Following the decision in Mhindurwa v Lovingangels Care Ltd, in which an employment tribunal held that an employee, who was made redundant in the early months of the pandemic, was unfairly dismissed because her employer did not consider furloughing her, another tribunal has reached a different conclusion on a different set of facts. In Handley v Tatenhill Aviation Ltd, the tribunal made it clear that an employee, who was supported under the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, was not unfairly dismissed simply because his employer decided to make him redundant even though it could have chosen to have furloug him for longer.
Handley v Tatenhill Aviation Ltd (ET Case No. 2603087–2020)
Facts
Mr Handley worked for a small private airfield and provided private flying lessons and flight experiences to their customers. Shortly after the first lockdown was announced Tatenhill decided to close the flying school. It agreed to furlough Mr Handley for ‘a period of three weeks initially or until [he] could return to work as normal’.
The business had been struggling financially pre-pandemic and, in April 2020, it began to consider redundancies. The flight training part of the business had no income at all and they envisaged this would remain the case for the foreseeable future.
Mr Handley was one of two flying instructors. He was ultimately selected for redundancy and his employment ended on 10 August 2020.
He claimed that he had been unfairly dismissed for a number of reasons, one of which was that he had been placed on furlough and, that the terms of the furlough agreement prevented his employer from making him redundant.
Decision
The employment tribunal dismissed this part of his claim.
It recognised that another employer may have taken a different approach and may have chosen to leave Mr Handley on furlough for longer. But, the decision the business reached was within the range of reasonable responses open to it on these facts:
‘It is for an employer, not the Employment Tribunal, to decide how to structure its business and whether to make redundancies. I accept the respondent’s evidence that it needed to cut costs irrespective of the furlough scheme, and that it wanted to use the furlough scheme to pay some of the costs of making the redundancy. The nation was in unprecedented uncertainty at the relevant time, and it is not for me to step into the shoes of the employer and substitute my view for that taken by the employer at the time. The decision to dismiss the claimant nothwithstanding the existence of the furlough scheme does not, in my view, render the dismissal unfair.’
Mr Handley was, however, unfairly dismissed for reasons that are not relevant to this analysis.
Wider implications
This judgment indicates that tribunals will analyse arguments differently:
- if an employer hasn’t considered furloughing staff as an alternative to redundancy, a tribunal could decide that their dismissals are unfair,
- but, the decision as to whether to keep someone furloughed is a matter for an employer. And, provided their decision is within the range of reasonable responses open to them, a tribunal won’t interfere with it.
Formed in 2017, following significant legislative changes designed to increase competition within the legal services marketplace, Pro Employment Law is a progressive set of barristers’ chambers, consisting only of experienced employment law barristers, offering a full range of specialist advisory, case management, and advocacy services directly to the public through the Public Access scheme. We supply our legal services exclusively in the area of Employment Law to clients located across England & Wales. All of the legal services we supply are covered by professional indemnity insurance with Bar Mutual.