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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Fairhurst Ward Abbotts Ltd. v Botes Building Ltd. & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 83 (13 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/83.html Cite as: [2004] ICR 919, [2004] EWCA Civ 83, [2004] IRLR 304 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT
APPEAL TRIBUNAL (HHJ J BURKE QC)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MUMMERY
and
LORD JUSTICE MAY
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FAIRHURST WARD ABBOTTS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BOTES BUILDING LIMITED & ORS |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR DAMIAN BROWN (instructed by DLA for the Respondent Botes Building Ltd
MR ANDREW GUMBITI-ZIMUTO (instructed by OH Parsons & Partners) for the Respondent employees on the appeal and for Mr Fevzi Salih on the cross appeal.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Mummery:
The Legal Background
"23 The aim of the Directive is to ensure continuity of employment relationships within an economic entity, irrespective of any change of ownership. The decisive criterion for establishing the existence of a transfer within the meaning of the Directive is whether the entity in question retains its identity, as indicated inter alia by the fact that its operation is actually continued or resumed (case 24/85 Spijkers [1986] ECR 1119, paragraphs 11 and 12, and case C-13/95 Suzen [1997] IRLR 255, paragraph 10).
24 First of all, in order for the Directive to be applicable, the transfer must relate to a stable economic entity whose activity is not limited to performing one specific works contract (case C- 48/94 Rygaard [1996] IRLR 51, paragraph 20). The term "entity" thus refers to an organised grouping of persons and assets facilitating the exercise of an economic activity which pursues a specific objective (Suzen, cited above, paragraph 13).
25 It is for the referring court to establish, in the light of the interpretative criteria set forth above, whether the driveage work carried out by ACC at the Prince of Wales Collieries was organised in the form of an economic entity before that undertaking sub-contracted that work to AMS.
26 Second, in order to determine whether the conditions for the transfer of an economic entity are met, it is necessary to consider all the facts characterising the transaction in question, including in particular the type of undertaking or business, whether or not its tangible assets, such as buildings and movable property, are transferred, the value of its intangible assets at the time of the transfer, whether or not essential staff are taken over by the new employer, whether or not its customers are transferred, the degree of similarity between the activities carried on before and after the transfer, and the period, if any, for which those activities are suspended. However, all those circumstances are merely single factors in the overall assessment which must be made and cannot therefore be considered in isolation (see, in particular, Spijkers, paragraph 13, and Suzen, paragraph 14).
27 So the mere fact that, in the instant case, the service provided by the undertaking holding the contracts for driveage work and then by the undertaking to which the work was then subcontracted is similar does not warrant the conclusion that an economic entity has been transferred between the first and the second undertaking. Such an entity cannot be reduced to the activity entrusted to it. Its identity also emerges from other factors, such as its workforce, its management staff, the way in which its work is organised, its operating methods or, indeed, where appropriate, the operational resources available to it (Suzen cited above, paragraph 15, joined cases C-127/96, C-229/96 and C-74/97 Hernandez, Vidal and others [1999] IRLR 132, paragraph 30, and joined cases C-173/96 and C-247/96 Hidalgo and others [1999] IRLR 136, paragraph 30."
The Appeal
The Facts
"31…..What it did was to create a service framework. The contractors would provide organisation; administration; and supervision. It would provide labour, both direct and subcontract, including skilled trade. It would provide materials and equipment."
Decision of the Employment Tribunal
" 57. There was a similarity of the undertaking before and after the change of contractor. On a partial basis, defined geographically, the support, administration and premises dedicated to the original contract related to the whole of Southwark were continued.
58. Having regard to the factors which we have set out and having regard to the overall picture which they create, we find that there was an undertaking which was transferred in two parts, to areas one and two."
" 61. Mr Salih had been off sick since January 1999. He had become detached from the remainder of the workforce constituted by the Applicants. Although on paper he was assigned to the part of the undertaking transferred to [Fairhurst], that was not the real situation. He was not in fact employed in the part transferred. He had a contract of employment with [Botes]. Therefore he remained in that employment until he was either transferred under TUPE or dismissed. He was not transferred to either area, and therefore the decision by [Botes] to treat him as no longer being employed by them as a dismissal of him, which was unfair."
Decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal
"20. ….whether, when an undertaking or economic entity operated by "A" ceases to be operated by "A" and continues in the hands of others but is divided into more than one part and one or more of the divided parts is taken over by "B", there can be a transfer of undertakings falling within Regulation 3 of TUPE from "A" to "B." Mr Swift on behalf of [Fairhurst] submitted, in short, that there must be an identity of entity prior to and after the supposed transfer, that on the facts of this case the economic entity which [Fairhurst] began to operate in April 1999 did not even exist before that date and that any decision that there could be a relevant transfer on the facts of this case was inevitably in conflict with established UK and European authority. Mr Brown on behalf of Botes submitted in short that there could be a relevant transfer if the entity as a whole retained its identity in the hands of the new operators even if split into more than one part; alternatively he submitted that the Tribunal had found on the facts that there was a transfer of a part of an undertaking which fell within Regulation 3."
