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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Anderson & Ors v London Fire & Emergency Planning Authority [2013] EWCA Civ 321 (11 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/321.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 321, [2013] IRLR 459 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EAT (3 JUDGES)
MRS JUSTICE SLADE
REF: UKEAT/050511SM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Vice President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division
LORD JUSTICE MOSES
and
LORD JUSTICE DAVIS
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Ms Anderson & ors and Mr Philips & ors |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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London Fire & Emergency Planning Authority |
Respondent |
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Mr James Goudie QC and Ms Holly Stout (instructed by London Fire & Emergency Planning Authority) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 13 March 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :
"In recognition of the agreement of GMB and Unison to the terms set out in this agreement, the LFEPA shall increase the rates of pay of all employees covered by the ICCS by 2.9% with effect from 01/04/07. On 01/04/08 there will be a further pay uplift of 2.75% save for those covered by the pay protection arrangements set out in paragraph 11 below. On 01/04/09 pay will be increased by 2.5% or by the NJC for Local Government Services settlement plus any uplift required to ensure general pay increases for the period 2007-09 are 1% above the NJC settlements for the same period."
No dispute arose in relation to the years commencing April 2007 or April 2008. The dispute relates to the year commencing April 2009 which was the subject of the words I have emphasised.
"In our judgment, the meaning of Clause 2 of the Collective Agreement is clear. It provides for a pay increase in 2009, the third year of the Collective Agreement, of 2.5% or the NJC settlement figure plus any uplift required to ensure pay increases for the period 2007-2009 were 1% above the NJC settlements for the same period. 'Or' means what it says. The [Employer] fulfilled their contractual obligation by paying in accordance with one alternative. They were not contractually obliged to pay 2.5% or whichever alternative would give the highest increase."
1. Was the 2009 provision contractual?
(a) An agreement to agree?
"The Tribunal on the evidence conclude that the agreement reached for 2009 was an agreement to agree …
… the parties had concluded an agreement to agree the final figure in 2009, after the NJC settlement had been concluded. There was no evidence … that the agreement contained a further guarantee that this would be not less than 2.5%. There was also no evidence that the parties had agreed a formula, stating which option was to take primacy over the other. In the event of agreement not being reached, all the parties had was an agreement to enter into further negotiations."
(b) Uncertainty
"Each option was clear. So too was it clear that it was for the paying party, [the Employer], to choose between the two. The existence of choice in an agreement does not render that agreement uncertain if the choices are clear. Contracts in different contexts may give an option to one party leaving the other party uncertain as to whether the option will be exercised. In the employment context a contract may give the employer the right to terminate on giving notice or pay in lieu of notice. The existence of choice in an agreement does not render that agreement enforceable as a contract."
(c) "Not apt for incorporation"
2. Construction
"(1) Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract …
(3) The law excludes from the admissible background the previous negotiations of the parties and their declarations of subjective intent …
(4) The meaning which a document … would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean. The background may not merely enable the reasonable man to choose between the possible meanings of words which are ambiguous but even (as occasionally happens in ordinary life) to conclude that the parties must, for whatever reason, have used the wrong words or syntax …
(5) … if one would conclude from the background that something must have gone wrong with the language, the law does not require judges to attribute to the parties an intention which they plainly could not have had. Lord Diplock made this point more vigorously when he said in Antaios Campania Naviera v Salen Rederierna [1985] AC 191, 201:
'if detailed semantic and syntactical analysis of words in a commercial contract is going to lead to a conclusion that flouts business commonsense, it must be made to yield to business commonsense'."
"On the facts here, it was a collective agreement which was incorporated into the contracts of the individual plaintiffs. A collective agreement has special characteristics, being made between an employer or employers' organisation on one side and a trade union or trade union representative of employees on the other, usually following a negotiation. Thus it represents an industrial bargain, and probably represents a compromise between the conflicting aims of the parties, or 'sides' as in this context they are revealingly called. But despite these special characteristics, a collective agreement must be construed like any other, giving a fair meaning to the words used in the factual context (known to the parties) which gave rise to the agreement."
That sets the scene for all such cases.
"(a) a three year pay agreement guaranteeing an additional 1% above the National Joint Council for Local Government Services Agreement."
"2.5% or the balance of the value of the NJC … for the same period (April 2007 – March 2009) plus 1%."
It also adopted the language of "long-term pay deal".
"On 01/04/09 pay will be increased by 2.5% or by the NJC … settlement plus any uplift required to ensure general pay increases for the period 2007-09 are 1% above the NJC settlements for the same period."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Moses:
Lord Justice Davis: