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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 >> Hare Wines Ltd v Kaur & Anor [2019] EWCA Civ 216 (22 February 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/216.html Cite as: [2019] IRLR 555, [2019] EWCA Civ 216 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
MR JUSTICE CHOUDHURY
UKEAT/0131/17/JOJ, [2017] UKEAT 0131_17_1710
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice- President, Civil Division, Court of Appeal)
and
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
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HARE WINES LTD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MRS SATWANT KAUR H&W WHOLESALE LTD (DISSOLVED) |
Respondent |
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Alexander MacMillan (instructed by Meaby & Co Solicitors LLP) for the First Respondent (Claimant)
The Second Respondent did not appear and was not represented
Hearing date: 19 February 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
The Facts
"I am sorry to inform you that due to unforeseen circumstances concerning the business, I must inform you that our business will now cease to trade. As a result we will unfortunately have to terminate your employment as from today."
"Mrs S Kaur was employed by H&W Wholesale Ltd which ceased trading on 9/12/14. She was called by Mr Alex T Windsor, who was director, and they had a meeting and Mr Windsor explained to her the situation and the matter was resolved between them. Mr K S Hare was unaware how things were resolved and was under the impression that S (Mrs S Kaur) did not want to continue as she did not turn up to work like all other staff did come to work."
"16. Both Counsel agree that at the heart of this case is a dispute as to what happened on 9 December 2014. On the Claimant's case, she was dismissed because of the Impending transfer and her contract of employment transferred pursuant to regulation 4(1). On the Respondents' case, the Claimant objected to transfer such that regulation 4(8) operated to prevent her contract from transferring and she should not be treated as having been dismissed,
17. The Claimant's evidence was that she was called into the meeting, that Mr Windsor opened it by saying that he did not know how to tell her this and proceeded to give her bad news in the form of an indication that she was dismissed as the Second Respondent did not want her. The Claimant estimated that meeting lasted 45 minutes to an hour. There was a long conversation about Mr Chatha, that he did not want her and that the Second Respondent did not want Mr Chatha to manage her.
18, By contrast, in his written statement, Mr Windsor says that he called the meeting and told the Claimant that the business was being transferred to the Second Respondent. The Claimant stated that she was not happy to be working for the Second Respondent and did not want to transfer. He stated that the Claimant explained her reason was the difficulty she had getting on with Mr Chatha and another male employee, whose name Mr Windsor could not recall, Mr Windsor stated that the Claimant also expressed concern that he would not be involved in the new company as she and he had got on well together. As the Claimant objected to transfer, her employment ended. He stated that the meeting lasted only 15 to 20 minutes.
19. It is therefore crucial for me to resolve on balance which version of events I prefer and I bear in mind that the burden of proof is on the Claimant in this case to establish the dismissal. It has not been an easy task. There is a remarkable lack of contemporaneous documentation clearly seeing out the position which the parties now adopt. I considered the credibility and reliability of each version of the meeting in turn.
…
22. There are equally a number of matters which count against both Respondents' version of events. The letter of dismissal on 9 December 2014, on a clear and unequivocal reading, makes clear that it is the First Respondent who was terminating the Claimant's employment. if the Claimant had indeed objected, the First Respondent could be expected to write to formalise the end of the employment relationship however I consider that it is significant that Mr Windsor chose to use words of termination by an employer and omitted any reference to the transfer of the business or the Claimant's supposed objection or reluctance to transfer with it. This is particularly so where the First Respondent paid the Claimant £1,474 despite its parlous financial situation.
…
24. I took into account the discrepancies between the contents of Mr Windsor's written witness statement and his oral evidence in cross-examination. The significance of the discrepancies was increased given that the written statement was only produced on the morning of the hearing. As such, any discrepancies cannot be explained by passage of time. Whilst his written statement referred to discussion about the Claimant's difficulties with Mr Chatha, in cross-examination he was adamant that only the Second Respondent was referred to and that Mr Chatha was not even discussed. In response to the Tribunal's questions, Mr Windsor was categoric that there was no discussion in the meeting of any problems between the Claimant and Mr Chatha. This discrepancy between the written and oral evidence was so significant as to undermine seriously the credibility of his evidence.
…
27. The omission of reference in both Responses to an alleged objection to transfer is not consistent with the case as now put. Mr Hare's evidence at paragraph 12 of his witness statement was that when the Claimant did not attend work on 11 December 2014, he spoke to Mr Windsor who told him that the Claimant had refused to transfer. This is not pleaded; rather what is asserted in the Response is that Mr Hare was unaware of how things had been resolved and was under the impression that she did not wish to work for them as she did not attend work. I am satisfied that if Mr Hare had been told in December 2014 that the Claimant had refused to transfer, he would have said so in the Response.
28. Nor was I impressed by the evidence of Mr Hare with regard to the chronology of Mr Chatha's appointment as a director. Whilst not decisive, or even the most weighty factor in my analysis of the credibility of the evidence, I did consider it relevant in considering the context in which the meeting on 9 December 2014 took place The transfer took place on 11 December 2014. Mr Hare's evidence was that there was no suggestion that Mr Chatha may be appointed a director until after Christmas, whereupon discussions took place and the appointment was registered on 2 January 2015. I find that inherently unlikely given the importance of such a decision, the short timescale and intervening holiday period. On balance, I infer that the decision that Mr Chatha would assume management of the Second Respondent following transfer was taken prior to the meeting with the Claimant.
29. On the balance of probabilities, I prefer the Claimant's evidence as to what was said in the meeting on 9 December 2014 to that of Mr Windsor. It is inconsistent with the Second Respondent anticipating that there would be ongoing difficulties in the relationship between the Claimant and Mr Chatha and therefore, deciding that it did not wish her contract of employment to transfer. It is for this reason that the Claimant was the only employee told that she was not wanted. The Claimant did not object to transfer. She would have been employed immediately before transfer but for the dismissal on 9 December 2014. The reason for the dismissal was the transfer. As such her contract of employment transferred and the Claimant was unfairly dismissed. The Claimant was entitled to 12 weeks' notice by virtue of her length of service; and that she was in fact only paid for one week and three days. As such, the Respondent breached her contract of employment."
i) The claimant did not object to transfer: her contract of employment transferred from H&W to Hare Wines Ltd pursuant to regulation 4(1) of TUPE 2006;
ii) the dismissal was automatically unfair;
iii) Hare Wines Ltd breached the contract of employment in respect of notice.
"Having found that [the Claimant] was dismissed because of a difficult working relationship with Mr Chatha the employment tribunal erred in law in concluding that the principal reason for the dismissal was the transfer OR has erred in law in failing to give any or all adequate reasons for that decision."
The law
"(1) Except where objection is made under paragraph (7) a relevant transfer shall not operate so as to terminate the contract of employment of any person employed by the transferor and assigned to the organised group of resources or employees that is subject to the relevant transfer, which would otherwise be terminated by the transfer, but any such contract shall have effect after the transfer as if made originally between the person so employed and the transferee.
…
(3) Any reference in para (1) to a person employed by he transferor and assigned to the organised grouping of resources or employees that is subject to a relevant transfer is a reference to a person so employed immediately before the transfer, or who would have been so employed if he had not been dismissed in the circumstances described in Regulation 7(1)."
"(1) Where either before or after a relevant transfer, any employee of the transferor or transferee is dismissed, that employee shall be treated for the purposes of part 10 of the 1996 Act (unfair dismissal) as unfairly dismissed if the sole or principal reason for his dismissal is the transfer.
(2) This paragraph applies where the sole or principal reason for the dismissal is an economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce of either the transferor or the transferee before or after the relevant transfer.
(3) Where para 2(2) applies,
a) paragraph (1) does not apply;
b) without prejudice to the application of section 98(4) of the 1996 Act (test of fair dismissal) for the purposes of sections 98(1) and 135 of that Act (reason for dismissal)--
i) the dismissal is regarded as having been for redundancy where section 98(2)(c) of that Act applies; or
ii) in any other case, the dismissal is regarded as having been for a substantial reason of a kind such as to justify the dismissal of an employee holding the position which that employee held."
The Appellant's submissions
"At paragraph 29 the Employment Judge initially finds that the reason for the dismissal is the anticipation of ongoing difficulties in the working relationship. She then immediately moves to a conclusion that the reason for the dismissal was the transfer. The employment judge appears to have assumed, consciously or otherwise, that because of the proximity of the transfer it would follow that any dismissal would be by reason of that transfer. An alternative explanation is that she assumed that having rejected the Second Respondent's case on dismissal it followed that she should find against it on the reason for the dismissal. If either of these is the case it amounts to an error of law. If there were some other reason(s) for the judge's decision, they are not ascertainable from the written reasons and the decision is not "Meek compliant".
It is not disputed that in the present case the fact that the transfer took place provided the occasion upon which the Claimant was dismissed. However, given that all of the other employees were not and that they transferred to the Appellant's employment, and that the reasons were found to be a difficult working relationship, it is impossible to discern from the reasons why it could be said that the reason for the dismissal was "the transfer" rather than the transfer providing the occasion for the dismissal.
The Appellant's primary position is that, once a finding had been made that the reasons for the dismissal were personal to the Claimant (and existed independently of the transfer) it was not open to the Employment Judge on her own findings to conclude that the reason or principal reason for the dismissal was the transfer. If that is wrong, then the fall-back position is that there is insufficient reasoning to show why that is the case.
The test of causation is not a "but for" question but must involve a finding as to the reason that caused the employer to dismiss……On any fair reading of the reasons, the findings of EJ Russell are that the reason that the Claimant was treated differently to the other employees was the existence of a difficult working relationship with Mr Chatha…... There is no examination of why, if a dismissal was proposed because of those difficulties, it would follow that the reason, or principal reason was the transfer. On its face it would appear that the true reason for the dismissal was animosity. Such animosity predated the transfer, would have existed had there been no transfer and, if the Claimant had remained employed. would have continued to exist.
A conclusion that the reason for the dismissal was for a reason entirely personal to [the Claimant] precludes the possibility that the principal reason for the dismissal was the transfer. As a matter of logic there can only be one "principal reason" for any action. The dismissal might or might not have been unfair but the responsibility of that dismissal would not transfer to the Appellant, There is a real danger in finding that a purely personal reason can co-exist with the reason or principal reason being the transfer. If the tribunal has concluded that, having rejected the [transferor]'s case that there was an objection or resignation, it was bound to conclude that the reason for the dismissal was the transfer then it has fallen into error see paragraph 59 of Kuzel v Roche. That is one reading of the tribunal's reasons where a sole "central issue" is identified [paragraph 7) .
It may be contended that there was some evidenced that the practical effect of the transfer was or might have led to greater proximity or management giving rise to a risk of further difficulties between the First Respondent and Mr Chatha. That appears to be the position taken in her Answer in the EAT. if that is the case, then the reasons are silent other than the fact that it was anticipated that Mr Chatha was to become a Director of the Appellant. In any event, that is to approach the issue of the reason for the dismissal on a "but for" basis which is wrong: see Smith and others v Trustees of Brooklands College. In any event, it is an insufficient basis for concluding that the principal reason for the dismissal was the transfer.
The very fact that it is necessary to speculate as to why the Employment Judge moved from a finding that there was a dismissal to a finding that the reason for the dismissal was the transfer illustrates that, whether or not there was some other error, the employment Judge has failed to give adequate reasons for her decision. Appellant will rely upon the authorities of Meek v City of Birmingham District Council [1987] IRLR 250, CA and Greenwood v NWF Retail [2011] ICR 896, EAT in support of a submission that this element of the decision is vitiated by an absence of reasons."
Discussion
"The reason for dismissal consists of a set of facts which operated on the mind of the employer when dismissing the employee. They are within the employer's knowledge. … the employer knows better than anyone else in the world why he dismissed the complainant. … an employer who dismisses an employee has a reason for doing so. He knows what it is. He must prove what it was."
Lord Justice Underhill: