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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Dixon & Ors v London General Transport Services Ltd [2000] UKEAT 1265_98_2903 (29 March 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/1265_98_2903.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 1265_98_2903 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BURTON
MS S R CORBY
MR J R CROSBY
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | MISS E BANTON (of Counsel) K Zaman Ali & Co Solicitors 409-411 Brixton Road London SW9 7DE |
For the Respondents | MR D WAGSTAFF (Solicitor) David Wagstaff & Co Solicitors 19 The Avenue March Cambridgeshire PE15 9PS |
MR JUSTICE BURTON: This is an appeal brought by Messrs Dixon, Anderson, Boyd and Guermet against the dismissal by unanimous decision of the Employment Tribunal sitting at London (South) of their claims for unfair dismissal by the Respondent, London General Transport Services Ltd.
"For the foregoing reasons therefore we found that each Originating Application in effect failed in limine because of the length of time which passed, and the conduct of each Applicant in continuing to work and affirm the contract; and the receipt of financial consideration as partial recompense for the changes. In any event however, we found (and we rely upon our conclusions on these issues as being supportive of our conclusions just stated) as a matter of causation that each [Applicant] left for a principal reason unconnected with any dissatisfaction with the change of terms and conditions. We deal with each Applicant now separately in chronological order of presentation of Originating Application."
"It follows from our foregoing conclusions that we have in each case found that as a matter of causation the Applicant did not prove that his resignation was caused by any repudiatory breach of contract. All applications are therefore dismissed."
Mr Dixon
In paragraph 25 the Tribunal said this:
"We have no doubt at all that the principal reason why Mr Dixon resigned was because he faced the risk of a serious disciplinary penalty as an outcome of being reported by Mr Pierce and referred for a disciplinary hearing by Mr Johnson"
The Tribunal rejected, in paragraph 26, the suggestion that:
"the conduct of the Respondents in the evidence of Mr Pierce and the evidence of Mr Johnson amounted to repudiatory behaviour. Furthermore we believe and find that Mr Dixon had a reasonably clear idea of the trouble that he was in and it was for that principal reason that he chose to leave."
Mr Anderson
In paragraph 32 the Tribunal say as follows:
"In Mr Anderson case therefore, we looked at all the facts and his own evidence in order to ascertain what was the reason why at that particular time he decided to terminate his employment. [December 1995] We came to the conclusion that the principal reason why Mr Anderson terminated his employment at that time related certainly to his ill-health absence and the fact that he knew he would be obliged to see the company doctor in the light of his poor attendance record. We find that Mr Johnson had been perfectly reasonable in his handling of Mr Anderson and his sickness absences up to that time, but that matters were coming to a head. There was certainly nothing in Mr Johnson's behaviour towards Mr Anderson or the behaviour of Mr Anderson [it must be somebody else] towards Mr Anderson at that time which could be criticised, ie alone amount to fundamental repudiatory behaviour."
The Tribunal's conclusion, at paragraph 33, was:
"Mr Anderson was unclear in his evidence as to how or why he claimed that the changed terms and conditions affected his health. Mr Anderson's flurry of different "reasons" for not returning to work at that time made it quite [clear] to us that he had decided to leave but we were not satisfied that he had proved that the reason for his resignation was the imposition of new terms and conditions over one year before and/or that such imposition had remained fundamentally repudiatory behaviour."
Mr Boyd
In paragraph 37 the Tribunal say:
"… In his case we also considered what was his principal reason for resigning and it was quite clear to us that having moved house and having found alternative work he made an ordinary and no doubt from his point of view a sensible decision to change jobs, and it was only when he applied to the PTSC [the new union in which he and his fellow Appellants were members] that he decided additionally to argue that the main factor of his decision was the imposed terms and conditions of some two years before."
Mr Guermet
The Tribunal in relation to Mr Guermet which, as I above indicated was a resignation on 30th January 1997, even further divorced in time from the changes in terms and conditions in 1994, conclude as follows at paragraphs 49, 50 and 51:
"49. We regret to have to conclude that we found Mr Guermet's case entirely devoid of merit. …
50. We have no doubt at all in Mr Guermet's case that the reason why he resigned was because he knew that he faced a very serious risk of dismissal for gross-misconduct which would involve probably considerable difficulty in obtaining a useful reference …
51. We find that Mr Guermet himself must have realised his case was hopeless and furthermore that by framing his notice of resignation in the way in which he did that the Respondents would be obliged to treat it very seriously. …"
(1) by continuing to work under the new contract after the initial complaint in the petition;
(2) by suing and recovering, although I am told it has not been paid, as a result of the appeal, the unpaid wages; and
(3) by virtue of the lapse of time.
It is quite plain that the Tribunal could have made a very substantial distinction, if there had been a case to be made at all, between Mr Dixon and Mr Anderson who delayed a year and Mr Boyd and Mr Guermet who delayed not only very substantially longer than that, but even after their fellow Appellants had (if they did) accepted the repudiation. The case for affirmation against Mr Boyd and Mr Guermet is inevitably much, much stronger even than the case in respect of Mr Dixon and Mr Anderson.
"9. … Mr Robert gave evidence that, so far as he was concerned, there had always been in operation a typical grievance procedure which involved an initial approach to line manager and upward progression through management stages in a fashion which is well-known throughout many large companies. It is our conclusion that it would have been obvious to any member of staff and for that matter to … the members of the Public Transport (Staff) Consortium ("PTSC"), that such a procedure operated had any member of staff wished to take it up. On the evidence before us, none of the four Applicants after the petitions of November and December 1994 took any action in a formal way to pursue what we have no doubt was an unhappiness about their terms and conditions, and indeed on the contrary worked normally subject to the particular problems which we find existed in each case until the actual termination of their employment."