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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> MM Packaging (UK) Ltd v Philip Potter & Ors [2017] EWCA Civ 1471 (31 July 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/1471.html Cite as: [2017] EWCA Civ 1471 |
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The Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURBALE LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM
THE RIGHT HONOURBALE LADY JUSTICE THIRLWALL
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MM PACKAGING (UK) LTD | ||
and | ||
PHILIP POTTER & ORS |
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61 Southwark Street, London SE1 0HL
Tel: 020 7269 0370
[email protected]
MR GORTON QC and MR PRIOR appeared on behalf of the Defendant
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LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL:
Introduction
The factual background
'A protective award is an award in respect of one or more descriptions of employees –
(a) who have been dismissed as redundant or whom it is proposed to dismiss as redundant, and
(b) in respect of whose dismissal or proposed dismissal the employer has failed to comply with a requirement of Section 188, ordering the employer to pay remuneration for the protected period'.
The protected period is defined in subsection (4), as follows:
'The protected period –
(a) begins with the date on which the first of the dismissals to which the complaint relates takes effect or the date of the award, whichever is the earlier, and
(b) is of such length as the tribunal determines to be just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to the seriousness of the employer's default in complying with any requirement of Section 188;
but shall not exceed 90 days'.
The employee's entitlement to remuneration for the protected period is defined in Section 190. Subsection (2) reads:
'The rate of remuneration payable is a week's pay for each week of the period; and remuneration in respect of a period less than one week shall be calculated by reducing proportionately, the amount of a week's pay'.
Subsection (5) provides for 'a week's pay' to be calculated in accordance with chapter 2 of part XIV of the Employment Rights Act 1996. I need not trouble with that since it is common ground that the effect of Section 190(2) is that for the purpose of payments pursuant to a protective award pay is calculated on what I have called the calendar basis. If an employer fails to pay remuneration due pursuant to a protective award the employees in question can bring separate tribunal proceedings to obtain an enforceable award of the sums due (see Section 192). Thus, although the original claim for a protective award has to be brought by the union, its fruit is an award ultimately inuring to the benefit of the employees and enforceable by them.
The agreement
'1.1 The Company agrees to pay to the Employees compensation calculated on an individual basis but in compromise of the following: -
(i) The Tribunal claims.
(ii) In full and final settlement of all other claims which could be pursued by the Union and the Employees arising out of the Employees' employment with the Company or the termination of that employment (save as provided for by clause 4 below).
(iii) In consideration of the Union and the Employees agreeing not to pursue any form of action or complaint against the Company (or any other Company in the MMP Group) or any individual associated with the management or ownership of the Company in relation to the decision taken to close the MMP Liverpool factory and/or in relation to the termination of the employment of the Employees.
1.2 In addition to any sums already paid or due to be paid to the Employees in respect of the redundancy payment: -
(i) A sum equalling the difference between the value of 3.5 weeks of gross pay per complete year of service and the redundancy payment.
(ii) 90 days of gross pay.
(iii) For the Employees with more than 32 complete years of service at the effective date of termination of employment an additional payment to each eligible Employee of £10,000.00
1.3 For the purposes of the calculation under clause 1.2(i) above, the maximum number of weeks to count shall be 80.
1.4 For the purposes of calculating the redundancy payment and determining a complete year of service, part years of more than 6 months will be rounded up to count as a full year, calculated to the effective date of termination of employment.
1.5 The parties agree that all payments due under this Agreement will be subject to lawful deduction of any tax properly due.
1.6 Subject to compliance with clause 3 below, and clause 1 of the COT3 Agreement to which this Agreement is annexed, the Company agrees that all payments due under this Agreement will be paid to all Employees within 14 days of receipt by the Company's solicitors of originals of the Agreement being signed by or on behalf of the parties.'
The claim and the judgment
"Thus in considering this particular clause, I ask the question not want was in the subjective consideration of the parties at the time they concluded the agreement, such as bottom or top line figures beyond which any deal was unacceptable, as this would required the kind of in-depth enquiry into goals and objectives, and the progress of the negotiations, but what were the objective facts, which in this context would be the declared positions of both parties as they came to the negotiating table, and thus known to each other. In simple terms, although I will expand upon this in my discussion, for the workers it was to obtain maximum compensation if they could not reopen the factory, and for the company it was to keep the financial package to a minimum and avoid further disruption through the leverage campaign."
'Whilst at first blush it may appear as if these objective facts, as competing tensions, are actually lending themselves to an alternative construction, in my judgment that is not necessarily the case. The court is not permitted to make enquiry, as I have indicated, as to what was in one or other party's mind at the time the agreement was reached. In this regard, the fact that the Defendant may have only wished to agree to a maximum statutory award is neither here nor there; I do not believe that discussions which included the TULRA entitlement enable this court to conclude that the context of a clause which is equivocal at very best as to whether it is a statutory award which is being agreed is one which enables this construction. in my judgment it is necessary for more to be established by way of objective fact if such an interpretation is to be arrived at on this basis.'
'75. In my judgment, the construction of this clause is assisted but not determined alone by the objective facts in the relevant background. There is a more compelling factor relevant to its interpretation. The concept of a "protective award" is derived from the "protected period" in section 189. It is not a term of art but one which has a specific implication, well known to use those who practise in employment law. If the term "90 days of gross pay" has an ordinary and natural meaning (and I accept that it does) to the effect that each average day's pay is to be multiplied by 90, it is insufficient for interpretive purposes to contend that it is so akin to a maximum award which could be made by a tribunal that it could be anything other than a protective award which was to be based on 90 days of calendar pay allowing for non-working days. In such circumstances, one might have expected the clause to refer to a period, or even the fact that it was a "protective" award. These words are conspicuous by their absence, and insofar as the Defendant is contending for a more elaborate interpretation than that which obviously arises from the words themselves, it seems to me that this presents a significant obstacle for it.
76. It is also relevant that this was a compromise not in the face of an employment tribunal, where failure to reach an agreement would have led to a tribunal award, but a multifaceted negotiation with a number of separate aspects to it, and this makes it harder, in my judgment, to arrive at the context that the clause had a clear and unequivocal reference to the statutory method of calculating compensation.'
'There is a final matter which in my judgment assists in interpretation. Where the agreement deals with redundancy pay, there is a specific reference to "weeks" that is to be based upon an average week. It was open to the parties to use a similar formula in relation to the compensatory award. They chose not to, and whilst it might be suggested that this is because the statutory compensation scheme is based on a 90 day maximum, any uncertainty could have been avoided, if an average weeks' pay was to be used for the purpose of calculating a compensatory payment, to have used similar terminology. The only possible interpretation in such circumstances would have been that non-working days were to be included, as inevitably they must be when the average week's pay is taken into account.'
He went on to deal briefly with the claim for rectification, but for reasons that will appear I will not deal with that.
The appeal
LADY JUSTICE THIRLWALL: I agree.
LORD JUSTICE LINDBLOM: I also agree.