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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Lloyd v Taylor Woodrow Construction [1999] UKEAT 1116_98_0107 (1 July 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/1116_98_0107.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 1116_98_0107, [1999] UKEAT 1116_98_107 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR D A C LAMBERT
MRS J M MATTHIAS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR C BROWN (Consultant) HRS Consultancy 35 Portway Wells Somerset BA5 2BA |
For the Respondents | MR R ASTON (Solicitor) Messrs Astons Solicitors 57 Love Lane Pinner Middlesex HA5 3EY |
JUDGE PETER CLARK: This is an appeal by Mr Lloyd, the applicant before an Employment Tribunal sitting at Carmarthen under the chairmanship of Miss C Collier on 25th and 26th June 1998, against that tribunal's reserved decision, promulgated with extended reasons on 24th July 1998, dismissing his complaint of unfair dismissal against his former employers, the respondent Taylor Woodrow Construction. We are not concerned in this appeal with his further complaints of breach of contract, which was also dismissed by the tribunal, and failure to provide written reasons for dismissal, which he withdrew.
The Facts
(1) The appellant had nine years service with the company, Mr Fouracre had 19.
(2) Both had good attendance and disciplinary records.
(3) Although both men had several years relevant experience, Mr Fouracre had been working full time on the Brynhenllys contract, scheduled to run until the year 2003, whereas the appellant had worked on it for only year, and then part-time. Mr Fouracre was 38 years old and would be available to complete the contract; the appellant was 61 and would retire before its completion. Further, Mr Fouracre was computer literate, an essential requirement for the project; the appellant was not.
(4) As to mobility, Mr Fouracre had relocated to South Wales; the appellant had never been previously asked to relocate.
"The appeals were by way of re-hearing and Mr Lloyd challenged many points and disputed the selection criteria."
The Law
The Issues
(1) The appellant's contention that his dismissal was engineered and that the true reason was not redundancy was rejected by the tribunal. They found redundancy to be the reason. That is a potentially fair reason for dismissal.
(2) As to the question of reasonableness under s. 98(4) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 the tribunal made the following findings:
(a) that, contrary to the appellant's contention, Mr Hinckley did carry out a selection process (as he had claimed in evidence) and that the selection criteria were fairly and objectively applied.
(b) that the respondent had discharged its duty to make reasonable efforts to find other employment for the appellant. That the job offered was not 'suitable alternative employment' within s. 141 of the 1996 Act was nothing to the point when considering reasonableness under s. 98(4).
(c) that the consultation process was deficient in one respect. The appellant was not told of the selection criteria before the decision to dismiss was taken. However, the tribunal went on to find that that defect was later corrected at the later appeal hearings when he had the opportunity to contest the criteria and did so.
The Appeal
(1) The tribunal's finding at paragraph 20, that the respondent's failure to write down the selection criteria on paper was not relevant to the fairness of those criteria and their application. Far from being perverse, we should have thought that that statement was self-evidently correct. The difficulty, as the tribunal observed, was an evidential one for the respondent. Were there any criteria and were they applied in this case? That question was resolved by the tribunal in favour of the respondent.
(2) It was not until the tribunal hearing that Mr Hinckley mentioned for the first time the fourth selection criterion, mobility. Again, that raised a problem of credibility for the respondent, which they overcame on the tribunal's findings.
(3) Mr Brown appeared to be complaining about the offer of alternative employment being made before dismissal. The appellant did not understand the context in which it was being made. That, we think, cannot be correct in circumstances where the appellant accepted that he had been warned by Mr Sadler on 19th September that he was potentially redundant.
(4) The finding at paragraph 15 that Mr Hinckley stated that nothing the appellant could have said or done would have altered the decision to make him redundant. That may have been Mr Hinckley's view, but the Employment Tribunal accepted that the case was properly reconsidered at the two stages of appeal by managers who had not previously been involved and who were in a position to reach a different conclusion.