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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Budge (Was Known As Baker) & Anor v McGinley Support Services Ltd & Anor (Unfair Dismissal) [2012] UKEAT 0600_11_1511 (15 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2012/0600_11_1511.html Cite as: [2012] UKEAT 0600_11_1511, [2012] UKEAT 600_11_1511 |
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EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
FLEETBANK HOUSE, 2-6 SALISBURY SQUARE, LONDON EC4Y 8JX
At the Tribunal
Before
MR D BLEIMAN
MR B WARMAN
(1) MR D BUDGE (WAS KNOWN AS BAKER) APPELLANTS
(2) MR J MARTIN
(1) McGINLEY SUPPORT SERVICES LTD
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
APPEARANCES
(Representative)
|
|
For the Second Respondent |
(Representative) Peninsula Business Services Ltd Legal Services The Peninsula 2 Cheetham Hill Road Manchester M4 4FB
Debarred |
SUMMARY
UNFAIR DISMISSAL
Constructive dismissal
Polkey deduction
Having concluded in its first Judgment that the Appellants had been unfairly dismissed, the Employment Tribunal erred in its law in failing to have regard to its reasons for reaching that conclusion when deciding, in its second Judgment, that the likelihood of the Appellants being made redundant if a fair redundancy procedure had been adopted was 100% applying the principle in Polkey v A E Dayton Services Ltd [1998] AC 344.
LORD JUSTICE SULLIVAN
Introduction
1. In a Judgment dated 7 October 2010 the Employment Tribunal found by a majority that the Appellants had been unfairly dismissed. In a Judgment dated 16 June 2011 the Tribunal unanimously concluded that applying the principle in Polkey v A E Dayton Services Ltd [1988] AC 344 (‘Polkey’) the likelihood of the Appellants being made redundant if a fair redundancy procedure had been adopted was 100% and reduced their compensatory awards accordingly. The Appellants appeal against the Tribunal’s 100% Polkey finding.
Background
The Tribunal’s first Judgment
“98. The Respondent attributed [Mr] Baker’s lack of work after July partly to his loss of Amey approval following some defective welds on 10 June but, with work on another site and re-assessment, he could have regained Amey accreditation. The Respondent made no effort to enable him to regain that accreditation.
99. The other part of the Respondent’s explanation was that Mr Baker lost his national registration as a qualified welder on 4 July because he was not reassessed by that date. Mr Wilson, the welding manager who was going to re-assess him, told us that it had been arranged for him to work alongside Mr Baker and re-assess him on the last possible day - 4 July. However, he claimed, Mr Baker telephoned a day or two earlier and said that there was no need for the assessment because he was going to join another company - Bridgen. Mr Baker said that he had spoken to Mr Wilson from time to time about jobs with other companies but denied making a call to say that the assessment had become unnecessary. On that conflict of evidence, we prefer the evidence of Mr Baker because continued national accreditation was essential to him and it is inherently unlikely that he would have failed to take the opportunity on the last day when renewal was a straightforward procedure. Moreover, Mr Wilson was responsible for checking the dates when his welders needed their assessments and he chose to leave Mr Baker’s until the last possible day, which does not indicate any keenness to retain Mr Baker’s services.”
9. In respect of Mr Martin, the Tribunal said in paragraphs 101 and 102:
“101. We accept Mr Martin’s evidence that one of the attractions of the job which he was offered by the Respondent was that he would be trained as a qualified welder. There was no suggestion by the Respondents’ witnesses that he was told that this was a mere possibility, dependent on there being three other trainees, and that it might never take place. After two and a half years of employment by the Respondent, without the promised training, we consider that the Respondent is in fundamental breach of contract.
102. We have already explained our conclusion that work was not allocated fairly to the three Claimants. One factor which made it more difficult for Mr Martin to obtain work was the removal of his company van. By stocking consumables in his garage, he had been self-sufficient for many jobs but used the van to travel with his equipment and consumables to the sites. In our view, the removal of the van placed Mr Martin at an unfair and unwarranted disadvantage in being allocated work.”
The Tribunal’s second Judgment
“59. In summary, if the Respondent had begun a redundancy procedure at any time in 2009, it is certain that it would have reduced the workforce of welders to no more than 14 and, if it had understood their employment status, it is more likely that it would have reduced to even lower levels. It is against that scale of redundancies that we have to measure the Claimant’s prospects of avoiding being selected for redundancy in such a procedure.”
“We heard evidence as to the criteria according to which the available work was distributed during the Claimant’s employment in 2009 and it seemed to us that it is highly likely that these would have been the criteria used.”
