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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> United Guarding Services Ltd v (St James Security Group Ltd & Anor [2004] UKEAT 0770_03_1504 (15 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0770_03_1504.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 770_3_1504, [2004] UKEAT 0770_03_1504 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 26 February 2004 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOOPER
MR J R CROSBY
MR P M SMITH
APPELLANT | |
(2) MISS YOLA HERMOZA |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR D HOBBS (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Windsor & Co Solicitors 670 High Road Tottenham London N17 OAH |
For the 1st Respondent For the 2nd Respondent |
MR I McGLASHAN Representative Peninsula Business Services Ltd Riverside New Bailey Street Manchester M3 5PB MISS L DUBINSKY Representative Free Representation Unit 4th Floor, Peer House 8-14 Verulam Street London WC1X 8LZ |
Issue was: What was the employee's place of work immediately before dismissal and from which he was excused at time of transfer by reason of illness? Application of FAIRHURST WARD ABBOTS LTD -v-BOTES BUILDING & ORS [2004] EWCA Civ 83.
Whether employee worked in the part of the undertaking transferred.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOOPER
"Location
You will normally be based at 50 The Broadway, Westminster, London SW1 however you may be required to work at different sites within reasonable travelling distance according to the needs of the business. Initially you will be working at different sites which will be confirmed by telephone. Thereafter, you will usually be based at a fixed site which will be confirmed in writing within a number of weeks".
We were told that no such written confirmation had in fact been provided to Miss Hermoza.
"In a nutshell Mr Williamson stated that there was a very substantial communication problem between [St James] and [Miss Hermoza]. I am putting the matter in a very simple shorthand language, the main reason why [Miss Hermoza] did not in fact work at other sites operated by [St James] was a communication breakdown."
"I would like the tribunal to tell the company to reinstate me in my permanent site at 50 The Broadway and to compensate me for the time I am out of work because of this bully [Mr Patiolla] and unfair removal in my work place to date without work"
"It is contended that [Miss Hermoza] failed to follow reasonable management instructions whereby phoning [St James] on a daily basis to be instructed of her daily shift. Furthermore, [Miss Hermoza] has failed to contact [St James] to notify them of her movements since 25 October 2002."
".....we accept that Mr Williamson made it quite clear that throughout the entire period from about October through until March, Mr Williamson and his managers were not prepared to allow the applicant to work at The Broadway on any shift when there was the possibility that the Applicant's working shift would overlap with that of Mr Patiolla. Furthermore we find that it is clear from Mr Williamson's evidence and some of the letters which were exchanged between the first Respondent and the Applicant, that increasingly Mr Williamson and the 1st Respondent's management were not prepared to allow the Applicant to work at The Broadway at all, whether or not there was an overlap of shift with Mr Patiolla".
"The reasons why Mr Williamson was not prepared to and did not in fact offer work to the Applicant at that site, were firstly because of the obvious breakdown in relationship between herself and Mr Patiolla. The second reason we find was that the First Respondent had carried out what it claimed to be a full investigation of the Applicant's allegations [about which we make no finding in one direction or another] and had found them to be unsubstantiated. Thirdly, therefore it followed that they did not accept the Applicant's claims that she was 'the victim' and that it was Mr Patiolla who ought to be moved to a different site. Fourthly, Mr Williams stated that there were difficulties because the First Respondent claimed that the Applicant was causing trouble with some of the tenants/occupiers of the building. Fifthly, Mr Williamson and management were beginning to go down the disciplinary road because of the various difficulties and the Applicant and finally, sixthly, Mr Williamson was receiving advice in a general way about the fact that there were Tribunal proceedings and we find he did not take any final decision about any of the possible options open to him as the Managing Director, pending those Tribunal proceedings".
"I have spoken to the Managing Director of St James, Mr Neil Williamson. He advises that the company do not currently have any vacancies on permanent sites but will write to the Applicant as soon as any vacancies arise".
"United have maintained the continuity of employment of existing employees engaged in work at 50 The Broadway".
"It is contended that rule 5 of the TUPE Regulations 1981 operates so as to transfer the Applicant's contract of employment from the Respondent to United Guarding Services Limited in addition to all duties and liabilities under or in connection with such contract."
"Had we been persuaded that the Applicant's allegations were justified, we believe that we would have concluded that the First Respondent had wrongly removed her, the victim of discrimination of her Manager and we would have either recommended or indeed considered recommending orders whereby the Applicant would be 'reinstated' to her post at The Broadway. Alternatively we might have decided that the Respondents were justified in rejecting her allegation and were justified in excluding her from The Broadway site pending the Tribunal proceedings or a final election by one side or the other".
"We find that so far as the contract of employment is concerned, there was blatantly no mutual agreement that the Applicant's normal location of work had been agreed to be changed. The Applicant could in no sense be said to have agreed not to return to The Broadway and to become an unallocated floating security guard. Indeed, there was letter after letter, quite apart from the contents of the Tribunal proceedings, in which the Applicant asserted that she wished to be "reinstated" to her position at The Broadway. Throughout the entire history, we find, the Applicant's case was that she was a Broadway employee and was entitled to remain a Broadway employee".
"The appropriate test, in our judgment, was whether he had been employed to work [in the part transferred] immediately before the transfer i.e whether [the part transferred] was his contractual place of work and that was where [the employer] would have required him to work immediately before the transfer had he not been excused from attendance. The same test would apply to the employee on holiday, on study leave or on maternity leave."