BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Boughton & Anor v. Audio Group International Ltd [2001] UKEAT 1202_00_2409 (24 September 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1202_00_2409.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1202_00_2409, [2001] UKEAT 1202__2409 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR R SANDERSON OBE
MISS S M WILSON
2) MRS W BOUGHTON |
APPELLANT |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | The Appellants in person |
For the Respondent | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Respondent |
JUDGE PETER CLARK
"1 Heads of Agreement (dated 16 March 1998) which provided that each applicant was to be given an initial two year fixed term contract of employment with the respondent - with an option to renew for a third year - and
"They are to perform duties commensurate with current duties in their capacities as Directors of Heybrook within the AGI group as a whole"
They were also to remain as directors of Heybrook.
2 A Sale Agreement (dated 24 April 1998) which, inter alia, provided that the applicants would forfeit a proportion of the purchase price if they left voluntarily within the first year; and that payment of 30% of that purchase price was subject to turnover achieved in each of the first three years after completion.
3 Service Agreements (also dated 24 April 1998) in which it was expressly agreed that they would be employed by, and would serve, AGI as directors of that company. The duties which they were required to perform under their Service Agreements were expressed to be such as "the Board may from time to time properly assign to (each of them) in connection with the business of the company and …… its associated companies."
(1) An express term that they were to be employed and would serve the Respondent as directors of that company (AGI).
(2) The implied term of mutual trust and confidence.
As to the first, the Tribunal rejected a contention by the Respondent that the term of the Service Agreement that each Appellant would be employed by and would serve the Respondent as directors of that company was inserted by mistake. They found that the Appellants never were appointed directors of the Respondent and that accordingly the Respondent were in breach of that express term of the Service Agreement. However they went on to conclude, first that the Appellants, being aware of the breach by October 1998 waived that breach and secondly that such breach did not cause the Appellants to resign in July 1999.
"Accordingly, it is our clear judgment that the applicants have failed to establish any conduct on the part of the respondent which sensibly and objectively viewed in the context of the acquisition of Heybrook could be reasonably regarded as a breach of the implied term of trust and confidence. At best, it might be said that the respondent displayed a lack of sensitivity towards the position of the applicants and the difficult adjustments which they were required to make but, in our judgment, their conduct did not amount to a repudiatory breach of contract."
"(a) ….there was no variation in the terms of the Appellants' contracts of employment which was affirmed by the Appellants by October 1998 at the latest."
The issue is whether:
"the terms of engagement remained in contractual, if not actual, force."
(b) …(since they were employed as directors/senior employees) there was no acceptance by the Appellants of a requirement that they should conduct clerical tasks"
as the EAT thought on the last occasion
"allegedly required of them in the meeting on 26 April 1999."
The question being that
"Such a requirement would normally be regarded as repudiatory conduct."
"(c) Although it appears that the Tribunal did consider the Appellants' complaint based on [their] treatment as junior members of staff, there is no obvious recognition of the fact that the reduction to status of clerical officer allegedly imposed at the meeting of 26 April 1999 was considered in this context. That may have been the last straw.
(d) Even if not sufficiently serious a matter on its own, there is no clear indication that the Tribunal looked at the combination of circumstances rather than events in isolation."
(a) It seems to us that the Tribunal found that in October 1998 the Respondent unilaterally varied the express terms of the Service Agreement by declining to appoint the Appellants to the board of the Respondent company AGI, or otherwise to treat them as directors of that company, as opposed to Heybrook. That amounted to a breach which the Tribunal found was a repudiatory breach of the contracts of employment. However, the Tribunal found and, in our judgment, were entitled to find that:
(i) the Appellants affirmed the contract, by continuing in employment, thereby consenting to the unilateral variation, and/or
(ii) that, on Mr Boughton's evidence, the Appellants did not resign in response to their non-appointment, or non-treatment, as directors of AGI. In either of those events the Tribunal's conclusion as to breach of the express term is sustainable, given their findings that such breach had been acquiesced in, and in any event did not contribute to the eventual resignation.
(b) On a fair reading of the Tribunal's reasons they were not persuaded, as a matter of fact, that at the meeting held on 26 April 1999 the Respondents then announced their intention for the first time to require the Appellants to carry out clerical tasks. On the evidence, including the evidence of the Appellants, they had, without objection, been carrying out what may be termed "clerical tasks" since the takeover by the Respondent in March 1998, and the nature of their duties had been agreed, so the Tribunal found at meetings of the board of Heybrook, held in 1998, at which the Appellants attended and took a full part. In these circumstances there was no material change in their duties, as from 26 April 1999.
(c) & (d) It is clear to us that the Tribunal were alerted to the "last straw" doctrine, articulated by the Court of Appeal in Lewis v Motorworld Garages Ltd [1985] IRLR 465. Counsel for the Respondent below specifically drew attention to that case in his closing written submissions. Further, at paragraph 10 of their Reasons, as Mr Boughton points out, the Tribunal referred to his evidence that although a lot of his complaints were trivial, they amounted to a constant drip of water on a stone.