Jason Braier Profile picture
Feb 28 20 tweets 7 min read
1/ Fentem v Outform Emea: where the employee gives notice of termination & the employer later relies on a PILON clause to cut short the expiry of notice, the employer's act isn't a dismissal under s.95 ERA. The EAT decision in Hamblin is binding
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ In April 2019, F resigned on notice, giving 9 months' notice of termination of his employment. In December 2019, OE invoked a PILON clause, terminating F's employment early & paying him the salary due for the remainder of notice (though excluding bonuses that would be due).
3/ F brought an unfair dismissal claim in respect of the December termination. The ET held itself bound by the EAT decision in Marshall (Cambridge) Ltd v Hamblin that termination of a post-resignation period of notice by way of PILON didn't amount to a dismissal under s.95 ERA.
4/ On appeal, F accepted the ET was right on what Hamblin said but argued that the EAT shouldn't follow the decision. Unsurprisingly, OE's position was that the EAT was bound to follow it.
5/ Hamblin was a car salesman who resigned giving 3 months' notice & was then terminated by the employer a couple of weeks later, by paying H salary for the notice period but excluding commission. It also meant H lost the chance of sales & commission for the remaining notice.
6/ In Hamblin the ET held that an employer couldn't pay in lieu of unexpired notice where the notice had already been given by the employee & that doing so amounted to a dismissal before notice had expired. A majority in the EAT in Hamblin disagreed.
7/ The EAT in Hamblin held that given the employment contract continues during a notice period, the employer is entitled during that period to effectuate any PILON clause. The fact that H derived most of his earnings from commission was immaterial.
8/ The EAT in Fentem noted the extent of the EAT's entitlement to depart from its previous decisions, as per the 5 categories outlined in British Gas v Lock:
9/ The EAT rejected F's argument Hamblin was per incuriam Tipton from which F suggested a common sense/purposive approach could have been discerned. The EAT considered the per incuriam principle only applied where the oversight made the reasoning demonstrably wrong.
10/ F's main argument focused on whether Hamblin was manifestly wrong. F argued that his termination was clearly within s.95(1)(a) ERA, which brooked no exceptions - he was employed under a contract & it was terminated by the employer.
11/ OE noted the height of the Lock threshold & asserted that in Hamblin what had happened was merely the bringing forward of the date of termination, not altering the mode of termination - which was H's resignation.
12/ The EAT started its analysis by noting that termination by agreement falls outside the statutory definition of dismissal. Secondly, it noted that whilst an employer unilaterally terminating early during a notice period results in dismissal that wasn't what happened in Hamblin
13/ The EAT accepted OE's characterisation of Hamblin was a combination of an employee giving notice of resignation & an employer then invoking a contractual clause applicable when notice of resignation has been given, to end employment on an earlier date.
14/ F argued that even in that circumstance the termination resulted from a unilateral act of the employer, regardless of it being parasitic upon the employee's resignation & a termination allowed for under the employment contract.
15/ The EAT found highly troubling the conclusion in Hamblin that there was no dismissal. However, the question of whether it was manifestly wrong required consideration of whether a reasonable analysis could be argued in defence of Hamblin's outcome.
16/ The mainstay of the EAT's finding that Hamblin wasn't manifestly wrong was that it was reasonably arguable a provision of the contract could provide for an employer to cause employment to end sooner than the notice given without altering how & when resignation takes effect.
17/ The EAT also noted that there's a body of case law referenced in Harvey about what happens when an employer terminates with notice & the employee wants to bring the end of his employment forward, with the case law going against a finding that the employee has then terminated.
18/ Whilst HHJ Auerbach accepted F's submission those cases were all about the date being brought forward to accord with the employee's wishes, he didn't consider it obvious they offered no reasonable basis for arguing the line taken in Hamblin.
19/ As a result, in spite of his misgivings about Hamblin, HHJ Auerbach found that none of the Lock exceptions applied, he was bound by Hamblin, & any release from Hamblin's shackles would be a matter for the Court of Appeal.
20/ I guess that means I look forward to @MattJEJackson and @AdamSolomon3 arguing the point on the Court of Appeal livestream at some point in 2023.

