![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Edwards v Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust [2009] EWHC 2011 (QB) (31 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/2011.html Cite as: [2009] IRLR 822, [2009] EWHC 2011 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Michael Steven Delawar Edwards |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
Chesterfield Royal Hospital NHS Foundation Trust |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Mark Sutton of Counsel instructed by Beachcroft Solicitors for the Defendant
Monday 27th July 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Nicol :
"In matters of personal conduct you will be subject to Trust procedures. In matters of professional misconduct or incompetence, you will be subject to a separate procedure which has been negotiated and agreed by the Local Negotiating Committee and which is available on request."
At the time of his appointment, HC(90) 9 was the procedure agreed by the Local Negotiating Committee. By 2005/2006 steps were being taken nationally to replace this with an alternative procedure known as Maintaining High Professional Standards in the Modern NHS ('MHPS'), but, the Claimant says MHPS had not at the relevant time been agreed by his Local Negotiating Committee.
The Appellant's submissions
The Respondent's submissions
a. The Court did not contemplate an investigation into what the outcome of any disciplinary proceedings would have been. Nowhere does the Court of Appeal say that the employer's right to give one month's notice to terminate the contract at their conclusion was dependent on those proceedings upholding the allegations of misconduct.
b. Correspondingly, nowhere did the Court suggest that the Claimant would have been entitled to greater damages if he could show that the disciplinary proceedings would have ended in his favour.
c. The Gunton extension to the period of notice (i.e. the additional period it would have taken for the disciplinary proceedings to be concluded) was dependent on the Plaintiff having not accepted the employer's repudiatory breach of contract. By contrast, Mr Sutton observes, the present Claimant pleads in the Particulars of Claim that his contract of employment came to an end on 10th February 2006. In consequence, he is not entitled to the Gunton extension which, in any event, has not been pleaded.
Discussion
Is the power to terminate on 3 months notice in clause 8 of any relevance?
"[21] The fallacy in our judgment, in the chairman's reasoning is to disregard the normal common law rules as to loss in cases of wrongful dismissal. That loss is limited to the sums payable to the employee had the employment been lawfully terminated under the contract. Once a dismissal has taken place, as was accepted and found in this case, it is irrelevant to consider what might have happened had a contractual disciplinary procedure been followed. An employer is entitled to dismiss on contractual notice at common law for whatever reason.
[22] The fact is that Mr Birkett was dismissed. In so far as he did not receive his full notice, he is generally entitled to damages to reflect the pay during the notice period and no more. The only exception is where employment would have been extended by operating the disciplinary procedure: Boyo v London Borough of Lambeth [1995] IRLR 50; Gunton v London Borough of Richmond-upon-Thames [1980] IRLR 321…"
"Some contracts of employment require the employer to follow a disciplinary procedure before notice of dismissal can be given. In other words, the disciplinary procedure acts as a brake on the giving of notice. In such a case, the employer would be acting in breach of contract if he gave notice terminating the contract without first having followed the correct procedure. The measure of loss for that breach is based upon an assessment of the time which, had the procedure been followed, the employee's employment would have continued. Again, that does not require an analysis of the chances that had the procedures been followed the employee might never have been dismissed. At this stage the court is engaged on a process of quantifying damage suffered by a dismissed employee. The court is concerned to know what would have happened contractually, if instead of unlawfully dismissing the employee the employer had not broken the contract, bearing in mind the Lavarack v Woods principle. For this purpose, the assumption that must be made is that the employer would have dismissed the employee at the first available moment open to him; namely after the procedure had been exhausted. The court is not concerned to inquire whether the employee would have been dismissed had the contract been performed, but rather for how long would the employee have been employed before the employer was contractually entitled to give notice. This is on the assumption that the employer has not been accused of acting in bad faith where other principles might apply. Authority for this proposition comes from [Gunton, Boyo and Focsa]."
In that case as well the EAT rejected an alternative argument that the Court (or Tribunal) was obliged to assess the employee's chance of having succeeded if the disciplinary procedure had been implemented.
