Willets v The Jennifer Trust for Spinal Muscular Atrophy UKEAT/0282/11/SM
Appeal against a ruling by the ET that the claimant’s claim of unfair constructive dismissal was out of time, and she had not shown that it was not reasonably practicable for her to present her claim in time. Appeal allowed and a declaration made that the claim was not time barred.
The claimant tendered her resignation claiming that her position at the respondent was untenable for a number of reasons. Her letter of resignation included her intention to leave on 31 July (which actually should have been 27 July according to her contractual notice period). She was asked to re-consider her decision which she did, writing another letter confirming her intention to resign. This second letter included a different date of leaving which was 6 August, being 4 weeks from the date of the second letter. The respondent emailed the claimant confirming that her leaving date was 6 August. Her P45 gave her leaving date as 6 August. The claimant subsequently brought proceedings of unfair dismissal, which the ET rejected as it accepted the respondent's explanation that the confirmation by the respondent of a leaving date of 6 August was a mistake; the date of 27 July was taken as the leaving date which meant that the claim was out of time. The claimant appealed.
The EAT upheld her appeal. It was plain that the original notice given by the claimant was varied by agreement between the parties, whereby the termination was extended to 6 August. The EJ was wrong to find that the EDT was 27 July, and even if he was correct, the appeal would have been allowed on the basis that the claimant held a genuine but mistaken belief that she had retracted her original resignation and worked her notice to 6 August, taking the respondent at their word. Therefore it was not reasonably practicable to present her complaint within time.
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Appeal No. UKEAT/0282/11/SM
EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
58 VICTORIA EMBANKMENT, LONDON EC4Y 0DS
At the Tribunal
On 28 September 2011
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK (SITTING ALONE)
DR L WILLETTS (APPELLANT)
THE JENNIFER TRUST FOR SPINAL MUSCULAR ATROPHY (RESPONDENT)
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
**APPEARANCES**For the Appellant
MISS NABILA MALLICK (of Counsel)
Bar Pro Bono
For the Respondent
MR DAVID MITCHELL (of Counsel)
Bar Pro Bono
**SUMMARY**JURISDICTIONAL POINTS
Claim in time and effective date of termination
Extension of time: reasonably practicable
Resignation notice by Claimant. Whether termination date extended by agreement. What was the EDT? If outside the three-month limit, was it not reasonably practicable to lodge the claim in time? Appeal allowed on both questions. Claim not time-barred.
**HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK****Introduction**- The parties in this matter in the Birmingham Employment Tribunal are Dr Willetts, Claimant, and the Jennifer Trust for Spinal Muscular Atrophy, Respondent.
- The principal question raised in this appeal, brought by the Claimant against the Judgment with Reasons of Employment Judge Wynn-Evans, following a PHR held on 25 February 2011, is what, as a matter of law, was the effective date of termination (EDT) of the Claimant's contract of employment with the Respondent?
- If it was, as the Employment Judge found in his Judgment promulgated on 17 May, 27 July 2010, then her complaint of constructive unfair dismissal contained in a form ET1 lodged on 2 November 2010 fell outside the primary three-month limitation period. The Employment Judge also held that the Claimant had not shown that it was not reasonably practicable for her to present her claim within time. Both findings are challenged on appeal. If the EDT was 6 August 2010, as the Claimant contends, then the claim was lodged in time.
- At the PHR the Employment Judge heard oral evidence only from the Claimant. The Respondent called no live witnesses. He also had before him a bundle of documentary evidence. The relevant facts are these.
- The Claimant commenced work as Director of Support Services with the Respondent charity on 18 August 2008. By letter dated 28 June 2010 she tendered her resignation to Heather Brown of the Respondent. She claimed that her position at the Respondent was untenable for a number of reasons; circumstances which she believed could be interpreted as a constructive dismissal situation, although she indicated in that letter that she had no intention of taking that course of action. She stated that she was contractually obliged to give four weeks notice but indicated an intention to leave on 30 July. In fact the contractual notice period was, apparently, one month. She was asked to reconsider her position with a time limit of 9 July. On that date she wrote a further letter to Ms Brown confirming her intention to resign. She added:
"I am contractually obliged to give 4 weeks notice from today, [9 July] which means that my last day in employment will be Friday August 6th 2010."
- On 13 July she lodged a grievance against Heather Brown. She was asked not to attend the office and did not do so. She was effectively on garden leave subject to any work she did for the Respondent at home or elsewhere. On 21 July the finance manager, Sue Taylor, emailed the Claimant saying:
"[...] I confirm that your leaving date is Friday 6th August.
Your July pay will be as normal. What you are owed in respect of holiday pay and Toil [time off in lieu] will be paid on the usual pay day at the end of August with your pay up to and including 6th August. This is the usual process for anyone leaving part way through a month."
