Can a failure to secure prompt payment of an employee’s bonus be a breach of the implied term of Trust and Confidence?

Lawyers often talk about the duty implied in the employment contract to maintain “trust and confidence”. It now even has an acronym: the “ITTC”. The principle was developed over decades of employment law. Its most authoritative iteration is in Malik and another v Bank Of Credit & Commerce International SA (in compulsory liquidation) [1998] AC 20 , where Lord Steyn said:

 

“The employer must not, without reasonable and proper cause, conduct itself in a manner calculated and likely to destroy or seriously damage the relationship of trust and confidence between employer and employee”.

 

In Nair v Lagardère Sports and Entertainment UK Ltd [2020] EWHC 2608 (QB) the issue was whether the ITTC applied to circumstances where the employer failed to secure bonus payments due to an employee under contracts with other companies broadly in the same group, and where he was (allegedly) “strung along”. The alleged breach consisted of a failure to secure payment of bonuses due from other companies in the broad group of companies in which Nair (N)was employed and over which it is argued Lagardère (L) had sufficient de facto control, or where the conduct was a positive ‘stringing along’ and avoiding honouring the bonus payment, leading to a breakdown in trust and confidence. The question in this preliminary hearing was whether the claim should fail at an early stage on the basis that the courts have, in the past, rejected the notion of an implied duty on an employer to take steps to protect the financial welfare of employees. But in this case, the stakes were huge. The sum involved was enormous, involving a bonus of at least $25 million USD.

L applied to strike out the claim and/or for summary judgment. Its case consisted of three essential elements namely: first that there was no real prospect of N establishing there was a positive contractual requirement that L had to use reasonable steps to procure repayment of sums due from the former employer of N within the group; second that the pleaded case on breach (failure to take those steps) stood no real prospect of success in any case, and third, that there was no reasonable prospect of establishing causation of loss

But Master McCloud held the case should not summarily be thrown out:

  • This was a case concerning whether the recognised implied term as to trust and confidence applies to circumstances where the employer (on complex facts yet to be ascertained) failed to secure payments due to N under contracts with other companies broadly in the same group.
  • There was nothing in principle which meant that (in the judge’s words) “it was fanciful to suppose that the ITTC can be breached where the employer ‘prevaricates’, ‘strings along’, ‘wriggles’ or however one wishes to describe it and simply fails to respect very large bonuses which are known to be due from companies in the group and where the payments originally fell due under the employee’s relationship with the connected companies and where the discussions included officers who were or may have been in a position to secure the payments (such as the CEO)”.
  • The existing case law on the issue of whether there is an implied term (or an extension to the ITTC) in relation to an employer protecting or not damaging the financial interests of an employee was not strong enough to demonstrate the claim stood no real prospect of success.
  • The test was whether, on the facts, in all the circumstances, the employer so conducted itself as to destroy or seriously undermine the relationship of trust and confidence between it and the employee without reasonable or probable cause. According to the judge: “Conduct can take the form of failure to do something or the form of positively doing something and often the difference may be merely semantic. That is fact-specific”

Mr. McNair might have a real fight on his hands at a full trial, but the observations of Master McLeod on the ITTC are fascinating in their potential to regulate employer behaviours.