"On the other hand, if no injunctive relief is granted and if (as seems likely) the Trust does summarily dismiss Mr Gryf-Lowczowski, he would be confined to a claim for damages for wrongful or unfair dismissal. The former would be limited to the contractual notice period of three months; the latter is statutorily capped at £56,000. I am unable to accept that in the circumstances of the present case such a remedy in damages is adequate."
"One might have thought that the answer to the first issue was obvious. The employer who is contemplating disciplinary action against an employee has to decide which procedure should be followed. If the employee thinks that the employer has made the wrong choice, he can try to have it changed in advance or seek damages after the event. The court will have to perform its usual task of construing the contract and applying it to the facts of the case."
It is true that this passage was adopted with approval by Lord Steyn in Skidmore who said at [15]
"If there has been a breach by the Authority in adopting the wrong procedure, Mr Skidmore is entitled to appropriate relief."
However, in neither Saeed nor Skidmore did the Court have to consider the appropriate measure of damages for wrongful dismissal if the Authority had chosen the wrong disciplinary procedure. I do not see in these circumstances how either passage assists Ms. O'Rourke.
"The provisional schedule of loss is founded upon a misconception in law. The claimant's recovery of damages in respect of the claim alleged in this case is confined to the amount of his contractual notice period: Eastwood v Magnox Electric plc [2004] ICR 1064 HL. If, contrary to the defendant's primary case, it is found to have breached the claimant's employment contract by dismissing him summarily, his claimable loss, subject to his duty of mitigation, is limited to a period of 3 months notice in accordance with the provisions of paragraph 8 of the offer letter referred to in paragraph 1 above."
That adequately put the Claimant on notice that the present point was to be taken. The Eastwood case concerned the implied term of trust and confidence but the Particulars of Claim did in part (see paragraphs 6 and 18(7)-(9)) rely on implied terms as well as the express terms that I have mentioned.
Are the maximum damages to which the Appellant is entitled, the income he would have earned during the period that the disciplinary procedure would have taken as well as the three month notice period?
a. He had not sought to keep the contract alive. On the contrary, he had treated it as terminated from 10th February 2006. In Gunton, the Appellant had only been entitled to damages extending beyond the notice period because he had not accepted that the contract of employment had been terminated.
b. Observations of Lord Hoffman in Johnson suggest that contractual disciplinary procedures may be intended to affect the issue of whether a dismissal is fair, but they were not intended to affect the common law power to dismiss without cause on giving the usual contractual notice period.
c. This was not the way he had pleaded his case, nor had it been argued on this basis by the Claimant before the District Judge, or in the Notice of Appeal, or in the Appellant's skeleton argument.
"Accordingly, in my judgment the plaintiff was entitled at January 14 1976, when he was excluded from his employment, to insist upon a right not to be dismissed on disciplinary grounds until the disciplinary procedures were re-commenced and carried out in due order but with reasonable expedition. Consequently, in my view, the period by reference to which the amount of damages should be recovered by the Plaintiff in this case should be assessed is a reasonable period from January 14, 1976, for carrying out those procedures plus one month, the plaintiff giving credit for one month's salary which he received in this respect of the month ended February 14, 1976, and for anything earned in other employment during the period."
That may suggest that the Gunton extension was, as Mr Sutton argued, dependent on the plaintiff having held the contract open. However, the plaintiff was only entitled to damages at all because the Judge had ruled that he was entitled to accept the repudiation at the trial and he had done so. Buckley LJ at p. 772 said that in the special circumstances of an employment contract a court would readily infer that a repudiatory breach had been accepted, as the plaintiff had done 'at trial, if not earlier.' In my view, it is far from clear whether Brightman LJ regarded the right to damages based on the Gunton extension to be dependent on the employee opting to keep the contract open. He said at p. 778, 'What I am clear about in my own mind is that this contract cannot be read so as to entitle the council to disregard the disciplinary procedures with impunity.' Shaw LJ dissented since he considered that an employer's repudiatory breach of a contract unilaterally brought it to an end, yet he thought that this made no difference to the result and, accordingly, he also approved the order which the other two judges considered to be appropriate (see p.764).
"[60] There is one further point. During the argument there was some discussion of whether the provisions for disciplinary hearings were express terms of Mr Johnson's contract and what the consequences would be if they were. No such express terms were pleaded and Mr Faulks QC, who appeared for Mr Johnson, was not enthusiastic about doing so. Nevertheless, it may be useful to examine the matter in a little more detail.
