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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Duru v. Granada Retail Catering Ltd [2001] UKEAT 281_00_0907 (9 July 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/281_00_0907.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 281_00_0907, [2001] UKEAT 281__907 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 10 May 2001 | |
Before
SIR CHRISTOPHER BELLAMY QC
MR H SINGH
MISS D WHITTINGHAM
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR A ADENIJI (Representative) Instructed By: Messrs Osibanjo Ete & Co Solicitors 74 Camberwell Church Street London SE5 8QZ |
For the Respondent | MR M CREAMORE Solicitor Instructed By: Messrs Gregsons Solicitors St Christopher's House Tabor Grove London SW19 4EX |
SIR CHRISTOPHER BELLAMY QC:
"(1) Any provision in an agreement (whether a contract of employment or not) is void in so far as it purports –
(a) to exclude or limit the operation of any provision of this Act, or
(b) to preclude a person from bringing any proceedings under this Act before an Employment Tribunal.
(2) Subsection (1) ...
(e) does not apply to any agreement to refrain from instituting or continuing proceedings where a conciliation officer has taken action under section 18 of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 ..."
"(2) Where an application has been presented to an employment tribunal, and a copy of it has been sent to a conciliation officer, it is the duty of the conciliation officer –
(a) if he is requested to do so by the person by whom and the person against whom the proceedings are brought, or
(b) if, in the absence of any such request, the conciliation officer considers that he could act under this subsection with a reasonable prospect of success,
to endeavour to promote a settlement of the proceedings without their being determined by an employment tribunal."
"(1) On 25 October 1999, Mrs Jannette Crisp, Conciliation Officer with ACAS, was allocated this case. She is an experienced Conciliation Officer, having worked full-time from 1986 to 1989, and part-time from 1990 to 1992 and from 1995 to date.
(2) On 17 November 1999, she telephoned the Respondent and was informed that Mr Pye was the relevant person to contact. She left a message for him to call her, which he did at 1320 hours that day. They had a discussion about the case in which he indicated that there was a nuisance value which the Respondent was likely to be prepared to pay, despite the Respondent's contention that the dismissal had been fair.
(3) At 1410 hours on 17 November, Mrs Crisp telephoned the Applicant and explained her role to him. He had already received a letter from ACAS with the standard guidance documentation which the Applicant had not read. The Applicant informed Mrs Crisp that he had taken legal advice but that he currently had no representative. They discussed the case and the difference in proof between civil and criminal matters. There was also a discussion between them relating to the compromise procedures. The telephone conversation ended with the Applicant informing Mrs Crisp that he would seek legal advice and come back to her.
(4) On 19 November 1999 at 1241 hours, Mrs Crisp rang the Applicant, who told her that he had seen a Solicitor who was supposed to be coming back to him and that he would contact her. The Applicant had Mrs Crisp's home telephone number.
(5) On 1 December 1999, Mrs Crisp spoke to Mr Pye, who confirmed to her that he would like her to put an offer to the Applicant of £250 to settle the case. At 1300 hours that day, Mrs Crisp telephoned the Applicant on his mobile and conveyed the offer of £250 to him. He told her that he was seeing a Solicitor that afternoon and he would contact her with a counter offer.
(6) On 10 December 1999, at 1218 hours, the Applicant left a message on the answerphone of Mrs Crisp at home. Mrs Crisp was not working on this day.
(7) On Monday 13 December 1999 at 1005 hours, Mrs Crisp rang the Applicant's mobile. He asked her for the offer to be put in writing. She told him that she conveys offers on the telephone, not in writing. The Applicant then told her that he was prepared to accept £250 to settle the claim. She asked him twice to confirm that she was to convey to the Respondent acceptance of the £250 offer, and on both occasions the Applicant informed her that she was to go ahead. She also discussed with the Applicant how the concluded agreement would work out in practice. He told Mrs Crisp that he would contact her on receipt of the draft COT3 and Mrs Crisp agreed to contact the Respondent immediately.
(8) Mrs Crisp telephoned Mr Pye at 1007 hours but could not make contact. She telephoned again at 1130 hours, but he was engaged at that time. She eventually got in touch at 1510 and conveyed acceptance of the £250 offer. Mr Pye indicated that he had some standard wording he would like to use on the COT3, but would be prepared to see Mrs Crisp's document first. She faxed through a document and at 1533 Mr Pye rang leaving a message that the COT3 was satisfactory.
(9) At 1643 hours that day, the Applicant rang and left a message stating that he wanted the Respondent to put the offer in writing before he accepted it.
(10) At 1735, Mrs Crisp rang the Applicant: she went over the conversation she had had with the Applicant earlier that day and he informed her that he had just woken up and did not know what was happening. She explained to him that she had put the acceptance to the Respondent and informed him that it may be a binding compromise agreement. She told the Applicant that she would attempt to get the Respondent to put the offer in writing to his home address.
(11) On 14 December 1999 Mrs Crisp was annual leave.
(12) On 15 December, Mrs Crisp contacted Mr Pye and conveyed the request of the Applicant for the offer to be made in writing. Mr Pye refused to do that, but informed Mrs Crisp that he had sent back to her the signed COT3."
"The unanimous conclusion of the Tribunal is that the Respondent requested the Conciliation Officer to put forward an offer of £250 to the Applicant to settle the case; that the Conciliation Officer put that offer to the Applicant; that the Applicant accepted that offer in a telephone conversation on Monday 13 December 1999 at 1005 hours; that that acceptance of the offer by the Applicant was unconditional, and the Tribunal concludes that at the end of that telephone conversation, there was an enforceable agreement to settle the claim, notwithstanding that the usual form COT3 document had not been signed at that stage."
"The Respondent, without any admission of liability, agrees to pay and the Applicant agrees to accept, the sum of £ to be paid within days of receipt of signed form COT3 by the Respondent's representative, in full and final settlement of all and any claims the Applicant may have arising out of the Applicant's contract of employment or its termination."
(i) In that conversation, the appellant asked for the offer to be put in writing, but Mrs Crisp declined to convey that request to the respondents.
(ii) According to the tribunal, Mrs Crisp discussed with the appellant "how the concluded agreement would work out in practice", but the Chairman's notes of evidence state, on this point "We discussed how agreement concluded". It seems to us that there is at least some ambiguity about the tribunal's finding as regards this discussion. The Chairman's notes could point to a discussion on the telephone about how the agreement was to be concluded or executed, which could support the appellant's contention that in his mind his acceptance of the offer was subject to the agreement being recorded in a document.
(iii) The appellant told Mrs Crisp that "he would contact her on receipt of the draft COT3". That signifies to our mind that it was in the contemplation of both Mrs Crisp and the appellant that there was still a further step to be taken, namely the sending to the parties of a "draft COT3", presumably for their signature. Moreover the reference to a "draft" COT3 (the word "draft" appears in the standard heading on the form we have seen) indicates that the document to be sent to the parties was not a final document but a draft that was still open to amendment.
(iv) At 1643 hours the appellant was still maintaining to Mrs Crisp that he wanted the offer put in writing before he accepted it.