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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Kimberley Group Housing Ltd v. Hambley & Ors (UK) Ltd [2008] UKEAT 0488_07_2504 (25 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0488_07_2504.html Cite as: [2008] ICR 1030, [2008] UKEAT 488_7_2504, [2008] UKEAT 0488_07_2504, [2008] IRLR 682 |
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UKEAT/0489/07/RN |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
MR D EVANS CBE
MR T MOTTURE
UKEAT/0488/07/RN | |
KIMBERLEY GROUP HOUSING LTD |
APPELLANT |
(2) LEENA HOMES LTD (3) ANGEL SERVICES (UK) LTD |
RESPONDENTS |
UKEAT/0489/07/RN | |
ANGEL SERVICES (UK) LTD |
APPELLANT |
(2) KIMBERLEY GROUP HOUSING LTD (3) LEENA HOMES LTD |
RESPONDENTS |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
UKEAT/0488/07/RN For the Appellant |
MR W JOSLING (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Haldanes Solicitors 66 High Street Stevenage SG1 3EA |
For Mr D Palmer For the First Respondent For the Second Respondent For the Third Respondent |
MR A ALLEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Rowley Ashworth Solicitors Suite 1B Joseph's Well Hanover Walk Leeds LS3 1AB MR E LEGARD (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Newbys with Thomas, Bingham & Spark Solicitors 100 Borough Road Middlesbrough Cleveland TS1 2HJ MR M PALMER (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Walker Morris Solicitors Kings Court 12 King Street Leeds LS1 2HL MR M GARGAN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Davies Arnold Cooper Solicitors 6-8 Bouverie Street London EC4Y 8DD |
UKEAT/0489/07/RN For the Appellant |
MR M GARGAN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Davies Arnold Cooper Solicitors 6-8 Bouverie Street London EC4Y 8DD |
For Mr D Palmer For the First Respondent For the Second Respondent For the Third Respondent |
MR A ALLEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Rowley Ashworth Solicitors Suite 1B Joseph's Well Hanover Walk Leeds LS3 1AB MR E LEGARD (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Newbys with Thomas, Bingham & Spark Solicitors 100 Borough Road Middlesbrough Cleveland TS1 2HJ MR W JOSLING Messrs Haldanes Solicitors Wye Lodge 66 High Street Old Stevenage Herts SG1 3EA MR M PALMER (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Walker Morris Solicitors Kings Court 12 King Street Leeds LS1 2HL |
SUMMARY
TRANSFER OF UNDERTAKINGS
The principles and approach which a Tribunal should take where there has been a transfer of one service provider's activities to two or more transferees, and there is disagreement as to whether an employee's contract is now to be with the transferor or any of the transferees, considered. The Tribunal had decided that where employees were dismissed, it was permissible to decide that the rights and obligations under this contract should be apportioned on a percentage basis between transferees. This was held an error. The Tribunal should have applied the approach in Botzen, adopted where there was a transfer of an undertaking under the 1981 Regulations, to a change of service provider under the 2006 Regulations.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF
The facts
"(1) these regulations apply to-
(a) a transfer of an undertaking, business or part of an undertaking or business situated immediately before the transfer in the United Kingdom to another person where there is a transfer of an economic entity which retains its identity.
(b) a service provision change, that is a situation in which-
….
(ii) activities cease to be carried out by a contractor on a client's behalf (whether or not those activities had previously been carried out by the client on his own behalf) and are carried out instead by another person ("a subsequent contractor") on the client's behalf; or
….
And in which the conditions set out in paragraph (3) are satisfied."
"The conditions referred to in paragraph (1)(b) are that-
(a) immediately before the service provision change-
(i) there is an organised grouping of employees situated in Great Britain which has as its principal purpose the carrying out of the activities concerned on behalf of the client;
(ii) the client intends that the activities will, following the service provision change be carried out by the transferee other than in connection with a single specific event or task of short-term duration; and
(b) the activities concerned do not consist wholly or mainly of the supply of goods for the client's use."
"(1) Except where objection is made under paragraph (7), a relevant transfer shall not operate so as to terminate the contract of employment of any person employed by the transferor and assigned to the organised grouping of resources or employees that is subject to the relevant transfer, which would otherwise be terminated by the transfer, but any such contract shall have effect after the transfer as if originally made between the person so employed and the transferee.
(2) Without prejudice to paragraph (1), but subject to paragraph (6), and regulations 8 and 15(9), on the completion of a relevant transfer-
(a) all the transferor's rights, powers, duties and liabilities under or in connection with any such contract shall be transferred by virtue of this regulation to the transferee; and
(b) any act or omission before the transfer is completed, of or in relation to the transferor in respect of that contract or a person assigned to that organised grouping of resources or employees, shall be deemed to have been an act or omission of or in relation to the transferee.
(3) Any reference in paragraph (1) to a person employed by the transferor and assigned to the organised grouping of resources or employees that is subject to a relevant transfer, is a reference to a person so employed immediately before the transfer…"
It is necessary only then to refer further to sub-paragraphs (7) and (8).
