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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Department of Work and Pensions v. Sutcliff [2007] UKEAT 0319_1010 (10 October 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0319_1010.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 319_1010, [2007] UKEAT 0319_1010 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | Ms S-J Davies (of Counsel) Instructed by: The Office of the Solicitor Department of Work & Pensions Quarry House Quarry Hill Leeds LS2 7UA |
For the Respondent | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Respondent |
SUMMARY
Unlawful deduction from Wages
Maternity Rights and Parental Leave: Pregnancy
Contract of Employment: Incorporation into Contract
Whether Maternity Leave policy incorporated into contract of employment. Whether sick pay is 'remuneration' s71 ERA. Whether entitled to sick pay whilst on maternity leave.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
Introduction
The Facts
The 17 July document
"Introduction.
"This contract gives particulars of the terms and conditions of employment applicable to your appointment in the Department for Work and Pensions and the Pension Service pending the further development and negotiations of new terms and conditions for the Department for Work and Pensions and the Pension Service following your appointment to Administrative Officer on 18 April 2006 … full details of your conditions of service are contained on the 'The Department and You' intranet site. Your line manager will be able to show you how to access the intranet site. "
"Sick leave.
"You will be allowed sick absence on full pay, less any Social Security National Insurance Benefits such as incapacity Benefit or Maternity Allowance received, for up to six months in any period of 12 months. After that you will be allowed to receive half pay, subject to an overriding maximum of 12 months sick absence in a period of four years or under. Any Statutory Sick Pay (SSP) will be paid with sick pay up to the maximum of full pay.
"If your attendance is unsatisfactory because you have frequent or continuous sick absences we will review your suitability for continued employment. Full information is contained on the 'Department and You' intranet site."
"Less than 26 weeks service.
"2. Regardless of length of service or hours worked, you have the entitlement to unpaid Departmental maternity leave of 52 weeks. You do not need to be in paid service to qualify. You are entitled to receive all contractual entitlements during the first 26 weeks maternity leave, apart from remuneration."
By paragraph 22:
"If you have already notified the Department of the date at which you would like maternity leave to start, and subsequently become sick, Departmental maternity leave can start as originally intended. The period before the start of Departmental maternity leave would be treated as sick leave, and the statutory maternity pay offset against any Departmental sick pay."
Paragraphs 23 to 32 deal with maternity pay depending on length of service. Under paragraph 23 one year's service is required before the employee is eligible for Departmental maternity pay, which is more generous than statutory maternity pay. However, statutory maternity pay was only payable after 26 weeks service. The Claimant, with her shorter length of service, qualified for neither. Hence she was entitled only to maternity allowance, which she claimed.
"Sickness during or after Maternity Leave.
"43. If you are sick whilst on paid or unpaid maternity leave your absence will continue as Maternity leave unless you want to end it early by sending in form DWP ML6. Maternity leave will end 28 days from the date the medical evidence and the form are received. You will be subject to the normal attendance management process and sick pay rules. However, if you are sick with a pregnancy-related illness during your pregnancy or Departmental maternity leave, it will not count towards the Department's sick pay calculations for half and nil pay and will be disregarded by managers when considering formal action under the attendance management procedures.
44. If you are too ill to recommence work at the end of your Maternity leave, the normal sick pay rules will apply. If your absence results from non-maternity related causes, then your absence will be considered under the attendance management procedures."
The statutory right to maternity leave
"An employee may, provided that she satisfies any conditions which may be prescribed, be absent from work at any time during an ordinary maternity leave period."
"For the purposes of section 71 of the 1996 Act (ERA), only sums payable to an employee by way of wages or salary are to be treated as remuneration."
Unlawful deductions from wages
(a) Any fee, bonus, commission, holiday pay or other emolument referable to his employment, whether payable under his contract or otherwise.
(b) Statutory sick pays.
(c) Statutory maternity pay, [and other types of payment there set out].
"(a) that his employer has made a deduction from his wages in contravention of section 13 …"
The Chairman's Decision
"Sick absence on full pay less any … Maternity Allowance received."
She did receive maternity allowance which could only be paid to someone on maternity leave, thus she was contractually entitled to have her full pay made up by DWP during her maternity leave whilst she was certified sick.
(1) Insofar as she took her entitlement to maternity leave under the statutory provisions of section 71 ERA she was not entitled to remuneration, which includes sick pay. The Chairman held that remuneration in section 71(5)(b) and regulation 9(3) did not include sick pay, and
(2) The terms of the MLP were incorporated into the contract of employment and they excluded the payment of remuneration (paragraph 2) which included sick pay. The Chairman held that the MLP was not incorporated into the contract because the Claimant had no access to the DWP intranet site after receipt of the contract document, but even if it did apply, the policy did not state that sick pay was not payable. On the contrary, paragraph 43 of the Policy, properly construed, provides for the payment of sick pay in the event of sickness during maternity leave.
