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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Hynd v. Armstrong & Ors [2007] ScotCS CSIH_16 (27 February 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_16.html Cite as: [2007] CSIH 16, [2007] ScotCS CSIH_16, [2007] IRLR 338 |
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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION |
|
Lord President
Lord Reed
Lord MacLean
|
[2007] CSIH 16XA158/04 OPINION OF THE COURT delivered by LORD REED in APPEAL TO THE COURT OF
SESSION under section 37 of the
Employment Tribunals Act 1996 by ROBERT GRAHAM HYND Appellant; against (FIRST) DAVID J. ARMSTRONG and OTHERS; and (2)
MESSRS. BISHOPS, SOLICITORS and OTHERS Respondents: _______ |
Act: Fairley; Harper Macleod (Appellant)
Alt: Napier, Q.C.; MacRoberts (Respondents)
[1] On
[2] In
January 2002 three of the partners in the firm ("the pension partners")
intimated that they were resigning with effect from
[3] During
June and July 2002 the
"The decision has now been taken to discontinue the
post of Commercial Consultant and in the circumstances I must formally advise
that your employment will terminate at close of business today by reason of
redundancy."
The decision to make the appellant
redundant was taken by the
[4] On
[5] In
"While it is true that there was some material that might suggest that a redundancy situation may have materialised at some stage had the de-merger not occurred, we think that that was only possible - and by no means probable ... [W]e are not prepared to hold that the dismissal was a redundancy per se and we reject [the respondents'] submissions on that point."
The tribunal's decision on that matter was not challenged before this court.
"(1) Where either before or after a relevant transfer, any employee of the transferor or transferee is dismissed, that employee shall be treated for the purposes of Part V of the 1978 Act and Articles 20 to 41 of the 1976 Order (unfair dismissal) as unfairly dismissed if the transfer or a reason connected with it is the reason or principal reason for his dismissal."
The respondents, on the other hand, submitted that the appellant had been dismissed for an economic, technical or organisational reason falling within regulation 8(2):
"(2) Where an economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce of either the transferor or the transferee before or after a relevant transfer is the reason or principal reason for dismissing an employee -
(a) paragraph (1) above shall not apply to his dismissal; but
(b) without prejudice to the application of section 57(3) of the 1978
Act or Article 22(10) of the 1976 Order (test of fair dismissal), the dismissal shall for the purposes of section 57(1)(b) of that Act and Article 22(1)(b) of that Order (substantial reason for dismissal) be regarded as having been for a substantial reason of a kind such as to justify the dismissal of an employee holding the position which that employee held."
[10] The primary
submission for the appellant, on the other hand, as recorded by the tribunal,
was to the effect that the dismissal was in fact by reason of the transfer, and
regulation 8(1) therefore applied. In
those circumstances, regulation 8(2) could not apply. Reliance was placed in that connection on the
decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal in Kerry Foods Ltd v Creber [2000] ICR 556. That argument was rejected by
the tribunal, and was not pursued before this court. The tribunal proceeded on the basis that
paragraphs (1) and (2) of regulation 8 were not mutually exclusive, but that
paragraph (2) operated to displace a preliminary conclusion that paragraph (1)
was applicable (cf Warner v Adnet Ltd [1998] ICR 1056). Secondly, it was submitted that for there to
be an "economic, technical or organisational reason" falling within regulation
8(2), that reason would have to have been held by Morison Bishop, rather than
by the new firm, since it was Morison Bishop which dismissed the
appellant. Morison Bishop could not have
had such a reason, since they were ceasing to exist. If in reality what happened was that the
"In Whitehouse the Court of Appeal emphasised that the words 'economic, technical and organisational reason ... entailing changes in the workforce' clearly meant that the reason must be connected with the future conduct of the business (see also Wheeler [Wheeler v Patel [1987] ICR 631]). In Whitehouse the dismissal was related to carrying on the service which the respondents had been successful in obtaining the contract for. While it is true that in that case the redundancy selection exercise was carried out after the transfer, we do not think that matters, given the wording of reg 8(2). Morison Bishop's (the transferee) reason for the dismissal was an ETO one [i.e. an economic, technical or organisational reason] entailing it changes in prospective firm of Bishops (the transferee) in connection with the future conduct of the business, i.e. the part of the undertaking which was the subject of the relevant transfer to them. That appears to us to fall plainly within Reg 8(2) ...
