BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> During v Waltham Forest Energy Services Ltd [1999] UKEAT 1145_98_0610 (6 October 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/1145_98_0610.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 1145_98_0610, [1999] UKEAT 1145_98_610 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J HICKS QC
LORD DAVIES OF COITY CBE
MR J C SHRIGLEY
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR RUSTOM TATA (Solicitor) Messrs Donne Mileham & Haddock Solicitors 100 Queen's Road Brighton East Sussex BN1 3HB |
For the Respondents | MR ALEX LOCK (of Counsel) SBJ Employment & Safety Services Ltd 3rd Floor 4 Copthall House Station Square Coventry CV1 2FL |
JUDGE HICKS QC:
"Section 94 does not apply to the dismissal of an employee if on or before the effective date of termination he has attained:
(a) in a case where-
(i) in the undertaking in which the employee was employed there was a normal retiring age for an employee holding the position held by the employee, and
(ii) the age was the same whether the employee holding that position was a man or a woman,
that normal retiring age, and
(b) in any other case, the age of sixty-five."
The employers took the view that this was a case within s.109(1)(a), namely that there was a normal retiring age for an employee holding Mr During's position. It was 60. He had attained it and therefore unfair dismissal section did not apply.
"My statement of terms and conditions given when my employment commenced states that my contractual retirement age is 65."
He then goes on to deal with what happened later but resumes, for present purposes, with this sentence:
"As my contractual retirement age remained 65 my employer cannot operate their new normal retirement age which is in breach of my contract of employment."
He then refers to a case decided in this Appeal Tribunal - Bratko v Beloit Walmsley Ltd [1996] ICR 76. It is quite apparent, therefore, that his Originating Application turned crucially on his allegation that he had a contractual retirement age of 65 and that on familiar authorities there would be a presumption that that was also his normal retirement age, but it is equally clear - and this is the important point in addressing Mr Tata's argument - it is equally clear that he accepted that but for that contractual provision the new normal retirement age, which it was common ground was 60, would have applied.
"When the Applicant was engaged by the Respondent in 1992, at the age of 55 years, he considered that he was placed under a contract which had a retirement age of 65 … Notwithstanding discussions regarding growing numbers of staff joining the Company, which created a retirement age of 60 years, the Applicant did not consider that the terms of this original contract were being varied as to the retirement age. … The Applicant's contractual retirement age was 65 years and whatever the Company's retirement age for new employees had become, there had been no agreement with the Applicant to vary his contract relative to retirement."
So the situation facing the tribunal was that although no doubt, in terms of an academic exposition of the law, it would have been more elegant to have set out the terms of s.109 and spell out how that related to the points before them, in truth and in substance everybody knew that the only real issue on which the applicant could succeed was to show that he had a contract containing a term for retirement at 65 years and, having concluded that issue against him; the tribunal, naturally and without, in our view, any error of law, simply fell back on what was absolutely common ground between the parties, that the normal retirement age for persons in the position held by him was 60 and that that was therefore his normal retirement age.
"finds the Applicant normal retirement age was 60 as there were many documents in support of that , such as the pension documents;"
For the reasons we have given the words "as there were many documents in support of that, such as the pension document" were truly surplusage because there was no real dispute that the normal retirement age, but for the contract point, was 60. But Mr Tata says on the authority of the same Bratko case that pension documents cannot be conclusive as to normal retirement age, because pensionable age and normal retirement age are in principle separable matters.