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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Lloyd-Briden v. Worthing College [2007] UKEAT 0065_07_2206 (22 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0065_07_2206.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 65_7_2206, [2007] UKEAT 0065_07_2206 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 6 June 2007 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE WILKIE
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | BEN COOPER (Of Counsel) Bar Pro Bono Unit 289-293 High Holborn London WC1V 7HZ |
For the Respondent | KAREN MOSS (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Curwens Solicitors Crossfield House Gladbeck Way Enfield Middlesex EN2 7HT |
UNFAIR DISMISSAL
Exclusions including worker/jurisdiction
Where a Member State has complied with Article 18 of the Equal Treatment Directive, the fundamental rights and general principles of community law do not require it to ignore its domestic provisions which may be discrimatory during the period permitted by the Directive for transposition of its terms into domestic law.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE WILKIE
"Shall adopt the laws, regulations and administrative provisions necessary to comply with this Directive by 2 December 2003 at the latest...
In order to take account of particular conditions, Member States may, if necessary, have an additional period of 3 years from 2 December 2003, that is to say a total of 6 years, to implement the provisions of this directive on age…discrimination. In that event they shall inform the Commission forthwith. Any Member State which chooses to use this additional period shall report annually to the Commission on the steps it is taking to tackle age… discrimination and on the progress it is making towards implementation. The Commission shall report annually to the Council."
By virtue of these provisions, the United Kingdom was not obliged to implement the Directive until a date after the appellant was dismissed, made his claim to the ET and had it dismissed. It therefore follows that, on the face of it, neither the repeal of section 109, nor the provisions of the Directive assist him in establishing that the ET had jurisdiction to determine his complaint of unfair dismissal.
"74…and above all, Directive 2000/78 does not itself lay down the principles of equal treatment in the field of employment and occupation. Indeed, in accordance with article 1 thereof, the sole purpose of the Directive is "to lay down a general framework for combating discrimination on the grounds of religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation", the source of the actual principle underlying the prohibition of these forms of discrimination being found, as is clear from the third and fourth recitals in the preamble to the Directive, in various international instruments and in the constitutional traditions common to the member states.
75. The principle of non discrimination on grounds of age must thus be regarded as a general principle of community law…
76. Consequently, observance of the general principle of equal treatment, in particular in respect of age, cannot as such be conditional upon the expiry of the period allowed the member states for the transposition of a Directive intended to lay down a general framework for combating discrimination on the grounds of age,…
77. In those circumstances it is the responsibility of the national court hearing a dispute involving the principle of non discrimination in respect of age, to provide, in a case within its jurisdiction, the legal protection which individuals derive from the rules of community law and to ensure that those rules are fully effective, setting aside any provision of national law which may conflict with that law."
" 56. It is true that fundamental rights which form an integral part of the general principles of community law include the general principle of non discrimination. That principle is therefore binding on member states where the national situation at issue in the main proceedings falls within the scope of community law…However, it does not follow from that that the scope of Directive 2000/78 should be extended by analogy beyond the discrimination based on the grounds listed exhaustively in article 8 thereof. "
i) the time when the directive entered into force; or
ii) the time when the time limit for transposing it into national law passed without transposition being effected; or
iii) the time when the national measure implementing it entered into force.
The ECJ concluded that the appropriate time was the second of those three, in particular it said as follows:
"114. Also, before the period for transposition of a directive has expired, member states cannot be reproached for not having yet adopted measures implementing it in national law…
115. Accordingly, where a directive is transposed belatedly the general obligation owed by national courts to interpret domestic law in conformity with the directive exists only once the period for its transposition has expired…"
The ECJ went on to say:
"121. In accordance with the court's settled case law…during the period prescribed for the transposition of a directive, the member states to which it is addressed must refrain from taking any measures liable seriously to compromise the attainment of the result prescribed by it…in this connection it is immaterial whether or not the provision of national law at issue which has been adopted after the directive in question entered into force is concerned with the transposition of the directive (Mangold paragraph 68)."
"I do not regard as particularly compelling the conclusion drawn in Mangold as to the existence of a general principle of non discrimination on grounds of age."
i) that there are fundamental rights forming an integral part of the general principles of community law which include the general principle of non discrimination and which are binding on member states when the issue to be determined by the national court falls within the scope of community law;
ii) that in the absence of any direct ECJ authority disapproving the decision in Mangold, and not withstanding the trenchant criticisms made by the advocate general in the Palacios case, I am obliged to accept as binding on me the proposition that the principle of non discrimination on grounds of age is to be regarded as a general principle of community law such that, in certain circumstances, a national court may be required to set aside any provision of national law which conflicts with that general principle;
iii) that the cases decided subsequent to Mangold by the ECJ have declined to use those general principles to extend the ambit of community law beyond the relevant Directive (Chacon Navas), or to undermine the freedom of member states lawfully to utilise the periods granted by the Directives for implementation of their provisions into domestic legislation (Adeneler);
iv) that in Mangold the domestic provision, which the ECJ concluded ought to be disregarded by the domestic court, had been enacted in breach of the arrangements agreed by member states and given effect to in article 18 of the Directive permitting transposition to be delayed by either three or six years.