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Transco plc v O'Brien

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Transco plc v O’Brien
CourtCourt of Appeal of England and Wales
Decided7 March 2002
Citation EWCA Civ 379
Court membership
Judges sittingPill LJ, Longmore LJ and Sir Martin Nourse
Case opinions
Pill LJ
Keywords
Employment contract

Transco plc v O'Brien [2002] EWCA Civ 379 is a UK labour law case concerning the contract of employment.

Facts

Mr O’Brien worked through an employment agency. He moved to an hourly wage. Transco announced it would give better terms to a 70 strong workforce, except Mr O’Brien, who it did not regard as permanent.

Judgment

Pill LJ gave the judgment for the Court of Appeal held that Mr O'Brien was an employee and that there had been a breach of contract.

11. The appellants accept that a term can be implied into a contract of employment that the employer will not "without reasonable and proper cause, conduct itself in a manner likely to destroy or seriously damage the relationship of confidence and trust between employer and employee": Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in Malik v Bank of Credit and Commerce International SA AC 20 at page 34...

17. In this case, for good commercial reasons the appellants decided to offer their workforce (the relevant part of which was over 70 strong) a new contract on better terms. To single out an employee on capricious grounds and refuse to offer him the same terms as are offered to the rest of the workforce is in my judgment a breach of the implied term of trust and confidence. There are few things which would be more likely to damage seriously (to put it no higher) the relationship of trust between an employer and employee than a capricious refusal, in present circumstances, to offer the same terms to a single employee.

18. The matter should be looked at as one of substance. Whether the form of the change proposed by the employer is by way of variation or by way of a new contract is not in itself of great importance: the context and the substance of the matter must be considered. The substance here was an offer of fresh contractual arrangements to a workforce in order to achieve the employer's aims and objects, though the welfare of the workforce may well also have been a factor. To deprive one member of a large workforce of the same opportunity as offered to all his fellow workers is a clear breach of the implied term, in my view.

Longmore LJ and Sir Martin Nourse agreed.

See also

Employment contract cases
Johnson v Unisys Ltd
Gisda Cyf v Barratt
Employment Information Directive
Employment Rights Act 1996 ss
Devonald v Rosser & Sons 2 KB 728
Sagar v Ridehalgh & Sons Ltd 1 Ch 310
Wiluszynski v Tower Hamlets LBC ICR 439
SS for Employment v ASLEF (No 2) ICR 19
System Floors (UK) Ltd v Daniel ICR 54
Scally v Southern Health Board 1 AC 294
Crossley v Faithful & Gould Ltd
UCTA 1977 ss
Keen v Commerzbank AG
Johnstone v Bloomsbury Health Authority 2 All ER 293
Dryden v Greater Glasgow Health Board IRLR 469
French v Barclays Bank plc
Alexander v Standard Telephones Ltd (No 2) IRLR 287
TULRCA 1992 ss 179-180
Kaur v MG Rover Group Ltd
Malone v British Airways plc `
see Employment contract in English law

Notes

References

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