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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Woodcock v Cumbria Primary Care Trust [2010] UKEAT 0489_09_1211 (12 November 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0489_09_1211.html Cite as: [2010] UKEAT 0489_09_1211, [2010] UKEAT 489_9_1211, [2011] ICR 143, [2011] IRLR 119 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 30 June & 1 July 2010 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
MS K BILGAN
DR B V FITGERALD MBE LLD FRSA
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR DESHPAL PANESAR (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs DLA Piper UK LLP Solicitors Bridgewater House 101 Barbirolli Square Manchester M2 3DL |
For the Respondent | MR ANDREW SHORT (One of Her Majesty's Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Capsticks LLP Solicitors 35 Newhall Street Birmingham B3 1PB |
SUMMARY
AGE DISCRIMINATION
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – 2002 Act
Claimant's post as Chief Executive of NHS Primary Care Trust disappears in reorganisation – Not selected for successor post – After twelve months working in temporary positions given twelve months' notice of dismissal – Notice given prior to formal consultation meeting in order to ensure that notice expired prior to his 50th birthday, when he would have been entitled to take early retirement, with consequent substantially increased costs to the Trust – Claims of unfair dismissal and age discrimination - Tribunal holds (a) that dismissal fair, notwithstanding non-compliance with 2002 Act procedures, because Claimant would have been dismissed anyway; and (b) that although the timing of the giving of notice was on the grounds of Claimant's age it was justified in all the circumstances, including the costs that would have been incurred if the Trust had to fund his early retirement.
HELD:
(1) Appeal allowed on unfair dismissal – If a decision was unfair by reference to s. 98A (1), s. 98A (2) has no application.
(2) Appeal dismissed on age discrimination – Tribunal had not decided the justification issue on the basis only of the cost to the Trust but had applied the "cost plus" test in Cross v British Airways [2005] IRLR 423 – It had been entitled to take into account the fact that it was only because the Claimant had been kept in employment for almost twelve months from when his job disappeared, and had then been given a further twelve months' notice, that the chance of his reaching the age of 50 arose; and that in those circumstances his becoming entitled to take early retirement would have been a "windfall" – Although the timing of the notice had meant that his first formal consultation meeting was before rather than after notice was given, in the particular circumstances of the case that fact did not prevent the giving of notice being justified.
Doubt expressed as to whether Cross v British Airways was right to hold that "cost alone" could never constitute objective justification.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
INTRODUCTION
THE FACTS
"Mr Farrar asked Mr Woodcock whether he wanted to leave the NHS or look for suitable alternative employment. Mr Woodcock confirmed that he wanted to use his experience and skills to remain in the NHS. Mr Farrar indicated that it would be easier for him to make an application to become a chief executive after 12 months or so had passed and things had quietened down. It was, therefore, pragmatic for Mr Woodcock to remain seconded to the SHA and not to return to work at the new Cumbria PCT [sc. in some post other than as Chief Executive]. Mr Farrar did not think he had mentioned a specific period before Mr Woodcock should apply for a chief executive's post. He agreed in oral evidence the reason for advising the delay was that Mr Woodcock had gone through the assessment and interview for a chief executive's post and had failed. Mr Farrar's view was that a period of time needed to elapse before a further application was made. He put the chance of success of a new application for a period of three months after the interview as improbable. For a period of three to six months unlikely. Between six to twelve months appointment a possibility."
That passage is ambiguous to the extent that it begins by saying that Mr Farrar's advice was not to apply for a new role for twelve months or so but subsequently records his evidence that he identified no particular period and that the prospects would gradually improve over a twelve-month period as indicated. We suspect that the first reference is intended to record the Appellant's version of what was said. In that case the Tribunal does not explicitly decide between the two accounts, but we note that at para. 66, in the Conclusions section, it says simply that Mr Farrar's advice was that the Appellant "should not apply for chief executive jobs until he had built up further qualities which he could refer to in his CV".
"1. MF opened the meeting by saying that he understood that I was being served with my formal redundancy notice and that I had 12 months notice in my contract. He then asked me whether I wished to take redundancy as other colleagues had done already or was seeking continuing employment.