[61] Section 1 (1) of the 1996 Act provides that upon commencing employment, an employee shall be provided with "a written statement of particulars of employment". This includes, but is not limited to, their "terms and conditions" of employment concerning various matters, including "the length of notice which the employee is obliged to give and entitled to receive to terminate his contract of employment" (section 1 (4) (e)). Section 3 (1) then provides that a statement under section 1 shall include a note " … specifying any disciplinary rules applicable to the employee or referring their employee to the provisions of a document specifying such rules which is reasonably accessible to the employee"
[62] Consistently with these provisions, Mr Johnson was written a letter of engagement which stated his salary and summarised conditions of his employment, including the notice period. Apart from the statement that in the event of gross misconduct, the company could terminate his employment without notice, it made no reference to disciplinary matters. It was however accompanied by the Employee Handbook, which the letter of engagement said "outlines all the terms and conditions of employment". This was divided into various sections, the first being headed "Employment Terms and Conditions". These made no reference to the disciplinary procedure, which appeared in a subsequent section under the heading "Other procedures". There one could find the various stages of the disciplinary procedure: formal verbal warning, written warning, final written warning, culminating in dismissal, as well as the separate procedure for summary dismissal in case of serious misconduct.
[63] So did the disciplinary procedure constitute express terms of the contract of employment? Perhaps for some purposes they did. But the Employee Handbook has to be construed against the relevant background and the background which fairly looms over the disciplinary procedure is Part X of the 1996 Act. The whole disciplinary procedure is defined to ensure that an employee is not unfairly dismissed. So the question is whether the provisions about disciplinary procedure which (to use a neutral phrase) applied to Mr Johnson's employment were intended to operate within the scope of the law of unfair dismissal or whether they were intended also to be actionable at common law, giving rise to claims for damages in the ordinary courts.
[64] Section 199(1) of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 gives ACAS power to issue "Codes of Practice containing such practical guidance as it thinks fit for the purpose of promoting the improvement of industrial relations". By section 207, a failure to comply with any provision of a code is not in itself actionable but in any proceedings before an industrial tribunal "any provision of the Code which appears…relevant to any question arising in the proceedings shall be taken into account in determining that question". In 1997 ACAS issued a Code of Practice entitled "Disciplinary Practice and Procedures in Employment" It explains why it was important to have disciplinary rules and procedures which were in writing and readily available to management and employees. It said in paragraph 4:
"The importance of disciplinary rules and procedures has also been recognise4d by the law relating to to dismissals, since the grounds for dismissal and the way in which the dismissal has been handled can be challenged before an industrial tribunal".
[65] In paragraph 10 it listed what disciplinary procedures should include. The Unisys procedures have clearly been framed with regard to the Code of Practice.
[66] My Lords, given this background to the disciplinary procedures, I find it impossible to believe that Parliament, when it provided in s.3(1) of the 1996 Act that the statement of particulars of employment was to contain a note of any applicable disciplinary rules, or the parties themselves, intended that the inclusion of those rules should give rise to a common law action in damages which would create the means of circumventing the restrictions and limits which Parliament had imposed on compensation for unfair dismissal. The whole of the reasoning which led me to the conclusion that the courts should not imply a term which has this result also in my opinion supports the view that the disciplinary procedures do not do so either. It is I suppose possible that they may have contractual effect in determining whether the employer can dismiss summarily in the sense of not having to give four weeks' notice of payment in lieu. But I do not think that they can have been intended to qualify the employer's common law power to dismiss without cause on giving such notice, or to create contractual duties which are independently actionable."
"Irrespective of the rights or wrongs of the dismissal, the Defendants at any stage could have said that they would only employ the Claimant for a maximum of three months further. Therefore, logic states that the damages must be limited to 3 months, not as I think is put forward by the Claimant, that because procedurally the disciplinary exercise was unfair, had it been carried out properly it would have taken a long time and the Claimant would still have been earning for that period. Therefore, rightly or wrongly I limit the damages to 3 months."
Conclusion