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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Morgan v. Swansea College [2000] UKEAT 984_99_0507 (5 July 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/984_99_0507.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 984_99_0507, [2000] UKEAT 984_99_507 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
LORD DAVIES OF COITY CBE
DR D GRIEVES CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | IN PERSON |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT): We have before us by way of a preliminary hearing the appeal of Mr W. Morgan in the matter Morgan against Swansea College and it is concerned with whether Mr Morgan's IT1 was out of time. Mr Morgan has been in person before us today.
"(1) An employee has the right not to have action short of dismissal taken against him as an individual by his employer for the purpose of –
(a) preventing or deterring him from being or seeking to become a member of an independent trade union, or penalising him for doing so."
And then, there are provisions (b) and (c) which do not arise in this case.
"(5) An employee may present a complaint to an employment tribunal on the ground that action has been taken against him by his employer in contravention of this section."
Section 147 provides a time limit:
"(1) An employment tribunal shall not consider a complaint under section 146 unless it is presented –
(a) before the end of the period of three months beginning with the date of the action to which the complaint relates or, where that action is part of a series of similar actions, the last of those actions, or
(b) where the tribunal is satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for the complaint to be presented before the end of that period, within such further period as it considers reasonable."
Subsection (2) and (3) of section 147 says:
"(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) –
(a) where an act extends over a period, the reference to the date of the act is a reference to the last day of that period;
(b) a failure to act shall be treated as done when it was decided on.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2), in the absence of evidence establishing the contrary an employer shall be taken to decide on a failure to act –
(a) when he does an act inconsistent with doing the failed act, or
(b) if he has done no such inconsistent act, when the period expires within which he might reasonably have been expected to do the failed act if it was to be done."
So far as concerns the purpose of the employer is dealt with in section 148 (1) and (3):
"(1) On a complaint under section 146 it shall be for the employer to show the purpose for which action was taken against the complainant.
(3) In determining what was the purpose for which action was taken by the employer against the complainant in a case where -
(a) there is evidence that the employer's purpose was to further a change in his relationship with all or any class of his employees, and
(b) there is also evidence that his purpose was one falling within section 146,
the tribunal shall regard the purpose mentioned in paragraph (a) (and not the purpose mentioned in paragraph (b)) as the purpose for which the employer took the action, unless it considers that the action was such that no reasonable employer would take having regard to the purpose mentioned in paragraph (a)."
Subsection 5 speaks of the "class". We will not need to read that out. That is the statutory background to the case which Mr Morgan brought.
"4 It is the applicant's contention that the respondents [Swansea College] were and are guilty of conduct amounting to:
(b) conduct prejudicial to the applicant, amounting to action short of dismissal."
And then, under a heading of "Particulars of Breach/Action" he says
"(a) the respondents have been a party to a conspiracy with their association (the Association of Colleges):
(i) to breach their contract with the applicant; and
(ii) to otherwise unlawfully interfere with the said contract
in that the respondents have (inter alia) applied a policy of the non-payment of annual or other periodic wage reviews;
(b) the respondents have treated the applicant differently and prejudicially, compared to the treatment offered to others, in that:
(i) the respondents (in an attempt to persuade staff to transfer to new contractual terms) have offered others
(a) a lump sum of £500
(b) several professional incremental salary points
(ii) the respondents have declined to offer the applicant the said (b above) incremental points."
And he said in paragraph 7 of that:
"7 The respondents' said conduct is continuing."
"The unanimous decision of the tribunal is that the originating application is struck out for lack of jurisdiction."
"38 He chose to remain on the Silver Book and as a result he enjoys long holidays and short attendance hours. He cannot reasonably expect to retain those advantages and at the same time reap the rewards enjoyed by those who are burdened with the pressures of the 52 week year."
"28. It was not apparent from the originating application and further and better particulars whether Mr Morgan was in fact asserting any material fact capable of being regarded as action short of dismissal within the three months prior to presentation. His representative, Mr Nicholson, addressed the tribunal at the outset of the hearing, asserting that the action complained of was a continuing act of on-going policy. Also Mr Morgan gave some evidence as to the nature of the complaint. However, the point remained obscure and the tribunal took the view that it would be unsafe to decide the jurisdiction issue without hearing all the evidence. We therefore proceeded, leaving the question as to time limit to be decided at the end."
"(i) With regard to alleged failure to carry out pay reviews, we are satisfied on the oral and documentary evidence that Silver Book pay was in fact reviewed each year and that a considered decision was taken not to award an increase. We find that that decision was reasonable and was not taken by way of penalty."
And a little later:
"There was no evidence to suggest that the purpose was to penalise for trade union membership."
So that was one head of complaint. Another was this:
"Mr Nicholson submitted that the right to a pay review gave rise to a financial expectation in the form of a salary increase.
This is rejected. Any such expectation must have been eliminated by Mr Lewis's letter in 1994 informing staff that it was 'most unlikely' that those who remained on the old contracts would receive increases. As there was no increase thereafter expectation cannot reasonably have been resurrected. If Mr Morgan wished to base his claim on loss of financial expectation he should have presented it within three months of Mr Lewis's letter."
In another form:
"(ii) With regard to the alleged denial of promotion we are satisfied that Mr Morgan was not denied promotion. He had the same opportunities as all other staff to apply for promotion and there was no evidence to suggest that he had applied. Had he done so he may have been promoted. We find that no action was taken against him as an individual in this respect. He was aware of the need to apply for promotion in 1994. If he wished to base his case on denial of promotion he should have presented it within three months of receiving that knowledge."
