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22 June 2023 & 13 July 2023 | Chancery and Commercial Property Breakfast Seminars

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Join Parklane Plowden's Chancery and Commercial specialists, Dominic Crossley and Bryan Patterson Whitaker at our next set of Property Breakfast Seminars. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Registration for each seminar is from 8:00am, allowing an opportunity to prepare, network and ask any questions before the seminar session starts at 8:30am in our boardroom.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Real Property (22nd June) programme</strong></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>8:00 – 8:30 – Registration, light breakfast &amp; refreshments (Barristers Lounge)</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>8:30 – 9:00 – Dominic Crossley:&nbsp;Proprietary Estoppel - a Magic Wand When All Else Fails?</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>9:00 – 9:30 – Bryan Patterson Whitaker:&nbsp;Boundary Disputes – Pitfalls and Practicalities</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Landlord and Tenant (13th July) p</strong><strong>rogramme</strong></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>8:00 – 8:30 – Registration, light breakfast &amp; refreshments (Barristers Lounge)</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>8:30 – 9:00 – Dominic Crossley:&nbsp;The Beginning of the End for the Private Rental Sector?</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>9:00 – 9:30 – Bryan Patterson Whitaker:&nbsp;Forfeiture – Perils and Pitfalls</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Please register your attendance for each seminar <a href="http://lexlinks.parklaneplowden.co.uk/doForm.aspx?a=0xF15D4A97E0E04123&amp;d=0x49EB4C9596DBE1A5^0xBDC0B87423493533|0x40F3E49C83A12815^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|0xF1B146662D144B75^0x8A1CDD2DB76555E3|0x9CB58EF48012E032^0xA092BEC2DACAE1A8|0xA14B30AADF25AF0D^0x4538EA01547C6D9520542FC6B6F63C93|0x43D48F22BB6859DF^0xA092BEC2DACAE1A8|0xD52134AC788FF0FE^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|">here</a>, this link will allow to to register to both programmes. </strong></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->

Justifying Compulsory Retirement &#8211; Academics v Oxford University: Round 3

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In September 2021, Eady J in the EAT upheld two employment tribunal decisions that had reached opposite conclusions on the lawfulness of Oxford University’s compulsory retirement policy: <strong>Pitcher v Oxford University,</strong> which Oxford won, and the slightly later case of <strong>Ewart v Oxford University, </strong>which it lost: [2022] ICR 338. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Compulsory retirement is an act of direct age discrimination and the issue in such cases is whether an employer, the burden being upon it, can justify it by reference to legitimate aims which must, according to the Supreme Court in <strong>Seldon v Clarkson, Wright &amp; Jakes</strong> [2012] ICR 716, be of a social policy nature. The two tribunals had reached different conclusions on whether the compulsory retirement scheme was a proportionate means of achieving a number of legitimate aims.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Rather than abandon the policy or appeal to the Court of Appeal, Oxford retained the so-called Employer Justified Retirement Age (“EJRA”) policy, tweaked it in a number of ways (e.g. reduced its scope, increased the retirement age from 67 to 68) and went about gathering further &nbsp;evidence to support it, some of which was seemingly designed to meet the criticisms articulated by the <strong>Ewart</strong> Tribunal.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Unsurprisingly, a further challenge to the policy made its way to the employment tribunal in <strong>Field-Johnson and others v Oxford University </strong>Case No3301882/2020 and others. Three of the claimants were academics, one was a senior administrator. By the time of the hearing, Oxford had a carried out a detailed 10-year review of the policy which had been introduced in 2011.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The creation of vacancies is generally at the heart of compulsory retirement policies.  It is through the creation of additional vacancies that social policy aims, such as increasing diversity or furthering intergenerational fairness, commonly relied upon aims, can be pursued. The key finding in <strong>Ewart</strong> though was that the University had not shown that compulsory retirement had anything other than a trivial impact on the vacancy creation rate.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Most vacancies arose for other reasons, many chose to retire at or before EJRA age in any event and of those that would stay, evidence suggested they would only stay for a limited period. The result was that the vast majority of vacancies would likely exist in any event, meaning the discriminatory EJRA was having only a very modest contribution, at best, on the achievement of Oxford’s aims.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In <strong>Field-Johnson</strong>, Oxford argued that the new evidence it adduced ought to lead to a different conclusion. It relied on Little’s Law of Queueing – which had been applied in the US in similar circumstances -  to model the rate at which vacancies were likely to arise as a result of different (and no) retirement ages, as well as its own analysis of the impact of the policy year on year. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>It contended this showed the EJRA significantly enhanced the number of vacancies, giving it the opportunity to use those vacancies to make progress towards achieving its aims, such as increasing diversity, creating opportunities for the next generation and helping it with succession planning.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>It also led evidence designed to show that the discriminatory impact of the policy was not as significant as it might appear, as retirement was cushioned both by generous pension provision (more generous than the current generation will receive, a point relevant to intergenerational fairness) and the ability of academics to stay on in an emeritus capacity post retirement.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The Tribunal however concluded, as it had in <strong>Ewart</strong>, that the University had not justified the policy: it was not a proportionate means of achieving legitimate aims. The University has since conceded the claims of direct age discrimination arising out of the enforced retirements.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>By the time of the hearing, the University had already decided to remove administrators, such as Mr Field-Johnson, from the scope of the EJRA because there was insufficient evidence it was efficacious. His task was therefore a little easier. The policy remained in place for various academic grades however, two of the three academic claimants were statutory professors (the highest academic grade) and one was a reader. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The Tribunal concluded that the modelling relied upon by Oxford rested on questionable assumptions and  showed <em>at best</em> that only up to 8% of vacancies at the statutory professor grade were attributable to the EJRA, though the figure was likely to be lower than that. The figure was even lower for the grades below statutory professor. These figures were said to be “small”.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>On the other side of the scales, the Tribunal concluded the qualitative discriminatory impact of the policy was great. This was so even though retired academics could often stay on and continue making use of some of the University’s facilities and take part in&nbsp; aspects of college life. Further, &nbsp;the fact the policy may only have a small quantitative effect did not prevent a finding that the EJRA caused a significant and substantial discriminatory impact.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Overall, it was not satisfied the EJRA was reasonably necessary for Oxford to achieve its aims. It was having a “trivial” impact and that impact was outweighed by its highly discriminative effect. &nbsp;</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In reaching those conclusions, the judgment contains much that may be helpful to other employers considering introducing or retaining compulsory retirement schemes:</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:list --> <ul><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>The fact the burden falls on an employer to justify such a policy is critical. That cannot be done by assertion or guesswork, cogent evidence will be needed. Where a policy has been operated for some time, an employer ought to be monitoring it, collecting data and periodically reviewing it. Justification is an on-going process;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --></ul> <!-- /wp:list --><!-- wp:list --> <ul><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>The Tribunal was critical of Oxford for failing to keep <em>contemporaneous records</em> to evidence the effect of the EJRA. It could have done so by eliciting information in exit interviews to determine why people were leaving when they did and when they might otherwise have left if their departure was EJRA related. Instead, it had to rely on surveys after the event of those that had already retired and could be bothered to respond. These surveys were unreliable because the samples were small and self-selecting. The Tribunal concluded that the mathematical analysis Oxford had adopted could only ever be second best to information elicited in exit interviews;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --></ul> <!-- /wp:list --><!-- wp:list --> <ul><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Oxford had relied on diversity data to illustrate the positive progress it had made. However, its case on this was significantly weakened by any lack of reliable statistics relating to protected characteristics other than sex. In any event, the Claimants’ case was that progress towards improving gender diversity was slow and did not compare favourably with progress at other Russell Group universities, none of which operated compulsory retirement schemes;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --></ul> <!-- /wp:list --><!-- wp:list --> <ul><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>The Tribunal held that Oxford had not properly considered alternatives to the EJRA, dismissing options that had been canvassed too readily and without proper reasoning. This was despite the fact its 10-year Review Group had devoted time in a number of meetings specifically to considering alternatives having received oral and written evidence, which is likely to be more than many employers manage. This perhaps illustrates the difficulties employers have in meeting the test for justification, given the burden is on them and the test involves a consideration of whether aims could be achieved via less discriminatory means.</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --></ul> <!-- /wp:list --><!-- wp:list --> <ul><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>The Tribunal did not think that Oxford could rely on its own convoluted internal procedures to justify what would otherwise be direct age discrimination: a warning to employers thinking of arguing that their internal recruitment processes contribute to the difficulty of securing replacements timeously where vacancies arise with limited notice.</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --></ul> <!-- /wp:list --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Whether Oxford will now abandon the policy or retain it and wait for the next challenge, in the hope that a different tribunal will reach a different decision, remains to be seen. That is clearly a possibility in light of the EAT’s conclusion in <strong>Pitcher and Ewart</strong> that there is no legally correct answer to the question of justification in all cases, it is a matter for a tribunal based on the evidence it hears. That sits uneasily with legal certainty. For the time being, the policy remains in place and each year, a new tranche of academics are forced to retire, some before they would wish to do so. Unless the policy is abandoned, “Round 4” seems inevitable.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>These series of judgments do not mean compulsory retirement can never be justified. It will depend on the evidence adduced by the particular employer in the particular sector in which they operate. Oxford is a large, somewhat unique, employer and the position may be very different for a small employer with scarce opportunities available for promotion. The <strong>Ewart</strong> and <strong>Field-Johnson</strong> judgments do however illustrate the difficulties of justifying such schemes and the lengths to which an employer is likely to have to go in order to do so.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><em>Andrew Sugarman represented the academic claimants in <strong>Field-Johnson</strong>, and Professor Ewart in the ET and EAT in <strong>Pitcher and Ewart</strong>.</em></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->

