time comparator were not employed on the same type of contract.
The case is remitted to the Tribunal to determine whether the part-time worker is engaged in the same, or broadly similar, work pursuant to Regulation 2(4)(a)(ii) and, if so, whether he has been subjected to unjustified less favourable treatment contrary to Regulation 5.
The following principles as to the proper approach to Regulation 2(3) for the purposes of Regulation 2(2) and 2(4) emerge from the case law[1]:
Regulation 2(3) provides a comprehensive list of categories of different types of contract for the purposes of paragraphs 2(1), (2) and (4);
The categories in Regulation 2(3) are broadly defined and, since the purpose of the Regulation is to provide a threshold to require a comparison of full and part-time workers to take place, the threshold is deliberately set not too high;
A contract cannot be treated as being of a different type from another just because the terms and conditions that it lays down are different, nor because an employer chooses to treat workers of a particular type differently;
Where a worker and his or her comparator are both employed under contracts that answer to the same description given in the same paragraph in Regulation 2(3), they are both to be regarded as employed under the same type of contract for the purposes of Regulation 2(4);
In order to satisfy the requirements of Regulation 2(4)(a)(i), it is not necessary to go further than to find that both workers are employed under contracts that fit into one or other of the listed categories;
The categories are designed to be mutually exclusive;
The category in Regulation 2(3)(d)[2] is a residual category. It refers to a description of worker who is different from those mentioned in categories (a) to (c) and does not apply to a worker who falls into one of those categories. An example of a description of worker who would fall within category (d) has yet to be identified. A zero-hours contract is not, of itself, a type of contract.
[2018] UKEAT 0299 – 17 – 2603
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616882
Admissibility of Evidence
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Review
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Wrongful dismissal
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
RACE DISCRIMINATION – Direct
RACE DISCRIMINATION – Inferring discrimination
RACE DISCRIMINATION – Burden of proof
The Tribunal did not err in determining that the dismissal of a Black African Consultant for a first offence was not unfair. The Respondent’s reliance upon a pattern of conduct giving rise to concerns about patient safety as a sufficient reason to dismiss was within the range of reasonable responses notwithstanding the fact that there was no single act that could be said to amount to gross misconduct.
However, the Tribunal did err in concluding that the dismissal was not wrongful as it had failed to make the necessary findings of fact for itself to establish that the Claimant’s conduct amounted to a repudiatory breach.
There was no error in concluding that the Claimant had not been discriminated against. The Tribunal’s approach to the evidentiary matters relied upon as giving rise to an inference of discrimination was not ‘fragmentary’ as is apparent from a fair reading of the whole judgment.
The decision not to reconsider its judgment in the light of new evidence from the GMC that no action should be taken against the Claimant was not perverse. The Tribunal was required to consider different matters from those which concerned the GMC and the latter’s conclusions were unlikely to have had a material influence on the outcome.
[2018] UKEAT 0218 – 17 – 1805
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616892
Working Time Regulations – Holiday Pay – Worker – The Claimant was a cycle courier with the Respondent. The ET upheld his claim that he was a ‘limb (b) worker’ within the meaning of Regulation 2 of the Working Time Regulations (‘WTR’); and in consequence entitled to holiday pay thereunder. In doing so it held that the written terms of contract between the parties, describing G as an ‘independent contractor’, did not reflect the reality of the relationship; and that, during the period when G was ‘logged on’ to the Respondent’s app, there was a contract with mutual obligations for ‘jobs’ to be offered and accepted.
The Respondent appealed on two grounds.
First, that on the facts as found by the ET, there was no basis to conclude that G was under any legal obligation to work, i.e. to accept jobs offered to him when logged on. His decision whether or not to do so (as with his entitlement to log on or off at will) was a matter for his whim and fancy. Accordingly the claim must fail for lack of the necessary mutuality of obligation.
Further or alternatively, that the ET’s ‘multi-factorial assessment’ that G had the status of a ‘limb (b) worker’ was vitiated by factual error and should be remitted to another Tribunal.
The EAT rejected both grounds of appeal.
[2018] UKEAT 0289 – 17 – 1105
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616889
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Wrongful dismissal
The claim of wrongful dismissal is remitted back to the same Employment Tribunal to make findings of fact (with additional evidence only if the Tribunal considers it necessary) and to decide for itself whether the Claimant was wrongfully dismissed. The Tribunal erred in appearing to decide the wrongful dismissal claim by reference to the statutory test for unfair dismissal. In scrupulously resisting the temptation of the substitution mindset for the purposes of the unfair dismissal claim in accordance with the wording in section 98 Employment Rights Act 1996 and the applicable case law, the Tribunal does not appear to have directed itself on the wrongful dismissal cause of action nor made the findings of fact necessary to make a determination of the question.
[2018] UKEAT 0301 – 17 – 2203
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616879
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Automatically unfair reasons
VICTIMISATION DISCRIMINATION – Protected disclosure
Unfair dismissal – automatically unfair reason for dismissal (protected disclosure) – section 103A Employment Rights Act 1996
Detriment – protected disclosure- section 47B Employment Rights Act 1996
The Claimant was employed by the Respondent as an Anaesthetics Nurse. He was also a steward for the Royal College of Nursing. The ET found that the Claimant was a campaigner and effective trade union representative and had been viewed as a nuisance and source of irritation by managers within the Respondent. It was against that background that the Claimant made the protected disclosures relied on in these proceedings. The ET was satisfied that the Claimant had discharged the initial (evidential) burden of showing his protected disclosures had materially influenced the Respondent’s decision that he should be suspended and subjected to a disciplinary process and had been the reason or principal reason for his dismissal. The ET rejected the potentially fair reasons relied on by the Respondent – conduct or some other substantial reason, namely a breakdown in relations. The ET further found that the managers involved in the dismissal and appeal decisions had been aware both what a nuisance the Claimant had been and of his whistleblowing. Rejecting the suggestion that this was a case akin to Panayiotou v Chief Constable of Hampshire Police [2014] IRLR 500 EAT, the ET concluded that the reason for dismissal was the fact that the Claimant had made the protected disclosures relied on. It further found the reason for the Claimant’s suspension was not made out and again concluded this had been because of his protected disclosures. The Respondent appealed against the ET’s findings on the Claimant’s whistleblowing complaints.
Held: allowing the appeal in part
Having found that the relevant decision takers in respect of the Claimant’s dismissal and appeal had in mind both that he had been a nuisance in his campaigning and trade union activities and the fact of his having made protected disclosures, the ET needed to engage with the question which had been the real reason or principal reason for the dismissal? Although it had stated it had found that the reason for dismissal had been the Claimant’s protected disclosures, there was nothing to demonstrate it had considered the alternative – that the decision takers’ view of the Claimant as a nuisance was the principal reason. On the ET’s findings, however, that had been left as a possibility, notwithstanding its rejection of the Respondent’s positive case on the dismissal having been for a reason related to the Claimant’s conduct or for some other substantial reason (Kuzel v Roche Products Ltd [2008] IRLR 530 CA applied). The appeal would therefore be allowed in this respect and the question of the reason or principal reason for dismissal remitted to the ET.
The ET had, however, been entitled to distinguish this case from that of Panayiotou v CC Hampshire Police; the issue in this case was not the manner in which the Claimant had made his protected disclosures but his entirely separate conduct that led the Respondent to view him as a ‘nuisance’. The separate grounds of appeal on this point would be dismissed.
[2018] UKEAT 0239 – 17 – 0503
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616880
Harassment – Purpose – Religion or Belief Discrimination – Where the same facts are relied upon for a claim of direct discrimination on grounds of religious belief or race and a claim of harassment for conduct related to those protected characteristics, an Employment Tribunal does not err in determining the harassment claim if they rely on their findings of fact on the direct discrimination claim provided they apply the correct ‘related to’ test required by Equality Act 2010 section 26. No evidence from the alleged perpetrator as to why he uttered offending words is required although an adverse inference may be drawn from his not giving evidence. Findings of fact on the context in which the words were spoken is relevant. Richmond Pharmacology v Dhaliwal [2009] ICR 724 considered. The Employment Tribunal did not err in the test for harassment which they applied. Although a different Employment Tribunal may have come to a different conclusion, they did not err in law. Appeal dismissed.
