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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Nosworthy v Instinctif Partners Ltd [2019] UKEAT 0100_18_2802 (28 February 2019)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2019/0100_18_2802.html
Cite as: [2019] UKEAT 100_18_2802, [2019] UKEAT 0100_18_2802

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BAILII case number: [2019] UKEAT 0100_18_2802
Appeal No. UKEAT/0100/18

EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
             At the Tribunal
             On 4 October 2018
             Judgment delivered on 28 February 2019

Before

THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE SLADE DBE

MR M SMITH OBE DL

MR M WORTHINGTON



MISS E NOSWORTHY APPELLANT

INSTINCTIF PARTNERS LTD RESPONDENT


© Copyright 2019


    APPEARANCES

     

    For the Appellant MISS ELOISE NOSWORTHY
    (The Appellant in Person)
    assisted by
    MR MICHAEL NOSWORTHY
    (The Appellant's Father)
    For the Respondent MR LANCE HARRIS
    (of Counsel)
    Instructed by:
    Messrs Osborne Clarke Solicitors
    One London Wall
    London
    EC2Y 5EB


     

    SUMMARY

    UNLAWFUL DEDUCTION FROM WAGES

    CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT - Implied term/variation/construction of term

    The Claimant was given a small shareholding in her employer as a condition of its sale to the Respondent and sold the shares to them under a Share Purchase Agreement. Part of the consideration for the shares were deferred earn-out shares and loan notes. By reason of that agreement, other agreements and the Articles of Association a Bad Leaver forfeited their loan notes and their shares were re-acquired. An employee who voluntarily resigned was defined in the relevant documentation as a Bad Leaver. The Claimant resigned and was treated as a Bad Leaver. The Employment Tribunal did not err in holding that the Bad Leaver provisions were not unconscionable or a penalty. The criteria for setting aside an agreement as unconscionable explained in Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (GB) Ltd [1983] 1 WLR 87 and Brian Strydom v Vendside Ltd [2009] EWHC 2130 were not satisfied. The ET did not err in holding that the Bad Leaver provisions were not a penalty as they were not imposed on breach of contract by the Claimant. Cavendish Square Holdings BV v Makdessi [2016] AC 1172 considered. The ET did not err in holding that the Bad Leaver provisions were not a deduction from wages within the meaning of the Employment Rights Act 1996 as the claim was excluded by section 27(2)(e). The Claimant was not permitted to pursue an argument that the Bad Leaver provisions were a restraint of trade. This point had not been taken in the ET and it would have required additional findings of fact. The Blackpool Fylde and Wyre Society for the Blind v Begg UKEAT/0035/05 and Rance v Secretary of State for Health [2007] IRLR 665 applied.


     

    THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE SLADE DBE

  1. Miss Eloise Nosworthy (the Claimant) appeals from the decision of an Employment Tribunal (Employment Judge Glennie and members, Mrs J Griffiths and Mr J Carroll) ("the ET"). By a Judgment with Reasons sent to the parties on 6 July 2017 ("the Judgment") amongst other orders the ET upheld her complaint of breach of contract but decided no remedy was due and dismissed her complaint of unlawful deduction from wages. The Claimant appeals from the decision to make no award for breach of contract and from the dismissal of her claim for deduction from wages.
  2. The appeal by the Claimant, who has acted in person assisted by her father as she was before the ET, has been advanced both in writing and orally clearly and thoughtfully displaying careful and thorough research. Mr Lance Harris, counsel for the Respondent who appeared at the ET, also presented helpful submissions.
  3. The contract and deduction from wages claims in respect of which the Claimant appeals turned on the effect of documents entered into in July 2013 by the Claimant when the company she originally joined, Communication Operations Limited ("COL"), was sold to the Respondent, then named College Hill Holdings Limited.
  4. In 2008 Mr Macfarlane set up COL to produce films for corporate communication and marketing purposes. COL had about three employees when the Claimant joined the company on 7 September 2011 as a Business Development Associate.
  5. The ET held that in connection with its acquisition by the Respondent, the Claimant was issued with 2% of the share capital of COL. The ET recorded at paragraph 15 that Mr Macfarlane gave evidence that he had been required by the Respondent to do so. He said "Instictif made it a term of the deal that I give equity to other people in the business to ensure continuity post acquisition". He also gave Mr Ryan, another employee, 8% of the shares retaining 90% for himself. The percentages given to the Claimant and Mr Ryan reflected "their relative value to the business and the impact their departure would have".
  6. The Claimant's relationship with the Respondent was governed by a number of documents she signed on 25 July 2013.
  7. On 25 July 2013 the Claimant entered into a contract of employment with COL. Her salary was stated to be £25,000. The Contract of Employment provided for no other benefits and contained no post termination restraints on her occupation. It was stated that the Claimant's continuous employment with COL had commenced on 7 September 2011.
  8. By a Deed made on 26 July 2013 between vendors of shares in COL, including the Claimant and College Hill Limited which changed its name to Instinctif Partners Ltd, the Respondent, the vendors agreed to sell their shares on the terms there set out ("the Share Purchase Agreement"). The consideration agreed to be paid to the vendors was made up of the Initial Consideration and Deferred Consideration. It is the Deferred Consideration which is the subject of the Claimant's claims.
  9. The Deferred Consideration was set out in Clause 4.1 which provided:
  10. "4.1. Subject to clause 4.5, each Earn-out Payment shall consist of:
    (a) subject to clause 4.4, Earn-out Shares and Earn-out Loan Notes to be issued, if any, pursuant to sub clause 4.2 and 4.3; and/or
    (b) Earn-out Cash Payments, if any, as become payable in accordance with sub clause 4.2, 4.3 and 4.4.
    4.5. Each Earn-out Payment shall be subject to the following conditions:
    (c) if any Vendor is a Bad Leaver, such Bad Leaver shall not be entitled to receive any Earn-out Payments that are or that become payable after the date of termination of such Bad Leaver's employment."

