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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hudson v University of Oxford [2007] EWCA Civ 336 (27 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2007/336.html Cite as: [2007] EWCA Civ 336 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(THE MASTER OF THE ROLLS)
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
and
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
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HUDSON |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD |
Respondent |
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MR J SWIFT (instructed by Messrs Nebarro Nathanson, LONDON WC1X 8RW) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay:
"I think it is arguable:
(1) that the true nature of the non-academic part-time contract was that it was academic,
(2) that the University cannot be held to say that it was not a part-time contract, and
(3) thus that as a part-time academic contract it was on less favourable terms than the full-time academic contract, and Mr Hudson may have a claim under the Regulations. It is thus arguable that this claim should not have been struck out."
The statutory framework
"(1) A part-time worker has the right not to be treated by his employer less favourably than the employer treats a comparable full-time worker--
(a) as regards the terms of his contract; or
(b) by being subjected to any other detriment by any act, or deliberate failure to act, of his employer.
(2) The right conferred by paragraph (1) applies only if –
(a) the treatment is on the ground that the worker is a part-time worker, and
(b) the treatment is not justified on objective grounds.
(3) In determining whether a part-time worker has been treated less favourably than a comparable full-time worker the pro rate principle shall be applied unless it is inappropriate."
"Worker" includes a person who, like Mr Hudson, works under a contract of employment: Regulation 1(1). Regulation 2 provides:
"(1) A worker is a full-time worker for the purpose of these Regulations if he is paid wholly or in part by reference to the time he works and, having regard to the custom and practice of the employer in relation to workers employed by the worker's employer under the same type of contract, is identifiable as a full-time worker.
(2) A worker is a part-time worker for the purpose of these Regulations if he is paid wholly or in part by reference to the time he works and, having regard to the custom and practice of the employer in relation to workers employed by the worker's employer under the same type of contract, is identifiable as a full-time worker.
(3) For the purposes of paragraphs (1), (2) and (4), the following shall be regarded as being employed under different types of contract—
(a) employees employed under a contract that is not a contract of apprenticeship;
(b) employees employed under a contract of apprenticeship;
(c) workers who are not employees;
(d) any other description of workers that it is reasonable for the employer to treat differently from other workers on the ground that workers of that description have a different type of contract.
(4) A full-time worker is a comparable full-time worker in relation to a part-time worker if, at the time when the treatment that is alleged to be less favourable to the part-time worker takes place--
(a) both workers are--
(i) employed by the same employer under the same type of contract, and
(ii) engaged in the same or broadly similar work having regard, where relevant, to whether they have a similar level of qualification, skills and experience; and
(b) the full-time worker works or is based at the same establishment as the part-time worker or, where there is no full-time worker working or based at the establishment who satisfies the requirements of sub-paragraph (a), works or is based at a different establishment and satisfied those requirements."
The power to strike out
"18
…
"(5) Notwithstanding the preliminary or interim nature of a pre-hearing review, at a pre-hearing review the chairman may give judgment on any preliminary issue of substance relating to the proceedings. Judgments or orders made at a pre-hearing review may result in the proceedings being struck out or dismissed or otherwise determined with the result that a Hearing is no longer necessary in those proceedings.
"(7) Subject to paragraph (6), a chairman or tribunal may make a judgment or order:--
(b) striking out or amending all or part of any claim or response on the grounds that it is scandalous or vexatious or has no reasonable prospect of success."
The decisions of the Employment Tribunal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal in the present case
"Suffered less favourable treatment in being employed under two half-time contracts, and independently under each half-time contract, by comparison with comparable staff on full-time contracts, from 12 June 2000 to 28 February 2005."
"The claimant was employed under two part-time contracts in order to enable him to be discriminated against, in regard to his remuneration, by comparison to a full-time employee engaged in the same type of work. The very reason for employing the claimant under part-time contracts was to facilitate the discrimination against him…
"The claimant has suffered detriment in terms of pay, holiday entitlement, pay during suspension, the terms of disciplinary and grievance procedures, and otherwise, by comparison with all and any one of the hundreds of other employees employed by the respondent under full-time contracts who were doing exactly the same type of work as the claimant."
"…demonstrate a fundamental error in law. In order for the claimant to succeed he must demonstrate that he as a part time worker in a particular role, not in the amalgam of two roles, has been treated less favourably or the subject of a detriment or dismissed because he is a part-time worker in that one particular role compared to the way he would be treated had he been a full-time worker in that particular role: Regulation 2(1)(2) of the 2000 Regulations. The claim therefore for less favourable treatment must inevitably fail as the claimant is not relying on the appropriate comparator for the purposes of the Regulations".
"[Counsel] submitted that the Chairman's characterisation of his claim was incorrect: on a proper analysis it was not being brought in respect of any 'amalgam' of his two roles – rather, it was being brought specifically in respect of his (part-time) non-academic job and was indeed therefore (in the Chairman's language) being brought by him 'as a part-time worker in a particular role'. The case was that in that job he was treated less favourably than a comparable full-time worker, the proper comparator being not someone doing a (non-academic) Technician/Photographer job full-time but someone doing his 'true' job, which was that of an Information Officer (being an academic job)".
And a little later:
"While [these] submissions may be right as far as they go, it seems to me unarguable that the true ground of the difference in pay between the Appellant (in his Technician/Photographer role) and his proposed comparators was not the fact that they were full-time and he was part-time but was the fact that they were on academic contracts and he was on a non-academic contract: this follows inexorably from the fact that, as the Appellant accepts, his terms in his non-academic job are pro rata to the terms afforded to employees doing an equivalent non-academic job full-time. His true complaint was not 'my part time work is paid less than comparable full-time work' but 'for part of my time I am working (inappropriately) on a non-academic contract'. The right of a part-time worker under Regulation 5 not to be treated less favourably than a comparable full-time worker only arises if the treatment is on the ground that he is a part-time worker: see Regulation 5(2)(a). That is not the ground of the treatment complained of here.
"For that reason I believe that the Appellant's claim under this head is bound to fail."
"Mr Hudson 'had two posts which jointly came to a full-time role' "
"… in practice there was no distinct demarcation between the two posts"
"The distinction between the two employment contracts was a false one … the contracts were intertwined"
"There was no clear division between [your] two roles".
According to Mr Hudson, those quotations emerged from the disciplinary hearings that took place within the University.
Discussion
"The point here is a hard-edged point of law deriving from facts which are not in dispute or open to interpretation."
1. His contention that the reality was that of a single full-time job does not necessarily preclude Mr Hudson from having been a part-time worker as defined in Regulation 2(2).
2. To the extent that he was a part-time worker under the non-academic contract he was on account of his job treated less favourably than relevant full-time comparators.
3. He was so treated on the ground that he was contractually and within the terms of Regulation 2 a part time worker.
Lord Justice Toulson:
Sir Anthony Clarke, MR:
Order: Appeal allowed.