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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Gibb v Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust [2009] EWHC 862 (QB) (28 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/862.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 862 (QB), [2009] LS Law Medical 364 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Rose Gibb |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Maidstone and Tunbridge Wells NHS Trust |
Defendant |
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Jane McNeill QC (instructed by Brachers Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 26th – 30th January 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE TREACY :
i) The further deterioration in the performance of the Trust.ii) The state of the management team and the need for a different style of leadership given by a new leader.
iii) The strength of the findings of the HCC report and its recommendation that the Trust board must review its leadership.
"An NHS Trust must exercise its functions effectively, efficiently and economically."
"may for or in respect of such of its employees as it may determine, make arrangements for providing pensions, allowances or gratuities."
"The reference in sub paragraph (1) to pensions, allowances or gratuities to or in respect of employees of an NHS Trust includes a reference to pensions, allowances or gratuities by way of compensation to or in respect of any of the NHS Trust's employees who suffer loss of office or employment or loss of or diminution of emoluments."
i) The payment for loss of office was unreasonably generous.ii) It exceeded by a substantial margin the maximum liabilities of the Trust to Ms Gibb in respect of her potential statutory claims.
iii) The decision to pay the sum took into account irrelevant considerations.
iv) Insufficient consideration was given to value for money and the need to avoid the public perception of being seen to reward failure.
v) The Trust agreed to make the payment without an adequate business case and/or Treasury approval.
i) Preparation of a business case which explained the case for termination and demonstrated that the parameters for a financial settlement represented value for money.ii) The Trust should forward the business case to its external auditors for comment. The auditors should be asked to confirm whether the approach proposed might cause them to issue a public interest report or take other action.
iii) The Trust should also present the business case to the SHA. Whilst its approval is not legally required, the SHA should be asked to clarify whether Treasury approval for the proposed payment was necessary.
i) Legal costs of up to £80,000.00.ii) Executive preparation time, twenty person days, £10,000.00.
iii) Director time at a five day tribunal hearing, £2,500.00.
He also referred to "inestimable costs" in dealing with the further media coverage and reputational damage for the Trust.
"Claims in the alternative
10. If, which is denied, the Defendant's agreement to the Compensation Payment is held to have been ultra vires, then in the alternative the Claimant will claim that she changed her position in detrimental reliance on the aforesaid express statements made by and/or on behalf of the Defendant and/or the implied representations that it had power to enter into the Compromise Agreement, inter alia by:-
a. accepting the immediate termination of her employment in circumstances where the Defendant had previously stated (including in writing on about 2 August 2007) its view that it would not be justified in dismissing her for cause, where she had asserted the propriety and competence of her performance and her willingness to defend the same if the Defendant were to make allegations internally or externally to contrary effect, and where the Claimant has been and will remain in effect unable to secure further similar employment anywhere within the NHS;
b. agreeing not to pursue and not pursuing any internal grievance or claim to the employment tribunal or any other court in respect of the her employment or termination thereof;
c. agreeing not to and refraining from making any statement or from taking part in any conduct potentially damaging to the Defendant or its directors, officers or employees, despite considerable negative coverage in the media and elsewhere of the Claimant;
d. agreeing not to disclose and not disclosing the contents of the Compromise Agreement (save as provided for in the Compromise Agreement).
11. As a result of so acting and in all material circumstances, which include that the Claimant had a legitimate expectation of receiving the said sum and that the Defendant resiled from its promise to pay her the compensation payment and did not make or offer any just and proportionate payment within its powers in lieu thereof, the Claimant contends that the Defendant has been unjustly enriched at her expense and that the Defendant is for that reason and/or in the proper exercise of the Court's equitable jurisdiction, in the alternative, obliged to pay her such sum as the court finds to be just and equitable.
11A. For the avoidance of doubt, the Claimant contends in respect of the aforesaid claim of unjust enrichment that:-
(1) The Defendant, by the Claimant's agreeing the terms of the Compromise Agreement and adhering thereto, unjustly secured the following benefits:-
a. The value of the Claimant's statutory claim to have been unfairly dismissed by the Defendant;
b. The value of the legal costs of contesting such claim;
c. The prevention of the Claimant from defending herself or otherwise making any statement or taking part in any conduct potentially damaging to the Defendant;
d. The Claimant's agreement to an immediate and ostensibly consensual termination of her employment;
e. The avoidance of any disciplinary or other internal process during which the Claimant would have sought to defend herself and during which the Defendant would have had to commit significant human and/or financial resources.
(2) The Defendant obtained the aforesaid benefits largely if not entirely at the Claimant's expense, in that:-
f. The Claimant was prevented from pursuing a statutory claim for unfair dismissal in which she contends she would inevitably have been successful;
g. The Claimant was largely deprived of the opportunity to defend her actions and reputation in the face of public attacks on her inter alia in the media and by Ministers of the Government;
h. The Claimant was deprived of the opportunity to challenge internally, by way of grievance or contested disciplinary process, any allegation that her conduct warranted the termination of her employment.
(3) In the circumstances set out in this paragraph and in paragraphs 10 and 11 above, it would be unjust for the Defendant to retain the aforesaid benefits. The Claimant contends that the appropriate remedy is that the Defendant should be required to pay her compensation or damages in the maximum sum intra vires of the Defendant, to be assessed by the Court.
(4) There is no policy reason for the Court not to order the payment of such compensation or damages.
12. In the further alternative, if, which is denied, the Defendant's agreement to the Compensation Payment is held to have been ultra vires, then the Claimant will claim that the Defendant acted in fundamental breach of its contractually implied duty of trust and confidence in securing the immediate and consensual termination of the Claimant's employment and other undertakings, etc., from the Claimant as aforesaid, inter alia by misleading her, deliberately or recklessly, as to its powers to enter into the Compromise Agreement as set out at paragraphs 3-5 above.
13. As a result of the said breach, the Claimant has sustained and continues to sustain significant losses…, to date and ongoing."
"should as a matter of principle be as broad as possible to enable justice to be done wherever necessary; and the relevant limits should be found not in the scope of the jurisdiction but in the manner of its exercise as the principles are worked out from case to case"
"Although it is impermissible to accord any validity to the compromise agreement and I agree that it therefore follows that no reliance can be placed on any promise or representation that merely reflects an alternative legal foundation for binding the council to an undertaking that it had no power to give, nevertheless the conduct of the parties still exists in the real world and cannot be ignored for all purposes. Thus, to take what I suspect would be an uncontroversial example, payments made under a void agreement, even though made in the belief that the agreement was a binding contract, have been really made, and can be taken into account for the purposes of a claim in restitution. That claim may or may not succeed, but the payments cannot be swept aside in the same way that the void agreement is reduced into nothingness by the doctrine of voidness ab initio. Similarly, services provided in exchange for those purposes have been made in the real world, and, even though the conventional scheme under which payments and services have been exchanged has vanished into thin air, the provider of those services may be entitled to have them taken into account for the purpose of a claim to a quantum meruit or quantum valebat. Indeed, in this case, the council accepts that, but for the fact that a defence of change of position rendered the enquiry mute, Mr Foster would have been entitled to be rewarded for his services on just such a basis"
"Identifying the boundary of the Johnson exclusion area",…is comparatively straightforward. Statutory code provides remedies for infringement of the statutory right not to be dismissed unfairly. An employee's remedy for unfair dismissal, whether actual or constructive, is the remedy provided by statute. If before his dismissal, whether actual or constructive, an employee has acquired a cause of action at law for breach of contract or otherwise. That cause of action remains unimpaired by his subsequent unfair dismissal and the statutory rights flowing there from. By definition, in law such a cause of action exists independently of the dismissal.
28. In the ordinary course, suspension apart, an employee's failure to act fairly in the steps leading to dismissal does not of itself cause the employee financial loss. The loss arises when the employee is dismissed and it arises by reason of his dismissal. Then the resultant claim for loss falls squarely within the Johnson exclusion area."
"29. Exceptionally this is not so. Exceptionally, financial loss may flow directly from the employer's failure to act fairly when taking steps leading to dismissal. Financial loss flowing from suspension is an instance. Another instance is cases such as those now before the House, when an employee suffers financial loss from psychiatric or other illness caused by his pre-dismissal unfair treatment. In such cases the employee has a common law cause of action which precedes, and is independent of, his subsequent dismissal."