Jason Braier Profile picture
Mar 17, 2023 16 tweets 7 min read Read on X
🧵Minnoch v Interserve FM: Another unless order appeal - this is an HHJ Tayler special, with a run down of the case law & a paragraph neatly summarising the principles. Worth a prime place in your unless order case law folder.
bit.ly/3n1bk3f
#ukemplaw
2/ This case involved a multiple claimant claim brought by 37 claimants re the withholding of pay for days on strike. At a PH, EJ Burns (unusually) ordered sequential disclosure with the claimants going first, & a schedule of loss for each claimant. The wording is important:
3/ The Cs failed to comply & the R applied for strike out or an unless order. EJ Burns made the unless order that very same day. It cross-referred to the 1st order & also (highly unusually) asked the Rs to report to the ET the names of those struck out for not complying.
4/ On the deadline day, C's sols sent a spreadsheet of losses showing rates, pay lost to strike & strike pay provided by their union. Disclosure was made of documents in the Cs' possession, & a list was sent. It was noted they couldn't find contracts from their previous employer.
5/ The following day, the R wrote to the ET to say that all claims were struck out without further order. C responded to say that the question of material compliance was a matter for the EJ, not the R, & the EJ then sent a notice of strike out with written reasons.
6/ In those reasons, the EJ asserted it was plain from the 1st CMO that each C would serve a separate schedule, complaining the spreadsheet didn't lay out a proper SoL, & didn't set out sums received from the R for the relevant periods, nor was disclosure complete.
7/ Although the Cs wrote to the ET to ask for reconsideration and/or relief from sanction, that request went unanswered and for some reason C's solicitors didn't pursue it. However, they did appeal the strike out decision.
8/ The appeal was asserted a failure to consider whether there was material non-compliance, failure to adopt a qualitative test and facilitative approach under which ambiguity is resolved in the favour of the party required to comply, & taking irrelevant factors into account.
9/ In setting out the law, the EAT made clear the care that should be taken in making unless orders due to their draconian effect.
10/ HHJ Tayler emphasised the need for ETs to construe ambiguities in unless orders in an expansive way favourable to the party required to comply, & the need to apply a qualitative rather than quantitative approach (thus material compliance rather than substantial is the test)
11/ In terms of process, HHJ Tayler noted that sometimes it will be obvious on the papers that there has been non-compliance (such as when nothing has been done), but that where there is doubt the non-complying party should be given the chance to comment, & possibly a hearing.
12/ When dealing with applications for relief from sanction, the EAT cited the well-known portion in Thind v Salvesen on what's relevant to consider, but that unless orders should not too readily be set aside (this is strictly obiter in Minnoch but a useful reminder anyway)
13/ In a valiant effort to save trees from being destroyed for the sake of authorities bundles, in para 33 HHJ Tayler summarises 16 key points from the authorities on unless orders:
14/ Applying the principles to the present case, the EAT disagreed with EJ Burns' construction of his own order. The CMO was ambiguous on whether a single or multiple Schedules were required. It also criticised the EJ for giving form precedence over substance re the contents.
15/ As regards the disclosure exercise, the EAT criticised EJ Burns for failing to assess which documents in the Cs' possession or control they'd failed to disclose & not treating the Cs as individuals when reviewing material non-compliance. EJ Burns had taken a punitive approach
16/ The appeal was thus allowed, & the question of whether there was material compliance was remitted to be determined by a different EJ (unsurprisingly).

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More from @JasonBraier

Apr 17
🧵SSBT v Mercer: Supreme Court issues declaration of incompatibility re the lack of protection from sanction short of dismissal for workers taking part in strike action. The current position breaches Art 11 ECHR.

#ukemplawsupremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uks…
2/ M was a support worker in the care sector & a UNISON workplace rep, who planned & participated in a lawful strike at her workplace. She was suspended, receiving normal pay but no overtime. Suspension removed her from the workplace during the period of industrial action.
3/ M was also given a first written warning, though that was overturned on appeal.

M brought an ET claim reliant on s.146 TULR(C)A, which provides protection against detriments for taking part in trade union activities. The statutory provisions are below: Image
Read 26 tweets
Apr 16
🧵 R (TTT) v Michaela Community Schools Trust - High Ct finds it was neither a breach of Art 9 nor indirectly discriminatory for the school to prohibit prayer rituals in response to Muslim pupils seeking to pray during their lunch break.

#ukemplawjudiciary.uk/wp-content/upl…
2/ The facts of this case will be familiar. Michaela is the school run by Katherine Birbalsingh, which has superb results but some incredibly strict rules & practices, including restricting discussion topics & limiting break time socialisation to groups of 4.
Image
Image
3/ The school, which is 50% Muslim, places considerable stock not only in its disciplinary regime, but also in what it calls its Team Ethos by which it seeks 'aggressively' to promote integration and to disrupt separation. Image
Read 25 tweets
Feb 26
🧵Mathur v HMRC: UT (Tax & Chancery) decides to broadly construe s.401 ITEPA so that a settlement including for claims re dismissal but also re unrelated pre-termination discrim is taxable where the trigger for bringing the claim is dismissal.

#ukemplawbailii.org/uk/cases/UKUT/…
2/ M worked for Deutsche Bank. Her employment was ended when the bank entered settlement with the New York State Dept of Financial Services re manipulation of interbank offered rates. DFS ordered the bank to terminate 7 employees, including M, said to be complicit in misconduct.
3/ She was offered c.£80k in a draft settlement agreement for that termination but declined to accept. Instead she brought ET proceedings for an equal pay claim, harassment, direct sex discrim, victimisation, s.47B & s.103A claims & ordinary unfair dismissal.
Read 18 tweets
Nov 29, 2023
🧵The Supreme Court's judgment in Tui Ltd v Griffiths is one of those rare non-employment law cases that all employment lawyers (& all other civil practitioners) really must read.
It's about whether you can impugn a witness without putting the point in XX.
supremecourt.uk/cases/docs/uks…
2/ The case concerned the court's treatment of an expert report prayed in aid of a claim by Mr Griffiths for the serious stomach upset & longer term stomach problems he suffered following an all-inclusive Tui package holiday at a Turkish resort.
3/ Mr G relied on an expert report from a microbiologist, Prof P. Tui didn't rely on any expert report (they sought unsuccessfully to apply to rely on one at too late a stage) & called no witnesses to give evidence. They didn't require Prof P to attend court to be cross-examined.
Read 11 tweets
Jul 26, 2023
🧵Garcha-Singh v BA: It wasn't unfair for BA to repeatedly extend the termination date in a medical incapacity dismissal - it was to G's advantage. There was also no need to provide an appeal against the final refusal to extend that date.

#ukemplawassets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/64c0d977…
2/ G worked as long haul cabin crew. He was off for a year, 1st for physical health reasons & then stress reasons, at which point his employment was terminated with a little more than 4 months' notice.
3/ During the notice period. G returned to work, performing some duties albeit not his contractual role. BA decided to extend his notice period to allow him to demonstrate an ability to sustain a full flying roster, implying that if he did so the termination might not go ahead.
Read 16 tweets
Jul 19, 2023
🧵Jackson v Uni Hospitals of North Midlands: EAT holds ET erred in law in finding a Hogg v Dover dismissal wasn't a Hogg v Dover dismissal. The EAT clarified that there's no special repudiatory breach threshold for a Hogg v Dover dismissal.

#ukemplawrb.gy/rttwp
2/ J was a specialist research nurse, entitled to 4 weeks' notice of termination. In a restructure, she was placed in a lower grade research practitioner role, against her will (she'd refused to sign T&Cs). Those deciding on this hadn't appreciated this was a redundancy situation
3/ Because of that, J hadn't been offered a trial period in the new role, nor redundancy on enhanced contractual terms, which is what she sought. The contractual terms provided for a loss of enhancement if a person left their job prior to expiry of notice.
Read 17 tweets

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