Beynon v Crash Accident Repair Services Ltd (Debarred): EAT 14 Mar 2013

EAT Transfer of Undertakings : Transfer
On the issue of whether there had been a ‘relevant transfer’ for TUPE purposes, the Employment Tribunal (ET) preferred to the Respondent’s witness’s evidence that there had been no transfer. It failed to give any reasons for preferring that evidence to the other evidence in the case. Moreover, such an explanation was called for in the circumstances of the case by contradiction and inconsistency in that witness’s three witness statements. The ET gave no other reasons for holding that no transfer had taken place and thereby failed to make the findings of fact essential to the multi-factorial approach to transfers required by Cheesman.

Judges:

Kuba QC Rec

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0255 – 12 – 1403

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473016

Uzor v Safiu and Others: EAT 7 Dec 2012

EAT Jurisdictional Points : Extension of Time: Reasonably Practicable – Worker, employee or neither
There was no error in the Employment Tribunal’s finding that a domestic servant was jointly employed on a contract of employment by a husband and wife and liability for substantial compensation was joint and several. The Employment Tribunal could not be faulted on its assessment of what was reasonably practicable, and what is a reasonable time for presenting non-discrimination claims.

Judges:

McMullen QC J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 1424 – 11 – 0712

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473030

Rogers v Department for Business, Industry and Skills: EAT 28 Feb 2013

EAT Practice and Procedure : Striking-Out/Dismissal
The Employment Judge found that Claimant’s discrimination claim had been automatically struck out for failure to comply with an unless order and struck out his unfair dismissal claim on the basis that it had no reasonable prospects of success.
The unless order did not specify sufficiently clearly the consequences of failure to comply with the unless order.
The EJ ought not to have acceded to the application to strike out the unfair dismissal claim because the onus was on the Respondent to show the reason for dismissal and the facts were in dispute.

Judges:

Shanks J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0251 – 12 – 2802

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473015

Cancer Research UK Ltd (Unfair Dismissal : Reasonableness of Dismissal): EAT 19 Sep 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
The decision of a single judge of the Claimant’s unfair dismissal claim was set aside and remitted to a three-person Employment Tribunal which dismissed the claim. This second appeal was misconceived. The task of the Employment Tribunal was not to decide who was driving the van, and whether dangerously or carefully, but whether the Respondent carried out as much investigation as was reasonable. On authority, the EAT would not readily intervene in a dismissal for conduct case, whether for the Claimant or the Respondent.

Judges:

McMullen QC J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 1918 – 11 – 1909

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473023

Uzor v Safiu and Others (Jurisdictional Points : Extension of Time: Reasonably Practicable): EAT 7 Dec 2012

EAT JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Extension of time: reasonably practicable – Worker, employee or neither
There was no error in the Employment Tribunal’s finding that a domestic servant was jointly employed on a contract of employment by a husband and wife and liability for substantial compensation was joint and several. The Employment Tribunal could not be faulted on its assessment of what was reasonably practicable, and what is a reasonable time for presenting non-discrimination claims.

Judges:

McMullen QC J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 1425 – 11 – 0712

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473031

O’Brien v London Borough of Haringey and Another: EAT 7 Feb 2013

EAT Contract of Employment : Sick Pay and Holiday Pay
Implied term/variation/construction of term
Whether trip to school in Gambia undertaken with approval of head teacher for purposes connected with the school was undertaken in the course of the teacher’s employment, as defined in a collective agreement incorporated into her contract of employment, for the purpose of determining entitlement to full pay during absence caused by sickness contracted at the Gambian school.

Judges:

Citations: [2013] UKEAT 0167 – 12 – 0702

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473014

Gaurilcikiene v Tesco Stores Ltd: EAT 7 Mar 2013

EAT Practice and Procedure : Bias, Misconduct and Procedural Irregularity – No procedural irregularity in the Employment Tribunal’s determination of victimisation/discrimination arising out of the Respondent’s failure to deal with a letter of complaint. ET entitled to find that if the letter was received it was not dealt with due to an administrative oversight.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0209 – 12 – 0703

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473017

Handshake Ltd v Summers (Unfair Dismissal : Reason for Dismissal Including Substantial Other): EAT 22 Oct 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reason for dismissal including substantial other reason
UNLAWFUL DEDUCTION FROM WAGES
The Employment Tribunal was entitled on the facts to find that a disagreement about salary and bonus did not result in a breakdown of trust and confidence and so become some other substantial reason for dismissal. It was entitled to hold there should be no reduction for Polkey. The dispute over bonus was within the meaning of s 27 of the Act.