  11. "Good Leaver" is defined in the Share Purchase Agreement to include a Vendor:
  12. "… [who] (f) is dismissed other than summarily for cause."

    "Bad Leaver" is defined in the Share Purchase Agreement to include a Vendor:

    "… who leaves the employment of the Company or any member of the Purchaser's Group in circumstances where he or she is not a Good Leaver, including in circumstances where the relevant Vendor:
    (a) voluntarily resigns his or her employment or engagement (whether or not in accordance with his or her service or employment contract); or
    (b) has (or, if his or her employment is terminated on other grounds, could have had) his or her employment terminated by the Company or any Purchaser Group Company summarily for cause (including, but not limited to, gross misconduct or any material breach of any shareholder arrangements including any articles of association, shareholders' or investment agreement and/or his or her service contract) and where such breach has not been (or cannot be) remedied."

  13. Clause 19 under the heading "Protection of Goodwill" sets out restrictive undertakings given by the Warrantor, Mr Macfarlane. These include his agreement that he would not during the restricted period, two years from completion, endeavour to entice away from any Group Company any Senior Employee. Senior Employee is defined as each of the Vendors. Further, he undertook that during that period he would not employ or otherwise engage any Senior Employee. By 19.3, each of the Vendors, which included the Claimant, severally agreed that having regard to matters set out and having taken professional advice the restrictions in Clause 19 were reasonable and necessary for the protection of the legitimate business interests of the Purchaser.
  14. By a deed of adherence entered into on 26 July 2013 between the Claimant and College Group Topco Ltd ("the Deed of Adherence") the Claimant undertook to the "continuing parties" to "comply with the provisions of, and to perform all the obligations in, the Principal Agreement of a Manager so far as they may remain to be observed and performed and, upon the issue of Relevant Shares to the Acquiror, the Acquiror shall become a party to the Principal Agreement as if the Acquiror were named in the Principal Agreement as a Manager holding the Relevant Shares in addition to the Existing Investors". Relevant shares are defined as shares and loan notes issued to the Claimant under the Share Purchase Agreement. The Principal Agreement is defined as the Investment Agreement dated 6 October 2011 between College Group Topco Ltd and others as amended from time to time.
  15. The Principal Agreement provided that "Bad Leaver" has the meaning given in the Articles of Association:
  16. "7.23. Each Manager holding Management Loan Notes severally covenants that he shall not become a Bad Leaver. If any Manager breaches this covenant, the Company is entitled to claim from such Manager an amount (if any) equal to the aggregate amount which is payable to that Manager in respect of the Loan Notes held by him at the time at which such Loan Notes are redeemed and such claim shall be satisfied by the Buyer setting off an amount equal to such sum from the total amount (if any) payable to such Manager under such Loan Notes.
    8.1. Subject to Clause 13, each Party agrees to observe and comply fully and promptly with the provisions of the Articles to the intent and effect that each and every provision thereof shall be enforceable by the Parties to this Agreement between themselves and in whatever capacity notwithstanding that any such provision might not have been so enforceable in the absence of this Clause 8."

  17. The Articles of Association of the Respondent included the following provisions. Article 15 applies to a Leaver in relation to any Leaver's Shares and Loan Notes:
  18. "15.2.2. a "Leaver" shall mean:
    (a) any Shareholder who ceases to be a Relevant Employee …"

    A "Relevant Employee" is an employee of any Group Company.

    Article 15.3 provides that a leaver is required to transfer Leaver Shares and Loan Notes ("Leaver's Securities") at a price in accordance with the Articles in the section titled "Price for Leaver's Securities":

    "15.6. Subject to Article 15.8 … the price ultimately payable for Leaver Shares shall be:
    15.6.2. in the case of a Bad Leaver the lower of Acquisition Cost and Fair Value for the Leaver Shares.
    15.7. Subject to Article 15.8, any Leaver holding Loan Notes:
    15.7.2. in the case of a Bad Leaver, shall forfeit such Loan Notes in whatever way the Remuneration Committee may determine (acting reasonably and in good faith and with a view to tax efficiency), including for example exercising its rights pursuant to clause 7.23 of the Investment Agreement …
    15.9. For the purposes of this Article 15, the classification of a Good Leaver or a Bad Leaver status shall be determined by the Remuneration Committee based on the following criteria:
    15.9.1. a Leaver shall be deemed to be a "Good Leaver" in circumstances where the relevant person:
    (f) is dismissed other than summarily for cause;
    15.9.2. a Leaver shall be deemed to be a "Bad Leaver" if he is not a Good Leaver, including in circumstances when the relevant person:
    (a) voluntarily resigns his employment or engagement (whether or not in accordance with his service/employment contract); …
    15.9.3. the "Vested" and "Non-Vested" Share entitlements referred to in Article 15.6 are shall be calculated in accordance with [a table set out in 15.9.3]."

  19. The Articles of Association of the Respondent Article 13 provides that unless the context requires otherwise any provision in the Articles requiring a transfer of Shares by a Manager shall be deemed to include a reference to require a transfer of, as closely as possible, a similar proportion of Loan Notes to the Shares so transferred.
  20. On 1 January 2014 the Claimant's salary was increased to £34,000 and on 1 November 2014 her job title was changed to Associate Partner. Another senior person was brought into the business at a much higher salary. The Claimant's salary was increased to £40,000 in April 2015.
  21. The Claimant resigned with notice given on 3 May 2016 which terminated her employment on 2 August 2016. The third earn-out period for the Deferred Consideration expired on 31 December 2015.
  22. By letter of 17 August 2016 the Claimant was required to transfer her shares to the Respondent. Relying on the Articles of Association the Respondent treated the Claimant as a Bad Leaver. The Claimant was informed that in accordance with Article 15.6.2 she would receive the lower of the acquisition cost and the fair value of the shares determined by the Remuneration Committee. The Remuneration Committee decided that she would receive the acquisition cost of £1 per share and therefore £143. Further, by reason of Article 15.7.2, the Claimant as a Bad Leaver forfeited her Loan Notes.
  23. The Judgment of the ET

  24. The ET held at the second paragraph numbered paragraph 72 that in accordance with the Articles of Association the Respondent was entitled to treat the Claimant as a Bad Leaver as she had resigned. Accordingly the Claimant was required to transfer her shares back to the Respondent. The price for a Bad Leaver's shares was to be determined in accordance with Article 15.6 of the Articles of Association. That was the lower of the acquisition cost and fair value for the leaver's shares. The ET found at paragraph 77 that the acquisition cost of the shares was nil.
  25. The ET did not make a finding in respect of the forfeiture of the loan notes.
  26. The ET considered three challenges to the Bad Leaver provisions made by Mr Nosworthy. They rejected the argument that the provisions under which the Claimant was to receive nothing for her shares was unconscionable. They held that this was not a situation in which the parties were making a bargain. They observed "The Claimant was not buying the shares, she was being given them. She did not negotiate a purchase of the shares". The ET further held that the remedy sought relying on the unconscionability of a bargain was to set it aside. In this case the ET considered that this would result in the Claimant not having the shares at all.
  27. As for the second challenge to the Bad Leaver provisions, the ET rejected the contention that they amounted to a penalty and should be held to be unenforceable. The ET accepted the submission of Mr Harris for the Respondent that a penalty is a sum to be paid on breach of contract. The Claimant was not in breach of contract in resigning from her employment. They also rejected that argument advanced by Mr Nosworthy that in respect of loan notes the Claimant was in breach of Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement. Under that provision each manager holding loan notes covenants that he shall not become a Bad Leaver and that in the event of breach of that covenant the company was entitled to claim compensation. The ET accepted the contention of Mr Harris that as the Respondent was not seeking to rely on that covenant the question of penalty did not arise.
  28. The ET rejected the third point made on behalf of the Claimant by Mr Nosworthy that the contract was illegal in that it involved a contravention of the Modern Slavery Act 2015 because the covenant at Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement constituted forced or compulsory labour. The ET said at paragraph 83 that the Claimant took up employment as a volunteer and when she was no longer wishing to continue working for the Respondent she resigned. The ET commented that reasons that may have operated on her mind that could have discouraged an earlier resignation would be applicable to any employment and any employee who was considering resigning. One of those factors that might encourage them not to resign would be the loss of salary and benefits.
  29. The ET therefore rejected the challenges to the Bad Leaver provisions.
  30. At paragraph 87 the ET found that the Respondent was not in breach of the Articles of Association and therefore was not in breach of contract for failure to pay remuneration. The Respondent could have paid nothing as the shares did not cost anything to acquire. The ET went on to comment that if there had been technically a breach of contract then they would find there would be no remedy as the contract could have been performed by paying no compensation.
  31. An element of deferred consideration under the Share Purchase Agreement was staged cash payments. The Respondent admitted that they had not paid the third tranche of such payment payable at the end of July 2016. £230 was due and had not been paid at the correct time.
  32. The ET therefore held that the complaint of breach of contract was well-founded but that no remedy was applicable as £379 had been paid to the Claimant by the time of the hearing.
  33. The Relevant Statutory Provisions

    Employment Rights Act 1996 ("ERA")

    Section 13

    (1) An employer shall not make a deduction from the wages of a worker employed by him unless -
    (a) the deduction is required or authorised to be made by virtue of a statutory provision or a relevant provision of the worker's contract, …
    (2) In this section "relevant provision", in relation to a worker's contract, means a provision of the contract comprised -
    (a) in one or more written terms of the contract of which the employer has given the worker a copy on an occasion prior to the employer making the deduction in question, …

    Section 14

    (4) Section 13 does not apply to a deduction from a worker's wages made by his employer in pursuance of any arrangements which have been established -
    (a) in accordance with a relevant provision of his contract to the inclusion of which in the contract the worker has signified his agreement or consent in writing, …

    Section 27

    (1) In this Part "wages", in relation to a worker, means any sums payable to the worker in connection with his employment, including -
    (a) any fee, bonus, commission, holiday pay or other emolument referable to his employment, whether payable under his contract [of employment] or otherwise, …

    Employment Tribunals Extension of Jurisdiction (England and Wales) Order 1994

    Article 3

    Proceedings may be brought before an employment tribunal in respect of a claim of an employee for the recovery of damages or any other sum … if -
    (a) the claim is one to which section 3(2) of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 applies …
    (b) the claim is not one to which article 5 applies; …

    Article 5

    This article applies to a claim for a breach of a contractual term of any of the following descriptions -
    (e) a term which is a covenant in restraint of trade.

