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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 >> McNeil & Ors v Revenue And Customs [2019] EWCA Civ 1112 (03 July 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1112.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1112, [2019] WLR(D) 372, [2019] IRLR 915, [2020] 2 All ER 33, [2020] ICR 515 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Mrs Justice Simler DBE (President)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division))
SENIOR PRESIDENT OF TRIBUNALS
(Lord Justice Ryder)
and
LORD JUSTICE HOLROYDE
____________________
DOREEN MCNEIL and others |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS FOR HER MAJESTY'S REVENUE AND CUSTOMS |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Thomas Linden QC and Mr Robert Moretto (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 19th & 20th March 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Underhill:
INTRODUCTION
"(i) What is or are the 'factors' within s. 69 (1) of the Equality Act 2010 causing the difference in basic pay between any Claimant and comparator who has a higher basic pay?
(This issue will include resolution of the parties' respective positions as to the correct definition of the relevant 'factors' and whether, or to what extent, the precise definition has a material bearing on the correct overall analysis under s. 69)
(ii) Whether in light of the proper definition of the factor or factors, that factor or factors put the Claimants and women at a particular disadvantage when compared with men in Grades 6 and/or 7 (respectively) for the purposes of s. 69 (2) of the Equality Act 2010?
(This issue will include resolution of the parties' respective positions as to the appropriate pool(s) of comparison and whether the statistical and/or other evidence demonstrates a relevant particular disadvantage within the appropriate pool(s))."
THE BACKGROUND LAW
THE LEGISLATION
"(1) If the terms of A's work do not (by whatever means) include a sex equality clause, they are to be treated as including one.
(2) A sex equality clause is a provision that has the following effect—
(a) if a term of A's is less favourable to A than a corresponding term of B's is to B, A's term is modified so as not to be less favourable;
(b) if A does not have a term which corresponds to a term of B's that benefits B, A's terms are modified so as to include such a term.
(3)-(4) …"
"(1) The sex equality clause in A's terms has no effect in relation to a difference between A's terms and B's terms if the responsible person shows that the difference is because of a material factor reliance on which –
(a) does not involve treating A less favourably because of A's sex than the responsible person treats B, and
(b) if the factor is within subsection (2), is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
(2) A factor is within this subsection if A shows that, as a result of the factor, A and persons of the same sex doing work equal to A's are put at a particular disadvantage when compared with persons of the opposite sex doing work equal to A's.
(3)-(6) …"
The effect is that the defence is available if but only if the differential complained of can be shown to be caused by a "factor" which is neither directly (sub-section (1) (a)) nor indirectly (sub-sections (1) (b) and (2)) discriminatory. In the present case we are concerned only with indirect discrimination.
"(1) A person (A) discriminates against another (B) if A applies to B a provision, criterion or practice which is discriminatory in relation to a relevant protected characteristic of B's.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), a provision, criterion or practice is discriminatory in relation to a relevant protected characteristic of B's if—
(a) A applies, or would apply, it to persons with whom B does not share the characteristic,
(b) it puts, or would put, persons with whom B shares the characteristic at a particular disadvantage when compared with persons with whom B does not share it,
(c) it puts, or would put, B at that disadvantage, and
(d) A cannot show it to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
(3) …"
The phrase "provision, criterion or practice" in section 19 is usually shortened to "PCP". I should also note that the term "indirect discrimination" is sometimes inaccurately used to refer to a case satisfying only requirements (a)-(c) (or, in the case of section 69, sub-section (2)), i.e. to a case which will constitute indirect discrimination unless justified: I will refer to such a case as one of "prima facie indirect discrimination".
"… where an apparently neutral provision, criterion or practice would put persons of one sex at a particular disadvantage compared with persons of the other sex, unless that provision, criterion or practice is objectively justified by a legitimate aim, and the means of achieving that aim are appropriate and necessary".
An identical definition is to be found in article 2.2 (b) of the Equality Directive 2000/78/EC (sometimes called "the Framework Directive"), which proscribes discrimination in the employment field on the basis of other protected characteristics. The EU legislation does not have the same distinction as the 2010 Act between discrimination as regards pay, or other contractual terms, and discrimination in the employment field generally.
"… he applies to her a requirement or condition which he applies or would apply equally to a man but—
(i) which is such that the proportion of women who can comply with it is considerably smaller than the proportion of men who can comply with it, and
(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 because she cannot comply with it."
Although the change to the current formulation (which preceded the 2010 Act) was intended to avoid some undesirable complexities of analysis which the original language was thought to encourage, the essential character of the requisite comparison has not changed. That is apparent in particular from the judgments of Lady Hale in Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police v Homer [2012] UKSC 15, [2012] ICR 704, (esp. at para. 14 (pp. 709-710)) and Essop v Home Office [2017] UKSC 27, [2017] 1 WLR 1343: in the latter she emphasises the "salient features" common to all the various iterations of the indirect discrimination concept (see paras. 23-29 (pp. 1353-4)).
INDIRECT DISCRIMINATION: SOME POINTS
"A fourth salient feature is that there is no requirement that the PCP in question put every member of the group sharing the particular protected characteristic at a disadvantage. The later definitions cannot have restricted the original definitions, which referred to the proportion who could, or could not, meet the requirement. Obviously, some women are taller or stronger than some men and can meet a height or strength requirement that many women could not. Some women can work full time without difficulty whereas others cannot. Yet these are paradigm examples of a PCP which may be indirectly discriminatory."
"It is for the national court to assess whether it may take into account those statistics, that is to say, whether they cover enough individuals, whether they illustrate purely fortuitous or short-term phenomena, and whether, in general, they appear to be significant."
