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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> BMC Software Ltd v Shaikh [2019] EWCA Civ 267 (05 March 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/267.html Cite as: [2019] ICR 1050, [2019] EWCA Civ 267, [2019] IRLR 653, [2019] WLR(D) 145, [2019] 2 All ER 748 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
HH Judge Hand QC
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 FLOYD
and
SIR STEPHEN RICHARDS
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BMC SOFTWARE LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ANJUMARA SHAIKH |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Andrew MacPhail (instructed by LB Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 5th February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Underhill:
"… [T]he appeal be allowed on ground 1 only and be remitted to the same Employment Tribunal, unless in the view of the learned Regional Employment Judge factors emerge which render such an arrangement impracticable, for it to state, after hearing submissions from the parties, its reasons for reaching the conclusions at paragraphs 73, 77 and 80 of the present Reasons. Any directions in relation to a further hearing will also be a matter for the Regional Employment Judge."
"The difference in pay between her and [Mr A] and [Mr B] was not because of sex discrimination. The difference in pay was due to the fact that (i) [Mr A] had been promoted to Account Executive (the level above the Claimant); and (ii) [Mr B] commanded a higher salary as a salary at this level had been necessary in order to recruit him."
Those averments are decidedly unparticular. A list of issues was agreed several months prior to the hearing in the ET, but we have not seen it, and in any event it seems unlikely from the terms of the Reasons that it gave any more detail.
"… [T]he respondents' salary records for the claimant and her comparators show increases which, on nine occasions, appear to refer to 'Merit' as the basis of an increase. There was no evidence of what that word meant in any of the nine contexts, there was no evidence of any application, assessment, decision or reasoning process, or of the conventional steps which often accompany pay considerations. In the absence of such evidence, it is possible that the word has been used as a record keeping device, merely to say that a pay increase was given to someone who was thought to deserve it."
At para. 43.12 it said:
"Ms Phillips agreed that a system such as this was vulnerable to improper use, and that the respondent would have difficulty in showing that it had not been improperly used."
"70. We therefore turn to each of the three pleaded material defences. The first applies to Mr A only. It is that he was promoted to Account Executive. In its questionnaire responses, the respondent stated that that was Mr A's title from 1 September 2008, and he received an increase of £5,000 with effect from the following April 'due to performance'. We note that the answers to the questionnaire are not fully consistent with the remainder of the respondent's case on the point. Mr A's salary record records a general promotion with effect from 1 April 2007 but no promotion-related salary increase thereafter.
71. We accept that Mr A was re-designated Account Executive with effect from 1 September 2008. We accept that he received a pay increase on 31 March 2009 of about £5,000.00 per annum for which no reason is recorded on his salary record. The job map, a document in which, according to Mr Corcoran, we could find no guidance on either grading or pay, indeed shows the existence of the title of Account Executive, and it appears on grade 10. The post from which Mr A had been promoted was that of Senior Account Manager, which on the job map appears between grades 7 and 11.
72. There was no record of the process by which Mr A had been promoted, and no record or evidence of the process by which he had seven months later received a pay increase; indeed, there was no evidence other than chronology that the promotion was the effective cause of the increase. There was no evidence to show why Mr A, at a post which appears only in grade 10 in the notional job map, was paid more than the claimant in a post which reached grade 11 on the same document.
73. We are unable to find that the respondent has discharged the burden of proving that the discrepancy in pay with Mr A from 1 April 2009 onwards was due to his promotion; or that his promotion was material, or that the difference in pay was not attributable to sex and accordingly the defence fails in relation to that matter.
74. The second pleaded material factor related to Mr B's recruitment. Extraordinarily, the respondent was not in a position to prove when a long-serving current employee began his employment. Mr Milonas thought that Mr B had joined as a result of a TUPE transfer in 1999; the responses to the questionnaire said that he joined on 1 October 2001. Mr B's job history stated that he started on 4 January 2000 in a job with an unknown title. His salary records showed that he was on the pay system at 1 April 2000.
75. The precise words of the pleading were that Mr B 'commanded a higher salary as a salary at this level had been necessary in order to recruit him'. That phrase implies the operation of market forces in attracting a new starter, not the operation of TUPE in preserving terms and conditions on a transfer.
76. The material factor relied upon was unclear as to whether it was open market recruitment or TUPE transfer; as to whether it happened in 1999, 2000 or 2001; and why it was material nine years before the period of like work with which we were concerned, and four years at least before the claimant joined the respondent. We were shown no evidence or record of the process by which Mr B joined the respondent, and no evidence of the actual consideration of the terms upon which he joined.
77. We are unable to find that the respondent has discharged the burden of proving that the discrepancy in pay with Mr B at any time was due to his recruitment (whether that word refers to a starter salary or a transfer salary); or that his recruitment was material, or that the reason in pay was not attributable to sex and accordingly the defence fails in relation to that matter.
78. The third pleaded matter relied upon was Merit adjustments. The terms upon which the amendment was allowed perhaps indicate that the amendment carried the seeds of its own failure. It was allowed on the agreed basis that it imported no fresh disclosure and no new evidence. It therefore followed that the respondent had no evidence to give of what the merit was in any of the increases, why the increase was initiated, by whom, when, how it was considered; and how, why or by whom the decision was reached. The high point to which Ms Shiu could refer was the quota history at 282, which showed that by and large, Mr A and Mr B, along with the claimant, had been successful performers against quota.
79. Given that background, and in the light also of Mr Corcoran's evidence that he never considered putting forward any of these three individuals for a basic pay increase, during three years of successful performance, we do not accept that it follows that attainment of high quota percentages necessarily forms the merit basis of an increase in basic pay. We repeat our general findings about merit adjustment and the use of the word at paragraph 43.13 above.
80. We are unable to find that the respondent has discharged the burden of proving that any discrepancy in pay with either comparator at any time was due to any merit increase; or that any merit increase was material, or that the difference in pay was not attributable to sex and accordingly the defence fails in relation to that matter."
(Mr Milonas, referred to in para. 74, is a senior employer of BMC from whom Ms Phillips had sought some information about the circumstances of B's recruitment for the purpose of this case and whose e-mail in response was in the bundle.)
"98. … In respect of all three conclusions … I am left wondering whether, in each case, the ET has concluded that the explanation put forward by the Appellant was not genuine. The ET has said that the difference in pay was not due to 'Mr A's' promotion but it has not said why that is the case (see para 73). It has said that the pay differential was not due to 'Mr B's' recruitment but not why that was so (see para 77). It has said that pay increases were not due to 'merit' but not why that was so (see para 80). In each case, it is said also that these factors were not material and in respect of all three factors the ET has been unable to say that the difference in pay was not attributable to sex.
99. If the factor was genuine, it is difficult … to understand, without further explanation, why the difference in pay is not due to the factor. I think it is particularly difficult to understand, if the pay rise system is genuine, why the difference in pay is not due to the fact that the comparators received 'merit' increases when the Respondent's did not."
Ms Shiu adopted that reasoning.
Lord Justice Floyd:
Sir Stephen Richards: