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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Rowe v. Moss Plastic Parts Ltd [2000] UKEAT 420_00_1207 (12 July 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/420_00_1207.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 420_00_1207, [2000] UKEAT 420__1207 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE KEENE
MR A E R MANNERS
MRS M T PROSSER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING – EX PARTE
For the Appellant | THE APPELANT IN PERSON |
MR JUSTICE KEENE: This is a preliminary hearing of an appeal against a decision of an Employment Tribunal sitting at Reading and entered on the Register on 22nd February 2000. The Employment Tribunal unanimously dismissed the appellant's complaint.
"Over the last three years, management have been trying to force me to work overtime, and over the last 18 months it has got worse, and pay increases have been used to punish me, as I do the same work on the other shift.
It does state in terms of employment, that employees are expected to work extra hours, but the managing director at a meeting agreed that overtime is asked of the worker, and if they want to work they do, and if not, they decline the offer, without it being used against them."
"1. … He brings a claim under the contract jurisdiction of the Tribunal. Having spent some time this morning exploring the issues we have agreed that the claim is confined to the difference between what the Applicant was paid for the months of January to March 1999 and the sum which he says should have been paid to him for that period. …"
It referred to the appellant's contract of employment, a term of which stated that:
"Employees are expected to undertake extra hours as necessary from time to time as dictated by circumstances."
It then went on to record that Mr Rowe's pay had been reviewed in January 1999 and that at that stage he had been informed that he would receive no pay increase. There was then some exchange of correspondence and it became clear from a letter in late February 1999 that the management's reason for denying any increase of pay was that an adverse opinion had been formed as to Mr Rowe's performance during the preceeding year. Attention in particular was drawn to what was regarded as a lack of flexibility when it came to working overtime and to failures in communication with other members of Mr Rowe's team. The tribunal accepted that the appellant had demonstrated much less willingness to be flexible in the matter of working hours and the working of overtime than most of his colleagues. In its conclusions the tribunal found that that there was no breach of an implied term of mutual trust and confidence because the company's judgments about the appellant's performance were not arbitrary or capricious. Consequently, they dismissed his claim.