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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Allen & Ors v GMB [2008] EWCA Civ 810 (16 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/810.html Cite as: [2008] EWCA Civ 810, [2008] ICR 1407, [2008] IRLR 690 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(ELIAS J, MR P JACQUES CBE and MR S YEBOAH)
REF NO: EAT 042506DA
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
____________________
Allen & ors |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GMB |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr John Cavanagh QC and Mr Jason Galbraith-Marten (instructed by Thompsons) for the Respondents
Hearing dates : 7 + 8 May 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
"The approach to the pay structure was always to get as much as possible for everybody. Men and women were treated no differently at all in that respect."
The statutory provisions
"It is unlawful for an organisation [of workers] in the case of a woman who is a member of the organisation to discriminate against her
(a) in the way it affords her access to any benefits, facilities or services or by refusing or deliberately omitting her access to them or
(b) by subjecting her to any other detriment."
"applies to her a provision, criterion or practice which he applies or would apply equally to a man, but
(i) which is such that it would be to the detriment of a considerably larger proportion of women than of men;
(ii) which he cannot show to be justifiable irrespective of the sex of the person to whom it is applied; and
(iii) which is to her detriment."
The decision of the ET
"7.54 The end goal was to achieve single status viewed as the panacea. En route to the end goal, the aims were to avoid privatisations, avoid job losses, avoid cuts in hours, avoid or minimise 'losers' and in so far as losers were inevitable to get the best possible pay protection. Those aims are all legitimate So let us turn to the proportionality of the means to the end."
"7.56 As we have found, the means which they adopted in respect of Mrs Spayne [a White Book employee] were to provide her with advice on back pay which as Mrs Bartholomew [a Union official and negotiator] says should have enabled her to make a 'fully informed choice'. Our finding is that the advice given to her was the antithesis of that. The Union's means were to keep her in the dark and to secure her acceptance of a deal which involved her sacrificing her rights in order to benefit others which places her at a disadvantage and fails to give her the benefit of the usual level of advice to enable her to make a fully informed choice."
"7.57 [As regards] Mrs Bone and the others [the Purple Book employees], the Union claimed to have been negotiating towards some 'deal' over back pay. It is clear from the facts that the Council were procrastinating in making lame excuses which no Union would normally tolerate. The least the Union should, and normally would, have done was to issue proceedings to establish an early date for the calculation of back pay and then if necessary to agree to stay that claim pending the single status job evaluation. Neither before or after that [job evaluation study] was a word of advice given to this group about back pay. The Union deliberately omitted to give this advice and refused to support litigation in our judgment because it did not want to 'rock the boat' and offend the Council so that progression to single status would be delayed or impeded."
"7.60 What did the Union actually do? First of all it rushed headlong into accepting an ill-considered back pay deal accepting the Council's plea of poverty without question The Union did not take any advice or probe the Council in any way to see whether, although there may not have been a provision in their budget for the making of any more substantial back pay settlement, they could raise the money by the selling of capital assets or by making savings in areas other than payroll. Very little care indeed went into the assessment of the back offer."
"7.61 It is striking how much care, effort and discussion went into pay protection and how little went into back pay. We believe the Union officials in Middlesbrough knew that they were neglecting the interests of the back pay claimants and that if they had taken legal advice they would have been told so. They did not want to hear that."
"7.64 The Union is entitled to pursue policies which oppose privatisation etc and is entitled up to a point to set its own priorities. However the requirement that men and women are paid the same for work of equal value has been a statutory obligation in this country for three decades. The means to the end of opposing privatisation which this Union has adopted involves disregard of Parliamentary priorities and reversing the order in which the Equal Pay Act requires equality of pay to be dealt with ie, instead of establishing equal value and then moving on to the consequence of back pay they agreed that the Council could pin down the back pay claimants at low value in advance of equal pay being introduced going forward."
"7.66 But the worst aspect of the case in our judgment was the way in which the relatively unsophisticated Union members were manipulated into either accepting the offer or doing nothing in the case of the APT&C workers by such alarmist information as was in the documents the letters were phrased in such a way as to produce a real fear amongst the members that pushing for more would involve job losses and make them traitors to their colleagues They were laden with 'spin' in order to produce the end which the Union wanted ie acceptance."