Finally for the sake of completeness we hold that the reason was a composite reason of economic (predominantly) and organisational factors entailing changes in the workforce of the transferee after the relevant transfer. The applicant was not required for the future conduct of the transferee's business after the transfer.
[The solicitor for the appellant] also submitted that what was important to look at here was the transferor's reason rather than the transferee's and the transferee's reason could not matter as they were not in existence. While that might be true from a technical point of view (i.e. that the partnership of Bishops did not come into existence until after the transfer) we are of the opinion that that point in itself does not affect the operation of Reg 8.
The '
THE PARTIES'
SUBMISSIONS
[14] Before this court, counsel for the appellant submitted that, in order for regulation 8(2) to apply, the reason (or principal reason) for dismissing an employee must be "an economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce of either the transferor or the transferee before or after a relevant transfer". Since the appellant had been dismissed by the transferor prior to the transfer, the relevant reason in the present case must be that of the transferor. It was clear from the authorities that a reason falling within regulation 8(2) must relate to the future conduct of the business. On the facts found by the tribunal, the transferor's reason for dismissing the appellant did not relate to the future conduct of its business, and was not a reason which entailed changes in its workforce: the appellant was not dismissed because he was surplus to the future requirements of Morison Bishop. Nor, for that matter, was the transferor's reason for dismissing the appellant a reason which entailed changes in the workforce of the transferee: the transferee had no workforce at the time of the appellant's dismissal. An economic, technical or organisational reason for which the transferee might have dismissed the appellant after the transfer could not be relied on by the transferor prior to the transfer, where the transferee did not exist at the time of the dismissal. Where a dismissal by the transferor was said to have been effected for a reason entailing changes in the workforce of the transferee, the transferee had to be in existence at the time when the dismissal was effected. Reference was made to Gorictree Ltd v Jenkinson [1985] ICR 51, Wheeler v Patel, Gateway Hotels Ltd v Stewart [1988] IRLR 287, Ibex Trading Co Ltd v Walton [1994] ICR 907, BSG Property Services v Tuck [1996] IRLR 134, Case C-319/94 Jules Dethier Equipement SA v Jules Dassy and Sovam SPRL [1998] ECR I-1061, Wilson v St Helens Borough Council [1999] 2 AC 52, Whitehouse v Charles A Blatchford & Sons and Thompson v SCS Consulting Ltd [2001] IRLR 801.
"(iii) If there is a reg 8(2) dismissal but it is unfair in all the circumstances, it
seems likely that the liability will not transfer to the transferee but will remain with the transferor. This is a powerful reason why in practice a transferor may prefer not to dismiss but to leave the transferee to do so.
(iv) If a fair dismissal can be effected in this way, it has one significant
practical advantage for the transferee. Often if there is a transfer and the transferee is choosing to select persons for redundancy, it will be unfair to select purely from the transferor's workforce. The principle lying behind the Regulations is that the employees should be treated after the transfer as if they had always been employed by the transferee, with full continuity of employment. Accordingly any selection solely from the transferor's workforce may well be unfair, unless there is a proper justification for this, e.g. they comprise a separate geographical unit from which the redundancies have to be made. However, if the dismissals are effected by the transferor prior to the transfer, the selection must then be from the transferor's own workforce, and the transferee avoids having to make any of his existing workers redundant."
Regulation 8(2) should not be interpreted so as to bring
about these results, which were inconsistent with the purpose of the European
directive on which the Regulations were based (Council Directive No.
