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Unfair dismissal boost for British expats 10/03/2006 00:00
In a landmark decision, the House of Lords has held that some of the hundreds of thousands of Britons who work overseas will now be able to claim unfair dismissal in the UK.
The right not to be dismissed unfairly is probably the most important of a bundle of UK statutory employment protection rights.
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Now workers with no fixed workplace can claim unfair dismissal |
With globalisation, increasing numbers of Britons are working overseas. Many are posted abroad by British employers. Others, while based in Britain, are employed by foreign companies and spend much of their time travelling.
Employees working in the UK are protected from unfair dismissal irrespective of the law applicable to their contracts. It is often assumed, however, that they will lose their UK unfair dismissal rights if working overseas for an extended period.
At last some clarity
In a string of decisions since legislative repeals in 1999 left the matter to the judges, courts and tribunals have struggled to find the territorial limits of the unfair dismissal legislation.
The House of Lords has now introduced some clarity into this situation by holding that while it would be generally unusual for an employee who works and is based abroad to come within the scope of British labour legislation, there is a significant group who in fact does.
Those who benefit from this judgement include employees who are "posted abroad by a British employer for the purposes of a business carried on in Great Britain".
So, for example, a foreign correspondent of a British newspaper is protected from unfair dismissal. Likewise, the executive of a British company who is sent abroad to run a new representative office which subsequently closes.
Others who benefit include Stephen Lawson, who was a security supervisor working in the Ascension Islands for English employer Serco Ltd, and John Botham, who worked at various MOD establishments in Germany as a youth worker.
Both employers were operating within what amounted to, for practical purposes, an extra-territorial British enclave. The House of Lords overturned rulings that neither Lawson nor Botham could bring unfair dismissal claims in the UK and held that both could do so.
The House of Lords also held that workers with no fixed workplace such as Andrew Crofts, who was a pilot working for a wholly owned Hong Kong subsidiary of Cathay Pacific, could claim unfair dismissal if their "base" was England.
"Unless one regards airline pilots as the flying Dutchmen of labour law, condemned to fly without any jurisdiction in which they can seek redress, I think there is no sensible alternative," Lord Hoffman said.
Since Crofts was based at Heathrow, the House of Lords was prepared to allow him to bring an unfair dismissal claim in the UK against his Hong Kong employer.
The same reasoning would apply to international management consultants, marketing and other senior executives, even if their work is mainly outside the UK.
The House of Lords did not need to comment on the position of mariners on board British registered ships, some of whom are protected against unfair dismissal by a specific provision which survived the legislative repeals in 1999 fairly unscathed.
There are also specific provisions for those working on, for instance, oil rigs in territorial waters or on the continental shelf.
Employers, prick up your ears
The judgment of the House of Lords will be of concern to British employers, who already face significant costs when expatriating employees and will have to be considered when reviewing relocation policies.
The principles established are not limited to employees posted abroad to work for a business conducted in Great Britain and to employees working in a political or social British enclave abroad.
There may be other cases with "equally strong connections with Great Britain and British employment law" Lord Hoffman said. No doubt this will remain a fertile area for litigation in future.
Furthermore, British employers should not assume that a choice of foreign law in the contract of employment will operate to exclude unfair dismissal rights. For example, Crofts' contract was governed by Hong Kong law, but he was still protected because of the circumstances of his employment.
Most UK statutory employment protection rights are mandatory and apply regardless of contractual choice of law. Nor is it sufficient — in the case of international workers with no fixed workplace — to specify in their contracts that they are based abroad if they are in fact based in the UK at the time of their dismissal.
Assuming that the expatriate or peripatetic employee is or may be within the grasp of UK unfair dismissal legislation, it is important that the employer should have a "fair reason" for dismissing him and also follow a fair procedure, as set out in a mix of legislation and case law.
The crunch point will often be when the foreign posting comes to an end, the employee does not wish to extend the posting for family or career reasons but the employer finds it awkward to reintegrate him into a UK structure which may have changed significantly in the meantime.
If strong British connections exist and the termination of employment is not handled carefully, employers are at increased risk of unfair dismissal claims in light of the decision of the House of Lords.
Originally published February 2006
Andrew Dekany is a partner and head of the employment group at Holman Fenwick & Willan, an international law firm with its head office in London (www.hfw.com/l3/ser/fserl3i.html). He can be contacted by telephone on + 44 20 7264 8161 or by email at andrew.dekany@hfw.co.uk.
This article is copyright Informa and is reproduced with permission. Reproduction, retrieval, copying or transmission of this article is not permitted without the publisher's prior consent. Informa does not guarantee the accuracy of the information contained in this article nor does it accept responsibility for errors or omissions or their consequences.
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