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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 >> Eastwood v Magnox Electric Plc [2002] EWCA Civ 463 (22 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/463.html Cite as: [2003] ICR 520, [2002] Emp LR 795, [2002] IRLR 447, [2002] EWCA Civ 463 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM LLANGEFNI COUNTY COURT
(His Honour Judge Elystan Morgan)
Strand London WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANTELL
SIR SWINTON THOMAS
____________________
(1) GEORGE BRIAN EASTWOOD | ||
(2) JOHN ROGER WILLIAMS | ||
Claimants/Appellants | ||
- v - | ||
MAGNOX ELECTRIC PLC | ||
Defendant/Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Friday, 22nd March 2002
"1.Both Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams were long serving employees holding senior and responsible posts in the security section at Magnox's power station.
2. On 1st May 1996 Mr Eastwood became involved in a verbal disagreement with his immediate superior (Mr Owens), an individual who had a grudge against Mr Eastwood relating to an earlier incident.
3.Mr Owens reported an incident to a Mr Allen, a manager, which resulted in Mr Eastwood being summoned to see Mr Allen on 2nd May 1996. Mr Eastwood was told to admit the allegations, with a threat that failure to do so would result in other unspecified matters from his past being brought up and used against him.
4.Mr Eastwood refused to admit the allegations and there followed a series of events, the purpose and aim of which was to secure evidence with which to start disciplinary proceedings against Mr Eastwood. Individuals were counselled and persuaded to make statements which were known or suspected to be false, to misrepresent what Mr Eastwood had said to them, and a campaign was orchestrated with the intention of undermining, harassing and demoralising Mr Eastwood.
5.Mr Eastwood, for what was a relatively trivial incident, was ultimately on 13th June 1996 given a final written warning to remain on his file for two years. Mr Eastwood decided to appeal.
6.Shortly before the appeal on 2nd July 1996, which resulted in the two-year period being reduced to six months, Mr Williams, a colleague of Mr Eastwood, was asked in late June 1996 to provide a false statement in support of the case against Mr Eastwood. When he refused he was threatened and told that he too would be made the subject of investigation and disciplinary action.
7.An apparent fact finding investigation was instigated but was in truth no more than a concerted attempt to obtain information detrimental to Mr Williams and Mr Eastwood. The exercise was aided by the chance discovery that historically there had been a previous dispute between Mr Eastwood and a female member of the security staff, Mrs Roberts. Allegations of serious sexual harassment by Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams against Mrs Robert was thereafter used as the vehicle in the campaign to harass and undermine Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams.
8.Mrs Roberts was encouraged and assisted by members of management in formulating a series of allegations against Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams, some of which were in the order of eight years old. A formal complaint was lodged on 31st July 1996 by Mrs Roberts.
9.On 2nd August 1996 Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams were informed that they faced serious allegations of sexual harassment, were required to answer detailed questions without being told what the details of the allegations were and were publicly suspended on 7th August 1996 pending disciplinary hearings.
10.Whilst suspended an opportunity was taken by the Defendants to secure any available prejudicial information against them with a promise that none of the individuals providing the information would be required to give evidence to support what they said. Further, and as part of the concerted effort to deprive Mr Williams and Mr Eastwood of the opportunity to prepare their case, they were forbidden to discuss any matter relating to the disciplinary investigation with any person in the workplace.
11.The main complainant, Mrs Roberts, was encouraged by certain members of management to `beef up' her allegations and was given assistance in so doing.
12.The disciplinary hearings in respect of Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams took place in circumstances where numerous serious allegations were made and found proved despite the fact that no evidence was called to support them. This was so even though some of the allegations found to have been proved had been withdrawn by the original makers, and others contradicted by witnesses called on behalf of Mr Williams and Mr Eastwood.
13.Mr Williams and Mr Eastwood were eventually dismissed, Mr Williams on 4th October 1996, after some four months of what is alleged to be a concerted attempt to demoralise and undermine him, and Mr Eastwood on 18th April 1997, after approximately 12 months of a similar campaign. After dismissal photographs of Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams were posted at the security entrance with accompanying derogatory remarks.
14.By the time of their dismissal both Mr Eastwood and Mr Williams were suffering from stress, in the case of Mr Eastwood he had been so suffering for over seven months."