(The identical passage appears in the later decision of the CJEU in R v Secretary of State for Employment, ex p Seymour-Smith C-167/97 [1999] 2 AC 554, which concerned barrier discrimination.) It appears that the Court is there using the term "significant" in a sense which is broader than, though it includes, "statistical significance" in the technical sense. The thinking appears to be that statistics should only be taken into account if, when properly understood and assessed, they are potentially probative of the existence of a gender-related explanation for the pay disparity between the two groups (or, in the case, of barrier discrimination, that the PCP has a disparate impact).
THE CODE
"177. Once employers have determined which male and female employees are doing equal work, they need to collate and compare pay information to identify any significant inequalities by:
- calculating average basic pay and total earnings, and
- comparing access to and amounts received of each element of the pay package.
…
179. Employers then need to review the pay comparisons to identify any gender pay inequalities and decide if any are significant enough to warrant further investigation. It is advisable to record all the significant or patterned pay inequalities that have been identified. The Commission's toolkit gives detailed advice and guidance on collecting and comparing pay information and when pay gaps may be regarded as significant."
"As a general guide, any differences of 5% or more, or 3% or more if there is a pattern of gaps favouring one sex, will require exploration and explanation."
THE PAY SYSTEM
THE DECISIONS OF THE ET AND THE EAT
THE CLAIMANTS' CASE
"It is the Claimants' case that the Respondent's use of length of service as a determinant of pay in both Grades 6 and 7 places, and has at all material times placed, women at a particular disadvantage compared with men because those grades are historically male-dominated and women have only more recently begun to be recruited or promoted into those grades in greater numbers, with the result that women tend to be disproportionately over-represented at the lower end of the pay scale for each grade and disproportionately under-represented at the upper end of the pay scale for each grade. That effect has been exacerbated by the Respondent's failure over the years to reduce the length of the pay scales and the period taken to move from minimum to maximum for the two grades in question and by the imposition of the public sector 'pay freeze' in 2010, which has had the effect of protecting the higher pay of longer-serving employees and precluding any narrowing of the gap for employees with shorter service."
In short, therefore, the factor which the Claimants said put women in the two grades at a disadvantage was "[HMRC's] use of length of service as a determinant of pay" (for short, "length of service"); and the reason why it was said to do so was that disproportionate recruitment of women into the grades in recent years (for short, "differential recruitment") meant that they were disproportionately represented at the lower end of the pay band and disproportionately under-represented at the higher end ("differential distribution").
"The most appropriate method for testing the core allegation set out at paragraph 3 above is to analyse whether the proportion of women within the lower part (e.g. the bottom quartile or decile) of the pay scale for each grade is significantly greater than the proportion of men in the same part of the pay scale and, conversely, whether the proportion of women within the upper part (e.g. the top quartile or decile) of the pay scale for each grade is significantly lower than the proportion of men in the same part of the pay scale."
That proposition is then developed in the following paragraphs.
"Therefore, whilst comparison of crude averages may be a useful tool in the context of an internal equal pay audit to identify potential areas for further investigation or in the context of a case where the basis on which pay is determined is wholly lacking in transparency, in a case such as the present where the allegation is about a particular alleged effect of a known determinant of pay on the distribution of men and women respectively within the pay scales, use of crude averages is not a meaningful, logical or adequate method for testing that allegation. At most, a comparison of averages (whether mean or median) may be used as a secondary method for double-checking the impact, since the alleged effect of length of service in this case would tend to produce consistently lower average pay for women than men within the relevant grades, though the differences in percentage terms may indeed, for the reasons set out above, be relatively small."
I need not summarise the "reasons set out above", because I will have to come back to them in the course of my discussion of the issues: see paras. 77-80 below.
"So far as comparison of average pay is concerned, in accordance with section 4 of the appended report, the Claimants accept the Respondent's calculations set out in paragraphs 34 and 35 of the Grounds of Resistance ... The Claimants do not therefore allege that the differences in average pay are or have been consistently greater than 3% and do not pursue the allegation in paragraph 7 (c) of the Details of Complaint to that effect. However, for reasons set out above, comparison of crude averages does not constitute a meaningful, logical or appropriate methodology for assessing particular disadvantage in this case."
There is a slight elision there. The "Respondent's calculations" which are referred to relate to the mean rather than the median (see para. 36 above), and accepting them would not require the Claimants to abandon their case based on the median as originally pleaded at para. 7 (c) of the Details of Claim (see para. 35): that is of course consistent with the stance adopted in para. 11 of the Particulars. (The Claimants took that stance notwithstanding that Dr Hall herself had expressed the view, at section 4 of her report, that the differentials in both the median and the mean figures, despite the latter being under 3%, tended to suggest that women were at a disadvantage compared to men.)
THE DECISION OF THE ET
(1) It had originally been pleaded, as he noted at para. 3 of his Reasons, "that the length of service criterion disadvantages women because they have had later career starts and/or career breaks to have children"; but that case was abandoned in the March 2014 Particulars. Previous equal pay challenges based on the use of length of service as a determinant of pay have proceeded on the basis that those were the reasons why it put women at a particular disadvantage: see in particular the litigation relating to the pay of female inspectors in the Health and Safety Executive in determining the pay of its inspectors (Cadman v Health and Safety Executive [2004] EWCA Civ 1317, [2005] ICR 1546, (CA) and [2006] ICR 1623 (CJEU) and Wilson v Health and Safety Executive [2009] EWCA Civ 1074, [2010] ICR 302[8]). It appears that the Claimants' advisers initially assumed that it could be demonstrated that that was the case here. But we were told that once the relevant figures were obtained and analysed they did not show that either reason was operative in these grades.