"7.68 In order to justify persuading a group which was overwhelmingly women to be altruistic we believe that the Union must be able to demonstrate their members were persuaded by truth to be so as opposed to duped or frightened into being so. Its obligation to its members is that in return for their subscription it will provide to them without discrimination, benefits and services, not deliberately omit to afford them access to those benefits and services and not subject them to any detriment We find they deliberately omitted to provide the service abusing its influence to press the employer to comply with its obligation under the Equal Pay Act, those obligations not only being to achieve equal pay going forward but to compensate for past inequality."
"7.69 Our finding is that the Union were not prepared to change by giving away previously won rights and having 'losers' and therefore they were not prepared to press the Council to comply with its obligations under the Act The law has to balance Union officials' freedom to set priorities against its duty to all of its members. If the officials do not agree with the priorities that the British and European legislature impose upon employers and the balance which has been struck by the law, the Union is not 'free' to disregard the rights of a sector of its members because it has different priorities and to be relieved of its obligations towards those members to use its best endeavours to compel their employer to comply with its obligations under the Equal Pay Act. It can with their consent draw a line under 'the past' but not ignore it or devalue its importance to a negligible level. Still less is it free to procure the acceptance or acquiescence of those members by a marked economy of truth in what it says and writes to them. It is for those reasons that we cannot accept that what the Union did in this case was a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim."
" The moment anyone signed up with Mr Cross nothing more was done for them at all and in fact they were portrayed to other Union members and to the Council as self-centred money-grabbers. We find the victimisation claim proved."
The decision of the EAT
" We need not explore this point further because Mr Stafford accepts that whilst this paragraph of the decision is somewhat problematic, he does not suggest that the tribunal was intending to say that the aim which the Union was seeking to achieve was of itself illegitimate. He submits that reading the judgment fairly, it was plain that the tribunal found that the Union were seeking to achieve a legitimate objective. They were entitled to adopt the priorities that they did, but the means adopted to achieve those priorities were disproportionate."
"83 The confusion lies in failing carefully to analyse what is required to establish objective justification. The question is whether the means to achieve the objective are proportionate to that objective. It is not whether the actions of the Union are otherwise lawful or achieved without negligence or in a morally acceptable way. The concept of proportionate means is not focusing upon whether Union has or has not conducted itself appropriately. The issue is whether the difference in treatment can be justified as a proportional response to a legitimate objective."
"87 The issue is how this renders the action unlawful indirect sex discrimination. To answer that it is in our view helpful to focus upon what would have occurred had accurate information been provided, and had no manipulation taken place.
"88.The tribunal estimates that many of these women would have withheld their support for the Union's stance had they appreciated the extent of their sacrifices. If that were so then the Union would either have had to modify its stance by changing its priorities, or continue to adopt the same basic strategy and risk alienating this group of members. If they had done the former, it would not have involved the adoption of different means to obtain the same objective. It would have involved having to adopt a different objective and one which gave greater weight to the interests of those seeking back pay. If it had adopted the latter position and had continued to adopt the original strategy notwithstanding the greater level of dissent, there would have been no change in the objective and no change in the means designed to achieve it."
"89.In short, the fact that the objective might be achieved by using unlawful, even dishonest practices does not necessarily mean that the means are disproportionate once it is accepted that the aim itself is legitimate. "
"91.Once it is accepted that the objective or aim was legitimate, then in our judgment it is difficult to see how it can be alleged that the means were inappropriate. The policy or practice under consideration involved determining priorities. There are not, in truth, different means of achieving that objective. In so far as the means involve giving greater weight or influence to the interests of the back payers, they simply change or distort the objective. This is one of those cases where the identity of the objective in substance determines the means.
"94. The object of the policy was to give as much emphasis as possible to the interests of those who lost out on the new job evaluation scheme. Mr Stafford did not dispute the legitimacy of that objective. The Union might have increased the cake available to all and the tribunal was critical of it for failing to do so."
