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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Camden Primary Care Trust & Anor v. Skittrall & Ors [2005] UKEAT 0078_05_1407 (14 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0078_05_1407.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 78_5_1407, [2005] UKEAT 0078_05_1407 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 7 and 8 June 2005 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR A HARRIS
MR S YEBOAH
APPELLANT | |
RACHEL SKITTRALL & OTHERS |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Between :
For the 1st Appellant For the 2nd Appellant |
MS KATHERINE NEWTON (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Beachcroft Wansbroughs 100 Fetter Lane London EC4A 1BN MR THOMAS CROXFORD (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Pinsent Masons Solicitors 1 Park Row Leeds LS1 5AB |
For the Respondents | MR MARTIN WESTGATE (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Thompsons Congress House Great Russell Street London WC1B 3LW |
TUPE – Identifying the undertaking – Whether transferred – Formulating preliminary issues.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
The Facts
"This agreement sets out the terms for the provisions of Education to students details of which Education appear in Appendix 1 …
Appendix 1 provides:
"Education courses to be provided
COURSE DURATION
BSc (Honours) in Podiatry 3 extended years
BSc (Honours) in Podiatry 4 years"
Under Cl4 SERVICES TO BE PROVIDED
"4,1 Courses to be provided
4.1.1. UCL and Camden PCT shall jointly provide the courses set out in Appendix 1 …
4.1.2 UCL shall be responsible for the academic teaching and overall co-ordination of the courses or otherwise Education. Camden PCT shall be responsible for the provision of clinical placement experience and associated clinical supervision and teaching …"
The Claims
The Preliminary Issues
"(i) Whether the contract to provide podiatry services was an undertaking within the scope of and meaning of Regulations 2 and 3 of the 1981 Regulations
(ii) If so, whether the undertaking transferred from the first and third Respondents (UCL and Camden PCT respectively) to UEL (the Second Respondent) on 29 September 2003."
"(i) Whether the contract (the "Podiatric Medicine Agreement") entered into on 26 September 1996 by the three parties – the Secretary of State for Health ("the funding body"), UCL and Camden and Islington Community Health Services NHS Trust ("C&ICHSNT" – Camden PCT's predecessor body) …whereby UCL C&ICHSNT (i.e, Camden PCT) jointly agreed to provide podiatry education services in the form of a BSc (Hons) degree in Podiatry at the LFH School of Podiatry, is/was an undertaking within the scope and meaning of regulations 2 and 3 of the 1981 TUPE Regulations;"
"(1) the provision of the University of London BSc Honours degree in Podiatry by University College London ("UCL") and Camden PCT (the successor to Camden & Islington Community Health Services NHS Trust) pursuant to their contract dated 26 September 1996 with the NELWDC (the successor to the Secretary of State for Health) (the "Podiatry Medicine Agreement") was an undertaking within the meaning of regulations 2 and 3 of the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 1981 ("TUPE") and;
(2) the said undertaking did not transfer under TUPE from UCL and Camden PCT to UEL (the University of East London) on 29 September 2003."
The Law
Employment Tribunal Judgment
(1) that the relevant undertaking prior to the putative transfer date, 29 September 2003, was the provision of a University of London BSc Honours degree in podiatry by UCL and Camden PCT pursuant to the PMA.
(2) that that undertaking did not transfer under TUPE from UCL and Camden PTC to UEL on the relevant date. The principal reason for that finding appears to be (Reasons Paragraph 15(12)(ii)) that the economic entity which came into being from that date – the provision of podiatric education in the form of a UEL BSc Honours degree in podiatry – was a distinct undertaking which came into being as a result of a separate contract entered into by UEL and NELWDC.
The Appeals
(1) They failed to take into account a relevant factor, namely the transfer of funding from UCL/Camden PCT to UEL, the principal asset of the undertaking.
(2) They held that neither the fact that former employees of UCL/Camden PCT accepted offers of employment with UEL and that the Claimants refused to join UEL had any bearing on the TUPE transfer issue (Reasons Paragraph 15(11)). That is plainly an error of law. To treat a relevant factor (see Spijkers, Paragraph 13) as irrelevant is wrong under 'Wednesbury' principles.
(3) The 'customers' in this case were the students, existing and prospective. To say that the UCL-registered students did not transfer under TUPE from UCL to UEL (Reasons Paragraph 15(9)) demonstrates a startling misconception by the Employment Tribunal as to what TUPE is about. It is concerned with the transfer of employment, not customers. More substantively it is unclear what weight, if any, the Employment Tribunal attached to the fact that all 31 students registered by UCL for the forthcoming 1st year course in 2003-2004 were referred to UEL and 19 chose to switch to the new UEL degree course. Such goodwill in the business as existed lay in the student/customers. It was, so far as possible, transferred in this way to UEL.
(4) It is also unclear what weight if any the Employment Tribunal attached to a relevant factor, namely that all relevant employees were offered employment with UEL. It is common ground that 8 out of 15 accepted (the majority); 1 resigned for unconnected reasons, the remaining 6, these individual Claimants, objected. We accept Mr Croxford's submission that, as to Mr McDonald FRCS and Campbell Wareham, their employer, Camden PCT believed that they were not assigned to the relevant undertaking; they were principally concerned with patients rather than students. It is not suggested that this view was other than genuine. Consequently they cannot be treated as relevant employees who were not accepted by UEL.
(5) The Employment Tribunal appears to have drawn the conclusion that the activity carried on by UEL differed from that carried on by UCL/Camden PCT in 3 respects (Paragraph 15(7)). First, the UEL course was based on the University of Brighton model, not the UCL model; secondly, the UCL course was accredited; the UEL course had only received a 'verbal OK'; thirdly, UEL did not have a medical school; it was based in their School of Health and Bioscience; UCL had its own medical school.
Those factors went to the mode of providing the education service rather than the activity itself.
(6) The Employment Tribunal appears to have taken into account an irrelevant factor, namely the terms and conditions on which the Claimants, and in particular Mr Wood, would have been employed by UEL. This factor is plainly material to the validity of the Claimants' objections to transferring to UEL, as is the question of the status of the teaching course to be offered by UEL in contrast to that offered by UCL. However, that issue was not part of the limited terms of reference of the preliminary issues before the Employment Tribunal. As the Employment Tribunal correctly observe (Reasons Paragraph 15(10)) "In a TUPE transfer situation the transferred employees have a right to expect the same terms and conditions of employment after the transfer as before." To suggest that a refusal by the putative transferee to honour the transferor's terms and conditions of employment is a reason for finding that no transfer has taken place would be to stand TUPE on its head and undermine the whole basis of the protection afforded to employees under the Regulations.
Conclusion
Disposal