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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 >> Creditsights Ltd v Dhunna [2014] EWCA Civ 1238 (19 September 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2014/1238.html Cite as: [2014] EWCA Civ 1238, [2015] ICR 105, [2014] WLR(D) 404, [2014] IRLR 953 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Mrs Justice Slade
Appeal No: UKEAT/0246/12/LA
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE FLOYD
and
LADY JUSTICE MACUR
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CREDITSIGHTS LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SATPAL DHUNNA |
Respondent |
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Mr Aiden O'Neill QC and Ms Aileen McColgan (appearing Pro Bono) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 20 May 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
Introduction
The facts
'3.3 … For example, in the lengthy written advice from the Dubai lawyers, it was stated that the establishment of branch offices of foreign companies in the UAE is established by ministerial decision. A branch office, on registration, carries on business under the name and form of the parent company. The branch office does not have a separate legal entity of its own but is considered as part of its parent company. A branch office is not permitted to carry out commercial activities and cannot physically deal in or trade in goods within the UAE. It is, however, permitted to render maintenance and service repairs to customers of its parent company. A branch office can promote, advertise and market its parent company's goods and services and even enter into contracts for sale. However, because of the prohibition against physically dealing in goods, the goods, when supplied to customers, must be imported into the UAE in the name of the customers as consignees etc. However, the Dubai based lawyer, in an e-mail to Mr Good, dated 23 October 2008, wrote setting out the requirements and procedures applicable to the incorporation of a representative office. The representative office can only carry out administrative and liaison office services. A representative office of a foreign company is allowed to promote its parent company's activities. To set up a representative office, the services of a UAE national or 100% UAE entity must be engaged to act as a sponsor of the entity etc. [CSL] reached an agreement with a local agent to assist in obtaining all necessary permits and licences to operate in Dubai. Again, the terminology in the agreement is somewhat loose. In the preamble it states: "whereas the company wishes to establish a branch in the Emirate of Dubai, UAE to carry out the activities of representative office (the branch)." The company there is identified as [CSL]. Internally, and so far as CreditSights generally was concerned, Mr Good decided that the Dubai office would be a branch of the London office, rather than a subsidiary company, given the restrictions on what it could do. In e-mail exchanges with colleagues and with the Dubai lawyers, Mr Good describes the Dubai office as a branch of CreditSights' UK operations. In the commercial register of the Government of Dubai, again terminology is loose. The trade name is given as [CSL] (Rep Office). However, the legal type is designated as branch of foreign company. Other relevant factors include the fact that the sales made in Dubai would be handled in London (in other words, invoiced from and payments remitted to London). The India office in New Delhi was similarly supported through the United States. The administration of the Delhi office [sic: counsel agreed that this should read "Dubai office"] remained in London and [Mr Dhunna] remained on the London payroll, albeit he was being paid in US dollars and without national insurance and tax deductions being made. However, [Mr Dhunna] was not entitled to be included in the UK pension plan and he had a separate health and dental policy in Dubai. He was entitled to the benefits of UK holidays (statutory and bank). All the expenses of the Dubai office and of [Mr Dhunna] were paid for by London.'
EJ Sigsworth's decision
'1. … Putting the question in the traditional terms of the conflict of laws, what connection between Great Britain and the employment relationship is required to make section 94(1) the appropriate choice of law in deciding whether and in what circumstances an employee can complain that his dismissal was unfair? The answer to this question will also determine the question of jurisdiction, since the employment tribunal will have jurisdiction to decide upon the unfairness of the dismissal if (but only if) section 94(1) is the appropriate choice of law.'
'12.1 … The general rule is that it is very unlikely that someone working abroad would be within the scope of section 94(1), even if working for an employer based in the United Kingdom. Something more than that UK connection is necessary. Thus, even though [Mr Dhunna] was technically (for administrative purposes) employed by [CSL], this was not sufficient. He has to be able to show that he was working in Dubai for the purposes of [CSL], in other words as a representative of a business conducted in the UK.
12.2 [Mr Dhunna] contends that the Dubai operation was a representative office of [CSL] and not a branch office conducting business abroad belonging to a British owner. He places substantial reliance on the paperwork generated in setting up the Dubai office. However, I regard this as inconclusive. "Branch" and "Representative Office" are terms used interchangeably. The laws of Dubai meant that there was a significant limitation on what the Dubai office could do and how it could operate. Thus, another office – London for convenience – had to carry out this role. I have to look behind the technical set up of the Dubai office and the reasons for it, to the commercial reality of the situation.