(2) The Claimants had in the May 2015 Particulars disavowed "any complaint that either of the other determinants of basic pay (starting salary and performance) is discriminatory": Reasons, para. 4 (1).
(3) The Judge noted that in the March 2014 Particulars the Claimants
"eschew an 'Enderby' claim (based on gender segregation between different jobs of equal value attracting different pay rates) or a 'Seymour-Smith' claim (involving the application of a provision, criterion or practice ('PCP') which divides employees into 'advantaged' and 'disadvantaged' groups and with which a smaller proportion of women than men can comply)"
(Reasons, para. 4 (2)).
(4) The Judge recorded at para. 4 (3) of the Reasons that the Claimants "accept that average pay statistics … do not show significant long-term differences between the pay of men and women". This is of course a reference to para. 15 of the March 2014 Particulars: see para. 42 above. It is important to emphasise that the argument before the Judge proceeded unequivocally on that basis.
"I have seen no evidence of the gender balance of those seeking appointment to grade 7 or grade 6 positions as against those appointed, no doubt because direct sex discrimination was never alleged and it was not suggested that the female numbers have been depressed by any form of indirect discrimination in the recruitment process [emphasis in original]"
Issue (1): Defining the Factor
"Of course, read literally, [the issue] could be answered as Mr Linden proposes: pay differences undoubtedly arise from all of the factors which he identifies. But in the context of this case, the sole criterion that matters is length of service. The Claimants rely on none other. They complain of breach of the equality clause in respect of 'a [my emphasis] difference"' in pay (s69 (1)) in so far as that difference is referable to length of service, but not otherwise. In these circumstances, I am satisfied that the 'material [my emphasis] factor' within s69 (1) is, as Mr Cooper submits, length of service."
Issue (2): Particular Disadvantage
"The Claimants' statistics are said to demonstrate 'bunching' or 'clustering' of men in the upper quartiles or deciles of the pay ranges and women in the lower quartiles or deciles. The Respondents cite figures which, they say, show a narrow and steadily diminishing gap in average pay across both grades. There was no real dispute about the figures themselves: the contest was as to what they prove."
"41. Mr Cooper submitted as follows.
"(1) The methodology apt to test the factor relied upon under s.69(2) must be logically fitted to the Claimants' case.
(2) The Claimants' case is that the system of pay progression based on length of service produces a disparate distribution by gender across the pay scales.
(3) Comparison of mean averages (as proposed by the Respondents) does not assist in a proper evaluation of the Claimants' case because (a) it brings into account the large part of basic pay which is unaffected by the s.69(2) factor and (b) it masks differential distribution by smoothing it out.
(4) By contrast, an analysis of the proportions of men and women within each decile or quartile of the pay scales will serve to identify any disparity and demonstrate whether it is significant.
(5) Dr Hall's Chi-square analysis lends further support to the Claimants' case.
(6) Application of the methodology referred to in (4) and (5) shows clearly that women are over-represented as the lower end of the pay scales and under-represented at the upper end.
(7) Accordingly, without prejudice to any objective justification defence, particular disadvantage is made out.
42. Mr Linden replied as follows.
(1) The Claimants' statistical approach based on distribution is flawed because it ignores actual pay, replacing it with an approximation.
(2) The Claimants' figures also ignore distribution both within and outside any selected decile, quartile or other segment of the population.
(3) The Claimants' case depends on impermissibly breaking down basic pay, which is indivisible, in order to isolate the notional sub-element referable to length of service.
(4) The Claimants' approach is arbitrary in that the pools for comparison would have to depend (for the purposes, presumably, of the issue under s.69(2) of individual disadvantage, i.e. whether 'A' is put at a particular disadvantage), on the identity of the particular Claimant under consideration.
(5) The Claimants' approach is also crude, misleading and, in practical terms, unworkable.
(6) Dr Hall's Chi-squared analysis is unsound and proves nothing.
(7) The only proper way to test the Claimants' case on group disadvantage is through measuring mean average pay. On that approach, the undisputed figures conclude the particular disadvantage issue in favour of the Respondents."
"43. … I agree with Mr Linden that distribution cannot be equated with, or allowed to supplant, pay. To state the obvious, the law is concerned with ensuring equal pay for equal work. Ascertaining the distribution of men and women within any particular segment of the overall sample may provide a partial picture of apparent advantage, but it says nothing about actual pay difference, within or outside the segment.
44. The second fundamental problem with the Claimants' argument is that it ignores the undisputed reality that, as the average figures show, there is no significant long-term difference between the basic pay of men and women in either of the two grades. Given that reality, it necessarily follows that, in so far as selective analysis based on deciles, quartiles or any other slice of the total grade population reveals a 'clustering' phenomenon apparently favouring men over women, there must be a (more or less) counter-balancing advantage the other way, within and/or outside the relevant decile, quartile or other slice. Otherwise, the mean figures would not tell the story they do. This being so, the methodology advanced on behalf of the Claimants cannot be regarded as a reliable instrument and certainly does not substantiate the assertion that women are collectively disadvantaged.
45. Thirdly, I am much more impressed by the evidence of Dr Brown than that of Dr Hall, whose qualifications and experience do not seem to me, with respect, to equip her fully for the task entrusted to her. I accept the entirety of Dr Brown's evidence, including his remarks about the chi-squared test. It satisfies me that the statistics relied on by the Claimants are statistically insignificant.
