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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 >> Balfour Beatty Power Networks Ltd & Anor v Wilcox & Ors [2006] EWCA Civ 1240 (20 July 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1240.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1240, [2007] IRLR 63 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
(THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF)
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
SIR PETER GIBSON
____________________
BALFOUR BEATTY POWER NETWORKS LTD | ||
INTERSERVE INDUSTRIAL SERVICES LTD | CLAIMANT/APPLICANT | |
- v - | ||
MR C WILCOX & ORS | DEFENDANTS/RESPONDENTS |
____________________
____________________
MR A STAFFORD QC and MR A ROSS (instructed by Messrs Rowley Ashworth, London, SW19 1SE)
appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
"This is not the class of case in which the [Court of Appeal] is in an equivalent position to the EAT, making the sole focus the ETl's decision. This was an appraisal of industrial realities within an uncontentious framework of law. Here both the ET and the EAT possess knowledge and experience which the [Court of Appeal] lacks".
"We accept the evidence of Mr Seymour that a couple of weeks after being dismissed at the end of December 2001 by Hyder, that he was approached by Mr Bowen, who told him that he had been head-hunted by Interserve and that he was trying to get the former Hyder employees on the RASP contract to come and work for Interserve. Mr Seymour started to work for Interserve in January 2002 on similar pay and he continued to work in exactly the same way as he had done for Hyder. He was still mostly sent to the depot of WPD and dealt with exactly the same WPD engineers as he had done for years. They told him where to go and what work was required as they had always done when he worked for Hyder. Mr Seymour considered the only change was that whereas he had worked at Hyder's Bridgend office, he now worked out of a Swansea office. The same equipment was provided by Interserve as had been by Hyder".
"It can be seen that most of the individuals were linesmen. We accept the evidence of Mr Lewis who joined Interserve, that he was performing exactly the same duties that he had performed for Hyder but for different employers and that all of the people were also performing exactly the same duties for Interserve. Mr Lewis gave Mr Bowen, Mr Handley and Mr Middleton's name in January. He also gave Mr Bowen all the other names of the ex- employees of Hyder. But Mr Lewis said that Mr Bowen did not want to take on the others because it could affect whether TUPE applied. Mr Lewis gave Mr Handley and Mr Middleton's names with the others and Mr Lewis confirmed in cross-examination that Mr Bowen did mention TUPE on that day. We find that Mr Lewis was correct in his recollection of the conversation with Mr Bowen".
"the work was carried out exactly as before by those Claimants who went to work for Interserve".
"The RASP contract application. Was there an 'economic entity' capable of being transferred?
The work under this contract was related to a specific area and supported the electricity supplier in that region. The Claimants had been part of the contract for several years. The work would be fairly constant over a period of time and the contract was managed as a separate entity by the contracts supervisor. Certain additional works were billed as day works. Directions would be given to the men by a supervisor and the men would go to WPD depots to be given more direct instructions by WPD's engineers. Apart from the two supervisors there was no other management structure in place. The skills of the workforce wre necessary as this was required by the WPD authority for the work that they performed. Although from time to time the Claimants would be sent to assist other contracts, this was the exception and does not alter the cohesion of this particular group and the work it was engaged to perform. We find that there was a clear economic entity applying the Cheesman test of a multi-factorial approach.
Did that economic entity retain its identity after the transfer in question?
We find that the same work was being carried out from January 2002 onwards by almost the same people with the same objectives. The majority of the work assigned to the contract did become employed by Interserve Industrial Services. Mr Bowen, contract engineer, commenced work from 17 December 2001. It was then that he started recruiting a number of the first Respondents employees. Mr Bowen did not give any evidence to the tribunal but the Respondents submit that his position is not as a contract engineer or senior authorised engineer with Interserve but a more general and wide ranging role described as project manager. We do not accept that that was a limited role by Mr Bowen and the evidence suggests he carried on more or less the same sort of role as with the first respondents. He is a key senior employee. We find that the skilled workers, which were mainly linesmen taken on, was because of the required levels of authority to keep the undertaking continuing as before to ensure there was no break in activity. We find that the reason why labourers did not transfer was connected with the attempt to avoid the TUPE regulations applying. This is a factor to be considered amongst all the other factors in the case. We consider this to be a case in which ECM considerations apply as defined in the Astle case.
As to tangible assets transferring, again the leased items did not transfer and this is a relatively minor aspect compared to the value of the contract in this case. It is suggested that in the Respondents case there would have been book debt belonging to Hyder, being payment for work being carried out by Hyder but not yet paid for by WPD which did not pass across to Interserve at the end of Hyder's contract. There is no evidence to support this and we reject such a submission. Taking into account our finding that the reason or principle reason why the workforce were not taken on initially or at staggered times or not at all in the case of labourers was an attempt to avoid the TUPE regulations, and applying the Cheesman factors, we find that the economic entity did retain its identity after the transfer in question".
"12. first, we must remind ourselves of the approach that we, as an Appeal Tribunal, have to take.
13. We may not substitute our own view of the facts, however convinced we may be of their righteousness, for those of the Tribunal if the factual finding below fell within the remit of that Tribunal; and we have to remind ourselves that whether or not there was an undertaking, is essentially a finding of fact as the European Court of Justice has emphasised in case after case. We also have to remind ourselves that whether there has been a transfer of such an undertaking, again involves a factual assessment. This is not the occasion for a rehearing of fact. We may only interfere if there is an error of law. We recognise that an Employment Tribunal does not have to deal with every argument which is presented to it. It is common experience that tribunals sometimes appear to fear, that if they do not deal with every argument, however small, and every disagreement, however immaterial, which is put before them, they may be subject to criticism. The criticism which we would make, however, is that approach itself tends to a complete lack of clarity.
14. Some arguments may even appear central before a Tribunal but on a logical approach, applying appropriate principles, are of no real relevance. Although we hope and expect Employment Tribunals to deal with an argument which had appeared to the parties before it to be central, we do not consider it to be an error of law if the Tribunal does not do so. The Tribunal's decision is not required to be one which is the product of elaborate draftsmanship. It needs simply and preferably, as briefly as the circumstances properly permit, to deal with the issues before it and its conclusions".
"6. The real critique is not that the decision fails the Allonby/Tran test which despite its faults I do not consider it does, but that it has not followed Interserve into the mass of detail upon which its case depends. In my view that misapprehends what the Employment Tribunal was required to do, which was to give a sensible industrial and commercial answer to a straightforward legal question".
"the following information
a. the issues which the Tribunal has identified as being relevant to the claim;
b. if some identified issues are not determined, what those issues were and why they were not determined;
c. findings of fact relevant to the issues which had been determined
d. a concise statement of the equivocal law
e. how relevant finding of fact and applicable law have been applied in order to determine the issues".
"Undertaking/Economic Entity
3. The ET erred in law in concluding there was an 'undertaking' or 'economic entity' in the hands of the putative transferor and in the hands of the putative transferee and the EAT erred in failing to hold that the ET had so erred. In particular
3.1 the ET erred in law in failing to identify the 'undertaking' or 'economic entity' which in found or supposed to exist
3.2 further and alternatively to 3.1 above the ET erred (in the final unnumbered paragraph on page 13 of the Reasons) in equating 'work under this contract' (being the 'RASP' contract between WPD and Interserve) with an economic entity. In accordance with the authoritative guidance of the European Court in the line of cases beginning with Süzen v Zehnacker [1997] ICR 662 (paragraph 15) an economi entity 'cannot be reduced to the activity entrusted to it'.
3.3 further, there could be or was no 'stable' economic entity since
(a) under the terms of Interserve's contract with WPD
(i) the work was not given exclusively to Interserve;
(ii) continuity of work could not be guaranteed;
(iii) the volume of work was indicated for guidance purposes only;
(b) accordingly the role of Interserve was to supplement, as required the needs of WPD (as appears from paragraph 58 of the Agreed Facts) so that Interserve was not providing a discrete service to Interserve;
(c) as appears from paragraph 88 of the Agreed Facts WPD in fact ceased to issue work to Interserve less than a year after it had begun to do so.
3.4 further and alternatively the ET erred in law in failing to address the contentions advanced by Interserve that there was or could be no stable or discrete entity in the hands of Interserve having regard to the matters set out in ground 3.3 above and each of them
3.5 further the ET failed properly to resolve, alternatively resolved (at pages 9 to 11) without any clear or adequate reasons, the disputes which were relevant to the existence, definition and scope of any undertaking and which were indicated
(i) at paragraph 44 of the Agreed Facts, as to whether Hyder's work with WPD was predominantly low voltage
(ii) at paragraph 84 of the Agreed Facts, as to whether low voltage work was required under the contract between Interserve and WPD only where low voltage was connected to the high voltage network".
"Although from time to time the Claimants would be sent to assist other contracts, this was the exception and does not alter the cohesion of this particular group and the work it was engaged to perform. We find that there was a clear economic entity applying the Cheesman test of a multi-factorial approach".
"We note that the Tribunal had plainly in mind the appropriate test not least by reason of their reference at the bottom of page 13 [the passage that I have just read] to the cohesion of this particular group, as they described it, and the work it was engaged to perform. We think that they were entitled to conclude that there was here an organised body of resources which, in particular, relied as a significant element upon the skills of the workforce as being necessary. In particular, on this contract, it would clearly be necessary that the employees have qualifications which were recognised giving them authority to deal with electricity and had to be trained to that end. Thus it might be difficult, if not impossible, to find similar workers on the open labour market and therefore one would expect that an incoming contractor would be inclined, perhaps, to use the services of those who had been used before. It is not for us to decide, merely to recognise that it was within the powers of the Employment Tribunal to come to that factual assessment if it chose to do so".
"We find that the skilled workers, which were mainly linesmen taken on, was because of the required levels of authority to keep the undertaking continuing as before to ensure there was no break in activity".
"13. For Directive (77/187/E.E.C.) to be applicable, however, the transfer must relate to a stable economic entity whose activity is not limited to performing one specific works contract: see [Rygaard]. The term entity thus refers to an organised grouping of persons or assets facilitating the exercise of an economic activity which pursues a specific objective".
"15. An entity cannot be reduced to an activity entrusted to it. Its identity also emerges from other factors, such as its workforce; its management staff; the way in which its work is organised; its operating methods, or indeed, where appropriate, the operational resources available to it.
16. The mere loss of a service contract to a competitor cannot therefore by itself indicate the existence of a transfer within the meaning of Directive (77/187/E.E.C.)".
"It seems to us that what matters in determining whether there is an undertaking is whether the test in the Directive can be said to be met or not. That is essentially a question of practicality. It is not to be defined by legal constructs other than those implicit in the Directive itself. The Directive is directed towards safeguarding employees' rights in the event of a change of employer. If it were right that those working for Balfour Beatty [this argument was principally deployed in the Balfour Beatty context] under a contract such as this, no matter how long they had worked for Balfour Beatty, nor how carefully they were organised and structured, nor how long they might expect, even if they could not demand, to be employed further, did not constitute collectively an undertaking, then any change of employer to which those employers were subject, would not itself be subject to the transfer of undertaking regulations. If X Co succeeded over a weekend to the business of Balfour Beatty, there would be no transfer of an undertaking upon this analysis because the core underlying contract did not provide the necessary stability. We think that the factual circumstances are so far removed from those which operated in the Rygaard case that not only would that defeat the purpose of the regulations as we understand them to be, but it makes no practical sense. Moreover, as the lay members would have wished to point out, it would have significant consequences for the avoidance of the transfer regulations because such an approach would encourage would-be employers who wished to avoid any TUPE consequences to ensure that contracts were 'defeasible' even if the expectation of the parties was that they would be honoured in a practical way".
"Interserve did not envisage any low voltage work at all".
"We do not accept that as being accurate evidence by Mr McLean since he had no particular knowledge of that fact. Indeed, we prefer the evidence of the Claimants, that they were doing the same work before as after, which would suggest that this was an on-going work required by WPD.
We find that the work was carried out exactly as before by those Claimants who went to work for Interserve. We do not accept the evidence of Mr McLean that this was unforeseen additional work. He had held negotiations with WPD; there is the close timing of the additional work to the start date of the contract, a matter of days; and Mr Bowen was actively recruiting individuals in ways to minimise the effect of TUPE as it was perceived. We conclude that this was a clear attempt to avoid the regulations. We find that Mr McLean must have known what the work was going to involve and his evidence about the fact that they would not require linesman or labourers to undertake the work under this contract, is not credible evidence".
"Mr Bowen, an engineer, was recruited as a product manager by Interserve in December 2001. He had formerly worked in the RASP contract of Hyder. He was a senior person/engineer. On page 89 of the bundle there was a memo from Mr Kitto from to Mr Collier of the AEEU dated 14 December 2001 in which Mr Kitto states 'The jungle drums are telling me that Interserve are actively seeking recruits and hence it is likely that our engineer, Mike Bowen, who starts with Interserve on Monday is likely to start approaching his former colleagues At least this may mean that they are not out of work while matters proceed'. This was prophetic because indeed Mr Bowen did start approaching his former colleagues".
"The nature of any undertaking and its 'transfer'
4. The ET erred in law in holding that any undertaking had been transferred and the EAT erred in law in failing to hold that the ET had so erred. In particular
4.1 The ET erred in law in treating any economic entity as 'labour intensive' that is to say an activity based essentially on manpower. The service at issue involved, on the Agreed Facts, substantial equipment so that it did not qualify on the test laid down by the European Court of Justice in Abler v Sodexho [2004] IRLR 168 as labour intensive or 'an activity based essentially on manpower'.
4.2 accordingly the fact that assets were not transferred from Hyder to Interserve ought to have been treated as fatal the existence of a transfer
4.3 the ET misdirected itself in law on page 9 of the Reasons in stating 'the same equipment was provided by Interserve as had been by Hyder'. In particular
(a) if this is a finding that the equipment was transferred from Hyder to Interserve it is contrary to paragraph 76 of the Agreed Facts.
(b) Alternatively if it is intended to be a determination that that same of kind of equipment was used by Interserve as had been used by Huder and that the operation was to that extent similar, the ET erred in failing to take account of and address the significance of the Agreed Facts that no vehicles, tools or equipment were transferred
4.4 further the ET misdirected itself in law
(a) in discounting the significance of the equipment because it had been leased by Hyder and
(b) in holding that it was a 'relatively minor aspect' compared to the value of the contract (paragraph 17 of the Reasons).
In particular
(i) it was irrelevant whether the equipment was leased or owned outright by Hyder
(ii) there was no basis, for the conclusion that the equipment and in particular the vehicles, was minor in value
(iii) in any event, the relevant matter, which the ET failed to consider, was that the equipment (including the vehicles) was an essential and determining feature of any undertaking, if any undertaking was capable of existing. The Agreed Fact that no equipment or vehicles transferred was crucial when considering whether an operation which was 'equipment intensive' (or not labour intensive) had transferred".
"Therefore, in a sector such as scheduled pubic transport by bus, where the tangible assets contribute significantly to the performance of the activity, the absence of a transfer to a significant extent from the old to the new contractor of such assets, which are necessary for the proper functioning of the entity, must lead to the conclusion that the entity does not retain its identity".
"We doubt whether the recent decisions of the Court of Justice in Oy Liikenne and Abler represent the shift away from previous authorities for which counsel for the appellants contended. In both cases, the Court reaffirmed the guidance previously given in Spijkers and other cases to the effect that all relevant facts and circumstances must be identified, and weighed in the balance, to determine whether an undertaking has or has not been transferred. Oy Liikenne and Abler were decided on the facts found in them. We do not read either case as laying down an invariable requirement that, in the context of a claimed TUPE transfer, a given business must necessarily be characterised as either "asset-reliant" or "labour-intensive", as if those were mutually exclusive categories that defined exhaustively the range of possibilities that could arise. The range of intermediate possibilities appears, a priori, to be unlimited. The cases illustrate the position at one end of the spectrum when a transfer must include the production assets of the entity. In intermediate cases, it must always be an issue for the fact-finding tribunal whether, on an appreciation of all relevant facts and circumstances, the undertaking in question can be said to have been transferred for the purposes of the 1981 regulations."
"11. Both parties made written submissions and responses to the other's written submissions. On behalf of the Claimants it is submitted that considering the type of undertaking, which requires skilled employees combining with labourers or mates, the relevance and weight to be attached to the factors relied on by the Claimants is far greater than the importance attached by the Respondents to the lack of transfer of valuable assets. The Tribunal must look at the reality of the situation and give a purposeful approach to the regulations by deciding that there was an economic entity represented by each contract which retained its identity."
"17. As to tangible assets transferring, again the leased items did not transfer and this is a relatively minor aspect compared to the value of the contract in this case".
"We consider that the appellation 'labour intensive' is not necessarily a mis-description and is one which the Tribunal is entitled to come to on its assessments of the facts. We recognise, however, that it would have been desirable for the Tribunal to have said something more about the importance of labour within the contract. We do not think that their failure to do so goes so far as to represent a defect, particularly when it is plain that they were considering a submission by the Respondents that the part played by vehicles, plant, equipment and specialist tools was vital to the operation. (see their citation in the middle of paragraph 16). Their rejection of that shows that they had well in mind the need to balance the significance within the contract of the nature of the labour and the nature of the equipment which it was using."
"It was also an agreed fact, turning for a moment to the RASP contract, although we shall look at that separately, that Hyder had leased vehicles. The submission was that if the identity of an undertaking is to be defined in part by the fact that it utilises plant and machinery as part of the resources, then a failure to transfer such plant and machinery indicates that there is to be no transfer of the undertaking. There was no basis, argued Mr Jeans for regulating the significance of the non-transfer of equipment, but that, he noted, was what the Employment Tribunal had done at page 13. We reject this submission. We consider again regard needs to be had in making a factual assessment in this context to the practicalities. There may be cases in which the failure to transfer equipment for instance buses, in the bus undertaking (see Oy Liikenne) may demonstrate that there can have been no transfer of the bus undertaking. It is not difficult to think of other examples. Where, however, purported transfer does not own equipment, but as a matter of commercial prudence chooses to lease that equipment, it does not seem to us to be a matter of such critical importance that the equipment or those leases are not transferred over to the would-be transferee if the transferee himself, or itself, similarly leases identical equipment. Each is choosing to ensure that the operation continues with equipment owned in each case by a third party and not the proprietor of the undertaking. Instead of the equipment being a capital asset, it is something that is paid for out of revenue.
"The lay members, in particular, see this as being a case in which it could not be said that assets of a business had not been transferred since leased goods cannot be described easily as assets and the essential aspect of such a transaction is that, as a matter of practicality, similar items are used after as before the transfer and obtained for that purpose".
"It is too often forgotten that, in the context of appeals from the Employment Appeal Tribunal, this court is a second-tier appellate court. Second-tier appellant courts are primarily concerned with the correctness of the trial court's decision."
Order: Appeal dismissed.