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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Mackenzie v Billing Aquadrome Ltd [2008] UKEAT 0238_08_2108 (21 August 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0238_08_2108.html Cite as: [2008] UKEAT 0238_08_2108, [2008] UKEAT 238_8_2108 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
MR K EDMONDSON JP
MR T STANWORTH
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR P GREEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Shoosmiths Solicitors Witan Gate House 500-600 Witan Gate West Milton Keynes MK9 1SH |
For the Respondent | MR D NORTHALL (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs DLA Piper UK LLP Solicitors Bridgewater House 101 Barbirolli Square Manchester M2 3DL |
SUMMARY
UNFAIR DISMISSAL: Dismissal/ambiguous resignation
The Tribunal failed to make clear findings about the date of termination or the manner in which the employment contract was terminated.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
"… did conduct themselves in a manner likely to damage trust and confidence."
"She asked him if he was resigning he said that he would need to seek advice from a solicitor before he took any further action."
"Further, or in the alternative, whilst the Claimant is clear he did not resign and was dismissed, the Claimant asserts that the change to the bonus scheme which was carried out with no consultation or notification amounted to a fundamental breach of his contract of employment which would have entitled the Claimant to treat himself as having been unfairly dismissed by the Respondent."
"On Friday 2 February 2007, the Claimant advised Mr Calvasbert that he was resigning. He said he was consulting his lawyer. Mr Calvasbert told him that he should go through the proper channels. On Sunday 4 February 2007 the Claimant confirmed to Mr Calvasbert that he was resigning and that the letter would arrive from his solicitor the next day. Given that he told the Respondent the fact that he was resigning, the Respondent decided that to protect the business he would not be required to work his notice period and he left the site and was paid for the following month while not required to work."
"At about 5.00pm Mr Calvasbert telephoned Mr Dawson his superior and informed him that Mr MacKenzie had resigned. Irrespective of whether it is justified or not Mr MacKenzie had a reputation for hot blooded outbursts and it is clear from their evidence that neither Mr Dawson nor Mr Calvasbert were certain of the actual position. Mr Dawson reported the exchange to the Board but neither were surprised to find that Mr MacKenzie had attended for work on 3rd of February and was at work on the 4th."
"It is Mr Calvasbert's evidence that Mr MacKenzie confirmed to him on that day that he maintained his wish to resign from the Company and that a letter would be forthcoming from his Solicitors. In consultation with Mr Dawson it was determined that the better course would be to send Mr MacKenzie home on full pay and await the promised letter. Late in the afternoon after Mr MacKenzie had completed his paperwork this is what occurred. Mr MacKenzie's account of this episode appears at paragraph 98 of his statement. He does not suggest that he was told in express terms that he had been dismissed only that he should leave Billing. Mr Calvasbert is adamant that he did not dismiss Mr MacKenzie."
"7. Conclusions: Constructive dismissal is a concept which contains elements of determination and causation. It is for the claimant to discharge his burden of proof by showing that he resigned because of either a present or anticipated fundamental breach of his contract. It is a concept which requires him to exercise a choice either to acquiesce to the breach or act upon it. The Claimant has stridently argued throughout that he did not resign and he has called evidence to support that contention. The evidential requirements of the concept are not satisfied by the presence of a fundamental breach and a termination of the employment alone. Causation is a quintessential element and the Claimant in order to succeed must be able to say I resigned and I did so because of my employer's fundamental breach. This is not evidence that the Claimant could plausibly give in the face of his denial of resignation and it is not before us. The Claimant has not discharged the burden of proving that he was constructively dismissed.
8. That takes us to the question of whether there was a de facto dismissal. Both parties are represented by solicitors and Counsel and it is not incumbent upon us to alter or look outside of the 'pleaded' case. The question for us therefore is whether there was a dismissal on 4th February 2007. We note that there is no allegation of express words of dismissal and we note that on the account of both parties the antipathy flowed from Mr MacKenzie to his employers. The evidence of the two participants to the meeting is diametrically opposed. Contact between the parties from this point forward was solely between solicitors so no further insight can be gleaned from it. This is one of those relatively rare cases where the solution lies with the burden of proof and we are not satisfied that there was a de facto dismissal."
"With all respect to the EAT in arriving at a different conclusion, in the circumstances it seems to me plain that the ET erred in coming to its decision on constructive dismissal without making findings on the evidential dispute about the meetings and without explaining why it left that factual dispute out of the count. That failure on so important a matter in controversy constitutes, in my judgment, an error of law."