" 39. In our judgment the Acquired Rights Directive and TUPE envisaged, when including within protection, in the case of the Directive, to be provided by Member States, and, in the case of TUPE, to be provided in the United Kingdom, the granting of such protection to cases in which the undertaking or entity in the hands of the new employer was structurally different from and was only part of the undertaking or entity in the hands of the old employer. We do not regard the provisions of the Directive or TUPE which apply that protection to the case of transfer of part of an undertaking as necessarily requiring that the part transferred was of itself a separate economic entity before transfer. Such a requirement appears to us to be neither logical nor practical; it would not be a logical outcome because, if the part transferred had to be an individual entity prior to transfer, there would be no need to treat the case as one of the transfer of a part; the case could be seen simply as a transfer of an entity which did not lose its identity after transfer. It would not be practical because there must inevitably be cases in which a body decides to contract out one or more of its activities which was not or were not, in its hands, separately operated which became separately operated in the hands of the contractors who take up the activities; similarly in a second generation contracting out. We do not believe that TUPE does not or cannot apply in such a situation.
40. We have already set out the reasons why, in our view, the conclusions for which Mr Swift contends on this issue potentially weaken the protection given to employees by TUPE to a substantial degree. In choosing between the rival contentions, we are entitled to take into account that those of Mr Brown, supporting the decision of the Tribunal on this issue, preserve at least to an important extent the purposes and intentions of the Acquired Rights Directive and of TUPE in a situation in which, were the contrary contentions to be preferred, those purposes and intentions would be at real risk not only in cases of second generation contracting out, as in the present case, but on a wider basis. Further, if for there to be a transfer of part of an undertaking, that part has of itself to have been an individual economic entity before the transfer, it would seem that the provisions for protection in the case of a transfer of part of an undertaking would be unnecessary.
41. We should make it clear that we do not take the view that in every case as a matter of law where an entity is split into parts there will be a transfer falling within Regulation 3 of TUPE; one can envisage circumstances in which the degree of fragmentation might be such that what emerged was not recognisably the same entity or part of the same entity when viewed as a whole and/or in circumstances in which an individual separated part or even all the separated parts were not of themselves stable entities; if the Tribunal so found on the facts, it would not be open to them to proceed to consider whether there was a transfer; but on the findings of fact in this case the Tribunal were in our judgment not precluded in principle from so proceeding, as they did, on the basis that the undertaking carried on in Area 2 by [Fairhurst] from April 1999 was a part of the undertaking or entity operated by Botes up to that time and that, therefore, there could in law, on the facts found, be a transfer from Botes to [ Fairhurst] within Regulation 3 of TUPE of that part of Botes' undertaking.
42. In summary, then, we conclude that it is not a prerequisite of a conclusion that there has been a transfer within Regulation 3 of TUPE of a part of an undertaking that that part was a separate economic entity in the hands of the transferor before the transfer. It was therefore open to the Tribunal to resolve in favour of the employees the issue as to economic entity."
A. Fairhurst's Appeal
"3(1)…to a transfer from one person to another of an undertaking situated immediately before the transfer in the United Kingdom or a part of one which is so situated."
"2 (2) References in these Regulations to the transfer of part of an undertaking are references to a transfer of a part which is being transferred as a business.
" We are of the opinion that it would not be correct to look at the issue exclusively from the standpoint of either the transferor or the transferee. It is relevant to consider in the first instance whether the transferor regarded the activity in question as a distinct part of his undertaking, for an affirmative answer to that may well settle the matter. It is not, however, conclusive that he did not so regard it or treat it as a separate part of his organisation, if it was in effect an economic entity capable of being transferred as a going concern, For example, a bank may have many branches throughout Northern Ireland, in two or three of which the cleaners are employed directly by the bank, while others are cleaned by a company to whom the operation is contracted out, which has travelling squads of cleaners each dealing with a number of branches. If the bank decides to arrange for the contracting company to undertake the cleaning of the remaining branches, that may on the authority of the Schmidt case be capable of constituting the transfer of so many parts of the bank's business, even though the company is merely adding them to an already extensive cleaning operation and may simply adjust its schedules to add those branches to groups of others cleaned by particular squads. The test is whether the cleaning of each branch could be regarded as an economic entity which is capable of transfer as a going concern, even if it is not so regarded by the transferor or separately operated by the transferee. There must of course be a point at which the fragmentation is so great that the fragments could not be regarded as distinct parts of the transferor's undertakings. The question of fragmentation will also be material to the second issue in this appeal, namely whether the employee was assigned to the part or parts transferred.
