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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Barts and the London NHS Trust v Verma [2011] EWCA Civ 1129 (12 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2011/1129.html Cite as: [2011] EWCA Civ 1129 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
The Hon Mr Justice Underhill sitting with two lay members
UKEAT/-182/10/SM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
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BARTS AND THE LONDON NHS TRUST |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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VERMA |
Respondent |
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Ms Karon Monaghan QC and Mr Edward Kemp (instructed by Messrs Darbys) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 23 June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
The relevant terms and conditions.
"Where a practitioner takes an appointment in a lower grade which is recognised by the appropriate authority as being for the purpose of obtaining approved training (which may include training to enable the practitioner to follow a career in another specialty), the practitioner shall, while in the lower grade, continue to be paid on the incremental point the practitioner had reached in his or her previous appointment. Such a practitioner shall receive the benefit of any general pay awards. On reappointment to the higher grade or on appointment to another higher grade, the practitioner's starting salary should be assessed as if the period spent in the approved training post had been continuing service in the previous higher grade. Practitioners whose previous appointment was in the Northern Ireland, Isle of Man or Channel Islands hospital service are eligible for protection of salary under the terms of this paragraph."
"a. the rate of salary for a part-time practitioner shall be taken to be the corresponding point in the salary scale, except for a practitioner employed as a part-time medical or dental officer under paragraphs 94 or 105, for whom it shall be the maximum amount appropriate to nine notional half-days…..
c. the rate of salary in the previous post shall be taken to be the present rate of remuneration for such a post, whether or not this rate was in fact paid…"
Pay protection.
Discussion.
Protection under paragraph 132.
"as if the period spent in the approved training post had been continuing service in the previous higher grade."
Part-timers and paragraph 135(a).
(1) The paragraph could be intending to say that the point on the salary scale which, by paragraph 132 provides the reference point by which the protected salary is determined, is the point applicable to the full time worker but reduced pro rata for the part-timer to take account of the fact that only a proportion of the full time work is being done. So if, say, a part-timer works half time as a registrar grade 5, the "corresponding point in the salary scale", to use the language of paragraph 132a, will be a figure of half the annual salary, since the pay scales fix the annual full-time salary for that particular post. This analysis would appear to involve treating the phrase "corresponding" point in the salary scale as equivalent to "pro rata" the point for the equivalent full-timer. If this is the right analysis, then in paragraph 132 the reference to the "incremental point" would be a reference to the "corresponding point" so defined. That would limit the pay protection to the salary actually earned in the previous job.
(2) Sub-paragraph 135a could be saying no more than that that the part-timers will have their salary determined by reference to the point in the scale which corresponds to their post and grade. In other words, their rate of pay is precisely the same as for full timers, although of course while they work part-time they will only receive a pro rata amount of the salary specified in that point in the scale. On this analysis, since (a) paragraph 132 requires the practitioner to continue to be paid on the incremental point in the previous salary, (b) that point is the same for full time and part-time workers, and (c) there is nothing in paragraph 132 itself which links the protected pay by reference to the hours worked in that previous job, then for the period of training when all occupying that post are working full time, part-timers will be entitled to receive the same pay as those who had formerly worked full time.
(3) It could mean that the salary has to be assessed on an hourly basis, this being the rate of pay as defined in the sub-paragraph, and that the hourly rate should then be multiplied by the hours worked on the training course to provide the annual salary. The result is similar to the second approach, but the method of analysis is wholly different. On this analysis the employee does not, whilst training, simply continue to receive the same pay for the basic hours in the training job as he or she would have received for the basic hours in the previous job. If the training involves longer contractual hours than were worked in the previous job then the employee will be better off because the salary is calculated by the hour rather than by simply comparing the basic pay for the two posts.
The favoured construction.
The problem of session workers.
Conclusion.