With regard to yet another form of complaint, the tribunal says:
"(iii) With regard to pension, we are satisfied that the effect of static salary on potential pension entitlements was not the result of action taken against Mr Morgan as an individual. It was the result of his choosing to remain on existing contractual terms which called for less productivity and flexibility than the new contract and which therefore, in the respondents' view, did not justify pay increases. Any complaint on this basis should have been presented within three months of Mr Lewis's letter indicating that the increases were unlikely."
Finally, the tribunal say:
"32. Mr Morgan's case in so far as it is based on the assertions made prior to the hearing therefore discloses no material fact capable of being regarded as action short of dismissal occurring within three months prior to presentation of the originating application."
"44. … the absence of a collective bargaining clause in the new contract was apparent to him in 1994, and any complaint made on this basis should have been made within three months."
In paragraph 47, they say:
"47 Other alleged actions against Mr Morgan included the removal of evening duties in September 1998 and changes to his timetable in November 1998. Both of these took place after presentation of the originating application and form part of the alleged continuing action."
In paragraph 52, they say:
"52 We reject Mr Nicholson's overall submission that there was an on-going policy which constituted action against Mr Morgan as an individual. We find that there was a policy of encouragement of transfer to new contracts which were drafted with the object of increasing productivity and flexibility, and that there was a policy of awarding pay increases only to those who satisfied the criteria of increased productivity and flexibility. Those policies were applied to all staff generally irrespective of whether or not they were members of a trade union and we find that their purpose was to satisfy changing educational needs. There was no evidence whatsoever capable of establishing that action short of dismissal was taken against Mr Morgan as an individual for the purpose of penalising him for membership of a trade union."
Paragraph 53 says:
"53 Having heard the evidence and ascertained the actions complained of and having concluded that they were not 'actions short of dismissal' within the meaning of section 146 we go on to deal with the question of jurisdiction. The issue is not whether the alleged actions did in fact constitute actions within the meaning of section 146, but whether Mr Morgan's genuine perception was that they did and, if so, whether his complaint was presented within the three month time limit of the last of the perceived actions."
Paragraph 54 says:
"54 None of the alleged actions took place within three months prior to presentation of the originating application on 5 May 1998. The last pay review on which Mr Morgan was awarded no increase took place eight months previously. Mr Nicholson submits [he was appearing below for Mr Morgan] however that the action was continuing in that there were the evening duties and timetable incidents in September and November 1998 and in that there was to be no pay increase on the next review."
Paragraph 55 says:
"55 His submission is rejected. The wording of section 147 is that the tribunal shall not consider a complaint unless it is presented before the end of the three months 'beginning with' the date of the action complained of or the last of a series of similar actions. The complaints as to evening duties and timetable were not presented before the end of the three months 'beginning' with those actions."
And in their last page the Tribunal says:
"ON THE EVIDENCE we find that:
(i) …
(ii) no action was taken which could reasonably have been perceived by Mr Morgan as action short of dismissal within the three months beginning with the last of the alleged actions, nor prior to or subsequent to that period."
And accordingly, their conclusion was:
"60 Having regard to those findings we conclude that Mr Morgan did not have a genuine perception that action within the meaning of section 146 of the 1992 Act had been taken against him, either within or outside the three month limitation period. Accordingly the tribunal has no jurisdiction to deal with his complaint and we strike out the originating application."
"The tribunal
(i) reached conclusions for which there was no conclusive, or little evidence
(ii) that the tribunal chose to ignore unchallenged representations."
COSTS APPLICATION
"The Applicant is ordered to pay the whole of the respondents' costs of this case to be assessed in the County Court on the Standard Basis."
It held:
"We find that in bringing the case and in the conduct of the case Mr Morgan has acted unreasonably."
Mr Morgan had failed to attend the hearing as to costs. The Tribunal said:
"By his unexplained non-attendance today he has deprived himself of the opportunity to give evidence as to his means and we can only rely on the information before us."
As to his unreasonableness, as the Tribunal found it to be, they said this, beginning in paragraph 3:
"Time and expense was wasted on the preliminary hearing as to jurisdiction on the breach of contract and unfair dismissal issues. Any reasonable applicant properly advised must have appreciated that termination of employment is an essential element of unfair dismissal and of breach of contract. Mr Morgan has been advised throughout by Mr Nicholson, who described himself as a lawyer. He must therefore have been aware that as long as he was still employed and had not received notice of termination he was not in a position to complain of unfair dismissal or breach of contract."
A little later, they say:
"The particulars of his claim have been deplorably obscure throughout and have necessitated repeated requests by the respondents for clarification of the issues. They remained so unclear that the Tribunal found it necessary to sit through three days of hearing before it was able to ascertain whether it had jurisdiction to hear the case, which it did not."
And then, in paragraph 6, the Tribunal said:
"6 It is said that 'the length of time taken by the Tribunal taking evidence to reach its conclusion seems to deny a conclusion of [its being] 'otherwise unreasonably'. On the contrary, the length of time taken was due entirely to the applicant's persistence with a complaint which had no reasonable prospect of success, to the obscurity of the particulars on which his case was based, and to Mr Nicholson's arguments which were misconceived and, at times, bizarre. This is a case which should never have been brought and should never have been pursued, particularly after the indication given in the pre-hearing review."
"Having proceeded through the interlocutory stage of these proceedings, and the opportunity to strike-out (where appropriate) the tribunal having declared its lack of jurisdiction, had no power thereafter to exercise any jurisdiction on the question of costs."