[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Neary v. Service Children's Education & Ors [2010] UKEAT 0101_10_1706 (17 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0101_10_1706.html Cite as: [2010] IRLR 1030, [2010] UKEAT 0101_10_1706, [2010] ICR 1083, [2010] UKEAT 101_10_1706 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2010] ICR 1083] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
On 12 May 2010 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE COX
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
(2) MINISTRY OF DEFENCE (3) ST JOHN’S SCHOOL |
RESPONDENTS |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR A D NEARY (The Appellant in Person) |
For the Respondent | MISS HELEN BELL (of Counsel) Instructed by: The Treasury Solicitor Employment Law Team One Kemble Street London WC2B 4TS |
SUMMARY
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Exclusions/jurisdictions
Was the Claimant "ordinarily resident in Great Britain" for the purposes of section 68(2A)(c) Disability Discrimination Act and regulation 10(2)(c) Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006, so as to found jurisdiction to determine his complaints of disability and age discrimination?
Employment Tribunal's decision that he was not was upheld on the evidence. Notwithstanding a mis-direction as to the test to be applied, the decision was plainly and unarguably right on the evidence and facts found.
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE COX
"… The post of mathematics head was for St John's School which is situated in Cyprus. The claimant would therefore be an overseas worker falling within section 68(2)(b) of the DDA and regulation 10(1)(b) of the Age Regulations.
21 Was the Claimant ordinarily resident in Great Britain, when he applied for the post or when he was rejected for it? In my view the Claimant was not ordinarily resident in Great Britain, either at the time of the application on 25 March 2008 or at the time that he was informed that he had not been short listed in 7 August 2008. [At] both of these times, the Claimant was ordinarily resident in Germany, which is clear from his oral evidence and confirmed by the information given in his application form and accompanying letter, his place of work at the time of making the application, and confirmed in his ET1 in September 2008, that the Claimant was still residing at the address in Hessen, Germany, where he was when he made his application for the position.
22 Having so found, 1 find that the Claimant is not protected by the provisions of the Disability Discrimination Act and the Employment Equality (Age) Regulations, he is therefore unable to bring a claim of disability discrimination and/or age discrimination in respect of the Respondents failure to shortlist the Claimant for the position of Head of Mathematics at St John's School, Episkopi. His claim can proceed no further and is dismissed."
The appeal
The Legislative Framework
"4 Employers: discrimination and harassment
(1) It is unlawful for an employer to discriminate against a disabled person-
(a) in the arrangements which he makes for the purpose of determining to whom he should offer employment; …"
…
(6) This section applies only in relation to employment at an establishment in Great Britain."
"(2) Employment (including employment on board a ship to which subsection (2B) applies or on an aircraft or hovercraft to which subsection (2C) applies) is to be regarded as being employment at an establishment in Great Britain if the employee-
(a) does his work wholly or partly in Great Britain; or
(b) does his work wholly outside Great Britain and subsection (2A) applies.
(2A) This subsection applies if-
(a) the employer has a place of business at an establishment in Great Britain;
(b) the work is for the purposes of the business carried on at the establishment; and
(c) the employee is ordinarily resident in Great Britain-
(i) at the time when he applies for or is offered the employment, or
(ii) at any time during the course of the employment."
"105. If the first two criteria are met, the third criterion then requires, in addition, that the employee is ordinarily resident in Great Britain, either at the time of applying for or being offered the job, or at some time during the course of the employment. Ordinary residence is a question of fact, which needs to be considered on case-by-case basis, taking into account all the relevant circumstances. To be ordinarily resident in Great Britain means that a person is usually living in and based in Britain, year after year. The fact that a person goes abroad for long periods at a time may not detract from the fact that they remain ordinarily resident in Britain - for example, if a person keeps their main residence in Britain. Equally, if a person lives from year to year in another country, he is not ordinarily resident in Britain simply by virtue of working temporarily in Britain for a few weeks or months.
…
106. These criteria are broadly similar to those which apply to the question of whether an employee working wholly outside Great Britain may be liable to pay income tax in Great Britain. So if an employee pays income tax in Britain because he is ordinarily resident in Britain and works for an employer resident in Britain, that will provide an indication that the employee is probably caught by regulation 9(2). However, the criteria are not identical, and so income tax liability should not be treated as a conclusive indication."
"I do not attempt to give any definition of the word "resident." In my opinion it has no technical or special meaning for the purposes of the Income Tax Act. "Ordinarily resident" also seems to me to have no such technical or special meaning. In particular it is in my opinion impossible to restrict its connotation to its duration. A member of this House may well be said to be ordinarily resident in London during the Parliamentary session and in the country during the recess. If it has any definite meaning I should say it means according to the way in which a man's life is usually ordered."