Court Of Appeal Clears Article 3 LOGJAM

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The Court of Appeal has now handed down its long-awaited decision in the case of <em>AB v Worcestershire County Council and others</em> [2023] EWCA Civ 529. The decision provides important clarification of the Article 3 duties owed by local authorities to children in their area. However, the court did not take the opportunity to provide any guidance on the “threshold” of seriousness required for a breach of Art3.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The claim was brought against two local authorities. AB lived in the defendants’ areas, with his mother until he was accommodated by the local authority, aged 11 and taken into care aged 12. Whilst in the care of his mother he was subjected to a number of incidents of abuse and neglect, which were recorded by the local authorities.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>At first instance, the judge accepted the second defendant’s submission that a local authority owed no duty to children in its area under Art3, who were not under its “care and control.” This finding had been a surprise to most practitioners, flying, as it did, in the face of longstanding ECtHR authority (<em>E and others v The United Kingdom (33218/96), DP &amp; JC v The United kingdom (38719/97)</em>. Very sensibly, the defendants conceded this issue on appeal and that concession was endorsed by the court as having been correctly made [85]. Although not surprising, this development brings to an end 16 months of unwelcome uncertainty and will allow many cases to be resumed, which had been stayed pending the outcome of this appeal.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The judgment is the first occasion on which a domestic appeal court has considered the application of Article 3 to a local authority’s duty to protect a child from neglect and abuse. It provides a clear and concise statement of the test [57-63], which is likely to be useful to practitioners and trial judges.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The court also noted [82] that: “<em>This is not a negligence claim where a court would be considering whether a …social worker had acted in accordance with a body of expert opinion…the question was whether “judged reasonably” [the defendants] had failed to take appropriate steps to avoid a real and immediate risk of Article 3 ill-treatment.. was a question for the court, not for expert evidence.</em>” This principle might prove useful for Claimants, particularly in historic cases, where social work practice at the time might now be thought&nbsp; to be woefully inadequate but might have satisfied the <em>Bolam</em> test.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The appeal failed on its facts. The court upheld the finding that, whilst the Claimant was “<em>vulnerable and at risk of being subjected to poor and inconsistent parenting and neglect</em>”, he was not at a “real and immediate risk” of treatment of the kind prohibited by Article 3. In other words: his mis-treatment had not met the Art3 “threshold”.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The appeal was determined on the basis that the Claimant had suffered only seven relevant incidents over a period of nine years. The particular circumstances of those incidents should be ascertained from the judgment, but many practitioners might conclude that the frequency and severity of the incidents is towards the lower end of the range of cases with which they are involved. As such, the failure of this appeal on its facts is likely to have little, if any, effect on most claims.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>In summary, the judgment:</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:list {"ordered":true,"type":"a"} --> <ol type="a"><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Confirms that a local authority owes an Art3 operational duty to children within its area, irrespective of the extent or absence of “care and control” and restores the law to its position prior to the decision at first instance;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Thereby removes the “logjam” caused by cases that had been stayed pending the outcome of that decision;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Sets out, and applies, the (well established) test for Art3 in the context of a “failure to remove” case against a local authority;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Notes that the assessment of the reasonableness of the defendant’s actions is a matter for the court, not expert opinion, and that, in effect, the defendant cannot avail itself of a <em>Bolam</em> defence;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Provides an illustration of a case in which the frequency and severity of incidents falls below the Art 3 “threshold”;</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --><!-- wp:list-item --> <li>Does not take the opportunity to provide any guidance on the frequency and severity of abuse/neglect that would meet the “threshold.” This will be a matter of regret, but perhaps not surprise, for practitioners. The level of the “threshold” remains an open question and is one that will probably only be answered as a body of decided cases emerges over time.</li> <!-- /wp:list-item --></ol> <!-- /wp:list -->

