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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Hussain v Acorn Independent College Ltd [2010] UKEAT 0199_10_0809 (8 September 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0199_10_0809.html Cite as: [2011] IRLR 463, [2010] UKEAT 0199_10_0809, [2010] UKEAT 199_10_809 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS N CUNNINGHAM (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Lawana & Co Solicitors 274 Hither Green lane London SE13 6TT |
For the Respondent | MR K HARRIS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Harold Benjamin Solicitors Hill House 67-71 Lowlands Road Harrow HA1 3EQ |
SUMMARY
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS Continuity of employment
The Claimant was employed on 26 April 2008 as a teacher to cover the illness of another until the summer exams. The contract came to an end on 8 July 2008. Quite independently the permanent teacher resigned by notice given on 8 July. By an oral and then written agreement the Claimant started a permanent job with the employer on 5 September 2008 which continued until he was dismissed on 12 June 2009. On the employer's challenge to his claim of unfair dismissal, on the ground that he did not have one year's employment, the Employment Judge's decision to that effect was reversed as he incorrectly applied Ford v Warwickshire to the reason for the Claimant's absence of 7 weeks between the two contracts. The correct approach is to look at the reason for the termination of the first contract. It was not disputed that in hindsight the interval was short and temporary so the matter did not require remission.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
Introduction
The legislation
A reflection on the two different forms of termination is given in section 97, which decides the effective date of determination and provides as follows:
"(1) "the effective date of termination"--
(a) in relation to an employee whose contract of employment is terminated by notice, whether given by his employer or by the employee, means the date on which the notice expires
(c) in relation to an employee who is employed under a limited-term contract which terminates by virtue of the limiting event without being renewed under the same contract, means the date on which the termination takes effect."
"108 Qualifying period of employment
(1) Section 94 does not apply to the dismissal of an employee unless he has been continuously employed for a period of not less than one year ending with the effective date of termination."
"212 Weeks counting in computing period
(1) Any week during the whole or part of which an employee's relations with his employer are governed by a contract of employment counts in computing the employee's period of employment.
(3) any week (not within subsection (1)) during the whole or part of which an employee is
(a) incapable of work in consequence of sickness or injury
(b) absent from work on account of a temporary cessation of work, or
(c) absent from work in circumstances such that, by arrangement or custom, he is regarded as continuing in the employment of his employer for any purpose.
counts in computing the employee's period of employment."
The facts
"11. The issue, then, is whether the intervening summer vacation between the expiry of the temporary contract and the commencement of the permanent contract counts to continuity of employment. The legal test is looking back from 12 June, was the Claimant not working between 8 July 2008 and 5 September 2008 owing to a temporary cessation of work. Put another way, is this a Ford v Warwickshire County Council case?
12. I do not think it is. The temporary cover contract came to an end at the end of the 2008 summer term. A new contract then began at the beginning of the Autumn Term. The Claimant would not have had an expectation (as opposed to a hope) during the course of the temporary contract of further work post the termination of the temporary cover contract. As it happens he got the work by reason of later events. That is different from the position of expectation of further work that the Claimant had in the Ford case.
13. There was also an aspect of unfairness in the Ford case that no permanent contract was in place. There is no such unfairness in this case, because the first contract was genuinely a temporary cover contract.
14. I do not agree with the Claimant's submission that it does not matter what sort of contract was enjoyed either side of the summer holiday. One does have to look at the purpose of the first contract and the reason for its termination. Both relate to the fact that it was a temporary cover contract."
Arguments and conclusion
"The fact that the unavailability of work had been foreseen by the employer sufficiently far in advance to enable him to anticipate it by giving to the employee a notice to terminate his contract of employment that is of sufficient length to satisfy the requirements of section 49 of the Act (which may be as long as 12 weeks), cannot alter the reason for the dismissal or prevent the absence from work following upon the expiry of the notice from being 'on account of a temporary cessation of work.
One looks to see what was the reason for the employer's failure to renew the contract on the expiry of its fixed term and asks oneself the question: was that reason 'a temporary cessation of work,' within the meaning of that phrase in paragraph 9(1)(b).
There are many employments, of which teaching is one of the largest and most obvious, in which it is perfectly possible to predict with accuracy the periods in which the educational institution at which a teacher who is employed to conduct courses in particular subjects will have no work available for that teacher to do, i.e. during the three annual school holidays or during vacations at universities and other institutions of further education. As the evidence in the instant case discloses, it is a common practice to employ part-time teachers of courses at institutions of further education under successive fixed term contracts the length of which is fixed according to the duration of the particular course and expires at the end of it. In the interval between successive courses which may coincide with the end of one academic year at an institution of further education and the beginning of the next but may be considerably longer, there is no work available at the institution for the teacher to do, and he remains without any contract of employment until the course is resumed, when he again becomes employed under a fresh fixed term contract."
"... the immediate cause of cessation of work is, in a sense, the expiry of the notices of dismissal; the effective cause is the anticipated cessation of work."
Jurisdiction
Disposal