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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bunning v G T Bunning & Sons Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 983 (27 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/983.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 983 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT
APPEAL TRIBUNAL
EAT/0193/04/DM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
____________________
SUZANNE BUNNING |
Appellant/Applicant |
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- and - |
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G T BUNNING & SONS LTD |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Ben Collins (instructed by Messrs Hood, Vores and Allwood) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
"Taken as a whole, we consider the risk assessment to be a superficial and cursory one, inadequate as a generic assessment of risk and bearing no indication that it paid any particular regard to the needs of a woman of child-bearing age."
"There is no reason why you should not continue to do the type of welding work which you are already employed to do. There is therefore no question of your being suspended as a result of your pregnancy and your current period of permitted absence from work will end at the end of this week. We will expect you to attend for work as normal at your usual starting time on Monday … and to work normally unless circumstances change. You will see that checks need to be made of your health at four weekly intervals and a further review of the general arrangements will be made at the same time."
"Whilst work in the stores represented less hazardous work than in the workshop, the risk assessment prepared by Mr Errington followed a similarly cursory examination to that for the workshop."
"The assessment purports to identify only four hazards and then goes on to dispose of two of them as not arising. There is nothing to suggest that the fact of pregnancy was considered as a material factor and there is nothing about rest or breaks. The hazard of 'slips, trips and falls' is identified but no control measures for that hazard are identified. In the section in which the control measures were to be identified, the report makes only the comment that 'the area is generally well laid out with access and egress between storage facilities'. There is no mention of the fact that the duties would include use of a computer and VDU screen or, more significantly, of the fact that Ms Bunning would use a forklift truck. Doubtless Mr Errington was unaware of the use of the forklift but its omission reveals the cursory nature of the examination. Both in its conception and in the implementation of the control measures, the assessment was inadequate. Neither the applicant nor those managing her duties could have a clear notion, based on the risk assessment, of those duties she should do and those she should not or how her working day should be planned and managed so as to take account of her pregnancy."
"I regard myself as having no choice but to resign in view of the treatment that I have received at the hands of company during the past few weeks, in particular now the failure to respond to or even acknowledge the concerns expressed in my letter by the date requested. It follows that I cannot work any longer in any environment, whatever that position of work may be, where the trust and confidence has entirely broken down as a result of the company's actions and attitude."
The Findings of the Employment Tribunal
"Not only were the two assessments inadequate but, in order that the measures proposed by Mr Errington should properly be brought into effect, it was necessary that the applicant be briefed upon those measures and directed as to the means by which concerns should be brought forward. That should have afforded an opportunity to ensure that the measures were specific to the individual circumstances of the applicant but, for whatever reason, that was not done, either in relation to the workshop or the stores. Thus, there was a detriment; it arose from a failure by the respondent to conform to its obligations under the Regulations and it was directly related to the fact of pregnancy."
"It was a serious mistake to insist upon a return to work in the workshop when it had not been adequately demonstrated that it was safe to do so and when proper measures were not in place. Had it maintained that stance and had the applicant resigned or been given notice of dismissal, the probability must be that the respondent would have been defenceless against the present claims. That is not what happened. The parties agreed a way forward … It has not been shown that working in the stores did create a risk in addition to the level of risk to be expected outside the workplace … Ms Bunning entered voluntarily into the new position"
"If the employer is guilty of conduct which is a significant breach going to the root of the contract of employment, or which shows that the employer no longer intends to be bound by one or more of the essential terms of the contract, then the employee is entitled to treat himself as discharged from any further performance. If he does so, then he terminates the contract by reason of the employer's conduct. He is constructively dismissed."
"As the letter of 27 November makes plain, the concerns of the applicant about the inadequacy of the risk assessment are confined to that related to the workshop. As we have found, those concerns were well founded. The evidence, however, suggests that nothing occurred in the period during which Ms Bunning was working in the stores that she perceived to be a breach of any fundamental obligation towards her …
By her witness statement, Ms Bunning suggests that, having given the respondent three days in which to respond and it having failed to do so –
'I had to conclude that the directors had no further interest in taking me seriously. After much thought I had decided that I had given the company enough chances to change and do the right thing and I therefore sadly resigned by letter dated 5 December 2001 …'
Earlier, she had identified what she described as the principal reasons for resigning and those were the way she had been treated over health and safety issues after announcing her pregnancy and the failure to respond to the letter of 27 November.
We are satisfied those were the reasons for the decision. But we are not persuaded that Ms Bunning was justified in resigning when she did for those reasons. With the withdrawal of the insistence that Ms Bunning return to work in the workshop, much of the force of her concerns about the safety of that option dropped away. There was no longer an obligation upon the respondent to take proper steps to ensure that it was safe for her to work there when there was no remaining intention that she should do so. We have expressed our concerns about the adequacy of the risk assessment carried out for the stores but we have rejected the assertion of Ms Bunning that she was misled by the respondent over the level of risk in that position. She did not have, or express, concerns about the safety of that post and the failure of the respondent to ensure that an adequate assessment of the risk in the stores was made, had no influence upon her decision to resign. By accepting the offer to work in the stores, Ms Bunning was acknowledging that a viable basis existed upon which the employment could continue and she was waiving past breaches."
Discrimination
"(1) Where –
(a) the persons working in an undertaking include women of a child-bearing age; and
( b) the work is of a kind which could involve risk, by reason of her condition, to the health and safety of a new or expectant mother, or to that of her baby, from any processes or working conditions, or physical, biological or chemical agents …
the assessment required by Regulation 3(1) shall also include an assessment of such risk.
(2) Where, in the case of an individual employee, the taking of any other action the employer is required to take under the relevant statutory provisions would not avoid the risk referred to in paragraph (1), the employer shall, if it is reasonable to do so, and would avoid such risks, alter her working conditions or hours of work.
(3) If it is not reasonable to alter the working conditions or hours of work, or if it would not avoid such risk, the employer shall, subject to section 67 of the 1996 Act, suspend the employee from work for so long as is necessary to avoid such a risk.
(4) In paragraphs (1) to (3) references to risk, in relation to risk from any infectious or contagious disease, are references to a level of risk at work which is in addition to the level to which a new or expectant mother may be expected to be exposed outside the workplace."
Unfair dismissal
"… in circumstances in which he is entitled to terminate it without notice by reason of the employer's conduct." (Employment Rights Act 1996, s.95(1)(c)).
The Employment Tribunal correctly identified that the test is the contractual one propounded by Lord Denning MR in Western Excavating (ECC) v Sharp (above, paragraph 18). It also observed that there must be a causal link between the employer's breach and the resignation. This accords with a long line of authority. For example, in Walker v Josiah Wedgwood & Sons Ltd [1978] ICR 744, Arnold J said (at p.751):
"… it is at least requisite that the employee should leave because of the breach of the employer's relevant duty to him, and that this should demonstrably be the case."
Or, as it is put in Harvey on Industrial Relations and Employment Law, Vol 1, [403]:
"He must leave in response to the breach and for no other reason."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Latham:
Lord Justice Brooke: