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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Okoro & Anor v Taylor Woodrow Construction Ltd & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 1590 (04 December 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1590.html Cite as: [2013] ICR 580, [2012] EWCA Civ 1590, [2012] WLR(D) 368, [2013] Eq LR 147 |
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ON APPEAL FROM
EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
LANGSTAFF J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
and
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
____________________
(1) Mr Azubike Okoro (2) Mr Harris Okenwa |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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(1) Taylor Woodrow Construction Ltd (2) Coyle Personnel Plc (3) Mane Contract Services Ltd |
Respondents |
____________________
Mr Ben Cooper (instructed by Magrath LLP) for the First Respondents
Mr Satinder Gill (instructed by Irwin Mitchell and SA Law) for the Second and Third Respondents
Hearing date : 23 October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill :
Facts
"This section applies to any work for a person ("the principal") which is available for doing by individuals ("contract workers") who are employed not by the principal himself but by another person, who supplies them under a contract made with the principal."
Section 7(2) makes it unlawful for the principal, in relation to work to which the section applies, to discriminate against a contract worker in specified respects. There is in this case the further dimension, as will appear, that the appellants were not employed by the second and third respondents, with whom the first respondents (the principal) made contracts, but by a limited company set up by the appellants. It has not, however, been suggested that section 7 does not apply in such a situation.
"1.1 Coyle Personnel Plc will supply temporary operatives to TWCL. These temporary operatives will be under the control, direction and supervision of TWCL, but will remain temporary operatives of Coyle Personnel Plc:
1.2 TWCL will be responsible for the quality of work executed by temporary operatives.
1.3 It is Coyle Personnel Plc's responsibility to ensure that all temporary operatives supplied are trained, appropriately qualified, experienced and competent in their trade. To that end, it is expected that Coyle Personnel Plc will recruit with care, train as necessary (including safety awareness training, which is considered a pre-requisite), maintain up to date CV's or similar career history and record of qualifications, and be able to provide such information on request . . .
. . . .
1.11 Any labour operatives found unsatisfactory will be sent off site and will not be charged if dismissed within 4 hours of arrival on site. Replace to be made within one day of advice to Cole Personnel Plc office or representative.
1.12 Individual temporary operatives may be ordered off site by TWCL for misconduct, non-compliance with safety measures, or failure to observe the terms of this Framework Agreement. Only the hours worked until dismissal will be paid for.
. . . .
2.5 Coyle Personnel Plc shall be responsible for paying its temporary operatives in accordance with all current Employment Laws and shall indemnify TWCL . . . .
3.1 TWCL shall pay to Coyle Personnel Plc:
3.1.1. The agreed rate of each temporary operative is as per the following table:
. . . .
3.1.6 Coyle Personnel Plc shall submit detailed invoices on a weekly basis. Each invoice shall identify the operative's name, trade, agreed hourly rates and hours claimed and shall have the relevant endorsed Timesheet attached."
"The terms set out in the Framework Agreements were then incorporated into separate contracts for the provision of particular numbers of workers with particular skills to work on particular projects for particular durations. The first respondent would raise an individual's sub contract order form for each separate contract which would then be accepted by the second or third respondent respectively providing the relevant workers. The second or third respondent respectively would then invoice on a monthly basis to the first respondent and would be paid accordingly."
"The second and the third respondent respectively had standard terms of engagement pursuant to which the claimants would be contacted for individual assignments, which would give rise to the individual contracts between the limited company set up by the claimants and the second and third respondents on their standard terms."
The Employment Tribunal and EAT
"The tribunal concludes the banning of claimants from the first respondent's site was a one-off decision with continuing consequences. The last act complained of could therefore only be on 18 April 2008.
The claims for race discrimination were therefore brought outside the primary time limit which expired on 17 July 2008."
The Tribunal also held that it was not just and equitable to extend time and that finding was not subject to appeal.
