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Employers Update - July 2012
Welcome to the July edition
of Employ! especially to
those of you who have
registered to receive
Employ! for the first time.
This
month sees the launch of our
first ever Manchester HR
Exchange on 17 July at the
Imperial War Museum,
Manchester. All the details
can be found by following
the link below:
http://www.thehrexchange.co.uk/manchester-event-17-july-2012
Bookings
are now being taken but we
do have a few places left,
and will also be keeping a
waiting list open in case
any places become available.
To other
matters and this month’s
edition sees recent case
decisions on redundancy and
yet another health warning
about clearly communicating
the effective date of
termination in dismissal
situations. Happy reading!
Kind
regards

Will Clayton
Head of Employment
Key
Employment Team Contacts:
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The EAT has held that it
is not necessary for the number of employees
carrying out work of a particular kind to be
reduced in order to satisfy the definition
of "redundancy".
In this
particular case, a firm suffered
a downturn in business and
therefore had a diminished need
for the book-keeping services
carried out by one of its
employees. As a result, the
employer sought to significantly
reduce the hours she worked each
week. The employee refused to
work reduced hours and therefore
was dismissed.
The Tribunal
found that she had been
dismissed by reason of
redundancy and was therefore
entitled to a statutory
redundancy payment. The EAT
subsequently upheld this
decision and in doing so
confirmed that the actual
headcount of employees does not
need to be reduced in order for
a redundancy situation to have
arisen.
What do I
need to know?
In accordance with the
Employment Rights Act 1996
(“ERA”), a redundancy situation
will arise if the employer’s
requirements for employees to
carry out work of a particular
kind have ceased or diminished
or are expected to do so. This
decision has confirmed that
reducing the amount of work to
be done by the same number of
employees can give rise to a
redundancy situation.
Employers should
bear in mind, however, that a
reduction in hours will not
always amount to a genuine
redundancy situation. Each
decision will be fact sensitive
and will need to be assessed on
the particular circumstances of
that individual situation. |
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As a general principle, in order to be
reasonable, redundancy selection criteria
should, so far as possible, be objective and
capable of independent verification. This
means that criteria should be measurable and
not based on someone’s personal opinion.
However, a recent Tribunal case has held
that there are some circumstances in which
subjective selection criteria will be
acceptable.
In these particular circumstances, a
Company carrying out a redundancy exercise
used some subjective selection criteria to
assess which role in the affected team could
be lost with the least affect on its
business.
Both the Tribunal and the EAT on appeal
found that the dismissals were unfair
overall. However, the EAT did not agree with
the Tribunal’s finding that the selection
criteria used, which had involved a degree
of subjective judgment, were inappropriate.
The EAT held that subjective criteria could
be acceptable provided that they could be
assessed in a dispassionate or objective
way, particularly where the company faced
with the redundancy situation was a
relatively small company in serious
financial difficulty, as was the case here.
Further, the EAT was critical of selection
processes that were limited to “box ticking”
exercises on the basis that they had to be
objective.
What do I need to know?
This decision does not change the general
principle that in carrying out a redundancy
selection process, employers should, as far
as possible, be objective. One way of doing
this is by being able to refer to verifiable
documents and records as evidence of the
score awarded. Another is to have more than
one manager score those employees at risk.
This will help to avoid accusations that the
selection criteria process is biased and
therefore unfair. However, this decision
does show that in certain circumstances
where the employer is still able to point to
“unbiased” evidence, criteria which involve
some degree of subjective determination will
be acceptable.
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The EAT has held in a recent case that
even where there has been a genuine
breakdown in trust and confidence between
the employer and employee, and therefore a
genuine SOSR dismissal, the Tribunal is
still entitled to take into account the
causes and surrounding circumstances of that
breakdown.
In brief, this recent case involved a
Teacher, who had a friendship with another
former Teacher who had been suspended for
possessing indecent images of children. Her
continuation of this friendship led to a
breakdown in trust and confidence between
herself and the Head teacher of the school,
who had advised her not to carry on
contacting the Teacher who had been
reprimanded for those offences.
