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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> NHS Leeds v Larner [2012] EWCA Civ 1034 (25 July 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1034.html Cite as: [2012] IRLR 825, [2012] 4 All ER 1006, [2012] WLR(D) 227, [2012] ICR 1389, [2012] 3 CMLR 46, [2012] EWCA Civ 1034 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
THE HON MR JUSTICE BEAN
UKEAT/0088/11/CEA
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOMLINSON
and
MR JUSTICE HENDERSON
____________________
NHS LEEDS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MRS JANET LARNER |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
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MR MICHAEL FORD (instructed by Thompsons Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27th March 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery:
Introduction
Narrative
"The carry forward of any annual leave must be for service delivery reasons and may only be authorised by the relevant Director having already been discussed and agreed by your Head of Service. The matter should be discussed before returning to work from sick leave."
The law
"1. Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that every worker is entitled to paid annual leave of at least four weeks in accordance with the conditions for entitlement to, and granting of, such leave laid down by national legislation and /or practice.
2. The minimum period of annual leave may not be replaced by an allowance in lieu, except where the employment relationship is terminated."
"A relevant agreement may provide for any leave to which a worker is entitled under this regulation to be carried forward into the leave year immediately following the leave year in respect of which it is due."
"Leave to which a worker is entitled under this regulation may be taken in instalments, but-
(a) it may only be taken in the leave year in respect of which it is due, and
(b) it may not be replaced by a payment in lieu except where the worker's employment is terminated."
"A worker may take leave to which he is entitled under regulation 13 [and regulation 13A] on such days as he may elect by giving notice to his employer in accordance with paragraph (3), subject to any requirement imposed on him by his employer under paragraph (2)."
"Any right or obligation under paragraphs (1) to (4) may be varied or excluded by a relevant agreement."
"A worker is entitled to be paid in respect of any period of annual leave to which he is entitled under regulation 13 [and regulation 13A], at the rate of a week's pay in respect of each week of leave,"
Article 7: Court of Justice rulings
Purpose of annual paid leave
(1) The purpose of paid annual leave guaranteed by EU law is different from the purpose of entitlement to sick leave, which is not governed by EU law. The purpose of the former is to enable a worker to enjoy rest, relaxation and leisure: it is for the protection of health and safety. The purpose of the latter is to enable a worker to recover from illness: [23]-[27].
No derogation from principle of paid annual leave
(2) Paid annual leave "is a particularly important principle of Community social law from which there can be no derogation." That is borne out by the terms of Article 7(2), which only permit payment in lieu on termination of the employment relationship: [22]-[23]. The right is "granted to every worker, whatever his state of health": [54]
The "opportunity principle" and its limits
(3) While it is for the Member States to lay down conditions for the exercise and implementation of the right, they must do so "without making the very existence of that right…subject to any preconditions whatsoever": [28] and [46].
(4) As a general rule, national legislation and practices may provide that a worker on sick leave is not entitled to take paid annual leave during sick leave, "provided, however, that the worker in question has the opportunity to exercise the right conferred by that Directive during another period": [29]. Equally, national legislation or practices may also allow a worker to take paid annual leave during sick leave: [31].
(5) National legislation may also provide for the loss of the right to paid annual leave at the end of a leave year or of a carry forward period, "provided, however, that the worker who has lost his right to paid annual leave has actually had the opportunity to exercise the right conferred on him by the Directive": [43]. The "opportunity principle" is relied on by NHS Leeds in its submissions discussed later.
Right of sick workers to carry forward paid annual leave
(6) "It must therefore be held that a worker, who ….is on sick leave for the whole year and beyond the carry-over period laid down by national law, is denied any period giving the opportunity to benefit from his paid annual leave": [44]. National legislation providing for the loss or extinction of the right in such circumstances at the end of the leave year and/or the carry forward period laid down by national law would undermine the social right directly conferred by Article 7(1): [46]. That would be the case " even where the worker has been on sick leave for the whole of the leave year and where his incapacity for work persisted until the end of his employment relationship, which was the reason why he could not exercise his right to paid annual leave": [49], [52] and [55]
Payment on termination in lieu of taking paid leave
(7) After termination of the employment relationship, it is, of course, no longer possible for a worker to take paid annual leave for which that employer is liable: he has ceased to work for that employer. Provision is made in Article 7(2) for entitlement to an allowance in lieu, but the Article does not expressly lay down the way in which the allowance must be calculated: [56] and [57].
(8) "…with regard to a worker who has not been able, for reasons beyond his control, to exercise his right to paid annual leave before termination of the employment relationship, the allowance in lieu to which he is entitled must be calculated so that the worker is put in a position comparable to that he would have been in had he exercised that right during his employment relationship"; [61] i.e. the worker's normal remuneration.
"22. It follows from the foregoing and, in particular, from that stated purpose of the entitlement to paid annual leave that a worker who is on sick leave during a period of previously scheduled annual leave has the right on his request [emphasis added] and in order that he may actually use his annual leave to take that leave during a period which does not coincide with the period of sick leave. The scheduling of that new period of annual leave, corresponding to the duration of the overlap between the period of annual leave originally scheduled and the sick leave, is subject to the rules and procedures of national law which are applicable to the scheduling of workers' leave, taking into account the various interests involved, including overriding reasons relating to the interests of the undertaking.
23. If such interests preclude acceptance of the worker's request for a new period of annual leave, the employer is obliged to grant the worker a different period of annual leave proposed by him [emphasis added] which is compatible with those interests, without excluding in advance the possibility that that period may fall outside the reference period for the annual leave in question.
24. According to the case law of the Court, while the positive effect of paid annual leave for the health and safety of the worker is deployed fully if it is taken in the year prescribed for that purpose, namely the current year, the significance of that rest period in that regard remains if it is taken during the later period …
25. Consequently, although Directive 2003/88 does not preclude national legislation or practices which allow a worker on sick leave to take paid annual holiday during that sick leave (Schultz-Hoff, paragraph 31), it follows from paragraph 22 of the present judgment that, where that worker does not wish to take annual leave during a period of sick leave, annual leave must be granted to him for a different period."
" 27. A worker who …is on sick leave throughout the reference period and beyond the carry-over period laid down by national law is denied any period giving him the opportunity to benefit from his paid annual leave."
" 31. … an employee who is off work as a result of sickness has a choice. He or she may choose to take annual leave during the period when they would anyway be absent sick-that might at first seem a surprising choice, but if his or her sick pay is exhausted it might in fact be attractive-or they can ask for it to be deferred until a later period. But it is for the employee to ask [emphasis added]: see the phrases 'on his request' in paragraph 22 of the judgment and; 'where the worker does not wish' in paragraph 25. If the claimant in the present case made a request to take the annual leave accruing in either 2006/2007 or 2007/2008 following her recovery the trust might have been obliged to accede to that request, and if she had not had the chance to take that holiday before her termination supervened it might be necessary to read reg. 14 as entitling her to a payment in lieu. But that is not what happened."
Summary of Article 7 rulings on paid annual leave
(1) Article 7 has direct effect against NHS Leeds, as an emanation of the State, in the ET, the EAT and the courts.
(2) A worker absent on sick leave, as the claimant was, is still a "worker" (though not at work) and may, during absence on sick leave, accrue entitlement to paid annual leave.
(3) If a worker on sick leave is unable or unwilling to take paid annual leave because of sickness, as was the case with the claimant, paid annual leave must be granted in another period, if necessary beyond the leave period concerned.
(4) A worker absent on sick leave throughout a leave year, as the claimant was, does not lose entitlement to paid annual leave at the end of that year, or the right to take paid annual leave at another time when the worker is not sick.
(5) The carry forward period for paid annual leave must be substantially longer than the reference period.
(6) Any allowance on termination of employment in lieu of paid annual leave must place the worker in the same position as if he had exercised the right to take paid annual leave during employment and so must be calculated in accordance with the normal remuneration payable for the period of paid annual leave which the worker has not been able to take because of sickness.
"6. Does the scale of the entitlement to payment in lieu based on Article 7(2) of Directive 2003/88/EC extend only to the minimum leave of four weeks guaranteed by Article 7(1) of Directive 2003/88/EC, or does the entitlement to a payment in lieu also extend to the additional leave entitlements for which national law provides? Do those extended leave entitlements also include entitlements to leave of absence arising solely from a particular distribution of working time?"
ET decision
EAT decision
"17…the result of Stringer and Pereda is that there is no distinction between the two cases [Mr Pereda's and the claimant's]. [The claimant] was signed off sick for the whole of the pay year 2009-10. She is therefore presumed not to have been well enough to exercise what the Luxembourg court has described as her "right to enjoy a period of relaxation and leisure," so, as a matter of law, contrary to what a layman might have thought, she did not have the opportunity at any time during 2009-10 to take her annual leave. Instead, she had the right to have her leave entitlement under Regulation 13 carried over to the following year; and she had that right, in my view, without having to make a formal request for the leave to be carried over. The right to be paid for that annual leave crystallised on the termination of her employment, as it happens, only a few days after the end of the pay year.
18. The position might be different in the case of a fit employee who fails to make any request for leave during the whole of a pay year. He or she might then lose the right to take annual leave, certainly if the contract so provides, because that worker, unlike [the claimant], has in the words of the Court in Pereda "had the opportunity" to exercise the right to leave."
Submissions of NHS Leeds
(1) The case of the worker who has requested to take paid leave in the relevant leave year and has been refused.
(2) The case of the worker who is incapable of taking paid annual leave and has requested that it should be carried over.
(3) The case of the worker who is unwilling to take paid annual leave during a period of sickness absence and has requested that the leave be carried over.
Discussion and conclusions
General guidance by court?
The request point
Article 7
Court of Justice rulings applied
The 1998 Regulations
"Leave to which a worker is entitled under this regulation may be taken in instalments, but-
(a) it may only be taken in the leave year in respect of which it is due, save where the worker was unable or unwilling to take it because he was on sick leave and as a consequence did not exercise his right to annual leave."
"(5) Where a worker's employment is terminated and on the termination date he remains entitled to leave in respect of any previous leave year which carried over under regulation 13(9)(a) because of sick leave, the employer shall make him a payment in lieu equal to the sum due under regulation 16 for the period of untaken leave."
The conditions of employment
The Regulation 13A point
Result
(1) The claimant was entitled to paid annual leave in the leave year 2009/10.
(2) She was prevented from taking her paid annual leave because she was sick.
(3) She was entitled to carry her untaken paid annual leave forward to the next leave year in 2010/11 without making a prior request to do so.
(4) As her employment was terminated in that year, before she could take the carried forward leave, she was entitled to payment on termination for the paid annual leave she had been prevented from taking.
Lord Justice Tomlinson:
Mr Justice Henderson