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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> British Telecommunications Plc v Royal Mail Group Ltd [2010] EWCA Civ 974 (08 July 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/974.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 974 |
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ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE EDWARDS STUART
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE GOLDRING
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BRITISH TELECOMMUNICATIONS PLC |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ROYAL MAIL GROUP LIMITED |
Respondent |
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WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court )
Mr Michael Kent QC (instructed by Plexus Law) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley:
"(2) Subject to the following provisions of this section, on the appointed day there shall be transferred from the Post Office to, and by virtue of this Act vested in, the Corporation all the property, rights and liabilities which, immediately before that day, were comprised in the part of the Post Office's undertaking mentioned in subsection (1)."
"Schedule 2 shall apply to any transfer under subsection (2) ..."
"3(1) The provisions of this paragraph shall have effect where any rights and liabilities transferred under a transfer to which this Schedule applies are rights and liabilities under a contract of employment and the transfer is that of property, rights and liabilities comprised in a specified part of the transferor's undertaking.
(2) The rights and liabilities under the contract of employment shall be transferred only if immediately before the transfer date the employee concerned was employed in the part of the transferor's undertaking which is transferred."
"34. This seems to me to be a natural and sensible reading of paragraphs 1 to 3 of Schedule 2. However, that does not necessarily mean that it is the correct reading."
"42. In my judgment section 10(2) of the Act, if read according to both its natural meaning and with a purposive approach refers to all liabilities in respect of former employees of the Post Office whose employment had ceased prior to 30 September 1981. Paragraph 3 of Schedule 2 to the Act is, in my view, no more than part of the mechanism for defining the circumstances in which existing employees will be transferred to BT in the absence of any specific agreement to the contrary. It does not 'trump' the natural meaning of the words in section 10(2)."
"35. Mr Hogarth submits that because section 10(2) of the act is expressly stated to be subject to Schedule 2, the provisions of the latter must prevail over the former. Since the wording of paragraph 3 of Schedule 2 is clear and unambiguous, it must have the effect that in respect of employees the only liabilities transferred are those in respect of employees who were in the employment of the Post Office on 30 September 1981.
36. The difficulty with this argument is that it has the consequence that the words 'all the … liabilities' in section 10(2) of the Act do not mean all the liabilities, but mean all the liabilities except for liabilities in respect of employees of the Post Office whose employment had ceased before 30 September 1981. One might except that such a major limitation, if that was what was intended, would be expressed in clearer words and might be found within the main body of the Act and not found in a sub-paragraph in a schedule to it. However, that said, I accept of course that a schedule is just as much a part of a statute as its main body."
"37. In my view, a further difficulty facing Mr Hogarth's argument is that the final words of paragraph 3(1) of Schedule 2 show that it is dealing with the situation where there is a transfer of all property, rights and liabilities comprised in a specified part of the transferor's undertaking and that there are associated contracts of employment subsisting at the time of the transfer and that it is not referring to those cases where the employment has ceased."
"38. A point emerged during the course of the argument that, in my view, throws strong light on the meaning of section 10. Section 33 of the Act is concerned with pensions. In the ordinary course of events an entitlement to a pension, if there is one, is a right that arises under a contract of employment. However, the responsibility for making the pension payments will usually rest with trustees who are a separate and distinct entity from the employer. Whether or not the employee will have a right of action to enforce his pension entitlement directly against the trustees will depend on the circumstances. However, usually his primary right would be against his employer who, in turn, will then have a right against the trustees of the pension fund to compel specific performance of the obligations to pay the pension to the employee.
39. Such documents as I have seen in this case suggest that similar arrangements existed between employees of the Post Office, the Post Office and the trustees of the Post Office's pension fund. For example, the Post Office Staff Superannuation Scheme booklet, at page 47 of the Core Bundle, explains the entitlement of members of the Scheme to a pension and how that pension is to be calculated by reference to years of reckonable service.
[…]
41. I am unable to find, and counsel could not identify, any provision of the Act that could have provided for the transfer of these pension rights apart from section 10(2). If this is correct, as I consider it must be, then this a powerful indication that section 10(2) does not have the limited effect for which Mr Hogarth contends."
Later the judge said:
"44. But even if section 33 did not exist, I would reject this argument on the ground that the language is perfectly apt to include liabilities arising out of contracts that have come to an end. During the course of argument Mr Hogarth accepted, realistically and inevitably it seemed to me, that a liability to a member of the public who had tripped over a defective telecommunications manhole cover many months before the transfer would be transferred to BT by section 10(2). From this it must follow that such a liability is a liability 'comprised in part of the Post Office's undertaking'. So if a liability is capable of being transferred which does not arise out of a contract at all, I cannot see why a liability arising under a contract, whether subsisting or not, is not also a liability 'comprised in part of the Post Office's understanding'."
"I would not say that it arose under the contract but I have no difficulty in saying that it arose from or in connection with the contract."
"A contract of employment contains an implied term that the employer will take reasonable care for the employee's health and safety. The level of this duty is the same as that of the employer's common law duty of care and the law of negligence, and so an employee injured at work may theoretically have a cause of action in both contract and tort."
"(2)(c) any person who ceases or ceased to be employed by the Post Office before the appointed day and as respects whom any liability of the Post Office under a Post Office scheme section 43 or section 46 of the 1969 Act is transferred to the Corporation by this Act [the corporation being BT]."
This, the judge considered, "shows clearly that the draftsman of the Act contemplated that the pension rights of former [telecommunications] employees of the Post Office ... would be transferred to BT under the provisions of the Act".
Conclusion
Lord Justice Richards:
Lord Justice Goldring:
Order: Application granted