46. Fourthly, I agree with Mr Linden that it is not permissible to divide basic pay into separate elements in order to challenge the length of service criterion. The sex equality clause under s. 66 modifies any 'term' shown to be less favourable than the corresponding 'term' of any comparator. The term relied on in this case is that which entitles the Claimants and their comparators to basic pay. Basic pay is indivisible, albeit that the figure in any particular case is explained by several factors of which length of service is one. Moreover, for the reasons already given, the Claimants' statistical evidence does not make good a theory of particular disadvantage attributable to any proposed 'sub-term', even if such were permissible.
47. Fifthly, I agree with Mr Linden that the distribution-based approach favoured by the Claimants would be unworkable in practice and liable to produce most undesirable results. If it was permissible, no employer could be sure of escaping liability under the equal pay provisions, or at least being put at risk in having to make out objective justification, since it would never be possible to guard against a complaint that, on this or that selective statistical analysis of a portion of the relevant population, one gender group appeared to enjoy an advantage over the other.
48. Sixthly, the logic of the Claimants' case does indeed, as Mr Linden pointed out, admit the possibly that distribution statistics could establish the 'particular disadvantage' of one gender group in respect of basic pay in a case where overall mean figures showed, by reference to the same term, that it was substantially advantaged. If the law contemplated a finding of particular disadvantage of gender group X as against gender group Y in circumstances where group X was the better paid of the two, Mr Bumble's celebrated remark would be entirely apposite. I do not, however, accept that view of the law.
49. Seventhly, although I accept that the categories of indirect discrimination are not closed and the law is constantly developing, it is a material fact that there is no authority to support the Claimants' case. I do not refer only to decisions of the higher courts. The Equality and Human Rights Commission ('EHRC') Code of Practice on Equal Pay (2011) says nothing about distribution-based analysis. It does refer (para. 177) to the need for employers to calculate average basic pay and total earnings. Likewise the guidance in the EHRC 'Equal Pay Audit Toolkit' ('the Toolkit'), which points out that 'significant' differences in pay (as referred to, for example, in the Code, para. 179) are to be reckoned in percentages of basic pay and total earnings.
50. For all of these reasons, I reject the Claimants' case on the statistics issue. The result is that they fail to establish particular disadvantage by their chosen route of distribution-based analysis. No alternative is advanced and, as I have noted, they do not dispute that average figures do not disclose significant, long-term differences between the basic pay of men and women in either of the two relevant grades. I am in no doubt that they are right to accept that those figures are against them. The Respondents have demonstrated (not that they bore any legal onus) that the differences in basic pay have been consistently marginal, have diminished over time, and will diminish further as time passes."
THE DECISION OF THE EAT
THE APPEAL
"The EAT (and ET) erred in adopting a construction of and/or approach to the concept of 'particular disadvantage' under Equality Act ('EqA') 2010 which measures the wrong thing, in particular by applying a method (comparison of total average basic pay) which measures the size or value of (average) differences in pay relative to total pay, instead of measuring the disparate impact on women compared with men caused by the factor of length of service by analysing the relative distribution of men and women along the pay range in each of the relevant grades."
They then go on to plead that "that fundamental error underpins each of the following subsidiary grounds of appeal". Those subsidiary grounds are:
"(1) The EAT (and ET) erred in construing the concept of 'particular disadvantage' in s. 69 (2) EqA 2010 as turning on a measure of the (average) value of the differences between 'whole' terms (in this case, average total basic pay), instead of an analysis of whether the material factor (here, length of service) operates in a way that means it is particularly women who suffer disadvantage (i.e. who receive lower pay as a result of being lower down the pay ranges) regardless of the size or value of the differences. The correct approach requires a differential distribution analysis looking at the relative distribution of men and women along the pay range in each of the relevant grades.
(2) The EAT (and ET) erred in reaching the purported conclusion that the statistics relied on by the Appellants were not sufficiently significant. Both that conclusion and the evidence of the Respondent's expert, Dr Brown, relied on in support of it, were premised on the fundamental underlying error that it is the (average) amount or value of pay differentials, as opposed to their disparate incidence as between women and men, that has to be measured. In light of the ET's finding of fact (recorded by the EAT at [§§30 (vii) EAT judgment]) that the statistics confirmed the clustering of women at the bottom of the pay range and men at the top of the pay range, and in any event based on the statistical evidence of differential distribution as a whole, the only proper conclusion was that significant disparate impact (and consequently particular disadvantage) was established.
(3) Alternatively, if (contrary to the Appellants' primary case) a differential distribution analysis was not the sole appropriate method for testing particular disadvantage, the EAT (and ET) erred in (a) holding that it was not open to the Appellants to maintain, and in failing to consider, their alternative case that such disadvantage should be analysed by reference to average variable pay together with evidence of differential distribution; and (b) not concluding that analysis of average variable pay established that length of service had put the Appellants and women generally at a particular disadvantage compared with men."
THE "OVERRIDING" GROUND: THE CORRECT APPROACH IN PRINCIPLE
£50,000: 55 women; 45 men
£70,000: 55 men
£80,000: 45 women.
Assume that that distribution is the result of the factor relied on by the employer under section 69. On Mr Cooper's approach the women in the pool are at a particular disadvantage because they are, in terms of numbers, disproportionately at the bottom "end" of the scale (and men disproportionately at the top). However, that leaves out of account the fact the men in the top half are only just over the mid-point, whereas the women are all at the maximum, so that a large minority of the women earn much more than any man – and the average pay of the women in the pool is greater than that of the men.
"where an undertaking applies a system of pay which is totally lacking in transparency, it is for the employer to prove that his practice in the matter of wages is not discriminatory, if a female worker establishes, in relation to a relatively large number of employees, that the average pay for women is less than that for men [emphasis supplied]".
