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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 >> Curless v Shell International Ltd [2019] EWCA Civ 1710 (22 October 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/1710.html Cite as: [2019] EWCA Civ 1710, [2020] ICR 431, [2019] WLR(D) 578, [2020] IRLR 36 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Slade J
[2018] UKEAT 0261/17/0908
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LEWISON
and
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
____________________
Michael CURLESS |
Claimant/ Respondent to Appeal |
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- and – |
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SHELL INTERNATIONAL LIMITED |
Respondentto Claim/ Appellant |
____________________
Patrick Halliday (instructed by Fox Williams LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 2 & 3 October 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Sir Terence Etherton MR, Lord Justice Lewison and Lord Justice Bean:
Background
The Second ET Claim
"10. In support of the matters averred in the previous paragraph, the Claimant relies in particular on the following:
(i) In or around late May of 2016, the Claimant was in The Old Bank of England, a bar on Chancery Lane in London. He overheard a conversation between two people, who he believes to have been lawyers from Lewis Silkin. They mentioned a senior lawyer at the Respondent who had commenced a disability discrimination claim in the Employment Tribunal. The Claimant believes that they were referring to him. They said that this individual's "days are numbered", because his managers had said that his Employment Tribunal claim was to be handled firmly, and because the Respondent planned to use the context of a redundancy exercise to terminate his employment purportedly by reason of redundancy.
(ii) In October 2016, the Claimant learnt that, in April 2016, Ms Alex Ward (the Respondent's "Managing Counsel, UK Employment and Employee Benefits") had told David Brinley (who was the line manager of the Claimant's line manager) that the Respondent could use a planned re-organisation of the Respondent's in-house legal department in order to terminate the Claimant's employment. Ms Ward told Mr Brinley that it was worth considering this in order to avoid the risk of "impasse and proceedings with ongoing employment with no obvious resolution". She did so while the Claimant's disability discrimination grievance process (see below) and existing claims for disability discrimination were in train, and three months before the Claimant was put on notice of risk of redundancy. This indicates that the Claimant's 'redundancy' process was a sham designed to end his employment, and that the Respondent wanted to end his employment because he had done protected acts, namely raising his disability discrimination grievance and bringing his Employment Tribunal claims of disability discrimination.
11. For the avoidance of doubt, the Claimant contends that none of the matters described in the previous paragraph attracts legal professional privilege. Even if (which is not admitted) any of those matters involved the giving or receiving of legal advice, privilege does not attach to iniquity, i.e. to communications which are for any "dishonest" purpose, including "sham contrivances"; and/or to conduct which the law treats as contrary to public policy. It was dishonest and/or a sham contrivance and/or contrary to public policy for the Respondent to use 'redundancy' as a pretext for terminating the Claimant's employment, especially where it wished to terminate his employment because of his protected acts."
"Spoke to David Brinley [In-house General Counsel with Shell].
It looks as though there are both opportunities for SVS conversations (as parts of the wider UK announcements and done consistently with others) and opportunities for potential compulsory redundancies. On a strictly confidential basis they are looking at reducing the overall number of senior C &P lawyer roles they have, both as part of the integration and generally.
I told him this is their best opportunity to consider carefully how such processes could be applies [sic] across the board to the UK legal population including the individual. If done with appropriate safeguards and in the right circumstances, while there is always the risk he would argue unfairness/discrimination, there is at least a wider reorganisation and process at play that we could put this into the context of. I felt in the circumstances this is definitely worth considering even if there is the inevitable degree of legal risk which we would try to mitigate. Otherwise we risk impasse and proceedings with ongoing employment with no obvious resolution. Happy to discuss next week."
The ET's Decision
"It is clearly a legally privileged document containing legal advice to Mr Brindley. It is headed "Legally Privileged and Confidential" and the Claimant acknowledges that it is legally privileged and that he should not have been given a copy. It is evident that the Respondent has not waived privilege on its contents. At its highest, the e-mail discloses advice on how to handle a possible redundancy of the Claimant as part of a UK wide process by which it would be reducing the number of lawyers it employed and acknowledges the risk that the Claimant might take legal action but points to the wider context as in effect justification. It is advising on a possible course of action and is not disclosing any element of discrimination or victimisation. It is legal advice aimed at avoiding rather than evading possible legal action (Bullivant) in place of simply doing nothing in fear that the Claimant might take further legal action. This is what lawyers do day in day out and the giving of legal advice does not as a matter of course raise iniquity."
"I do not find that it discloses a strong prima facie case or even a prima facie case of iniquity. I have considered the authorities cited and the submissions made and I accept the Respondent's submissions as to what is required for the iniquity exception to apply. Whilst of course protection against discrimination and victimisation is important, it is a tort, and to elevate it to the status required to disapply legal advice privilege, goes too far. The case law supports as much and I am specifically bolstered in this finding by Norris J at BBGP at pages 318 & 319, Schiemann L J in Eustice at paragraph 1250H, Walsh and Dadourian"
26. Around 6 pm a group of professionally dressed people came into the pub and walked past [Mr Curless] and sat at the table behind him. There were three or four males and two females in their 30s or 40s with brownish hair. One of the men was carrying a Lewis Silkin notepad inside a plastic sleeve. The group sat at a table the other side of the pillar about a metre or so away from where he was sitting. Whilst he could hear their conversation, he did not pay any attention to what they were saying until one of the women mentioned dealing with a complaint by a senior lawyer at Shell. It was at this point that he started to listen to what she was saying.