[2018] UKEAT 0176 – 17 – 1005
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616890
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Reasonable adjustments
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Constructive dismissal
Disability discrimination – reasonable adjustments – sections 20 and 21 Equality Act 2010
Unfair dismissal – constructive dismissal – section 95 Employment Rights Act 1996
The Claimant, who had been employed by the Respondent as a Probation Service Officer (‘PSO’) from April 1999, was a disabled person for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010 by reason of his anxiety and depression; something of which the Respondent had constructive knowledge from 2014. It was accepted that the provision, criterion or practice (‘PCP’) of requiring him to undertake urgent Court duties placed the Claimant at a substantial disadvantage and when the Claimant returned from a period of ill-health absence in April 2015 he was put into an Enforcement Officer role that did not require him to do these duties. Going into the autumn of 2015, however, the ET found the Claimant’s duties essentially slid back to his former role and included the Court duties that placed him under particular stress. The Claimant responded badly to this and began to avoid attending Court. In early and mid-February 2016, he asked the Respondent to consider moving him to a different role as a Victim Liaison Officer (‘VLO’) but no enquiries were made, although a VLO vacancy was advertised in March, only 11 days after the Claimant’s second request. In late February 2016, the Claimant was involved in an altercation at work and left, commencing a further period of sick leave. In early April 2016, the Claimant was offered a position in the Offender Management Unit (‘OMU’). He raised a number of concerns about this but the ET found his subjective fears were ill-founded and the Respondent had complied with its obligations to make reasonable adjustments. The ET was also satisfied that the Claimant was employed in a generic role such that he could be moved to other positions by the Respondent, including the OMU post. In any event, the Claimant had been given time to think about the OMU offer but had decided instead to retire. His retirement was accepted by the Respondent, thus bringing his employment to an end by mutual agreement. The Claimant appealed.
Held: allowing the appeal
The Claimant’s complaint of a failure to make reasonable adjustments was not limited to events in March/April 2016 but also encompassed the latter part of 2015 and early 2016. On the ET’s findings of fact, the Claimant’s Enforcement Officer position had changed such that he was again subject to the PCP (Court duties) that placed him at a substantial disadvantage; the ET had, however, not demonstrated that it had engaged with the Claimant’s complaint that the Respondent had failed to comply with its obligation to make reasonable adjustments at this stage. This was also the case in respect of the Claimant’s complaint that the Respondent had been under an obligation to look at the possibility of alternative positions when he raised the question of moving to a VLO post in February 2016; although the ET had been entitled to assess the reasonableness of the Respondent’s subsequent step (offering the Claimant the OMU role) on an objective basis, it was not irrelevant to that assessment that the position being offered was likely to exacerbate the Claimant’s stress (the substantial disadvantage of which he complained) and there seemed to be another role available that did not have that effect. If seen in the light of the Claimant’s case as to the obligation to make an earlier reasonable adjustment, the ET might have better appreciated the relevance of the point. Separately, the Claimant was contending that the OMU role did not fall within his contract. The ET rejected that argument, finding he was employed in a generic position, allowing the Respondent to move him to other roles. Its conclusion in this regard was, however, inadequately explained. And, although the ET had found that the Claimant had not left his employment because of any breach of contract, that conclusion was rendered unsafe once regard was had to the potential relevance of the history from the autumn of 2015 and the first two months of 2016. In the circumstances, the ET’s decisions on the Claimant’s claims could not stand and the matter would be remitted to a different ET for re-hearing.
[2018] UKEAT 0274 – 17 – 2903
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616884
Practice and Procedure – Right To Be Heard – PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Case management
The wide discretion given to Employment Tribunals to make case management decisions is not to be interfered with on appeal save in limited circumstances. This was one. The refusal by the Regional Employment Judge to be taken by counsel on behalf of the Respondent applicant to passages in the ET1 and witness statement of the Claimant sought to be redacted was so unreasonable that the decision on the application cannot stand. Counsel was inhibited from making submissions on material which was at the heart of the application. Rejection of the application for redaction set aside. Application remitted to the Regional Employment Judge for rehearing.
[2018] UKEAT 0238 – 17 – 2204
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616885
Unfair Dismissal – Reasonableness of Dismissal – Unfair dismissal – reasonableness of the dismissal – section 98(4) Employment Rights Act 1996
The Claimant was dismissed, on notice, for a reason relating to his conduct; initially this was found to amount to gross misconduct but, on his internal appeal, the Respondent accepted it was more properly to be categorised as serious misconduct. The ET found the Claimant’s dismissal for this reason was unfair: it had been unreasonable to characterise his conduct as gross misconduct at the original dismissal decision and once it was recognised it was something less – serious misconduct – that meant a warning was the only reasonable response, dismissal was not. The Respondent appealed.
Held: allowing the appeal.
The ET had unduly restricted its assessment of the fairness of the dismissal for the purposes of section 98(4) ERA by assuming as a general rule that a finding of conduct short of gross misconduct meant dismissal for a first offence was necessarily unfair; section 98(4) made no such prescription and the ET had failed to demonstrate it had correctly approached the question of fairness, alternatively, it had impermissibly substituted its view as to the appropriate sanction for that of the reasonable employer in the particular circumstances of the case.
[2018] UKEAT 0255 – 17 – 1603
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616881
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Absence of Party
The Tribunal was not obliged to make any more adjustments to its procedure than it did for a disabled Claimant. The Tribunal erred in not considering whether to cause a telephone call to be made to enquire as to the Claimant’s reasons for not attending a hearing. However, that error made no difference to the outcome.
Lavender J
[2018] UKEAT 0229 – 17 – 0105
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616893
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Polkey deduction
Upon a remission by the EAT to reconsider its Polkey decision without any further evidence, the ET concluded that there was a 75% chance that the Claimant would have been dismissed on the same date in any event. The Claimant appealed on the basis that the ET had again not properly considered the remitted question and sought remission to a fresh Tribunal; the Respondent cross-appealed on the basis that the ET had fettered its decision by limiting the percentages to ‘quarters’ and that on its findings the appropriate deduction was 90%. The appeal and cross-appeal were dismissed.
[2018] UKEAT 0179 – 17 – 1302
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616873
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Direct disability discrimination -Reasonable adjustments – Justification – direct discrimination (section 13 Equality Act 2010) – indirect discrimination (section 19) – failure to make reasonable adjustments (sections 20 and 21) – justification
The Claimant who was disabled by reason of having undergone double below-knee amputations and suffering from type 2 diabetes and other health conditions, was denied the opportunity to take up an assignment in Dubai because his disabilities were considered to give rise to a risk if he were deployed at a location remote from the UK. The Claimant complained that this amounted to direct and/or indirect disability discrimination and/or that the Respondents had failed to comply with an obligation to make reasonable adjustments. The ET unanimously rejected the Claimant’s complaint of direct discrimination and, by a majority, dismissed his claims of indirect discrimination and of a failure to make reasonable adjustments. The Claimant appealed.
Held: dismissing the appeal
At the heart of the Claimant’s appeal was his contention that the ET had misinterpreted the medical evidence that had informed the Respondents’ decision that he should not take up the assignment; failing to appreciate that the medical advice went no further than identifying the risks the Claimant lived with on a day-to-day basis given his disabilities. On the direct discrimination claim, however, the ET had been entitled to find that a similarly placed comparator – subject to medical advice that they were at a high risk of needing medical assistance if deployed at a location remote from the UK – would have been treated in the same way as the Claimant. As for the claims of indirect discrimination and failure to make reasonable adjustments, the ET majority had correctly undertaken a staged approach to the issues it was required to determine. On the indirect discrimination complaint, ultimately the question was whether the Respondents had established that the requirement to undertake a medical assessment was justified. Given the legitimate aims the ET had found proven (essentially the avoidance of risk), the ET majority had permissibly found that this was justified. As for the reasonable adjustments complaint, the only adjustment identified by the medical advice was not to permit the Claimant to take up the assignment; otherwise, the Claimant’s complaint was really whether the Respondents should have undertaken a further assessment but that went to process rather than any adjustment.
