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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Claridge v. Daler Rowney Ltd [2008] UKEAT 0188_08_0407 (4 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0188_08_0407.html Cite as: [2008] UKEAT 188_8_407, [2008] ICR 1267, [2008] UKEAT 0188_08_0407, [2008] IRLR 672 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 30 June 2008 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS (PRESIDENT)
MRS R CHAPMAN
MR A HARRIS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS CATRIN LEWIS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Mr John Harman Legal Adviser Bracknell Citizens Advice Bureau 40-42 The Broadway BRACKNELL Berkshire RG12 1AG |
For the Respondent | MR JONATHAN NAYLOR (Solicitor) Messrs Shoosmiths LLP Solicitors Apex Plaza Forbury Road READING Berkshire RG1 1SH |
SUMMARY
UNFAIR DISMISSAL: Constructive dismissal
The Employment Tribunal held the employee had not been constructively dismissed. One of the complaints related to defects in the handling of the grievance procedure. The Tribunal held that they considered that the employers had acted unreasonably, but that applying the principle adopted in Abbey National plc v Fairbrother [2007] IRLR 320 the grievance had been handled in the way a reasonable employer could have dealt with it and accordingly there was no repudiatory breach of contract.
The EAT held that this was a conclusion which the Tribunal was entitled to reach on the evidence. Accordingly, the appeal was dismissed. Observations on the reasoning in the Fairbrother case.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS (PRESIDENT)
"Accordingly, in a constructive dismissal case involving resignation in the context of a grievance procedure … it is not only appropriate but necessary to ask whether the employer's conduct at the grievance procedure was within the band or range of reasonable responses to the grievance presented by the employee. We would add that we are not persuaded that it is appropriate to separate out each part of the grievance procedure to see whether it was reasonably conducted or not … The conduct of a grievance procedure requires to be looked at as a whole. Only if it has been conducted in a manner in which no reasonable employer would have conducted it can it be said that he did not have reasonable and proper course for his conduct."
"Our view of the conduct of this grievance by the Respondent was that overall, there was a failure by management to take a thoughtful, proactive overview of how to solve these matters as a human employment problem.
There was a failure to keep the matter under review in the same spirit, and had either of those things been done, it is perfectly possible that at a very early stage the Claimant would have received reassurance that he had not been demoted, coupled of course with the offer to proceed to a grievance meeting as was his unqualified right.
However, applying the test stated by Lady Smith, we certainly cannot fault the conduct of the procedure up to 26 February, which seemed to us to be conducted with reasonable and proper cause, and paying proper deference to the reasons for postponement requested in particular by the Claimant in the light of his health.
We have much greater difficulty in the period thereafter. It must by then have been obvious to Mr Paradis that there could only be one conclusion to this grievance, and having met and discussed the matter with the Claimant, he must surely have been aware of the necessity for a prompt resolution. The matter became bogged down in procedural points which were of little consequence, and which could readily have been overcome.
Had the EAT not delivered the Fairbrother decision in the terms which it did, we would have considered that the claim in relation to the period after 26 February was likely to succeed. However, we cannot go so far as to say that the manner in which the grievance was conducted in that period satisfies the Fairbrother test, in as much as the test is one of how no reasonable employer would have conducted the matter."
The significance of Fairbrother
462(HL), and broke down the duty of trust and confidence as follows (para 30):
"….conduct calculated to destroy or seriously damage the trust and confidence inherent in the employer/employee relationship may not amount to a breach of the implied term; it will not do so if the employer had reasonable and proper cause for the conduct in question. Accordingly, the questions that require to be asked in a constructive dismissal case appear to us to be:
1. what was the conduct of the employer that is complained of?
2. did the employer have reasonable and proper cause for that conduct?
If he did have such cause, then that is an end of it. The employee cannot claim that he has been constructively dismissed. If the employer did not have such cause, then a third question arises:
3. was the conduct complained of calculated to destroy or seriously damage the employer/employee relationship of trust and confidence?"
"…although the point at which reasonableness considerations arise differs as between the two types of case, the point which is being addressed seems to be the same. It is that of whether or not, when conducting himself towards his employee in a manner which has resulted in the detriment of his job coming to an end, the employer had reasonable and proper cause for his conduct."
The grounds of appeal.
Conclusion
Disposal.