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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Clark & Anor v Chief Constable of Derbyshire Constabulary & Ors [2024] EWCA Civ 676 (19 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2024/676.html Cite as: [2024] ICR 1147, [2024] EWCA Civ 676, [2024] WLR(D) 281 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUAL
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE EADY DBE
[2023] EAT 135
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 LEWIS
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
NICOLA CLARK MICHAELA BELL |
Claimants/Appellants |
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- and – |
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(1) CHIEF CONSTABLE OF DERBYSHIRE CONSTABULARY (2) CHIEF CONSTABLE OF WEST MIDLANDS CONSTABULARY (3) SECRETARY OF STATE FOR THE HOME DEPARTMENT |
Respondents |
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Peter Lockley (instructed by East Midlands Police Legal Services and Joint Legal Services for Staffordshire Police and West Midlands Police) for the First and Second Respondents
Adam Tolley KC and Elizabeth Hodgetts (instructed by the Government Legal Department) for the Third Respondent
Hearing dates: 22 and 23 May 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS:
INTRODUCTION
"Ground 1: The EAT erred in concluding that the regulation 12 gratuity, and/or the Policy (Injury Benefit) Regulations 2006 more generally did not meet the definition of an "occupational pension scheme" in s. 1 of the Pension Schemes Act 1993.
Ground 2: The EAT erred in concluding that the regulation 12 gratuity is not pay within the meaning of EU law."
"Ground 3: The EAT erred in concluding that the alleged discrimination in failing to pay the regulation 12 gratuity did not fall within s. 108…"
THE LEGAL FRAMEWORK
The 2006 Regulations
"in relation to a person means a pension, whether contributory or not, of any kind whatsoever payable to or in respect of him, and includes a lump sum or gratuity so payable, and a return of contribution".
"12.— Disablement gratuity
(1) This regulation applies to a person who—
(a) receives or received an injury without his own default in the execution of his duty,
(b) ceases or has ceased to be a member of a police force, and
(c) within 12 months of so receiving that injury, becomes or became totally and permanently disabled as a result of that injury.
(2) Subject to the provisions of regulations 22 and 23 (abatement), the police pension authority for the force in which a person to whom this regulation applies last served shall pay to him a gratuity of an amount equal to whichever is the lesser of the following amounts, namely—
(a) five times the annual value of his pensionable pay on his last day of service as a member of a police force;
(b) the sum of four times his total remuneration during the 12 months ending with his last day of service as a member of a police force and the amount of his aggregate pension contributions in respect of the relevant period of service."
The 2010 Act
"61 Non-discrimination rule
(1) An occupational pension scheme must be taken to include a non-discrimination rule.
(2) A non-discrimination rule is a provision by virtue of which a responsible person (A)—
(a) must not discriminate against another person (B) in carrying out any of A's functions in relation to the scheme;
(b) must not, in relation to the scheme, harass B;
(c) must not, in relation to the scheme, victimise B.
(3) The provisions of an occupational pension scheme have effect subject to the non-discrimination rule.
…..
"(7) A breach of a non-discrimination rule is a contravention of this Part for the purposes of Part 9 (enforcement)."
"108 Relationships that have ended
(1) A person (A) must not discriminate against another (B) if—
(a) the discrimination arises out of and is closely connected to a relationship which used to exist between them, and
(b) conduct of a description constituting the discrimination would, if it occurred during the relationship, contravene this Act.
(2) A person (A) must not harass another (B) if—
(a) the harassment arises out of and is closely connected to a relationship which used to exist between them, and
(b) conduct of a description constituting the harassment would, if it occurred during the relationship, contravene this Act.
(3) It does not matter whether the relationship ends before or after the commencement of this section.
(4) A duty to make reasonable adjustments applies to A if B is placed at a substantial disadvantage as mentioned in section 20.
(5) For the purposes of subsection (4), sections 20, 21 and 22 and the applicable Schedules are to be construed as if the relationship had not ended.
(6) For the purposes of Part 9 (enforcement), a contravention of this section relates to the Part of this Act that would have been contravened if the relationship had not ended.
(7) But conduct is not a contravention of this section in so far as it also amounts to victimisation of B by A."
"120 Jurisdiction
(1) An employment tribunal has, subject to section 121, jurisdiction to determine a complaint relating to—
(a) a contravention of Part 5 (work);
(b) a contravention of section 108, 111 or 112 that relates to Part 5."
Occupational Pension Schemes
"occupational pension scheme" means any scheme or arrangement which is comprised in one or more instruments or agreements and which has, or is capable of having, effect in relation to one or more descriptions or categories of employments so as to provide benefits, in the form of pensions or otherwise, payable on termination of service, or on death or retirement, to or in respect of earners with qualifying service in an employment of any such description or category"
"(1) In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires—
"occupational pension scheme" means a pension scheme–
(a) that–
(i) for the purpose of providing benefits to, or in respect of, people with service in employments of a description, or
(ii) for that purpose and also for the purpose of providing benefits to, or in respect of, other people,
is established by, or by persons who include, a person to whom subsection (2) applies when the scheme is established or (as the case may be) to whom that subsection would have applied when the scheme was established had that subsection then been in force, and
(b) that has its main administration in the United Kingdom or outside the member States,
or a pension scheme that is prescribed or is of a prescribed description;
…..
