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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Lardier v. British Gas Research & Technology Plc [2001] UKEAT 821_00_0503 (5 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/821_00_0503.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 821_00_0503, [2001] UKEAT 821__503 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 9 February 2001 | |
Before
MR COMMISSIONER HOWELL QC
MISS C HOLROYD
MRS M T PROSSER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING – EX PARTE
For the Appellant | THE APPELLANT IN PERSON |
MR COMMISSIONER HOWELL QC:
(a) the conclusion that the reason for Miss Lardier's dismissal on 31 March 1996 was redundancy (it was common ground from the outset of the proceedings that this had taken place on 31st March 1996: see the two originating application forms and the respondent's answer in the tribunal proceedings at pages 26 to 38 of the appeal file),
(b) the claim that she had been discriminated against on the grounds of her sex, and
(c) her complaints based on "action short of dismissal".
"In the light of the Respondent's admission that it had unfairly dismissed the Applicant and breached the Applicant's contract, the appropriate remedy is for damages. The Applicant is not entitled to any basic award because her entitlement to basic award has to be set off against the redundancy payment made to her by the Respondent. The Respondent has agreed to pay her the maximum compensatory award applicable at the time of the termination of her employment on 31 March 1996 (£11,300.00) and her maximum entitlement to compensation under breach of contract (£25,000.00). The Tribunal orders the Respondent to pay the Applicant the sum of £36,300.00 which is the total of the compensatory award for unfair dismissal (£11,300.00) and the compensation for breach of contract (£25,000.00)."
As correctly recorded by the tribunal, those amounts were the maximum possible awards of compensation under the two heads at the relevant time: see SI/1995 No 1953 and SI/1994 No 1623 Article 10.
(1) Miss Lardier contended that the tribunal had been wrong in not reconsidering the question of whether she had been dismissed by reason of redundancy on 31st March 1996 at all. She said this was not an issue which had itself been reviewed at the EAT level and she thought it should have been, though when pressed she said that she did not criticise the Employment Tribunal for this in view of the directions they had been given. This point is completely unarguable in view of the clear terms of the judgment of this tribunal given by Charles J on 11th October 1999 to which we have already referred.
(2) She said the tribunal had erred in failing to make specific findings on all the issues of fact she had wished to raise under the heading of her breach of contract claims, referring in particular to the period when she had been on "gardening leave". That too is quite unarguable since once it was admitted that the breach of contract claim succeeded and the maximum amount of compensation was payable, any further raking over the ground of factual disputes going back over many years would have been completely superfluous.
(3) She said that it was wrong for the tribunal to have restricted the compensation awarded to her to the mandatory limits under United Kingdom domestic law, as she wished the question of whether these limits were discriminatory and unlawful to be referred to the European Court of Justice. We sought to press her on the nature of the discrimination she was alleging and the extent to which this point had been relied on at all before the tribunal. We were left wholly unpersuaded that there was any arguable point of European law here of which the tribunal should have taken account (whether or not overtly raised before them) or which we should ourselves consider or refer to the European Court of Justice for a ruling. Miss Lardier suggested that the discrimination lay in the fact that different compensation limits apply to the different types of claim which may be made to a tribunal for breach of contract, unfair dismissal, discrimination and so forth, but failed to identify any relevant principle of domestic or European Union law to show that the point was worth further consideration.
(4) She said that the tribunal's failure to make a basic award of compensation was an error, because it was wrong to have applied the statutory offset for an earlier redundancy payment from her employers under s. 122(4)(b) Employment Rights Act 1996. She asserted before us that she had never accepted any money at all from the respondents; but again it was unclear the extent to which that had been argued before the tribunal. On this simple question of fact the tribunal were plainly entitled to accept and act on, as it appears to us they did, the details of the actual payment and acceptance of a sum of £16,749.25 compensation for redundancy provided by the respondents at the outset of the proceedings (see their grounds of resistance dated 31 July 1996 at page 36). On that basis the order made by the tribunal, and their decision in paragraph 15 of their extended reasons that she was not entitled to a basic award because of the redundancy payment, is squarely in accordance with the legislation.