77/187/EEC, subsequently replaced by Council Directive 2001/23/EC). In particular, an interpretation of
regulation 8(2) which allowed the selection of employees for redundancy, in the
context of a transfer, to be made solely from the workforce of the transferor
would be inconsistent with the purpose of the Directive. Reference was made to Case 19/83 Wendelboe v LJ Music ApS [1985] ECR 457, Case 105/84 Foreningen af Arbejdsledere i Danmark v A/S Danmols Inventar [1985] ECR 2639, Case 287/86 Landsorganisationen i Danmark for
Tjenerforbundet i Danmark v Ny Mølle
Kro [1987] ECR 5465, Case C-362/89 D'Urso
v Ercole Marelli Elettromeccanica
Generale SpA [1991] ECR I-4105, Joined Cases C-132/91, C-138/91 and
C-139/91 Katsikas v Konstantinidis [1992] ECR I-6577 and Litster v Forth Dry Dock & Engineering Co. Ltd. 1989 SC (HL) 96.
DISCUSSION
1. Introduction
2. Directive 2001/23/EC
"It is common ground that, both under English law and under Community law, the national court should construe a regulation adopted to give effect to a Directive as intended to carry out the obligations of the Directive and as not being inconsistent with it if it is reasonably capable of bearing such a meaning: see Garland v British Rail Engineering Ltd [1983] 2 AC 751 and Litster v Forth Dry Dock & Engineering Co Ltd [1990] 1 AC 546. In von Colson v Land Nordrhein-Westfalen (Case 14/83) [1984] ECR 1981, 1909, para. 26 the European Court of Justice said that, pursuant to member states' obligations under article 5 of the EEC Treaty (Cmnd.5197-II):
'national courts are required to interpret their national law in the light of the wording and the purpose of the Directive in order to achieve the result referred to in the third paragraph of article 189.'"
"Article 3
1. The transferor's rights and obligations arising from a contract of employment or from an employment relationship existing on the date of a transfer, shall, by reason of such transfer, be transferred to the transferee.
...
Article 4
1. The transfer of the undertaking, business or part of the undertaking or business shall not in itself constitute grounds for dismissal by the transferor or the transferee. This provision shall not stand in the way of dismissals that may take place for economic, technical or organisational reasons entailing changes in the workforce."
"13. It follows from a textual interpretation of [Article 3(1)] in the various language versions that it refers only to the rights and obligations of workers whose contract of employment or employment relationship is in force on the date of the transfer and not to those who have ceased to be employed by the undertaking in question at the time of the transfer ...
15. That interpretation of the scope of Article 3(1) is also in conformity with the scheme and the purposes of the directive, which is intended to ensure, as far as possible, that the employment relationship continues unchanged with the transferee, in particular by obliging the transferee to continue to observe the terms and conditions of any collective agreement (Article 3(2)) and by protecting workers against dismissals motivated solely by the fact of the transfer (Article 4(1)). Those provisions relate only to employees in the service of the undertaking on the date of the transfer, to the exclusion of those who have already left the undertaking on that date.
16. The existence or otherwise of a contract of employment or an employment relationship on the date of the transfer within the meaning of Article 3(1) of the directive must be established on the basis of the rules of national law, subject however to observance of the mandatory provisions of the directive and, more particularly, Article 4(1) thereof, concerning the protection of employees against dismissal by the transferor or the transferee by reason of the transfer."
One implication of that passage is
that a person who has been dismissed prior to the date of the transfer cannot
claim the benefit of article 3, unless the dismissal was contrary to
article 4(1). Where an employee is
dismissed in breach of article 4(1), on the other hand, his rights are
safeguarded in the manner explained by Lord Slynn of Hadley in
"Where the transferee does not take on the employees who are dismissed on transfer the dismissal is not a nullity though the contractual rights formerly available against the transferor remain intact against the transferee. For the latter purpose, an employee dismissed prior to the transfer contrary to article 4(1), i.e. on the basis of the transfer, is to be treated as still in the employment of the transferor at the date of transfer."
" ... Directive No. 77/187 is intended to achieve only partial harmonization essentially by extending the protection guaranteed to workers independently by the laws of the individual Member States to cover the case where an undertaking is transferred. Its aim is therefore to ensure, as far as possible, that the contract of employment or the employment relationship continues unchanged with the transferee so that the employees affected by the transfer of the undertaking are not placed in a less favourable position solely as a result of the transfer."
