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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Lambert v. M & J Engineers Ltd [1999] UKEAT 508_99_1706 (17 June 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/508_99_1706.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 508_99_1706 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR D CHADWICK
MR P DAWSON OBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | NO APPEARANCE OR REPRESENTATION BY OR ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT |
JUDGE PETER CLARK: The Appellant, Mr Lambert, commenced employment with the Respondent, M & J Engineers Ltd on 12th October 1998. By the 29th June 1998 he had been promoted to the post of Yard Foreman, according to the Appellant, or Foreman Fitter, according to the Respondent. That distinction does not matter for the purposes of this Appeal.
The Appeal
The Grounds of Appeal
(i) The Appellant received one month's pay in lieu of notice. Counting on 1 months' notice from 27th July 1998 the Appellant had completed 2 years service.
(ii) The Respondent did not use the contractual grievance or disciplinary procedures. That was a breach of contract. Had the disciplinary procedure been followed the Appellant would have completed 2 year's service. The Appellant was not informed of his right of Appeal.
(iii) This was not a case of gross misconduct entitling the Respondent to terminate the employment summarily.
(iv) There was no investigation of the disciplinary charge. In any event, a driving licence was not necessary for the performance of the Appellant's job.
(v) The Respondent will not tell the Appellant's advisers what the 1 month's pay represented, other than to say it was compensation. Further, the holiday pay calculation was incorrect. Steps are being taken to recover the balance of holiday pay allegedly outstanding.
(vi) The Chairman was wrong to reject the review application on the basis that the authorities referred to by the Appellant in that application related to the issue of damages for wrongful dismissal at commonlaw, and were not relevant to the issue of qualifying service for the purposes of the statutory claim for unfair dismissal.
Conclusion
(i) Prima facie, the Effective Date of Termination ("EDT") of the contract of employment is to be calculated under one of 3 possible terminating events provided for in Section 97(1);
(a) where the contract is terminated by notice, the date on which the notice expires
(b) where the contract is terminated without notice, the date on which the termination takes effect
(c) expiry of a fixed term contract. That does not arise in this case.
(ii) Was the contract terminated with or without notice?
The letter of 22nd July was expressed to terminate the employment "with immediate effect". It was not a letter of dismissal with notice.
However, contrary to the Respondent's pleaded case in the form IT.3, a letter of dismissal will not take effect until the employee has a reasonable opportunity to read it. It will be otherwise where the employee deliberately seeks to avoid reading the letter, Brown -v- Southall & Knight [1980] IRLR 130, McMaster –v- Manchester Airport plc [1998]IRLR 112.
It follows, on the Employment Tribunal's findings of fact, that the Appellant did not become aware of the contents of the dismissal letter until 27th July. That is the earliest EDT. A combination of the oral dismissal in the office on 27th July, together with handing over a copy of the dismissal letter dated 22nd July, points ineluctably to the conclusion that, for the purposes of Section 97(1), prima facie the EDT was 27th July 1998.
(iii) However, Section 97(2) provides that where the contract of employment is terminated by the employer (as here) and the notice required by Section 86 would, if given on the material date expire on a date later than the EDT as defined by Section 97(1), for the purposes of, among other things, Section 108(1), the later date is the EDT.
We have earlier observed that the statutory notice requirement in this case, under Section 86(1)(a), was one week. The Employment Tribunal so found, correctly, and also found that the contractual notice period for termination by the employer was one week. In our judgment the contractual notice period is irrelevant for the purposes of Section 97(2). The EDT is only extended under Section 97(2) by the statutory notice period under Section 86, not the contractual notice period if that is different. Fox Maintenance Ltd -v- Jackson.
On the Employment Tribunal's findings there is no difference between the statutory and contractual notice requirement in this case. The Appellant contends for a one month notice period to be added to the Section 97(1) EFT (here, 27th July 1999). That contention fails on two counts; first, on the facts, since the contractual notice period was found to be 1 week, not 1 month. What seems to have happened is that the Respondent paid "one month's pay in lieu of notice" partly in satisfaction of the Appellant's actual contractual entitlement to 1 weeks pay in lieu of notice and partly by way of an ex gratia, extra-contractual payment. Secondly, and in any event, even if the Appellant was entitled to 1 month's notice under the contract of employment, he could not count the full contractual notice period insofar as it exceeded the statutory notice requirement under Section 86.
Finally, and for completeness, we should observe that where the Employer is entitled to dismiss the Employee summarily at common-law for gross misconduct, the Employee is not entitled to any notice under Section 86(6). In these circumstances, the EDT will be the date of summary dismissal.
(iv) It follows that in the absence of a finding by the Employment Tribunal that the Respondent was in fact entitled to terminate the employment summarily for gross misconduct on 27th July, the true EDT is 3rd August as they found in the alternative by virtue of the operation of Section 97(1) and (2) and Section 86(1)(a). It is that alternative finding which we uphold.
It follows, as the Employment Tribunal concluded, that for the purpose of Section 108(1) the Appellant had not completed 2 years continuous service starting on 12th August 1996, the EDT of the contract being 3rd August 1998. The Employment Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain the complaint under Section 108, subject to the pending House of Lords determination in Seymour-Smith.
(v) The Review Decision
It is not entirely clear whether this Appeal is directed to the review decision as well as the original decision. For completeness we are quite satisfied that the Chairman was entitled to dismiss the review application for the reasons which she gave. In particular, it is right to say that the authorities relied on in that review application are directed to the issue of damages for wrongful dismissal. For the reasons given, any notional extension of the contract for the purpose of assessing damages for wrongful dismissal (as opposed to extending the duration of the contract for statutory purposes, for example, the time which it would take to complete the contractual disciplinary procedure (See Raspin –v- United News Shops Ltd [1999] IRLR 9)) will be immaterial for the purposes of determining the EDT under Section 97(1) and (2) of Employment Rights Act. There was no breach of contract claim before the Employment Tribunal.