The Appeal
"Dear Madam,
I write on behalf of Ms Sutcliffe as the solicitor who represented her at the original tribunal. I have spoken to Miss Sutcliffe on the subject of resisting the Appeal from the Judgment of His Honour Judge Thomas from the Manchester Employment Tribunal.
Whilst I do not have a copy of the actual Respondent's answer form that was supplied to Miss Sutcliffe, I can confirm that we do not resist the application for the Appeal. Our case is by way of case stated. We have nothing further to add and we will not be attending the ppeal Hearing.
"We understand the Appeal will go ahead in our absence. Our view is that the DWP are appealing against the decision of the Judge; that the Judge erred in Law, that is a decision to be made by the Tribunal itself. We would make no further representations at this stage. We will abide by the decision of the Appeal Tribunal and await the Outcome in due course."
(1) The expression "remuneration" in section 71(5)(b) ERA, read with regulation 9(3), includes sick pay.
(2) The Chairman was wrong in Law to find that the MLP was not incorporated into the contract of employment.
(3) On a proper construction of the MLP the Claimant was not entitled to sick pay while she was on maternity leave.
(1) Both parties and the Chairman (see Reasons, paragraphs 2, 4 and 5) have proceeded on the basis that the Claimant commenced a period of maternity leave on 1 August 2006 and that leave continued throughout the relevant period.
(2) If the Chairman was correct in finding that the MLP was not incorporated into the contract, then the contract document of 17 July is silent on the subject (Reasons, paragraph 3.4). Accordingly the Claimant would then be dependent on her statutory rights under section 71 ERA.
(3) Applying section 71 I agree with the DWP that remuneration under section 71(5)(b), read with regulation 9(3), includes sick pay, and thus entitlement to sick pay during maternity leave is excluded by operation of section 71(5)(b). Put another way, it would be a strange result if contractual sick pay formed part of a worker's wages within the meaning of section 27(1) for the purposes of a complaint under section 23(1), as the Chairman correctly found for the purposes of upholding the complaint, but not remuneration, that is sums payable by way of wages or salary, within the meaning of regulation 9(3).
(4) I also agree that in fact the MLP was incorporated into the contract of employment by virtue of the notification in the contract document to the employee of the full details of her Conditions of Service on the intranet site. I do not accept the Chairman's reasoning that because the Claimant did not have access to the intranet site during her absence that the policy was thereby not incorporated. DWP had done all that was reasonably sufficient to give the Claimant notice of the policy. See Hood v Anchor Line (Henderson Bros) Ltd [1918] AC 837. The fact that the Claimant did not read the policy or was incapable of personally doing so is immaterial. See Thompson v LMS Railway Company [1930] 1KB 41.
(5) The terms of the MLP are tolerably clear. Paragraph 2 provides that an employee without at least 26 weeks service (this Claimant) is entitled to receive all contractual entitlements during maternity leave, apart from remuneration. As I have earlier indicated, remuneration includes sick pay by parity of reasoning. Paragraph 22 makes clear that the period before maternity leave will be treated as sick leave; it does not allow for sick pay during maternity leave. The position under paragraph 43, on which the Chairman relied, requires the employee to give notice of early termination of maternity leave if she wishes to claim sick pay for sickness during maternity leave; the employee will then be subject to the normal attendance management process. There is no evidence that the Claimant served notice to end her maternity leave; on the contrary, it was common ground, as I have earlier observed, that her maternity leave ran its normal course.
(6) That leaves the final point which impressed the Chairman. The contract document, in the section headed "Sick Leave", provided that the employee would be allowed sick absence on full pay less any Social Security and National Insurance Benefits such as, among others, Maternity Allowance. Before the Chairman, Counsel then appearing suggested that was a mistake. Before me, Miss Davies has raised the possibility that by reference to paragraphs 21 and 22 of the MLP, and regulation 6 of the regulations, it is conceivable that an employee might, for the four-week period before the expected week of childbirth, be entitled to sick pay at a time when she was in receipt of Maternity Allowance. I do not find it necessary to reach any conclusions on that possibility. In my judgment, the reference to Maternity Allowance in the sick leave section of the contract document does not operate to grant a right to sick pay, which is otherwise excluded in the case of employees on maternity leave, to which the MLP applies.