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More from @JasonBraier

Feb 28
AG v Taheri - EAT makes a restriction of proceedings order of indefinite duration under s.33 ETA against a serial claimant, who applies for jobs & brings discrimination claims when turned down, hoping to extract a small settlement.
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ Mr Taheri is one of those well-known serial litigants. He applies for a job, gets turned down & then brings a claim for race, age &/or disability discrimination in the hope of making some money out of it, valuing the claim in the thousands but settling in for hundreds.
3/ He'd never succeeded in any that had gone to hearing, often found vexatious, four times struck out plus a few times subject to deposit orders, with the claim struck out on not paying.
Read 5 tweets
Feb 28
1/ NMC v Somerville: Worker status exists when undertaking to do work personally for someone who isn't a client/customer. There's no additional irreducible minimum of obligation required. A mere right to withdraw is immaterial.
bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/…
#ukemplaw
2/ @robinsomerville was appointed as a panel member & chair of an NMC Fitness to Practise Committee. On a WTR holiday pay claim, the ET found S was a limb (b) worker given the existence of an overarching contract with the NMC & individual contracts when hearings were assigned.
3/ The ET found S agreed to provide services personally. It wasn't put off of finding S a worker by the fact that he was contractually able to refuse to accept any hearing date or to cancel his attendance at a hearing by notifying the NMC he was no longer available.
Read 17 tweets
Feb 17
1/ Kocur v Angard Staffing Solutions: CA holds reg 13 of the Agency Worker Regs gives agency workers a right to be informed of vacancies in the same terms as permanent workers but not a right to apply.
bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/…
#ukemplaw
2/ The case concerned an employment agency providing agency worker staff exclusively to the Royal Mail. When vacancies arose in the Leeds sorting office, they were put on the internal noticeboard for all to see, but permanent employees had the 1st chance to apply.
3/ K sought to argue that this was in breach of the right under reg 13(1) of the AWR, which provides: Image
Read 6 tweets
Feb 16
1. Water v The Mote Cricket Club: EAT upholds ET's decision that a cricket club groundsman operating through his own business was neither an employee nor a worker
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2. Mote employed a groundsman for many years until 2016. He had licence to live in residential accommodation as part of his contract. When he left, Mote engaged a self-employed contractor. At about that time, W obtained became shorthold tenant of the groundsman's property.
3. W was a member of the cricket club. In 2011, he set up a gardening & grounds business. 1 of his jobs was maintenance of another cricket pitch. When he ended the tenancy, he based his business at Mote & kept tools there (bringing in a shipping container to do so).
Read 8 tweets
Feb 14
1/ Shittu v South London & Maudsley NHS: Important finding (obiter) that the loss of chance test remains the test re compensation for unfair/discrim dismissal & the counterfactual chance of a fair dismissal. Perry v Raley doesn't change that.
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6202b0d0…
#ukemplaw
2/ S was a complaints manager for SL&M NHS Trust. He'd been diagnosed with bowel cancer in 2009 & resigned in Aug 2016. He brought claims for constructive unfair dismissal, a couple of bases of automatic unfair dismissal & loads of disability discrim & victimisation claims.
3/ Ultimately of the very many claims brought, he succeeded on 2 claims re 1 act: he'd complained about not being paid when off work for a post-cancer check-up & complained also about a failure to investigate that complaint. It was 1 of the reasons he resigned.
Read 13 tweets
Feb 11
1/ Arvunescu v Quick Release: An interesting consideration of s.112 EqA (aiding a contravention) & the width of COT3 wording, as well as an application of Cox v Adecco to find a s.112 claim albeit not expressly pleaded.
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/62029aca…
#ukemplaw
2/ A worked for QR for a month before being dismissed. He brought a race discrim claim but that was ultimately compromised under a COT3 in 2018 with the following widely drafted term as to what was being compromised:
3/ Also in early 2018, A applied for a job with a wholly-owned subsidiary of QR. He was rejected. Subsequent to the COT3 being signed, A brought a victimisation claim against QR in re that rejection. A PH was held to consider whether the claim should be struck out.
Read 9 tweets

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