2. I said that I wanted to keep my options open as I felt that I was too young to finish working and that I had a lot of experience and ability still to contribute, that I had continued to be professional in my overall outlook and positive in my attitude eg response to requests to undertake important work such as currently with Bev Humphrey at Bolton, Salford & Trafford MH Trust. However, I was fully aware that if no suitable opportunities came up in 12 months time that I was on my own and redundant.
3. I said that I was thoroughly enjoying my role in Bolton et al and realised that there was an NHS outside Cumbria! MF responded by saying that he agreed that I had been positive and professional and had a recognised proven track record in mental health eg North Lakeland role.
4. We agreed to meet again in 2-3 months time ie end of May/early June to review progress on interim work."
"It was Ms Page's decision to send the dismissal letter to Mr Woodcock. Her evidence is that at the time she considered that all avenues to obtain redeployment for Mr Woodcock had failed. She accepted that there was no consultation with Mr Woodcock or in fact any discussion with him about his future in the NHS. Her decision was that the respondent's position had to be protected. If there had been consultation Mr Woodcock would have celebrated his birthday and by the time the 12 months' notice period would have been served he would have been 50 years old and thus entitled to an enhanced payment. She had a duty to look after the financial side of the Trust which was tax payer's money. She accepted that she had no meeting with Mr Woodcock or any conversation with him at all. At the time she considered that he was delaying the arrangement of the meeting. During cross examination she accepted that that was an assumption on her part and which was not correct."
The Tribunal also set out, at para. 34, a transcript (taken by one of the lay members, who has shorthand) of Ms Page's answers in cross-examination on this issue. We need not reproduce it in full. Ms Page did not accept the suggestion that the substantive decision that the Appellant had to be dismissed had anything to do with his age, but she did accept that his age affected the timing of the decision. Referring to late May 2007, she said:
"I became very aware at that point of his age and of the significance because of the time delay of a significant delay and the fact that contributions to salary in April were going to cost the NHS half a million pounds. We discussed options. I understood the importance of not getting to a meeting until 6th June."
There then followed this exchange:
"Mr Panesar: This was not just a major factor in the decision to issue notice to Mr Woodcock without having a meeting with him it was the factor.
Ms Page: Along with the fact that we had exhausted all opportunities he was effectively to be made redundant.
Mr Panesar: Two factors on the table and the dominant factor was his age.
Ms Page: At that point it was, but prior to that it was not a consideration."
THE UNFAIR DISMISSAL APPEAL
"75 … The meeting on 6 June 2009 did discuss alternative employment as can be seen from the notes ... Mr Woodcock was still looking for a senior position and his preferred option was a senior executive post. There were no posts with the respondent, the chief executive post and director posts had been filled. There were no other posts available. Mr Woodcock had a year's notice. It is indicative of the situation that he did not apply for any other post during his notice period.
76. We are satisfied that as at 6 June 2009 the application of any procedure statutory or otherwise would have made no difference to Mr Woodcock's situation. He would have been dismissed for redundancy. Applying section 98A (2) of the Employment Rights Act the dismissal was fair. In any event his redundancy payment would cancel out any compensatory award as the application of a procedure would have made no difference. Mr Woodcock would be dismissed for redundancy."
AGE DISCRIMINATION
"(2) It is unlawful for an employer, in relation to a person whom he employs at an establishment in Great Britain, to discriminate against that person—
(a)-(c) …
(d) by dismissing him, or subjecting him to any other detriment."
Discrimination is defined at reg. 3 as follows:
"(1) For the purposes of these Regulations, a person ('A') discriminates against another person ('B') if-
(a) on grounds of B's age, A treats B less favourably than he treats or would treat other persons, or
(b) A applies to B a provision, criterion or practice which he applies or would apply equally to persons not of the same age group as B, but-
(i) which puts or would put persons of the same age group as B at a particular disadvantage when compared with other persons, and
(ii) which puts B at that disadvantage,
and A cannot show the treatment or, as the case may be, provision, criterion or practice to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
(2) A comparison of B's case with that of another person under paragraph (1) must be such that the relevant circumstances in the one case are the same, or not materially different, in the other …"
We adopt the usual shorthand of referring to discrimination within the meaning of limbs (a) and (b) of reg. 3 (1) respectively as "direct" and "indirect" discrimination, and to the requirement of the final part of the definition as "justification". The language of reg. 3 is derived directly from art. 2 of the EU Equality Directive (2000/78/EC).
