![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Warren v. S & N Pubs and Restaurants Ltd [2002] UKEAT 1376_01_2910 (29 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/1376_01_2910.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 1376_1_2910, [2002] UKEAT 1376_01_2910 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
MR P DAWSON OBE
MR D J HODGKINS CB
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR NICHOLAS SIDDALL (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Pearson Hinchcliffe Solicitors Albion House 31 Queen Street Oldham Oldham OL1 1RD |
For the Respondent | MR MARTYN WEST Representative Peninsula Business Services Ltd Riverside New Bailey Street Manchester M3 5PB |
HIS HONOUR J McMULLEN QC
"(1) For the purposes of this Part an employee is dismissed by his employer if..
…
(c) the employee terminates the contract under which he is employed (with or without notice) in circumstances in which he is entitled to terminate it without notice by reason of the employer's conduct"
"1. In this case, the Appellant, Mr Warren, was employed by the Respondents as an assistant manager of one of its public houses. At the material time the Appellant was the relief manager of the Hare & Hounds Public House in Oldham, and ran it whilst the full time managers were on holiday. During that period, the Appellant appears to have had a number of difficulties not of his own making, including considerable problems with the computerised till. The result of this was that he was unable to ascertain whether the sums he was banking from takings in the public house were accurate. He also appears to have been unable to obtain any material assistance from the Respondents.
2. The result was that on 14 March 2001, when the full time managers returned from holiday, there was an argument between them and the Appellant, during the course of which the former abused the Appellant; and accused him, amongst other things, of stealing money, lying and – in effect – of being so drunk as to be unable to manage the public house properly. The Tribunal accepted that this behaviour on the part of the full time managers – occurring as it did in front of customers – was sufficient to constitute a fundamental breach of contract.
3. The Appellant then went on sick leave, and sought to invoke the company's grievance procedures. He wrote a number of letters to the Respondents which appear to have gone unanswered. The company appears to have insisted on the Appellant being proved fit to work before it would invoke the grievance procedures and there appears to have been a degree of confusion about precisely what was being asked of the Appellant. In any event, on or about 12 June, the Appellant resigned.
4. His principal case before the Tribunal was that he had been constructively dismissed because of the way he had been treated and because the Respondents failed to deal with his grievances. He argued that this course of conduct constituted a fundamental breach of contract of employment. The Employer's case was that they had not failed to deal with his grievances and that he had resigned.
5. This, of course, is a familiar area of dispute and usually depends upon the Tribunal's finding of fact. However, in the instant case, the Appellant argues, amongst other points, that the Tribunal erred in law in particular in failing to have any proper regard to the fact that the events of 14 March and the Respondents' subsequent contact, represented a cumulative series of breaches of his contract of employment and that the fact that the Appellant did not resign then and there on 14 March did not mean that when he did resign on 12 June he was not resigning in response to a fundamental breach.
6. In very helpful argument before us this morning, Mr Glyn, on behalf of the Appellant has pointed to the fact that in his submission there were a total of some 9 breaches of the Appellant's contract of employment. There was first of all the way he was left to do the relief work between 6 and 13 March which he sets out in some detail in a letter he wrote to the Respondents. There is secondly, the fundamental breach which is agreed, namely the way he was spoken to by the regular managers when they returned from holiday. There is also an acceptance, Mr Glyn argues that the initial administrative handling of his grievance procedure was defective and in particular item 4, that when the Appellant went to see an Occupational Health Advisor, he was in fact presented with a medical examiner The manner in which that took place was, it is said, a breach of his contract. There was also, and this we feel of particular significance, a failure (as the Tribunal found) to pay sick pay. There was also a failure (as the Tribunal found) to pay holiday pay. There was a failure (as the Tribunal found) to pay relief pay and there was also an administrative change in the way payments were made from a calendar to lunar monthly payments, which again caused the Appellant expense. Finally, Mr Glyn relied on the fact that the Respondents did not tell the Appellant the reason for seeking a medical report and indeed no prior position was sought for a medical examination.