"In my view these observations [in Addis] cannot be read as precluding the recovery of damages where the manner of dismissal involved a breach of the trust and confidence term and this caused financial loss. Addis v Gramophone Co. Ltd was decided in the days before this implied term was adumbrated. Now that this term exists and is normally implied in every contract of employment, damages for its breach should be assessed in accordance with ordinary contractual principles. This is as much true if the breach occurs before or in connection with dismissal as at any other time."
"...based not on the manner of a wrongful dismissal but on a breach of contract which is separate from and independent of the termination of the contract of employment."
"The principled position is as follows. Provided that a relevant breach of contract can be established, and the requirements of causation, remoteness and mitigation can be satisfied, there is no good reason why in the field of employment law recovery of financial loss in respect of damage to reputation caused by breach of contract is necessarily excluded. I am reinforced in this view by the consideration that such losses are in principle recoverable in respect of unfair dismissal."
Part X of the Employment Rights Act 1996 gives an employee the right not to be unfairly dismissed. Section 111 provides that complaints of unfair dismissal may be brought to an Employment Tribunal. Such tribunals are specialist tribunals consisting of a legally qualified chairman and two lay members, one drawn from the employers' side and one from Trades Unions, with appeals from the Employment Tribunal's decisions going to the Employment Appeal Tribunal. The Employment Appeal Tribunal is similarly constituted with a presider, who is usually a judge, and two lay members. The basic period allowed for the bringing of a complaint of unfair dismissal is only three months, far shorter than the limitation period for actions in contract or tort in the civil courts, and the Employment Tribunal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal have their own procedures which are less formal than those of the courts. If the employee's complaint is held by the Employment Tribunal to be well-founded and the employee does not seek, or, if he does seek, does not obtain, an order for reinstatement or re-engagement, the court will order compensation, consisting of a basic award and a compensatory award. The basic award is computed by reference to the length of service but may be reduced on just and equitable grounds having regard to the employee's conduct. The compensatory award is of "such amount as the Tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to the loss sustained by the complainant in consequence of the dismissal insofar as that loss is attributable to action taken by the employer", but it may be reduced by such amount as the Tribunal considers just and equitable if the employee caused or contributed to the dismissal. Importantly, the compensatory award is subject to a statutory limit. The Act also prescribes what employees can avail themselves of the right not to be unfairly dismissed. By section 205(1) the remedy of an employee for infringement of any of the rights conferred by Part X is by way of complaint to an Employment Tribunal and not otherwise.
"2 My Lords, on this appeal the employee seeks damages for loss he claims he suffered as a result of the manner in which he was dismissed. He uses as his legal foundation the decision of the House in Mahmud v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA [1998] AC 20, although that was not a manner of dismissal case. In principle the employee's argument has much to commend it. I said so, in my obiter observations in Mahmud's case, at pp 39-40. But there is an insuperable obstacle: the intervention of Parliament in the unfair dismissal legislation. Having heard full argument on the point, I am persuaded that a common law right embracing the manner in which an employee is dismissed cannot satisfactorily coexist with the statutory right not to be unfairly dismissed. A newly developed common law right of this nature, covering the same ground as the statutory right, would fly in the face of the limits Parliament has already prescribed on matters such as the classes of employees who have the benefit of the statutory right, the amount of compensation payable and the short time limits for making claims. It would also defeat the intention of Parliament that claims of this nature should be decided by specialist tribunals, not the ordinary courts of law. I too would dismiss this appeal."
"So it does not seem altogether appropriate for use in connection with the way that relationship is terminated."
"54 My Lords, this statutory system for dealing with unfair dismissals was set up by Parliament to deal with the recognised deficiencies of the law as it stood at the time of Malloch v Aberdeen Corpn [1971] I WLR 1581. The remedy adopted by Parliament was not to build upon the common law by creating a statutory implied term that the power of dismissal should be exercised fairly or in good faith, leaving the courts to give a remedy on general principles of contractual damages. Instead, it set up an entirely new system outside the ordinary courts, with tribunals staffed by a majority of lay members, applying new statutory concepts and offering statutory remedies. Many of the new rules, such as the exclusion of certain classes of employees and the limit on the amount of the compensatory award, were not based upon any principle which it would have been open to the courts to apply. They were based upon policy and represented an attempt to balance fairness to employees against the general economic interests of the community. And I should imagine that Parliament had also in mind the practical difficulties I have mentioned about causation and proportionality which would arise if the remedy was unlimited. So Parliament adopted the practical solution of giving the tribunals a very broad jurisdiction to award what they considered just and equitable but subject to a limit on the amount.
