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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Grampian Country Food Group Ltd v McInally [2004] UKEAT 0035_04_1711 (17 November 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0035_04_1711.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 0035_04_1711, [2004] UKEAT 35_4_1711 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE LORD JOHNSTON
MR A J RAMSDEN
MISS G B LENAGHAN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | Mr P Paterson, Solicitor Of- Messrs Tods Murray WS Solicitors 66 Queen Street EDINBURGH EH2 4NE |
For the Respondent |
Mr KRW Hogg, Solicitor Of Messrs Allcourt Solicitors 1 Carmondean Centre Carmondean LIVINGSTON EH54 8PT |
Unfair dismissal – some other substantial reason
LORD JOHNSTON:
"In the first instance the Tribunal required to consider the reason for dismissal. There was no evidence adduced to show that the dismissal was for any reason other than for some other substantial reason" (SOSR). This is a potentially fair reason for dismissal in terms of Section 98(1)(b) of the 1996 Act. Accordingly the Tribunal find that the respondents did dismiss the applicant for this reason. The Tribunal then required to consider whether or not the respondents had established SOSR as the reason for dismissal and, in particular, that there was a sound, good business reason for the reorganisation of working practices and terms and conditions of employment. The Tribunal did not find the evidence led on behalf of the respondents to be either sufficient or convincing to justify the changes that they were seeking to make. The Tribunal could readily see that there was much to be gained from utilising the assets at Fairview Mill to their fullest extent. However the Tribunal wholly agreed with Mr Hogg when he stated that the respondents had failed to advance sufficient evidence to show that the proposed changes to working practices and to terms and conditions of employment were justified. The Tribunal did not see any evidence which supported the benefits which these proposed changes were designed to achieve and the Tribunal regarded it as being of some significance that in Production R36 there is no hint whatsoever that the overall business is in difficulty or that existing practices at Fairview Mill have either caused or contributed to any losses and, more importantly that the proposed changes would address the underlying reasons for these losses. Doubtless the respondents had inherited an operation from Marshalls which was not as efficient as it could have been but that was a long way from saying that the proposed changes amounted to a substantial reason for altering terms and conditions of employment in the radical way in which the respondents were seeking to do. Accordingly the respondents have not satisfied the Tribunal that they have established a substantial reason and the application must accordingly fail.
For the sake of completeness and because a considerable amount of the evidence was focussed on the issue of reasonableness, the Tribunal conclude that, had the respondents established SOSR to the Tribunal's satisfaction, the Tribunal would have concluded that the decision to dismiss the applicant did fall within the band of reasonable responses open to them when they took the decision to dismiss him on 16 June 2003. The Tribunal accepted that there had been a lack of formality on the part of the respondents in contacting and consulting the applicant in regard to the proposed terms and conditions of employment between him going off work in April 2002 and the beginning of June 2002 in circumstances where they were clearly seeking to impose radical changes to which he was objecting but these were outweighed by the fact that by June 2003 when all of the other affected employees had accepted the new terms and were working to the new patterns the respondents could not make an exception for the applicant. It would have been wholly wrong of them to do so and potentially could have been productive of discontent among the workforce."
"The question which is being discussed in this case is whether the reorganisation of the business, which the National Farmers' Union felt they had to undertake in 1976, coupled with Mr Hollister's refusal to accept the new agreement, was a substantial reason of such a kind as to justify the dismissal of the employee. Upon that there have only been one or two cases. One we were particularly referred to was the case of Ellis v Brighton Co-operative Society Ltd [1976] IRLR 419 where it was recognised by the Court that reorganisation of business may on occasion be a sufficient reason justifying the dismissal of an employee. They went on to say: 'Where there has been a properly consulted-upon reorganisation which, if it is not done, is going to bring the whole business to a standstill, a failure to go along with the new arrangements may well - it is not bound to put it may well - constitute "some other substantial reason".' Certainly I think, everyone would agree with that. But in the present case Mr Justice Arnold expanded it a little so as not to limit it to where it came absolutely to a standstill but to where there was some sound, good business reason for that reorganisation. I must say I see no reason to differ from Mr Justice Arnold's view on that. It must depend in all the circumstances whether the reorganisation was such that the only sensible thing to do was to terminate the employee's contract unless he would agree to a new arrangement. It seems to me that that paragraph may well be satisfied, and indeed was satisfied, in this case, having regard to the commercial necessity of rearrangements being made and the termination of the relationship with the Cornish Mutual, and the setting up of a new relationship via the National Farmers' Union Mutual Insurance Limited. On that rearrangement being made, it was absolutely essential for new contracts to be made with the existing group secretaries: and the only way to deal with it was to terminate the agreements and offer them reasonable new ones. It seems to me that that would be, and was, a substantial reason of a kind sufficient to justify this kind of dismissal. I stress the word 'kind' as it would not justify the act of dismissal."