When does the notice period start running? The Supreme Court has just answered ...
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When does the notice period start running? The Supreme Court has just answered ...

If an employee is dismissed on written notice posted to their home address, does the notice period begin to run from the date the letter was delivered or from when the employee actually read it?


In a landmark judgment, the Supreme Court in Newcastle upon Tyne Hospital NHS Foundation Trust v Haywood held that a term will be implied into all contracts of employment that notice will only start to run from the date the employee has received the letter and had a reasonable opportunity to read it if different.


The successful employee in this case recovered £400,000 in compensation.


Background


Mrs Haywood worked for the NHS for over 30 years. On 13 April 2011, she was informed that she might be made redundant following the merger of two NHS bodies. Both parties knew that if her employment terminated before her 50th birthday she would not be entitled to receive a reduced early retirement pension worth approximately £400,000.

Mrs Haywood was entitled to 12 weeks’ notice (the statutory minimum). The crucial date was 27 April. Notice given on or after that would expire on or after her 50th birthday and would trigger her right to receive an early pension something the Trust presumably wished to avoid.

Mrs Haywood had pre-booked an overseas holiday from 18 April to 27 April. The Trust issued written notice to terminate her employment on 20 April which it sent by recorded delivery to her home and by email to her husband’s email address. Mrs Haywood’s father collected the letter from the Post Office on 26 April and she opened it when she returned home the following day. Her husband read the email notice on 27 April.

The Trust argued that notice was effective from the date of delivery (which in this case was 26 April). Mrs Haywood argued that it was effective from the date she actually read it (the following day). The High Court and Court of Appeal ruled in favour of Mrs Haywood and the trust appealed to the Supreme Court.

Supreme Court decision


By majority, the Supreme Court decided that, at common law, notice could only run from the date an employee receives written notice of their dismissal and has had a reasonable opportunity to consider it. This interpretation will now be implied into every contract of employment unless the contract between the parties expressly provides for a different interpretation.

What is reasonable will depend on the circumstances. If Mrs Haywood had returned from her holiday a day earlier, but had chosen to avoid opening her letter of dismissal to improve her financial position, her claim would have failed. Similarly, if Mrs Haywood had been on leave but remained at home, she would have been deemed to have had a reasonable opportunity to consider the letter (even if she had refused to sign to acknowledge receipt of the recorded delivery letter or had not been at home on the day Royal Mail attempted to deliver it). An employee who effectively buries their head in the sand to avoid facing an unpleasant situation will not be acting reasonably.

If the Trust had wanted to make sure that Mrs Haywood received notice of dismissal before her valuable pension rights crystalised it should have taken further steps to inform her at an earlier stage – either in writing before she went on holiday, or over the telephone when she was away.

Implications for employers


The relationship between employer and employee is primarily a contractual one governed by the terms and conditions agreed between them and usually contained in an offer letter or written contract of employment. These are known as express terms. In addition, terms can be implied into a contract - for example where the express terms are incomplete, or where the parties have failed to include something that the law considers they intended to include.


Employers should make sure that their contracts of employment set out how notice can be served and when it will be considered to have been received. If Mrs Haywood’s contract had said that written notice will be been deemed to have been sent by first class post, 48 hours after the time of service, or if sent by email, 24 hours after sending, the Trust would have lawfully been able to terminate her contract before her 50th birthday and avoid triggering her entitlement to receive an early pension.



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