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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Gab Robins (UK) Ltd v Triggs [2008] EWCA Civ 17 (30 January 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/17.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 17, [2008] IRLR 317, [2008] ICR 529 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(His Honour Judge Peter Clark presiding)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LAWRENCE COLLINS
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
____________________
GAB ROBINS (UK) LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GILLIAN TRIGGS |
Respondent |
____________________
Ms Ingrid Simler QC and Ms Sarah Stanzel (instructed by Holmes & Hills) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 December 2007
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
The statutory provisions
"Subject to the provisions of this section and sections 124, 124A and 126, the amount of the compensatory award shall be such amount as the tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to the loss sustained by the complainant in consequence of the dismissal in so far as that loss is attributable to action taken by the employer."
The ET's directions as to the assessment of compensation
"63. We are here concerned with the compensation [Mrs Triggs] can recover as a consequence of her acceptance on 15 February 2005 of the Respondent's breach of the implied term of trust and confidence as a repudiation of her contract of employment with effect from 14 March 2005.
64. As a consequence of [Mrs Triggs] accepting the cumulative breaches as repudiatory, [Mrs Triggs] lost her ability to exercise her rights under the contract of employment and thereby an ability to continue to consult and agree with the Respondent any exercise of its discretion on whether or not to pay her sick pay and if so, at what rate. [Mrs Triggs] also by accepting the Respondent's breaches as repudiating the contract accepted it was no longer possible for her outstanding grievances to be resolved and that she could not return to work for the Respondent.
65. Having resigned in response to the Respondent's conduct which was no longer capable of resolution under the terms of the contract of employment, [Mrs Triggs's] loss thereafter flows from the dismissal. The Tribunal has found that [Mrs Triggs] became ill as a result of the Respondent's conduct and in those circumstances it matters not that by the time of the dismissal [Mrs Triggs] was in receipt of only statutory sick pay from her employer. She is entitled to recover the loss of her salary flowing from her dismissal at the full rate for such period as the Tribunal determines at the adjourned hearing with the Tribunal taking account of such payments [Mrs Triggs] has received since that time it considers it is required to do. In deciding what is a reasonable period for [Mrs Triggs] to recover compensation for, the Tribunal will have to have regard to what period of [Mrs Triggs's] ill-health is attributable to the Respondent's conduct."
"If [Mrs Triggs's] concerns about her treatment at work had been properly investigated from the outset and indeed if her grievance submitted in December 2004 had been properly investigated as Mr Hessey told the Tribunal it would have been had he been employed at the time, the grievance may have been resolved to the satisfaction of [Mrs Triggs] in a way she would either not have become ill or if she had become ill been able to recover and carry on working. Why should a Claimant not be able to recover compensation for her loss of income post dismissal where her loss of income pre and post dismissal in [sic] attributable to the Respondents conduct. The compensation is not for the illness it is for the loss post dismissal which is attributable to the Respondents conduct."
Were the ET's directions correct in principle?
"47 It is not simply an incremental step from the duty of trust and confidence implied in Malik v. Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA [1997] IRLR 462. The close association between the acts alleged to be in breach of the implied term and the irremovable and lawful fact of dismissal give rise to special problems. So, in Wallace v. United Grain Growers Ltd [1997] 152 DLR (4th) 1, the majority rejected an implied duty to exercise the power of dismissal in good faith. Iacobucci J said, at p.28, that such a step was better left to the legislature. It would be 'overly intrusive and inconsistent with established principles of employment law.'"
"54 The remedy adopted by Parliament was not to build upon the common law by creating a statutory implied term that the power of dismissal should be exercised fairly or in good faith, leaving the courts to give a remedy on general principles of contractual damages. Instead, it set up an entirely new system outside the ordinary courts, with tribunals staffed by a majority of lay members, applying new statutory concepts and offering statutory remedies. Many of the new rules, such as the exclusion of certain classes of employees and the limit on the amount of the compensatory award, were not based upon any principle which it would have been open to the courts to apply. They were based upon policy and represented an attempt to balance fairness to employees against the general economic interests of the community. And I should imagine that Parliament also had in mind the practical difficulties I have mentioned about causation and proportionality which would arise if the remedy was unlimited. So Parliament adopted the practical solution of giving the tribunals a very broad jurisdiction to award what they considered just and equitable but subject to a limit on the amount."
