![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Devoy v. World Duty Free (Europe) Ltd [2000] UKEAT 59_00_2711 (27 November 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/59_00_2711.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 59__2711, [2000] UKEAT 59_00_2711 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BELL
MR D J HODGKINS CB
MR H SINGH
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING – EX PARTE
For the Appellant | MR R DAVIS (Solicitor) K E Davis & Sons Solicitors Warley Chambers Warley Road Hayes Middlesex UP4 0PU |
For the Respondents | MR T CROXFORD (of Counsel) Lewis Silkin Solicitors Windsor House 50 Victoria Street London SW1H 0NH |
MR JUSTICE BELL: This in an appeal by Mrs Devoy against the decision of the Employment Tribunal held at London (South) on 6th September 1999. The decision with extended reasons was promulgated on 27th October 1999. The Employment Tribunal rejected Mrs Devoy's claim that she had been constructively and unfairly dismissed by the respondent, deciding:
"The Applicant did not resign in response to a breach of contract by the Respondent and that the Applicant was not dismissed by the Respondent."
"An employee has the right not to be unfairly dismissed by his employer."
Section 95(1) provides, so far as is material to this case, that:
"… and employee is dismissed by his employer if-
…
(c) the employee terminates the contract under which he is employed (with or without notice) in circumstances in which he is entitled to terminate it without notice by reason of the employer's conduct."
Dismissal of the kind described in paragraph (c) is generally referred to as "constructive dismissal".
"4.1 The Applicant was employed by the Respondent as a Payroll Administrator at Heathrow Terminal 1.
4.2 In January 1999 it came to the attention of Ms Deadman [the respondent's Human Resources Manager] that there appeared to have been two separate instances where confidential information relating to two employees' payroll details had been given to other members of staff in a short space of time. Both instances related to the grant of "Lieu days" in lieu of Bank Holidays where they have been off sick or given compassionate leave.
4.3 The incidents appeared to Ms Deadman to point to the Applicant who was invited to an investigatory meeting on 23rd January 1999. In accordance with the Respondent's Personnel Policies and Procedures the Applicant was accompanied by Joan Young. At the conclusion of the interview the Applicant was suspended on full pay pending further investigation.
Ms Deadman had other interviews with other personnel involved and a further investigatory interview on 2nd February 1999 with the Applicant.
The investigatory meeting was reconvened on 3rd February 1999. The Applicant was not told who had made the allegations against her and was not shown any witness statements (contrary to the Respondent's Personnel Policy and Procedures). The meeting was adjourned at 1.05pm and reconvened by Ms Deadman as a disciplinary interview at 1.30pm. The Respondent's Personnel policies and Procedures require that "At least 24 hours advance notice and the reason for the meeting must be given to the employee prior to any disciplinary interview"). The disciplinary interview lasted ten minutes.
At the end of the interview Ms Deadman told the Applicant she would be demoted to her previous position on the shop floor.
The Applicant asked for confirmation in writing. She did not receive this until after her resignation.
4.4 The Applicant went off sick immediately after the 3rd February meeting. The medical evidence submitted by the Applicant indicated she was suffering from "anxiety and depression". The Applicant remained off sick suffering from "anxiety and depression" (and was paid full sick pay in accordance with the Respondent's sick pay policy) until she resigned on 16th June 1999.
4.5 By letter dated 16th February 1999 the Applicant appealed against Ms Deadman's decision. Under the Respondent's Personnel Policies and Procedures an appeal requires "a full review of the whole case and not just a review of any new information".
4.6 Between 16th February and 16th June 1999 correspondence was exchanged between the Applicant and the Respondent.
In a letter dated 18th February the Respondent made it clear that "any time limits relating to the appeal process will not begin until you have returned to work".
The Respondent by letter dated 5th March made it clear that the Respondent did not think it appropriate for the Applicant "to attend an appeal hearing when you are clearly in an unfit state to attend work", that no change had been made to her salary or other terms of employment.
By letter dated 29th April the Applicant indicated to Mr Sowerby [the respondent's General Manager] that "the uncertainty concerning my position at work is contributing to my anxiety and depression I am unable to return to work until my position is resolved. As returning to work is a condition of the appeal process, clearly we have reached deadlock" and requested a personal meeting with Mr Sowerby.
On 5th May Ms Deadman wrote to the Applicant "to ask for your permission to approach your doctor for a medical report concerning your fitness and capacity to return to work".
On 10th May Mr Sowerby wrote to the Applicant confirming that "no changes have been made to your rate of pay nor your hours, on the department in which you work" and that "if you are medically unfit to come to work, then I cannot agree to overriding your Doctor's medical advice" and confirming that the Applicant's appeal would be heard when she was fit to return to work.
On 8th June Ms Deadman wrote again to the Applicant enclosing a copy of her letter of 5th May and asking the Applicant to make herself available to see a Doctor at the Occupational Health Centre".
On 16th June the Applicant wrote to Ms Deadman resigning forthwith on the grounds that "I have no further confidence in the company procedure".
The tribunal found at paragraph 4.7 of its extended reasons:
"The reason for the Applicant's resignation was solely the delay in hearing her appeal."
We should add to the facts which the tribunal found and which we have narrated, the common ground that the applicant did not respond to Ms Deadman's letter of 5th May 1999 but that there was a query as to whether she had received that letter. She did not reply to the request in 8th June 1999 letter that she make herself available for medical examination.
