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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Bateman & Ors v. Asda Stores Ltd [2010] UKEAT 0221_09_1102 (11 February 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0221_09_1102.html Cite as: [2010] IRLR 370, [2010] UKEAT 221_9_1102, [2010] UKEAT 0221_09_1102 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 3 December 2009 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SILBER
DR K MOHANTY JP
MR T MOTTURE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR JOHN HENDY (One of Her Majesty's Counsel) and MR STEPHEN HARDY (of Counsel) Instructed by Messrs Simpsons Solicitors Thorne House, 36 Station Road Cheadle Hulme Cheshire SK8 7AB |
For the Respondent | MR CHRISTOPHER JEANS (One of Her Majesty's Counsel) and MR DANIEL OUDKERK (of Counsel) Instructed by Messrs Pinsent Masons Solicitors City Point One Ropemaker Street London EC2Y 9AH |
SUMMARY
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT: Incorporation into contract
Asda wished to ensure that their entire store staff were employed on the same pay and work structure and this meant that those on the old regime had to transfer to a new regime. Some 9,330 employees agreed, but some did not. So when the new regime was imposed on them, 6 test Claimants brought claims for unauthorised deductions from their wages contrary to section 13 of the Employment Rights Act 1996.
Asda contended before the Employment Tribunal that they were entitled to impose new conditions because the staff handbook stated that Asda "reserved the right to review, revise, amend or replace the contents of this handbook, and introduce new policies from time to time reflecting the changing needs of the business..." The handbook also provided details of pay and other conditions of employment.
The conditions in the staff handbook were incorporated in the Claimants' contracts of employment. The Employment Tribunal held that these conditions permitted Asda to impose the new regime on its employees without obtaining their further consent.
The Claimants appealed contending that Asda could not rely on the conditions in the staff handbook to justify imposing the new regime and they required the consent of all employees.
Held: The appeal is dismissed because:
1. The staff handbook permitted Asda to make the changes to the pay and work regimes without obtaining the further consent of the Claimants (Dicta of Lord Woolf M.R. in Wandsworth London Borough Council v D'Silva [1998] IRLR 193 [31] applied);
2. The wording in the staff handbook was wide enough to permit Asda to change matters set out in it and these included the pay and work structure with the result that Asda were entitled to impose the changes in the Claimants' pay and work provisions without the need to obtain their express consent.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE SILBER
I Introduction
"Issue 1
(1) Was the introduction of "Top Rate" such as to require the consent of the claimants having regard to:
(a) the nature of the change (a change in the classification of pay); and
(b) the Colleague Handbook (which provides that Asda may amend terms)?
Issue 2
(2) If the claimant's consent was needed did the claimants consent (expressly or impliedly)?
Issue 3
(3) If the claimants' consent was not given was the total amount of wages paid to the claimants on occasions to which the claim form relates less than the total amount of wages properly payable to him or her on each such occasion as to amount to an unauthorised deduction from wages?"
II The Colleague Handbook
"Your Contract
[A] The letter you received offering you your job (and any subsequent contract change letters), together with the following sections in this handbook, form your main terms and conditions of employment:
- Changes to the Colleague Handbook
- Probationary Period
- References
- My Pay
- Sick Pay
- My hours of work
- Breaks
- Customary Holidays
- Holidays
- Notice Periods
- Other employment
[B] They also constitute your statement of employment particulars which you are entitled to under the Employment Rights Act 1996. The handbook also contains lots of information about Asda policies which do not form part of your terms and conditions of employment.
Changes to the Colleague Handbook
[C] The Company reserves the right to review, revise, amend or replace the content of this handbook, and introduce new policies from time to time to reflect the changing needs of the business and to comply with new legislation. A copy of the handbook is displayed on the colleague communication board in your store and on Pipeline, and replacement copies are available from your People Manager.
[D] You should keep yourself up to date with any changes, by attending meetings, huddles [informal team meetings] and by keeping an eye on the colleague communication board for any updates…"
III The Approach of the Employment Tribunal
(a) The power to vary, on its proper construction, is limited to non-contractual policies.
(b) Any proposed variation as to pay will still require consent.
(c) On the facts, the Respondent did not in fact do what is covered by the variation clause.
(d) The fact that the Respondent never expressly acted in accordance with the variation clause supports the Claimants' interpretation of its meaning and that it did not extend to changing contractual terms, or these particular contractual terms
"The general position is that contracts of employment can only be varied by agreement. However, in the employment field an employer or for that matter an employee can reserve the ability to change a particular aspect of the contract unilaterally by notifying the other party as part of the contract that this is the situation. However, clear language is required to reserve to one party an unusual power of this sort. In addition, the court is unlikely to favour an interpretation which does more than enable a party to vary contractual provisions with which that party is required to comply. If, therefore the provisions of the code which the council were seeking to amend in this case were of a contractual nature, then they could well be capable of unilateral variation as the counsel contends. In relation to the provisions as to appeals the position would be likely to be different. To apply a power of unilateral variation to the rights which an employee is given under this part of the code could produce an unreasonable result and the courts in construing a contract of employment will seek to avoid such a result."
"a variation clause which purports to give a power to amend the contents of a staff handbook which encompasses contractual matters is apt to be contractual"(paragraph 70).
(a) paragraph C of the Colleague Handbook confers the right first to review revise, amend or replace the content of the Colleague Handbook and second the right to introduce new policies [paragraphs 74 and 75];
(b) this could be done again in the words of paragraph C of the Colleague Handbook "to reflect the changing needs of the business and to comply with new legislation";
(c) the Colleague Handbook specifically identifies the sections of it which are contractual which include pay and holidays and the variation clause set out in paragraph C of the Colleague Handbook;
(d) there was an amendment of "the content" of the Colleague Handbook when Asda sought to change the old regime to the new regime and such changes fell within the terms of the Colleague Handbook, which permitted unilateral change by Asda; and that
(e) "[Asda] acted in this case in pursuance of a clear and unambiguous power to vary contractual terms. The Tribunal has considered carefully how the clause should be interpreted, in view of its wide-ranging effect, but it is entirely unambiguous. However unusual and broad this power was, and however unfettered, the Tribunal has no doubt that it permitted the respondent as a matter of contract to do what it did. The power could only be exercised to reflect the changing needs of the business (the second circumstance in the clause, changes in legislation, does not arise in this case). The Tribunal described [Asda]'s reasons for which to have [the new regime] as the only pay structure, and to force the change in August 2007, at paragraphs 32 and 38 above, and the Tribunal has no hesitation in concluding that these reasons fell within the words "the changing needs of the business". Finally, as the Tribunal has said, there is no contention that [Asda] acted capriciously, or arbitrarily, or in any way which breached mutual trust and confidence, in imposing [the new regime] in August 2007."(paragraph 82).
IV The Grounds of Appeal
(a) Failed to take account of the recognised principles of construction which required the Employment Tribunal to take account of the background of the employees of Asda affected by the change to the new regime ("The Relevant Background Issue");
(b) Did not appreciate that Asda's duty to maintain trust and confidence required them to have brought home to [the Claimants] what [the contractual provisions] meant ("The Trust and Confidence Issue");
(c) was perverse in reaching the conclusions which it did that on the true construction of the relevant provisions in the Colleague Handbook, Asda was entitled to impose the new regime on the Claimants without obtaining their further consent as the Colleague Handbook did not authorise the introduction of the new regime without obtaining the express consent of the employees concerned. That was because the terms of the Colleague Handbook on their proper construction did not permit Asda to incorporate the new regime into its employees' contacts of employment without first obtaining their express consent and Asda could not merely rely on the terms of the Colleague Handbook ("the Construction Issue"); and that it
(d) should have construed the words contra proferentem. He contends that if the Employment Tribunal had applied the principles it would have found in the Claimants' favour (The Contra Proferentem Issue").
V The Relevant Background Issue
"(1) Interpretation is the ascertainment of the meaning which the document would convey to a reasonable person having all the background knowledge which would reasonably have been available to the parties in the situation in which they were at the time of the contract. …
(4) The meaning which a document (or any other utterance) would convey to a reasonable man is not the same thing as the meaning of its words. The meaning of words is a matter of dictionaries and grammars; the meaning of the document is what the parties using those words against the relevant background would reasonably have been understood to mean. The background may not merely enable the reasonable man to choose between the possible meanings of words which are ambiguous but even (as occasionally happens in ordinary life) to conclude that the parties must, for whatever reason, have used the wrong words or syntax. (see Mannai Investments Co. Ltd. v Eagle Star Life Assurance Co. Ltd. http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1997/19.html[1997] 2 WLR 945."
"52. …the court or tribunal must consider whether or not the words of the written contract represent the true intentions or expectations of the parties (and therefore their implied agreement and contractual obligations), not only at the inception of the contract but at any later stage where the evidence shows that the parties have expressly or impliedly varied the agreement between them
53. In my judgment the true position, consistent with Tanton, Kalwak and Szilagyi, is that where there is a dispute as to the genuineness of a written term in a contract, the focus of the enquiry must be to discover the actual legal obligations of the parties. To carry out that exercise, the tribunal will have to examine all the relevant evidence. That will, of course, include the written term itself, read in the context of the whole agreement. It will also include evidence of how the parties conducted themselves in practice and what their expectations of each other were…"
"not one of the 150,000 employees who entered a contract on the basis of it, could conceivably have intended or expected its effect would be to leave to the unilateral discretion of the respondent the right to reduce the pay increase or change the hours of work and cut holidays without the need for consent and without the need for notice."
VI The Trust and Confidence Issue
VII The Construction Issue
(a) any variation would require further consent but that ignores the wording in paragraph C under which Asda "reserves the right to review, revise, amend or replace". These words show clearly that Asda was entitled to unilaterally change the content of the handbook;
(b) the power to vary conferred on Asda was limited to "non-contractual policies" but that submission was correctly rejected by the Employment Tribunal because the power conferred in paragraph C which was "the right to review, revise, amend or replace" was not limited to policies but was indeed extended to "the contents of this handbook". Such contents included contractual matters such as "my pay" "sick pay" and "my hours of work" which are changed in the new regime; and that
(c) as set out in their skeleton argument, "the meaning ascribed to the relevant words by the Tribunal would have rendered the contract void for uncertainty". We cannot understand this submission because the right of Asda to vary the conditions of their employees relating to the matters set out in paragraph A of the Colleague Handbook without obtaining their further consent has been clearly established. There is no uncertainty about this.
VIII The Contra Proferentem Issue
IX Conclusions