"77 We should deal with the events that occurred before May 2007. We can identify no discrimination in what happened leading up to the final decision to dismiss. Restructurings of the Primary Care Trusts was done on a national basis and had no relevance to age. The appointment procedure for chief executives in the restructured primary care trusts was transparent and we can detect no age discrimination at all in the process. Unfortunately Mr Woodcock was not at his best at the interview. The discussions with Mr Farrar do not indicate any discrimination. The failure of the respondent to carry out any meaningful consultation in the ten months' period from the at risk letters had no connection with Mr Woodcock's age. Ms Mordain wanted the respondent to engage with Mr Woodcock but others delayed. It is the final decision to issue the notice we consider to be discriminatory.
78 We accept that by May 2007 no one had been able to come up with alternative employment arrangement for Mr Woodcock. It is clear that he could not be chief executive of the respondent as that post was filled. He had not applied for and therefore was not eligible for any directors post. They had all been filled. The only alternative would have been a lesser job within the organisation. Mr Woodcock's evidence is clear that he would not have accepted such job. He was looking for alternative employment in other Primary Care Trusts within the North West region. There were none available in May 2007. Those that had become available he had not applied for. He had a twelve months notice period built into his contract of employment. Notice should have been given to expire on 30 June 2007. The decision by Ms Page to issue a dismissal notice on 23 May 2007 was because of Mr Woodcock's age. Ms Page admitted such in cross examination, that at that stage, age was a significant factor in the dismissal of Mr Woodcock. It is clear that if Mr Woodcock had been 48 on 17 June 2007 there would have been no problem because he could not have achieved with his 12 months notice period his fiftieth birthday. The significant factor was that he was to reach the age of forty nine on 17 June 2007. Any notice on or after that date would make him fifty years old on the expiry of his notice. He would then be entitled to enhanced pension and redundancy payments.
79 We have not been referred to any particular comparator. No doubt there are some. A hypothetical comparator can be constructed. It will be an employee of the respondent employed as chief executive (or higher management) whose job had been made redundant and who had not found alternative employment and is dismissed without consultation having taken place and subject to a one year notice period.
80 What was the discrimination act? It was, in our opinion, the act of dismissal without proper consultation by the respondent. Why was Mr Woodcock dismissed? We conclude he was dismissed because of his specific age, that is his impending forty ninth birthday. The comparator who was forty eight on 17 June 2007 or who had attained his forty ninth birthday on 17 June 2006 would not be dismissed because of their age. The decision to dismiss Mr Woodcock was his age. He was directly discriminated because of his age.
81 Is the discrimination act justified? We have to decide whether there was a legitimate aim. The aim was to bring about Mr Woodcock's dismissal for redundancy and to avoid the additional costs to the respondent of his attaining the age of fifty before the end of his notice period and thus being entitled to enhanced payment. If triggered the enhanced payment would amount to a considerable sum of money.
82 The avoidance of cost is not in itself a legitimate aim, Cross v. British Airways Plc. A discriminatory act to avoid an employee receiving a windfall can be a legitimate aim: Loxley v. BAE Systems. The aim of the respondent was to bring an end to Mr Woodcock's employment because he was redundant and alternative employment had not been offered.
83 We find that the dismissal of Mr Woodcock prior to consultation being carried out was a legitimate aim. Was it, however, proportionate. We are satisfied that Mr Woodcock wanted a chief executive job and did not consider any other job suitable. He had been aware of the possibility of a redundancy dismissal for ten months. He would have been given notice to expire on 30 June 2007. That is he should have been given notice at the latest in May 2006. By the respondent delaying giving him notice he achieved an extra years employment which otherwise in his position did not [sic]. He was paid a large redundancy payment to which he was entitled through his position and work with the NHS.
