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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Freeman v Ultra Green Group Ltd (Victimisation Discrimination : Protected disclosure) [2011] UKEAT 0239_11_0908 (09 August 2011)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0239_11_0908.html
Cite as: [2011] UKEAT 239_11_908, [2011] UKEAT 0239_11_0908

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Appeal No. UKEAT/0239/11/CEA

 

 

EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL

58 VICTORIA EMBANKMENT, LONDON EC4Y 0DS

 

 

At the Tribunal

On 9 August 2011

 

 

Before

HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON

MS G MILLS CBE

MR S YEBOAH

 

 

 

 

 

MR J FREEMAN APPELLANT

 

 

 

 

 

 

ULTRA GREEN GROUP LTD (IN CREDITORS VOLUNTARY

LIQUIDATION RESPONDENT

 

 

 

Transcript of Proceedings

 

JUDGMENT

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPEARANCES

 

 

 

 

 

For the Appellant

MR ANDREW WATSON

(Representative)

Free Representation Unit

289-293 High Holborn

London

WC1V 7HZ

For the Respondent

No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Respondent

 

 


SUMMARY

VICTIMISATION DISCRIMINATION – Protected disclosure

UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Automatically unfair reasons

 

The Tribunal erred in law in holding that words spoken at a meeting by the Claimant did not amount to information for the purposes of section 43B of the Employment Rights Act 1996Cavendish Munro Professional Risks Management v Geduld [2010] ICR 125 applied.

 

The Tribunal erred in law in considering that retirement provisions within the Employment Rights Act 1996 and the Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006 inhibited the Claimant’s claim under section 103A (dismissal on grounds of protected disclosure) or of themselves limited the compensation payable.  Section 98ZD(2) and (3) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 considered.

 

 

 


HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON

 

1.            This is an appeal by Mr John Freeman (“the Claimant”) against aspects of a judgment of the Employment Tribunal sitting in Brighton (Employment Judge Warren presiding) dated 27 January 2011.  By its judgment the Tribunal upheld his claim that he had been constructively and unfairly dismissed by his former employers Ultra Green Group Limited (“the Respondent”); however, it rejected his claims that he had been subjected to detriment and dismissal on the grounds of protected disclosure, and awarded him only limited compensation because the Respondent complied procedurally with statutory requirements relating to his retirement.  It also rejected a claim for pay when (on the Claimant’s case) he was available to work at home while recuperating from an operation.

 

The background facts

2.            The Claimant was born on 19 July 1944; accordingly his 65th birthday was 19 July 2009.  He was employed by the Respondent as a financial planner with effect from 1 March 2008 at a salary of £60,000 per annum.  On paper the Company had a retirement policy which recognised the state retirement age; in fact, however, no steps were taken prior to 19 July 2009 to retire the Claimant at what was his state retirement age.

 

3.            The Respondent worked in the investment field, specialising in investments relating to the environment.  The Claimant became concerned that he was being asked to prepare financial plans which were grossly exaggerated.  On 20 July 2009 at a meeting he said words to the following effect

 

“The calculated return on investment is 4.66 as I have based the financial model on the 100,000 hectares and I refuse to base it on 2 million hectares as Tony Blakey has directed.  To use the bigger area without proper costing information and scrutiny will provide investors with false information and would be misleading.  I said that Tony Blakey will have to contact Neville Burman and sort out the lack of additional financial information.”

 

4.            On 20 July the Respondent’s Mr Blakey (who was, we are told, the “Executive Chief Executive”) wrote an email (which the Tribunal did not cite in its reasons, but may be thought to be of some significance):

 

“John

Judging from your refusal to create the model for Hannah (4.66 return is not what we asked for) and your suggestion that I should solve the problem on Russia, you are too important to do the things I want now.

I guess I need to find another analyst ....”

 

5.            Only after this did the Respondent institute a procedure to dismiss the Claimant for retirement.  By letter dated 18 September the Respondent purported to terminate the Claimant’s employment by reason of retirement with effect from 18 March 2010.  The Claimant, however, resigned on 6 October, terminating his employment with effect from 5 January 2010.