That passage is repeated in Enderby, at para. 14 of the Court's judgment (p. 161 D-E). I would not in fact put great weight on it in this context because, again, the Court was not concerned with the particular issue before us; but it is legitimate at least to note that it apparently regarded comparison of average earnings for men and for women as the natural way of identifying discrimination within a particular pool.
SUBSIDIARY GROUND (1)
"… I do not accept Mr Cooper's contention that where average pay is to be used as a proxy indicator for differential distribution (or relied on together with differential distribution), as a matter of law this can only be by reference to differences in average pay within the variable part of the pay only, in other words in respect of amounts above the pay grade minimum (the so-called variable pay element). This argument amounts to a contention that basic pay can be subdivided into notionally separate elements representing, in effect, base salary and a length of service element, even where there is no evidence that as a matter of contract or practice such a distinction is drawn within basic pay; and where the Employment Tribunal found as a fact that basic pay in this case was indivisible and could be explained by several factors of which length of service was one. Neither the EA 2010, nor authority supports Mr Cooper's approach. Nor does the Code or Commission guidance support it."
She develops those points in the following paragraphs. At paras. 53-54 she refers to the line of authorities which establish that any comparison under (what is now) section 66 of the Act must be on a term-by-term basis (specifically, Hayward v Cammell Laird Shipbuilders Ltd (no 2) [1988] 1 AC 894 and Brownbill v St Helens Hospitals NHS Trust [2011] EWCA Civ 903, [2012] ICR 68); and points out that the relevant term here is "pay". At paras. 55-56 she observes that if the analysis were confined to the variable element in pay the percentage differential would be dependent on the relative length of the pay band in any particular case. As she says at para. 55:
"Since it is well established that long pay scales can lead to unequal pay and a means of tackling pay inequality is to shorten the pay scales, it would be a perverse result that the shorter the pay scale the easier it is to establish particular disadvantage."
SUBSIDIARY GROUND (2)
SUBSIDIARY GROUND (3)
"This was a complicated case which evolved over time and the parties' respective cases on particular disadvantage were reduced to writing and refined, and were supported by statistics and expert analysis. In the absence of any written argument to the effect that the Claimants were advancing a positive case in reliance on data containing average variable pay differentials together with or to support their distribution analysis, it does not surprise me that EJ Snelson understood the point advanced in submissions as a point designed only to attack the Respondent's approach rather than to support an alternative positive case. In all the circumstances, if the variable pay argument were sound, I do not consider that it was properly raised before the Tribunal, or that it can fairly be raised now to demonstrate a fatal flaw in the Judgment."
DISPOSAL
Lord Justice Holroyde:
Lord Justice Ryder:
Annex 1: Agreed Facts
HMRC's Pay System – Background
1. HM Treasury has overall responsibility for the Government's public sector pay policy, which includes defining the overall parameters for Civil Service pay and budget for all government departments. Each year, HM Treasury publishes Civil Service Pay Guidance. For example, the 2010/11 guidance is at pages 1173-1203 of the hearing bundle.
2. Pay for delegated grades (AA to Grade 6) has been delegated to Government departments since 1996. In line with public sector pay policy, and therefore operating within the pay guidance set by HM Treasury, HMRC submits a pay remit proposal in relation to these grades to its Minister, which for HMRC is the Treasury Minister. Following approval of the total spending allocation, and under collective bargaining, HMRC negotiates the pay settlement with the two Departmental Trade Unions (collectively referred to in this statement as the 'DTUS'), which are the Association of Revenue and Customs (ARC), which is a section of the First Division Association (FDA) and the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS). Examples of submissions made to HMRC by PCS and ARC in relation to pay can be seen in the hearing bundle at pages 1227-1235 (PCS) and pages 1278-1284 (ARC). It is not essential for agreement to be reached with DTUS. In the absence of agreement, the pay settlement is implemented following discussion and consultation.
3. HMRC was formed in April 2005 by the merger of two separate Government departments, Inland Revenue ('IR') and HM Customs and Excise ('C&E'). Following negotiations with the DTUS, a set of pay and other terms and conditions was implemented for staff in the new department. The new terms and conditions aligned the pay and grading systems of the former departments. They also involved an "assimilation exercise" in 2006 based upon the length of past satisfactory performance in the current grade. Further details about this assimilation exercise are given below.
Pre-merger pay structures
4. Prior to the merger in 2005, IR and C&E had separate delegated pay arrangements aligned with their own business needs, considering a range of factors including grading, location, staffing levels and business priorities.
Inland Revenue pay structure
5. As at April 2005 IR was the bigger department with approximately 77,000 people, compared to 24,000 in C&E (page 971AB).
6. IR's pre-merger grading structure mirrored the traditional Civil Service structure though the grades had different names. For example, Grade 7 was known as Band B2 and Grade 6 was Band B1.
7. IR's grading structure had a pay system that had:
• London and National pay zones;
• A two tier pay structure (with an upper and lower tier) and a 'pay target' within each band. The 'pay target' was 81% up the pay range for the National zone and 86% up the pay range for the London zone (page 950B), (See tables on pages 950F to 950I for details of the IR maxima, minima and pay targets between 2002 and 2004).
8. Annual pay awards payable from 1 August each year consisted of:
• A flat rate monetary basic performance award, the value the same for each individual in the pay band, and;
• A flat rate monetary progression award for staff below their maximum. The value of the award differed depending where an individual sat in the pay range (i.e. upper or lower tier, above or below pay target), and;
• A lump sum, non-consolidated additional award for satisfactory performers.
The pay offer for 2002-2004 can be seen in hearing bundle at pages 950A to 950I.
