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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 >> Butt & Ors v Reading Borough Council [2020] EWCA Civ 1642 (22 October 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2020/1642.html Cite as: [2020] EWCA Civ 1642 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(MR JUSTICE LAVENDER)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS
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BUTT & ORS |
Claimants/ Respondents |
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- and - |
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READING BOROUGH COUNCIL |
Defendant/ Appellant |
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Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Email: [email protected] (Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR R LEIPER, QC and MR A BLAKE appeared on behalf of the Defendant/Appellant
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL:
"The claimants' claims presented as part of the Gordon multiple ... do not include complaints about equal pay which pre-date 1 May 2011."
"1. The Claimant has already submitted a claim to the Employment Tribunal under the Equal Pay Act 1970 and/or the Equality Act 2010. However, the Respondent implemented a new pay and grading structure on 1 May 2011 for all or most employees, and the Claimant's terms and conditions were altered to reflect that.
2. The Claimant has been employed by the respondent in the post listed on the attached schedule. The claim relates however to all posts held or jobs done by the Claimant in the previous six years unless covered by a COT3 or compromise agreement. The Claimant and comparators are all employed by the same employer in the same establishment and/or on common terms and conditions.
3. The Claimant relies on the pleadings, comparators and decision of the Employment Tribunal in the Genuine Material Factor defence hearing in [the James multiple]. The claimant adopts the finding that the following payments given to the relevant male employees were discriminatory and the failure of the Council's defences regarding those payments."
The pleading then enumerates various kinds of payment made in respect of particular jobs which were being said in the James multiple to be discriminatory. I need not set out or substantively summarise the entirety of the remaining paragraphs, which are numbered 4 to 14 (although there are in fact two paragraphs 8 and three paragraphs 9). That is perhaps fortunate, because their structure and language is not a model of clear pleading. I shall have to come back to one or two particular paragraphs later. All that I need say at this stage is that the specific challenges advanced (or, at any rate, adumbrated, because a major part of the claimants' complaint is that they have not been given sufficient information to assess what, if any, claim they wish to advance) are to the validity of the new job evaluation study and the new pay and grading structure which is based on it: see the second paragraph 9 up to paragraph 14. They are to the effect that the job evaluation study and the pay and grading structure do not comply with either the Green Book principles (see paragraph 11) or the requirements for a valid job evaluation study under the 2010 Act (see in particular paragraphs 9 and 10).
"12. The question that we have had to determine is whether the claimants' claims presented as part of the Gordon multiple include complaints about equal pay which pre-date 1 May 2011 and if they do whether the said claimants' claims presented as part of the Gordon multiple should be struck out because they are an abuse of process.
13. The conclusion of the tribunal is that the claimants' claims presented as part of the Gordon multiple do not include complaints about equal pay which pre-date 1 May 2011.
14. We consider that the claims presented as part of the Gordon multiple were presented to deal with different issues from those in the James multiple. They were not intended to cover the same ground and did not cover the same ground. The claims in the Gordon multiple take up events from 1 May 2011.
15. We consider that on a proper reading of the complaints in that case, read on their face and also taken in context of what was happening at the time and in the light of the existence of the James multiple, the answer to the first question in our view must be no."
"Given the background of the James multiple, anyone reading the claim form might not be expecting to find a claim covering the period before 1 May 2011, but that appears to be what it contains, perhaps, as was suggested in the argument, because the draftsmen of the claim form sought at that early stage to cast the net as wide as possible. On balance, I conclude that the correct interpretation of the claim forms is that they did include a claim in respect of the period before 1 May 2011."
"The Claimants also reserve their position as to whether the Respondent have [sic] properly implemented the Green Book JES in accordance with section 1(5) of the Equal Pay Act 1970 or alternatively section 65(4) of the Equality Act 2010 until disclosure has been provided."
Paragraph 10 requires to be read in the context of the preceding paragraph, which is the second paragraph 9. The two together are headed "Sections 65(4) and 80, Equality Act 2010" and continue:
"9. The Respondent has carried out and implemented a 'single status' job evaluation study (JES) on 1 May 2011 which is designed to comply with the requirements under the National Agreement on Pay and Conditions of Service 1997 ('the Green Book').
10. The Respondent has not disclosed sufficient information to the Claimant which would allow the Claimant to consider whether the Green Book JES has complied with ss. 65(4) and 80 Equality Act 2010 (formerly s.1(5) of the Equal Pay Act 1970). The Claimant therefore reserves the right to contend that the JES carried out by the Respondent under the Green Book or any previous evaluation fails to comply with ss.65(4) and 80 Equality Act 2010 and s.1(5) of the Equal Pay Act 1970."
"The Claimant is not paid the same as men employed in posts rated either the same or lower than her post, or who do work of equal value to her (and the claim is pursued in the alternative for the whole of the relevant period …)."
She relies on the reference to "the whole of the relevant period" in the parenthesis and says that that must mean the period referred to in paragraph 2, i.e. the period going back for six years.
LORD JUSTICE LEWIS:
Order: Appeal allowed.