"(8) …. Where an employee so objects, the relevant transfer shall operate so as to terminate his contract of employment with the transferor but he shall not be treated, for any purpose, as having been dismissed by the transferor."
The Findings in Summary
"There are, as we see it, four options:
(a) The drafting of TUPE 2006 is ineffective to protect employees where there is a change of employer, which will satisfy all the requirements of regulation 3(1)(b) were it not for the fact that no single transferee could be identified as having taken over activities which in the hands of the transferor had its own dedicated sub group of employees assigned to the same specific place or area. Mr Gargan in arguing for this option, [we interpose that he was Counsel then as now for Angel], to his credit, acknowledged that may well not have been what Parliament intended - but it was, he says, what has been written.
(b) The Tribunal makes an arbitrary allocation of employees between transferees. As we explained at paragraph 4.28 above we, and all representatives, found that absurd.
(c) The transferee who takes the greater part of the transferor's activities takes all the employees of the transferor. There are two main reasons why this would be unacceptable. First it is plainly unfair and would stifle competition and enterprise. Second, as the facts here show, although the size of the whole of the transferor's activities was ascertainable, without hindsight one cannot tell which of the two transferees acquire the greater part until they have finished the contest between themselves to acquire as much as they can.
(d) That although the people and their contracts cannot be "split" the liabilities under these contracts can."
The Tribunal went on to say that they ruled out (b) and (c). The reasons for ruling out (c) appear to be those we had just quoted. This left a choice, in their view, between (a) and (d). Before us a modification or refinement of (c) was discussed in argument, that was the suggestion (principally advanced by Mr Gargan) that the attribution of an employee to a transferee should depend not upon whether the transferee had taken the greater or lesser part of the transferor's activities but should depend upon that part of the transferor's activities to which the employee had been assigned before transfer, so that to the extent those activities continued after transfer he would be so allocated.
"we think it is right to rely upon those authorities which advocate a purposive, some may say inventive, construction of TUPE in order to give practical effect even to a particular provision which has no root in the European Directive."
The appeal
Discussion
Conclusion
"13. Rotterdamsche…claims that only employees working full-time or substantially full-time in the transferred part of the undertaking are covered by the transfer of employment relationships, to the exclusion of those engaged in partial tasks in various businesses or parts of businesses and those who, although working for several businesses or parts of businesses, form part of the remaining staff.
14. On the other hand, the Commission considers that the only decisive criterion regarding the transfer of employees' rights and obligations is whether or not a transfer takes place of the department to which they were assigned and which formed the organisational framework within which their employment relationship took effect.
15. The Commission's view must be upheld. An employment relationship is essentially characterised by the link existing between the employee and the part of the undertaking or business to which he is assigned to carry out his duties. In order to decide whether the rights and obligations under an employment relationship are transferred under Directive 77/187 by reason of a transfer within meaning of article 1(1) thereof, it is therefore sufficient to establish to which part of the undertaking or business the employee was assigned."
That was applied in the domestic jurisdiction in the case of Duncan Webb Offset (Maidstone) Ltd v Cooper [1995] IRLR 633. That was a case in which a company owned subsidiary companies in the printing industry at Maidstone, Basildon and St Albans. Three employees worked for the group. The Maidstone business was transferred in a transfer to which the 1981 Regulations applied. The three employees who worked for the group were not on the list of those employees who were to be transferred. When they complained an Employment Tribunal found that they spent some of their time working for the undertakings at Basildon and St Albans but 80 per cent of the time, broadly speaking, in each case working for the Maidstone operation. This Tribunal, Morrison J presiding, considered that the Employment Tribunal were entitled to come to the conclusion they did that those employees were transferred with the Maidstone operation notwithstanding that some of their duties, no doubt on a somewhat fluctuating basis we might add, were performed for others than Maidstone.
"X has a business in which he employs a number of people. X transfers part of his business to Y. In order to determine which employees were employed by X in the part transferred it is necessary to ask: which of X's employees were assigned to the part transferred - see Botzen. In Gale [1994] IRLR 292 it was suggested that the question might be asked whether a particular employee was 'part of the … human resources' of the part transferred, which is the same thing put another way. The contracts of employment of those who were so assigned will, unless the employees object, pass over to the transferee, thus giving effect to the purpose of the Regulations and the Acquired Rights Directive, pursuant to which they were made, that an employee should not forfeit his job because of a change in the identity of his employer."
Then he said this:
"There will often be difficult questions of fact for Industrial Tribunals to consider when deciding who was 'assigned' and who was not. We were invited to give guidance to Industrial Tribunals about such a decision, but decline to do so because the facts will vary so markedly from case to case. In the course of argument a number were suggested, such as the amount of time spent on one part of the business or the other; the amount of value given to each part by the employee; the terms of the contract of employment showing what the employee could be required to do; how the cost to the employer of the employee's services had been allocated between the different parts of the business. This is, plainly, not an exhaustive list; we are quite prepared to accept that these or some of these matters may well fall for consideration by an Industrial Tribunal which is seeking to determine to which part of his employer's business the employee had been assigned."
The appeals