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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 >> Malone & Ors v British Airways Plc [2010] EWHC 302 (QB) (19 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/302.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 302 (QB), [2011] ICR 351, [2010] IRLR 431 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
(1) ELIZABETH ANNE MALONE (2) NIGEL ANTONY STOTT (3) MARCEL DEVEREUX (on their own behalf and as representatives under CPR r19.6) |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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BRITISH AIRWAYS PLC |
Defendant |
____________________
Bruce Carr QC and Andrew Burns
(instructed by Messrs Baker & McKenzie) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 2, 3, 4, 5 and 8 February 2010
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
SIR CHRISTOPHER HOLLAND:
I Introduction
II My Approach
III Preliminaries
IV The Financial Position of BA
2007/2008 BA achieved an exceptional total operating profit of £878m and a dividend was paid to shareholders for the first time since 2001.
2008/2009 BA had another exceptional result: this time a total operating loss of £720m. The factors contributing to this state of affairs included a massive rise in the price of fuel and a collapse in passenger revenue reflecting the general economic downturn – the collapse being particularly relevant to a BA specialty, "premium traffic" utilising First or Business Class. It is to be noted that for BA this "premium traffic" had accounted for approximately 47% of total revenue, as compared with an industry average of 27%.
2009/2010 The financial year started on the basis of an overall financial plan that postulated financial viability if there were cost savings of £220m, which savings had substantially to be made from those costs which could be subject to control by management, such as employee costs. In the event the situation worsened. In the first quarter BA made an operating loss of £94m – the first "first quarter" loss in its history, given that the period March-June is normally highly profitable. In June 2009 a revised financial plan was prepared focusing on further radical cost reductions. I can curtail recital of the intervening progress by turning forthwith to that which became available in the course of the trial: the material content of the Interim Management Statement as presented on the 5th February 2010 to the Stock Exchange. From such as analysed by Ms Mussenden, it is apparent that the bad news continues: an operating loss for the first nine months of £86m (compared with a 2008/2009 operating profit of £89m) and analysts' predictions of an annual overall loss exceeding £600m. That said:
"between 1st October 2009 and 31st December 2009" (the third quarter of BA's financial year or "Q3") BA made a small operating profit of £25m. This is the first time that BA has shown a quarterly operating profit for 15 months. Non operating costs such as pension interest expense and financial costs means that overall the company remained loss making in Q3. The Q3 operating profit results highlight the beneficial impact of permanent changes across the company which have focussed on reducing our cost base. Revenue remains weak; it is down by around 11% or £254m when compared with Q3 of last financial year. However total operating costs savings of approximately 14%, more than offset this revenue deterioration. Employee cost savings, including around £18m of savings from cabin crew during the quarter, were a significant contributor to the improved performance of the business."
BA LHR Worldwide: £60
Eurofleet: £58
By way of comparison:
Longhaul
Emirates: £27
Virgin: £20-27
BA Gatwick: £37
Shorthaul
BMI: £33
Easy Jet: £20
BA Gatwick: £37
V The Employment Contracts
26th February 1969 Mr R. McCallum and British European Airways.
Condition C, "You will observe and abide by the Constitution and Rules of Procedure of the National Joint Council for Civil Air Transport (hereinafter referred to as 'NJC') and by the agreements between BEA and Trades Union represented in the NJC in so far as the terms apply to you…The agreements covering your normal hours of work, holiday entitlement, sickness benefit and your employment generally are referred to in Section G and are also attached hereto."
G."NJC agreements applicable to this employment… Agreements of the National Sectional Panel for Cabin Crew".
8th April 1969 Mr Alan Land and British Overseas Airways Corporation. Condition 4 "Your employment will be governed by the following agreement: the Air Stewards and Stewardesses which was concluded in the (NJC)…"
12th March 1976 Miss Elizabeth Malone and British Airways Board
Condition B1, "Your employment…will be governed by…the agreements between (BA) and the Employees' side of the NJC so far as the same are applicable to your particular appointment. The NJC agreements from time to time in force are deemed incorporated into this contract and you are referred to these agreements for details of your hours of work, periods of notice, paid holiday entitlements, sickness benefits and general matters".
C. Relevant documents include "Agreements of the National Sectional Panel for Air Cabin Crew".
24th June 1985 Miss Gitta Randhawa and BA. Her terms are as for Miss Malone.
14th September 1988 Mr Marcel Devereux and BA. His terms are as for Miss Malone.
13th March 1990 Mr Michael Deehan and BA. His terms are as for Miss Malone.
3rd March 1992 Mrs Heather Facchinello and BA. She joined as new entrant Support Cabin Crew, that is, as a casual worker called in when needed. The agreement is of course specific to this category of employment but includes:
Condition 1 "The NJC Agreements from time to time in force are incorporated into and shall form part of this contract except where they are inconsistent with the express terms of this contract when such express terms shall prevail".
Special Condition (g) "The Scheduling Agreements for Support Cabin Crew from time to time in force are deemed to be incorporated into, and form part of this contract… (BA) shall in its absolute discretion determine the aircraft types and routes to be worked by you as a member of Support Cabin Crew in accordance with its operational requirements".
23rd June 1997 Miss Tanya Cumming and BA.
Condition 7 "You are referred to the Air Cabin Crew National Sectional Panel Agreement and the Scheduling Agreement for full details of terms and conditions relating to your hours of work, entitlement to holidays and holiday pay, absence due to sickness and sick pay. These Agreements, together with the collected agreements between the Company and the Trade Unions…and the Employment Guide contain the terms and conditions of employment as far as applicable to you and as amended from time to time. The Collected Agreements and the Employment Guide are incorporated, where appropriate, into your contract of employment, save as varied by this document."
Condition 18 "The Company reserves the right to make reasonable changes to any of your terms of employment from time to time. Such changes may be made by way of a general notice applicable to all employees or by way of specific notice to you."
19th May 2005 Mr John Gilfillan and BA.
Condition 3 "The Air Cabin Crew National Sectional Panel Agreement…and the Scheduling Agreement from time to time in force for your fleet are the collective agreements that apply to you. The Collective Agreements, together with any other or subsequent collective agreements between the company and its recognised Trade Unions that cover your occupational group (or NSP) from time to time in force, form part of your contract of employment. The Trade Unions may agree changes in your terms and conditions on your behalf… The contractual policies in the Employment Guide also form part of your contract of employment.."
Condition 31: as Condition 18 above.
VI The Collective Agreements
February 2004 Eurofleet Cabin Crew Manual ("ECCM"). This covers divers topics under 25 headings over 42 pages. It opens "This manual has been produced jointly by Inflight Services Scheduling, Crew Control and your Eurofleet Trade Union representatives and as such all areas will uphold the agreement". It continues:
"The Agreements incorporated into this manual are for the benefit of everyone in the Eurofleet community. Please adhere to the arrangements at all times. If there is ever a requirement to operate outside of them this will have been specifically agreed following consultation between management and your Trades Unions. To knowingly break the agreement is viewed seriously and appropriate action will be taken".
The subsequent content is varied, seemingly comprehensive and often detailed. That said what is stipulated as to Crew Complement is:
"There is a requirement for extra cabin crew to be added to the Crew Complement when European product is served depending on numbers of passengers in Club Europe. The crew complement matrix is available from Answers. For minimum numbers on each aircraft type please refer to Flying Crew Orders".
I interpose: 'Answers' is a BA office. 'Minimum numbers' seemingly refers to the certified legal minimum. Before me there was put in evidence as to that which, as from July 2004, Answers could have supplied: regularly updated, detailed cabin crew complements.
"7.4 Downroute Shortage
Occasionally, unplanned situations will occur downroute when it is not possible to provide the correct crewing level. If this happens, in-flight service may be adjusted by the in-charge crew member to cope with the reduced crew complement. The level of service you are able to provide will depend on passenger numbers, time available and rest requirements. A guide to product delivery standards is given later in this manual.
Note:
Prior to finding a downroute service having to go crew short, British Airways must make every effort to find another crew member."
Options include:
a) Where an ICC base exists, utilising ICC crew from standby or availability.
b) Disrupting the itinerary of another crew member following minimum rest.
c) Positioning out of a replacement crew member."
"When significant events outside the control of British Airways cause severe disruption to the operation, the following changes to the scheduling agreement may, after agreement with the Trades Union has been reached, be enacted for an agreed fixed period of time, to maintain the integrity of the operation and facilitate the return of the operation to normal as soon as possible.
The IFS Operations Manger will contact the chairpersons of each of the Trades Unions to inform them of the situation and recommend a timescale for which the disruption agreement will be required. With the agreements from the aforementioned confirmed, the details of options to be used will be verified in writing.
The IFS Operations Manager will log the occasions that the agreement is utilised and will fully debrief the Trades Union at the following week's Operations meeting. Details will also be recorded in the Worldwide Steering Minutes.
During the specified period of disruption, the report centres at LHR and LGW will display signage to the cabin crew informing them that the Operation is in a period of disruption.
Examples of occasions where this agreement could be enacted are severe weather, acts of terrorism, ATC failure or the collapse of power/communications supply. This list of examples is not exhaustive and other events that are outside of British Airways control will need to be considered."
(a) The so-called legal minimum crewing complements are markedly lower than those set out in WSA. Thus, for example, a crew complement of 15 for a 747 compares with a minimum requirement of 12; complements of 11-13 for a 777 compare with the minimum of eight.(b) S. 179 Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 precludes legal enforcement of these collective agreements, absent a specific provision (not contended for) stating a joint intent that there be legal enforceability.