- Heather Brown responded to the Claimant's grievance in a document dated 27 July 2010. On page 18, at paragraph 5, she said this:
"Liz (Claimant) did not withdraw her first letter of resignation, when she confirmed that she had decided to resign on 7th July her termination would have still stood at the 31st July. Having received her 2nd letter of resignation when it was decided that Jennifer Trust would exercise its rights under paragraph 12.6 of Liz's contract of employment for her not to work her notice. I extended her Leaving date to the 6th August 2010. This was a simple typolitical [sic] error on my part. When brought to our notice by Liz this has been corrected for pay purposes. As Liz is still in the employment of the Jennifer Trust up to the 6th August. We have been able to correct this typolitical error before her leaving date."
- As the finance manager had indicated in her email of 21 July, after the Claimant received her pay for July she was paid for the period 1-6 August as appears on her 31 August pay statement. Her form P45 dated 20 August gives her leaving date as 6 August 2010. At paragraph 8.4 of his Reasons, the Employment Judge said this:
"8.4 The fact that the respondent paid the claimant until 6 August 2010 and issued a P45 reflecting that as the termination date, being the date which she identified as her termination date in her second resignation letter and which indeed the respondent's Finance Manager recorded in an e mail and in the claimant's P45, is undisputed as a matter of fact. I accept that this was a genuine error on the part of the respondent, especially in the context of what (as is common ground) is a small charitable organisation with minimal administrative support and professional advice."
- I enquired of the parties during the hearing what evidence supported the finding that this, presumably the date 6 August, was a genuine error on the part of the Respondent. No oral evidence to that effect was led on behalf of the Respondent. It was, Mr Mitchell tells me, put by him to the Claimant in cross-examination but he cannot recall her reply. Miss Mallick tells me that the Claimant rejected that suggestion. The only error raised in the documentary evidence appears in the passage from Ms Brown's response to the Claimant's grievance, set out above. However, it is common ground that the typographical error referred to by Ms Brown was a reference by her to a leaving date of 4 August in an earlier letter to the Claimant. Thus there was no evidence to support a finding that the 6 August date represented an error on the Respondent's part.
- Section 97(1)(a) of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (ERA) provides:
"the effective date of termination
(a) in relation to an employee whose contract of employment is terminated by notice, whether given by his employer or by the employee, means the date on which the notice expires."
I agree with the Respondent that the Claimant's letter of 28 June was a letter of resignation on notice. It did not require acceptance by the Respondent. I prefer the view that that notice expired, as the Claimant said, on 30 July. Strictly the notice period under the contract was one month, hence the date contended for by the Respondent of 27 July and accepted by the Employment Judge. However as a matter of law, notice once given by an employee cannot be unilaterally withdrawn (see Harris and Russell Ltd v Slingsby [1973] ICR 454) but it can, during the operational period of that notice be extended (see Mowlem Northern Ltd v Watson [1990] ICR 751) or shortened (see Palfrey v Transco by agreement between the parties. What the parties cannot agree is a retrospective EDT (see Fitzgerald v University of Kent at Canterbury.
- On the facts in the present case, it not being suggested here or below that the contract was terminated not by the Claimant, but by the Respondent under section 95(1)(a) ERA on 13 July with pay in lieu of notice, it is plain to me that the original notice given by the Claimant on 28 June was varied by agreement between the parties during the currency of the notice period, whereby the date of termination was extended to 6 August. Alternatively, and in deference to the views expressed by the majority of the Court of Appeal in TBA Industrial Products Ltd v Morland [1982] IRLR 331, the true analysis is that the Claimant withdrew her original notice of 28 June and gave a new notice on 9 July, giving a termination date of 6 August, with the consent of the Respondent. All the evidence points in one direction.
- In these circumstances I hold that the Employment Judge was wrong to find that the EDT was 27 July on a correct legal analysis of the facts, and I would allow the appeal on this basis. Further, even if the EDT was 27 July, as the Employment Judge held, it is clear from paragraphs 10 and 11 of his Reasons that, having found (see paragraph 7) that the Claimant held a genuine but mistaken belief that she had retracted her original resignation, and substituted a second resignation by her letter of 9 July, he then failed to ask himself the question raised by Brandon LJ in Walls Meat Co. Ltd v Khan [1979] ICR 52, 60F-61A, discussed at paragraphs 15-16 of my Judgment in Defer-Wyatt v Brenig Williams (EAT/0270/03/DA 24 July 2003, unreported). Was that mistaken belief itself reasonable?
- Unlike the Claimant in [Northamptonshire County Council v Entwhistle]() [2010] IRLR 740, this Claimant did not rely on wrong advice from her own adviser. She took the Respondent at their word and worked to the 6 August date to lodge her ET1 within the three-month time limit. In these circumstances I would hold in the alternative, contrary to the finding of the Employment Judge, that she had shown that it was not reasonably practicable to present her complaint within time if the EDT was 27 July.
- It follows that the appeal is allowed. I declare that the unfair dismissal claim is not time barred. Mr Mitchell tells me that there remains, as a preliminary issue, the Respondent's application for a strike out order under ET rule 18(7)(b). That issue was not determined by the Employment Judge at the first PHR and must return now to the ET for determination.
Published: 14/10/2011 17:28