"(1) An Employment Tribunal shall not consider a complaint under section 54 unless it is presented to the Tribunal before the end of -
(a) the period of three months beginning when the act complained of was done;
(b) . . ."
Section 68(7) provides, in so far as is material:
"For the purposes of this section
. . .
(b) Any act extending over a period shall be treated as done at the end of that period.
. . ."
The present complaint is under section 54.
"44. . . . The Tribunal had to direct itself by reference to the statutory test, and determine the issue as one of fact. I accept in general terms the force of the points that Mr Adjei makes here as to the analogy which might (though tentatively) be drawn between the situation here and that of dismissal from employment. It seems to me, however, that the matter cannot be resolved by analogy; it must be examined as a matter of principle. The essential question is whether the allegations which a claimant seeks to put before a Tribunal focus upon events at one point in time, albeit spread over a few days, or whether they focus upon that which Mummery LJ in Hendricks called a continuing state of affairs. To term something a 'ban' might involve either. Here, however, the focus in the originating applications is undeniably upon a short sequence of events in April 2008. The latest of those was on 18 April 2008, and indeed that on 8 April 2008, was by reference to a banning which had occurred as a matter of decision on 6 April 2008. There was no further act since for well over the three months following 18 April, and for the further period that elapsed before the applications here were first made to the Tribunal. The allegation (in the unamended claim) was not of a continuing act.
45. Such was the focus of the allegations in the claim and, I infer, from the facts set out as agreed before the Tribunal . . . that I am bound to conclude that it was at least open to the Tribunal to think that here the real complaint being made to it was of the behaviour of Mr Williams as an employee of Taylor Woodrow, when he behaved towards the Claimants in a manner that they thought might well be discriminatory on the nights of 6, 7, 8 and 18 April 2008, and that they were not maintaining that these were acts which in any real sense could be equated to the type of regime, policy or rule identified in some of the cases, and therefore to find as a matter of fact that what was alleged was not an act extending over a period such as to confer jurisdiction. The acts complained of extended over a period, perhaps, but the period ended on 18 April 2008 and did not extend thereafter."
Submissions
"The matter can be further tested by taking the case of an employer who before the Act was passed paid lower wages to his coloured employees than to his white employees. Once the Act came into force the employer would be guilty of racial discrimination if he did not pay the same wages to both coloured and white employees. If he continued to pay lower wages to the coloured employees it would be a continuing act lasting throughout the period of a coloured employee's employment within the meaning of subsection (7)(b)."
"By constituting a scheme under the rules of which a female could not obtain the benefit of the mortgage subsidy in our judgment the employers were discriminating against the applicant in the way they afforded her access to the scheme. It follows, in our judgment, that so long as the applicant remained in the employment of these employers there was a continuing discrimination against her. Alternatively it could be said that so long as her employment continued, the employers were subjecting her to 'any other detriment' within section 6(2)(b)."
"If the regime which the GMC had selected for its exemptions policy was inherently discriminatory, as the applicant maintained, then on every occasion that it refused to allow her limited registration without first taking the PLAB test it would be committing an act of unlawful discrimination contrary to section 12(1)(b) of the Act."
He stated at page 92 F-H:
"It was an important part of his case that the appeal tribunal failed to take into account the fact that the cases on which it relied were all decided in relation to section 4 of the Act of 1976 or section 6 of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, which for all material purposes is in identical terms. In those cases the discriminatory act complained of is not a one-off act of refusal: it arises out of the way in which the employer affords his or her employees access to opportunities for promotion, transfer or training, or to any other benefits, facilities or services, or out of the employer refusing or deliberately omitting to afford the employees access to them. In these circumstances the courts have held that, if an employer adopts a policy which means that a black employee or a female employee is inevitably barred from access to valuable benefits, this is a continuing act of discrimination against employees who fall into these categories until the offending policy is abrogated."
"The factual circumstances in which discrimination occurs have been illustrated in the authorities as falling into one of the following categories.
(1) A one-off act of discrimination, such as a refusal to promote, which has continuing consequences for the disappointed candidate.
(2) An act extending over a period of time, constituting a rule or policy, by reference to which decisions are made from time to time.
(3) A series of discriminatory acts, whether or not set against a background of a discriminatory policy.
A complaint in respect of category (1) must be made within three months of the act or, where specific statutory provision is made for a deliberate omission to act, within three months from the date when the relevant less favourable treatment was 'decided on'. Time runs for a category (2) complaint when the discriminatory rule is abrogated; and it will also run in the case of the specific application of the rule to any given employee, eg in refusing promotion, from the date of that application. Time runs in a category (3) complaint where there is specific statutory provision for this, from the last in the series of acts."
Mr O'Brien submitted that the present case comes within category 2.
"What then is the position in the case of a contract worker? We have invited submissions from the parties' advocates on this question. It seems to us that where an employer, here Sames, supplies a contract worker, the Appellant, to the principal, Nat West, the refusal by the principal to permit the Appellant to continue with the work gives rise to a potential claim of unlawful discrimination. However, once the worker has been barred by the principal and the employer makes no further attempt to supply that worker under the contract made with the principal, but instead assigns him to other duties as an alternative to terminating his employment, the protection provided by Section 7 ceases."
"To acknowledge that there may be successive acts of discrimination in this way does not negate the time bar provided by section 76, provided that decision makers make clear in responding to further requests whether they have reconsidered the matter. If they have, time begins to run again; if they have not, and merely refer the complainant to their previous decision, no new period of limitation arises. However, where the successive acts are such as to indicate and/or are pursuant to a policy or regime, different considerations arise."
"Accordingly, I would hold that on the primary facts found by the industrial tribunal the applicant had clearly complained of a policy constituting an extended act up to the time she left her employment within section 76(6)(b) and that, by virtue of that provision, it was to be treated as done to her up to that time."
In the present case, there was no reconsideration of the ban and none was requested.
"The consequence alleged here, if it is a consequence, is of exactly the same nature and character as the act which is said to give rise to it."
Attempts to draw such a distinction, or point to the lack of such a distinction, would be a distraction from the task of the Tribunal. Tribunals should consider what, in substance, is the act complained of. Tribunals may be trusted to recognise what is an "act" and what is merely a consequence. An "ordinary commonsense meaning" must be given to the provisions of the Act (Bristow J in Amies v Inner London Education Authority [1977] ICR 311A).
"The concepts of policy, rule, practice, scheme or regime in the authorities were given as examples of when an act extends over a period. They should not be treated as a complete and constricting statement of the indicia of 'an act extending over a period.' I agree with the observation made by Sedley LJ, in his decision on the paper application for permission to appeal, that the Appeal Tribunal allowed itself to be side-tracked by focusing on whether a 'policy' could be discerned. Instead, the focus should be on the substance of the complaints that the Commissioner was responsible for an ongoing situation or a continuing state of affairs in which female ethnic minority officers in the Service were treated less favourably. The question is whether that is 'an act extending over a period' as distinct from a succession of unconnected or isolated specific acts, for which time would begin to run from the date when each specific act was committed."
It was submitted that a policy or analogous arrangement should not be forced into existence. No gloss should be based on the statutory language. There was a specific act, the ban.
"does not bite on a discriminatory practice which is not in action at all vis-a-vis a particular applicant if he is not employed by the employer at all."
There is no on-going relationship within which it can be said that the protection bites in relation to the appellants, it was submitted. The subject matter of the complaint is no longer "in action". Turning away the contract worker after more than three months would at most constitute an independent act of discrimination requiring a fresh 'act' of discrimination to be complained of. In Calder Browne-Wilkinson J confined the relevant period to that in which the applicant "remained in the employment of those employers", as did Lord Griffiths in Kapur.
Conclusions
Lord Justice Hughes :
Lord Justice Rimer :