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England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Simon-Hart v Standard Chartered Bank [2024] EWHC 2957 (KB) (20 November 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2024/2957.html Cite as: [2024] EWHC 2957 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Ms Sobara Simon-Hart | Claimant |
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Standard Chartered Bank | Defendant |
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Edward Kemp (instructed by Simmons & Simmons LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 24 October 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
Master Sullivan:
Background Facts
The law
Submissions and discussion
Express terms
"The Bank shall be entitled at its absolute discretion to terminate your employment lawfully without notice (or part thereof) by paying to you a sum equal to 100% of your basic salary plus other cash allowances which you receive monthly for the unexpired portion of your entitlement to notice less any appropriate deductions…"
"If at any time you are unable to perform your duties properly because of ill health, accident or otherwise for a period or periods totalling at least six months in any twelve calendar months…then the Bank may at its absolute discretion terminate your Employment by giving not less than three months' written notice…"
"Details of the Bank's discretionary sick pay arrangements are available on iConnect."
"The Bank is entitled to terminate your Employment with immediate effect and without notice or compensation for the reasons permitted in the [Previous Law]"
"Where an employee takes more than an aggregate of sixty working days of sick leave in any 12 month period, the employer may terminate the employment immediately with written notice to the employee."
Implied terms
The foreign law experts
"It is therefore my opinion that these statutory standards function as implied terms governing DIFC contracts of employment".
"The primary law governing employment is the DIFC Employment Law, but elements of the DIFC Contract Law, Law of Obligations, Implied Terms and Unfair Terms Law and UAE Federal Law apply to ensure good faith, fairness, care and proper handling of employment contracts. Further the DIFC courts themselves have indicted a willingness to apply such principles into the reading of employment contracts, Consequently it is my opinion that Mr Brown errs in Fact and Law when he states in paragraph 6.7 of his expert report the DIFC law does not imply terms into an employees employment contract. "
i) The DIFC Employment Law does not itself imply terms into an employment contract.
ii) The DIFC Employment Law sets minimum standards that can not be contracted out of.
iii) Articles 43 and 44 do not directly confer any right to remedies in these proceedings.
Conclusions on the implied terms arguments
"[The unamended DIFC Employment law] sets out at Article 3 all the statutory rights and protections of the employee, and at Article 8 the minimum standard and requirements of employment which the parties cannot contract out of. In substance, then, the Employment Law has a regulatory content and is the only law that governs the employee who works for any entity having a place of business in the DIFC. Therefore there is no basis to adopt any other law than the DIFC Employment Law to determine the rights of the Appellant, and her contractual relationship with the respondent is regulated by the DIFC Employment Law."
"DCJ Colman was correct to rule that any introduction of implied terms such as the duty of good faith, confidentiality, fair dealing and reasonableness, so as to justify the claim of unfair dismissal, would be problematic as such terms are difficult to define and uncertain in terms of application, and that, if any such principle of unfair dismissal is to be introduced, it should therefore be by legislation and not by judicial innovation. "
"The trial judge adverted to the difficulties of definition and uncertain application of implied terms of this nature. One aspect of this is that the present question is one of termination of employment, not performance of employment obligations…Even as an incident of the employment relationship, an implied term must be consistent with, and yields to, the express terms of the employment contract. …The Employment Law comprehensively regulated contracts of employment in the DIFC, but it had not been thought appropriate to regulate a contractual power of termination by notions of mutual trust and confidence, good faith or reasonableness. There is no legislative basis in the DIFC for fettering such a power, rather, the indication is that it should not be fettered. "
"articles 56 and 57 (of the Contract Law) envisage that implied obligations can arise, but say nothing about the implication and application of terms in particular contracts and particular situations."
Paragraphs 35(b) to (e)