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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Garland v British Rail Engineering Ltd (No 2) [1982] UKHL 2 (22 April 1982) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1982/2.html Cite as: [1982] UKHL 2, [1982] 2 WLR 918, [1983] 2 AC 751, [1982] ICR 420 |
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Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/18/2412
Die Jovis 22° Aprilis 1982
Upon Report from the Appellate
Committee to whom
was referred the Cause Garland against British
Rail
Engineering Limited, That the Committee had heard
Counsel
on Wednesday the 26th day of November
1980 upon the Petition and
Appeal of Eileen Mary
Garland of 49 Shepperton Close,
Castlethorpe, Milton
Keynes praying that the matter of the Order
set forth
in the Schedule thereto, namely an Order of
Her
Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 4th day of April
1979
might be reviewed before Her Majesty the Queen
in Her Court of
Parliament and that the said Order
might be reversed, varied or
altered or that the
Petitioner might have such other relief in the
premises
as to Her Majesty the Queen in Her Court of
Parliament
might seem meet; as also upon the Case of British
Rail
Engineering Limited lodged in answer to the said
Appeal which said
Appeal was, by an Order of this
House of the 19th day of January
1981, referred to
the Court of Justice of the European
Communities
for a preliminary ruling under Article 177 of the
Treaty
establishing the European Economic Community; and
due
consideration had this day of what was offered on
either side in
this Cause:
It is Ordered and Adjudged,
by the Lords Spiritual
and Temporal in the Court of Parliament
of Her
Majesty the Queen assembled, That the said Order
of Her
Majesty's Court of Appeal of the 4th day of
April 1979 complained
of in the said Appeal be, and
the same is hereby, Reversed
and that the Order of
the Employment Appeal Tribunal of the 16th
day of
November 1977 be, and the same is hereby, Restored:
And
it is further Ordered, That the Respondents do
pay or cause
to be paid to the said Appellant the Costs
incurred by her in the
Courts below and also the Costs
incurred by her in respect of the
said Appeal to this
House, the amount of such last-mentioned Costs
to be
certified by the Clerk of the Parliaments if not
agreed
between the parties: And it is also further Ordered,
That
the Cause be, and the same is hereby, remitted
back to the
Employment Appeal Tribunal to do therein
as shall be just and
consistent with this Judgment.
HOUSE OF LORDS
GARLAND (APPELLANT)
v.
BRITISH RAIL ENGINEERING LIMITED (RESPONDENTS)
Lord
Diplock
Lord Edmund-Davies
Lord
Fraser of Tullybelton
Lord
Russell of Killowen
Lord
Scarman
Lord Diplock
my lords,
The facts
which give rise to this appeal are sufficiently stated in the
four
explanatory paragraphs incorporated in a reference to the
European
Court of Justice, made by this House under Article 177 of
the E.E.C.
Treaty, of questions concerning the interpretation of
Article 129 of that
Treaty and of two directives made by the
Council of Ministers. The
reference was in the following terms :
Mrs.
Eileen Mary Garland is a married woman employed by the
Respondents,
British Rail Engineering Limited (" BREL "). The
whole
of the shareholding in BREL is held by the British Railways
Board which
is a public authority charged by statute with the
duty of providing
railway services in Great Britain.
All
employees of BREL enjoy certain valuable concessionary
travel
facilities during the period of their employment. These
facilities entitle
each employee, regardless of sex to travel
free or at a reduced rate on
British Rail and certain foreign
railways. Such facilities are extended
not only to the
employee, but to his or her spouse and dependent
children.
After
employees of BREL retire from their employment
on
reaching retiring age (which is earlier for women than for
men) there
is a difference in their treatment depending on their
sex. In the case of
former male employees, they continue to
be granted (though on a
reduced scale) travel facilities for
themselves, their wives and dependent
children. In the case of
former female employees, they receive (on a
similarly reduced
scale) travel facilities for themselves, but no such
facilities
are granted in respect of their husbands or dependent
children.
These facilities are not enjoyed by former employees as
a matter of
contractual right, but employees have a legitimate
expectation that they
will enjoy
them after retirement and it would be difficult in practice for
BREL
to withdraw them unilaterally without the agreement of the
trade
unions of which their employees are members.
4. On 25
November 1976 Mrs. Garland complained to an industrial
tribunal
that BREL were discriminating against her contrary to the
provisions
of a United Kingdom Act of Parliament, the
Sex
Discrimination Act 1975 (" the Act "). Her
complaint after consideration
also by two intermediate appellate
courts ([1978] I.C.R. 495 (Employment
Appeal Tribunal), [1979]
I.C.R. 558 (Court of Appeal)) has now reached
the House of Lords
which is a court against whose decision there is no
judicial
remedy under United Kingdom law.
5. In
order to enable it to give judgment on the appeal, this
House
considers that a decision is necessary on the following
questions:
"1.
Where an employer provides (although not bound to do so by
"contract)
special travel facilities for former employees to enjoy after
"
retirement which discriminate against former female employees in
"the
manner described above, is this contrary to:-
" (a) Article
119 of the E.E.C. Treaty?
" (b) Article 1 of Council
Directive 75/117/EEC?
" (c) Article 1 of Council Directive
76/207/EEC?
2
" 2. If the answer to
questions 1(a), 1(b) or 1(c) is affirmative,
is
" Article 119 or either of the directives directly
applicable in Member
" States so as to confer enforceable
Community rights upon individuals
" in the above
circumstances? "
Before it reached this House, Mrs.
Garland's claim had been dealt with
in an industrial court, the
Employment Appeal Tribunal and the Court of
Appeal upon the
footing that it turned upon the true construction of section
6(4)
of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, but without any
consideration
being given to the fact that equal pay without
discrimination on the grounds
of sex is required by Article 119 of
the E.E.C. Treaty and that the application
of this Article had
also been the subject of directives made by the Council
of the
E.E.C. under Article 189 of the Treaty. Furthermore, after
the
passing of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, the European Court
of Justice
had held in Defrenne v. Sabena [1976] ECR 455 that Article 119 was
directly applicable in Member
States, without the necessity of any further
act by any
institution of the Community or legislative action by a Member
State,
to make unlawful any discrimination between men and women in
the
amount of compensation receivable by them for equal work performed
in
the same establishment whether private or public.
Section 6 of the Sex
Discrimination Act 1975 appears in Part II of the
Act which bears
the general heading " Discrimination in the Employment
"
Field" and is the first of a fasciculus of five sections under
the
sub-heading " Discrimination by employers ". For
present purposes it is
sufficient to set out the following
provisions of section 6: —
" 6.—(1) It is unlawful
for a person, in relation to employment by
" him at an
establishment in Great Britain, to discriminate against a
"
woman—
" (a) in the
arrangements he makes for the purpose of determining
" who
should be offered that employment, or
" (b) in the terms on which he offers her that employment, or
" (c) by refusing or deliberately omitting to offer her that employment.
" (2) It is unlawful for a
person, in the case of a woman employed by
" him at an
establishment in Great Britain, to discriminate against her—
" (a) in the way he
affords her access to opportunities for promotion,
" transfer
or training, or to any other benefits, facilities or
"
services, or by refusing or deliberately omitting to afford her
"
access to them, or
" (b) by dismissing her, or subjecting her to any other detriment.
" . . . . .
" (4) Subsections 1 (b)
and (2) do not apply to provision in relation
" to death
or retirement."
The Industrial Tribunal was of
opinion that concessionary travel facilities
afforded to
ex-employees after their retirement fell within subsection (4);
they
were " provision in relation to ... retirement" and so were
not
subject to the prohibition on discrimination imposed by
subsection (1)(b) or
(2)(a). The Employment Appeal
Tribunal took the contrary view. They
considered that the words of
the exception created by subsection (4) ought not to be construed so
widely as to include
" a privilege [that] has existed during
employment " and is allowed by the
employer " to
continue after retirement." The Court of Appeal (Lord
Denning
M.R. Lawton and Geoffrey Lane, L.JJ) restored the decision of
the
Industrial Tribunal. Lawton L.J. described the question of
construction
of subsection (4) as being " largely a matter of
first impression ". His own
first impression, which was
shared and adopted by the Master of the Rolls,
was that "
provision in relation to ... retirement" was a wide
expression
and included any provision about retirement.
In neither the Employment Appeal
Tribunal nor the Court of Appeal was
attention drawn by counsel,
as it should have been, to Article 119 of the
E.E.C. Treaty or to
either of the two directives dealing with sex discrimina-
3
tion, No.75/117 of 10 February
1975 and No. 76/207 of 9 February 1976;
although in the light of
the answers given by the European Court of Justice
to the
questions referred by this House, reference to Article 119 is
sufficient
to dispose of the matter and reliance upon neither of
these directives has
turned out to be necessary.
The relevant provisions of Article 119 are:-
" Each Member State shall
during the first stage ensure and subse-
" quently maintain
the application of the principle that men and women
" should
receive equal pay for equal work.
" For the purpose of this
Article, ' pay' means the ordinary basic
" or minimum wage or
salary and any other consideration, whether in
" cash or in
kind, which the worker receives, directly or indirectly, in
"
respect of his employment from his employer."
