Misplaced Pages

Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board

Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from Scally v Southern Health Board)

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (January 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board and others
CourtHouse of Lords
Citation 1 AC 294
Case opinions
Lord Bridge
Keywords
Pensions, implied terms

Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board 1 AC 294 is an English contract law case, relevant for pensions and UK labour law, concerning implied terms.

Facts

Dr Gabriel Scally and three other doctors were employees of either the Southern or Eastern Health and Social Services Boards in Northern Ireland. In consequence of the long duration of undergraduate medical training, six years, they would not have been in paid employment for the requisite 40 years before retirement to get full superannuation (or pension) benefits by the time they reached 60 years of age. But by law they could "top up" their superannuation by a lump sum purchase of added years of superannuation entitlement within twelve months of beginning their first period of employment in the Health and Social Services. Their employer did not inform them of this option within the twelve month time limit and therefore they were not in a position to take advantage of the enhancement.

Reynold QC, counsel for the employees, argued a ‘necessary’ term of employment was information about exercising rights under the superannuation scheme.

Judgment

The House of Lords held that the employers had breached a contractual duty, implied into the employment contracts, to properly inform their employees about their rights.

Lord Bridge, distinguished terms implied ‘in fact’ to reflect the parties’ unexpressed common intentions and those implied ‘in law’. He went on as follows.

A clear distinction is drawn in the speeches of Viscount Simonds in Lister v Romford Ice and Cold Storage Co Ltd AC 555 and Lord Wilberforce in Liverpool City Council v Irwin AC 239 between the search for an implied term necessary to give business efficacy to a particular contract and the search, based on wider considerations, for a term which the law will imply as a necessary incident of a definable category of contractual relationship. If any implication is appropriate here, it is, I think, of this latter type. Carswell J. accepted the submission that any formulation of an implied term of this kind which would be effective to sustain the plaintiffs' claims in this case must necessarily be too wide in its ambit to be acceptable as of general application. I believe however that this difficulty is surmounted if the category of contractual relationship in which the implication will arise is defined with sufficient precision. I would define it as the relationship of employer and employee where the following circumstances obtain: (1) the terms of the contract of employment have not been negotiated with the individual employee but result from negotiation with a representative body or are otherwise incorporated by reference; (2) a particular term of the contract makes available to the employee a valuable right contingent upon action being taken by him to avail himself of its benefit; (3) the employee cannot, in all the circumstances, reasonably be expected to be aware of the term unless it is drawn to his attention. I fully appreciate that the criterion to justify an implication of this kind is necessity, not reasonableness. But I take the view that it is not merely reasonable, but necessary, in the circumstances postulated, to imply an obligation on the employer to take reasonable steps to bring the term of the contract in question to the employee’s attention, so that he may be in a position to enjoy its benefit. Accordingly I would hold that there was an implied term in each of the plaintiffs’ contracts of employment of which the boards were in each case in breach.

Lord Roskill, Lord Goff, Lord Jauncey and Lord Lowry concurred.

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
Implied terms cases
Hutton v Warren EWHC Exch J61
The Moorcock (1889) 14 PD 64
Southern Foundries (1926) Ltd v Shirlaw AC 701
Liverpool CC v Irwin [1976] UKHL 1
Johnstone v Bloomsbury HA 2 All ER 293
Scally v Southern Health Board 1 AC 294
Malik v BCCI SA [1997] UKHL 23
Equitable Life Assurance Society v Hyman [2000] UKHL 39
Baird Textile Holdings Ltd v M&S plc [2001] EWCA Civ 274
Attorney General of Belize v Belize Telecom Ltd [2009] UKPC 10
Carter v Boehm (1766) 97 ER 1162
Yam Seng v International Trade Corp [2013] EWHC 111 (QB)
Bhasin v Hrynew, 2014 SCC 71
Implied terms in English law

Notes

  1. Health Services (Superannuation) (Amendment) (No. 3) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1974
  2. 1 AC 294, 307

References

Categories:
Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board Add topic