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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Embery v Fire Brigades Union (Certification Officer - interpretation of trade union rule) [2023] EAT 134 (25 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/134.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 134 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
Mrs Gemma Todd
Mr Martin Pilkington
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MR P EMBERY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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FIRE BRIGADES UNION |
Respondent |
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Mr O Segal KC (instructed by Thompsons Solicitors LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12 October 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
Certification Officer – interpretation of trade union rule
The Certification Officer had not erred in her construction of rule C13 of the rules of the Fire Brigades Union and her decision to strike out the appellant's complaint as having no reasonable prospect of success and/or as misconceived could not be said to be perverse.
The Honourable Mrs Justice Eady DBE, President:
Introduction
The Factual Background and the Rule in Dispute
"INTERPRETATION OF RULES
In the event of a dispute arising on the interpretation of any of the rules which cannot be satisfactorily settled by the Executive Council or any sub-committees thereof, the Standing Orders Committee shall be empowered to adjudicate on the dispute."
"President stated for the records that the Disciplinary Committee had voted 3 to 1 to dismiss Bro Embery's dispute in relation to the interpretation of the rule."
The decision of the Certification Officer
Section 108A Right to apply to Certification Officer
(1) A person who claims that there has been a breach or threatened breach of the Rules of a trade union relating to any of the matters mentioned in subsection (2) may apply to the Certification Officer for a declaration to that effect, …
(2) The matters are – … (b) disciplinary proceedings by the union (including expulsion); … (d) the constitution or proceedings of any executive committee or of any decision-making meeting. …
Section 256ZA Striking out
(1) At any stage of proceedings on an application or complaint made to the Certification Officer, he may— (a) order the application or complaint, or any response, to be struck out on the grounds that it is scandalous, vexatious, has no reasonable prospect of success or is otherwise misconceived, (b) order anything in the application or complaint, or any response, to be amended or struck out on those grounds, …
"7. The matter of the interpretation of the rules therefore seems to have been resolved by the Disciplinary Sub Committee.
8. However, Mr Embery states that "in the event the dispute between me and the president/vice president remained unsettled following the meeting that was being convened under rule C13, I expected the standing orders committee to be empowered to adjudicate on the matter."
9. Mr Embery's complaint, therefore, appears to be that when a Union member feels that the interpretation of the rules has not been satisfactorily resolved, they have the right to raise the matter themselves with the Standing Orders Committee. However, Mr Embery has not identified a rule which enables him or any other member of the Union to require the issue to be resolved by the Standard Orders Committee.
10. My view is Rule C13 empowers the Standard Orders Committee to adjudicate on disputes on any interpretation of the Union's rule which have not been settled by the Executive Committee or one of the sub-committees. The rules do not appear to set out explicitly how a dispute should be referred to a committee. Instead, they appear to empower the committee to adjudicate on a dispute which has not been settled by the Executive Committee or any sub-committee. The Rules does not explicitly give any individual member of the Union the right to raise an issue with the Standing Orders Committee.
11. In Mr Embery's case the Executive Committee delegated the matter to its disciplinary sub-committee who appear to have resolved the issue. I understand Mr Embery does not agree with their decision. However, he has not referred me to a rule which would enable him to engage Rule C13 himself. 12. Consequently, I consider that Rule C13 is not capable of being breached the way that Mr Embery has set out. On that basis I consider that Mr Embery's complaint has no prospect of success and is misconceived."
The Appeal and the Appellant's Submissions
The Submissions of the FBU
The Relevant Legal Principles
(1) A trade union's rulebook is in law a contract between all of its members from time to time (Heatons Transport (St Helens) Ltd v Transport General Workers Union [1972] IRLR 25, [1972] ICR 308; Evangelou and ors v McNicol [2016] EWCA Civ 817, paragraph 19; Kelly, paragraph 36(1))
(2) As such, it must be interpreted in accordance with the principles which apply generally to the interpretation of contracts (Evangelou, paragraph 20; Kelly paragraph 36(2)).
(3) Nevertheless, context is important. Trade union rule books are not drafted by parliamentary draftsmen and should not be read as if they were. Further, unlike commercial contracts, it is not to be assumed that all the terms of the contract will be found in the rule book alone (particularly as regards the discretion conferred by the members upon committees or officials of the union as to the way in which they may act on the union's behalf) and may be informed by custom and practice developed over the years (Heatons Transport per Lord Wilberforce at pp 393G-394C; Kelly, paragraph 36(3)).
(4) It is also important to recall that what falls to be construed in this context is in substance the constitution of a trade union. Although in law its status is that of a multilateral contract, it is the document which sets out the powers and duties of a trade union (Evangelou, paragraph 19; Kelly, paragraph 36(4)).
(5) The rules of a trade union should thus be given an interpretation which accords with what the reasonable trade union member would understand the words to mean; a court should be slow to adopt a construction which, on the face of it, is contrary to what both the members and common sense would have expected. (Jacques v AUEW [1986] ICR 683 per Warner J, at p 692A-B; Coyne v Unite the Union (D/2/18-19) per HHJ Jeffrey Burke QC (acting as a CO), paragraph 30; McVitae and ors v Unison [1996] IRLR 33 per Harrison J, paragraph 57; Kelly, paragraph 39).
Analysis and Conclusions