In the collective agreements between Rolls-Royce and
Unite, each year of service gave employees an extra point against selection for redundancy. Rolls-Royce, challenging the collective agreement that it had itself agreed to, asked the court whether this was compatible with the
Employment Equality (Age) Regulations 2006. The High Court held that under EE(A)R 2006 r 3, the employer would have a defence to age discrimination because the collective agreement pursued a legitimate business aim, and in any case points for long service conferred a benefit on employees within regulation 32. Rolls-Royce argued that the judge had failed to consider whether the provision was proportionate, and there was no ‘benefit’ under regulation 32. ==Judgment==