Following her suspension, an
investigation and disciplinary and appeal
hearing, the Teacher was eventually
dismissed on grounds that her relationship
with the Head teacher had been irreparably
damaged.The dismissed Teacher subsequently
brought a claim for unfair dismissal and the
Tribunal concluded that her dismissal had
indeed been unfair. Although it accepted
that the school genuinely had “some other
substantial reason for the dismissal” (i.e.
the loss in trust and confidence between the
Head teacher and the Teacher), it concluded
that the dismissal had not been reasonable
in all the circumstances. In reaching this
decision, the Tribunal took into account the
circumstances of why there had been a
breakdown in trust and confidence between
the parties.
The EAT agreed with the Tribunal’s
approach and upheld the decision of unfair
dismissal. In doing so, the EAT confirmed
that:
- The Tribunal was perfectly entitled
to examine how the employer’s lack of
confidence had arisen. If the Tribunal
was not able to do this in SOSR
dismissal cases, then it may be open to
an employer to dismiss for any reason or
for no reason at all, provided that it
could establish that there had been a
genuine breakdown in trust and
confidence between the parties. This was
not an adequate given that unfair
dismissal legislation is designed to
protect employees from exactly this
practice.
- In “SOSR” cases such as this where
the substantial reason relied upon for
the breakdown in trust and confidence is
a consequence of the employee’s conduct,
it is essential to examine the
circumstances leading up to the
dismissal and to assess whether the
principles of fairness applicable in
misconduct dismissals have been adhered
to. In this particular case, the
Tribunal and EAT took into account the
fact that the teacher had not been
warned of the potential consequence of
dismissal if she continued with her
behaviour. The EAT concluded that the
requirement to follow these general
principles of fairness in matters
involving misconduct was not
automatically wiped out simply by the
conclusion that there had been a genuine
loss of trust and confidence.
What do I need to know?
This case serves as a note for caution for
employers when relying on a SOSR reason to
dismiss when the issue is really one of
misconduct. In this case, the Tribunal
approached this SOSR matter in a similar way
to which they would have done in a
misconduct case and determined that, given
the circumstances, it was appropriate for
the relevant principles of fairness,
including those requirements under the ACAS
Code of Conduct to be fulfilled.
Even where there is a genuine breakdown
of trust and confidence, Tribunals are
entitled take into account the circumstances
and substantial merits of the case to
determine whether or not the dismissal was
reasonable in all the circumstances. |
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A number of our recent editions of
Employ! have stressed the importance of
clarity when communicating or affirming the
effective date of termination of an
employee’s contract of employment. We have
seen how a failure to do this can lead to
Tribunal claims being allowed after the date
on which the employer believed the time
limit for bringing such claims had expired.
In a recent case, the EAT has held that
the EDT had been varied where the employer
had changed that date on an appeal by the
employees against their dismissal.
In this case, the employees, who had been
dismissed for gross misconduct, initially
received a letter terminating their
employment summarily as of the date of the
letter of termination, being 5 October 2010.
The employees unsuccessfully appealed and in
the letters rejecting the appeal, the
employer stated that the effective date of
termination was in fact 4 November 2010 (the
date on which their appeals were dismissed).
The employees were also paid in full up to
this date.
The employees subsequently lodged unfair
dismissal claims relying on 4 November 2010
as the EDT. The employer initially
acknowledged in their Response form that the
EDT was 4 November 2010 but then
subsequently sought to argue that the
correct EDT was in fact 5 October 2010 and
that the employees’ claims were therefore
out of time.
The EAT rejected this argument and
confirmed that the employer had in these
particular circumstances intended to change
the date of termination to 4 November 2010.
Although it was unusual for an employer to
do this, it was clear that they had done so
and this could not be interfered with by the
EAT.
What do I need to know?
The EDT is a statutory construct which is
defined as the date on which the employee’s
notice expires, or the date on which
termination takes effect, where the employee
has been dismissed without notice. Case law
has confirmed that the EDT is a matter of
fact as to what actually happened and cannot
be changed by what the parties may agree to
treat as having happened.
