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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Harlow v Artemis International Corporation Ltd [2008] EWHC 1126 (QB) (22 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/1126.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 1126 (QB), [2008] IRLR 629 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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CHRISTOPHER HARLOW |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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ARTEMIS INTERNATIONAL CORPORATION LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr. Daniel STILITZ (instructed by White & Case) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 12 – 14 May 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr. Justice McCombe:
"Until your transfer to the new location your redundancy rights will not be adversely affected, provided you indicate your change of view within that period…"
The Claimant's "start date" with the company was identified as 3 October 1983. In clause 7 there is a notice provision stating that the Claimant's employment is subject to termination on either side by one month's written notice, with an extra week's notice to the Claimant after 5 years service, up to a maximum of 12 weeks. In clause 9 the Claimant is told that he will retain his "company car eligibility and petrol for private and business use in the UK, subject to the company's current car policy at the time of signing". The offer of employment is stated to be open until 5 April 1993.
"All other terms and conditions are as detailed in the Staff Handbook as issued to you, and subject to its most recent update."
"On the question of construction, as Mr Brennan acknowledged, where a contract of employment expressly incorporates an instrument such as a collective agreement or staff handbook, it does not necessarily follow that all the provisions in that instrument or document are apt to be terms of the contract. For example, some provisions, read in their context, may be declarations of an aspiration or policy falling short of a contractual undertaking; see e.g. Alexander and others v Standard Telephones and Cables Ltd. (no.2) [1991] IRLR 286, per Hobhouse J, as he then was, at paragraph 31; and Kaur v MG Rover Group Ltd [2005] IRLR 40, CA, per Keene LJ, with whom Brooke and Jonathan Parker LJJ agreed, at paragraphs 9, 31 and 32. It is necessary to consider in their respective contexts the incorporating words and the provision in question incorporated by them."
"There was considerable overlap in the judge's treatment in his judgment of such evidence – extraneous to the issue of express term but relevant and admissible to that of implied term – between the two alternative, but not always readily distinguishable, issues, one of construction of the effect of the enhanced redundancy payment provision read in context, and the other as to implication of a contractual term, 'recognised by that provision' from custom and practice."
"…the judge was not construing a contract, but 'part of a document in its over-all context in order to determine whether it was a contract at all'. Such an exercise, he maintained was purely one of fact and for resolution as such before embarking on the task of construction. For the purpose of resolving that issue of fact, he submitted that the judge was entitled to look at the extraneous material in so far as it was capable of shedding light on the document's contractual status."
"29. The difficulty with the 'anterior fact' argument of Mr Cox in the circumstances of this case is that it cannot stand with the terms of the two documents read together. This is not a case where Fosroc maintains that the documents do not contain the whole agreement, certainly in relation to an enhanced redundancy payment. Fosroc has not suggested any express terms additional to that in the staff hand book as to its payment or non payment. Its case is that one of the terms does not have the contractual effect that it is expressed to have, and it seeks to support such a case in part by reference to inadmissible evidence of the parties' subjective intentions. But, to respond to that case in general terms, where document A, acknowledged to have contractual effect, expressly incorporates by reference document B, and there are no other candidates for contractual contribution to the agreement, the construction of a particular provision in document B does not become a fact-finding exercise on the strength of extraneous evidence as to the true intention of the parties, any more than it would have done if the provision had originally appeared in document A. It simply becomes a matter of construction of the two documents read together.
30. In my view, the issue or issues for the judge were essentially ones of construction of an acknowledged contract, the written terms of which were not in issue, only in the instance of this provision its effect. The variously expressed views on both sides from time to time in the formulation and application of the provision are not, in my view, admissible on that issue. They are potentially relevant and admissible only in the event of the failure of Mr Keeley's case on construction of the express term, driving him to rely on his alternative case based on an implies term – or if Fosroc had pleaded some form of estoppel, which it has not."
"(a) whether the policy was drawn to the attention of employees;
(b) whether it was followed without exception for a substantial period;
(c) the number of occasions on which it was followed;
(d) whether payments were made automatically;
(e) whether the nature of communication of the policy supported the inference that the employers intended to be contractually bound;
(f) whether the policy was adopted by agreement;
(g) whether employees had a reasonable expectation that the enhanced payment would be made;
(h) whether terms were incorporated in a written agreement;
(i) whether the terms were consistently applied."