"17. ... Directive 77/187 may be relied upon solely by workers whose
contract of employment or employment relationship is in existence at the time
of the transfer. Whether or not such a
contract or relationship exists at that time must be assessed on the basis of
national law subject, however, to compliance with the mandatory provisions of
the directive concerning protection of employees from dismissal as a result of
the transfer.
18. Accordingly, the employees of the undertaking whose contract
of employment or employment relationship was terminated with effect from a date
prior to that of the transfer, contrary to Article 4(1) of the directive,
must be regarded as still in the employ of the undertaking on the date of the
transfer, with the result, in particular, that the employer's obligations
towards them are automatically transferred from the transferor to the
transferee in accordance with Article 3(1) of the directive."
"the directive is intended
to safeguard the rights of workers in the event of a change of employer by
making it possible for them to continue to work for the new employer on the
same conditions as those agreed with the transferor. The rules applicable in the event of a
transfer of an undertaking or a business are thus intended to safeguard, to the
maximum possible extent in the interests of the employees, the existing
employment relationships which form part of the economic entity transferred."
"Looked at, article 4
says no more than two things. First
of all, a transfer cannot in itself justify a dismissal; second, in a situation
involving a transfer, it is still open for dismissals to take place that would
otherwise be justified according to the law of the country to which it
applies. The words 'dismissals ... for
economic, technical or organisational reasons entailing changes in the workforce'
are, in my judgment, merely a very broad description of the whole range of
circumstances that might, in the law of any one of the member states, give rise
to a justification for dismissal. And it
goes no further than that."
In the
present case, Morison Bishop could not lawfully have dismissed the appellant on
the ground of redundancy, according to the findings of the tribunal, if they
had had regard only to their own requirements as employers. A finding of unfair dismissal could therefore
be avoided only on the basis that regulation 8(2) extends the
circumstances in which an employer can make his employees redundant: in particular, by entitling an employer to
dismiss his employees prior to a transfer of the undertaking, on the ground of
redundancy, where the employees are surplus to the requirements of the
transferee. To interpret
article 4(1) as having that effect would not in our view be consistent
with the intention of the Directive, as the Court of Justice has explained it.
"to ensure, as far as
possible, that the contract of employment or employment relationship continues
unchanged with the transferee, in order to prevent the workers concerned from
being placed in a less favourable position solely as a result of the transfer"
(Case
287/86 Landsorganisationen i Danmark for
Tjenerforbundet i Danmark v Ny Mølle
Kro, paragraph 25).
3. The
Regulations
"(1) ... a relevant transfer shall not operate so as to terminate the
contract of employment of any person employed by the transferor in the
undertaking or part transferred but any such contract which would otherwise
have been terminated by the transfer shall have effect after the transfer as if
originally made between the person so employed and the transferee."
Paragraph (2)
of regulation 5 further provides that, on the completion of such a
transfer
"(a) all the transferor's rights, powers, duties and liabilities under
or in
connection with any such
contract, shall be transferred by virtue of this Regulation to the transferee;
and
(b) anything done before the transfer is completed by or in
relation to the
transferor in respect of
that contract or a person employed in that undertaking or part shall be deemed
to have been done by or in relation to the transferee."
Paragraph (3)
of regulation 5 makes it clear that the reference to a person employed is
a reference to a person employed immediately before the transfer.
"Where an economic,
technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce of either
the transferor or the transferee before or after a relevant transfer is the
reason or principal reason for dismissing an employee ...".
In such circumstances, the
dismissal is to be regarded as having been for a substantial reason of a kind
such as to justify the dismissal for the purposes of the legislation concerned
with unfair dismissals.
"The references to 'technical' and to
'organisational' reasons seem to us to be references to reasons which relate to
the conduct of the business. In our
view, the adjective, 'economic', must be construed eiusdem generis with the
adjectives 'technical' and 'organisational'.