Judges:

McMullen QC J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0216 – 12 – 2210

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473025

IPC Media Ltd v Millar (Disability Discrimination : Section 15): EAT 26 Apr 2013

EAT DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – SECTION 15
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – BURDEN OF PROOF
Claimant dismissed for redundancy – Not given the chance to apply for two vacancies for which the Tribunal considered she was potentially appointable – Claimant had a history of absences due to operations for a knee condition which constituted a disability – Tribunal holds, applying the burden of proof provisions, that the failure to give her the chance to apply for the vacancies was because of her absences and accordingly fell within the terms of section 15 of the Equality Act 2010.
Held (by a majority), allowing the appeal, that there was no evidence that the relevant decision-taker was aware of the Claimant’s absence history and that the burden of proof had accordingly not shifted.

Judges:

Underhill J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0395 – 12 – 2604

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473020

Micheldever Tyre Service Ltd v Burrell: EAT 15 Feb 2013

EAT Race Discrimination : Inferring Discrimination – Detriment
Conduct capable of being racially discriminatory – burden of proof transferred to employer – whether Employment Tribunal entitled to conclude it had not been discharged – whether ET also entitled to conclude that employee was required to change his place of work by reason that he had undertaken a protected act, raising a grievance about racial harassment and the manner in which the employer had dealt with it.

Judges:

Mitting J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0427 – 12 – 1502

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoBurrell v Micheldever Tyre Service Ltd EAT 15-Feb-2013
EAT Race Discrimination : Inferring Discrimination – Detriment
Conduct capable of being racially discriminatory – burden of proof transferred to employer – whether Employment Tribunal entitled to conclude it . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473013

Burrell v Micheldever Tyre Service Ltd: EAT 15 Feb 2013

EAT Race Discrimination : Inferring Discrimination – Detriment
Conduct capable of being racially discriminatory – burden of proof transferred to employer – whether Employment Tribunal entitled to conclude it had not been discharged – whether ET also entitled to conclude that employee was required to change his place of work by reason that he had undertaken a protected act, raising a grievance about racial harassment and the manner in which the employer had dealt with it.

Judges:

Mitting J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0368 – 12 – 1502

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

See AlsoMicheldever Tyre Service Ltd v Burrell EAT 15-Feb-2013
EAT Race Discrimination : Inferring Discrimination – Detriment
Conduct capable of being racially discriminatory – burden of proof transferred to employer – whether Employment Tribunal entitled to conclude it . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.473012

Hay and Others v Gilgrove Ltd and Others: CA 26 Apr 2013

The employees, registered market porters, appealed against reversal of the Tribunal’s judgment that the employer had made unlawful deductions from their wages. The deductions purported to have been authorised under collective agreements from the 1970s. The employers dedcuted porterage charges from the stall holders, and distributed the charge among all the porters, saying that the collective agreements had been terminated. The appellants said that the charge should be divided only between registered porters. The arguments had centered in whether the 1974 agreement could be taken to refer only to registered porters, when there were at the time, non-unregistered.
Held: The appeal failed: ‘The 1974 agreement is no doubt about registered porters, and can fairly be read as directed to identifying their entitlement to ‘porterage’. The reason, however, that it focuses on registered porters is because, at the time it was made, registered porters were the only species of porter known to the Market. It appears to me, however, unreal to interpret the agreement as intended to prescribe that, in circumstances in which the qualifications to work as a porter in the Market changed, and unregistered porters could also lawfully work there, the porterage earned by all porters was nevertheless to be paid exclusively to registered porters.’

