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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> MBI UK Ltd v Quigley [2009] UKEAT 0061_08_0207 (2 July 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2009/0061_08_0207.html Cite as: [2009] UKEAT 61_8_207, [2009] UKEAT 0061_08_0207 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Appellant |
For the Respondent | MR C QUIGLEY (The Respondent in Person) |
SUMMARY
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT
Implied term/variation/construction of term
Tribunal entitled to find that evidence that the employee had undergone a conventional induction on recruitment did not constitute evidence that he had received "training" at a cost of £500 which the employer was entitled to recover under a claw-back clause.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
"During the probationary period the company will provide training both structured and on the job training. If the employee is dismissed or chooses to leave the company during this time the company will be entitled to deduct from their final pay a sum equivalent to but not exceeding £500. This will cover the training costs provided by the Company during this period."
"The claimant received no material training of any kind. The claimant accepted he had received some limited on the job instruction but nothing which would remotely justify the respondent claiming it had incurred training costs of £500."
Paragraphs 6 and 7 of the Reasons are in the following terms:
"The Law
6. Employers are entitled in a written contract of employment to have a provision whereby it is entitled to recover sums expended on training in the event that the employee ceases to be an employee within a certain period of time. Any such sum specified in the contract must however be a genuine pre-estimate of the cost to the employer of the training which is to be provided. It must not be a penalty.
Discussion
7. The Tribunal was satisfied that £500 had been deducted from the claimant's final payment of salary. Indeed the respondent admits that it did so in its response form. The Tribunal was however satisfied on the basis of the claimant's evidence that no material training had been given to him and that such on the job instruction as he may have been given did not remotely justify an assertion that the respondent had incurred material training costs. The Tribunal accordingly took the view that the sum deducted from the claimant was a penalty and not a genuine pre-estimate of the training costs which were to be occurred [sic]."
Accordingly the Tribunal ordered the Appellant to pay the Claimant £500. It appeals against that decision.
"It is clear from the judgement that no reference has been made to the attached form signed by Mr Quigley (copies already sent to the tribunal) demonstrating extensive training financially justifiable at considerably more than £500. We believe therefore that the tribunal has not properly considered the documentary evidence that clearly demonstrates that the deduction was not a penalty and as such should not be considered so when judging the law as pointed out in point 6."
The attached form is a record of the Claimant having gone through a two-day induction process at the start of his employment, which is signed by him under the declaration "I agree that I have undertaken and understood the above training". The Claimant has confirmed to me that the form in question was before the Tribunal and that it had regard to it. The only point which the Appellant can accordingly make is that if the Judge had given the form proper weight he would inevitably have found that training to the value claimed had been given. That seems to me a hopeless submission. The form itself merely indicates that the Claimant had, over a one-and-a-half-day period, what might be described as a conventional induction, under such headings as "what are we looking for in an employee", "what difference can a website make to a company?", "cold calling", and so forth. Without any further evidence or guidance it would be quite impossible for the Tribunal to be satisfied that material of this kind constituted training of the type contemplated by Clause 5.2. If the Appellant wished to argue that that was the case, it was its business to turn up at the hearing and advance such an argument with any supporting evidence that might have been helpful. As I have already noted it did not do so, and the Tribunal cannot be criticised for taking the view that the form, such as it was, had no real weight against the Claimant's evidence that nothing that he received constituted training in any real sense. In those circumstances this appeal must be dismissed.