In our view it was a matter for the tribunal to consider whether the modules purchased by the contractors constituted parts of the executive's business, by the application of the principles which we have set out. We are not prepared to hold that those modules could not reasonably be regarded by a tribunal properly directed by the law as parts of the executive's undertaking, and it was therefore a matter of fact which it was open to the tribunal to decide. It is necessary to determine whether it did apply the correct test when it held in favour of the employee on this issue. The tribunal confined itself in para 17 of its decision to holding that the modules constituted an identifiable entity, which remained identifiable in the hands of the private contractors to whom they were transferred. For the reasons we have set out, we do not consider that in so holding it applied the correct test. The test which it did apply is relevant to the question whether there was a transfer, as distinct from some change of activity which does not amount to a transfer. It is not sufficient to determine the question whether what was transferee constituted a part of the transferors' undertaking…"
B. Mr Salih's Cross Appeal
Result
Lord Justice May:
"1. This Directive shall apply to the transfer of an undertaking, business or part of a business to another employer as a result of a legal transfer or merger."
"1.(a) This Directive shall apply to any transfer of an undertaking, business, or part of an undertaking or business to another employer as a result of a legal transfer or merger.
(b) Subject to sub-paragraph (a) and the following provisions of this Article, there is a transfer within the meaning of this Directive where there is a transfer of an economic entity which retains its identity, meaning an organised grouping of resources which has the objective of pursuing an economic activity, whether or not that activity is central or ancillary."
"(1) Subject to the provisions of these Regulations, these Regulations apply to a transfer from one person to another of an undertaking situated immediately before the transfer in the United Kingdom or a part of one which is so situated.
(2) Subject as aforesaid, these Regulations so apply whether the transfer is effected by sale or by some other disposition or by operation of law."
"Notwithstanding the retention in the amended Article 1 of the 1977 Directive of the requirement for the transfer to result from "a legal transfer or merger", that requirement has been emasculated out of existence by purposive judicial interpretation. The literal words, and indeed the whole structure, of the Directive appear to require some legal relationship effecting a transfer between the transferor employer and the transferee employer, such as, for instance, might take place upon the assignment of an undertaking or the sale of a business. But the cases have eliminated the need to look for such an orthodox legal relationship. Speaking generally, the question of transfer may arise where an undertaking or business carried out by one or more employees ceases to be carried out by one employer and starts to be carried out by another employer. If the undertaking or business is an "economic entity which retains its identity, meaning an organised grouping of resources which has the objective of pursuing an economic activity", there is or may be a transfer within the meaning of the Directive. Thus the concept of transfer is now a judicially constructed fiction derived from the purpose of the Directive and the Regulations to safeguard the rights of employees." (See also paragraphs 20 and 32 of that judgment.)
"13. For the Directive to be applicable, however, the transfer must relate to a stable economic entity whose activity is not limited to performing one specific works contract (case C-48/94 Rygaard [1996] IRLR 51, paragraph 20). The term entity thus refers to an organised grouping of persons and assets facilitating the exercise of an economic activity which pursues a specific objective.
…
15. As observed by most of the parties who commented on this point, the mere fact that the service provided by the old and the new awardees of a contract is similar does not therefore support the conclusion that an economic entity has been transferred. An entity cannot be reduced to the activity entrusted to it. Its identity also emerges from other factors, such as its work force, its management, staff, the way in which its work is organised, its operating methods or indeed, where appropriate, the operational resources available to it."
"It is for the referring court to establish, in the light of the interpretive criteria set forth above, whether the driveage work carried out by ACC at the Prince of Wales Collieries was organised in the form of an economic entity before that undertaking subcontracted that work to ANS."
"The test is whether the cleaning of each branch could be regarded as an economic entity which is capable of transfer as a going concern, even if it is not so regarded by the transferor or separately operated by the transferee."
"57. There was a similarity of the undertaking before and after the change of contractor. On a partial basis, defined geographically, the support, administration and premises dedicated to the original contract related to the whole of Southwark were continued.
58. Having regard to the factors which we have set out, and having regard to the overall picture which they create, we find that there was an undertaking which was transferred in two parts, to Areas 1 and 2."
"Although on paper he was assigned to the part of the undertaking transferred to the First Respondents that was not the real situation. He was not in fact employed in the part transferred. He had a contract of employment with the Second Respondent. Therefore, he remained in that employment until he was either transferred under TUPE or dismissed. He was not transferred to either area. …"
Lord Justice Pill
Order: Minute of order to be lodged with court