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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Thatcher v. Middlesex Univerity & Anor [2005] UKEAT 0134_05_1006 (10 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0134_05_1006.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 0134_05_1006, [2005] UKEAT 134_5_1006 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
SECRETARY OF STATE FOR EDUCATION (2) |
RESPONDENTS |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
CITY UNIVERSITY RESPONDENTS
For the Appellant |
Mr B BURGHER (of Counsel) |
For the Respondents | Mr R NEWMAN (Representative) |
SUMMARY
Equal Pay Act
Part-time worker's pension.
The Employment Tribunal Chairman erred in concluding the claim was submitted out of time when a stable employment relationship had been established. The analysis of the contractual differences alone was inaccurate, and this failure to consider and apply unchallenged evidence was an error.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
"In the present case, in September 1992 Dr Thatcher radically changed her employment status because she ceased to be a part-time worker and worked under a fixed-term contract which provided fractional pay and entitled her to contribute to the Teachers' Superannuation Pension Scheme."
"115
It is therefore necessary to consider the 'features that characterise a stable employment relationship' (ECJ judgment paragraph 70) and these can be broken down as follows:
(1) A succession of short-term contracts.
(2) Concluded at regular intervals.
(3) Relating to the same employment.
(4) To which the same pension scheme applies.
As to (1), this devolves into two parts. The subject-matter must be short-term contracts. The House of Lords in its Order for Reference and in its consideration of the ECJ judgment when referred back to it has in mind as 'short-term' contracts which are termly, or for the academic or sessional year. It follows that those contracts and anything for a shorter period are 'short-term'. There must be a 'succession' or a 'sequence' (ECJ judgment paragraph 70). I interpret this to mean three or more, for the existence of two such contracts is not usually described as a sequence or a succession of such contracts. It would ordinarily be described as the repetition of a contract.
116
As to (2), the intervals which must be regular, this is described as 'periodicity' which of course implies regularity. The periods are regular because they are clearly predictable and can be calculated precisely; and they are also regular where the intervals between work, and the length of the spells of work, are not to be predicted with accuracy; but nevertheless it is possible to say that the teacher, for example, is frequently, or even customarily, called upon whenever a need arises. This arises, by definition in the field of supply teaching, several times a term and thus may be described as regularly; but the precise dates cannot be calculated or predicted and so the work may accurately be described as intermittent.
117
As to (3), 'same employment', no guidance is given. As to (4), the same pension scheme, it seems that the adoption of the expression 'over-arching' is encompassed within the same scheme.
118
In order to succeed in bringing the test cases within the above framework, Mr Cavanagh submits that the chairman was wrong to find that the stable employment relationship ceases when the terms of the contract, or the work done, alter radically: that is, when a succession of short-term contracts is superseded by permanent contract (Reasons paragraph 251(3)(e). But in the context of the analysis of the ECJ's judgment as applied by the House of Lords, the submission fails because feature (1) is missing. The succession of short-term contracts ceases, or is interrupted, when a new permanent contract is negotiated. It is not apt to describe a succession of short-term contracts and a permanent contract as a succession of short-term contracts. The succession is broken, and the nature of the contract changes from short-term to permanent. The submission also fails because there is no periodicity about the contracts. There is no interval, let alone a regular interval, between the contracts since on the footing of the test cases each relationship is regulated by a single permanent contract. Thirdly, the cases may also founder under feature (3) as not being in 'the same employment'. I will examine this matter in more detail below. I would further agree with the chairman that, in respect of Mrs Cockrill, her claim would fail because the pattern of her working was too spasmodic and could not be characterised as meeting each of the features set out above. She would fail principally on feature (2): the lack of periodicity of the employments.
119
4. Similarity of terms and/or work
The chairman held (Reasons paragraph 233, 235) that:
'It is simply inconsistent with the nature of a stable employment relationship that the fundamentals of the succeeding contracts should vary .
The work must be for the same employer and be broadly the same throughout; that is it will be supply teaching though not necessarily at the same schools, or the same subject at the same key stages; or home teaching, but not necessarily the same subjects, or to the same pupils broadly the same throughout.'
It was contended that these words represent a gloss impermissibly put upon the words 'stable employment relationship'. Or alternatively that they 'imposed too strict a test of similarity'. In my view, that is an unfair criticism for one of the features of a stable employment relationship is 'same employment' which can be construed in different ways. It must be borne in mind that the report for the hearing in the ECJ described the stable employment relationship cases as follows (at p.510):
' in other cases, the appellants worked regularly, but periodically or intermittently, for the same employer, with each period of work technically being under a separate contract of employment but with each contract containing the same terms and with the employment in total being relevant for pension purposes (but for it being part-time work' (emphasis added).
The applicants contended (at p. 520):
'To require the applicants who are employed under a series of identical, or substantially similar, contracts to bring applications within six months of the end of each such contract some of which may be contracts for only one day's work would plainly impose an unrealistic requirement which would make the enforcement of rights excessively difficult or impossible in practice and thus infringe the principle of effectiveness.'
It is for that reason that 'same employment' was given the characteristic cited above: it was not a gloss but the exemplification of the issues placed before the European Court of Justice."
"3. A stable employment relationship ceases and time for commencing proceedings therefore begins to run when:
a. A party indicates that further contracts will either not be offered or not accepted if offered;
b. A party acts inconsistently with the continuation of the relationship;
c. a further contract is not offered when the periodicity of the preceding cycle of contracts indicates that it should have been offered;
d. a party ceases to intend to treat an intermittent relationship as stable;
e. the terms of the contract or the work to be done under it alters radically: eg a succession of short-term contracts is superseded by a permanent contract."