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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Sibbit v St Cuthbert’s Catholic Primary School [2010] UKEAT 0070_10_2005 (20 May 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0070_10_2005.html Cite as: [2010] UKEAT 0070_10_2005, [2010] UKEAT 70_10_2005 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
MR T MOTTURE
MS B SWITZER
APPELLANT | |
CATHOLIC PRIMARY SCHOOL |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR COLIN HUTCHINSON (of Counsel) Instructed by: Association of Teachers & Lecturers Legal Services Department 7 Northumberland Street London WC2N 5RD |
For the Respondent | MR JONATHAN HOLDEN (Solicitor) Messrs Forbes Solicitors Rutherford House 4 Wellington Street (St John's) Blackburn BB1 8DD |
SUMMARY
UNFAIR DISMISSAL - Compensation
The Employment Tribunal used the simplified approach to pension loss in the Employment Judges' Guide. This was an error of principle where the Claimant had long service, was in stable employment, was not in future employment liable to economic risk and could quantify the difference as between the simplified and the substantial approach. The latter should have been applied as provided by Guide para 4.13 and 4.14.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
Introduction
The facts
The legal principles
"20. I recognise that an appellate court should only interfere with the decision on compensation if the Employment Tribunal has either erred in principle or reached a perverse conclusion (see the decision of the Court of Appeal in Bentwood Bros (Manchester) Ltd v Shepherd [2003] ICR 1000 paragraph 10 per Peter Gibson LJ). In my judgment it was an error of principle …"
Discussion and conclusions
"Subject to the provisions of this section … the amount of the compensatory award shall be such amount as the Tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to the loss sustained by the complainant in consequence of the dismissal in so far as that loss is attributable to action taken by the employer."
"4.7. The key choice to be made by the Tribunal is whether to look at the whole career loss to retirement which can then be discounted to allow for the eventuality that the applicant would not have remained in the employment throughout, or to look only to the next few years and assume that by that time he will have obtained comparable employment either with a similar pension scheme or a higher salary to compensate. Tribunals have tended to find in many cases that the applicant would obtain comparable employment within a fairly short period, ranging from 3 months to 2 years. Where the likely period of unemployment was longer the Tribunal would quickly find that compensation had reached the previous statutory limit of £12,000, so that assessing future loss over a period of years was largely an academic exercise. However, the increase in the limit in respect of compensatory award for unfair dismissal to £50,000 (now £53,500) and the removal of any limit in discrimination cases and some unfair dismissal cases require, where appropriate, an approach akin to that adopted in personal injury cases.
4.10. We consider that, in assessing future pension loss, the Tribunal has to select one of two approaches, which we will call the simplified approach and the substantial loss approach. As we have indicated, the decision by the Tribunal as to which approach to use will be a crucial one. It has led to considerable debate in the consultation process and the final conclusion will be a matter for the Tribunal. It can, however, make a substantial difference to the amount of compensation under this heading.
4.13 Experience suggests that the simplified approach will be appropriate in most cases. Tribunals have been reluctant to embark on assessment of whole career loss because of the uncertainties of employment in modern economic conditions. In general terms the substantial loss approach may be chosen in cases where the person dismissed has been in the Respondent's employment for a considerable time, where the employment was of a stable nature and unlikely to be affected by the economic cycle and where the person dismissed had reached an age where he is less likely to be looking for new pastures. The decision will, however, always depend on the particular facts of the case.
4.14 More particularly, we suggest that the substantial loss approach is appropriate in the following circumstances:
(a) when the applicant has found permanent new employment by the time of the hearing and assuming no specific uncertainties about the continuation of the lost job such as a supervening redundancy a few months after dismissal; further, the Tribunal has found that the applicant is not likely to move on to better paid employment in due course;
(b) when the applicant has not found permanent new employment and the Tribunal is satisfied on the balance of probabilities that he or she will not find new employment before State Pension age (usually confined to cases of significant disability where the applicant will find considerable difficulty in the job market):
(c) when the applicant has not found new employment but the Tribunal is satisfied that the applicant will find alternative employment (which it values, for example, with the help of employment consultants) and is required then to value all losses to retirement and beyond before reducing the total loss by the percentage chance that the applicant would not have continued to retirement in the lost career. See Ministry of Defence v Cannock and Others [1994] ICR 918 et al subject to our comment below.
The simplified approach becomes inappropriate in these cases because there is a quantifiable continuing loss which can be assessed using the pension data and Tables 1 to 4 of Appendices 5 and 6. These tables use factors similar to those in the Ogden Tables for personal inquiry and fatal accident cases. Although tables for pension loss are included in those tables, the tables in this booklet use some different assumptions to those underlying the Ogden Tables (see Appendix 2)."
"Where it is not clear which method may more accurately estimate future loss of pension, the guidance is of particular help to a Tribunal and a Tribunal may very well have a free choice as between one or the other approach. But where it is plain on any objective view what the loss is going to be, then the Tribunal should adopt that method and the guidelines, after all, are just guidelines."