[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Asamoah-Boakye v. Walter Rodney Housing Association Ltd [2000] UKEAT 44_00_1407 (14 July 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/44_00_1407.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 44__1407, [2000] UKEAT 44_00_1407 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
On 30 June 2000 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
DR D GRIEVES CBE
MR N D WILLIS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR S CHAWATAMA (of Counsel) Instructed By: Dexter Montague & Partners 105 Oxford Road Reading Berkshire RG1 7XR |
For the Respondents | MR O CAMPBELL (of Counsel) Instructed By: Messrs Sharp & Pritchard Solicitors Elizabeth House Fulwood Place London WC1 6HG |
JUDGE PETER CLARK:
Adjournment
The Issues
The Facts
(1) salary to be paid up to 31 May, the proposed date of termination of the employment and
(2) a good reference in a mutually agreed form of words.
(1) the draft did not deal with his entitlement to pay in lieu of notice
(2) the respondent had not provided the appellant with a copy of their reference.
"To Whom It May Concern
Yaw Asamoah-Boakye commenced employment with Walter Rodney Housing Association (WRHA) as Temporary Finance Officer in January 1993. His main duties were to maintain the finance systems of the organisation, by carrying out trial balances, cash flow forecasts, annual budgets and utilising a double-entry bookkeeping system.
His position was made full time, and during the course of his career at WRHA he was promoted to the post of Accountant in February 1995. This gave him more responsibility over the production and maintenance of the financial system at WRHA.
His attendance at work has always been good, with the minimum time off sick. He has always been punctual in his time-keeping."
"Terms having been agreed to end your employment, it will not be appropriate for you to attempt to return to work on 1 June."
The Employment Tribunal Decision
(1) That although there was a small area of dispute between the parties, not unimportant to the appellant, on the wording of the reference, the tribunal concluded that there was an agreement in principle between the parties for the termination of the employment. The appellant had left the offices of the respondent on 19 May, not anticipating that he would return. The employment relationship had broken down. There was neither a dismissal by the respondent nor a resignation by the appellant. There was a termination by mutual agreement. Accordingly the claim of unfair dismissal failed; there was no dismissal under section 95 ERA.
(2) Although there was broad agreement that the respondent would pay the appellant a lump sum of £3,600, that was subject to the appellant leaving, signing a section 203 compromise agreement and withdrawing his first complaint. He did not sign the agreement, nor did he withdraw the first complaint. In these circumstances the tribunal held that the respondent was not in breach of the agreement reached between the parties during May 1999. The breach of contract claim was dismissed.
Parties Submissions
Dismissal or termination by mutual agreement?
"… It is a question of construction whether the execution of the further contract is a condition or term of the bargain or whether it is a mere expression of the desire of the parties as to the manner in which the transaction already agreed to will in fact go through. In the former case there is enforceable contract either because the condition is unfulfilled or because the law does not recognise a contract to enter into a contract. In the latter case there is a binding contract and the reference to the more formal document may be ignored."
(1) there was a failure to agree a material term, that is, the terms of the reference to be provided by the respondent and
(2) that the signing of a compromise agreement, upon which an enforceable withdrawal by the appellant of the first complaint depended, was a condition precedent to an effective and binding agreement to terminate the appellant's employment mutually.
(3) further, a key requirement of a compromise agreement which complies with section 203 ERA is that the employee must have had independent advice. On the facts, the appellant received advice, which was not to sign the draft agreement.
Our Conclusions
(1) The tribunal found that the relationship between the parties had broken down by 12 May. That state of affairs may lead to a resignation by the employee, not amounting to constructive dismissal. The tribunal expressly found (reasons: paragraph 8) that the appellant did not resign, contrary to the respondent's case. It may lead to a dismissal, actual or constructive, by the employer. The tribunal did not make that finding either. They found termination by mutual agreement.
(2) We look at the non-controversial evidence before the tribunal in the form of the correspondence exchanged between the parties. It is absolutely plain that the respondent required the appellant to sign a valid form of compromise agreement, which their solicitors drafted, after he had taken independent advice (for which they agreed to pay). They wished to be assured that the appellant would (a) withdraw the first complaint and (b) not present any further complaint arising out of the termination of his employment. We accept the appellant's submission that this was not simply a case where the written agreement confirmed the terms already agreed between the parties, it was a condition precedent to agreement being finally reached.
We do not base our reasoning on the appellant's alternative submission that any agreement reached between the parties was void by virtue of section 203. On the facts of this case it was a necessary precondition that his existing and future employment tribunal claims were validly disposed of.
On this ground no binding agreement was reached such as to found the tribunal's ultimate conclusion.
We compare and contrast cases where nothing is said about a "section 203 agreement" and the parties reach agreement on all terms such as to amount to termination by mutual agreement. For example, in Sheffield v Oxford Controls Ltd [1979] ICR 396, an employee, having been told that if he did not resign voluntarily he would be dismissed, signed an agreement to resign in return for certain financial benefits. On his complaint of unfair dismissal an Industrial Tribunal held that he had resigned and had not been dismissed. That decision was upheld on appeal to the Employment Appeal Tribunal. The principle issue was whether he had resigned under duress, but it is nowhere suggested that the absence of the equivalent of a section 203 compromise agreement prevented the agreement between the parties operating as the terminating event, rather than dismissal. Birch is a further example on its facts.
(3) In any event, the parties did not in fact reach an agreement, as the tribunal found. At paragraph 8 of their reasons they refer to an agreement "in principle", recognising that there remained a small area of dispute, small but not unimportant to the appellant, concerning the wording of the reference. Mr Campbell has submitted that that issue did not arise until 21 May. That is not correct. It was raised by the appellant in his letter to the respondent of 14 May in the form of an amendment to the proposed draft compromise agreement.
(4) In short, we are driven to conclude that the tribunal did take a pragmatic approach, as Mr Campbell submits they were entitled to do. Their feel for the case, not unlike ours, was that the respondent had acted reasonably and that the just result would be reflected in the agreement which the respondent sought to achieve. However, that is not the law. Absent agreement, termination cannot be said to take place by agreement.
Breach of Contract
Order