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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Conway v Centre Point (UK) Ltd & Ors [2000] UKEAT 1042_97_2310 (23 October 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/1042_97_2310.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 1042_97_2310 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CHARLES
MRS A GALLICO
MS B SWITZER
MR R CONWAY |
APPELLANT |
CENTRE POINT TRADE (UK) LTD & OTHERS |
RESPONDENTS |
MR R CONWAY |
APPELLANT |
CENTRE POINT TRADE (UK) LTD |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | IN PERSON |
MR JUSTICE CHARLES:
"8 Nevertheless, Mr Conway says he does not anticipate a difficulty because he is able to illustrate adequately that the 17 or so Respondents set out by him in his letter of 18 May 1996 are associated employers within the meaning of the Employment Rights Act 1996 at Section 231. I remind Mr Conway that Section prescribes as follows:
'231 – For the purposes of this Act, any two employers shall be treated as associated if -
(a) one is a company of which the other (directly or indirectly) has control; or
(b) both are companies of which a third person (directly or indirectly) has control; an associated employer shall be construed accordingly'.
9 Mr Grossman on behalf of Centre Point Trading (UK) Limited says that Mr Conway will be unable to show that the previous potential Respondents are associated within the meaning of Section 231. Mr Conway says that certain of the potential Respondents have been wound up and/or are in liquidation or have ceased to trade. He is unable to assist by the provision of addresses for service upon those potential Respondents in the event that I join them in these proceedings.
10 Mr Conway urges me to join those Respondents and to order this case to proceed for a preliminary hearing so that a Chairman may review, upon hearing the evidence, whether the assertion Mr Conway now makes assists him in proving a two year period of continuous employment.
11 I am persuade that notwithstanding the administrative inconvenience it is likely to cause, it is in the interests of justice that I should join as Respondents to these proceedings those individuals or limited liability companies or partnerships which I shall set out below.
12 Arising therefrom, I direct that each of the new Respondents shall be served with these proceedings and with a copy of the Tribunal decision dated 7 March 1996 and a copy of these interlocutory directions.
13 When the various Respondents have been served with these proceedings and Notices of Appearance, if so desired, have been filed, a preliminary hearing will be ordered. The purpose of that preliminary hearing will be to hear evidence only as to whether the Respondents now joined or any of them are associated employers within the meaning of Section 231 of the 1996 Act. In the event that, in due course, a Tribunal finds that Mr Conway has been employed only by one or by more than one of the Respondents but which Respondents are associated employers, the Tribunal will then occupy itself as to whether the duration of such single or joined periods of employment entitled Mr Conway to prosecute his claim of unfair dismissal or those of his other claims which rely on a period of not less than two years continuous employment ending with the effective date of termination."
"1 This is an application by Mr Conway which has been before the Tribunal on two previous occasions. He alleges that he has been unfairly dismissed, and seeks to pursue his claim against the 16 Respondents in this case. The matter has been listed for a preliminary hearing to determine the issue of whether Mr Conway has two years continuous employment, either with the First Respondent, Centre Point Trading (UK) Ltd, or with any of the other Respondents being associated employers within the meaning of Section 231 of the Employment Rights Act 1996.
Background
The parties agree that between 1990 and 1994, Mr Conway was employed by Countrytech Limited. That was a property company run by Mr A. Grossman. It was very successful in 1990 and had a value of something like £4.5 million. In about 1992 to 1993, the company ran into serious difficulties with the bank when interest rates were very high. As a result, the company found it was difficult to continue trading, and there have been substantial losses of some £1.8 million. The whole venture has been a disaster for Mr A. Grossman, not only financially, but also in terms of his credibility.
3 In February 1994, Mr Conway was taken onto the payroll of Centre Point Trading (UK) Ltd (Centre Point). The issue is whether at that stage there was continuity of employment as between Countrytech and Centre Point. Mr Conway argues that the companies are an associated employer within the meaning of Section 231 of the Act, and that the companies were in effect controlled by the same people, namely, the Grossman brothers. Mr Conway says he did the same work in the same place throughout, and that there was effectively no change in his employment status."
"Where the evidence between Mr Conway and Mr M. Grossman and Mr A. Grossman differs, the Tribunal prefers the evidence of the Respondents who gave a clear and sensible account of the way in which Countrytech failed."
And, in sub-paragraph (ix):
"The Tribunal accepted the evidence of Mr M. Grossman and Mr A. Grossman, that Mr M. Grossman had no interest, either financial or factual, in Countrytech. …"
"One also notices a lack of attention given to the other Respondents who appear to have been overlooked. It was previously ordered that a total of 17 Respondents be joined in the case, yet no attention was paid to the involvement of 15 of these and the fact that 7 of them failed to return their IT3 form. No mention was given as to whether the Applicant was employed by these other Respondents and for what period. The only Respondents that were considered were those that paid the Applicant's wages.
In refusing the review the Chairman said this, amongst other things:
"The arguments are similar in nature to those presented to the Tribunal and depend very much on the findings of fact on the evidence."
"The fourth point was this. Apparently the Industrial Tribunal did not pay any overt attention to the other respondents who, he alleges, appear to have been overlooked. But the reason why there is no express reference is apparent from the face of the Industrial Tribunal's decision, namely that the two candidates as employers, namely those who had been paying his wages, were the two named companies to whom I have referred."
"Accordingly, and not without some regret, we dismiss the appeal.
We express our regret only because this might have been a case where the Employment Appeal Tribunal would have been prepared to re-look at the question of continuity of employment had Mr Conway appealed against the substantive decision of the Industrial Tribunal set out in its written reasons dated 2nd July 1997, but no such appeal has been made to us."
"The Applicant's claim in respect of written terms and conditions of employment is struck out pursuant to Regulation 13(2)(d) and/or (e) of the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Procedure) Regulations 1993, Schedule 1."
Those sub-rules provide that:
"13(2) A tribunal may -
(d) subject to paragraph (3), at any stage of the proceedings, order to be struck out or amended any originating application or notice of appearance, or anything in such application or notice of appearance, on the grounds that it is scandalous, frivolous or vexatious.
(e) subject to paragraph (3), at any stage of the proceedings, order to be struck out any originating application or notice of appearance on the grounds that the manner in which the proceedings have been conducted by or on behalf of the applicant or, as the case may be, respondent has been scandalous, frivolous or vexatious."