“The most important criterion was Amey accreditation. Fewer welders were Amey approved than the number who could stamp welds for Network Rail. Amey provided 85% of welding turnover after 1 April 2009. None of the Claimants possessed such accreditation during or shortly before the respective dates when their employments ended. This alone is likely to have proved a major negative factor for all three Claimants, making them highly likely to have been selected for redundancy.”
“63. The change of principal work provider from Network Rail to Amey had an adverse geographic impact on the Claimants. The Network Rail contract was for its western territory, which covered from Cornwall to Bristol, as well as South Wales. By contrast, Amey’s work was predominantly in South Wales, where they had a large re-signalling programme at Newport. The Claimants lived in Somerset, so they were no longer conveniently located. This would have been another significant adverse factor affecting all three Claimants.
64. Of the 14 welders who remained after November 2009, all except one was based in Wales and we were told he normally undertook work in Scotland. Most of those who left during 2009 lived outside Wales and included the ‘pairs’ of the Claimants. Thus, geographic and pairing considerations would have adversely affected the Claimant’s prospects in any redundancy procedure.”
“67. The criteria would have applied to Mr Baker as follows:
67.1 Amey: Mr Baker was Amey accredited until his accreditation was suspended by Amey on 10 June. Moreover, his ability to stamp welds for any company lapsed with his welding qualification on 4 July. So, a major negative factor (Amey) would have become an even worse negative after 4 July.
67.2 Quality: Mr Baker lost his Amey accreditation because he carried out and stamped three welds on 10 June which were found to be defective, so the Respondent would have been likely to score Mr Baker adversely under this heading.
67.3 Reliability: We were not told of any complaints about the reliability of Mr Baker’s attendance. So, we conclude that this would have been a positive score.
67.4 Pairings: His normal pair was Mr Howard until the latter resigned on 21 May, leaving him without a regular pair. Mr Martin could have been paired with him until Mr Baker lost first his Amey accreditation and then his welding qualification - thereafter such a pairing would have lacked a qualified welder. So, the pairing heading would have yielded another negative score.
67.5 Geography - Mr Baker lived in Taunton, Somerset. This would have been another significant negative factor.
68. Mr Baker would have been among the lowest scoring welders in any redundancy procedure - with low scores on Amey (after 10 June), Quality, Pairings and Geography headings and a positive score only on one heading. So, we conclude that there is a 100% probability that he would have been selected for redundancy either in March or on 26 October (his effective date of termination).”
17. The Tribunal’s conclusions in respect of Mr Martin in paragraphs 69 and 70 were as follows:
“69. The criteria would have applied to Mr Martin as follows:
69.1 Amey: He was not a qualified welder - working only an assistant - and therefore could not be accredited by Amey. This would have been a significant negative factor.
69.2 Quality: We were not told of any complaints about the quality of his work or about any exceptionally good quality work. So, we conclude that this would have been a neutral factor.
69.3 Reliability: We were not told of any complaints about his reliability. So, again, we conclude that this would have been a positive score.
69.4 Pairings: His normal pair was Mr Roger Wilkins, who was Amey accredited, but Mr Wilkins left in mid-April. Thereafter, Mr Martin lacked a regular partner and no qualified welder was available in or near Somerset after Mr Baker lost first his Amey accreditation on 10 June and then his welding qualification lapsed on 4 July. Finally, from 26 October, there was not even another of the Respondent’s welders living anywhere near him. So, this would have been an increasingly negative score.
69.5 Geography: Mr Martin lived in Weston-super-Mare, Somerset. This would have been another significant negative factor.
70. Mr Martin would have been among the lowest scoring welders in any redundancy procedure, with negative scores on Amey, Pairings (after mid-April and especially after 4 July) and Geography headings and, on the other two headings, one neutral and one positive score. So, we conclude that there is a 100% probably that he would have been selected for redundancy either in March or on 18 November 2009 (his effective date of termination).”
Discussion
“It is arguable that the Tribunal has not reflected in its Second Judgment findings which it made in the reasons for the First Judgment; see especially paragraphs 98, 99, 100, 101 for the majorities’ reasons for the First Judgment. It is arguable that the fact that the Respondent was in breach of contract and had behaved unfairly as regards the way it dealt with training and accreditation, ought to have been taken into account by the Tribunal in it’s Polkey reasoning. Could and would the Respondent have dismissed fairly on the basis that an Amey accreditation was required when it had treated the Claimants in the way the Tribunal found at the First Hearing?”
Conclusion