[2018] UKEAT 0210 – 17 – 2302
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616877
[2018] ScotCS CSOH – 54
Scotland
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616866
CENTRAL ARBITRATION COMMITTEE (CAC)
The PCS made complaint to the CAC pursuant to the Information and Consultation of Employees Regulations 2004 (‘ICER’) that ACAS, as an employer, had failed to consult with its employees pursuant to a collective agreement. ACAS disputed the jurisdiction of the CAC on the basis that it was not an ‘undertaking’ within the meaning of Regulation 2 of the ICER because it was not ‘carrying out an economic activity, whether or not operating for gain’.
The CAC dismissed the challenge to the jurisdiction, holding that all of ACAS’ activities satisfied that requirement; alternatively, that a sufficient part of its activities did so.
The EAT dismissed the appeal, upholding the CAC’s decision on its alternative basis.
[2018] UKEAT 0160 – 17 – 0502
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616872
Contract of Employment – A contract of employment was entered into by the Claimant. When dismissed he claimed that the dismissal was both unfair and wrongful, and that the appropriate Respondent amongst a group of companies (whom he said was the Second Respondent to the claim) was in breach of the contract it had made with him. The First Respondent, another member of the group, argued that it was the true contracting entity, since a written contract had been entered into with it. A written contract was entered into with the First Respondent, but on the same day the Claimant was given a letter to the passport office from the Second Respondent as if it was his employer. The Employment Tribunal concluded that the parties would never have, and did not at the time of entering the contract, intend that the Claimant would work for the First Respondent (which had no place at which he could have worked); the First Respondent appealed. Each of four grounds was considered and rejected.
[2018] UKEAT 0091 – 17 – 2501
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616871
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Amendment
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Case management
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Extension of time: reasonably practicable
In a multiple holiday pay claim, the parties were unable to reach a mutual understanding of the effect of an ET decision (‘the first decision’) giving leave for claims to be amended so as to include unlawful deductions from wages claims which post-dated presentation of the claim forms, on the question of time limits.
At a Preliminary Hearing before a differently constituted Tribunal, the Tribunal held that the effect of the first decision was to preclude any argument on time limits and that no residual power to extend time remained (‘the second decision’). Those claims that were outside the primary three-month time limit were therefore dismissed.
On appeal from the second decision, the appeal was allowed. The second decision had varied the first decision which it had no power to do under Rule 29 ET Rules of Procedure (Serco Ltd v Wells [2016] ICR 768), and/or had in any event wrongly interpreted the first decision.
The second decision erred in purporting to preclude the Tribunal from determining the issue of time limits, which had not been decided and on which there had been no evidence or legal argument, since time limits are a jurisdictional issue for the Tribunal to resolve (Radakovits v Abbey National plc [2009] EWCA Civ 1346.
The case is remitted back for the Tribunal to decide the time limits issue.
[2018] UKEAT 0103 – 17 – 2803
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616878
Contract of Employment – Notice and Pay In Lieu – CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Implied term/variation/construction of term
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – New evidence on appeal
The Respondent Employee resigned, giving 4 weeks’ notice and claimed pay during that period. The claim was made on the basis of resignation not dismissal. The ET awarded 4 weeks’ notice pay. The Employer appealed on grounds including that upon receipt of the resignation it had immediately waived the requirement of notice, thereby terminating the contract and reducing any award to the notice period (1 week) which applied to termination by the Employer. The EAT dismissed the appeal, holding that the Employer had merely waived the Employee’s obligation to work and that the contract continued.
The Employee’s claim for commission depended on construction of the meaning of the word ‘images’ in the contract. The ET rejected the Employer’s interpretation. The Employer appealed on grounds that the conclusion was perverse and/or that fresh evidence should be admitted. The EAT rejected both arguments. As to fresh evidence, the first requirement of Ladd v Marshall was not satisfied.
[2018] UKEAT 0149 – 17 – 0202
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616875
Oral hearing to consider whether the Notice of Appeal discloses any reasonable grounds for bringing the appeal.
[2018] UKEAT 0378 – 17 – 3101
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616870
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity
Following a 14-day hearing the ET comprehensively rejected a large number of claims.
The Claimant appealed on the basis of ‘apparent bias’ on the part of the Employment Judge. She relied on two incidents during the hearing; the first arose from questions asked of the Claimant by the Employment Judge at the conclusion of her evidence; the second from his treatment of her counsel following an incident between counsel where the Claimant’s counsel had stated that conduct by her opponent could be seen as an attempt to corrupt the witness evidence.
On analysing the facts and looking at what happened in context, the EAT decided that a fair-minded and informed observer would not have concluded that there was a real possibility that the Employment Judge was biased against the Claimant.
The appeal therefore failed.
[2018] UKEAT 0191 – 17 – 0602
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616874
Practice and Procedure – Postponement or Stay
Practice and procedure – postponement – hearing of interim relief application – section 128(5) Employment Rights Act 1996
The Appellants had lodged separate whistleblowing claims against the Respondents and had both applied for interim relief. They had instructed counsel under the Bar Council’s direct access scheme and he had advised them on their claims and had settled their respective particulars of claim attached to the ET1 forms. The ET had expedited the listing of the interim relief applications for a date on which the Appellants’ counsel had a prior court commitment; that was immediately drawn to the ET’s attention, the Appellants’ counsel applying for a postponement and re-listing of the hearing, explaining he was instructed on a direct access basis and the Appellants would be unable to obtain alternative legal representation for the interim relief hearing; and further offering a number of alternative dates, the earliest of which were within five working days of the existing listing. The ET refused the application, reasoning that a postponement of an interim relief application was prohibited under sections 128(5) ERA 1996, save where there were special circumstances and counsel’s convenience did not amount to special circumstances. The Appellants appealed.
Held: allowing the appeal
Although there were good reasons for the ET to list interim applications on an urgent basis and to expect the parties to make themselves available for the hearing at short notice – postponements only being granted where there were special circumstances (section 128(5) ERA), that did not mean that the Appellants had to demonstrate that the circumstances in question were exceptional and the ET’s construction of the statutory provision suggested it had set a higher standard than was in fact required and/or had unduly fettered its discretion. In the present case, it might not be exceptional for the Appellants to have instructed counsel on a direct access basis but it did mean that they were faced with a particular difficulty in obtaining alternative legal representation at such short notice. Having regard to the overriding objective – in particular, to save expense, to be flexible and to seek to ensure that the parties were on an equal footing – this gave rise to a special circumstance on the particular facts of this case. Moreover, given that it seemed the parties could make an alternative listing less than a matter of five working days after the existing date of hearing, it had been perverse to refuse the application in this instance and the appeal would accordingly be allowed and the ET’s decision set aside and substituted by an Order that the hearing be postponed.
[2018] UKEAT 0039 – 18 – 2602
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616876
Judicial cooperation in civil matters – Regulation (EC) No 44/2001 – Jurisdiction over individual contracts of employment – Contract with an embassy of a third State – Immunity of the employing State – Concept of branch, agency or other establishment within the meaning of Article 18(2) – Compatibility with Article 21 of an agreement conferring jurisdiction on the courts of the third State
[2012] EUECJ C-154/11, [2013] ICR 1, [2012] ILPr 41, [2013] CEC 452, [2012] WLR(D) 218, [2014] All ER (EC) 96, ECLI:EU:C:2012:491, C-154/11
European
Opinion – Mahamdia v People’s Democratic Republic of Algeria (Judicial Cooperation In Civil Matters) ECJ 24-May-2012
Judicial cooperation in civil matters – Jurisdiction – State immunity from jurisdiction – Jurisdiction over individual contracts of employment – Dispute concerning the validity of the dismissal of the applicant who had been employed as a driver in a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616744
Appeal from rejection of complaint of unfair dismissal as out of time. The court considered the effective date of termination after
Laws, Lindblom, King LJJ
[2016] EWCA Civ 1017, [2017] IRLR 147
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616604
[2016] EWCA Civ 832, [2017] IRLR 81
Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992
England and Wales
Updated: 22 April 2022; Ref: scu.616603
Appeal by employment judge against dismissal of whistleblower’s claim.
Held: Dismissed. An employment judge is an office-holder, and neither office holder nor worker.
Lady Justice Gloster
(Vice President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
Lord Justice Underhill
And
Lord Justice Singh
[2017] EWCA Civ 2220, [2018] IRLR 315, [2018] 3 All ER 521, [2018] ICR 827
Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998
England and Wales
Appeal from (EAT) – Gilham v Ministry of Justice EAT 31-Oct-2016
Jurisdictional Points: Worker, Employee or Neither – The Employment Judge made no error of law in concluding that District Judges are office-holders and do not also work under a contract of employment or for services. . .
Appeal from (CA) – Gilham v Ministry of Justice SC 16-Oct-2019
The Court was asked whether a district judge qualifies as a ‘worker’ for the purpose of the protection given to whistle-blowers under Part IVA of the 1996 Act, and if not then was the absence of protection an infringement of her human rights.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 21 April 2022; Ref: scu.602606
The claimant was a superintendent registrar of Births Deaths and Marriages. His union instructed him not to conduct weddings on Saturdays. He had been told that if he failed to perform his full range of duties on a Saturday (including marriages), he would not be required to attend for work and would not be paid. The refusal to conduct marriages on the Saturday was met with deduction of 3/37ths of his weekly salary. He sued for payment of the sums withheld sum compliance with that instruction.
Held: His position was akin to an employee even if he was not strictly such but rather an office holder. His right to be paid depended upon his doing the work he was employed to do.
The deductions were proper. The salary payable under a contract of employment is part of the mutual obligations it contains as between the parties. An employee could expect payment if he or she worked in accord with the contract. Failure to work normally was fatal to an employee’s claim to enforce a right to his/her salary.
Boston -v- Ansell was authority for saying: ‘An employee, for instance, who is rightly dismissed from his employment can recover salary which has become due and payable at the date of his dismissal but cannot recover sums becoming due and payable at some later date and on the condition that he has performed his contractual duties down to that date.’
Lord Templeman said: ‘It is unusual for the holder of an office to take industrial action and the consequences will depend on the rights and obligations conferred and imposed on the office-holder by the terms of his appointment. But if an ambassador and the embassy porter were both on strike then I would expect both to be liable to lose or both to be entitled to claim their apportioned remuneration attributable to the period of the strike. A judge and an usher on strike should arguably be treated in the same manner. The ambassador might be required to decode a declaration of war on Sunday, and a judge might devote his Christmas holidays to the elucidation of legal problems arising from industrial action, so that it would be necessary to divide their annual salaries by 365 to define a daily rate applicable to the period of strike, whereas the weekly, daily or hourly wages of the porter and the usher provide a different basis for apportionment, . . ‘
Lord Oliver of Aylmerton, Lord Templeman
[1987] ICR 368, [1987] 2 WLR 795, [1987] 1 AC 539, [1987] UKHL 15, [1987] IRLR 193, [1987] 1 All ER 1089, [1987] 1 FTLR 533
England and Wales
Cited – Boston Deep Sea Fishing and Ice Co v Ansell CA 1888
An employer having dismissed an employee (its managing director) later learnt of the employee’s fraud.
Held: The employer was allowed to rely upon that fraud to justify the dismissal. Where an agent is in wrongful repudiation of his contract . .
Cited – Leonard Batty v BSB Holdings (Cudworth) Ltd CA 24-May-2002
The employee was former managing director employed as consultant on a fixed term contract. After differences with the new management, he was off work with stress. The company sought to suspend him. He claimed that the company had repudiated the . .
Cited – Fassihim, Liddiardrams, International Ltd, Isograph Ltd v Item Software (UK) Ltd CA 30-Sep-2004
The first defendant (F) had been employed by a company involved in a distribution agreement. He had sought to set up a competing arrangement whilst a director of the claimant, and diverted a contract to his new company.
Held: A company . .
Cited – Percy v Church of Scotland Board of National Mission HL 15-Dec-2005
The claimant appealed after her claim for sex discrimination had failed. She had been dismissed from her position an associate minister of the church. The court had found that it had no jurisdiction, saying that her appointment was not an . .
Cited – SG and R Valuation Service Co v Boudrais and others QBD 12-May-2008
The claimant sought to require the defendants not to work during their notice period to achieve the equivalent of garden leave despite there being no provision for garden leave in the contracts. It was said that the defendants had conspired together . .
Cited – Buckland v Bournemouth University Higher Education Corporation CA 24-Feb-2010
The claimant had been dismissed from his post as chair of archeology after criticism of his marking practices. Though a report vindicated him, the respondent continued with disciplinary procedures. He claimed unfair dismissal. The EAT had allowed . .
Cited – Societe Generale, London Branch v Geys SC 19-Dec-2012
The claimant’s employment by the bank had been terminated. The parties disputed the sums due, and the date of the termination of the contract. The court was asked ‘Does a repudiation of a contract of employment by the employer which takes the form . .
Cited – Spackman v London Metropolitan University Misc 13-Jul-2007
Shoreditch County Court – claim brought by an employee against her employer arising from non-payment of part of her salary. Normally such a claim would be made under the statutory jurisdiction of an Employment Tribunal. But it is agreed that access . .
Cited – Hartley and Others v King Edward VI College SC 24-May-2017
The teacher appellants challenged the quantification of deductions from their salaries after engaging in lawful strike days.
Held: The appeal as allowed. The correct approach under section 2 to a case like this, where the contract is an annual . .
Cited – Gilham v Ministry of Justice SC 16-Oct-2019
The Court was asked whether a district judge qualifies as a ‘worker’ for the purpose of the protection given to whistle-blowers under Part IVA of the 1996 Act, and if not then was the absence of protection an infringement of her human rights.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 21 April 2022; Ref: scu.182993
Jurisdictional Points: Worker, Employee or Neither – The Employment Judge made no error of law in concluding that District Judges are office-holders and do not also work under a contract of employment or for services.
Simler DBE P J
[2016] UKEAT 0087 – 16 – 3110, [2017] ICR 404, [2017] IRLR 23
Employment Rights Act 1996 230(3), Public Interest Disclosure Act 1998
England and Wales
At EAT – Gilham v Ministry of Justice SC 16-Oct-2019
The Court was asked whether a district judge qualifies as a ‘worker’ for the purpose of the protection given to whistle-blowers under Part IVA of the 1996 Act, and if not then was the absence of protection an infringement of her human rights.
Appeal from (EAT) – Gilham v Ministry of Justice CA 21-Dec-2017
Appeal by employment judge against dismissal of whistleblower’s claim.
Held: Dismissed. An employment judge is an office-holder, and neither office holder nor worker. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 21 April 2022; Ref: scu.570731
The appellant challenged the approach taken by the Employment Tribunal on her claim for constructive unfair dismissal.
Underhill, Singh LJJ
[2018] EWCA Civ 978, [2018] WLR(D) 268
England and Wales
Updated: 20 April 2022; Ref: scu.614922
Defendant’s counterclaim for wrongful dismissal.
[2018] EWHC 910 (QB)
England and Wales
Updated: 20 April 2022; Ref: scu.614887
Contract of employment – implied term/variation/construction of term
unfair dismissal – reason for dismissal including substantial other reason
unfair dismissal – automatically unfair dismissal
The claimant was employed under a fixed-term contract and was not entitled to notice of termination of her contract. The decision not to renew her contract was taken because she was assessed and her performance was judged to be extremely poor. The decision was not made on the ground that she made protected disclosures.
