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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Rooke v. Anglian Water Services Ltd [2001] UKEAT 475_01_1307 (13 July 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/475_01_1307.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 475_01_1307, [2001] UKEAT 475_1_1307 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MISS A MACKIE OBE
MS G MILLS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | The Appellant in person |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
"I refuse the request for a review as having no reasonable prospect of success. The applicant is seeking to revisit the case, and re-argue points decided or already taken into account."
"Our reasons for coming to this conclusion"
and that was a conclusion that the application of Mr Rooke must be dismissed
"are that at the heart of all this case is a contractual issue. Was the applicant bound by the Mobility Clause in the unsigned contract of 1994. We are satisfied that he was. He received it, he read it, he never signed it. We are unclear as to whether he never signed it because of the objections he raised to it in the letter to which we were already referred, document 17 of his bundle, or generally because he objected to the Mobility Clause. The Mobility Clause is not mentioned in that letter. Admittedly his original contract did not have a Mobility Clause but he had been promoted and it is not at all unreasonable that on promotion he got a new contract of employment and because of his wider responsibilities and usefulness to the respondent, a Mobility Clause was required of him."
"In 1994 as a result of a competitive recruiting programme the applicant was promoted and was tendered a contract of employment on 26 October 1994, as appears in pages 10 - 16 of his bundle. That contract included at page 12 of the bundle, a Mobility Clause. The applicant protested the contract, as can be seen by his note of 14 November 1994, document 17, but in fact in every respect worked to it and was paid in accordance with."
Presumably it was the Employment Tribunal's view that he had in every respect worked to the 1994 contract that led them to their later view that he was bound by that contract notwithstanding that he had protested it.