In this case, the Tribunal held that the
decision to vary the EDT at the appeal stage
was part of the process of what actually
happened between the parties and was
therefore relevant for establishing the EDT.
The Tribunal found that on the facts, the
employer had in these circumstances intended
to change the date of termination from 5
October 2010 to 4 November 2010. |
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The ERRB was introduced in May this
year and is currently being considered by
parliament. The Bill will implement a number
of the Government’s proposals to reform
employment law and cut-red tape for
businesses. In particular, many of its
proposals are in response to the “Resolving
Workplace Disputes Consultation” which
concluded last year.
Two of the proposals in particular focus
on encouraging employers and employees to
come together to settle disputes before they
reach the Tribunal:
Settlement Agreements
Under the bill, compromise agreements
which are currently used between employers
and employees to settle disputes will be
re-named “settlement agreements”. At
present, in order for settlement
negotiations with employees to be “without
prejudice”, they must be part of a genuine
attempt to resolve an existing dispute
between the parties. In fact, many such
agreements are discussed and concluded under
the guise of being “without prejudice” when
the rule would not in reality have properly
been invoked because of the lack of an
existing dispute.
The ERRB includes a provision to give
employers greater protection when offering
settlement agreements outside of the context
of litigation. Evidence of such offers could
not then be used as evidence in unfair
dismissal proceedings, however they could
still be referred to in other claims such as
discrimination and breach of contract which
has led to some questions about the
workability of the proposal. The intention
is to give employers the ability to talk
frankly with employees about bringing their
employment to an end without fear that such
negotiations will be later used against them
in litigation.
There is some debate as to how effective
this provision will actually be in reducing
the fear of litigation for employers, and
whether, in reality, as it is currently
drafted it will have any impact on the
practice of discussing things informally
“off the record” as is already commonly
adopted by employers. What is certain is
that if and when this proposal becomes law,
there will be some interesting cases heard
about how it operates and refining what will
and will not be admissible!
Mandatory ACAS procedure
The Bill includes a new mandatory
four-step procedure for pre-claim
conciliation through ACAS. At present,
parties are encouraged to liaise with ACAS
to explore settlement. However, under the
new provisions, there will be a duty on the
parties to attempt pre-claim conciliation.
Under the proposals, claimants will be
unable to submit their claim form to the
Tribunal until they have obtained a
certificate to confirm that they have
attempted conciliation during the
“prescribed period” (proposed to be a
month).
We will continue to update you on the
other proposed reforms in this Bill, and
what they might mean for your business, as
it progresses through parliament. |
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Q: We have an employee who has been
off on ordinary maternity leave (“OML”) and
then additional maternity leave (“AML”) for
the last 12 months. While she was absent, we
got in a replacement that has subsequently
proved much more efficient at doing the job
than the employee on maternity leave! I have
been told that where an employee takes over
their OML (i.e. more than 6 months maternity
leave) they do not need to be offered the
same job on return and instead can be
appointed to an alternative role? The
employee is due to return from maternity
leave shortly, and if at all possible, we
want to move her into a different position
and keep the replacement on. Can we do this?
A : In short, you are going to have to
tread very carefully in this matter. There
is a common misconception that an employee
who has taken leave beyond OML (i.e. a
period of AML as well, as this employee
has), does not have the right to return to
the same job, but instead can be offered an
alternative.
The reality is that whilst the employer
may have more flexibility to provide a
suitable alternative, this only applies
where it is not practicable to permit that
employee to return to the same job. A
typical example of this would be a
reorganisation taking place in the
employee's absence resulting in the role
that she previously adopted no longer being
available. In those circumstances, the
employer may be entitled to offer her a
suitable alternative role on terms no less
favourable than her previous position.
There is case law which states that a
mere preference to keep a maternity cover
employee in the role (e.g. because they are
better at the job than the employee on
maternity leave) will not generally satisfy
the “not reasonably practicable” test.
Accordingly, "bumping" the returning
employee out of her previous role in favour
of the maternity replacement risks claims of
maternity discrimination and constructive
unfair dismissal. |
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Copyright 2006 - 2012 Taylors Solicitors
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