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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> James v. Northern Leisure Inc Plc [1999] UKEAT 372_99_1706 (17 June 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/372_99_1706.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 372_99_1706 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR D CHADWICK
MR P DAWSON OBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | NO APPEARANCE OR REPRESENTATION BY OR ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT |
JUDGE PETER CLARK: This is an Appeal by the Applicant before the Shrewsbury Employment Tribunal, Mr James, against that Tribunal's decision promulgated with extended reasons on 27th January 1999, following a Hearing on 14th January dismissing his claims of unfair dismissal and damages for breach of contract, brought against his former employer, the Respondent, Northern Leisure Inc PLC. He was represented before the Employment Tribunal by Mr Naylor, an Employment Rights Adviser, who entered this Appeal on his behalf by letter dated 3rd March 1999. By a further letter dated 19th March, Mr Naylor asks us to consider his written submission there set out in the absence of the Appellant or his representative at this Preliminary Hearing. That we have done.
The Facts
The Tribunal Decision
A. Was the Appellant constructively dismissed?
B. If so, was that dismissal unfair and if so was he entitled to any remedy?
C. If he was dismissed, was he entitled to damages for wrongful dismissal at common law, that is, the equivalent of pay in lieu of contractual notice?
a)
b)
c) Dismissal
By a majority, the Employment Tribunal found that he was constructively dismissed by the Respondent. The majority found that the Respondent fundamentally breached the implied term of mutual trust and confidence by requiring the Appellant to return to work at Wrexham whilst he was still under disciplinary investigation, a fact known to his subordinates, who had been asked by management to provided evidence of his absences over the 10 week period prior to his suspension. The Appellant promptly resigned in response to that repudiatory breach of contract by the Respondent. He was constructively dismissed for the purposes of Section 95(1)(c) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 and, we would add, for the purposes of establishing a dismissal at common law. The tests here are identical. The Respondent has not intimated any prospective cross-appeal against that finding in their PHD form.
d) Unfair Dismissal
(i) What was the reason for dismissal? The majority found that the reason related to the Appellant's conduct, namely his failure to attend regularly for work; failing to obey the lawful instructions of Mr Davidson that he should attend on and after 1st September every night when the club was open.
(ii) The majority held that the Respondent acted reasonably in treating that reason as a sufficient reason for dismissal. His disobedience was deliberate and at least on Tuesday and Thursday of the first week in September he had no excuse. He also failed to attend on Saturday evening without explanation. Any reasonable employer would have been entitled to treat those circumstances as amounting to gross misconduct and to dismiss summarily. Indeed, the Employment Tribunal were surprised the Respondent did not dismiss the Appellant earlier.
(iii) Alternatively, if there had been any unfairness in the dismissal (and although not expressly stated the Employment Tribunal may have had in mind the fact that the disciplinary procedure had not been completed, as well as the Respondent's repudiatory breach in requiring the Appellant to return to work in the circumstances of the ongoing disciplinary investigation) the Employment Tribunal unanimously found that the Appellant's own conduct contributed to his dismissal to the extend of 100%.
e) Wrongful Dismissal
The Employment Tribunal rejected the Appellant's claim for pay in lieu of notice by way of damages for breach of contract (wrongful dismissal). Their reasoning appears from para 8 of their extended reasons to be this. The Appellant purported to give one month's notice of resignation but at the same time refused to work that notice. That amounted, in the view of the Employment Tribunal, to resignation without notice. The majority took the view that because of the Respondent's fundamental breach of contract, as they found had taken place, the Appellant was entitled to resign and was relieved of his obligation to give notice of his intention to do so. If he wished he could have resigned with notice and in those circumstances, he would have been entitled to be paid for such notice period. In the present circumstances, he was not.
The Appeal
Conclusion
Unfair Dismissal
Breach of Contract
(a) We make the preliminary observation that on the Employment Tribunal's findings it is not clear what was the contractual notice required from the employer. They find only that the employee was obliged to give 2 weeks notice. For the reasons that follow, it matters not what was the correct employers' notice.
(b) Mr Naylor is correct in submitting that ordinarily if an employee accepts his employers' repudiatory breach of contract and leaves, he has been dismissed at common law and without more is entitled to recover damages for wrongful dismissal being normally, the equivalent of the pay due for the contractual notice due from the employer, subject to the usual deductions.
(c) Accordingly, we cannot accept the reasoning in para 8 of the Employment Tribunal's reasons. It would not matter, it seems to us, whether the employee left in response to the employers' repudiatory breach by himself giving notice, or without notice. As the innocent party, he is entitled to recover pay in lieu of notice by way of damages for breach.
(d) However, we uphold the Employment Tribunal's conclusion that the Appellant was not entitled to recover for damages for breach of contract on the ground that notwithstanding that misdirection, the result was plainly and unarguably right. (See Dobie –v- Burns [1984] IRC 812) for the following reasons. It is axiomatic that where the obligations of the parties to a contract are dependent then a party in fundamental breach of his obligations cannot enforce the terms of the contract against the other party where that party is also in fundamental breach. The position here, on the facts as found, either by a majority of the Employment Tribunal or unanimously is:
(i) That the Appellant was in fundamental breach of the contract by failing to attend work regularly and in disobeying Mr Davidson's instructions. Those circumstances amounted to gross misconduct entitling the Respondent to dismiss the Appellant summarily had they chosen to do so on 17th September. It was a surprise to the Employment Tribunal that the Respondent had not dismissed him earlier. Further, the finding of 100% contribution also supports the conclusion that the Respondent was entitled to summarily dismiss the Appellant at common law.
(ii) The Respondent had neither accepted the Appellant's breach by dismissing him, nor had they affirmed the contract despite his breach, since the disciplinary investigation was ongoing as at 17th September. The Appellant's breach remained extant.
(iii) On 17th September, the Respondent was guilty of a fundamental breach of the contract by requiring the Appellant to return to work whilst the disciplinary investigation continued, so the majority found.
(iv) In these circumstances, on a proper analysis, both parties were released from further performance under the contract. The Appellant was entitled to leave without notice. The Respondent was not obliged to give him notice of termination. It follows that the Appellant's claim based on the Respondent's obligation to give notice of termination fails, because the Respondent was entitled to dismiss him summarily, applying the principle in Boston Deep Sea Fishing –v- Ansell (1888) 39 Ch D 339, where the Defendant employer succeeded in defeating the Plaintiff employee's claim for damages for wrongful dismissal on the grounds of gross misconduct on the part of the employee prior to termination of which the Defendant only became aware after termination. A fortiori where the employee's misconduct was known to the employer before termination.