Gallagher v Post Office

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search
Gallagher v Post Office
Royal Coat of Arms of the United Kingdom.svg
Court High Court of Justice
Citation(s) [1970] 3 All ER 712
Keywords
Trade union, collective bargaining

Gallagher v Post Office [1970] 3 All ER 712 is an UK labour law case, concerning the enforceability of collective agreements.

Facts

Mr Gallagher was a member of the National Guild of Telephonists that the Post Office wish to derecognise in the process of changing into a public company under the Post Office Act 1969. It wished solely to recognise the Union of Postal Workers. Mr Gallagher claimed this would breach an implied term of his contract, based on what a trainer had told him when he started, namely that he was free to join any or no union.

Judgment

Brightman J held that it could not be an express term of the contract, and the statement by the trainer was merely an informative statement. It could not be actionable as a term that someone was covered by any particular agreement.

See also

Template:Clist collective bargaining

Notes

References

External links