Parklane Plowden Charity Abseil

<p style="margin-top: 0cm; background: white;"><span style="font-size: 13.5pt; font-family: 'Segoe UI',sans-serif; color: black;">Parklane Plowden's Chancery and Commercial Clerks, <a href="https://www.parklaneplowden.co.uk/clerks/jodie-connor/">Jodie Connor</a> and <a href="https://www.parklaneplowden.co.uk/clerks/teri-croman/">Teri Croman</a> will be taking part in the <a href="https://www.candlelighters.org.uk/">Candlelighters</a> Abseil down the 148ft Moda Building in Leeds on Saturday 10th June 2023.</span></p> <p style="background: white; font-size: revert; margin: revert;"><span style="font-size: 13.5pt; font-family: 'Segoe UI',sans-serif; color: black;">Our Chancery and Commercial team have worked closely with <a href="https://www.candlelighters.org.uk/">Candlelighters</a> for a number of years, to date raising a total of £5,342.00!</span></p> <p style="background: white; font-size: revert; margin: revert;"><span style="font-size: 13.5pt; font-family: 'Segoe UI',sans-serif; color: black;">Any donation is greatly appreciated. If you would like to contribute to their efforts, the fundraising page can be found <a href="https://candlelighters.enthuse.com/pf/plp-cc-abseil-2023">here</a>.</span></p> <p style="background: white; font-size: revert; margin: revert;"><span style="font-size: 13.5pt; font-family: 'Segoe UI',sans-serif; color: black;">Good luck from all at Parklane Plowden!</span></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --><!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --><!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --><!-- /wp:paragraph -->

11 July 2023 | Half day Trust and Probate Conference, The Queens Hotel, Leeds

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Join our Probate, Inheritance &amp; Trusts specialists at our annual half day conference for an afternoon of talks and networking.&nbsp;This conference will be held at <strong>The Queens Hotel, Palm Court, Leeds.</strong>&nbsp;</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Guest speaker <strong><a href="https://www.9sjs.com/our-people/barristers/richard-price/">Richard Price</a></strong>, barrister from Nine St John Street, will be discussing Mediating Trust Disputes. Richard is a CEDR accredited mediator specialising in Business and Property disputes and head of Chambers’ Mediation Group.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>This seminar will be relevant to all professionals practising Probate, Inheritance &amp; Trusts.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph {"style":{"typography":{"fontSize":"25px"}}} --> <p style="font-size:25px"><strong>Programme</strong></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>12:00 - 13:00: </strong>Registration and lunch</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>13:15 - 13:30:</strong> Welcome</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>13:30 - 14:00: </strong>Sarah Harrison - Applications under the Variation of Trusts Act</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>14:00 - 14:30:</strong> Anna Metcalfe - Challenging the exercise of Trustee Powers</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>14:30 - 15:00:</strong> Richard Price - Mediating Trust Disputes</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>15:00 - 15:20 :</strong> Tea Break</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>15:30 - 16:00:</strong> Greg Pipe - The Interface between Trusts and Commercial Disputes</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>16:00 - 16:30:</strong> Sean Kelly - Knowing Assistance and Tracing Remedies</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>16:30 Onwards:</strong> Networking and Drinks</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>The price per delegate is <strong>£75.00 + VAT</strong> and includes lunch, afternoon refreshments and a post-conference drinks reception.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><strong>Tickets for this event are now sold out.</strong></p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->

14 June 2023 | FAMILY HYBRID SEMINAR SERIES: PRIVATE FAMILY LAW

<!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Parklane Plowden's family specialists, Naakesha Michl and Naomi Hartridge will be discussing the public and private implications of Parental Alienation.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><a href="https://www.parklaneplowden.co.uk/our-barristers/naakesha-michl/">Naakesha Michl</a> joined Parklane Plowden in January 2022 after spending the first 6 years of her career at the Bar at KBW Chambers. She specialises in all areas of family law, including public and private children law and finance. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p><a href="https://www.parklaneplowden.co.uk/our-barristers/naomi-hartridge/">Naomi Hartridge</a> qualified as a Solicitor in 1999 and initially worked in white collar crime in Harley Street, London. Naomi then transferred to the Bar in 2017. Within her private law practice Naomi has been instructed on matters involving parental alienation, international relocation, non-accidental injury, sexual offences and a variety of protracted contact and parenting issues.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>This event will be taking place in our <strong>Leeds Chambers on 14th June from 5 PM onwards</strong>. This is a hybrid event and attendance is possible via Zoom.</p> <!-- /wp:paragraph --><!-- wp:paragraph --> <p>Sign up to this event <a href="http://lexlinks.parklaneplowden.co.uk/doForm.aspx?a=0xF15D4A97E0E04123&amp;d=0x49EB4C9596DBE1A5^0xBDC0B87423493533|0x40F3E49C83A12815^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|0xF1B146662D144B75^0x8A1CDD2DB76555E3|0x9CB58EF48012E032^0x9BAE882720B3E2DD|0xA14B30AADF25AF0D^0x4538EA01547C6D9520542FC6B6F63C93|0x43D48F22BB6859DF^0x9BAE882720B3E2DD|0xD52134AC788FF0FE^0xAF1BA1DD83354AE1|">here</a>. </p> <!-- /wp:paragraph -->