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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Hancock v Doncaster Metropolitan Borough Council [2002] UKEAT 0023_02_1511 (15 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/0023_02_1511.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 0023_02_1511, [2002] UKEAT 23_2_1511 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS
LORD DAVIES OF COITY CBE
MR T HAYWOOD
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised (13 February 2003)
For the Appellant | THE APPELLANT In Person |
For the Respondent | MR ASHLEY UNDERWOOD QC (One of Her Majesty's Counsel) |
MR JUSTICE ELIAS
"Application for ill-health retirement.
I enclose a sickness certificate from my doctor dated … I have been reluctant to accept his advice and had hoped that I could somehow struggle on. I had thought that my family's best interests would be best served if I could have continued my employment. However, following my latest consultation with my psychiatrist, I now realise this is not possible. I would therefore be grateful if you could arrange for this application for my ill-health retirement, could be considered as quickly as possible."
"The case for the Council is that they have accepted his request to retire on the ground of ill-health in substitution of his termination for redundancy, and treated him as retired because they supposed that would be to his benefit. He would get a slightly more generous lump sum and, what was perhaps much more important, an immediate annual payment of pension as opposed to the time when he would have been entitled to claim his pension without there being a resignation on the grounds of ill-health.
That really gives one the heart of the dispute. Mr Hancock says the two matters are entirely separate. "I was made redundant and that entitled me to the £24,000 and, quite separately, I resigned on the grounds of ill-health as I was entitled to do and would have been entitled to do at any time thereafter, whether I was still employed or not".
In my judgment, the analysis on the part of the Council is the correct one. This was, in the event, not a redundancy. It was, albeit at the last moment, a resignation on the grounds of ill-health."
"When, therefore, the judge proceeds in the terms quoted in paragraph 15 of the tribunal's Reasons, the first sentence is in our view to be understood as expressing his choice in principle between Mr Hancock's case that his employment could end both by dismissal for redundancy and concurrently or subsequently also by resignation for ill-health and that he could retain the fruits of both methods of termination, and Doncaster's that the two methods of termination were incompatible and that the parties had by agreement chosen between them and put that agreement into effect. The second sentence is the finding which both gives effect to and provides the factual basis for that choice. It is true that other findings of fact could have been made which would have led to the same result by a different route and been nearer to the way in which Doncaster's case was pleaded, but the finding which was made is in our view clear and unambiguous, was within the judge's jurisdiction and has not been appealed. We do not therefore consider that the tribunal was justified in law in rejecting the estoppel defence on that ground."
"The complaint of failure to pay redundancy payments is therefore dismissed."