[2018] UKEAT 0194 – 17 – 2703
England and Wales
Updated: 18 April 2022; Ref: scu.621084
The taxpayer was a computer consultant working through the medium of a limited liability company. The respondent sought to make him liable for social security contributions as an employee of the business which used his services.
Held: The anti-avoidance provisions were effective. The court listed the factors which weighed on either side of asking whether he was an employee, but included that he only financial risk to him was of the client company’s insolvency, the contract was for a fixed period. And he was integrated into the work force, having a line manager. What weight was to be given to each factor was a matter of fact for the commissioners, and the court was unable to say that they were wrong in law.
Hart J
Times 07-Apr-2003, Gazette 05-Jun-2003, [2003] ICR 1149
Finance Act 2000, Social Security Contributions (Intermediaries) regulations 2000 (2000 No 727) 6
England and Wales
Cited – Professional Contractors’ Group and Others v Commissioners of Inland Revenue CA 21-Dec-2001
Legislation had been enacted to tax under Schedule E, people employed through one man service companies and similar. Representatives of such taxpayers sought review of the legislation as incompatible with European law being a hindrance to the . .
Cited – Usetech Ltd v HM Inspector of Taxes ChD 8-Oct-2004
The taxpayer operated through a one man limited company employed by a recruitment agency to provide IT services to a customer. He appealed a finding that he was liable to pay tax as an employee.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. The legislative . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 15 April 2022; Ref: scu.180509
Prison officers may not refuse to accept responsibility for prisoners properly committed to the care of the prison by the courts.
Times 19-Dec-1994
England and Wales
Updated: 14 April 2022; Ref: scu.89108
Civil Service – Temporary Staff – Judgment
T-200/17, [2018] EUECJ T-200/17
European
Updated: 14 April 2022; Ref: scu.609521
Staff Regulations of Officials and Conditions of Employment of Other Servants – Judgment
T-574/16, [2018] EUECJ T-574/16
European
Updated: 14 April 2022; Ref: scu.609511
Staff Regulations of Officials and Conditions of Employment of Other Servants – Judgment
T-747/16, [2018] EUECJ T-747/16
European
Updated: 14 April 2022; Ref: scu.609331
Social Policy – Insolvency of Their Employer – Entitlement of Employees To Old-Age Benefits – Opinion – Request for a preliminary ruling – Protection of employees in the event of the insolvency of their employer – Article 8 of Directive 2008/94/EC – Protection of the immediate and prospective entitlement of employees to old-age benefits – Supplementary occupational pension scheme – Minimum guarantee – Direct applicability
ECLI:EU:C:2018:287, [2018] EUECJ C-17/17 – O
European
Updated: 14 April 2022; Ref: scu.609311
Accession of New Member States – Croatia – Opinion – Request for a preliminary ruling – Accession of new Member States – Croatia – Transitional measures – Free movement of workers – Articles 56 and 57 TFEU – Freedom to provide services – Directive 96/71/EC – Posting of workers – Scope – Posting of Croatian and third-country nationals to Austria through an undertaking established in Italy – Article 1(3) – Posting – Hiring out of manpower
ECLI:EU:C:2018:288, [2018] EUECJ C-18/17 – O
European
Updated: 14 April 2022; Ref: scu.609305
Jurisdictional Points – Claim In Time and Effect Date of Termination – – Application/claim – Preliminary issues
The statutory provisions in the Employment Rights Act 1996, the Employment Tribunals Extension of Jurisdiction (England and Wales) Order 1994 and the Equality Act 2010, which operate to extend time limits to facilitate conciliation before the institution of proceedings, are to be applied sequentially and do not provide for alternative limitation periods.
[2018] UKEAT 0180 – 17 – 1204
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609163
Practice and Procedure – Amendment – Application to amend – race discrimination – complaint of unequal pay – whether direct or indirect race discrimination
The Claimant – acting in person – had put his case of race discriminatory unequal pay as a complaint of direct discrimination, albeit relying on general statistical evidence in support. After taking legal advice, he subsequently sought to amend: to add details about a subsequent decision on his internal grievance; to add a claim of indirect discrimination in the alternative; to include a further basis for his complaint of direct discrimination. The ET permitted the application to amend in respect of the internal grievance but only to the extent this was background information; it otherwise refused the amendments, concluding these were not simply different labels but added substantively new causes of action and arguments that had been raised too late (the parties had fully prepared their respective cases on the basis of the claim as already pleaded) and had already led to the postponement of the listed Full Merits Hearing; in the circumstances, the balance of prejudice supported the refusal of the application. The Claimant appealed.
Held: dismissing the appeal
The ET permissibly understood the application to amend in respect of the internal grievance to have been limited to adding an update to the factual background; on this basis the Respondents had not objected to the amendment and it had been allowed. That was an entirely appropriate exercise of the ET’s case management powers and there was no proper basis of challenge.
As for the indirect discrimination case, the ET was entitled to conclude this was not previously identified by the Claimant as part of his claim. Although the fact that it might still be in time was a potentially significant factor (Gillett v Bridge 86 Ltd UKEAT/0051/17 applied), the ET had permissibly taken the view that whether or not there was a continuing act could only be determined at the final Merits Hearing. It was, moreover, open to the ET to conclude that the different issues raised by the indirect discrimination claim meant the balance weighed against hearing that together with the existing direct discrimination claim, in particular given the prejudice caused to the Respondents.
Similarly, the ET had been entitled to see the new argument raised in respect of the direct discrimination claim as giving rise to substantively new issues for determination such as to cause unfair prejudice if this amendment was permitted. To the extent the Claimant was only seeking to make this amendment to explain how he argued that the burden of proof shifted to the Respondent, that remained open to him given he had always made it clear he intended to rely on the statistical evidence to this purpose.
Eady C HHJ
[2018] UKEAT 0190 – 17 – 1204
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609164
EAT Race Discrimination – Inferring Discrimination – JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Extension of time: just and equitable
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
The Claimant was employed by the Trust as a consultant surgeon. He was the only black African consultant employed by the Trust.
After concerns were raised about his practice, he was restricted to non-clinical duties in September 2013 and the Royal College of Surgeons was invited to conduct a review of his practice; the reviewers reported in April 2014, making various adverse findings about his practice and a series of recommendations. After some delays, the Trust’s Medical Director took the view that a capability panel should be appointed; after further delays, a hearing took place in March 2015 and on 7 May 2015 the panel dismissed the Claimant for capability reasons.
Meanwhile in May/June and October 2014 the Claimant had raised grievances alleging that he was being discriminated against in relation to the capability concerns because of his race. The Trust considered that these grievances were brought as a way of delaying or derailing the capability procedure and said that they were ‘out of time’ and failed to deal with them under the Trust’s formal grievance procedure, although they were considered and rejected by the ‘case investigator’ appointed under the capability procedure.
The Claimant appealed against the dismissal but the Trust failed to arrange a hearing to take place within 25 days of the appeal as required by the capability procedure and the Claimant said he would not participate in the appeal.
The ET:
(1) found that the Claimant was discriminated against because of his race in relation to the failure to deal with his grievances under the formal grievance procedure;
(2) extended his time for bringing a claim for discrimination based on (1) under section 123(1)(b) of the Equality Act on the basis that it was ‘just and equitable’ to do so;
(3) found that the Claimant was unfairly dismissed because:
(a) in its conduct in the period from September 2013 to the panel’s decision (in particular its restriction of the Claimant to non-clinical duties in September 2013) the Trust had acted as no reasonable employer would have acted;
(b) that conduct was sufficient to taint the decision to dismiss and render it unfair;
(c) (although the panel had reached the view that the Claimant’s capability was impaired on reasonable grounds and there was no criticism of its procedure) the panel had given insufficient consideration to possible remediation or redeployment of the Claimant;
(d) the Trust’s failure to comply with the procedural timetable for the hearing of an appeal involved acting as no reasonable employer would have acted and denied the Claimant the opportunity to appeal against the dismissal decision.
The EAT allowed the Trust’s appeals against the findings of discrimination and unfair dismissal.
(1) The inference that the failure to deal with the grievances in accordance with the grievance procedure was race discrimination was based solely on the fact that the reason given at the time, i.e. that they were ‘out of time’, was not a sustainable reason; but the ET found that the Trust considered that the grievances were presented as an attempt by the Claimant to delay or derail the capability proceedings: this provided a complete explanation for the Trust’s conduct unrelated to the Claimant’s race and the inference of race discrimination was unsupportable and the claim should have been dismissed.
(2) It followed that the decision to extend the time for bringing the claim for race discrimination was no longer a relevant issue. On the point which was argued (namely whether it was ever open to the ET to extend time when the Claimant had presented no evidence as to why he had failed to present a claim in time) the apparent conflict in the EAT jurisprudence had now been resolved by the Court of Appeal in Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Local Health Board v Morgan [2018] EWCA Civ 640, which makes it clear that, if a Claimant gives no evidence on that issue, the ET is not obliged to infer that there was no acceptable reason for the delay and that, even if there is no acceptable reason for the delay, that does not necessarily mean that time should not be extended.
(3) The finding of unfair dismissal involved errors of law in that
(a) the conclusion that the Trust’s conduct between September 2013 and the panel’s decision was sufficient to render the dismissal unfair without reference to the reasonableness of the decision or the circumstances applying when it was made focussed on the wrong question and involved an error of approach (see: McAdie v Royal Bank of Scotland [2007] EWCA Civ 806);
(b) when considering the decision to dismiss itself the ET did not focus properly on its reasonableness because they failed to engage with the reasons set out in the dismissal letter for rejecting the various possible alternatives to dismissal;
(c) the conclusion that the Trust’s failure to comply with the timetable for the hearing of the Claimant’s appeal was unfair and deprived the Claimant of the opportunity to appeal was perverse.
Shanks HHJ
[2018] UKEAT 0164 – 17 – 2604
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609162
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Wrongful dismissal
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Constructive dismissal
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
The EAT allowed the appeal of the Claimant against a Judgment of the ET dismissing, among other claims, his claim for constructive unfair dismissal. The Claimant had relied on a threat unilaterally to impose a substantial cut in his basic pay (before commission) as a breach of the implied term of trust and confidence. The ET held that the Claimant resigned because of the breach and that the breach was a breach of the implied term, but that the Respondent had reasonable and probable cause for imposing the pay cut. The EAT held that, given that the breach relied on was a significant breach of an important express term (as well as a pleaded breach of the implied term) the ET had erred in law in asking itself whether the employer had reasonable and probable cause for repudiating the contract of employment. It also held that the ET’s conditional decision that any dismissal was unfair could not stand. The case was remitted to a different ET for it to consider whether or not the Claimant was unfairly dismissed.
Elisabeth Laing DBE HHJ
[2018] UKEAT 0158 – 17 – 2202
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609158
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Costs
Ordinary and Wasted Costs Orders were made in disregard of the well-established principles that apply to such Orders and without giving adequate reasons. The Judgment was neither accessible nor public in consequence.
The Respondent did not resist the appeal. The Employment Appeal Tribunal allowed the appeal and substituted (with the agreement of the parties) an Order dismissing both applications.
[2018] UKEAT 0184 – 17 – 1701
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609153
Sex Discrimination – SEX DISCRIMINATION – Indirect
VICTIMISATION DISCRIMINATION – Detriment
A father who wished to take shared parental leave so that his wife could go back to work claimed direct sex discrimination in not being entitled to pay at the higher maternity pay rate for 12 weeks after the 2 weeks compulsory maternity leave but only that paid for shared parental leave.
The Employment Tribunal erred in failing to consider or have regard to the purpose of maternity leave with pay which is the rationale for domestic law provision for maternity leave and pay and the European legislation which it implements. That purpose is for the health and wellbeing of a woman in pregnancy, confinement and after recent childbirth. The Employment Tribunal erred in holding that the circumstances of the Claimant father were comparable within the meaning of the Equality Act 2010 section 23(1) to those of a woman who had recently given birth as both had leave to care for their child. Such a finding fails to have regard to the purpose of maternity leave and pay. A mother will care for her baby but that is a consequence not the purpose of maternity leave and pay. Whether and for how much there is an entitlement to pay depends upon and is inseparable from the type of leave taken. Shared parental leave is given on the same terms for men and women. Hofmann v Barmer Ersatzkasse [1985] ICR 731 and Betriu Montull v Instituto NSS [2013] ICR 1323 considered. Further the ET erred for similar reasons in holding that the payment to a woman who had recently given birth and was on maternity leave at a higher rate than that given to parents of either sex on shared parental leave the purpose of which was different, the care of the child, did not fall within Equality Act 2010 section13(6)(b). Eversheds v Legal Services De Belin [2011] ICR 1137 considered.
Appeal from finding of direct sex discrimination allowed. Finding set aside.
Appeal from three findings of victimisation under Equality Act 2010 section 27 dismissed. Decision in respect of one finding of victimisation was not Meek-compliant. Appeal allowed in respect of this claim of victimisation allowed. Claim of victimisation remitted for hearing before the same Employment Tribunal, if practicable.
Slade DBE J
[2018] UKEAT 0161 – 17 – 1104
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609161
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
The Respondent sought to challenge a case management order made by the Employment Tribunal following an appeal that remitted allegations of unlawful victimisation be redetermined. The order permitted the parties to adduce additional evidence on the issue of knowledge of the protected act.
The appeal failed. The order made by the Employment Tribunal did not exceed its jurisdiction. The Employment Appeal Tribunal’s Judgment expressly anticipated the possibility of additional evidence being heard and the order did not limit this possibility.
Further, in the unusual circumstances of this case, the order was a permissible option and well within the case management discretion available to the Employment Tribunal.
Simler DBE P J
[2018] UKEAT 0308 – 17 – 1201
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609154
Practice and Procedure – Case Management – witness order – exercise of ET’s discretion – overriding objective
The Claimant was pursuing complaints of race discrimination before the ET, specifically contending the real reason for his dismissal by the Respondent was because of racial dislike of him on the part of his line manager, Mr Pandya. Just over a week before the commencement of the Full Merits Hearing, the Respondent applied for a witness order in respect of Mr Pandya, who had left its employment and had stopped responding to its communications. The ET refused the application, questioning whether the Respondent had shown that Mr Pandya was an unwilling witness and expressing concern regarding the late timing of the application and the problem this might cause for the witness. The Respondent appealed.
Held: allowing the appeal
In considering an application for a witness order, the ET had to be satisfied both that the evidence in question would be relevant and that it was necessary to make the order (Dada v Metal Box Company Ltd [1974] IRLR 251 NIRC). This involved an exercise of discretion by the ET, which it was required to carry out judicially. In the present case, there was no indication that the ET has considered the relevance of the proposed evidence. Even if it had (although not stated in the Reasons provided for refusing the application), there was no indication that it had assessed the significance of the evidence – whether it was of marginal relevance or (as the Respondent urged) was central to the issues to be determined. Undertaking that exercise, as it was common ground that Mr Pandya’s evidence would be of considerable relevance in this case, it would be perverse to find the matters cited by the ET outweighed the grant of a witness order in these circumstances; at the time of the ET’s decision, there was no basis for concluding that granting the application might lead to a postponement of the hearing (as the Claimant contended) and the ET’s concern for the difficulties that might (but might not) be faced by Mr Pandya was disproportionate to the interests of justice in seeking to ensure that he give evidence.
Eady QC HHJ
[2018] UKEAT 0027 – 18 – 1602
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609159
NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE
The Employment Tribunal did not address the Appellant’s compatibility challenge in relation to Regulation 2(2) NMWR 1999 and refused reconsideration of this issue. That was an error of law. The compatibility issue is remitted for consideration, preferably, by a Regional Employment Judge.
The Employment Tribunal would need to reconsider the question of the number of hours of housework performed by the Appellant and whether that was voluntary or contractual as a matter of custom and practice or otherwise.
The perversity ground failed.