9. IR's pay system provided for guaranteed pay progression (subject to performance) for Bands B2 and B1 from the pay range minimum to the 'target rate' in 7 years, and from the 'target rate' to the pay range maximum in 5 years, i.e. 12 years in total to move from minimum to maximum. See page 950A paragraph 3.
10. The IR pay offer 2002-2004 document in the bundle shows (see table on page 950H) that following the 2004 pay award, so just prior to the merger:
• B2 National (Grade 7) pay range minimum was £37,630 and pay range maximum was £47,590;
• B2 London (Grade 7) pay range minimum was £42,250 and pay range maximum was £54,170;
• B1 National (Grade 6) pay range minimum was £45,670 and pay range maximum was £58,530;
• B1 London (Grade 6) pay range minimum was £51,320 and pay range maximum was £65,270.
11. The table on page 950AY shows pay range length for IR B1 and B2 grades at 2004 were:
• B2 National 26.5%
• B2 London 28.2%
• B1 National 28.2%
• B1 London 27.2%
Customs & Excise pay structure
12. C&E's grading system pre-merger did not align with the traditional Civil Service seven graded structure. From 1996 C&E had a twelve graded structure with junior and middle management grades (Administrative Assistant to Senior Officer) having both a general and technical band (Bands 1 to 10). Grade 7 and Grade 6 were not split and were Bands 11 and 12 respectively.
13. In 1996 C&E amalgamated Band 1 and 2 (for the Administrative assistant grade) so at April 2005 (the time of the merger) C&E had 11 pay bands numbered 2-12. (See table on page 950 AR, within the 2004 C&E pay settlement document)
14. C&E's grading structure was supported by a pay structure that had:
• London, National and other premium pay zones;
• An 'entry point rate' (pay range minimum) and a 'bonus point rate' (pay range maximum) for each of the 11 bands in the National pay zone (with higher entry point rate and bonus point rate for the London pay zone). The pay ranges were subject to annual review, and would increase according to C&E's reward strategy and available funds. (The terminology was changed to minimum and maximum in the 2004 pay offer: see page 950AU)
• In addition, Office Premium allowances were payable to individuals working in London, and in a few other hotspot locations which had recruitment or retention challenges.
The C&E pay settlements for 2002 to 2004 can be seen in the bundle at pages 950Y to 950AY.
15. The annual pay awards payable from 1 June (see page 950AR for the 2004 award) consisted of:
• A salary-related percentage-based increase for Top and Good performers, with Less Effective performers receiving a lower award; and
• A flat rate monetary progression award for Top and Good performers (only if they were below their pay band maximum) and
• A non-consolidated non-pensionable lump sum award for Top performers
16. The salary-related percentage-based increase mirrored the increase applied to the pay range entry point and the bonus point rate. For example, in 2004 the pay range entry and bonus points (the minimum and maximum) were increased by 2.6%, so staff received an initial increase of 2.6% to their salary (i.e. before the addition of the progression award) to preserve their position within the pay range and thereby ensure that any 'progression award' would actually move them up to a higher position. C&E had an aim – but not a guarantee – that people would reach the bonus point of their pay band in around 9 years (see page 971AI). It is not known how long this took in practice at Band's 11 and 12 prior to the merger.
17. The 2004 C&E pay settlement document shows (see table on page 950AX) that following the 2004 pay award, i.e. just prior to the merger:
• Band 11 National (Grade 7) pay range minimum was £40,954 and pay range maximum was £48,285;
• Band 11 London (Grade 7) pay range minimum was £43,012 and pay range maximum was £50,711;
• Band 12 National (Grade 6) pay range minimum was £51,164 and pay range maximum was £60,322;
• Band 12 London (Grade 6) pay range minimum was £53,682 and pay range maximum was £63,292.
18. It also shows the pay range length for C&E Band 11 and Band 12 (National and London) was 17.9% (see page 950AY).
19. The HMRC pay Remit 2005/6 to 2007/8 includes a table at page 971AW which shows both the 'existing' (2004) pay ranges for IR and C&E prior to the merger, and the 'proposed' (2005 to 2008) pay ranges for HMRC post-merger. This provides a useful summary and comparison of the grading and pay bands pre and post merger, showing how they differed.
HMRC's post-merger pay structure
20. A new set of pay, grading, terms and conditions were required for the newly merged HMRC as the former departments arrangements were so different, especially for C&E staff who would move from an eleven banded structure back to a traditional seven banded one. Transitional arrangements also had to be put in place.
21. The documents at pages 950BB to 971BJ of the bundle – in particular the HMRC Pay Remit 2005/6 to 2007/8 – date from 2005 and refer to the various pay options which were considered for the newly merged department, and those which were eventually put forward to the Paymaster General by HMRC. The pay structure options and proposals are summarised at Appendix B of the Remit document, on pages 971AA to 971BB.
22. Since 2005, the merged department has had seven grades below the Senior Civil Service, which reflects the traditional Civil Service grading structure (see page 980). Each of the seven grades has a London and a National pay band (see page 964), with the London pay band being on average 15% higher owing to the associated costs of living in London. Each pay band has a minimum and a maximum rate of pay, with no set points (such as milestones, or incremental increases) in between (see page 981 and the table on page 1172).
23. HMRC does not have contractual pay progression; movement up through the pay range for each grade is by annual pay awards, payable on 1 June. The value of these annual pay awards is not guaranteed, and varies each year, impacting on the rate at which a person's pay will increase during their time in grade.