"95.The Union might also have misled some of the members into accepting the priorities without a full understanding of what was involved and, in particular, without appreciating what they were personally sacrificing. But that is not suggesting that other more proportional means could have been used to achieve the same objective. Rather it is saying that had the Union acted properly, the objective might not have been reached at all and some other objective would have had to be adopted."
Discussion
"applied a practice of agreeing to a low back pay settlement for Mrs Spayne and doing nothing for the APTLC workers in order to leave as much money as possible for the pay line in the future and pay protection where necessary."
A little later, in paragraph 7.43, the ET said:
"We must remember throughout that the Union's practice was that all losers must be protected to the greatest extent possible The practice involved striking a balance between back pay, future pay and the need for protection."
"7.54 The end goal was to achieve single status viewed as the panacea. En route to the end goal, the aims were to avoid privatisations, avoid job losses, avoid cuts in hours, avoid or minimise losers and, in so far as losers were inevitable, to get the best possible pay protection. Those aims are all legitimate."
"7.69 we cannot accept that what the Union did in this case was a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim."
"If the officials do not agree with the priorities that the British and European Legislature impose upon employers and the balance which has been struck by the law, the Union is not 'free' to disregard the rights of a sector of its members because it has different priorities and to be relieved of its obligations towards those members to use its best endeavours to compel their employer to comply with its obligations under the Equal Pay Act. It can with their consent draw a line under the past but not ignore it or devalue its importance to a negligible level. Still less is it free to procure the acceptance or acquiescence of those members by a marked economy of truth in what it says and writes to them."
"So a practice which involved persuading those who had [equal pay] claims to take less than they were worth [or] not to bring them at all, would disadvantage all the test claimants."
"helpful to focus upon what would have occurred had accurate information been provided and had no manipulation taken place." (paragraph 87)
"If they had done the former, it would not have involved the adoption of different means to obtain the same objective. It would have involved having to adopt a different objective and one which gave greater weight to the interests of those seeking back pay. If it had adopted the latter position and had continued to adopt the original strategy notwithstanding the greater level of dissent, there would have been no change in the means designed to achieve it In short, the fact that the objective might be achieved by using unlawful, even dishonest, practices does not necessarily mean that the means are disproportionate once it is accepted that the aim itself is legitimate."
(1) Direct, not indirect discrimination
(2) The statutory language
(3) Policy
(4) Disparate impact
"7.45 The disadvantaged groups are those who, but for the practice applied, i.e. the balance struck, would have gained more than they actually did The disadvantaged group are those GMB members who had, and could have been predicted to have, a good back pay claim.
7.46 The advantaged group comprises everybody else`. The more the disadvantaged group's back pay rights were sacrificed, the more everyone else would benefit. The disadvantaged groups would also benefit from a higher pay line but at their own expense! So the advantaged group to put it another way are those who get more than they would have got had the disadvantaged enforced their rights under the Equal Pay Act as opposed to doing "the deal" which their Union recommended to them or doing nothing at all, save waiting for Council to decide on the APT&C workers."
"Mr Cavanagh's approach focuses on the winners and losers in the overall scheme of single status rather than the effect of the union's policy. That shift of focus does not identify the effect of the particular policy. These potentially compensating advantages are in truth no more than mitigating features so far as the claimants are concerned. In so far as they have any relevance, it is in the context of justification rather than in the assessing disparate impact.
In our view the [ET] approached this issue perfectly properly and reached a conclusion which was in truth inevitable on the statistical material, which was not itself disputed."
(5) The ET "substituted its own view"
"The principle of proportionality requires the tribunal to take into account the reasonable needs of the business. But it has to make its own judgment, upon a fair and detailed analysis of the working practices and business considerations involved, as to whether the proposal is reasonably necessary. I reject the employers' submission that, when reaching its conclusion, the employment tribunal needs to consider only whether or not it is satisfied that the employer's views are within the range of views reasonable in the particular circumstances."
Conclusion
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Tuckey: