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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Hogan v. Cambridgeshire County Council [1999] UKEAT 382_99_1810 (18 October 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/382_99_1810.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 382_99_1810 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MR P A L PARKER CBE
MR N D WILLIS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | MR T N HOGAN (Husband) |
For the Respondents | MR T HORAN (of Counsel) Instructed by Solicitor to Council Respondents Mailbox Res 1001 Shire Hall Castle Hill Cambridge CB3 0AP |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT): We have before us by way of a preliminary hearing the appeal of Mrs H Hogan in the matter Hogan v Cambridgeshire County Council. Unusually, because this is only a preliminary hearing, Cambridgeshire County Council have been represented and we have heard from them briefly. The unanimous decision of the Tribunal was that Mrs Hogan's application for unfair dismissal and from breach of contract were each dismissed. That was the result of a hearing on 18, 19 and 20 January and the decision was sent to the parties on 21 January of this year.
"Relies on frustration.
Otherwise not a fair dismissal.
The issue is very narrow."
and, at our page 18, the Chairman as saying:
"In EAT said that if this is dismissal, it is unfair."
"The Tribunal has taken account of the documents submitted by both sides and the submissions which have been made and it is the view of the Tribunal that the applicant was not dismissed from her employment with the respondent but that the performance of the contract was frustrated by the events which we have described and the other submissions in the case so that by 4 February 1997 the contract of employment no longer existed. Through no fault of either of the parties, circumstances unprovided for in the contract of employment, unforeseen, had arisen, that is to say the applicant's long term incapacity, which rendered performance of the contract impossible. In those circumstances the claim for unfair dismissal must fail."
If there was here a frustration in that technical sense, it may be, looking at the decision of the Employment Tribunal as a whole, that the frustration was, at any rate in part, self-induced because one of the events which the Tribunal seems to have relied on, as part of the events that caused the frustration, was Mrs Hogan's application to go on a degree course. Frustration of contracts of employment is never an easy subject and it is made even more difficult where there arise questions of how far the frustration was self-induced and whether the person who has thus in part at least caused it can rely upon it as an issue. It is a vexed and difficult area (see for example, Harveys Volume 1 paragraph 821-825).