The 'economic' reasons apt to bring the case within paragraph (2) must,
in our view, be reasons which relate to the conduct of the business. If the economic reason were no more than a
desire to obtain an enhanced price, or no more than a desire to achieve a sale,
it would not be a reason which related to the conduct of the business. It would not in our judgment, be an 'economic'
reason for the purposes of paragraph (2).
We think that an eiusdem generis approach to construction justifies
giving a limited meaning to the adjective 'economic' in paragraph (2). We think the need to leave a sensible scope
for paragraph (1) similarly requires a limited meaning to be given to the
adjective 'economic' in paragraph (2)."
On that basis, the Tribunal held
(at page 640) that where the transferor's reason for dismissing the
employee was his wish to comply with a requirement of the intended purchaser of
the business, that was not an economic reason within the meaning of
regulation 8(2):
"It did not relate to the conduct of the
business; it related simply to the
desire of [the transferor] to sell."
"In the event that the transferor is insolvent, a
situation commonly forming the occasion for the transfer of an undertaking, the
employee would be left with worthless claims for unfair dismissal against the
transferor. In any event, whether or not
the transferor is insolvent, the employees would be deprived of the remedy of
reinstatement or re-engagement. The
transferee would be under no liability towards the employees and a coach and
four would have been driven through the provisions of reg 5(1)."
This point was reiterated by Lord
Oliver of Aylmerton, at page 108:
"It will be seen that, as is to be expected, the
scope and purpose of both the Directive and the Regulations are the same, that
is, to ensure that on any transfer of an undertaking or part of an undertaking,
the employment of the existing workers in the undertaking is preserved or, if
their employment terminates solely by reason of the transfer, that their rights
arising out of that determination are effectively safeguarded. It may, I think, be assumed that those who
drafted both the Directive and the Regulations were sufficiently acquainted
with the realities of life to appreciate that a frequent - indeed, possibly,
the most frequent - occasion upon which a business is transferred is when the
original employer is insolvent, so that an employee whose employment is
terminated on the transfer will have no effective remedy for unfair dismissal
unless it is capable of being exerted against the transferee."
His Lordship returned to the point
at page 120:
"The remedies provided by the 1978 Act in the case
of an insolvent transferor are largely illusory unless they can be exerted
against the transferee as the Directive contemplates ... ".
Lord Templeman, with whose speech
Lord Keith of Kinkel, Lord Brandon of Oakbrook and Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle
expressed agreement, noted one of the consequences of article 4(1) of the Directive,
and of regulation 8(1), at page 102:
"The result of art 4(1) is that the new owner
intending to dismiss the workers cannot achieve his purpose by asking the old
owner to dismiss the workers immediately prior to the transfer taking place ...
The result of reg 8(1) is the same as art 4(1), namely, that if the new owner
wishes to dismiss the workers he cannot achieve his purpose by procuring the
old owner to dismiss the workers, prior to the transfer taking place ... "
"first, that the sequence of events was the result
of independent action by the receivers and the transferees and that there was
no collusion between them and, secondly, that the reason why the receivers
decided to dismiss the workforce was that, until a contract could be
renegotiated with the company's principal customer, there was no prospect of
any work for the business. It follows
from these findings that the reason for the dismissal was not one connected
with the transfer but was due to economic considerations, with the result that
reg 8(1) did not render the dismissals unfair."
The material factor in concluding
that regulation 8(1) was inapplicable in the circumstances of Spence appears therefore to have been
that the transferor had dismissed the employees for an economic reason relating
to the future conduct of its own business prior to the transfer, entailing a
reduction in its workforce.
"It is to be observed that the transferor in that
case [Wheeler v Patel] had no intention of continuing the business and consequently
his reason for dismissing the employee could not have been related to his
future conduct of the business. It seems
to me that the words 'economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce',
clearly support the conclusion that the reason must be connected with the
future conduct of the business as a going concern."
The first sentence we have quoted appears
to proceed on the basis that, for regulation 8(2) to apply where an
employee is dismissed by the transferor, the transferor's reason for dismissal
must relate to the transferor's future conduct of the business: a condition which cannot be met where the
transferor has no intention of continuing the business.
CONCLUSIONS