Lord Justice Rimer :
"PROTECTION
132. Where a practitioner takes an appointment in a lower grade which is recognised by the appropriate authority as being for the purpose of obtaining approved training (which may include training to enable the practitioner to follow a career in another specialty), the practitioner shall, while in the lower grade, continue to be paid on the incremental point the practitioner had reached in his or her previous appointment. Such a practitioner shall receive the benefit of any general pay awards. On appointment to the higher grade or on appointment to another higher grade, the practitioner's starting salary should be assessed as if the period spent in the approved training post had been continuing service in the previous higher grade. Practitioners whose previous appointment was in the Northern Ireland, Isle of Man or Channel Islands hospitals ser eligible for protection of salary under the terms of this paragraph. …
INTERPRETATION
135. For the purposes of paragraphs 121 to 134:
a. the rate of salary for a part-time practitioner shall be taken to be the corresponding point in the salary scale, except for a practitioner employed as a part-time medical or dental officer under paragraphs 94 or 105, for whom it shall be the maximum amount appropriate to nine notional half-days.
b. service in a part-time or honorary appointment shall count in exactly the same way as service in a whole-time appointment;
c. the rate of salary in the previous post shall be taken to be the present rate of remuneration for such a post, whether or not this rate was in fact paid;
d. the rate of salary in the previous post of a practitioner shall be inclusive of any allowance paid for acting as Medical Superintendent and of the allowance to SHMOs or SHDOs occupying posts graded as consultants. It shall exclude London Weighting, extra duty allowance, or other fees payable by the health authority or allowances for junior doctors in peripheral hospitals."
Lord Justice Rix:
"86. The terms and conditions of service provide that hospital practitioner posts are for a maximum of five sessions per week. The maximum salary, therefore, for an individual on the top incremental point of a hospital practitioner post, as the Claimant was at Luton and Dunstable, was, therefore, five times the sessional rate. This amounted to £28,415.
87. We do not accept, therefore, Mr Kemp's argument that the Claimant was entitled to pay protection on what she would have obtained if she had worked 11 sessions per week. The terms and conditions stipulate a maximum of five sessions per week and this is the figure to which she was entitled to pay protection under the contractual provisions in force."
"If the general approach of the pay protection provisions is, as we have held, that a practitioner should receive in her training post protection at the rate that she received in her previous appointment, irrespective of the actual hours worked, it seems to us immaterial that the reason why she did not work full-time in the previous post is that the terms and conditions did not permit it" (at para 25).
"132, (i) Where a practitioner takes an appointment in a lower grade which is recognised by the appropriate authority as being for the purpose of obtaining approved training (which may include training to enable the practitioner to follow a career in another specialty), (ii) the practitioner shall, while in the lower grade, continue to be paid on the incremental point the practitioner had reached in his or her previous appointment. (iii) Such a practitioner shall receive the benefit of any general pay awards. (iv) On reappointment to the higher grade or on appointment to another higher grade, the practitioner's starting salary should be assessed as if the period spent in the approved training post had been continuing service in the previous higher grade…"
"135. For the purposes of paragraphs 121 to 134:"
a. the rate of salary for a part-time practitioner shall be taken to be the corresponding point in the salary scale, except for a practitioner employed as a part-time medical or dental officer under paragraphs 94 or 105, for whom it shall be the maximum amount appropriate to nine notional half-days.
b. service in a part-time or honorary appointment shall count in exactly the same way as service in a whole-time appointment;
c. the rate of salary in the previous post shall be taken to be the present rate of remuneration for such a post, whether or not this rate was in fact paid;
d. the rate of salary in the post of a practitioner shall be inclusive of any allowance paid for acting as Medical Superintendent and of the allowance to SMHOs or SHDOs occupying posts graded as consultants. It shall exclude London Weighting, extra day allowance, or other fees payable by the health authority or allowances for junior doctors in peripheral hospitals…"
"a. In convalescent homes, general practitioner maternity hospitals where no other rate is appropriate, including general practitioner hospital units in respect of work not covered by payments into the staff fund, payment shall be made at the rates set out in Appendix I for each weekly notional half-day or less a year, the notional half days being assessed as in paragraph 61.
b. Where a practitioner holds appointments under this paragraph with more than one authority or holds one or more appointments under this paragraph and one or more appointments under paragraph 61, the practitioner's remuneration in respect of each appointment shall be calculated in accordance with the methods set out in paragraphs 71 to 75."
Paragraph 105 is to the same effect in the case of "part-time general dental practitioner appointments" and refers back to paragraph 94.
"The case before us, reflecting the decision of the Tribunal, was that the Appellant was entitled, but entitled only, to protected pay for the equivalent of five sessions. That necessarily involves, though we are not sure that this was fully appreciated, at least a limited acceptance that what is protected is the rate of pay. The Trust's case is, in truth, that the Appellant is entitled to be paid at the rate derived from the two sessions which she in fact worked but subject to a cap on account of the maximum prescribed by para. 6(d)."
But, for the reasons which I have sought to explain above, reference to "rate" advances Dr Verma's argument not a bit.
Conclusion.