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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Harris v Richard Lawson Autologistics Ltd [2002] EWCA Civ 442 (14 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/442.html Cite as: [2002] ICR 765, [2002] EWCA Civ 442, [2002] IRLR 476 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM ORDER OF HIS HONOUR JUDGE POULTON
(Canterbury County Court)
Strand London WC2 Thursday, 14th March 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANTELL
SIR SWINTON THOMAS
____________________
HARRIS | Appellant | |
- v - | ||
RICHARD LAWSON AUTOLOGISTICS LTD | Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2HD
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MR JAMES RAMSDEN (Instructed by Brachers, Kent) appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Facts
"It is accepted by both parties that employment under this Agreement is dependent on any prospective employee being a member of the Transport and General Workers' Union and adherence in entirety to the terms of the Agreement."
"The Company will recognise the Shop Steward and the Deputy Steward formally elected by the members of the Depot as the official representatives of the Union. The Stewards agree to act in a responsible manner and confine themselves to specific issues relating to the welfare of their members."
Pleadings
"Mr Mick Selsby, who represented the Sheerness drivers at the meeting, and who signed the agreement on their behalf, had actual or alternatively ostensible authority to sign on their behalf."
Before the Judge
"There may be circumstances where a substantive agreement has to be varied, but advice should be sought from a full-time officer before contemplating any such action. In any event, it is for the full- time officers to be signatories to substantive agreements."
This Appeal
Relevant Facts
(1) From 1988 onwards the claimant was offered employment and then employed by the defendants on terms which the employers believed to be endorsed by his union. Our attention was drawn to a letter of 21st September 1988 addressed to the claimant individually by the defendant. Part of it reads:
"I am therefore pleased to offer you a permanent position with our company as a transport driver under terms and conditions which are subject to agreement and ratification with the Trade Union.
Once these terms and conditions have been agreed upon, I will write to you again confirming them, at which time I shall require from you confirmation of your acceptance or otherwise of our offer of employment."
"Following the completion of our negotiations with your Trade Union representative, I am now pleased to confirm that we have agreed on terms and conditions for your employment with our company on the Peugeot contract at Port Richborough.
Thus, you are now formally offered permanent employment with our company as a transporter driver commencing on Monday 6th February 1989 under the terms and conditions of the agreement, details of which can be provided for you by your Trade Union representative or obtained from a copy which is held in the depot office by the Depot Manager.
Given that these terms and conditions are acceptable to you, then I would ask you to sign the attached acknowledgement of acceptance of employment and return it to me in the envelope provided."
(2) As indicated earlier in this judgment, the defendants on 8th February 1989 made an agreement with the Transport and General Workers' Union as a result of which Port Richborough became a closed shop (clause 4) and the elected shop steward and his deputy were recognised as the official representatives of the union (clause 5).
(3) Subsequently, as one would expect, over the years between 1989 and 1996, the shop stewards did negotiate with the employers in relation to a variety of matters, including holiday pay (see, for example, the addendum to Agreement No. 6 dated 18th September 1990 at page 166 of Vol II of the exhibits).
(4) Mr Selsby was in 1996 the duly elected shop steward. He had apparently been elected in 1989 and re-elected subsequently.
(5) On 11th June 1996 Mr Selsby and Mr Nolder, another union official, met Mr Cowie, the defendants' finance director, and discussed holiday pay. The employers produced a list of holiday entitlement for the men to consider prior to entering into an agreement to put all holidays on what was described as "real time".
(6) There was an issue as to whether in fact what happened on 11th June was put to the claimant and his workmates, so the case must proceed at this stage on the basis that it was not.
(7) However on 14th August 1996 Mr Cowie and Mr Selsby negotiated the variation agreement which Mr Selsby returned signed in October 1996. Mr Selsby asserts that between August and October he obtained the drivers' approval of the agreement which he had in due course signed. That is disputed. For present purposes it must be assumed that he did not obtain that approval and that, as the claimant contends, he was not fully aware of the agreement until the problem of redundancies arose in 1997.
(8) As Mr Evans points out, and as this claim demonstrates, the 1996 variation reduced the holiday pay entitlement of the claimant in the event of redundancy.
(9) On the evidence available to the claimant which again, for present purposes, is accepted, it was not custom and practice at the defendants' depot for shop stewards to negotiate and agree matters affecting pay without prior consultation with the workforce.
(10) According to the claimant in this case there was a standing instruction of the Transport and General Workers' Union issued in 1991, to which I have referred, which was not complied with in that the agreement was concluded without reference to the union's district officer. For present purposes, I would accept that there was non-compliance.
Law
"There is no reason at all why, in a particular case, union representatives should not be the agents of an employee to make a contract, or to receive a notice, or otherwise effect a binding transaction on his behalf. But that agency so to do does not stem from the mere fact that they are union representatives and that he is a member of the union; it must be supported in the particular case by the creation of some specific agency, and that can arise only if the evidence supports the conclusion that there was such an agency."
"The so called `normative effect' by which it can be inferred that provisions of collective agreements have become part of individual contracts of employment is now well recognised in employment law. However, serious difficulties still arise because the principle still has to be one of incorporation into the individual contracts of employment and the extraction of a recognisable contractual intent as between the individual employee and his employer. The mere existence of collective agreements which are relevant to the employee and his employment does not include a contractual intent. The contractual intent has to be found in the individual contract of employment and very often the evidence will not be sufficient to establish such an intent in a manner which satisfies accepted contractual criteria and satisfies ordinary criteria of certainty. Where the relevant subject-matter is one of present day-to-day relevance to the employer and employee, as for example wage rates and hours of work, the continued relationship between employer and employee, the former paying wages and providing work, the latter working and accepting wages, provides a basis for inferring such a contractual intent. Where, as in the case of redundancy, the situation is one which does not have daily implications but only arises occasionally, the inference will be more difficult to sustain. Here, there had not previously been any question of compulsory redundancies. There is no previously tested position by which a local custom could be demonstrated, nor was there any previous situation involving any of the relevant individuals, or for that matter any other employees of the defendants from which it could be inferred as a matter of individual contractual intent, that individual contracts of employment were to include as a matter of contractual right and obligation selection for redundancy on the seniority principle."
"An employer is not entitled unilaterally to vary a contract since that would be to impose terms upon the employee to which the employee has not agreed. The same principles of variation of contract apply to contracts of employment as to any other contract; it is a consensual exercise."
"In practice the unions or other representatives of the employees play a valuable role in negotiating and facilitating variations in the individual contracts of employment and frequently, probably normally, the matter is dealt with less formally; revised terms of employment are negotiated with the employees' representatives and adopted by the employees either as a matter of ratification or by implied acceptance by continuing to work for the employer upon the new terms."