My Lords, even if the obligation
to observe the provisions of Article 119
were an obligation
assumed by the United Kingdom under an ordinary
international
treaty or convention and there were no question of the
treaty
obligation being directly applicable as part of the law to
be applied by the
courts in this country without need for any
further enactment, it is a principle
of construction of United
Kingdom statutes, now too well established to
call for citation of
authority, that the words of a statute passed after the
Treaty has
been signed and dealing with the subject-matter of the
international
obligation of the United Kingdom, are to be
construed, if they are reasonably
capable of bearing such a
meaning, as intended to carry out the obligation
and not to be
inconsistent with it. A fortiori is this the case where
the
Treaty obligation arises under one of the Community Treaties
to which
section 2 of the European Communities Act 1972
applies.
The instant appeal does not
present an appropriate occasion to consider
whether, having regard
to the express direction as to the construction of
enactments "
to be passed " which is contained in section 2(4),
anything
short of an express positive statement in an act of
parliament passed after
1 January 1973 that a particular provision
is intended to be made in breach
of an obligation assumed by the
United Kingdom under a Community
Treaty, would justify an English
court in construing that provision in a
manner inconsistent with a
Community Treaty obligation of the United
Kingdom however wide a
departure from the prima facie meaning of the
language of
the provision might be needed in order to achieve consistency.
For,
in the instant case the words of section 6(4) of the Sex
Discrimination
Act 1975 that fall to be construed, "provision
in relation to ... retire-
" ment ", without any undue
straining of the ordinary meaning of the
language used, are
capable of bearing either the narrow meaning accepted by
the
Employment Appeal Tribunal or the wider meaning preferred by
the
Court of Appeal but acknowledged by that court to be largely a
matter
of first impression. Had the attention of the court been
drawn to Article
119 of the E.E.C. Treaty and the judgment of the
European Court
of Justice in Defrenne v. Sabena, I have no
doubt that, consistently with
statements made by the Master of the
Rolls in previous cases, they would
have construed section 6(4) so
as not to make it inconsistent with Article 119.
In order to decide whether the
construction of section 6(4) in fact adopted
by we Court of Appeal
was inconsistent with Article 119, and whether that
alternative
construction adopted by the Employment Appeal Tribunal was
consistent
with it, it was desirable to obtain a ruling of the European
Court
Justice that would be binding upon all courts in England,
including this
House, upon the question of the effect of Article
119 on the kind of
discrimination as respects concessionary travel
facilities after retirement to
which Mrs. Garland was
subjected by her employers simply because she
was a woman and not
a man.
Although I do not believe that any
of your Lordships had any serious
doubt as to what answer would be
given to that question by the European
Court, there was not in
existence at the date. 19 January 1981 when the
order of reference
under Article 177 was made, so considerable and
4
consistent a line of case law of
the European Court of Justice on the
interpretation and direct
applicability of Article 119, as would make the
answer too obvious
and inevitable to be capable of giving rise to what
could properly
be regarded as " a question " within the meaning of
Article
177. It thus became mandatory on this House, as a court
from whose
decisions there is no possibility of appeal under
internal law, to refer to the
European Court of Justice the
questions that were in fact referred by the
order that I have
quoted at the beginning of this speech, so as to provide
the House
with material necessary to aid it in construing section 6(4) of
the
Sex Discrimination Act 1975.
To those questions the answers given by the European Court are:
" THE COURT
" hereby rules: —
" 1. Where an employer
(although not bound to do so by contract)
" provides special
travel facilities for former male employees to enjoy
" after
their retirement this constitutes discrimination within the meaning
"
of Article 119 against former female employees who do not receive
"
the same facilities.
" 2. Where a national court
is able, using the criteria of equal
" work and equal pay,
without the operation of Community or national
" measures, to
establish that the grant of special travel facilities solely
"
to retired male employees represents discrimination based on
difference
" of sex, the provisions of Article 119 of the
Treaty apply directly to
" such a situation."
As is rightly conceded by the
respondent employers, British Railway
Engineering Ltd., these
answers make it clear that the construction put upon
section 6(4)
of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 by the Employment Appeal
Tribunal
was correct, with the result that the appeal must be allowed.
Lord Edmund-Davies
my lords,
I have had the privilege of
reading in draft the speech of my noble and
learned friend, Lord
Diplock, with which I concur.
Lord Fraser of Tullybelton
my
lords,
I concur.
Lord Russell of Killowen
my
lords.
I concur.
Lord Scarman
my
lords,
I concur.
140159—2 Dd 8209971 C3 4/82