24. HMRC operates a performance management system, where people receive an annual rating based on their performance at 31 March. Up to March 2013, the ratings were Top; Good; Improvement Needed and Poor Performance. Since 2005, the consolidated value of the pay award for both Top and Good performance was the same, so people progressed at the same rate if they joined on the same day and remained in the same grade and pay location (page 982). A person with an Improvement Needed mark received a lower award and those managed under Poor performance did not receive an award.
25. In April 2013, HMRC modified its performance management system, and the ratings are now Exceeded, Achieved, Must Improve and Poor Performance. The pay policy has not changed as a result, as both performance management systems have many similarities, although currently the value of the consolidated pay award is the same for Exceeded, Achieved and Must Improve performance.
26. HMRC employed 64,515 people as at 31 January 2015, of whom 3,010 (5% of the total workforce) were employed at Grade 7 and 1,262 (2% of the total workforce) were at the more senior Grade 6, being the two grades relevant to this case. For Grade 7, 2,027 employees were in the National pay band and 983 were in the London pay band as at 31 January 2015. For Grade 6, 718 were in the National pay band and 544 were in the London pay band as at 31 January 2015.
27. Between 1 April 2005 and 31 January 2015, HMRC reduced its total workforce by 40,155 from 104,670 to 64,515. However, during this period the number of Grade 7 staff increased from 2,424 to 3,010 (i.e. by 25%), and the number of Grade 6 staff also increased from 1,225 to 1,262 (i.e. by 3%).
HMRC pay awards
28. Historically, pay awards were agreed with HM Treasury as a multi-year settlement, often covering three years at a time. This practise ceased following the public sector pay freeze (see below), so pay awards are now settled on an annual basis. To be eligible for a pay award, a person must have been in post on 1 June of the settlement year, and have completed at least 91 days paid reckonable service in the appraisal year ending 31 March, with a performance mark of Top, Good or Improvement Needed (see pages 1038, 1104 and 1154).
2005/06 to 2007/08 settlement (pages 972-1019)
29. Before the merger, IR and C&E had very different terms and conditions, including pay and grading. Transitional arrangements to take effect from 1 June 2006 had been agreed with the DTUS and HM Treasury to align pay for staff from the two merging departments where there were unjustifiable differences. This was necessary because former C&E staff had moved from the traditional Civil Service seven-graded structure in 1996 to an eleven-graded structure, where grades AO, Officer, Higher Officer and Senior Officer had each been split into two grades. IR had maintained the traditional Civil Service seven-graded structure. (See page 980). In the interests of fairness, HMRC sought to ensure that, when staff transferred to the relevant new HMRC grade, their pay reflected the number of years of satisfactory or better performance in their equivalent 'old' grade as at 31 May 2006 (pages 951-971).
30. HMRC's first pay settlement was an average of 3.86% for each of the three years from 1 June 2005 to 31 May 2008, including an assimilation exercise in 2006. The settlement percentage reflects the amount that the paybill increased by, in total, though individual pay awards ranged from 0% - 10%.
31. The annual pay award (known as stage 1) was paid to all eligible staff on 1 June 2006 as normal practice, and was then followed by the assimilation exercise (stage 2), also on 1 June 2006. For the purposes of the assimilation exercise only, notional pay points and rates within each new pay range were set, establishing the minimum pay a person would receive for a given historical duration of satisfactory or better service, e.g. someone with 2 years satisfactory service (but less than three years) as at 31 May 2006 would move to the notional rate for point 2, if their pay, after the stage 1 pay award was below this notional rate. So a Grade 7 or 6 with at least 8 years satisfactory service could move to the maximum of the pay range, which was point 8 in the notional tables if their pay was still below the maximum after the pay award. If they were already being paid above the notional rate for their historical length of service, their pay remained the same. No-one received a pay cut on assimilation. (See pages 986, 998-9, 1001-2).
32. To ensure that the assimilation exercise did not disadvantage any particular group of staff, HMRC included all service in the equivalent grade including periods of maternity leave, both paid and unpaid, and career breaks (whether male or female). The exercise was intended to ensure parity of pay according to length of service for men and women from the two former departments (see pages 1017-1019).
33. A further assimilation exercise was repeated on a smaller scale for selected groups on 1 June 2007 (depending on when staff opted in to the arrangements).
34. The pay award in 2005 (i.e. for the year 2004-5, but paid out post-merger) maintained many of the elements of the two former departments, chiefly because individuals had had their performance assessed up to 31 March 2005 under their former department's arrangements, and with different performance management processes.
35. Former C&E Band 11's (Grade 7) and Band 12's (Grade 6) received their pay award on 1 June 2005 (under C&E's existing arrangements) and were paid a non-consolidated bonus. Former IR B2's (Grade 7) and B1's (Grade 6) received their pay award on 1 August 2005 (under IR's existing arrangements) and were paid an individual non-consolidated bonus if they received a Top performance rating.
36. As part of the HMRC terms and conditions it was agreed to introduce a common pay award settlement date of 1 June. This meant IR staff would receive their 2006 award just 10 months after they received their 2005 award so the amounts were amended to reflect this.
37. The next pay award, for 2005/6 – which formed part of the 2005-2008 3 year settlement – was the first year that all HMRC staff were assessed on their performance using a common performance management system. It was also the year when the first assimilation exercise was carried out.
2008/09 to 2010/11 Settlement (pages 1064-1073)
38. By 2008, pay band lengths had decreased from a combined IR/CE average of 38% (pre-merger) down to 23% (page 1025).
39. In 2008, the overall pay settlement from 1 June 2008 to 31 May 2011 was 2.4% for each of the three years, and in 2008/09 pay offer HMRC announced that for the 2009/10 and 2010/11 pay awards, greater priority would be given to progression and further range shortening (see page 1027). In 2008/09, the minima for all grades increased by 3% by 4.1% on average for 2009/10, and by 4.6% on average for 2010/11. The settlement was agreed by the trade union.
