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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 >> George v The Ministry of Justice [2013] EWCA Civ 324 (17 April 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/324.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 324, [2013] WLR(D) 144 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE LIVERPOOL COUNTY COURT
His Honour Judge Graham Wood Q.C.
Claim No: 0LV25855
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 RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE JACKSON
____________________
THOMAS GEORGE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE MINISTRY OF JUSTICE |
Respondent |
____________________
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Mr John Cavanagh QC and Mr Alexander Williams (instructed by the Treasury Solicitor's Department) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 18 and 19 December 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
The background to the collective agreement
'The purpose of this Statement of Agreed Principles is to provide a framework within which new working arrangements for Prison Officers are to be developed. The new arrangements which will be drawn specifically to meet the individual needs of establishments (and groups within establishments) will be subject to introduction over a phased period.'
'All local working arrangements should comply with the principles set out below. Where, in an exceptional case, an establishment wishes to implement and work an arrangement which is at variance with these common principles, it will be necessary to refer the case for variation to Headquarters via Regional Office, for approval.'
'10. Prison Officers are conditioned to a 39 hour working week. Additionally Officers can contract to work a further 9 hours each week and qualify for the Group Working Contracted Hours allowance. These hours are referred to in this document as "conditioned" and "contract hours" respectively.'
'12. Working Week
i. The working week will be the period of seven days beginning midnight Saturday. The number of hours that an officer will be required to work may differ from week to week but will average either 48 weekly hours over the cycle of his system of attendance being a combination of 39 conditioned hours and 9 contract or 39 hours for those working conditioned hours only; …
13. Time Off In Lieu
'i. Time Off In Lieu (TOIL) will be given in respect of additional duty performed in excess of weekly hours, where such duty cannot be covered effectively by other means. Group Managers should endeavour to allow TOIL soon after the performance of the additional duty, and wherever possible during the officer's shift cycle. In granting TOIL the officer's preference should be sought and whenever possible complied with providing the needs of the work are met;
ii Following protracted emergency attendance involving the majority of available staff, ex gratia payments may be made.'
Mr Hendy informed us that in 1987 a prison officer's 'shift cycle' could be between 20 and 40 weeks.
'As matters have turned out, we have now had prolonged discussions about the entire contents of the revised package and these have led us not only to recognise that it would be beneficial to spell out some of the material in the Revised Offer documentation in greater detail but to improve the Offer in certain respects [the 'Offer' referred to is Bulletin 7]. These amplifications and improvements are set out in the attached Annexes. Annex A should be read as a supplement to the Statement of Agreed Principles for Fresh Start Proposals which were set out in Appendix 1 to the Revised Offer. Annex B itemises the improvements to the pay and conditions elements of the Offer. … Annex C uprates the scales in Annex B by the 4¼% offered by way of general pay settlement for 1987. … The 39-hour week will be introduced from 1 April.
The supplementary material in Annex A has been produced, in the light of the discussions we have had, with a view to meeting anxieties which have been expressed about how the Statement of Agreed Principles might be applied in practice in establishments. It reflects the advice, which has been given to the teams, which are now conducting reviews of the structure and working arrangements of establishments in order to prepare them for the implementation of Fresh Start. It recognises the need for as much predictability as possible about work patterns, for certainty about the operation of local procedures, for the individual's freedom of choice to be as untrammelled as possible and for there to be recognised methods for settling disputes. It accepts that local arrangements should be enshrined in written agreements and that there should be a mechanism for modifying agreements, where necessary. It seeks to balance management's requirements for greater flexibility in the way work is done in prisons against the need for as much certainty as possible for individuals and even handedness of treatment as between individuals. Most of all, it looks to involve staff, through their local representatives, in the consideration of how work might best be organised to meet the needs of individual establishments.
The Agreed Principles for Fresh Start Proposals in the Revised Offer and the supplementary material which has now been produced – and which, subject to endorsement by the NEC, has been agreed with the POA negotiating team – will be kept under review as Fresh Start implementation proceeds. The aim will be to produce, in due course, a single agreed code of principles on working practices.
Annex B sets out the further improvements, which we have thought it proper to make to what is proposed in the pay and conditions part of the Fresh Start package. In broad terms these are [and such terms are then set out. They are not material to the present issue]. …
I believe that what is set out above, taken together with the contents of Annexes A, B and C, substantially meet most of the points put to us by you in the course of our recent discussions. So far as we are concerned, these discussions have now ended and I must ask for the Association's response to the entire Fresh Start package by the deadline already stated. There can be no further improvements. …'
'1. This advice on how the Statement of Agreed Principles for Fresh Start set out in Appendix 1 of the Revised Offer (above) should be applied has been formulated following discussion with the [POA]. The essence of the approach taken is that flexibility in determining how the needs of the work can most effectively be matched to staff availability should be combined with as much predictability and fairness for staff as possible. In the interests of flexibility it is accepted that there may be good grounds for departing from the guidelines and practice set out below in particular local circumstances.
Status of Local Agreements
2. Governors and local POA Branches should seek to reach agreements about how the principles set out in the Statement and this document can best be reflected in local shift systems and working practices. Such local agreements should be consistent with the Statement of Agreed Principles and with the provisions of this document.
3. Local agreements should be set down in writing. Each agreement should be signed and dated by the Governor and on behalf of the Branch, as the parties to the agreement.
4. Agreements should be honoured by both parties. Staff should only be asked to act contrary to the terms of an agreement in a clear operational emergency when events make it necessary for the Governor to call in the majority of available staff to meet a threat. …'
We were told that no local agreements such as are referred to in paragraph 3 were entered into, or at any rate none that related to the establishment at which Mr George worked.
'Additional Hours
17. Officers will not normally be required to work longer than the sum of their conditioned hours or conditioned plus contract hours over the length of the shift cycle. But staff may be asked on occasions to work more than their average weekly hours because of
i. an operational emergency
ii the need to ensure minimum staffing levels are maintained
iii unavoidable or unforeseen operational reasons such as delay in returning from external duty.
18. Hours worked in this way will be repaid as soon as possible as described in paragraphs 22-25 below. …
Time Off In Lieu
22. In granting Time Off in lieu priority should be given if possible to staff who have attended for additional duty involuntarily
23. Group Managers should ensure that individual members of staff do not work high levels of additional hours without being compensated by TOIL. The aim should be for no more than five additional hours to be accumulated in any one week. Accumulated TOIL will be granted as soon as operationally possible and within a maximum period of five weeks.
24. Within these principles and subject to the needs of the work, local agreements may specify the amount of additional hours worked which can be carried forward and the time period within which TOIL should be granted for them.
25. Group Managers will need to maintain clear records to ensure fair treatment in the working of additional hours and the granting of TOIL.' (Emphasis supplied)
It is the third, emphasised sentence in paragraph 23 that is at the heart of the dispute between the parties in this litigation. It is the alleged breach of that provision for which Mr George sued the Ministry. I shall refer to it as 'the paragraph 23 sentence'.
'26. Similarly, where in any week an officer has not attended for his total hours for that week these hours will be banked (An example would be because he sought and was allowed to leave early on a shift for urgent domestic reasons.) Group Managers should aim to ensure that no more than five hours are accumulated in this way in any one week and for these hours to be worked as soon as possible and in any event within a maximum period of five weeks.'
Collective agreements
'Agreements such as these, composed largely of optimistic aspirations, presenting grave practical problems of enforcement and reached against a background of opinion adverse to enforceability, are, in my judgment, not contracts in the legal sense and are not enforceable at law. Without clear and express provisions making them amenable to legal action, they remain in the realm of undertakings binding in honour.'