27. The woman referred to a "he" who had brought a complaint of disability discrimination that had taken up a lot of Shell's time, had been ongoing for a long time and that Shell wanted his tribunal complaint to be handled firmly or sternly. She said that however his days were numbered as there was now a good opportunity to manage him out by severance or redundancy in a big reorganisation exercise that was underway, as a result of Shell's acquisition of British Gas. The second woman did not speak much but listened to what the first woman was saying. At this point the conversation was interrupted by the other people in the group. The Claimant said in oral evidence that this was the gist of the conversation.
28. The Claimant felt uncomfortable and conspicuous because he believed what he had overheard was clearly about him. He decided to leave. The traffic outside was still busy and so he decided to walk to Marylebone Station and left."
"As the Respondent submits it is a repetition possibly third or fourth hand of something privileged, a discussion between solicitors. Privilege was not waived because the privilege belonged to the Respondent and not to whoever allegedly had this conversation in public. At its highest it is an extremely indiscrete conversation by an unknown lawyer relaying a strategy clearly not with the Respondent's permission to do so and no doubt without Lewis Silkin's permission to do so. The extent to which this is the speaker's slant on the matter or legal advice given is not known. But again it simply refers to what at most is action relating to tortious claims and not excepted by the iniquity principle."
The EAT's Decision
"In my judgment the email of 29 April 2016 is to be interpreted as recording legal advice that the genuine redundancy exercise could be used as a cloak to dismiss the Claimant to avoid his continuing complaints and difficulties with his employment which were said by him to be related to his disability."
"59. If the advice in the email of 29 April 2016 had gone no further than "you may select the Claimant, an employee with a disability, for redundancy but you run the risk of a claim by him" in my judgment it would not have reached the high threshold required to disapply legal advice privilege. The EJ reached his decision based on such an interpretation. However I have held that the EJ erred in doing so. In my judgment, properly interpreted, the email of 29 April 2016 records advice on how to cloak as dismissal for redundancy dismissal of the Claimant for making complaints of disability discrimination and for asking for reasonable adjustments which will continue if there is "ongoing employment". In my judgment a strong prima facie case has been established that what is advised is not only an attempted deception of the Claimant but also, if persisted in, deception of an Employment Tribunal in likely and anticipated legal proceedings. The email does not record any advice on neutral selection criteria for redundancy. It concentrates exclusively on how the redundancy can be used to rid the Respondent of ongoing allegations of discrimination by the Claimant and of underperformance which he stated are related to his disability and failure to make reasonable adjustments. Whether the legal advice given was in fact to perpetrate or in furtherance of iniquity will be for the Employment Tribunal hearing the claim to which it relates to decide."
"61. Although of significantly lesser importance, lest there be any doubt about whether legal advice privilege can be claimed in respect of the overheard conversation in the pub in May 2016, it cannot."
The appeal to the Court of Appeal
Shell's application for anonymity
"IT IS ORDERED that;
Pursuant to Rule 2A(1) of the Employment Appeal Tribunals Rules 1993 as amended and Section 30(3) of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 that there shall be no publication in Great Britain in respect of the above proceedings of any identifying matter in a written publication available to the public, nor shall any identifying matter be included in a relevant programme for reception in Great Britain. Identifying matter means any matter likely to lead members of the public to identify a person as a person making, receiving or affected by the material in respect of which legal advice privilege is claimed.
The following are the persons who may not be identified
(1) Michael Curless; (2) Shell International Ltd; (3) Alexandra Ward; (4) Angela Gill; (5) David Brinkley
The Registrar shall omit from any register kept by the Appeal Tribunal available to the public, and shall delete from any order judgment or other document which is available to the public, any identifying matter which is likely to lead members of the public to identify a person making, receiving or affected by the material in respect of which legal advice privilege is claimed. The parties shall be identified as above.
There shall be no publication of any such identifying matter in any publication available to the public or any programme.
Subject to further order the Anonymity Order and Restricted Reporting Order be extended to the conclusion of the final appeal on the issue of legal advice privilege."
Mr Curless' application to admit fresh evidence
The interpretation of the e-mail of 29 April 2016
The overheard pub conversation
The crime/fraud exception to privilege
"For reasons given earlier in this judgment we start here from a position in which, on a prima facie view, the client was seeking to enter into transactions at an undervalue the purpose of which was to prejudice the bank. I regard this purpose as being sufficiently iniquitous for public policy to require that communications between him and his solicitor in relation to the setting up of these transactions be discoverable."
Conclusion