    The Grounds of Appeal

    Ground 1

  34. The Claimant contended that the ET erred in rejecting the contention that the bargain determining the leaver provisions applicable to the Claimant's shares and loan notes pursuant to which she received no benefit was unconscionable and should be set aside.
  35. It was contended that the ET erred in holding at paragraph 78 that the question of unconscionability did not arise because this was not a situation where the parties were making a bargain. As the Claimant was not buying the shares, she was being given them.
  36. The Claimant contended that the ET erred in holding that if the parties were put in the position they would have been had the bargain not been made, she would not have been given the shares at all.
  37. It was submitted that the Claimant gave valuable consideration for her 2% share in COL as it was a condition of the sale of that company to the Respondent that she and the other employees have equity in the business. Further it was said that in providing her services for three years post acquisition to ensure continuity the Claimant provided consideration to the Respondent. It was contended that the Share Purchase Agreement provided that Managers as employees receive shares and loan notes for performing their duties. Further it was said that the provisions of the Share Purchase Agreement linked the grant of shares to remaining employed by the Respondent until 31 December 2015.
  38. The basis for the contention that setting aside the Bad Leaver provisions as unconscionable would not affect entitlement to the shares and loan notes was that the leaver provisions sought to be set aside and the Share Purchase Agreement under which the shares and loan notes were awarded were contained in two separate agreements. Setting aside the agreement which contained the leaver provisions said to be unconscionable would not affect the Share Purchase Agreement under which the shares and loan notes were claimed.
  39. The Claimant with the assistance of Mr Nosworthy developed a legally sophisticated argument on unconscionability. They cited Lloyds Bank Ltd v Bundy [1974] EWCA Civ 8 in which it was held that:
  40. "… English law gives relief to one who, without independent legal advice, enters into a contract or transfers property for a consideration which is grossly inadequate, when his bargaining power is grievously impaired by reason of his own needs or desires, or by his own ignorance or infirmity, coupled with undue influences or pressures brought to bear on him for the benefit of the other."

    Reference was also made on behalf of the Claimant to Alec Lobb (Garages) Ltd v Total Oil (GB) Ltd [1983] 1 WLR 87, referred to in Brian Strydom, in which it was held that unconscionability involves a process whereby:

    "… one party has been at a serious disadvantage to the other, whether through poverty, or ignorance, or lack of advice, or otherwise, so that circumstances existed of which unfair advantage could be taken … secondly, this weakness of the one party has been exploited by the other in some morally culpable manner … and thirdly, the resulting transaction has been, not merely hard or improvident, but overreaching and oppressive. …"

  41. It was submitted that the ET should have considered whether the Claimant had been treated fairly. If they had done so they would have concluded that it was unfair to deprive an employee who gave notice to terminate employment of shares and loan notes whereas an employee whose contract was terminated by the Respondent, including for their breach of contract, would retain theirs.
  42. The Claimant contended that in accordance with the judgment in Yam Seng PTE Ltd v International Trade Corporation Ltd [2013] EWHC 111 (QB) the contracts entered into by the Claimant with the Respondent were "relational". They involve expectations of loyalty which are not legislated for in the express terms of the contract. In her skeleton argument the Claimant contended that the Respondent was not dealing fairly and used undue influence over her as an employee to impose the Leaver Provisions which arose from an inequality of bargaining power.
  43. Mr Harris contended that the ET has no jurisdiction to consider the contract or deduction of wages claims. The breach of contract and deduction from wages claims were based on a contention that the leaver provisions in the Articles of Association were unconscionable and therefore inapplicable. Mr Harris submitted that although connected to her employment with the Respondent the payments sought under the breach of contract claim relate to the Claimant's capacity as a shareholder and not as a worker.
  44. Counsel submitted that the ET had no jurisdiction to set aside or rewrite a transaction. It was said that this is what the Claimant was seeking. The deferred consideration under which the entitlement arose was a benefit arising on sale of shares not as a worker. The Share Purchase Agreement as well as the Principal Agreement to which the Claimant adhered by a Deed of Adherence on 26 July 2013 contained a definition of "Bad Leaver" which included a Vendor who voluntarily resigns. The Claimant fell within this definition. The Claimant held her shares and loan notes on the terms of the Principal Agreement and the Articles of Association. It was said that the Claimant was asking the ET to rewrite the contract and that it had no jurisdiction to do so.
  45. Moreover it was submitted that, as the ET found in paragraph 78, the remedy which the Claimant sought would result in the setting aside of the entire deferred consideration provision. The Extension of Jurisdiction provisions gave no power to ETs to make such an order. Nor did a claim to set aside a contractual provision fall within a claim under ERA section 13.
  46. Even if the ET had jurisdiction to entertain the Claimant's claims, Mr Harris submitted that the Bad Leaver provisions were not unconscionable. The Claimant had not been compelled to accept the gift of the 2% shareholding, the sale of which included the deferred consideration provisions. Those provisions included a cash consideration which was paid. Mr Harris referred to the judgment of Mr Justice Blair in Brian Strydom v Vendside Ltd [2009] EWHC 2130. Mr Justice Blair held at paragraph 36 that three elements have to be satisfied before the burden passes to the other party to show that the transaction was fair, just and reasonable. Mr Harris contended that none of these elements was present in the case of the Claimant let alone all three as required.
  47. Mr Harris commented that it would have been better if the ET had referred to the Contract of Employment. Further counsel recognised that the ET did not expressly deal with the loan notes. However as the forfeiture of the loan notes arose from the same contractual Bad Leaver provisions as applied to the shares it was submitted that this omission made no difference to the outcome.
  48. Discussion - Ground 1

  49. The Claimant entered into a contract of employment with the Respondent on 25 July 2013. The ET did not find nor is it suggested by the Claimant that that employment was conditional in entering into the Share Purchase Agreement and Deed of Adherence. The contract of employment included no requirement to sell her 2% shareholding in COL to the Respondent.
  50. The Share Purchase Agreement executed as a Deed included the terms upon which the earn-out shares and loan notes become payable. By the date of giving notice the third tranche of earn-out shares and loan notes had become payable. The Bad Leaver provision in the Share Purchase Agreement was not relied upon by the Respondent. It did not apply as the deferred consideration became payable before the Claimant gave notice of termination of her employment.
  51. It was a condition of the issue to her of the shares and loan notes, the subject of the Share Purchase Agreement, that the Claimant enter into the Deed of Adherence. The Claimant did so on 26 July 2013. In our judgment, therefore, the shares and loan notes in the numbers and at the times provided in the Share Purchase Agreement were issued and held on the terms agreed between the parties, the Principal Agreement.
  52. In our judgment, therefore, the terms under which the Claimant held the shares and loan notes and what would happen to them on her terminating her employment were those set out in the Principal Agreement. The Claimant was a "Bad Leaver" as defined in the Principal Agreement. Clause 8.1 of the Principal Agreement provided that the parties, which by the Deed of Adherence included the Claimant, agreed to comply fully with the Articles of Association. The Respondent dealt with the Claimant's shares and loan notes in accordance with the Articles of Association.
  53. Accordingly in our judgment the ET did not err in failing to hold that the Leaver Provisions contained in the Principal Agreement formed a separate bargain and did not apply to the deferred consideration provisions in the Share Purchase Agreement.
  54. Further in our judgment the Bad Leaver provisions in the Share Purchase Agreement and in the Principal Agreement are not in conflict. The Bad Leaver provisions in the Share Purchase Agreement provide that no earn-out benefits become payable after the termination of a Bad Leaver's employment. The shares and loan notes already payable are held on the terms of the Principal Agreement and Articles of Association which determine in the case of the shares their value on compulsory transfer, and in the case of loan notes, their forfeiture.
  55. We agree with Mr Nosworthy that the Shares and Loan Notes were not a gift. They were deferred consideration for the purchase of the Claimant's 2% shareholding in COL. However the consideration provided by the Claimant was the transfer of her 2% shareholding, not as suggested by Mr Nosworthy, the provision of non-monetary consideration, her work. The consideration for the Claimant's services was that provided in her contract of employment. The Share Purchase Agreement as supplemented by the Principal Agreement formed a separate bargain governing the transfer and holding of shares and loan notes.
  56. The Claimant with the help of her father, Mr Nosworthy contended that the Bad Leaver provisions in the Principal Agreement and the Articles of Association should be set aside as unconscionable.
  57. As has been established in Alec Lobb, more recently relied upon by Mr Justice Blair in Brian Strydom in paragraph 36:
  58. "… before the court will consider setting a contract aside as an unconscionable bargain, one party has to have been disadvantaged in some relevant way as regards the other party, that other party must have exploited that disadvantage in some morally culpable manner, and the resulting transaction must be overreaching and oppressive. No single one of these factors is sufficient - all three elements must be proved, otherwise the enforceability of contracts is undermined (see the reasoning in Goff & Jones, The Law of Restitution, 7th edn, para 12-006). Where all these requirements are met, the burden then passes to the other party to satisfy the court that the transaction was fair, just and reasonable (Snell's Equity, 31st edn, para 8-47)."

    The court in Alec Lobb gave examples of the first element: serious disadvantage whether through poverty, or ignorance or lack of advice or otherwise leaving the individual vulnerable to unfair disadvantage. There is no suggestion in the findings of fact that any of these elements was present in this case. There was no evidence that the Claimant did not have access to legal advice. There is no suggestion that the Claimant did not or could not have taken advice before entering into the various agreements she entered into in July 2013. Indeed by Clause 19.3 of the Share Purchase Agreement the Claimant and the other vendors warranted that they had taken professional advice and agreed that the restrictions in Clause 19 were reasonable.

  59. Whether or not the ET were right to hold that if the bargain under which the "Bad Leaver" provisions were relied upon by the Respondent was unconscionable the entire Share Purchase Agreement would be set aside, in our judgment the contention advanced on behalf of the Claimant does not surmount even the first of the three hurdles in Brian Strydom. Mr Harris rightly relied upon Alec Lobb and Brian Strydom. The findings of the ET would not support a finding that the agreement between the parties dealing with shares and loan notes in the event that the Claimant was a Bad Leaver was unconscionable.
  60. Mr Harris contended that the Claimant's claim did not fall within the jurisdiction of the ET under the Extension of Jurisdiction Order as the remedy sought was a setting aside of a contractual provision rather than for a certain sum or for damages for breach of a contract connected with employment. As acknowledged in his skeleton argument the claim for the value of shares and loan notes under the Share Purchase Agreement is under a "contract connected with employment" within the meaning of Article 3(a) and the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 section 3(2). Subject to the Bad Leaver provisions the earn-out payments are dependent upon the Claimant remaining in the Respondent's employment until after 31 December 2015. The claim was therefore brought under a contract "connected with employment". In our judgment the means of advancing that claim, by disapplying the Bad Leaver provisions, does not alter the claim itself.
  61. However, in our judgment the claim of the Claimant for payment of or in respect of her earn-out shares and loan notes does not fall within ERA section 23 as a deduction from wages within the meaning of section 27. Section 27 provides that wages mean:
  62. "… any sums payable to the worker in connection with his employment …"

    including "any fee, bonus, commission, holiday pay or other emolument referable to his employment" but excluding by reason of section 27(2)(e) "any payment to the worker otherwise than in his capacity as a worker". Whilst the claim in respect of earn-out shares and loan notes could be said to be payable in connection with employment, they are deferred consideration for the sale by the Claimant of her shares in COL. They were provided to the Claimant as a vendor of shares, not in her capacity as a worker.