'27. The so-called "normative effect" by which it can be inferred that provisions of collective agreements have become part of individual contracts of employment is now well recognised in employment law (see, for example, Harvey on Industrial Relations and Employment Law, vol. 235). However, serious difficulties still arise because the principle still has to be one of incorporation into the individual contracts of employment and the extraction of a recognisable contractual intent as between the individual employee and his employer. The mere existence of collective agreements which are relevant to the employee and his employment does not include a contractual intent (see, for example per Ackner LJ, Robertson v. British Gas [1983] IRLR 302). The contractual intent has to be found in the individual contract of employment and very often the evidence will not be sufficient to establish such an intent in a manner which satisfies accepted contractual criteria and satisfies ordinary criteria of certainty. Where the relevant subject-matter is one of present day-to-day relevance to the employer and employee, as for example wage rates and hours of work, the continuing relationship between employer and employee, the former paying wages and providing work, the latter working and accepting wages, provides a basis for inferring such a contractual intent. Where, as in the case of redundancy, the situation is one which does not have daily implications but only arises occasionally the inference will be more difficult to sustain. Here, there had not previously been any question of compulsory redundancies. There was no previously tested position by which a local custom could be demonstrated, nor was there any previous situation involving any of the relevant individuals, or for that matter any other employees of the defendants from which it could be inferred as a matter of individual contractual intent, that individual contracts of employment were to include as a matter of contractual right and obligation selection for redundancy on the seniority principle. It must be borne in mind that although the present plaintiffs would be the beneficiaries of the application of such a principle, by a parity of reasoning there would be other employees who would be disadvantaged. Similarly, there is no necessity to infer an intention to incorporate since collective agreements have a function and value of their own which exists wholly independently of any individual contract of employment (see, for example, the reasoning of the Judicial Committee in Young v. Canadian Northern Railway [1931] AC 83 at 88 to 89.) …
31. The principles to be applied can therefore be summarised. The relevant contract is between the individual employee and his employer; it is the contractual intention of those two parties which must be ascertained. In so far as that intention is to be found in a written document, that document must be construed on ordinary contractual principles. In so far as there is no such document or that document is not complete or conclusive, their contractual intention has to be ascertained by inference from the other available material including collective agreements. The fact that another document is not by itself contractual does not prevent it from being incorporated into the contract if that intention is shown as between the employer and the individual employee. Where a document is expressly incorporated by general words it is still necessary to consider, in conjunction with the words of incorporation, whether any particular part of that document is apt to be a term of the contract; if it is inapt, the correct construction of the contract may be that it is not a term of the contract. Where it is not a case of express incorporation, but a matter of inferring the contractual intent, the character of the document and the relevant part of it and whether it is apt to form part of the individual contract is central to the decision whether or not the inference should be drawn.'
The proceedings
The judge's judgment
'59. … there is no obvious contractual source for this entitlement, other than in the text of Bulletin 8. The relevant clause is 17, of Annex A, whilst the very first reference to additional duty performed in excess of weekly hours arises under clause 13 in Appendix 1. The most recent letter of appointment [a 2010 document, to which I shall come] has a provision relating to working hours at paragraph 7, but it is noteworthy that it sources Bulletin 8 for the application, and proceeds to set out almost word for word the text of clause 17.
60. Equally, the repayment of additional hours worked sources Bulletin 8, after a brief statement that "hours worked in this way will be repaid as soon as possible". (Defence counsel emphasises the absence of any outer limits for repayment in the appointment letter).
61. In terms of custom and practice, it is plain that regardless of the absence of contractual clarity, both prison governors and prison officers have proceeded for many years on the basis that officers have no right to refuse to work when requested (assuming one of the contingencies stipulated arises) but that any additional hours worked are credited for repayment. The evidence, which I accept, is that when prison officers refused to work additional hours, they were subjected to disciplinary proceedings, and in one instance actually dismissed. There is also evidence that records were kept of every hour that was worked in this way, just as records were kept of those officers whose hours fell short ("banked hours").
62. On this basis, the custom and practice in relation to both the requirement for additional hours worked and its repayment by TOIL, I am quite satisfied was clearly understood to be contractually binding by the parties. Therefore, I have no difficulty in accepting that the provision for requirement of additional hours and its repayment by TOIL was incorporated into individual contracts employment.'
'63. However, whether or not a long stop for repayment of TOIL within a maximum of five weeks as suggested in clause 23 was incorporated, is far less straightforward. Although Mr Travis informed the court that this was a clear expectation, and it was Mr George's belief that he had an absolute right, there is a paucity of evidence as to the regular enforcement of this long-stop, or a practice which suggested that it was anything other than a target for guidance.
64. Under the same clause in the letter of appointment setting out the terms and conditions …, it is noted that the five week long-stop is not replicated, even though reference is made to arrangements set out in Bulletin 8. The term "arrangements" carries less contractual understanding in my view than would terminology such as "requirements" or "stipulations".