84 The reasonable need of the respondent was to bring about the end of Mr Woodcock's employment without incurring cost to the taxpayer. Mr Woodcock was redundant, there was no job for him. The discriminatory effect on Mr Woodcock was that he did not have a consultation meeting. At the stage the respondent eventually applied its mind to Mr Woodcock's continued employment consultation would have achieved nothing. It was a chief executive job Mr Woodcock wanted. There was none. We find it was a proportionate [sic]. The discriminatory act is justified under the Regulations."[4]
(1) The act which the Tribunal found to be prima facie discriminatory - that is, discriminatory unless justified – was not the Appellant's dismissal as such but its timing, and more particularly the giving of notice prior to the planned consultation meeting. That is the effect of paras. 78 and 80.(2) That act was held to be done on the grounds of his age because the decision as to timing was taken in order to avoid the Appellant reaching pensionable age: again, that is clear from paras. 78 and 80. (Such motivation falls within the scope of the term "on grounds of age": see London Borough of Tower Hamlets v. Wooster [2009] IRLR 980, at para. 47 (p. 988).)
(3) The avoidance of the additional costs liability which it would incur if the Appellant reached pensionable age constituted the Trust's "aim" in serving notice at the date that it did. That is explicitly stated in para. 81 and is in any event self-evident on the Tribunal's findings of primary fact. It may look as though the aim is being differently formulated in the final sentence of para. 82; but in context it is clear that that sentence is directed to the question of the legitimacy of the aim – see below. (The exercises of defining the aim and assessing its legitimacy may in practice overlap and tribunals should not get too bogged down in elaborate analysis of the statutory formula: cf. our observations on a similar point in Pulham v. London Borough of Barking and Dagenham [2010] ICR 333, para. 15 (pp. 343G–344A).)
(4) That aim was legitimate. The Tribunal evidently intended to give its reasons for that conclusion in para. 82, but the reasoning is rather compressed. As we understand it, however, what it was saying was that it is legitimate to seek to avoid incurring costs unnecessarily and that there was no need to postpone giving notice of dismissal beyond the Appellant's 49th birthday because he was clearly redundant and no alternative job had been found: in those circumstances the chance of taking early retirement in the final weeks of his notice period would be a "windfall for him". The reference to Loxley is to the decision of this Tribunal in Loxley v. BAE Systems Land Systems (Munitions & Ordnance) Ltd [2008] ICR 1348. The "windfall" there discussed was of a very specific nature (see the exposition in Kraft Foods Ltd. v. Hastie (UKEAT/0024/10) [2010] EqLR 18); but the Tribunal was evidently taking the decision as authority for the proposition that it is in principle justifiable to deprive a person of a benefit on the grounds of his age if that benefit was one which he had no legitimate right to expect. It may be worth spelling out the metaphor inherent in the term "windfall": it refers to fruit which has fallen by itself and which the picker has not had to go to the effort of reaching or climbing for. It thus most directly applies to any unearned benefit, i.e. one for which the recipient has not had to work; but it can be applied more generally to a benefit which he had no legitimate entitlement to expect.
GROUND 1
"It seems to us, as a matter of obvious common sense (and in accordance with the principle of the concept of proportionality), and by way of example drawn from these cases, that, albeit that, in the weighing exercise, costs justifications may often be valued less, particularly if the discrimination is substantial, obvious and even deliberate, economic justification such as the saving, or the non-expenditure, of costs (which must, for example, include the avoidance of loss) must be considered. It would, in our judgment, need clear reasoning and binding authority to prevent that occurring."
He proceeded to review the ECJ authorities and expressed the conclusion of the Tribunal at para. 72 (p. 436), where he said:
"... An employer seeking to justify a discriminatory PCP cannot rely solely on considerations of cost. He can however put cost into the balance, together with other justifications if there are any."
That conclusion is often summarised by saying that "cost alone" can never justify a measure or a state of affairs with a discriminatory impact but that "cost plus some other factor" may do so.
GROUND 2
(1) The Appellant had already had a far longer period before notice was given than he was legitimately entitled to expect. The relevant HR policy, as he will have been aware, provided for an employment guarantee period expiring on 30 June 2007 (see para. 10 above). He had already had almost a year's de facto extension of that period, i.e. a period when he had been formally notified that he was at risk of redundancy but had received no notice of dismissal.(2) Although during that period the Appellant had had no formal consultation with the Trust (or its three-headed predecessor), he had had discussions with Mr Farrar – see paras. 8-9, 11 and 13 above. Mr Farrar had formal responsibility, as Chief Executive of the SHA, for giving him information about his options (see para. 6); and he was indeed better placed to do so than anyone at Trust level. Thus the Appellant had had the substance of a consultation process, as regards the crucial question of alternative employment, if not the form. He was well aware of his position: see the note which he made of his meeting on 30 March 2007 (para. 13 above).
