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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Stenson & Ors v. West Dunbartonshire Council [2007] UKEAT 0089_06_0908 (9 August 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0089_06_0908.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 0089_06_0908, [2007] UKEAT 89_6_908 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANTS | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
WEST DUNBARTONSHIRE COUNCIL RESPONDENT
For the Appellant | MR N GARDINER (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Allan McDougall & Co Solicitors 3 Coates Crescent Edinburgh EH3 7AL |
For the Respondent | MR R LYNCH (Solicitor) West Dunbartonshire Council Council Offices Garshake Road Dunbarton Dunbartonshire G82 3PU |
SUMMARY
Contract of Employment – Incorporation into Contract
The Claimants were employed as anti-social behaviour wardens under contracts which provided that salary and conditions were "in accordance with" a particular collective agreement. Issue was whether or not a statement in the collective agreement regarding allowances payable in respect of weekend and night working had been incorporated into their contracts of employment. The Tribunal held that it had not. The Claimants appealed against that determination without success.
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
Introduction
Background
1. a document entitled "PRINCIPAL STATEMENT OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT"("TCE");
2. a document entitled SCHEDULE OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT ("the Schedule"); and
3. the Red Book
"National Negotiating Body: The salary and conditions of service attached to this post are in accordance with agreement reached by SJC for Local Government Employees.
…
Salary Scale: The salary scale attached to this post is £12,789 - £15,204 p.a. (SCP 10 – 18). Your commencing salary will be £12,789 p.a.
…
Incremental Progression: Subject to satisfactory service your salary will rise within the scale by annual increments up to the maximum of the scale payable in accordance with the general conditions of service referred to in paragraph 1 of the attached Schedule …
Allowances: 7.5% irregular hours payment
…
Sickness Allowances: Details of entitlement to sickness allowance are contained within the attached Schedule of Terms of Conditions of Employment …"
"1. Conditions of Service
Your terms and conditions of employment are in accordance with:-
(a) the collective agreements of the Scottish Joint Council for Local Government Employees as adopted and applied by the Council.
(b) certain additional terms and conditions determined by the Council as contained in Circulars issued by the Head of Personnel Services, and
(c) any special conditions referred to in the covering letter.
Full details of the terms and conditions at (a) and (b) above are available from your Section Head, Departmental Personnel or from Corporate Personnel."
"Full details of the Sickness Allowances Scheme are available as outlined in paragraph 1 above."
"The rights of pregnant women to maternity leave and pay are in accordance with the Scheme referred to in paragraph 1 above."
"SICKNESS PROVISIONS"
and there then follow detailed terms and conditions relating to entitlement to and qualification for sick pay. Those provisions are immediately followed by a section in the Red Book entitled:
"MATERNITY SCHEME"
which contains detailed provisions regarding entitlement to and qualification for maternity leave, maternity pay and the right to return to work.
"PART 2 – KEY SCOTTISH PROVISIONS"
"EXTRACT FROM SCHEME OF CONDITIONS FOR APT & c STAFF RELATING TO ENHANCEMENTS"
"…outside the period 1 ½ hours before and/or 1 ½ hours after the authority's normal working hours in the period Monday to Friday..".
The Tribunal's Decision
"12. Parties were also agreed that an employee in receipt of an irregular payment could not qualify for both an irregular payment allowance and the enhancements payable in connection with night and weekend work in the sense that entitlement to an irregular payment ousted the right to these enhanced payments …
15. Mr Foley conceded that his clients were not entitled to an irregular hours payment. "
"If I am wrong in this assumption, a fortiori I am of the opinion that the contract does not confer on the Claimants the rights that they seek to enforce: the Principal Statement and Schedule read together suggest that it was the intention of the Respondents to adopt and apply the terms and conditions of the Red Book to the extent that they are specifically referred to in the Principal Statement. It is also quite clear that the Schedule reflects the Red Book and does not reproduce it applying its provisions to the particular circumstances of the Respondents circumstances. The fact that the Schedule reflects certain of the provisions of the Red Book, but says nothing concerning the enhancements suggests strongly that it was never the intention of the parties that these enhancements be paid."
The Appeal
"(iv) There is ambiguity within the principal Statement of Terms and Conditions of Employment to the extent that it states "The salary and Conditions of Service attached to this post are in accordance with agreement reached by SJC for Local Government Employees". Later on it states that the Appellants are to receive a 7.5% irregular hours payment. The two statements are mutually exclusive.
…
(vii) On a proper construction of the employment contract between the parties in order for it to make sense and be in accordance with the agreement reached by the Scottish Joint Council for Local Government Employees, the Appellants must be entitled to enhancements for weekend working and night working…."
Relevant Law
"… serious difficulties still arise because the principle still has to be one of incorporation into the individual contracts of employment and the extraction of a recognisable contractual intent as between the individual employee and his employer. The mere existence of collective agreements which are relevant to the employee and his employment does not include a contractual intent (see for example per Ackner LJ, Robertson v British Gas [1983] IRLR 302). The contractual intent has to be found in the individual contract of employment and very often the evidence will not be sufficient to establish such an intent in a manner which satisfies accepted contractual criteria and satisfied ordinary criteria of certainty."
and also at paragraph 31:
"The principles to be applied can therefore be summarised. The relevant contract is that between the individual employee and his employer; it is the contractual intention of those two parties which must be ascertained. In so far as that intention is to found in a written document, that document must be construed on ordinary contractual principles. In so far as there is no such document or that document is not complete or conclusive, their contractual intention has to be ascertained by inference from the other available material including collective agreements. The fact that another document is not itself contractual does not prevent it from being incorporated into the contract if that intention is shown as between employer and the individual employee. Where a document is expressly incorporated by general words it is still necessary to consider, in conjunction with the words of incorporation, whether any particular part of that document is apt to be a term of the contract; if it is inapt, the correct construction of the contract may be that it is not a term of the contract. Where it is not a case of express incorporation, but a matter of inferring the contractual intent, the character of the document and the relevant part of it and whether it is apt to form part of the individual contract is central to the decision whether or not the inference should be drawn."
"The basic terms and conditions for your employment by this company are in accordance with and subject to the provisions of the relevant agreements".
Hobhouse J saying that:
"The additional words 'and subject to' indicate that in at least some respects the collective agreements are to apply to the individual contract of employment."(para 25)
"This post carries the following allowance(s) at present:
5 days cycle allowance"
"Mr Randall concedes that if clause 13 had said 'This post carries only the following allowances', the Employment Tribunal's construction would have been correct. For our part, we see the provision of clause 13 as clear enough, even without the word "only". It sets out to say what allowances are carried by the post, it was not left blank."
Decision