1/ Parr v Moore Stephens: CA finds exercise of a discretion to de-equitise a partner on reaching normal retirement age a 1-off act rather than continuing conduct.

bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/…

#ukemplaw
2/ Mr Parr was a longstanding equity partner at MS accountancy firm. The firm's LLP Members' Agreement set a normal retirement date of the accounts date following a 60th birthday and then set out what followed from reaching that milestone.
3/ In basic terms, the whilst cl29.2 set a normal retirement date, cl29.4 allowed for discretion to extend membership of the LLP for a specified period on a valid business case being presented, & also discretion to employ the member instead of continuing as a LLP member.
4/ P reached normal retirement age and it was agreed under cl29.4 that he would remain a LLP member for 2 more years but not as an equity partner. The MD didn't think there was a business case for him to remain in equity. A De-Equitisation Agreement was drafted & signed.
5/ Unfortunately for P, losing equity led to a substantial loss a year or so later when MS merged with BDO. Had he been an equity partner still, he'd have made about £3m from the merger & sales of parts of the business. Ouch!
6/ It's important to understand that whilst discretion had been exercised to de-equitise P but allow him to remain a member, there had been other cases where discretion had been exercised to allow the member to remain an equity partner after reaching 60.
7/ Following the painful loss, P brought an age discrimination claim in the ET, but this was outside of the prima facie time limits for bringing a claim if it crystallised on the decision to de-equitise or signing that agreement.
8/ The ET characterised the de-equitisation as a demotion to fixed share partner & considered the rule governing normal retirement date to be a continuing act with time only running from abrogation of the rule. P was only (& only remained) a fixed share partner due to the rule.
9/ The EAT disagreed, finding the change of status to be a 1-off act. The EAT relied heavily on the existence of the discretion (one that had been applied to others) as showing P's complaint to be about a case-by-case basis application of the rules.
10/ The EAT thus distinguished this case from those cases (such as Amies, Calder & Kapur) in which a rule has a continuing discriminatory effect (i.e. the difference b/w a rule saying only men would be appointed & a 1-off decision not to appoint someone because she was female)
11/ Hence the EAT had found that here there was not a rule preventing equity partners from continuing in equity after the age of 60, but the one-off application to P of a discretion under an allegedly discriminatory rule under which members could be so prevented on reaching 60.
12/ P appealed, relying heavily on the HL approval in Kapur of Amies & Calder. Amies concerned an art teacher whose claim concerned her non-appointment to a job a man was given. The HL approved the EAT making the distinction I set out in tweet 10.
13/ In Calder the employer restricted a mortgage subsidy to male employees over 25, thus the HL in Kapur approved the EAT holding that there was continuing discrimination against C once over 25 & still in this employment.
14/ P sought to rely on these cases as showing that a change of status is a 1-off act unless the omission arises from a rule or policy, & that his case fell into that exception, relying on Seldon to show a mandatory retirement age is a rule even if there's discretion to extend.
15/ P also sought to assert that given the EqA explanatory note said s.123 was intended to reproduce previous legislation, it should be interpreted as if s.68(7)(a) RRA was still in effect, as per the terms set out below:
16/ The CA gave that proposition should shrift as a 'startling' one as it would suggest that including a mandatory retirement age clause rendered the making of the contract an unlawful act - a proposition with startling consequences.
17/ MS's position was that this was a straightforward 1-off act in which the de-equitisation agreement had the effect of terminating the partnership once & for all & emphasising that resulted from exercising the contractual discretion rather than an inevitable outcome.
18/ MS also relied on Tyagi v BBC (where T complained a year after his employment ended that over a year earlier he'd been victim to a continuing policy of not appointing those of Asian origin). The CA held the continuing act provisions don't bite when not in action vis-a-vis T.
19/ The CA agreed with MS. Kapur distinguished between a 1-off decision & a continuing state of affairs. The former was shown well by Sougrin & Amies where a decision not to appoint the claimant was an alleged act of discretionary discrimination rather than application of a rule.
20/ P's de-equitisation was a 1-off decision. Cl.29.2 could only be applied once. Also, viewing it with Cl.29.4 it was exercise of a discretion, & the case law distinguished between rules with inevitable discriminatory outcomes as against discretions without that inevitability.
21/ Moreover, relying on Tyagi, once the de-equitisation decision was made & effected re P, the relevant LLP agreement clauses were no longer "in action" for him. They couldn't be applied to him again, they were in the past as much as if he'd been dismissed.
22/ Finally, the CA considered there force in MS's policy concern that if P was right LLPs would be more ruthless in putting retirement clauses into effect to end the relationship lest demotion exposes them to a claim for as long as the contractual relationship remains in force.

