1/ There's not been a decent one-off or continuing act case for a while, but Moore Stephens LLP v Parr provides much of the relevant case law all in one convenient place.

bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…

#ukemplaw
2/ P was an equity partner at MS, an accountancy firm. There was a provision in the LLP members' agreement for a normal retirement age of 60 but with MS having discretion to extend beyond on terms decided by the managing partner. Image
3/ When P reached 60, MS decided he could continue another 2 years but only as a non-equity partner. This was agreed. A few months later, P learned of subsequent proposals to sell MS & then learned that as a non-equity partner he'd not receive a share in the proceeds of sale. Image
4/ He brought a direct age discrimination claim (for c.£4m) whose timeliness depended on whether the removal of equity status was a 1-off act with continuing consequences or was conduct extending over a period. The ET found the latter & that the claim was in time. MS appealed.
5/ The EAT allowed MS's appeal. Its analysis starts with Amies, a sex discrim claim about the appointment of a man to an art department head role. There the EAT held the appointment a 1-off act, contrasting it to a rule that only men would be appointed: a continuing act. Image
6/ Next was Calder, about an employer refusing to pay a mortgage subsidy provided to male employees because C was female. There the scheme was constituted in such a way that female employees couldn't benefit & that was held to be a continuing act. Image
7/ The EAT moved on to Barclays v Kapur, the HL race discrim case about failure to count periods of service for Barclays in East Africa when calculating pensions, another example of a rule working against the claimants' protected characteristics, & a continuing act. Image
8/ Sougrin v Haringey was next up, where a race discrim case focused on a pay grading decision was held to be a one-off act - it wasn't a rule that led to the grading decision. The only rule here was to be paid at your grade, but that was a continuing consequence of the 1-ff act ImageImage
9/ The EAT then looked at Owusu, where the EAT accepted as a continuing act an alleged continuing (and repeated) practice of excluding O from regrading exercises & from opportunities to act up. Image
10/ Cast v Croydon was next, where similarly to Owusu a sex discrim claim in re a practice to refuse C's requests to job share & to work part time were all refused. This was held to be an allegation of a discriminatory policy or regime & a continuous act case. Image
11/ The famous Hendricks was next, with H's numerous allegedly linked allegations of discrim against the police force, which the CA accepted asserted a continuing discriminatory state of affairs & thus an act extending over a period. Image
12/ We can doubtless all recite para 52 of Mummery LJ's judgment in Hendricks, but it bears repeating with its focus on whether a multiplicity of complaints amounted to an act extending over a period as opposed to a succession of unconnected, isolated specific acts. Image
13/ The EAT also noted the recent case of South Western Ambulance Service v King, in which it was made clear that in a chain of acts it's only the discriminatory ones which count for time limit purposes. Image
14/ Having set out the case law, the EAT distinguished for the purpose of this appeal between the discriminatory rule/policy cases (Calder, Kapur, Owusu) & those without such a discriminatory rule/policy (Amies, Sougrin).
15/ The EAT gave particular emphasis to the observation in Cast that a 1-off act can still emanate from an established discriminatory policy in circumstances where the complaint is of a specific discriminatory act. Image
16/ Here, the pleaded complaint was of a specific act - change from equity to non-equity status. The EAT noted that the policy applied was one which had equally been applied to others to retain them as equity partners & was the exercise of a genuine discretion. Image
17/ That was important in placing the case outside of the Calder/Kapur strand - the claim resulted from a specific discretion exercised as to P's status. It was a one-off act exercised in a particular manner rather than emanating from a rule precluding equity partnership post-60. ImageImage

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More from @JasonBraier

24 Jun
1/ Polyclear Ltd v Wezowicz: in considering strike out for failure to comply with an unless order, the ET should consider what attempts were made to comply & the extent of failure in material compliance when weighing the interests of justice.

assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60d33cc5…

#ukemplaw
2/ In this unfair dismissal/race discrimination claim, 1 issue was whether Polish workers at the respondent plastic manufacturer were required to work on machine which required harder work than those allocated to Indian workers.
3/ At a PH, the EJ ordered disclosure of job sheets by way of cross-reference to a written request from the claimants, which appeared to ask for 30 job sheets for two sets of machines, all for the same date.
Read 17 tweets
24 Jun
21/ Underhill LJ accepted that other features of the Deliveroo riders' relationships might also point against them being in an employment relationship for A11 purposes, but he was reluctant to rule on them, limiting himself to personal service.
22/ Whilst open to the possibility that Uber would have provided a different domestic answer to the working relationship, Underhill LJ also wasn't prepared to go there either. The appeal was limited to A11 rights & the domestic answer shouldn't be considered by the back door.
23/ Even were the CA wrong on A11's scope, it held it wouldn't necessarily follow that the A11 freedom entails the right of compulsory recognition. There would remain a question over whether denying access to compulsory collective bargaining fell within the margin of appreciation
Read 5 tweets
24 Jun
1/ The CA has found Deliveroo drivers aren't workers. That may surprise close followers of Uber, but the main reason is that this appeal was about the scope of Art 11 ECHR & personal service, neither of which were features of the Uber judgment. bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/…

#ukemplaw
2/ The case concerned collective bargaining rights, with the IWGB applying to the CAC to be recognised by Deliveroo for collective bargaining purposes in the Camden & Kentish Town food delivery zone. The CAC found the drivers weren't workers & the CA agree.
3/ The relevant definition of 'worker' is that under s.296(1) TULR(C)A, which is similar though not identical to that under the ERA.
Read 21 tweets
23 Jun
1/ A v B - A claim involving a love triangle (actually, more a love square), allegations of manslaughter, intimidatory communications to witnesses, allegations of cover up by the Scottish ET President and strike out! See the EAT judgment here: bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…

#ukemplaw
2/ The claim revolves around A's relationship with C, both doctors employed by B. C is married, but was also in a relationship with A. A considered herself married to C, though at law she isn't. A suspected C entered a relationship with another Dr, SS, & allegedly assaulted her.
3/ Whilst A was prosecuted for assault, she was acquitted. However, in disciplinary proceedings, she was dismissed. She brought claims for unfair dismissal & sex & religious discrimination. Within the claim, A wrote correspondence leading to a strike out application.
Read 13 tweets
22 Jun
1/ Dobson v North Cumbria Integrated Care - In a flexible working requirement discrim claim, the EAT usefully reminds that judicial notice can be taken of the fact that childcare responsibility renders it less likely women can be flexible in hours worked than men. #ukemplaw
2/ D worked for NCIC NHS Trust as a community nurse. She has 3 children, 2 disabled. She worked 2 consistent days a week, but then NCIC required community nurses to change to work flexibly including occasional working weekends.
3/ NCIC's response was to fire & seek to re-engage D on the new terms. D didn't accept them & thus her employment terminated. She brought unfair dismissal, victimisation & indirect sex discrimination claims, but it's the latter we're mainly interested in for the appeal.
Read 16 tweets
11 Jun
Steer v Stormsure: There's sure to be a storm a-comin' on this one, but for now the CA has found that the lack of interim relief under the Equality Act isn't discriminatory under the ECHR & hence there's no legislative reading in or declaration of incompatibility needed #ukemplaw
2/ Bean LJ's judgment starts ominously for Steer, noting the scarcity of injunctions to keep employment contracts in force or to suspend a dismissal, before noting the limited incremental crawl of interim relief as an ET remedy.
3/ The facts of the underlying claim are perhaps unimportant but C's case is she worked for R for 4 months before resigning in circumstances of sexual harassment, a botched grievance investigation, intrusive WFH conditions & enforced reduction of hours by R due to her childcare.
Read 36 tweets

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