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The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> The Judicial Committee of the Privy Council Decisions >> Berridge and Others v. Benjies Business Centre (Antigua and Barbuda) [1996] UKPC 38 (7th November, 1996) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKPC/1996/38.html Cite as: [1997] WLR 53, [1997] 1 WLR 53, [1996] UKPC 38 |
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Privy Council Appeal No. 51 of
1995
(1) Margaret Berridge and
(2) Dave Edwards Appellants
v.
Benjies Business Centre Respondent
FROM
THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE EASTERN
CARIBBEAN (ANTIGUA AND BARBUDA)
---------------
JUDGMENT OF THE LORDS OF THE
JUDICIAL
COMMITTEE OF THE PRIVY COUNCIL,
Delivered the 7th November 1996
-----------------
Present
at the hearing:-
Lord Mustill
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead
Lord Hoffmann
·[Delivered
by Lord Hoffmann]
-------------------------
1. This appeal concerns the effect of section C10
of the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Code upon proceedings before the Industrial
Court for unfair dismissal. The
relevant parts of the section read as follows:-
"(1)Upon the termination by an employer of
any person's employment subsequent to the expiration of the latter's probation
period, the employer shall, upon a request being made by the employee within
seven days of termination or notice thereof furnish forthwith to said employee
a written statement of the precise reason for the action.
(3)An employer who furnishes a
statement...required by subsection (1) ..., shall be conclusively bound by the
contents therein in any proceeding testing the fairness of the dismissal ...
(4)An
employer who fails to furnish ... the statement ... shall be estopped from
introducing testimony as to facts which might have been recited in said
statement ..., in any proceedings testing the fairness of the dismissal
..."
2. The appellants, a man and a woman, were senior
employees of the respondent company. On
16th January 1991 the respondent's managing director sent them each written
notice of summary dismissal. The letters
assigned the following reason: "misconduct on the job in that you were
seen committing an indecent act on your employer's premises during working
hours". The appellants went to a
solicitor and on the same day he wrote to the respondent asking under section
C10 for a statement of the precise reason for the termination of their employment. There was no reply.
3. Section 19 of the Industrial Court Act 1976
gives the Minister of Labour power to refer to the Industrial Court
(established under that Act) any trade dispute which has come to his
attention. On 12th December 1991 he
referred the dispute between the appellants and the respondent over whether the
former had been unfairly dismissed to the Court. The 1976 Act defines a "trade dispute" (by reference to
the definition in the Labour Code) as, among other things,
"any disagreement between employer and
workers ... over ... the ... termination ... of employment of one or more
workers ... which disagreement has led, or may lead, to an interruption of
employment by lockout or by strike."
4. In the course of his argument for the
respondent, Dr. Ramsahoye Q.C. questioned whether this dispute could have
qualified for reference to the Industrial Court under section 19. There was, he said, no evidence that when
the reference was made, nearly a year later, there had been any strike or
lockout or that any was threatened. He
also said that power to make a reference was impliedly excluded by the
existence of an alternative statutory procedure for dealing with complaints of
unfair dismissal in sections C62 to C69 of the Code. But Dr. Ramsahoye fairly acknowledged that a challenge to the
jurisdiction of the Industrial Court was not open to him. Section 17(1) of the 1976 Act gives a right
of appeal from the Industrial Court to the Court of Appeal on various grounds,
including lack of jurisdiction (paragraph (a)) but provides that:-
"it shall not be competent for the Court
of Appeal to entertain such ground of appeal, unless objection to the
jurisdiction of the Court has been formally taken at some time during the
progress of the matter before the making of the order or award."
5. No such objection was taken before the
Industrial Court and its jurisdiction is therefore not open to challenge on
appeal.
In
accordance with the rules of the Industrial Court, the appellants filed a
Memorandum of Claim. This recited the
reason assigned by the respondent for the dismissal, claimed that it had been
"refuted" and alleged that the dismissal was unfair. The Employer's Memorandum filed by the
respondent on 9th March 1992 gave some more details of the alleged indecent act
and claimed that the dismissal had been fair. Issue therefore appeared to be joined on what the appellants had been
doing on the occasion in question. A
year later, on 8th March 1993, the case came on for hearing. Dr. Ramsahoye Q.C.
represented the respondent and was ready to call witnesses. But Miss Kentish, who appeared for the
appellants, raised a preliminary point. She said that by virtue of section C10(4) of the Code, the respondent
was not entitled to call any evidence. The facts which they sought to prove "might have been recited"
in the statement which they had been obliged to furnish under section C10(1). Accordingly they were estopped from
introducing testimony to prove them. It
followed that the claim for unfair dismissal could not be resisted and must
succeed. The Court accepted her
submission, found that the applicants were unfairly dismissed and stayed the
assessment of compensation pending an appeal.
6. There was no challenge to the basic facts upon
which Miss Kentish made her submission, namely that there had been a request
for a written statement of the reasons for dismissal and that none had been
furnished. But Dr. Ramsahoye plainly
felt that he had been ambushed. Nothing
had been said about section C10 during the two years in which the proceedings
had been on foot. It seems to their
Lordships, however, that if the point was a good one, the Industrial Court had
no option but to give effect to the provisions of the Code. In the absence of "exceptional
reasons" the Court has no jurisdiction to make an order for costs: see
section 10(2) of the 1976 Act. No
application was made for an order on the grounds that costs had been thrown
away by the C10 point being taken late. So there, in their Lordships' opinion, the ambush point must rest.
7. The Court of Appeal, by a majority, allowed the
respondent's appeal. Sir Vincent
Floissac C.J. gave the leading judgment. He said that section C10 must be given a purposive construction. The mischief which the section was intended
to remedy was that, before the introduction of the Code, employees who had been
summarily dismissed were often not given any reasons until litigation had been
commenced. In a case in which the
employee had already been given the reason, a right to a further written
statement was unnecessary. He concluded that:- "...a former employee is not entitled to demand a written
statement of the precise reason for his dismissal if the employer has already
furnished him with that written statement."
Satrohan Singh J.A. agreed with the Chief
Justice. Byron J.A. dissented, holding
that the language of the section was unambiguous. It required a statement to be furnished upon request and made no
exception for a case in which reasons had already been given.
8. Their Lordships think that Byron J.A. was
right. The purpose of section C10 is
not merely to ensure that the employee is given reasons for the termination of
his employment. It requires those
reasons to be given in a form which can be readily identified for the purposes
of any subsequent proceedings "testing the fairness of the dismissal". The reason why they need to be capable of
identification as formal statutory reasons is that in such proceedings, the
employer is "conclusively bound" by the statutory reasons (subsection
(3)) but not by any other reasons which he may have given. Likewise, he is estopped by subsection (4)
from introducing testimony of facts which could have been included in the
statutory reasons. On the other hand,
if there has been no request for statutory reasons within 7 days of the notice
of dismissal, the employer is not estopped from supplementing or even
contradicting any non-statutory reasons which he may have given. The statutory reasons are therefore akin to
an unamendable pleading which the employer may be required to serve.
9. This pleading function of the statutory reasons
makes it impossible for earlier informal reasons to take their place. For example, it is not unknown for an
employer who has good grounds for dismissal to try to soften the blow by giving
some other reason which he thinks less hurtful to the employee. If there is no request for statutory reasons
under section C10 and the employer is afterwards sued for unfair dismissal, he
may or may not have evidentiary problems in persuading the court to accept that
his real reasons were different, but he should not be barred from trying to establish
them. On the other hand, if the
employee makes a statutory request, the employer will know that the time for
prevarication is past. He must state
his true reasons and be bound by them.
10. Their Lordships think that this construction of
section C10 gives it a reasonable effect. On the other hand, the reasoning of the majority in the Court of Appeal
leads to the conclusion that either the employer is conclusively bound by his
first informal reasons, which seems to their Lordships unfair to the employer,
or that he is neither bound by his first reasons nor liable to furnish
statutory reasons which would be binding upon him afterwards, which seems
unfair to the employee.
11. Byron J.A. drew attention to the differences
between the language (and purpose) of the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Code and
the equivalent legislation in the United Kingdom, namely section 53 of the
Employment Protection (Consolidation) Act 1978. In England the written statement is admissible evidence but does
not bind the employer or create any estoppel. The employee's remedy is to make a complaint to an industrial tribunal
which can award him a sum equal to two weeks' pay if it finds that the employer
"unreasonably" refused to provide a written statement of reasons for
dismissal. On these provisions, it is
not surprising that in Marchant v. Earley Town Council [1979] I.C.R.
891, 895-6, Slynn J. held that an employer who had already provided written
reasons did not "unreasonably" refuse a request to give them
again. The position would in their
Lordships' view have been very different if the duty to give reasons was, as in
Antigua and Barbuda, unqualified, and if reasons given in response to a request
and only such reasons were conclusively binding upon the employer.
12. On the footing that he was wrong on the
construction of section C10, Dr. Ramsahoye Q.C. made a number of alternative
submissions based on provisions in the 1976 Act, which he said overrode or gave
the Industial Court power to mitigate the rigour of section C10(4) in an
appropriate case. The majority of the
Court of Appeal did not find it necessary to deal with these submissions, but
Byron J.A. considered and rejected them. Again, their Lordships think that Byron J.A. was right and do not find
it necessary to burden this judgment with a repetition of the reasons
convincingly stated in his judgment. The section upon which the respondent principally relies is section 9(1)
of the 1976 Act, which says that the Industrial Court:-
"may act without regard to technicalities
and legal form and shall not be bound to follow the rules of evidence
stipulated in the Evidence Act, but the Court may inform itself on any matter
in such manner as it thinks just ..."
13. This section deals with matters of evidence and
procedure. It is true that estoppel is
sometimes called a rule of evidence, but this is not the case. It is a rule of substantive law, by which
the facts which a party is estopped from proving, which would otherwise be
material to the issue of liability, are assumed to be otherwise. Evidence to the contrary is inadmissible not
on account of some technical exclusionary rule like hearsay, but because the
substantive law makes it irrelevant. The effect of section C10 is that if no statutory statement is
furnished, the grounds which it could have contained are irrelevant to the
question of whether the employee was wrongfully dismissed. Section 9(1) has no application to such a
rule. The same is true of section
10(3), which says:-
"Notwithstanding anything in this Act or
in any other rule of law to the contrary, the Court in the exercise of its
powers shall -
(a) make such order or award in relation to a dispute before it as it
considers fair and just, having regard to the interests of the persons
immediately concerned and the community as a whole;
(b) act
in accordance with equity, good conscience and the substantial merits of the
case before it, having regard to the principles and practices of good
industrial relations and, in particular, the Antigua and Barbuda Labour
Code."
14. It seems to their Lordships that the binding
effect of a statutory statement of reasons for dismissal is an integral part of
the principles and practices of the Antigua and Barbuda Labour Code and that
the Industrial Court could not have been intended to be able to jettison
section C10 simply on the grounds that a less draconian rule would be
fairer. This was a matter for the
legislature in enacting the Code.
15. Their Lordships will therefore humbly advise
Her Majesty that the appeal should be allowed and the order of the Industrial
Court restored. The respondent must pay
the appellants' costs before their Lordships' Board and in the Court of Appeal.
© CROWN
COPYRIGHT as at the date of judgment.