55 In my opinion, all the matters of which Mr Johnson complains in these proceedings were within the jurisdiction of the industrial tribunal. His most substantial complaint is of financial loss flowing from his psychiatric injury which he says was a consequence of the unfair manner of his dismissal. Such loss is a consequence of the dismissal which may form the subject matter of a compensatory award."
"56 Part X of the Employment Rights Act 1996 therefore gives a remedy for exactly the conduct of which Mr Johnson complains. But Parliament had restricted that remedy to a maximum of £11,000, whereas Mr Johnson wants to claim a good deal more. The question is whether the courts should develop the common law to give a parallel remedy which is not subject to any such limit.
57 My Lords, I do not think that it is a proper exercise of the judicial function of the House to take such a step. Judge Ansell, to whose unreserved judgment I would pay respectful tribute, went in my opinion to the heart of the matter when he said:
`there is not one hint in the authorities that the ... tens of thousands of people that appear before the tribunals can have, as it were, a possible second bite in common law and I ask myself, if this is the situation, why on earth do we have this special statutory framework? What is the point of it if it can be circumvented in this way? ... it would mean that effectively the statutory limit on compensation for unfair dismissal would disappear.'
58 I can see no answer to these questions. For the judiciary to construct a general common law remedy for unfair circumstances attending dismissal would be to go contrary to the evident intention of Parliament that there should be such a remedy but that it should be limited in application and extent.
59 The same reason is in my opinion fatal to the claim based upon a duty of care. It is of course true that a duty of care can exist independently of the contractual relationship. But the grounds upon which I think it would be wrong to impose an implied contractual duty would make it equally wrong to achieve the same result by the imposition of a duty of care."
"79But the courts might well have developed the law in a different way by imposing a more general obligation upon an employer to treat his employee fairly even in the manner of his dismissal. ...
80But the creation of the statutory right has made any such development of the common law both unnecessary and undesirable. In the great majority of cases the new common law right would merely replicate the statutory right; and it is obviously unnecessary to imply a term into a contract to give one of the contracting parties a remedy which he already has without it. In other cases, where the common law would be giving a remedy in excess of the statutory limits or to excluded categories of employees, it would be inconsistent with the declared policy of Parliament. In all cases it would allow claims to be entertained by the ordinary courts when it was the policy of Parliament that they should be heard by specialist tribunals with members drawn from both sides of industry. And, even more importantly, the coexistence of two systems, overlapping but varying in matters of detail and heard by different tribunals, would be a recipe for chaos. All coherence in our employment laws would be lost.
81 For these reasons it is a step which, for one, I am not prepared to take. For the same reasons I am satisfied that it would not be appropriate to attempt to achieve the same result by taking the novel course of subjecting the employer's contractual rights to a tortious duty of care."
(1) Did Johnson define areas of exclusivity which restricted the operation of implied conditions or a duty of care? The judge said that it did, and that Johnson clearly laid down areas which limited the operation of the implied conditions and that, in respect of the duty of care, the unfair dismissal legislation acted as a buffer.
(2)What are the boundaries to be set? The judge said that the area of exclusion was the area of the purview of the Employment Tribunal considering unfair dismissal, and included those acts which took place since the disciplinary machinery began to run.
(3)How do those boundaries affect the issue in this case? The judge held that in the case of Mr Eastwood the facts from the time since 2nd May 1996, when Mr Eastwood was summoned to see Mr Allen, and in the case of Mr Williams from the time when he was enmeshed in the disciplinary procedures near the end of June 1996, were matters which could not give rise to a claim relating to the unfair manner of dismissal in the county court proceedings.
(4)Were the opinions of the majority in Johnson ratio or obiter? The judge said that they were ratio.
(5) What is the situation in regard to causation and foreseeability in the context of remoteness of damage? The judge said that the issue of remoteness did not really arise, given his earlier conclusions.