"27 An employee's remedy for unfair dismissal, whether actual or constructive, is the remedy provided by statute. If before his dismissal, whether actual or constructive, an employee has acquired a cause of action at law, for breach of contract or otherwise, that cause of action remains unimpaired by his subsequent unfair dismissal and the statutory rights flowing therefrom. By definition, in law such a cause of action exists independently of the dismissal.
28. In the ordinary course, suspension apart, an employer's failure to act fairly in the steps leading to the dismissal does not of itself cause the employee financial loss. The loss arises when the employee is dismissed and it arises by reason of his dismissal. Then the resultant claim for loss falls squarely within the Johnson exclusion area.
29. Exceptionally this is not so. Exceptionally, financial loss may flow directly from the employer's failure to act fairly when taking steps leading to dismissal. Financial loss flowing from suspension is an instance. Another instance is cases such as those now before the House, when an employee suffers financial loss from psychiatric or other illness caused by his pre-dismissal unfair treatment. In such cases the employee has a common law cause of action which precedes, and is independent of, his subsequent dismissal. In respect of his subsequent dismissal he may of course present a claim to an employment tribunal. If he brings proceedings both in court and before a tribunal he cannot recover any overlapping heads of loss twice over.
30. If identifying the boundary line between the common law rights and the statutory rights is comparatively straightforward, the same cannot be said of the practical consequences of this unusual boundary. Particularly in cases concerning financial loss flowing from psychiatric illnesses, some of the practical consequences are far from straightforward or desirable. The first and obvious drawback is that in such cases the division of remedial jurisdiction between the court and an employment tribunal will lead to duplication of proceedings. In practice there will be cases where the employment tribunal and the court each traverse much of the same ground in deciding the factual issues before them, with attendant waste of resources and costs.
31. Second, the existence of this boundary line means that in some cases a continuing course of conduct, typically a disciplinary process followed by dismissal, may have to be chopped artificially into separate pieces. In cases of constructive dismissal a distinction will have to be drawn between loss flowing from antecedent breaches of the trust and confidence term and loss flowing from the employee's acceptance of these breaches as a repudiation of the contract. The loss flowing from the impugned conduct taking place before actual or constructive dismissal lies outside the Johnson exclusion area, the loss flowing from the dismissal itself is within that area. In some cases this legalistic distinction may give rise to difficult questions of causation in cases such as those now before the House, where financial loss is claimed as the consequence of psychiatric illness said to have been brought on by the employer's conduct before the employee was dismissed. Judges and tribunals, faced perhaps with conflicting medical evidence, may have to decide whether the fact of dismissal was really the last straw which proved too much for the employee, or whether the onset of the illness occurred even before he was dismissed.
32. The existence of the boundary line produces other strange results. An employer may be better off dismissing an employee than suspending him. A statutory clam for unfair dismissal would be subject to the statutory cap, a common law claim for unfair suspension would not. The decision of the Court of Appeal in Gogay v. Hertfordshire County Council [2000] IRLR 703 is an example of the latter. Likewise, the decision in Johnson's case means that an employee who is psychologically vulnerable is owed no duty of care in respect of his dismissal although, depending on the circumstances, he may be owed a duty of care in respect of his suspension.
33. It goes without saying that an inter-relation between the common law and statute having these awkward and unfortunate consequences is not satisfactory. The difficulties arise principally because of the cap on the amount of compensatory awards for unfair dismissal. Although the cap was raised substantially in 1998, at times tribunals are still precluded from awarding full compensation for a dismissed employee's financial loss. So, understandably, employees and their legal advisers are seeking to side-step the statutory limit by identifying elements in the events preceding dismissal, but leading up to dismissal, which can be used as pegs on which to hang a common law claim for breach of an employer's contractual obligation to act fairly. This situation merits urgent attention by the government and the legislature."
" the course of conduct by the Respondent amounting to a breach of the implied term forms part of the constructive dismissal and that [Mrs Triggs's] ill-health caused by that breach is to be treated as a consequence of the dismissal leading to the loss of earnings which would otherwise have been received at the full rate from the employer, such loss being attributable to action taken by the employer."
Lord Justice Lawrence Collins
Lord Justice Tuckey