(5) In subsection (1) "pension scheme" (except in the phrases "occupational pension scheme", "personal pension scheme" and "public service pension scheme") means a scheme or other arrangements, comprised in one or more instruments or agreements, having or capable of having effect so as to provide benefits to or in respect of people–
(a) on retirement,
(b) on having reached a particular age, or
(c) on termination of service in an employment."
THE BACKGROUND
The Appellants
The Decision of the Employment Tribunal
"on the facts, the refusal to pay gratuities under Regulation 12 arose out of the relationship between the First Respondents exercising his duties under the [2006 Regulations] and the Claimants seeking benefit thereunder".
The Appeal to the EAT
"70. As for regulation 12 [of the 2006 Regulations], three conditions have to be fulfilled for the benefit to be payable. The officer must (a) have received an injury in the execution of duty (not of their own fault), and (b) ceased to be a member of a police force, and (c) within 12 months of receiving the injury, have become totally and permanently disabled. Logically, condition (a) (injury in the execution of duty) has to precede conditions (b) (cessation of service) and (c) (total and permanent disablement as a result of the injury). There is, however, no requirement that the cessation of service (condition (b)) must have any causal connection with conditions (a) or (c), although, as in the present cases, that may well be so. Indeed, recognising (as regulation 12 plainly does) that total and permanent disablement might not arise for some time after the injury, entitlement to a disablement gratuity allows for the possibility that the cessation of the officer's service might be entirely unrelated to the injury they previously received in the execution of their duty. Unlike entitlement to ill-health pension (which, by regulation 29 Police Pensions Regulations, arises upon an officer's "compulsory retirement on the ground of disablement", see para 7 supra), entitlement to a disablement gratuity under regulation 12 [of the 2006 Regulations] requires no causal link between the cessation of the officer's service and the injury, and subsequent disablement, they suffered.
71. Another way of making the point is to note that ceasing to be a member of a police force is only one of the three conditions that must be satisfied for the entitlement to arise. Given that an officer's service could cease before they became totally and permanently disabled—a question to be determined by the selected medical practitioner, pursuant to regulation 30 [of the 2006 Regulations]—(a possibility further underlined by the provision for a death gratuity under regulation 21, see para 18 supra), it cannot be said that the entitlement arises on cessation: cessation of service is a necessary but not sufficient condition, such that it could not be said that entitlement to the benefit under regulation 12 arises "on retirement" or "on termination of service".
72. On a straightforward reading of regulation 12 [of the 2006 Regulations], therefore, I agree with the respondents: it does not provide for a benefit that would fall within the definition of an "occupational pension scheme" for the purposes of section 1 [of the 1993 Act]."
"73. For the claimants it is said that the words "capable of having effect" within section 1(5) PSA 1993 would cover both regulations 11 and 12 [of the 2006 Regulations], as this would extend the definition to schemes or arrangements where there could be entitlement if other conditions were met (the scheme or arrangement would thus be capable of having that effect). I am not, however, persuaded that that can be correct. In my judgment, the phrase "capable of having effect" clarifies that a scheme or other arrangement will be a pension scheme in relation to a member without that member having yet drawn any benefits from it. It is a necessary part of the definition as, absent such clarification, the literal reading of the subsection would seem to exclude that possibility; it thus provides the answer to the claimants' objection that the respondents' construction would exclude pension schemes where an entitlement arises on retirement or termination but the actual payment of the benefit is delayed in certain circumstances: the scheme would still be capable of providing benefits on retirement or termination. I cannot, however, see that it would make sense to read this reference as meaning that a scheme or arrangement is a pension scheme for these purposes provided that in one possible permutation of circumstances it could be capable of satisfying the conditions for being such a scheme."
"98. For the reasons I have provided, I consider the ET erred in its approach to the construction of section 1 [of the 1993 Act]. A disablement gratuity under regulation 12 [of the 2006 Regulations] is not part of an occupational pension scheme for the purposes of section 61 of the 2010 Act] and the [employment tribunal] was thus wrong to hold that it had jurisdiction to determine the claimants' claims under that provision. I duly allow the respondents' appeal."
"100. Given my conclusions (i) as to the proper construction of section 1(5) [of the 1993 Act] and (ii) on the claimants' arguments under EU law, and for the reasons I have already provided, I do not accept these submissions. As the claimants accept, the ET made no error of law in its reasoning in respect of the claims made under section 108 [of the 2010 Act]; I therefore dismiss the cross-appeal.
Ancillary Matters
THE APPEAL
GROUND 1 – THE MEANING OF OCCUPATIONAL PENSION SCHEME
Discussion and conclusion on ground 1
GROUND 3 – SECTION 108 OF THE 2010 ACT
Discussion
The Meaning of Section 108
"Effect.
349. This section makes it unlawful to discriminate against or harass someone after a relationship covered by the Act has ended.
350. It covers any former relationship in which the Act prohibits one person from discriminating or harassing another, such as in employment, or in the provision of good and services. It is designed to ensure that treatment of the kind made unlawful by the Act which results from, and is closely linked to, the existence of a relationship is unlawful even though the relationship no longer exists."
The application of section 108(1) in the present cases
GROUND 2 – THE MEANING OF PAY
CONCLUSION
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL