![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Carshalton College v. Morris [2002] UKEAT 0673_01_1908 (19 August 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/0673_01_1908.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 0673_01_1908, [2002] UKEAT 673_1_1908 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
On 5 August 2002 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J R REID QC
MR D J HODGKINS CB
MR A D TUFFIN CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised (25 November 2002)
For the Appellant | PETER WARD (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Levenes Solicitors Grove House 140-142 The Grove Stratford London E15 1NS |
For the Respondent | THE RESPONDENT In Person |
JUDGE J R REID QC
The facts
quite happy for her to return full-time. However if she were to come back part-time, the College insisted that she should do so under a contract which provided for flexibility.
"As discussed it is a requirement of all staff to be flexible in their hours of work and to this end changes to the above arrangements (that is to say arrangements under which she would be working 2½ days a week during the day time) may be necessary. However these changes will be notified to you at least a month in advance. As discussed you be required to cover an evening teaching session but again you would be given advance notice should this occur."
"I met with the college as agreed, there was no real compromise, only an offer of help with childcare payments, such help is as I am aware offered to all staff as an option within the college schemes and packages. I explained once again my concerns and feel that as a working mother I have been discriminated against. During this meeting I was not offered an increase to my salary, however this was due in October, and was to be back dated to August, this increase was part of a review of salaries and grades within my department as the staff were not payed on par with other college members. I did not feel valued and felt that having a family to consider upon returning to work was used against me as I was told of the college and the flexibility that they may need in the future with regards to any special requirements i.e. sickness or leave as a result of a sick child.
During this time I spoke to a valued member of staff to explain my difficulties in returning to work, I was however very concerned when I was told to reconsider if I wanted to return to work.
It was not an option made easy for me and I resigned from my position on the 10/10/2000, in my letter of resignation I explained that I felt I had been constructively dismissed and discriminated against for having a family, the college denied this when accepting my resignation."
The Tribunal's decision
"We could see no possible connection between the Applicant's understandable desire to work part-time and the Respondents' insistence on imposing the right to call for evening working. We found to be particularly unconvincing the suggestion that that potential obligation would be tempered by the need to give one month's notice. We could not, for example, understand how the Applicant could be called upon to cover emergencies and sick leave if the Respondents were actually going to give one month's notice. Rather we came to the conclusion that it was an attempt to foreshadow the possibility of evening class working for members of staff (as opposed to the former arrangement of evening class working by employment agency staff)."
"Furthermore we are not necessarily persuaded as a matter of general fact that a greater proportion of child caring mothers or parents are unable to comply with their requirements to work one or more evenings per week or per month let alone every two months."
They then went on to consider the possibility of direct discrimination. This was something that the Tribunal raised of its own motion. It was not the basis upon which Mrs Morris put her claim. They found that Mrs Morris was the only one of the employees still on the old "Gatewood Contracts" who was being required to agree to the flexible working term which they found was unfavourable to her. They did not consider that the fact that there had been general discussions with her former colleagues prevented there being a clear disparate approach by the College. They then went on as follows in paragraphs 11 and 12 of their decision:
"11. We therefore asked ourselves what we find to be the proper and obvious question, namely what was the reason why the Respondents were imposing the clause? We accepted the Applicants' pithily asked question, namely that the Respondents were taking advantage of the Applicant's return from maternity leave to impose a term which was totally unconnected with her part-time working (for understandable management reasons). We find that there was a direct link between the Applicant's returning to work and the proposed imposition of that clause and the Respondents were taking advantage of the weakness of the Applicant's position at that stage. We therefore came to the conclusion that that was straightforward direct discrimination of the Applicant as the mother of a young child just returning from maternity leave.
12. We find that having reached a conclusion that there was disparate unfavourable treatment of the Applicant, it was plainly a breach of the fundamental duty of mutual trust and confidence in the contract of employment. Whilst we accept that even in the worst case scenario it ought not to have been a major headache for the Applicant to sort out, nevertheless, she needed the certainty to be sure that she could make childminding arrangements on, we would think, at least a six monthly cycle and this was a sufficiently serious problem for her to feel obliged to look for alternative employment."
The Tribunal went on at paragraph 14 to say that it was not necessary for it to reach a conclusion as to whether in addition the College was in breach of section 79(2)(c) of the Employment Rights Act (in fact now Regulation 18(5)(c) of the Maternity and Paternal Leave Etc Regulations 1999) as to whether the terms and conditions were: "not less favourable". The Tribunal went on to express the decision that had it been necessary they would have concluded that Mrs Morris was constructively dismissed because of the attempt to impose evening working as being a term or condition less favourable to her. In paragraph 15 the Tribunal assessed the compensation payable and made the award to which we have referred of £2320. There is no appeal against the quantum of that award, if liability is upheld.
"25 The first point which Mr Gatt takes is that to establish constructive dismissal on the basis of a fundamental breach of contract committed by the employer, the employee must resign in response to that breach. He submits, accordingly, that on the facts, the Tribunal was perverse to find, as it did, that the Respondent resigned as a consequence of the proposal that she should resign and be re-employed under a fresh contract. He points to the fact that the proposal – for this purpose assuming it to qualify as a fundamental breach – had been withdrawn, and that the letter which provoked the Respondent's resignation expressly said that the offending condition had been withdrawn. The Respondent, he agreed, plainly did not leave in response to that proposal made by the Applicant.
26. We think this submission well founded. It also seems to us clear from the evidence before the Tribunal that, contrary to its finding, if the Respondent had been able to negotiate a return package which was suitable to her needs, she would have returned. The whole tenor of the negotiations, in our view, does not indicate that there had been a breakdown in mutual trust and confidence: rather that the parties were unable to negotiate terms which were mutually satisfactory."
"Held, allowing the appeal, that, though pregnancy and maternity leave had in each case precipitated the applicant's request to job share, that request was not an exercise of her statutory right, which was to return to her old job on the same terms, but sought to alter her terms of employment, and, once the applicants' maternity leave ended, their statutory protection was finished; that accordingly, the treatment complained of was not on the ground of sex and there was no evidence that a man seeking to alter his hours of employment would have been treated in any different way; ..."
(1) the College sought to take advantage of Mrs Morris' return from maternity leave to force an unfavourable variation of her contract of employment upon her in circumstances where they knew she wished to work only part-time. Further she was the only employee required to vary her contract and was therefore clearly less favourably treated on the grounds of her sex.
And
(2) Mrs Morris was seeking to make arrangements for her return from maternity leave. A male would not have a statutory right to maternity leave or to return to work under the same terms of employment. A man wishing to return after a long period of absence would have to negotiate a fresh contract of employment and in determining whether detrimental treatment was on the grounds of her sex there could be no proper male comparator for the same reasons as were advanced in Webb v Emo Air Cargo (UK) Ltd [1994] IRLR 482.
"There is, it seems to us, a further objection; that is, that there is no right here which can sensibly be described as 'a right to return to work' independently of the Act of 1975, under a contract of employment or otherwise. What happened was that she became pregnant; her old job was open to her if she cared to return to it. To that extent, of course, there was implicit a right to return to work; but that was under her original contract of employment and not otherwise, and what is relied on here is a collateral agreement to return as a part-time physiotherapist, basic grade. It does not seem to us that, in the terms of the Employment Protection Act 1975, that is a contract under which she acquired a right to return to work. Her right to return to work existed independently prior to that and was always recognised. This was merely a collateral agreement about the particular work that she would do when she did return."
"9. The Applicant's case on informal advice which she had obtained from a friend who is legally qualified was based on a claim of indirect discrimination. We did not accept the Applicant's evidence that she had established on the evidence that she could not comply with a requirement to work occasional evenings or for that matter a requirement that she might have to switch her part-time day or morning to a different day or period of a day. That kind of allegation would have required a much greater body of evidence about the Applicant's difficulties in relation to childminders during the day and/or the possibility of family support and childminder support in the evenings. Indeed we would point out, with respect to the Applicant, that it is inconsistent for her to rely upon the inflexibility of her husband's shift working patterns as a reason why she herself should not be called upon on occasions to work unsocial hours. Furthermore we are not necessarily persuaded as a matter of general fact that a greater proportion of child caring mothers or parents are unable to comply with their requirement to work one or more evenings per week or per month let alone every two months."
19. Having considered the matter carefully, we take the view that the Tribunal there properly considered and rejected the claim based on indirect discrimination. In those circumstances we take the view that we can properly dispose finally of this case. The Tribunal erred in law in finding that there had been a fundamental breach by the College of Mrs Morris's contract of employment in the College's refusal to submit to her wish to work part-time but without a flexibility clause in her contract. The Tribunal also erred in law in holding that there was direct sex discrimination. The Tribunal's decision that there was no indirect sex discrimination is one which appears on the face of it to be safe, and indeed it was not submitted to us that the case should be remitted to another Tribunal so that indirect discrimination could be reconsidered. In these circumstances in our judgment the decision of the Tribunal should be reversed and instead an order should be made dismissing the claimant's applications both for sex discrimination and for unfair dismissal.