(5) She said that the tribunal had been wrong in not ordering her reinstatement or re-engagement, and that the way the tribunal had dealt with this issue was unfair. Whether an order for reinstatement or re-engagement under s. 113 Employment Rights Act 1996 should or should not be made in a particular case is pre-eminently a matter for the judgment and discretion of the employment tribunal and we see no grounds whatever on which this tribunal can be criticised for declining to make such an order in this case. Even from the limited amount of material we have had occasion to consider for the purposes of this appeal, it is obvious beyond argument that the decision not to order reinstatement or re-engagement in this case was not only reasonable but entirely correct for the reasons the tribunal gave. No reasonable tribunal could seriously have considered making such an order given the long drawn out history of past and continuing grievance and mistrust disclosed here.
(6) Miss Lardier said that notwithstanding the award of the maximum compensation for breach of contract claims, the tribunal had erred in failing to list and record all the many instances in which she contended the employer had been at fault in breaking her contract of employment, in addition to her complaints about her "gardening leave" period already dealt with under (2) above. As with her submission on that issue, we consider this unarguable. The raking over of the details of past alleged breaches of contract is superfluous if the maximum compensation for all such breaches is agreed to be payable in any event.
(7) For similar reasons we also consider unarguable her seventh point which was that the tribunal had failed to address as a separate issue, and make factual findings about, a contention she wished to ventilate that the fact of her not being affiliated to a trade union had played a part in her being selected for redundancy. Again, once it was agreed that the maximum compensation for an unfair redundancy dismissal was payable in any event, the detailed reasons leading up to her selection became unnecessary to go into.
(8) Her eighth point was that one of her breach of contract claims (namely that in paragraph 2 in her Originating Application at page 30, stated as "Breach of Contract - Redeployment Policy") had in fact been a claim of racial discrimination and ought to have been so treated by the tribunal despite being put only as a claim for breach of contract. We were quite unable to see that the tribunal could in any way be said to have erred in dealing with that claim as what it said it was. In any case as already indicated the issues remitted to them by this Appeal Tribunal on 11th October 1999 were limited to breach of contract and unfair dismissal claims; this particular claim being identified at paragraph 43 of the judgment of that date as coming under the first of those two heads, and no mention at all of racial discrimination as an issue being made at that stage or included in the originating application at any stage.
(9) The ninth point was that the tribunal hearing had been unfair, in that the tribunal's findings were inconsistent with the evidence as to what employment vacancies there were as an alternative to redundancy and the possibility of the applicant's reinstatement. This did not appear to us to add anything to the other points made on factual issues. Insofar as it was intended as a separate point we were not satisfied it could provide her with any arguable ground of appeal.
(10) Tenth and last, Miss Lardier contended that the order for costs against her made by the tribunal was in her words "ludicrous" as being a perverse exercise of the tribunal's jurisdiction. She based this submission principally on what she said had been her own willingness to agree to an out-of-court settlement through ACAS, though making it clear that she considered this should have been at a higher figure than the maximum compensation awarded by the tribunal. However the tribunal's stated reasons for making the award of costs as set out in paragraph 17 of their extended reasons on page 14 were different: the order was made because the applicant had unreasonably pursued the question of her claim for reinstatement or re-engagement over a period of three days when this was quite unrealistic and the respondents had already indicated their agreement to pay the maximum possible compensation. In our judgment the tribunal's reasons as stated in paragraph 17 both explain and wholly justify the exercise of their discretion to award costs in those circumstances, and we can see no arguable ground for this tribunal to interfere with it. It appears to us to be a justified award as on the contrary it was Miss Lardier who was being perverse and unreasonable in the way she pursued and prolonged the proceedings.