"On 17th June 1999 I resigned from my employment with the Respondent as they had failed to provide any information which allowed me to prepare my appeal or a date as to when the appeal was to be heard."
"The law on constructive dismissal as established in the principles of Western Excavating (ECC) Ltd v Sharp is that:
1. There must be a breach of contract by the employer.
2. The breach must be sufficiently serious to justify the employee resigning, or else it must be the last in a series of incidents which justify the employee leaving.
3. The employee must leave in response to that breach and not for some other, unconnected reason.
4. The employee must not delay too long in terminating the contract in response to the employer's breach."
"In our findings of fact we have found that the Applicant resigned because of the delay in hearing her appeal. The first question we had to ask ourselves was therefore whether this constituted a breach of contract by the Respondent.
It was not suggested by either party that there was any provision in the written terms and conditions of employment concerning the position where an employee was off sick while a disciplinary appeal was pending. We were therefore left to consider the normal principles of contract law which we considered in the light of the principles enunciated (albeit in a different context) in Iceland Frozen Foods v Jones.
The question which we asked ourselves was whether the Respondent's decision not to convene the disciplinary appeal while the Applicant was certified as unfit to work on account of anxiety and depression but to delay it until she was fit to work was a course of action which fell within or without the band of reasonable responses which a reasonable employer might have adopted. In coming to our decision we bore in mind the responsibility which the Respondent had to the Applicant in relation to her health and safety (indeed we would have been very concerned whether it would have been reasonable to hold a disciplinary appeal while the Applicant was certified unfit for work due to anxiety and depression), that the Respondent was seeking to investigate the medical position, was continuing to pay the Applicant sick pay and had made it clear that the disciplinary appeal would be postponed until the Applicant was fit.
It is therefore our unanimous decision the Applicant did not resign in response to a breach of contract by the Respondent and that the Applicant was not dismissed by the Respondent."
"It was not suggested … that there was any provision in the written terms and conditions of employment concerning the position where an employee was off sick while a disciplinary appeal was pending."
"Appeals must be heard as soon as is practicable after the receipt of the formal appeal letter."
Without doubting Mr Davis' good faith, we initially had some difficulty in accepting that this term was raised before the Employment Tribunal since there was no reference to it in the tribunal's decision or in the Notice of Appeal or in Mr Davis's skeleton argument. On further enquiry, however, it appears to us that the most likely explanation is that Mr Davis did refer to the express provision in Clause 7.6 conceded and argued that Mrs Devoy's illness was of no relevance to the question of whether it had been practicable to hear her appeal before she resigned in June 1999. In that sense, the express term in Clause 7.6 did not, in Mr Davis' submission, provide for or concern "the position where an employee was off sick while a disciplinary appeal was pending." Mr Davis sustained that argument before us. He contended that "practicable" meant simply "capable of being done, feasible" and that it was "practicable" in that sense, to be distinguished he argued from "reasonably practicable" or "reasonable", for Mrs Devoy's appeal to be held well before June 1999. All that had to be done, Mr Davis submitted, was to fix a date for the hearing of the appeal. Illness, however severe, could not affect that, even if the employee was too ill to make any contribution to the appeal. So it was quite wrong of the Employment Tribunal to concern itself with what was "reasonable" and in particular whether delay from February to June 1999 was reasonable. Mr Davis contended that if the tribunal had asked itself whether it was practicable to hear Mrs Devoy's appeal before June 1999 the answer must have been in the affirmative and that failure to do so amounted to a serious and fundamental breach of contract on the part of the respondent which justified Mrs Devoy in leaving, hence constructive dismissal which, Mr Davis argued, was unfair. Mrs Devoy's claim should have succeeded. Even if we could not go that far, Mr Davis submitted that the tribunal had erred in failing to grapple with Clause 7.6 and in applying the wrong test and that the matter should be remitted to the Employment Tribunal to apply the correct test.
"… we think that one can say that to construe the words "reasonably practicable" as the equivalent of "reasonable" is to take a view too favourable to the employee. On the other hand "reasonably practicable" means more than merely what is reasonably capable physically of being done – different, for instance, from its construction in the context of the legislation relating to factories … In the context in which the words are used in the Employment Protection (Consolidation) Act 1978, however ineptly as we think, they mean something between these two. Perhaps to read the word "practicable" as the equivalent of "feasible" as Sir John Brightman did in Singh v Post Office [1973] ICR 437 NIRC and to ask colloquially and untrammelled by too much legal logic – "was it reasonably feasible to present the complaint to the industrial tribunal within the relevant three months?" – is the best approach to the correct application of the relevant subsection."
In our view that approach is a good working approach to the meaning and application of the word "practicable".
"Once you detect that there has been a misdirection, and particularly that there has been an express misdirection of law, the next question to be asked is not whether the conclusion of the tribunal is plainly wrong, but whether it is plainly and unarguably right notwithstanding that misdirection. It is only that it is plainly and unarguably right notwithstanding the misdirection that the decision can stand. If the conclusion was wrong or might have been wrong, then it is for an appellate tribunal to remit the case to the only tribunal which is charged with making findings of fact."
"Appeals must be heard as soon as is practicable after the receipt of the formal appeal letter."
and to decide whether if the respondent was in breach of that express term the nature of the breach was sufficiently serious to amount to constructive dismissal.