 

The Tribunal’s reasoning on dismissal and public interest disclosure

6.            The Tribunal dealt with these aspects succinctly in paragraphs 9 and 10 of its reasons.

 

“9. Coming now to the public interest disclosure elements, we do not consider that the words that Mr Freeman sets out at paragraph 24 of his statement which we set out above in this decision amounts to a disclosure of information which tends to show a breach or likely commission of a criminal offence.

It is not a disclosure of information and we do not consider it complies with the requirements of section 43B of the Employment Rights Act 1996.

Even if we had found that it was a public interest disclosure the reason for Mr Freeman’s dismissal by the respondents by reason of retirement is just what it says.  The claimant accepts that the respondents went scrupulously through the procedures required of them under the Age Regulations and if an employer does that then the reason for dismissal is retirement and an Employment Tribunal cannot look behind that.  It is clear having gone through that procedure then the reason was retirement and it is not open to the Tribunal to find that it was any other reason.  Even if we had found there was a public interest disclosure dismissal would not have been unfair under section 103(a) of the Employment Rights Act.

10. Turning now to the unfair constructive dismissal, we accept on the evidence from the claimant that pressure was being put on him to create financial models that were inaccurate and which over stated the potential benefit which investors were likely to obtain were they to invest in the respondents projects.  That we find amounts to a breach by the employer of the implied term of trust and confidence, so entitling the claimant to terminate his employment.”

 

7.            The Tribunal proceeded to assess compensation for the period of 39 days after 5 January 2010. This was appropriate (allowing for some unpaid leave which the Claimant was intending to take) if the Claimant’s loss was restricted to 18 March 2010.  In his witness statement for the Tribunal, however, the Claimant had claimed compensation substantially beyond that date, on the basis that it had always been intended to employ him for longer.

 

Was there a disclosure of information?

8.            On behalf of the Claimant Mr Andrew Watson of the Free Representation Unit first submits that the Tribunal was wrong to hold that the Claimant had not made a disclosure of information for the purposes of the public interest disclosure provisions of the Employment Rights Act 1996.  We agree with him.  Our reasons are as follows.

 

9.            Section 43B(1), so far as relevant, provides –

 

“(1) In this Part a ‘qualifying disclosure’ means any disclosure of information which, in the reasonable belief of the worker making the disclosure, tends to show one or more of the following –

(a) that a criminal offence has been committed, is being committed or is likely to be committed,

(b) that a person has failed, is failing or is likely to fail to comply with any legal obligation to which he is subject.”

 

10.         Section 43L(3) provides –

 

“(3) Any reference in this Part to the disclosure of information shall have effect, in relation to any case where the person receiving the information is already aware of it, as a reference to bringing the information to his attention.”

 

11.         In Cavendish Munro Professional Risks Management v Geduld [2010] ICR 125 the Appeal Tribunal (Slade J presiding) pointed out that the statutory provisions drew a distinction between the mere making of an allegation (not covered by the public interest disclosure legislation) and the provision of information (which is). A helpful illustration was given.  She said:

 

“Further, the ordinary meaning of giving “information” is conveying facts. In the course of the hearing before us, a hypothetical was advanced regarding communicating information about the state of a hospital. Communicating “information” would be: “The wards have not been cleaned for the past two weeks. Yesterday, sharps were left lying around.” Contrasted with that would be a statement that: “You are not complying with health and safety requirements.” In our view this would be an allegation not information.”

 

In that case the Claimant relied on a solicitor’s letter written on his behalf; but the letter contained nothing which could be described as information.

 

12.         In this case the Tribunal said that there was no disclosure of information.  We have no doubt that the Claimant made a disclosure of “information”.  He stated that he had based the financial model on 100,000 hectares; that Mr Blakey had directed him to base it upon 2,000,000 million hectares; that he had refused to do so; that there was no proper costing information or scrutiny for the basis which Mr Blakey directed him to use; and that to use that basis would provide investors with false information and would be misleading.  The Tribunal’s view appears to be that this was a mere allegation.  We do not think that view is tenable.