2011/12 to 2012/13 settlement (pages 1081-1087)
40. The Government announced a two year pay freeze for public sector workforces from 2011 for those earning above £21,000 per annum, which included all Grade 7s and Grade 6s. The immediate pay freeze applied to all organisations and departments in the Civil Service that had not entered into legally binding pay agreements. As HMRC had already agreed a pay settlement for 2010, the pay freeze took effect from June 2011 for staff in grades AA to Grade 6. (The Senior Civil Service had a pay freeze of three years from 1 April 2010 to 31 March 2013). Cabinet Office instructions to HR Directors on the implementation of this policy are set out at pages 1204-1212.
41. Details of HMRC's pay offer during the pay freeze, i.e for 2011/12 and 2012/13, covering the grades for staff earning less than £21,000, are set out at pages 1081-1087. Following the Government's Spending Review published in October 2010, in the 2011 Autumn Statement the Chancellor of the Exchequer announced that pay awards for the public sector would average 1% for the two years following the pay freeze – 2013/14 (see pages 1088 and 1129). This was later extended to three years, i.e. to 2015/16, in the 2013 Budget (see page 1131).
2013/14 settlement (pages 1133-1152)
42. For the 2013 pay award, which averaged 1%, the value of the award paid to people at the pay range maximum for all grades was 0.70%. Awards greater than 1% were paid to people below the maximum, which would provide them with some movement towards the maximum (see pages 1138-1142). The maximum was frozen. The award was implemented following discussion and consultation with DTUS, rather than negotiation, as they do not have a mandate to negotiate pay settlements below 3%.
2014/15 settlement (pages 1153-1171)
43. For the 2014 pay award, which again averaged 1%, the value of the award paid to people at the pay range maximum was 0.50% for Grade 7s and 6s, and 0.55% for other grades. Awards greater than 1% were paid to people below the maximum to provide them with some movement towards the maximum (see pages 1153 and 1168). The maximum of the pay range was frozen and the pay range minimum increased. For the first time, people on the 2013 minimum received the increase to the new minimum and then received the pay award. In previous years, the new minimum was applied after the pay award. As in the previous year, the award was implemented following discussion and consultation with DTUS rather than negotiation.
2015/16 settlement (pages 1172P-1172AD)
44. Details of the 2015/16 pay award are in the hearing bundle at pages 1172P to 1172AD.
45. The 1% average pay award applicable to the public sector workforce in 2013/14 and 2014/15 was extended to three years in the 2013 Budget (https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/budget-2013-chancellors-statement), so it was also applied to HMRC's pay award for 2015/2016.
46. HMRC increased the pay range maximum for all grades by 0.5% in recognition of the fact that individuals on maximum had not received a consolidated pay increase for five years, since 2010.
47. The remainder of the sum available was used to pay awards of greater than 1% to individuals who were below maximum, to provide movement towards pay range maximum for each grade. Pages 1172P-1172AD. As in 2014, the minimum grade increase was applied before individual pay awards were added to ensure progression within grade.
48. As in the previous year the award was implemented following discussion and consultation with DTUS.
Note: It is not possible here to reproduce the colour difference referred to in the rubric; but that is not necessary in order to understand the nature of the exercise.
Note 1 The theoretical basis of Enderby-type discrimination is most convincingly explained by Elias P in Villalba v Merrill Lynch & Co Inc [2006] UKEAT 0223/05, [2007] ICR 469: see para. 113 of his judgment (pp. 502-3). (See also my judgment in Newcastle upon Tyne NHS Hospitals Trust v Armstrong [2010] UKEAT 0069/09, [2010] ICR 674, at para. 20.)
[Back] Note 2 This aspect is more fully discussed in para. 15 of my judgment in Bury Metropolitan Borough Council v Hamilton [2011] UKEAT 0413/09, [2011] ICR 655 (p. 663 B-F). [Back] Note 3 NB that in saying that the disadvantage did not have to be particularly “significant” the Court was evidently not using the term in the same sense as in Enderby andSeymour-Smith, but rather to mean something like “substantial”. [Back] Note 4 As will appear, the evidence sometimes uses the terms “mean average” and “median average”, but I will refer simply to “mean” and “median”; and where I use the term “average” without qualification I intend it as synonymous with “mean”.
[Back] Note 5 They incorporate corrections subsequently provided by HMRC in correspondence. [Back] Note 6 The quartiles/deciles are by reference to salary amount (i.e. dividing the band into four/ten equal parts by salary), not to numbers of employees.
[Back] Note 7 As will appear, the Employment Judge found that Dr Hall’s application of the ?2 test was inappropriate, and Mr Cooper did not challenge that finding as such – that is, separately from his primary case. I need not therefore seek to explain it for the benefit of the statistically uninitiated. [Back] Note 8 The essence of the underlying case advanced by the applicants in that litigation is summarised at para. 2 of the judgment of Arden LJ inWilson.
[Back] Note 9 As I understand it, he says “semi-continuous”, rather than “continuous”, because pay-points occur at intervals through the band rather than in a seamless flow. [Back] Note 10 That is not strictly accurate. As explained at para. 18 above, once a claimant proves that she is paid less than her (proper) comparator, the burden is on the employer to plead and prove the factor which he says accounts for that differential. But in this case the Claimants chose to advance a positive case and the effect of the ET’s judgment on “issue (1)” is that it is that factor which has to be shown to be prima facie indirectly discriminatory.
[Back] Note 11 Apparently figures were not available on the relative lengths of service of men and women. [Back]