(c) I was provided with the October 2006 Gatwick Fleet Memorandum of Agreements as a point of reference and comparison. As to Crew Complements it specifies simply "Crew Complements will be determined via The Gatwick Fleet IFC and will be widely published".
VII The Chronology - 2009
i) 24th February – At a National Sectional Panel ("NSP") meeting Mr Francis told the Union that in the then financial circumstances BA looked to save £82m as against the cost of cabin crew. Throughout Unite had separately identified representatives from both its BASSA and Amicus factions.ii) 26th February – At a further such meeting Mr Francis handed over a list setting out 32 prospective costs saving measures and invited discussion. Of these measures nine involved reduction in current cabin crew complements.
iii) February – April BA met 14 times with BASSA and four times with Amicus in a mixture of formal and informal meetings.
iv) May – Following release of the figures for the first quarter (see para 12 above) the required costs saving was increased to £140m.
v) 1st June – BA issue a statutory HR1 form proposing up to 2000 redundancies amongst cabin crew. BA and the Union meet at a formal NSP.
vi) 9th – 30th June – Intermittent talks at Heathrow Renaissance Hotel. In the course of such;
a) 15th June BASSA had a heated argument with Amicus and refused to cooperate togetherb) 23rd June BA put forward a proposal in writing. This included specific reductions in crew complementsc) 25th June – Unite put forward a written Pay and Productivity Proposal, claiming that it would save BA £173m. It proposed some alterations in the cabin crew complements but no significant reduction. Thereafter BA tried to understand and analyse the cost saving as anticipated by Unite, bringing in accountants, Price Waterhouse Cooper. The latter's assessment was that the saving would be about £53m. Unite refused to have further discussions over this issue, whether with BA or the accountants.In the overall result, the meetings broke up without reaching any joint conclusion.vii) 29th June – Mr Francis sent a letter to each cabin crew member, setting out BA's proposals, such including a reduction in cabin crew complements.
viii) 21st-23rd July – An abortive session at ACAS.
ix) 21st, 30th September and 1st and 2nd October – Following an agreement reached between BA's CEO and the Joint General Secretaries of Unite, there was a further sustained resort to ACAS for conciliation. I heard evidence as to the course of events at ACAS and the following emerged. The BASSA and Amicus factions were separately represented and sat in separate rooms. Despite the efforts of ACAS they could not be persuaded to join forces for a meeting with BA. The latter raised the possibility of separate agreements with the respective factions but, understandably, that did not appeal. In the overall result there was no meeting between the Union and BA.
x) 6th October – Mr Francis e-mails all cabin crew. The e-mail is long and detailed – currently, a summary will suffice. It opens with an expression of intention to achieve the cost saving of £140m sought from his department. It asserts that, notwithstanding consultation with Unite, no agreement as to measures has been forthcoming : "… after nine months of talks the time has come to move forward". There then comes the crucial passage:
"How we will make our savings while minimising the impact on you, our current crew.We can make these savings and minimise the impact on you, by changing our crew complements. From 16th November 2009 we will make the following changes while still ensuring that our crewing levels can deliver our premium customer service. Worldwide – effective from 16th November;
- One purser position will be removed from all Heathrow Worldwide flights (747,777,767). At the same time all Worldwide CSDs will join the customer service routines allowing us to keep the same number of crew who are directly serving our customers on board.
- Removal of the additional main crew member on Heathrow long range routes and additional crew member routes.
Eurofleet – effective from 1st December
- The crew complements on Eurofleet flights will be varied to make them consistent with those currently operated at Gatwick.
- The use of a single supervisor on all Eurofleet flights, either a CSD or a purser, balancing the work between these grades.
Gatwick – effective from 1st December
- One purser position will be replaced with a main crew member on 777 3-class aircraft at Gatwick consistent with Heathrow."
xi) 16th November and 1st December – These changes duly came into force.
VIII The First Claimant
i) By way of my contract of employment as already cited collective agreements made from time to time between BA and the Unions "are deemed incorporated". It is by reference to these agreements that I can discern various contractual terms, specifically "hours of work, periods of notice, paid holiday entitlements, sickness benefit and general matters."ii) One such collective agreement is the WSA of November 2005. I refer to it for details of a contractual term arguably coming under that heading 'general matters', namely the minimum planned crew complement for any flight for which I am rostered. Thus, if for example, I am rostered for a long range 3 class 777 not only do I expect to have 12 fellow crew members I am legally entitled to such: these collectively agreed complements are incorporated into my contract of employment. Thus whereas the terms as to these complements are not legally binding as between the parties to the collective agreement (see s.179), they are binding as between BA and myself.
iii) Given that when I now fly the complement is less by one member, BA is to that extent in breach of contract – a state of affairs that will continue until the collectively agreed complement is restored or the reduction is satisfied by a further collective agreement.
iv) Given this breach of contract, I seek an injunction restraining BA from continuing to roster worldwide flights other than in accordance with collectively agreed crew complements – in effect a mandatory order to increase such by one and thereby comply with my contract.
v) Further, with respect to the period pending restoration of collectively agreed complements, I seek damages as for breach of contract, such damages reflecting compensation for each understaffed flight undertaken.
"The principles to be applied can therefore be summarised. The relevant contract is that between the individual employee and his employer; it is the contractual intention of those two parties which must be ascertained. In so far as that intention is to be found in a written document, that document must be construed on ordinary contractual principles. In so far as there is no such document or that document is not complete or conclusive, their contractual intention has to be ascertained by inference from the other available material including collective agreements. The fact that another document is not itself contractual does not prevent it from being incorporated into the contract if that intention is shown as between the employer and the individual employee. Where a document is expressly incorporated by general words it is still necessary to consider, in conjunction with the words of incorporation, whether any particular part of that document is apt to be a term of the contract; if it is inapt, the correct construction of the contract may be that it is not a term of the contract. Where it is not a case of express incorporation, but a matter of inferring the contractual intent, the character of the document and the relevant part of it and whether it is apt to form part of the individual contract is central to the decision whether or not the inference should be drawn."
i) There was nothing in Miss Malone's contract of employment that invited incorporation of the WSA's crew complement matrices;ii) There was nothing in the relevant part of the WSA to suggest objectively an intention to create a term potentially binding as part of individual employment contracts:
iii) Incorporation of the relevant part of the WSA into Miss Malone's contract was patently 'inapt';
iv) The alleged entitlement to injunctive relief is obviously unsustainable – indeed consideration of the claim for such and for damages serves to underline how 'inapt' incorporation would be.
IX The First Claimant - Judgment
(a) At no stage did the parties to the WSA express an intention that Section 7 and the provisions satellite to such should be legally binding, either as between themselves (with the power to make such provision expressly retained by s.179), or as incorporated in the respective employment contracts. True, it would have been surprising if there had been any such provision: the Unions were no doubt pushing for the highest possible crew complements and, I infer, any mention of legal enforceability would not have helped their cause. That said, when the parties could have expressed an intention to make Section 7 legally binding they omitted to do so.(b) The parties to WSA were conscious of the fact of material legally enforceable provisions. Page 11 refers to such in the context of the Air Navigation Order 1989 and, more pertinently, 'legal minimum crew complements' are specifically referred to in Section 7 as being distinct from that which is provided for.
(c) Miss Malone's contract does not readily point to Section 7 of the WSA as being "applicable to your particular appointment". If covered, such must come under the 'catch-all' head, 'general matters' which hardly seems convincing.
(d) Applying the test suggested by Auld LJ Section 7 and the satellite Disruption Agreement could not have been sensibly set out in Miss Malone's contract. True, had there been the mutual intent a different clause could have been expressly included, along the lines "when you fly Worldwide as a member of cabin crew the total complement of the crew will be as may be from time agreed collectively between BA and your Union and in any event it will not be less than that certified for the aircraft by the Federal Aviation Authority." However, no such clause is contended for and it is not for me to draft the contract. That said, this exercise of drafting underlines the unreality of a contention that the contract incorporates the relevant WSA provisions so as to render such legally enforceable.
(e) Whereas there is a long established common law obligation on an employer to institute and maintain a safe system of work, under which head there may well arise a need to provide an employee with sufficient assistance from fellow employees so as to obviate reasonably foreseeable risk of injury, the notion of an obligation based on a complement essentially devised in excess of the minimum so as to deliver an enhanced product is novel.
(f) Finally, a minor point: is 'all services will be planned' (see Section 7) aspirational rather than contractual?
"If (the Defendant) has already broken his contract… he may be ordered by mandatory injunction actually to undo the breach. Such an order is subject to a 'balance of convenience' test and may accordingly be refused if the prejudice suffered by the defendant in having to restore the original position heavily outweighs the advantage that will be derived from such restoration by the claimant."
Several authorities are cited, principally Sharp v. Harrison (1922) 1 Ch 502. Here the disparity in terms of convenience is quite overwhelming. The effectively unchallenged evidence of Ms Mussenden and Ms Karen Slinger (the person in charge of cabin crew resource planning) identified a quite exceptional burden faced by BA in terms of cost, planning and reorganisation in the event of a permanent injunction, sufficient indeed to jeopardise prospects of financial recovery. I turn to this Claimant. I give weight to all that she opined in her statement of the 2nd November 2007. Without belittling any of it (albeit noting that this was before the actual change) it does not begin to offer anything significantly impacting on the balance of convenience.
X THE SECOND CLAIMANT
XI THE THIRD CLAIMANT
XII Generally