 

13.         If the Tribunal had any other reason for holding that the disclosure of information did not fall within section 43B(1), it has not articulated it and we cannot see what it was.

 

The impact of retirement

14.         The Tribunal seems to have thought that, since the Respondent operated retirement provisions derived from the Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006 (“the Age Regulations”), the Claimant was unable to rely on section 103A of the Employment Rights Act 1996 and that the Claimant’s compensation was limited to the date of retirement.  Mr Watson submits that the Tribunal was wrong in this respect; and we agree with him.

 

15.         The Age Regulations (now in effect repealed and replaced by the Equality Act 2010) inserted at the relevant time a series of provisions into Part X of the Employment Rights Act 1996.  These provisions are lengthy and labyrinthine; we hope we will be forgiven for not setting them out extensively in this judgment.  They are no longer in force.

 

16.         Under those provisions retirement is taken to be the only reason for dismissal in certain circumstances where dismissal is at or after the age of 65 or a normal retirement age: see, for example, section 98ZB(2), section 98ZD(2) (which appears most apposite in this case) and section 98ZE(4).  If retirement is taken to be the reason for dismissal, and certain procedural requirements have been satisfied, the employee will not be regarded as unfairly dismissed: see section 98ZG.  These, we think, must have been the provisions which the Tribunal had in mind.

 

17.         However, none of those provisions apply in this case.  This is because those provisions apply only where the contract of employment terminates on the intended date of retirement.  In this case it did not.  The intended date of retirement was 18 March.  The contract terminated by reason of constructive dismissal before that date.  In such a case retirement shall not be taken to be the reason for dismissal: see section 98ZB(3), section 98ZD(3) (which appears most apposite in this case) and section 98ZE(5).

 

18.         There was, in our judgment, nothing in the retirement provisions to prevent the Tribunal from dealing normally with this case.  It could and should have considered section 103A (see generally as to the relationship between section 98 and section 103A Kuzel v Roche Products Limited [2008] ICR 799).

 

19.         Nor was there anything in the retirement provisions which necessarily required the Tribunal to restrict the award of compensation to the date of intended retirement given by the Respondent.  The Tribunal should have awarded such compensation as was just and equitable. If the Respondent subjected the Claimant to detriment and dismissal by reason of his protected disclosure by imposing retirement provisions when they would not otherwise have been imposed then the Tribunal was certainly not bound to limit compensation to the date of retirement.

 

20.         Mr Watson would, if necessary, have sought leave to amend the Notice of Appeal to argue that the retirement provisions ought to be read down as being incompatible with the rights of the Claimant under article 10 of the European Convention.  In view of our conclusions the application to amend is unnecessary; Mr Watson has correctly not pursued it.

 

Pay

21.         On 5 October 2009 the Respondent wrote to the Claimant:

 

“In line with your contract of employment we would like you to work from the Brighton office twice a week commencing on 22nd October 2009.  We would suggest that for that week you attend on 22nd and 23rd October.  For all future weeks, we would request that you attend on a Monday and Friday of each week and you will need to produce a weekly report of work carried out over the three days you work remotely.”

 

22.         In November 2009 the Claimant underwent a knee operation. He was discharged home on 17 November 2009.  As he told the Respondent, the doctors confirmed that he would be unfit for travel for 6 weeks but was fit to work from home.  He did not attend work and was not paid.

 

23.         Part of the Claimant’s case is that he was entitled to work remotely for 3 days per week; that he was therefore entitled to be paid for those 3 days even if he was not fit to attend the office.  The Tribunal appears to have understood his claim to be a claim for sick pay, and to be defeated by a provision in the contract of employment stating that such pay was discretionary.  But it was also his case that he was entitled to payment for 3 days per week because he was ready, willing and able to work for those three days.  The Tribunal has not dealt with this part of the case.  We do not think the Claimant’s case is straightforward, but it depends on findings of fact as to what happened in October, November and December 2009 which the Tribunal has not made.

 

Conclusions

24.         The appeal is allowed.  The matter will be remitted to a freshly constituted Tribunal for the Tribunal to hear it in accordance with this judgment.

 

 


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0239_11_0908.html