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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ashworth & Ors v The Royal National Theatre [2014] EWHC 1176 (QB) (15 April 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/1176.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1176 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Ashworth and Others |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Royal National Theatre |
Defendant |
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David Reade QC and Jeremy Lewis (instructed by Harbottle & Lewis) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 10 April 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Cranston :
Introduction
Background
The claimants' contracts
"The engagement shall commence on the [23rd] day of March 2009 and shall continue until either the Musician gives the Manager on any Saturday two weeks' notice in writing to terminate engagement, or, the Manager gives the Musician on any Saturday two weeks' notice in writing of the closure of the production, or otherwise as in accordance with clause 15."
"9. DURATION OF A MUSICIAN'S ENGAGEMENT
9.1 Duration
The duration of a Musician's engagement shall be subject to the following:
9.1.1 The Musician giving the Manager on any Saturday 2 weeks' notice on writing to terminate the engagement.
9.1.2 The Manager giving the Musician on any Saturday notice in writing in accordance with 9.2 below of the closure of the production. A copy of such notice shall be sent to the Musician's Union.
9.1.3 The Manager giving the Musician on any Saturday no later than twenty six weeks after the official Press Night notice in writing in accordance with 9.2 below to terminate the engagement. Provided that in the case of a disciplinary matter, such notice shall be given only after the procedure in Appendix 4 has been exhausted.
9.2 Notice Provisions
The Musician shall be entitled to one week's notice for each year of continuous employment in the production subject always to a minimum of two weeks' notice and a maximum of twelve weeks' notice."
This form of the clause dates from the time of the 2003 SOLT/MU Agreement. Prior to that the comparable clause permitted Managers to give a musician appropriate notice in writing to terminate after the official press night except with disciplinary matters where, as with the current form of the clause, notice could only be given after the relevant procedure had been exhausted. In his witness statement the assistant general secretary of the Musicians' Union, Horace Trubridge, asserts that the clause was cast in its present form so as to bring it into line with custom and practice. He adds that a review of the Union's personnel files has uncovered no case where a SOLT producer has terminated a musician's contract, without the musician's agreement, for any reason other than illness or old age, disciplinary action or the closure of the production.
Specific Performance/Final Injunction
"Like Stamp L.J. dissenting in Hill v CA Parsons & Co [1972] Ch 305, 323: "I would be far from holding that in a changed and changing world there can be no new exception to the general rule" that a court will not grant an injunction in aid of specific performance of a contract of personal service, so that if the servant has been wrongfully dismissed, it will consider his contract unilaterally terminated by the master and leave the servant to his remedy in damages. I would not, however, look for new categories in which to pigeonhole new exceptions to this rule as it works either for the employer or the employee, but I would make exceptions in accordance with the general principle on which discretionary remedies are granted, namely, where, and only where, an injunction is required by justice and equity in a particular case, and, at the interim stage, by the balance of convenience": at 503H.
Stephenson LJ held that Chappell was not an exceptional case, since the employees seeking relief there would not give an undertaking not to engage in disruptive activities. The other members of the court agreed. Geoffrey Lane LJ said that very rarely indeed would a court enforce either by specific performance or by injunction a contract for services, either at the behest of the employers or of the employee, since if one side has no faith in the honesty or integrity or the loyalty of the other, to force it to serve or to employ that other was a plain recipe for disaster: at 506B. In his judgment Lord Denning MR said that in that case if an injunction were granted no one could have any confidence that the employment would continue peaceably: at 501G-H.
"when the employer had sought to terminate [the employee's] employment and to prevent [her] carrying out [her] work under the contract, unless it was clear on the evidence not only that it is otherwise just to make such a requirement but also that there exists sufficient confidence on the part of the employer in [the employee's] ability and other necessary attributes for it to be reasonable to make the order. Sufficiency of confidence must be judged by reference to the circumstances of the case, including the nature of the work, the people with whom the work must be done and the likely effect upon the employer and the employer's operations if the employer is required by injunction to suffer the plaintiff to continue in the work": at 194B-C.
Adequacy of damages and balance of convenience
Conclusion