"My Lords, the word 'ordinarily' may be taken first. The Act on the one hand does not say 'usually' or 'most of the time' or 'exclusively' or 'principally' nor does it say on the other hand 'occasionally' or 'exceptionally' or 'now and then,' though in various sections it applies to the word 'resident,' with a full sense of choice, adverbs like 'temporarily' and ' actually.' I think the converse to 'ordinarily' is 'extraordinarily' and that part of the regular order of a man's life, adopted voluntarily and for settled purposes, is not 'extraordinary.'"
"…now settled by authority that the question of residence or ordinary residence is one of degree, that there is no technical or special meaning attached to either expression for the purposes of the Income Tax Act."
"I, therefore, accept the two tax cases as authoritative guidance, displaceable only by evidence (which does not exist) of a subsequent change in English usage. I agree with Lord Denning M.R. that in their natural and ordinary meaning the words mean 'that the person must be habitually and normally resident here, apart from temporary or occasional absences of long or short duration.' The significance of the adverb 'habitually' is that it recalls two necessary features mentioned by Viscount Sumner in Lysaght's case, namely residence adopted voluntarily and for settled purposes.
…
I note that in the 19th century bankruptcy case In re Norris (1888) 4 T.L.R. 452 it was accepted that one person could be ordinarily resident in two countries at the same time. This is, I have no doubt, a significant feature of the words' ordinary meaning for it is an important factor distinguishing ordinary residence from domicile.
…
Unless, therefore, it can be shown that the statutory framework or the legal context in which the words are used requires a different meaning, I unhesitatingly subscribe to the view that 'ordinarily resident' refers to a man's abode in a particular place or country which he has adopted voluntarily and for settled purposes as part of the regular order of his life for the time being, whether of short or of long duration.
…
There are two, and no more than two, respects in which the mind of the 'propositus' is important in determining ordinary residence. The residence must be voluntarily adopted. Enforced presence by reason of kidnapping or imprisonment, or a Robinson Crusoe existence on a desert island with no opportunity of escape, may be so overwhelming a factor as to negative the will to be where one is.
And there must be a degree of settled purpose. The purpose may be one; or there may be several. It may be specific or general. All that the law requires is that there is a settled purpose. This is not to say that the 'propositus' intends to stay where he is indefinitely; indeed his purpose, while settled, may be for a limited period. Education, business or profession, employment, health, family or merely love of the place spring to mind as common reasons for a choice of regular abode. And there may well be many others. All that is necessary is that the purpose of living where one does has a sufficient degree of continuity to be properly described as settled.
…
.. if there be proved a regular habitual mode of life in a particular place, the continuity of which has persisted despite temporary absences, ordinary residence is established provided only it is adopted voluntarily and for a settled purpose.
…
Counsel for the local education authorities recognised, and, indeed, submitted, that it is a necessary consequence of the 'real home' test, or its variant, that a man can have only one ordinary residence at any one time. It was said on behalf of Brent and Barnet that this view was supported by the 'recoupment' provisions to which I have already referred. For the reasons already given I derive no assistance from those provisions. What is important is to note that the test is wholly inconsistent with the nature and ordinary meaning of the words as construed by this House in the two tax cases.
…
By giving the words their natural and ordinary meaning one helps to prevent the growth and multiplication of refined and subtle distinctions in the law's use of common English words. Nothing is more confusing and more likely to bring the statute law into disrepute than a proliferation by judicial interpretation of special meanings, when Parliament has not expressly enacted any."
"vii) 'Ordinarily resident' refers to a person's abode in a particular place or country which he has adopted voluntarily and for settled purposes as part of the regular order of his life, whether of short or long duration: R v Barnet LBC ex p Shah [1983] 2 AC 309, 343;
viii) Just as a person may be resident in two countries at the same time, he may be ordinarily resident in two countries at the same time: Re Norris (1888) 4 TLR 452; R v Barnet LBC ex p Shah [1983] 2 AC 309, 342;
ix) It is wrong to conduct a search for the place where a person has his permanent base or centre adopted for general purposes; or, in other words to look for his 'real home': R v Barnet LBC ex p Shah [1983] 2 AC 309, 345 and 348;
x) There are only two respects in which a person's state of mind is relevant in determining ordinary residence. First, the residence must be voluntarily adopted; and second, there must be a degree of settled purpose: R v Barnet LBC ex p Shah [1983] 2 AC 309, 344;
…
xii) The purpose, while settled, may be for a limited period; and the relevant purposes may include education, business or profession as well as a love of a place: R v Barnet LBC ex p Shah [1983] 2 AC 309,344;"