12.3 At the date of his dismissal, [Mr Dhunna] had relinquished all his European accounts (run from London) and was focusing entirely on Middle East, Asia and Africa, as the director of sales for those areas. He was line managed from Delhi, and had close links with that office and the management of employees based there. What is fundamental to this case is that [CSL] was only part of a worldwide business, which was ultimately run and managed by [CS Inc] in New York. The Dubai office and the Delhi office were part of the global operation, and had their own spheres of operation in the Middle East, Africa and Asia. [CSL] in London focused on Europe. [CS Inc] in New York focused on the United States. [Mr Dhunna] was not selling a product of [CSL] as their representative. He was selling a global product for the international business. He did not report to London because he was not within [CSL's] remit. He may have received assistance from specialist staff in London, but so did all sales staff wherever they were based.
12.4 [Mr Dhunna] was on [CSL's] to [sic] payroll only as a matter of administrative convenience, consistent with it being the parent of a branch office. He was paid in US dollars. He was not entitled to be in [CSL's] pension plan or under its health insurance scheme etc. Mr Adamson did not line manage [him], and only signed contractual documentation generated by the office because he was the only convenient authorised signatory. [Mr Dhunna] was in every sense that mattered part of the Asia operation, reporting to Ms Mithal in Delhi, line managing Delhi staff, and any revenue generated by him "counted" as part of the Asian business, not the business of [CSL]. The key Mubadala account – the confidentiality agreement was signed by [CS Inc], and [Mr Dhunna] worked with colleagues in New York to try and finalise he consultancy services contract.
12.5 As Ms Mithal said, the international business of CreditSights defined their business by where of [sic] the sales and clients were located. All revenue ultimately went to New York. Had [Mr Dhunna] not been dismissed he would undoubtedly have moved to Singapore from where a main office for the Asian business was to be established. He had effectively severed his links with the UK. In his own words to a colleague at the start of his period in Dubai, he had no intention of returning to the UK. There was no role for him to return to in any event. The decision to dismiss him was taken by [CS Inc] in New York. Thus, the circle was complete. [CS Inc] had set up the Dubai office, and they decided to close it, and [CS Inc] dismissed [Mr Dhunna]. [CSL] was not involved in these key decisions.
12.6 I therefore conclude that the Dubai office was not a representative office of [CSL's] UK Business …. [Mr Dhunna] was not working as a representative of [CSL] in Dubai. He was part of the Asian business of an international company, based in New York. He does not fall within the first class of ex-patriate employees identified by Lord Hoffmann in Lawson v. Serco. Further, he did not have strong connections with the UK and British employment law, such as would put him into the third, somewhat vaguely defined, category identified by Lord Hoffmann. The reality of the situation was that he had moved from the United Kingdom and severed his links with it. He was only on [CSL's] payroll and received administrative support from it as a matter of convenience. Such could equally well have been provided by New York, and would been provided by Singapore had [Mr Dhunna] moved there. Thus, the Tribunal has no territorial jurisdiction to hear the claims of unfair dismissal and breach of the right to be accompanied to a disciplinary hearing. …'
The decision of the EAT
'It is therefore clear that the right will only exceptionally cover employees who are working or based abroad. The principle appears to be that the employment must have much stronger connections both with Great Britain and with British employment law than with any other system of law. There is no hard or fast rule and it is a mistake to try and to use the circumstances of one employment to make it fit one of the examples given, for they are merely examples of the general principle.'
'(1) the overarching question is whether Parliament intended that … section 94(1) apply to a person in the circumstances of the Claimant;
(2) the general rule is that the place of employment is decisive; but
(3) where the employment has much stronger connections both with Great Britain and with British employment law than with any other system of law the Claimant will be within the scope of section 94(1) if the connection is sufficiently strong;
(4) the comparative exercise is appropriate where the Claimant is employed wholly abroad. As suggested in paragraph 98 of Bates van Winkelhof, the comparison is between Great Britain and the jurisdiction in which the Claimant works;
(5) the country in which the Claimant lives is relevant. If he lives as well as works abroad an especially strong connection with Great Britain and British employment law is required before an exception can be made for him;
(6) when the Claimant lives and/or works for at least part of the time in Great Britain, the comparison of connection with Great Britain and with the country in which he works is not required. All that is required is a sufficiently strong connection to enable it to be said that Parliament would have regarded it appropriate for an ET to deal with the Claimant's unfair dismissal claim.'
'55. Lord Hope in Ravat considered such cases in paragraph 28 of the judgment. Paragraph 29 concerns the case of those who, like Mr Ravat, are not truly expatriates. In paragraph 28 Lord Hope referred to the comparative exercise of whether the connection of the employee with Great Britain was sufficiently strong to overcome the general rule that the place of the employment is decisive. An especially strong connection with Great Britain is required before an exception to the general rule can be made. As Elias LJ held in Bates van Winkelhof paragraph 98, the comparative exercise is appropriate where an employee, such as the Claimant, is employed wholly abroad. He observed that: "Some comparison and evaluation of the connections between the two systems will typically be required to demonstrate why the displacing factors set up a sufficiently strong counter-force".'
'56. … However, the question of the relative strength of connection of an expatriate employee with Great Britain and with the country in which he works and, if the connection with Great Britain is the greater, whether it is sufficient to bring the Claimant within the territorial scope of section 94(1) is one of degree. Whilst respect must be paid to the fact finding Tribunal, in this case the EJ viewed the facts in the light of the guidance in [Lawson]. The guidance has been developed in subsequent authorities. In my judgment it cannot be said with the degree of confidence required to uphold the decision of the EJ, that the outcome would be the same notwithstanding that the test to be applied in determining whether the Claimant is within the territorial scope of section 94(1) requires a different enquiry than that which was undertaken by him. Further findings of fact may be necessary and a different emphasis may be given to the relevant facts.'
The appeal
'36. The circumstances would have to be unusual for an employee who works and is based abroad to come within the scope of British labour legislation. But I think that there are some who do. I hesitate to describe such cases as coming within an exception or exceptions to the general rule because that suggests a definition more precise than can be imposed upon the many possible combinations of factors, some of which may be unforeseen. … I would also not wish to burden tribunals with inquiry into the systems of labour law of other countries. In my view one should go further and try, without drafting a definition, to identify the characteristics which such exceptional cases will ordinarily have.
37. First, I think that it would be very unlikely that someone working abroad would be within the scope of section 94(1) unless he was working for an employer based in Great Britain. But that would not be enough. Many companies based in Great Britain also carry on business in other countries and employment in those businesses will not attract British law merely on account of British ownership. The fact that the employee also happens to be British or even that he was recruited in Britain, so that the relationship was "rooted and forged" in this country, should not in itself be sufficient to take the case out of the general rule that the place of employment is decisive. Something more is necessary.
38. Something more may be provided by the fact that the employee is posted abroad by a British employer for the purposes of a business carried on in Great Britain. He is not working for a business conducted in a foreign country which belongs to British owners or is a branch of a British business, but as a representative of a business conducted at home. I have in mind, for example, a foreign correspondent on the staff of a British newspaper, who is posted to Rome or Peking and may remain for years living in Italy or China but remains nevertheless a permanent employee of the newspaper who could be posted to some other country. He would in my opinion fall within the scope of section 94(1). …
39. Another example is an expatriate employee of a British employer who is operating within what amounts for practical purposes to an extra-territorial British enclave in a foreign country. …
40. I have given two examples of cases in which section 94(1) may apply to an expatriate employee: the employee posted abroad to work for a business conducted in Britain and the employee working in a political or social British enclave abroad. I do not say there may not be others, but I have not been able to think of any and they would have to have equally strong connections with Great Britain and British employment law. …'
'8. It is therefore clear that the right [to claim for unfair dismissal under section 94(1)] will only exceptionally cover employees who are working or based abroad. The principle appears to be that the employment must have much stronger connections both with Great Britain and with British employment law than with any other system of law. There is no hard and fast rule and it is a mistake to try and torture the circumstances of one employment to make it fit one of the examples given, for they are merely examples of the application of the general principle.'
'27. Mr Cavanagh [leading counsel for the appellant employer] drew attention to Lord Hoffmann's comment in [Lawson], para 37, that the fact that the relationship was "rooted and forged" in Great Britain because the employee happened to be British and he was recruited in Great Britain by a British company ought not to be sufficient in itself to take the case out of the general rule. Those factors will never be unimportant, but I agree that the starting point needs to be more precisely identified. It is that the employment relationship must have a stronger connection with Great Britain than with the foreign country where the employee works. The general rule is that the place of employment is decisive. But it is not an absolute rule. The open-ended language of section 94(1) leaves room for some exceptions where the connection with Great Britain is sufficiently strong to show that this can be justified. The case of the peripatetic employee who was based in Great Britain is just one example. The expatriate employee, all of whose services were performed abroad but who had nevertheless very close connections with Great Britain because of the nature and circumstances of employment, is another.
28. The reason why an exception can be made in those cases is that the connection between Great Britain and the employment relationship is sufficiently strong to enable it to be presumed that, although they were working abroad, Parliament must have intended that section 94(1) should apply to them. The expatriate cases that Lord Hoffmann identified as falling within its scope were referred to by him as exceptional cases: para 36. This was because, as he said in para 36, the circumstances would have to be unusual for an employee who works and is based abroad to come within the scope of British labour legislation. It will always be a question of fact and degree as to whether the connection is sufficiently strong to overcome the general rule that the place of the employment is decisive. The case of those who are truly expatriate because they not only work but also live outside Great Britain requires an especially strong connection with Great Britain and British employment law before an exception can be made for them.
29. But it does not follow that the connection that must be shown in the case of those who are not truly expatriate, because they were not both working and living overseas, must achieve the high standard that would enable one to say that their case was exceptional. The question whether, on given facts, a case falls within the scope of section 94(1) is a question of law, but it is also one of degree. The fact that the commuter has his home in Great Britain, with all the consequences that flow from this for the terms and conditions of his employment, makes the burden in his case of showing that there was a sufficient connection less onerous. Mr Cavanagh said that a rigorous standard should be applied, but I would not express the test in those terms. The question of law is whether section 94(1) applies to this particular employment. The question of fact is whether the connection between the circumstances of the employment and Great Britain and with British employment law was sufficiently strong to enable it to be said that it would be appropriate for the employer to have a claim for unfair dismissal in Great Britain.'
'96. The appellants contend that each of the employment tribunal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal erred in their approach to the question of jurisdiction. It is submitted that in the light of Lord Hope DPSC's judgment it was incumbent on the tribunal to carry out a comparative exercise in which the factors which pointed towards a connection with Great Britain were compared with the factors pointing in favour of another jurisdiction, in this case Tanzania. It was only if the former plainly outweighed the latter that the tribunal should exercise jurisdiction.
97. In this case, submits Mr Stafford, the comparison was simply not made and the case should be remitted to the employment tribunal. This is not a case where the answer is so obvious that we would be entitled to reach our own conclusion on the matter one way or the other. There are further findings that the tribunal would have to make before the jurisdiction issue could be properly determined.
98. I do not accept this submission. The comparative exercise will be appropriate where the applicant is employed wholly abroad. There is then a strong connection with that other jurisdiction and Parliament can be assumed to have intended that in the usual case that jurisdiction, rather than Great Britain, should provide the appropriate system of law. In those circumstances it is necessary to identify factors which are sufficiently powerful to displace the territorial pull of the place of work, and some comparison and evaluation of the connections between the two systems will typically be required to demonstrate why the displacing factors set up a sufficiently strong counter-force. However, as para 29 of Lord Hope DPSC's judgment makes plain, that is not necessary where the applicant lives and/or works for at least part of the time in Great Britain, as is the case here. The territorial attraction is then far from being all one way and the circumstances need not be truly exceptional before the connection with the system of law in Great Britain can be identified. All that is required is that the tribunal should satisfy itself that the connection is, to use Lord Hope DPSC's words: "sufficiently strong to enable it to be said that the Parliament would have regarded it as appropriate for the tribunal to deal with the claim."
99. I agree with the claimant that, showing remarkable prescience, this is in essence the question posed by the employment judge here. She asked whether there were "strong connections with Great Britain such that the tribunal has jurisdiction to hear the [complaints]". Even if, contrary to my view, the question was not quite appropriately framed, Judge Peter Clark was plainly entitled to conclude, as did Lord Hope DPSC in the different circumstances in the Ravat case, that had she asked the right question she would necessarily have come to the same conclusion.'
'47. This test is one of sufficiently strong connection. …
51. The starting point which must not be forgotten in applying the substantial connection test is that the statute will have no application to work outside the United Kingdom. Parliament would not have intended that unless there were a sufficiently strong connection. "Sufficiently" has to be understood as sufficient to displace that which would otherwise be the position.'
Discussion and conclusion
Lord Justice Floyd :
Lady Justice Macur :