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More from @JasonBraier

14 Jan
1/ SoS Justice v Johnson: EAT holds that in considering whether just & equitable to extend time, it's relevant to take account of the lengthy delay of the trial post-presentation of the ET1 (here due to a stay pending a PI claim)

bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…

#ukemplaw
2/ J was a prison officer unfortunate enough to attend the scene of a brutal murder, including mutilation & disembowelment. He suffered psychiatric injury as a result. He was compelled to complete an ill-health retirement assessment when he didn't want to medically retire.
3/ J brought an ET claim in 2013, stayed pending determination of his PH claim. That took some years but in 2020 his ET claim was finally heard & he won on 1 ground of harassment re the compulsion to complete the assessment.
Read 8 tweets
7 Jan
1/ 🚨Eckland v Chief Constable Avon & Somerset: CA holds police officers wanting to claim discrimination against misconduct panels can bring the claim in the ET against the Chief Constable.
Comments on equivalence of particular interest.
bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/…
#ukemplaw
2/ PC Eckland had given false evidence in a criminal trial & was subject to misconduct proceedings as a result. The panel decided to dismiss him. PC Eckland claimed his false evidence resulted from mental impairment & the dismissal was s.15 discrimination arising from disability.
3/ He brought a claim in the ET against his Chief Constable. The question was whether the Chief was an appropriate respondent & whether the ET was the correct venue.
Read 23 tweets
30 Dec 21
1/ Wells Cathedral School v Souter: EAT makes clear it's open to an EJ to extend time for an EqA claim where the claimant waited for an internal grievance to be heard, & is open for an EJ to decide the other way. It's a matter of weighing up the relevant factors.
#ukemplaw
2/ Claims of constructive unfair dismissal & disability discrim were made by a husband & wife (with the husband's disability claim being an associative one). An SAR uncovered emails said by the Cs to show plans to undermine them & to remove them from the school.
3/ They both raised grievances reliant in part on those emails & resigned following determination of those grievances. They brought their claims in time as against their grievances/resignations but not as against any of the alleged EqA breaches or from seeing the emails.
Read 12 tweets
30 Dec 21
Khan & Uzayr v BP: ET erred in refusing to postpone a 3-week case with 48 witnesses due to happen a few days later when 1 of K&U's counsel team had a medical emergency & was told that he shouldn't carry out any work until the following month.
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ On reconsideration, whilst the ET declined to postpone, it sought to set case management directions to start the evidence a day after counsel would be medically fit to work again. The EAT agreed that was unfair in a case of this complexity, where 2 weeks' prep was needed.
3/ The EJ was also criticised for relying on the lack of medical evidence in refusing the urgent application for postponement notwithstanding that (a) the medical position wasn't disputed, & (b) it was provided by the unwell counsel & his solicitors as officers of the court.
Read 4 tweets
29 Dec 21
1/ Francis v Ford: An EAT decision about whether to admit background evidence is a case management decision & hence subject to limited review on appeal. A deposit order re extension of EqA time limits shouldn't be made without evidence. assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/61c303b1…
#ukemplaw
2/ The case concerned various race discrim allegations from 2019-2020, in respect of which the C sought also to rely on historic matters from 2009-2018 as background material to establish a culture of racism. At a CMH, the ET ordered the background matters be omitted.
3/ The ET's reasons focused on relevance & their historic nature & hence overriding objective matters relating to the length of trial & difficulties for the R in preparing evidence for trial on such historic matters.
Read 6 tweets
23 Dec 21
1/ Piepenbrock v LSE: EAT rejects amendment appeal to bring heavily out of time amendments re matters happening 8 years earlier, finding EJ erred as to whether P had already brought claims re the amended matters, but the error wasn't material.
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ P was a renowned economist and academic at LSE, suffering depression & anxiety & recently diagnosed on the with autism spectrum disorder. When he was on a lecture tour in the US, an accompanying student made sexual harassment allegations against him, which P said were false.
3/ This was in 2012. P went on long-term sick leave & when his fixed term contract ended in 2014 it wasn't renewed. A year earlier, the allegations were found not proven.
In 2015, P brought ET claims for unfair dismissal, victimisation & discrimination arising from disability.
Read 15 tweets

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