65. In relation to the text of clause 23 itself, this provides a clumsy and uncomfortable formula which does not lend itself easily to interpretation. Mr Williams, on behalf of [the Ministry], makes a sound point that the granting of TOIL as soon as operationally possible is not qualified, before reference to the long stop of five weeks, by reference to terminology such as "or in any event". Whilst this submission may also be relevant to the question of the aptness of the term to be incorporated, in my judgment, it … also arises under consideration of the mechanism for incorporation.
66. I accept the argument that the description "reasonable, certain and notorious" must apply to the custom or practice, rather than the term, but it is relevant that an ambiguous or equivocal term may well have led to the non-enforceability of the long-stop in most instances.
67. In all the circumstances, I am not satisfied, on a balance of probabilities, that the clause 23 long-stop was incorporated into individual contracts of employment and intended to be contractually binding. Clause 13 of Appendix 1 sits independently of clause 23, and there is force in the submission of Mr Williams for the defence that the wording of … paragraphs 22 to 25 is more akin to guidance than contractual terminology.'
'70. … Whilst it is undesirable that officers should be allowed to build up substantial credit accounts for TOIL, potential situations could arise where senior prison officers were faced with a significant number of prison officers with accumulated TOIL insisting on contractual repayment within the specified five-week period.
71. Of course efficient management of shifts and working patterns should prevent this from arising, and there is sense in having a system whereby those who owe hours are called upon first to provide additional hours for operational reasons. However, the nature of the work in a prison is invariably unpredictable. Illness, conflict, or an influx of inmates will require working patterns to be reorganised, especially if minimum staffing levels are to be maintained.'
'75. In my judgment the five week long stop, or outer limit, was intended to be guidance, even though there is a general contractual entitlement to the repayment of TOIL. The effect of this has been recognised, in many instances, in that if operational reasons have prevented the taking of TOIL for a substantial period of time, at the end of an appointment as a prison officer, those hours that had not been taken as time off in lieu are compensated in monetary terms.'
The appeal
A. Was the paragraph 23 sentence incorporated into Mr George's contract of employment?
'The weekly conditioned hours are an average of 39 hours over the shift cycle, net of meal breaks. Meal breaks are unpaid. Additional hours are recompensed by time off in lieu (TOIL).'
That says nothing about there being a five-week longstop for the provision of TOIL and so merits no further consideration.
'The five day week is the standard arrangement for all Prison Service staff. The Service does have the right to call on staff to work at any time but this right will normally only be exercised in exceptional circumstances. There are special arrangements for prison officer grade, operational managers and prison governor grades: these are set out in Fresh Start Bulletin 8 (3 April 1987).'
'Procedures, policies and rules relevant to your employment are set out in the Prison Service Staff Handbook (as amended from time to time) as well as in Prison Service Instructions, Prison Service Orders and Prison Service Notices to Staff. These are not generally part of your contract of employment, and may be changed from time to time.
Save for explicit variations of terms and conditions, in the case of doubt, inconsistency or ambiguity, this statement of summary of principal terms and conditions of employment shall prevail over any other document.' (emphasis supplied)
'You are required to work shifts, including night shifts.
The policy on working arrangements (such as shifts, rostering of annual leave, working week, rest days, annual leave, substitution, night shifts, etc) for Prison Officers is currently contained in the following parts of Bulletin 8: Statement of Agreed Principles for Fresh Start Proposals (Appendix 1 of Bulletin 8) and the Application of Agreed Principles for Fresh Start Proposals (Annex A of Appendix 1 of Bulletin 8). These are available on the NOMS intranet. Local arrangements specific to establishments/areas may be applicable.
You may on occasion be asked to work for more than your average weekly hours because of:
- an operational emergency
- the need to ensure minimum staffing levels are maintained
- unavoidable or unforeseen operational reasons such as delay in returning from external duty
Hours worked in this way will be repaid as soon as possible through arrangements for "Time Off in Lieu" described in Bulletin 8.
In the case of doubt, inconsistency or ambiguity, this statement of summary of principal terms and conditions of employment and the Staff Handbook shall prevail over Bulletin 8 and any local arrangement.
The policy on working arrangements may be reviewed from time to time subject to applicable consultation provisions.'
B. 'Aptness' for incorporation
Disposition
Lord Justice Jackson :
Lord Justice Maurice Kay :