  63. Notwithstanding the conclusion that the ET had jurisdiction under the Extension of Jurisdiction Order to hear the Claimant's claim in respect of shares and loan notes, ground 1 of the appeal does not succeed.
  64. Ground 2

  65. The Claimant contended that the ET erred in concluding at paragraph 72 that the Respondent acted in good faith with regards to dealing fairly and exercising a duty of care in applying the Bad Leaver provisions when requested to use its discretion, as permitted by the Articles of Association, to treat the Claimant as a Good Leaver.
  66. Mr Nosworthy and the Claimant contended that applying Yam Seng PTE Ltd, treating her as a Bad Leaver would be regarded as commercially unacceptable by reasonable and honest people. It was submitted that reasonable people would view as unreasonable treating an employee who gave notice to terminate her employment as a Bad Leaver when an employee who was dismissed, including someone who is dismissed for breach of contract, is treated as a Good Leaver. However it is to be noted that a relevant person who is dismissed summarily for cause is not treated as a Good Leaver.
  67. Both Mr Nosworthy and Mr Harris commented on the absence of reference in the reasoning of the ET to the forfeiture of Loan Notes. Mr Nosworthy commented on the rationale referred to by the ET for shares held by a departing employee who has no further active interest in the success of the company to be acquired by the Respondent. He submitted that this rationale does not apply to the Loan Notes. These provide for the payment of a fixed sum and interest. Their value is not dependent upon the success of the Respondent. The rationale for transferring shares to the Respondent referred to by the ET in paragraph 73 did not apply to loan notes.
  68. Further it was contended that the Articles of Association gave the Remuneration Committee a discretion under Article 15.11.2 to reclassify a Bad Leaver as a Good Leaver. It was submitted that the ET erred in failing to hold that the Remuneration Committee acted unfairly in failing to do so.
  69. Accordingly it was submitted that the ET erred in failing to hold that the Respondent had not acted fairly or in good faith in treating the Claimant as a Bad Leaver.
  70. Mr Harris pointed out that pursuant to the Share Purchase Agreement the Claimant had been paid all the earn-out cash sums which were due in respect of each specified date albeit that part of the final amount was paid late. These sums were not clawed back under the Bad Leaver provisions.
  71. Mr Harris contended that the ET did not err by failing to hold that the Respondent did not act reasonably in failing to exercise its discretion to treat the Claimant as a Good Leaver. He referred to paragraph 72 in which the ET held that the Respondent was entitled to treat the Claimant as a Bad Leaver. The ET referred to the arguments advanced before them that the Respondent was under an obligation to act in good faith, to deal fairly and to exercise a duty of care in applying the Articles of Association. The ET did not err in concluding that the Respondent was entitled to treat the Claimant as a Bad Leaver.
  72. In our judgment the ET did not err by failing to hold that the Respondent acted unfairly or unreasonably by failing to exercise, by the Remuneration Committee, its discretion under Article 15.11.2 to treat the Claimant as a Good Leaver. The Articles to which the Claimant had subscribed were clear. An employee who gave notice to terminate their employment was a "Bad Leaver". However curious that may be, it was clearly spelled out in the Articles. There were no exceptional circumstances which would be said to call into question the decision of the ET that the Respondent was entitled to treat the Claimant as a Bad Leaver.
  73. Ground 2 of the appeal does not succeed.
  74. Ground 3

  75. The Claimant contended that the ET erred by failing to hold that the Bad Leaver provisions in the Articles of Association were unenforceable as a penalty. Mr Nosworthy and the Claimant referred to Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement which provides:
  76. "7.23. Each Manager holding Management Loan Notes severally covenants that he shall not become a Bad Leaver. …"

  77. It was submitted on behalf of the Claimant that as she was a Bad Leaver Miss Nosworthy was in breach of Clause 7.23. The consequences were forfeiture of her Loan Notes and transfer of her shares for no value. It was said that such actions were a penalty.
  78. Reliance was placed on the joined cases of Cavendish Square Holdings BV v Talal El Makdessi; ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis [2016] AC 1172 in which three of the Supreme Court Judges held at paragraph 32 that the:
  79. "… true test [of a penalty] was whether the impugned provision is a secondary obligation which imposes a detriment on the contract-breaker out of all proportion to any legitimate interest of the innocent party in the enforcement of the primary obligation. The innocent party can have no proper interest in simply punishing the defaulter. His interest is in performance or in some appropriate alternative …"

    Reference was also made to the speech of Lord Hodge in which he said at paragraph 255:

    "I therefore conclude that the correct test for a penalty is whether the sum or remedy stipulated as a consequence of a breach of contract is exorbitant or unconscionable when regard is had to the innocent party's interest in the performance of the contract. …"

  80. The Claimant contended that giving notice to terminate her contract of employment caused the Respondent no loss. Accordingly the imposition of the double penalty of forfeiture of the Loan Notes and repurchase of the Shares at minimal value was out of all proportion to any loss caused by her breach of contract by being a Bad Leaver.
  81. Mr Harris referred to paragraph 80 of the Judgment of the ET. The Respondent did not assert or rely on any breach of contract by the Claimant. The forfeiture of the Loan Notes and transfer of the Claimant's Shareholding were consequences of being a Bad Leaver. The definition of "Bad Leaver" in Article 15.9.2(a) does not depend on a breach of contract. Its effect is not the consequence of a breach of a primary obligation. Mr Harris referred to Makdessi in which Lord Neuberger held at paragraph 13:
  82. "… There is a fundamental difference between a jurisdiction to review the fairness of a contractual obligation and a jurisdiction to regulate the remedy for its breach. Leaving aside challenges going to the reality of consent, such as those based on fraud, duress or undue influence, the courts do not review the fairness of men's bargains either at law or in equity. The penalty rule regulates only the remedies available for breach of a party's obligations, not the primary obligations themselves. …"

  83. Mr Harris summarised his contention on the effect of Makdessi in paragraph 21 of his skeleton argument:
  84. "21. The fact that performance of the contract by a party in a particular way may result in a less advantageous outcome for that party than performance of the contract in a different way, does not mean that a sanction is being applied or that the party is being treated as effectively having breached the contract. To apply such an approach would run counter to the reasoning of the Supreme Court in Makdessi."

  85. The ET held at paragraph 81 that the answer to the allegation that the imposition of the Bad Leaver provisions amounted to a penalty was that these did not follow any breach of contract by the Claimant. The ET did not err in concluding that the Respondent was not seeking to rely on Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement. They did not seek to assert that the Claimant was in breach of contract. The Respondent was simply applying the provisions of Articles 15.6 and 15.7 as a consequence of the Claimant giving notice to terminate her contract of employment.
  86. Although it does not affect the determination of appeal ground 3, it is to be noted that the consequence of a breach of Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement is different from the consequence of being a Bad Leaver dealt with under the Articles of Association. Clause 7.23 entitles the Respondent to claim an amount equal to the aggregate amount in respect of Loan Notes held by him. Such claim is satisfied by a set off. No reference is made in Clause 7.23 to shares. The Respondent dealt with the Claimant's shares in accordance with the provisions of the Articles of Association. Pursuant to Article 15.7.2 the Bad Leaver forfeits Loan Notes in whatever way the Remuneration Committee may determine. Although the ET made no express finding about the way in which the Claimant's Loan Notes were dealt with there is no suggestion that they were dealt with as set out in Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement.
  87. The ET did not err in holding that the Respondent did not rely upon any breach of contract as entitling them to apply the Bad Leaver provisions. These were applied as a consequence not of any breach of contract but because of the terms of the Articles of Association.
  88. Ground 3 of the appeal does not succeed.
  89. No issue was raised in the Notice of Appeal as to the construction of the Bad Leaver provisions.
  90. The Amendment to The Grounds of Appeal

  91. On 18 September 2018 His Honour David Richardson granted the Claimant permission to amend the Notice of Appeal in terms of the document entitled "New Point of Law - Restraint of Trade". The Order states:
  92. "… For the avoidance of doubt, this grant of permission does not prevent the Respondent from arguing that the point is not open to the Appellant because it was not taken below."

  93. The Claimant formulated ground 4 as follows:
  94. "1. The Claimant contends that the 'Leaving Covenant' of the Investment Agreement, the 'Bad Leaver Provisions' and the Valuation and Vesting mechanism included within these provisions constitute a Restraint on Trade by creating a strong economic disincentive to leave one's employment, in line with the ruling in 20:20 London Ltd v Riley [2012] EWHC 1912 (Ch).
    3. The Claimant argues that the Leaving Covenant, the Bad Leaver Provisions and the Valuation mechanism included within these provisions constitute a financial incentive to an employee not to exercise a right to terminate his or her existing employment, and as such that the arrangement constitutes a Restraint of Trade.
    4. Furthermore, the measures go far beyond the Respondent's business justification for the Leaver Provisions and as such are not designed to protect a legitimate interest and are unreasonable."

  95. The Claimant contended that the "Leaving Covenant" in Clause 7.23 of the Principal Agreement and the Bad Leaver, Valuation and Vesting provisions in the Articles of Association constitute a Restraint of Trade by creating a strong economic disincentive to leave employment. It was said that they go far beyond the Respondent's business justification for the Leaver Provisions and are not designed to protect a legitimate interest and are unreasonable, one-sided, unfair and oppressive.
  96. Although the ET made no findings of fact on the issues, the Claimant sought to suggest that the Respondent's business justification for the Leaver Terms was the subject of oral evidence on the issue of penalty. The Claimant suggested that the ET referred to the business justification for these terms in paragraph 73 of their Judgment. The Claimant referred to paragraphs 21 and 22 of the Respondent's Answer to the original grounds of appeal as being relevant to the justification for the Leaver Provisions.
  97. Mr Nosworthy contended that in accordance with the overriding objective, the EAT should exercise our discretion to allow the restraint of trade argument to be taken on appeal. He said that the Claimant was self-represented and this was a complex area. He contended that the circumstances were exceptional and the new point should be permitted to be taken. Mr Nosworthy referred to Rance v Secretary of State for Health [2007] IRLR 665. Also he relied upon the conclusion that the contract entered into by a young Wayne Rooney was held in Proactive Sports Management Ltd v Rooney [2010] EWHC 1807 (QB) to be a restraint of trade as was the contract in Schroeder Music Publishing Co Ltd v Macaulay [1974] 1 WLR 1308.
  98. Mr Harris for the Respondent contended that the EAT should not exercise our discretion to permit the new ground of appeal that the Bad Leaver covenant was a restraint of trade to be raised. Both parties are agreed that this is a new point raised for the first time following the Rule 3(10) Hearing. He submitted that there are no exceptional circumstances which would warrant the exercise of discretion to allow the new point to be taken. Further the issue of whether the Bad Leaver provisions were an unjustified restraint of trade would require consideration by an ET on the basis of evidence and findings of fact relevant to that issue.
  99. Counsel for the Respondent referred to the judgment of the EAT in The Blackpool Fylde and Wyre Society for the Blind v Begg UKEAT/0035/05 in which HH Judge McMullen QC set out a passage from his judgment in Orthet Ltd v Sarah Vince-Cain UKEAT/0801/03 from which the Court of Appeal in 2004 refused permission to appeal and in which the EAT held:
  100. "29. [as for] … 5 Court of Appeal and 4 EAT authorities dealing with the issue of new points, it is fair to say that they point in one direction, which is that new points may only in exceptional circumstances be raised at the EAT. …"

    The same point was made in Secretary of State for Health v Rance [2007] IRLR 665 relied upon by Mr Harris. Counsel submitted that the discretion to allow a new point to be raised for the first time is only to be exercised in exceptional circumstances. There is nothing exceptional justifying raising this new point, that the Bad Leaver provisions are a restraint of trade, at the appeal stage.

  101. Further Mr Harris submitted that 20:20 relied upon by the Claimant to support the exercise of discretion to allow the new restraint of trade point to be taken did not support the current application. That was not a case concerning proceedings before an Employment Tribunal and it involved a summary judgment application. The court was of the view that the matter needed to proceed to trial to consider all the evidence and argument on the issue. 20:20 illustrates what is plainly the case, that an issue of restraint of trade requires evidence and findings of fact on the purpose of the provision under scrutiny, its justification and a decision if it is a restraint, whether it is reasonable in all the circumstances.
  102. Mr Harris also submitted that in any event the Bad Leaver provisions were not a restraint of trade. The Claimant could have rejected the offer to purchase her shares. Further the Share Purchase Agreement did not prevent her from working elsewhere. Counsel accepted that there was some limited overlap of the restraint of trade arguments with those on penalty, but evidence would have been required on whether the Bad Leaver provision was a restraint of trade and if so whether it was reasonable in the circumstances.
  103. Counsel submitted that in any event the ET did not have jurisdiction to determine a claim that the Bad Leaver provisions represented a restraint of trade. Mr Harris contended that a claim which relied on an argument that a term was an unreasonable restraint of trade could not be pursued in an ET by reason of Article 5(e) of the Extension of Jurisdiction Order.
  104. In our judgment Article 5(e) of the Extension of Jurisdiction Order would not have prevented the Claimant from raising in the ET an issue that the Bad Leaver provisions were a restraint of trade. Article 5 applies to a claim for a breach of a contractual term of certain descriptions including "a term which is a covenant in restraint of trade". The claim made by the Claimant was a contract claim for sums of money in respect of shares and loan notes. It was not a claim for a breach of a contractual term which is a covenant in restraint of trade. The restraint of trade argument sought to disapply a barrier to the claim. There was no claim based on a breach of the Bad Leaver provisions.
  105. In giving permission to amend the Notice of Appeal to include a ground of appeal that the Bad Leaver provisions were an unreasonable restraint of trade, HH David Richardson did so on the basis that the Respondent could contend that the argument is not open to the Claimant to do so because the point was not taken in the ET. HH David Richardson referring to Rance recognised that this potentially was a very serious problem for the Claimant. The Judge considered it arguable that discretion should be exercised to allow the new point to be taken if the view were that (1) the point is closely allied to the points which were taken below, and (2) the failure to take the point was not tactical but rather resulted from a lack of specialist legal advice and appreciation of the law.
  106. The EAT has a discretion to allow amendment of grounds of appeal. Whilst the decision whether to grant such permission must depend upon the particular facts and circumstances, the parameters within which such discretion is to be exercised have been explained in several authorities.
  107. In paragraph 48 of Rance the EAT cited the passage from the judgment of the Court of Appeal in Jones v Governing Body of Burdett Coutts School [1998] IRLR 521 in which Robert Walker LJ held at paragraph 20:
  108. "20. These authorities show that although the Employment Appeal Tribunal has a discretion to allow a new point of law to be raised (or a conceded point to be reopened) the discretion should be exercised only in exceptional circumstances, especially if the result would be to open up fresh issues of fact which (because the point was not an issue) were not sufficiently investigated before the industrial tribunal. …"

    In paragraph 50 of Rance the EAT set out principles of law derived from the authorities on the exercise of discretion by the EAT to permit a new point of law to be argued. These include:

    "(3) The discretion is exercised only in exceptional circumstances;
    (4) It would be even more exceptional to exercise the discretion where fresh issues of fact would have to be investigated."

  109. The contentions on behalf of the Claimant concentrated more on the arguments on the new issue rather than whether the court should exercise their discretion to allow the restraint of trade ground of appeal to be advanced at all.
  110. By the additional ground of appeal the Claimant contends that the Bad Leaver and associated provisions constitute a financial incentive not to exercise a right to terminate the contract of employment and that this financial incentive constitutes a restraint of trade. Further it is said that the measures go far beyond the business justification for the Bad Leaver provisions, are not designed to protect a legitimate interest of the Respondent and are unreasonable.
  111. It can be readily seen that this new ground of appeal raises points of law which were not the subject of submissions before or decision by the ET. When does a financial incentive not to exercise a contractual right to terminate employment constitute a restraint of trade? Further, if such were to be found, determining the issue of business justification for a restraint, and its reasonableness requires relevant findings of fact. Decisions as to justification and reasonableness would be determinative of the enforceability of the restraint.
  112. Mr Nosworthy and the Claimant submitted that the ET heard evidence relevant to the restraint of trade issue when considering penalty. Whatever evidence may or may not have been given, the Employment Appeal Tribunal can only base their deliberations on findings of fact. The findings of fact made by the ET are far from all of those which would be required for determining the new issue.
  113. The possibility referred to by HH David Richardson that the restraint of trade point may not have been taken from a lack of specialist legal advice and appreciation of the law was rightly not adopted or pursued by Mr Nosworthy and the Claimant. There was no evidence that the Claimant had no access to legal advice. Indeed in paragraph 19.3 of the Share Purchase Agreement she had agreed that having taken professional advice the restrictions in that clause which could be said to be a restraint of trade were reasonable and necessary for the protection of the legitimate business interests of the Respondent.
  114. In our judgment whatever may be the demerits or merits of the new ground of appeal, as anticipated by HH David Richardson, the argument advanced by the Respondent, that it is not open to the Claimant as it was not taken below, succeeds. The circumstances in which the new point is sought to be advanced are not exceptional. The discretion of the EAT is not exercised to allow it to proceed.
  115. All grounds of appeal are dismissed.


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