7. Mr Glyn submits that the failure to take into account these breaches as a cumulative total vitiates the Tribunal's decision. The impression, given by the reasons is that there was simply one breach and that breach, was insufficient to enable the Appellant properly to be deemed to be constructively dismissed. But taken together, Mr Glyn argues, they amount to cumulative breach, which is sufficiently fundamental to entitle the Appellant to resign. This compartmentalisation of the breaches, Mr Glyn argues, vitiates the Tribunal's decision."
On that basis the EAT ordered a full hearing, which is today.
"Relevant Legal Principles
The relevant legal principles by which the Tribunal directed itself will be apparent from its reasoning below."
As will become apparent, we regret to say that it did not address precisely the legal principles which, in that short sentence, it said it was going to do. The Tribunal concluded that the Applicant did not resign, pursuant to a repudiatory breach by the employer.
"Experience in this appeal tribunal has shown that one of the consequences of the decision in the Western Excavating case has been that employers who wish to get rid of an employee or alter the terms of his employment without becoming liable either to pay compensation for unfair dismissal or redundancy payment, have had to resort to methods of "squeezing out" an employee. Stopping short of any major breach of the contract, such an employer attempts to make the employee's life so uncomfortable that he resigns or accepts revised terms. Such an employer, having behaved in a totally unreasonable manner, then claims that he has not repudiated the contract and therefore that the employee had no statutory right to claim either a redundancy payment or compensation for unfair dismissal.
It is for this reason that we regard the implied term we have referred to as being of such importance. In our view, an employer who persistently attempts to vary an employee's conditions of service (whether contractual or not) with a view to getting rid of the employee, or varying the employee's terms of service does act in a manner calculated or likely to destroy the relationship of confidence and trust between employer and employee. Such an employer has therefore breached the implied term. Any breach of that implied term is a fundamental breach, amounting to a repudiation since it necessarily goes to the root of the contract; see Courtaulds Northern Textiles Ltd -v- Andrew [1979] IRLR 84."
"If the employer is guilty of conduct which is a significant breach going to the root of the contract of employment; or which shows that the employer no longer intends to be bound by one or more of the essential terms of the contract; then the employer is entitled to treat himself as discharged from any further performance. If he does so, then he terminates the contract by reason of the employer's conduct. He is constructively dismissed. The employee is entitled in those circumstances to leave at the instant, without giving any notice at all, or alternatively, he may give notice and say he is leaving at the end of the notice. But the conduct in either case must be sufficiently serious to entitled him to leave at once. Moreover, he must make up his mind soon after the conduct of which he complains: for, if he continues for any length of time without leaving, he will lose his right to treat himself as discharged. He will be regarded as having elected to affirm the contract."
"The breach of this implied obligation of trust and confidence may consist of a series of actions on the part of the employer, which cumulatively amount to a breach of the term, though each individual incident may not do so. In particular in such a case the last action of the employer which leads to the employee leaving need not itself be a breach of contract; the question is, does the cumulative series of acts taken together amount to a breach of the implied term? See Woods…..This is the "last straw" situation."
In addition, we have been referred to Goold -v- McConnell [1995] IRLR 516, where it was held that a failure to redress a grievance can itself constitute a breach of contract.
"The final straw was that he was getting nowhere about his grievance."
(a) the Tribunal held that none of the events which occurred prior to 14 March, amounted to a breach of contract, whether of a fundamental or a repudiatory kind.
(b) the events on 14 March were held by the Tribunal to be a breach. It said this:
"….the joint managers of the public house in question acted in an unacceptable manner towards the applicant and this would have amounted to a breach of the implied term of mutual trust and confidence on their part However, again, the Applicant did not resign in response to any such breach".
(c) of the third phase, up until 12 June the Tribunal said:
"The Tribunal is satisfied that the respondent committed no breach of the contract of employment in the way it handled the applicant's grievance."
The Tribunal erred in failing to apply the more flexible approach enjoined by Lord Justice Glidewell, which is to look at matters beyond simply breaches in order to determine whether there was a cumulation of acts, breaches or otherwise.