(3) Even with the Appellant having had the benefit of that uncovenanted extension, it was only because of a chapter of accidents that the consultation meeting had been pushed so close to the danger zone: see para. 14 above. If the meeting had occurred when first proposed there would have been no question of any notice being given after his 49th birthday. So far from this being a case (up to that point) of the employer artificially accelerating the procedure, it had in fact been, albeit through no-one's fault or design, slowed down.
(4) On the Tribunal's findings there was, as at 23 May, no suitable alternative employment available for the Appellant: see paras. 75 and 78 of the Reasons set out at paras. 22 and 26 above. The meeting on 6 June whose outcome the Appellant says was pre-empted by the giving of notice would not in fact have prevented his dismissal.
(5) The giving of notice did not bring the consultation to an end. The Appellant had a twelve months' notice period. In such a case the duty to consider alternative employment up to the expiry of the notice period (see Mugford v. Midland Bank plc [1999] ICR 399) was more than a formality, as the Trust recognised; and if there was indeed still a chance of alternative employment the notice period gave plenty of opportunity for it to be explored. In this particular context the issue of a notice of dismissal in advance of the formal consultation meeting has much less significance than it might have in other circumstances, particularly given the amount of informal discussion and consideration of the Appellant's future that had already taken place with Mr Farrar – see above. Consultation is concerned with substance and not only with taking the right steps in a ritual dance.
GROUND 5
CONCLUSION
Note 1 At least, that is, if it were regarded, as appears to have been the case, as wrong to serve notice of dismissal on someone who might yet be appointed to one of the successor posts. [Back] Note 2 We were told that Ms Page’s evidence in fact only supported the lower figure, and counsel were unable to tell us where the higher figure came from or how either was worked out: apparently the NHS Pensions Agency had been unhelpful about supplying figures. But the make-up of the figure was not explored in the evidence, and, as the Tribunal observed, even the lower figure is a significant sum. [Back] Note 3 Indeed on a strict analysis the Appellant’s employment by the Trust was almost bound to have to be terminated anyway, whether by dismissal or consent, since in practice any alternative employment would have been with a different Trust. [Back] Note 4 We should say that at several points in that passage something seems to have gone wrong with the English or the typing. We have made silent corrections where the Tribunal’s intention is clear. At one or two points we have had to resort to “sic”, to indicate that the error is not in our transcription. But these problems do not obscure the overall meaning. [Back] Note 5 When Bainbridge went to the Court of Appeal – [2009] ICR 133 - there does not appear to have been any issue on the point. Cross was referred to in passing (see para. 122, at p. 174 C-D), but its reasoning was not considered. The Court explicitly acknowledged that a local authority might in principle be able to justify the continuation of discriminatory pay arrangements on the basis that it would be too expensive to rectify the discriminatory impact, or in any event to do so immediately (see para. 175, at pp. 187-8); but, unlike Elias P. it did not attempt to analyse the position in “cost plus” terms.
[Back] Note 6 Indeed Pulham (above) was an age discrimination case in which the employer’s justification relied, on the face of it, only on the cost of correcting the discriminatory impact complained of. But as a result of a concession by the appellant it was unnecessary to consider whether only cost was being relied on or whether it could have been characterised as a “cost plus” case: see n. 7 (pp. 358-9). [Back] Note 7 It is worth emphasising that there is no discussion which elucidates the thinking behind this phrase in either the judgment of the Court or the speech of the Advocate General; nor is there in the judgments of the Court in the subsequent cases in which it is repeated. [Back] Note 8 No-one suggested that the statement was made in his witness statement, which we were not shown.
[Back] Note 9 There is an echo of such evidence in a submission from Mr Short recorded at para. 40 of the Reasons, where the Appellant is said to have said that if he applied for jobs below Director level “he would be reporting to those who once reported to him”.
[Back]