Simler P DBE J
[2018] UKEAT 0165 – 17 – 3101
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609155
Practice and Procedure – Bias, Misconduct and Procedural Irregularity – Disposal of Appeal including remission
The Appellant argued that the ET had failed to comply with an Order by which the EAT remitted the case to the ET for it to consider the issues set out in that Order. The EAT held that the ET had erred in law by misinterpreting the EAT’s Decision remitting the case, and by embarking on its own inquiry, rather than by considering the issues which the EAT had required it to consider. The EAT remitted the case to a different ET for it to consider the issues originally remitted to the ET by the EAT.
[2018] UKEAT 0105 – 17 – 2002
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609157
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Amendment
The Appellant had issued an ET1 including a claim under section 15 Equality Act 2010. He applied out of time to add a claim under section 13 Equality Act 2010, contending that it raised no new facts or matters and thus was a mere relabelling exercise (Selkent). The Employment Judge accepted that argument and granted leave to amend. Appeal allowed: the section 13 claim involved more than relabelling. The application was remitted to the Employment Judge to consider the exercise of discretion.
[2018] UKEAT 0258 – 17 – 1602
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609160
[2018] UKEAT 0173 – 17 – 2301
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609156
The court was asked as to the extent to which the Defendant (an NHS Foundation Trust) complied with its contractual obligation to monitor whether junior doctors employed by it take their 30 minute natural breaks after approximately 4 hours’ continuous duty.
Simler DBE J
[2018] EWHC 796 (QB), [2018] WLR(D) 238
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609112
Application to enforce post employment restrictive covenants
Mr Daniel Alexander (sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court Chancery Division)
[2018] EWHC 850 (Ch)
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609079
Claim for payment of contractual bonus
EggersC DHCJ
[2018] EWHC 876 (Comm)
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.609092
Appeal against a decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal dismissing an appeal against an order of the Registrar refusing the Appellant an extension of time for filing his appeal.
Sir Brian Leveson P QBD, Underhill, Leggatt LJJ
[2018] EWCA Civ 751, [2019] ICR 771
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.608720
Ryder SPT, Underhill LJJ, Sir Patrick Elias
[2018] EWCA Civ 796
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.608736
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Direct disability discrimination
Perceived Discrimination
The Employment Tribunal did not err in law in finding that the Respondent (1) perceived the Claimant to be disabled and (2) treated her less favourably because of the protected characteristic of disability.
David Richardson HHJ
[2017] UKEAT 0260 – 16 – 1912, [2018] WLR(D) 75, [2018] ICR 812, [2018] IRLR 193
England and Wales
Appeal from – Chief Constable of Norfolk v Coffey CA 21-Jun-2019
The claimant had a minor hearing impairment. It was not of itself sufficient to amount to a disability in law, but the appellant took her off front line duties because of it. The CC now appealed a finding that it had breached the 2010 Act, saying . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.601925
Practice and Procedure – Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Admissibility of evidence
[2017] UKEAT 0297 – 16 – 2104
England and Wales
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.603709
The trades’ union had agreed with the employer that what had been irregular and non-pensionable payments made to employees would, in future, be paid regularly, but that only certain parts of the payments become pensionable. The employer now sought to enforce that agreement, on the inception of a new scheme which it had to be no worse than the previous scheme.
Held: There was no reduction in benefit, so the agreement did not fall foul of the order protecting the benefits on the transfer. There was no conflict with any existing agreement, and the agreement operated to create an inplied obligation on the employee not to seek any further benefit under the pension scheme in respect of these payments. A collective agreement under which consolidation of earnings excluded the attachment of pension rights remained enforceable after transfer.
Neuberger J
Times 14-Jan-1998
Railways Pension Schemes Order 1994 (1994 1433), Pensions Act 1995 67
England and Wales
Cited – Parry v Cleaver HL 5-Feb-1969
PI Damages not Reduced for Own Pension
The plaintiff policeman was disabled by the negligence of the defendant and received a disablement pension. Part had been contributed by himself and part by his employer.
Held: The plaintiff’s appeal succeeded. Damages for personal injury were . .
Cited – National Coal Board v National Union of Mineworkers 1986
A collective agreement between employer and the recognised trades union was ‘inapt to become enforceable terms of an individual’s contract of employment.’ Such collective agreements may deal with the appropriate mechanisms for dealing with . .
Cited – Mihlenstedt v Barclays Bank International CA 1989
The company’s pension scheme provided that the trustees were to form an opinion as to the employee’s ability or otherwise to work. The plaintiff sought payment of an ill-health pension under the Bank Pension Scheme.
Held: A pension scheme . .
Cited – Hirachand Punamchand v Temple CA 1911
The defendant, a British army officer in India, had given a promissory note to the plaintiff moneylenders. Unable to pay, he suggested they apply to his father, Sir Richard Temple. In reply, Sir Richard Temple’s solicitors wrote saying they were . .
Cited – Mackay v Dick and Stevenson HL 1881
One party contracted to supply to the other ‘a steam navvy of novel construction’ on condition that it achieved a stipulated rate of excavation in stipulated circumstances. The purchaser did not make available the ‘opened up face’ that was necessary . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 13 April 2022; Ref: scu.89437
Sir John Donaldson said: ‘With respect to the tribunal, we think that it erred in holding that an unfair procedure which led to no injustice is incapable of rendering unfair a dismissal which would otherwise be fair. The question in every case is whether the employer acted reasonably or unreasonably in treating the reason as sufficient for dismissing the employee and it has to be answered with reference to the circumstances known to the employer at the moment of dismissal. If an employer thinks that his accountant may be taking the firm’s money, but has no real grounds for so thinking and dismisses him for this reason, he acts wholly unreasonably and commits the unfair industrial practice of unfair dismissal, notwithstanding that it is later proved that the accountant had in fact been guilty of embezzlement. Proof of the embezzlement affects the amount of the compensation, but not the issue of fair or unfair dismissal.’
Sir John Donaldson
[1973] 1 WLR 51
Approved – Polkey v A E Dayton Services Limited HL 19-Nov-1987
Mr Polkey was employed as a driver. The company decided to replace four van drivers with two van salesmen and a representative. Mr Polkey and two other van drivers were made redundant. Without warning, he was called in and informed that he had been . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.441859
[1988] ICR 885
England and Wales
Cited – Amnesty International v Ahmed EAT 13-Aug-2009
amnesty_ahmedEAT2009
EAT RACE DISCRIMINATION – Direct discrimination
RACE DISCRIMINATION – Indirect discrimination
RACE DISCRIMINATION – Protected by s. 41
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Constructive dismissal
Claimant, of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.374667
Serving an apprenticeship abroad will intitle a man to follow his trade here.
[1792] EngR 884, (1792) 1 Ld Raym 738, (1792) 91 ER 1394 (A)
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.359096
EAT Transfer of Undertakings – Transfer.
The Honourable Lord Johnston
EAT/103/01, [2001] IRLR 597
Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 1981
Not Followed – Kerry Foods Ltd v A Creber and others EAT 11-Oct-1999
Where a receiver of a company dismissed the employees and then transferred the business to a purchaser, that amounted to an unfair dismissal because it was a TUPE transfer, even though the manufacturing base also moved. The company was liable to the . .
Cited – Alamo Group (Europe) Ltd v Tucker and Another EAT 24-Feb-2003
The tribunal was asked whether Regulation 5 of the 1981 Regulations have the effect of transferring to the transferee the duties and liabilities imposed on the employer under Regulations 10 and 11? The Respondent (Alamo) appeals from the decision . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.255338
EAT Practice and Procedure – Withdrawal.
The Honourable Mr Justice Rimer
UKEAT/0581/05
England and Wales
See Also – Khan v Heywood and Middleton Primary Care Trust EAT 20-Jan-2006
EAT Rule 25 of The Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure 2004
(i) Does an employment tribunal have jurisdiction to set aside a notice of withdrawal of a claim given under Rule 25(2) of The Employment . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.238183
EAT Equal Pay Act – Like work
Mr Commissioner Howell QC
UKEAT/0375/04
England and Wales
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.219853
[1999] UKEAT 336 – 99 – 1709
England and Wales
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.205578
[1998] UKEAT 834 – 97 – 1401
England and Wales
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.206025
EAT Practice and Procedure – Amendment
His Honour Judge Reid QC
UKEAT/0471/04
England and Wales
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.201632
[1984] IRLR 453
Northern Ireland
Cited – Kwik Save Stores Limited v Greaves; Crees v Royal London Mutual Insurance Society Limited CA 20-Jan-1998
Women had taken extended maternity leave, but having followed the procedures, had been unable for illness to return to work on the day they had notified. The employer then asserted that the claimants had resigned. The EAT had confirm that they had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.194005
EAT Procedural Issues – Employment Tribunal
The Honourable Lord Johnston
EAT/845/99
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.171935
EAT Unfair Dismissal – Compensation
The Honourable Lord Johnston
EAT/85/02
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.174268
EAT National Minimum Wage –
Mr Recorder Langstaff QC
EAT/121/01
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.174271
EAT Unfair Dismissal – Compensation
The Honourable Lord Johnston
EAT/1020/00
Scotland
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.172054
EAT Unfair Dismissal – Contributory Fault
The Honourable Lord Johnston
EAT/1403/00
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.168165
EAT Procedural Issues – Employment Tribunal
The Honourable Mr Justice Lindsay (President)
EAT/229/01, EAT/1411/00
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.168179
EAT Contract of Employment – Breach of Contract
His Hon Judge D M Levy QC
EAT/1122/00
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.168446
The applicants appealed a finding that their employees were workers within the regulations. The question related to whether bank nurses, who were available to be called on the telephone at home during the night, were working as they waited. The words ‘on-call’ cold not be used simply. The Tribunal is to look at the ingredients of the particular case and the type of work involved, and the different elements to see if they can properly be described as work. A person awaiting calls, could not control the hour at which he might be called, and therefore had to restrict his activities to be available. The fact that pay was not related to the number of calls was also relevant. The Tribunal’s finding of fact was not to be disturbed. There is no general principle to apply to home work in defining whether or not a worker is working.
EAT National Minimum Wage
EAT National Minimum Wage –
His Honour Judge Altman
EAT/1387/00, (2001) IRLR 659
National Minimum Wage Regulations 1999 (1999 No 584) 15(1)
England and Wales
Distinguished – J M Walton v The Independent Living Organisation Ltd EAT 21-Mar-2002
The applicant worked as a care assistant. She was required to be resident but worked shifts through the week. She appealed a finding that she was working ‘unmeasured time’ under regulation 6, asserting that it should have been judged to be ‘time . .
Appeal from – British Nursing Association v Inland Revenue (National Minimum Wage Compliance Team) CA 2002
The employers provided ‘bank nurses’ for nursing homes and other institutions on an emergency basis, including a 24 hour telephone booking service. At night employees were based at home. The ‘duty nurse’ would answered a diverted phone call and then . .
Cited – Walton v The Independent Living Organisation CA 26-Feb-2003
The worker was employed as a carer for a lady who would need support at unpredictable times, but on average she would need some 6 hours’ care a day. Whilst at work, the claimant would stay with her patient for a full 24 hour day, but, except when . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.168230
[1999] EWCA Civ 1886
England and Wales
Appeal from – Pandya v Leicester City Council EAT 26-Mar-1999
. .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 12 April 2022; Ref: scu.146801
Post employment restrictive covenant – unreasonable restraint of trade – six months restriction – not to become shareholder in a competitor.
Held: The injunction against employment and holding the shares was discharged. The Court rejected the construction placed by Mann J upon the word ‘interested’ in the non-competition covenant. It held that its effect would be to prohibit Ms Tillman from holding even a minority shareholding in any of the competing businesses there specified and that, as such, the covenant was in unreasonable restraint of trade; and it refused to sever the word from the remainder of the clause so as to save the remainder of the prohibition.
Longmore, Patten, Sales LJJ
[2017] EWCA Civ 1054, [2017] WLR(D) 492, [2017] IRLR 906, [2018] ICR 574
England and Wales
Appeal from – Egon Zehnder Ltd v Tillman ChD 23-May-2017
Application for an injunction to enforce an employee restrictive covenant which, if effective, would restrain the defendant from working for a competitor of the claimant for a period of six months from the termination of her employment. Mann J, at . .
Appeal from – Tillman v Egon Zehnder Ltd SC 3-Jul-2019
The company appealed from rejection of its contention that its former employee should be restrained from employment by a competitor under a clause in her former employment contract. . .
Cited – Freshasia Foods Ltd v Lu ChD 20-Mar-2019
The Court considered continuation of an interim injunction to enforce a post employment restrictive covenant.
Held: Arnold J ruled that the employer had failed to establish legitimate interests which required the protection of the covenant. He . .
Cited – Freshasia Foods Ltd v Jing Lu ChD 4-Jan-2019
The Court granted an interlocutory injunction by way of enforcement of parts of an employee’s non-solicitation post-employment covenant. Treating the inquiry as purely interlocutory, he made only provisional determinations. These were that three . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.591197
The employer had a written policy against discrimination on the grounds of age. The employee was required to retire early. It was held that this was not a breach of contract which gave the employer a wide discretion in these matters, and in this case the decision was not of itself discriminatory.
Gazette 14-Jul-1999, (1999) IRLR 362
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89750
The employee went on strike for a half day. The employer deducted a whole day’s pay, and the employee sought to complain to the Industrial Tribunal that the extra half days deduction was unlawful. It was held that the tribunal had no power to hear the complaint. The deduction arose from the strike, and so was excluded under the section. The amount of the deduction could not affect the jurisdiction.
Times 16-Mar-1993
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89606
EAT disapproved of growing practice of professional IT chairmen taking preliminary points alone. It saved money but at the potential expense of the appearance of injustice. The importance of the contribution capable of being made by lay members is not to be forgotten.
Gazette 03-Sep-1998, Times 25-Jun-1998, [1998] IRLR 428
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89622
Fear of transfer terms was insufficient to found claim of unfair dismissal on its own; TUPE regulations gave some protection.
Times 05-Dec-1996
Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 1981 (1981 No 1794)
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89282
Industrial Tribunals should state facts as found and relied on, when making finding of dismissal for trade union membership.
Times 22-Mar-1996
Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 152(1)(a)
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89450
There is no rule of law to suggest that a sole director and owner of majority of shareholding could not be an employee and entitled to redundancy payment on the liquidation of the company. ‘The higher courts have taken the view that the issue as to whether a person is or is not an employee is a pure question of fact. The shareholding of a person in the company by which he alleges he was employed is a factor to be taken into account, because it might tend to establish either that the company was a mere simulacrum or that the contract under scrutiny was a sham. In our judgment it would be wrong to say that a controlling shareholder who, as such, ultimately had the power to prevent his own dismissal by voting his shares to replace the board, was outside the class of persons given rights under the Act of 1996 on an insolvency.’
Morison J
Gazette 28-May-1998, [1998] IRLR 120
Employment Rights Act 1996 213
Appeal from – Secretary of State for Trade and Industry v Bottrill CA 12-Feb-1999
There is no rule of law, to suggest that a sole director and owner of majority of shareholding, could not be an employee of that company, and be entitled to a redundancy payment on the liquidation of the company. ‘If the tribunal considers that the . .
Cited – Ultraframe UK Limited v Clayton, Fielding and Others ChD 3-Oct-2002
The claimants asserted infringement of their registered design rights in parts used in their double glazing and conservatory units. ‘Therefore it is possible for design right to subsist in the design of the part of the article which is not excluded . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.89124
Tribunals looking at ‘reasonable adjustment’ cases in disability discrimination are reminded to check the case against the wording of the Act and the published Codes of Practice.
Gazette 03-Feb-1999
Disability Discrimination Act 1995
Updated: 10 April 2022; Ref: scu.88785