Judges:

Sir John Thomas P QBD, Moore-Bick, Rimer LJJ

Citations:

[2013] WLR(D) 220, [2013] EWCA Civ 412, [2013] ICR 1139

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Employment Rights Act 1996 13

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

Appeal fromGilgrove Ltd and Another v Hay and Others EAT 10-Apr-2012
EAT UNLAWFUL DEDUCTION FROM WAGES
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Incorporation into contract
By a 1974 collective agreement, incorporated into the contracts of employment of Covent Garden Market porters, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472994

Dhunna v Creditsights Ltd: EAT 3 Apr 2013

EAT JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Working outside the jurisdiction
WORKING TIME REGULATIONS – Holiday pay
The approach to determining whether an employee of British company who works and lives abroad falls within the territorial scope of the Employment Rights Act 1996 section 94(1) has been developed since Lawson v Serco Ltd [2006] ICR 250. The question to be asked in the case of an employee who works wholly abroad is whether the connection with Great Britain and its employment law is stronger that that to the place where he performs all his work to overcome the general rule that the place of employment is decisive and is sufficiently strong to bring the employee within the scope of section 94(1). The connection with Great Britain and its employment law must be especially strong in the case of an employee who performs all his work and lives abroad. The test of whether when working abroad the employee is a representative of his British employer or is working in a branch office no longer of itself has the importance suggested in Serco. Ravat v Halliburton Manufacturing Services Ltd [2012] ICR 389, and Bates Van Winkelhof v Clyde and Co LLP [2012] IRLR 992 considered.
The test for the territorial scope of a claim under section 10 of the Employment Relations Act 1999 is the same as that for unfair dismissal. The principal basis for the decision of the Employment Judge that the Employment Tribunal did not have territorial jurisdiction to determine the Claimant’s claims for unfair dismissal and for breach of section 10 of Employment Relations Act 1999 had been superseded after the hearing by the comparative and strong connection tests developed in cases since Serco. Appeal allowed.
Cross-appeal from the decision that the Working Time Regulations 1998 applied to an employee working outside the EU by reason of European law allowed. Claim for holiday pay under the Working Time Regulations 1998 dismissed.

Judges:

Slade DBE J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0246 – 12 – 0304

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Working Time Regulations 1998, Employment Rights Act 1996

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromCreditsights Ltd v Dhunna CA 19-Sep-2014
The employer disputed a finding that the Employment tribunal had jurisdiction over the employment claims made by the respondent. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472856

Kelly and Another v The Hesley Group Ltd: EAT 19 Apr 2013

EAT Redundancy – COLLECTIVE CONSULTATION AND INFORMATION
Employees challenged a failure to make a protective award under s.189 of TULR(C)A 1992, on four grounds. The first – that MSF v Refuge Assurance should not be followed- was rejected, but the other grounds succeeded. The Tribunal had failed to place the burden of proof on the employer to show that representatives were appropriate; did not make any finding whether as a body they had the authority of the affected employees to represent them in respect of the proposed dismissals; did not have regard to the purposes of the body to which they were elected/co-opted/appointed, nor the process of co-option etc., and in particular wrongly thought that the fact that the body was expressly not empowered to negotiate was irrelevant to whether they had authority to be consulted with a view to reaching agreement; wrongly thought that it was sufficient for an employer to provide an opportunity to representatives to discuss ways of avoiding the dismissals, reducing the numbers to be dismissed, and mitigating the consequences of the dismissals, when it was incumbent on an employer to ensure those topics were raised for discussion; and wrongly concluded that a letter sent to employees had disclosed the matters required to be disclosed by s.188(4).
Appeal allowed, but remitted to the same Tribunal for reconsideration and further fact-finding.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0339 – 12 – 1904

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472858

South Wales Police Authority v Johnson: EAT 19 Mar 2013

EAT Practice and Procedure : Appellate Jurisdiction or Reasons or Burns-Barke
Appeal allowed and case remitted to same Employment Tribunal to reconsider their finding on extending time for bringing the two complaints of direct race discrimination upheld by the Employment Tribunal.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0628 – 11 – 1903

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472854

Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust v Laakkonen and Others: EAT 1 Mar 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Compensation
Respondent’s appeal allowed only in relation to Employment Tribunal’s making of a basic award coupled with an order for reinstatement. The two are mutually exclusive: see Employment Rights Act ss.112(4) and 118(1).

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0536 – 12 – 0103

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472853

Milson v Hope: EAT 7 Mar 2013

EAT CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Damages for breach of contract
The Tribunal awarded to the unfairly dismissed Claimant compensation for failure to pay any money to her during a 4 week notice period. The award was made under sections 86 to 88 of the ERA 1996. However the statutory minimum period of notice under section 86 was only 2 weeks. The appeal was allowed to the extent that 2 weeks pay was substituted for 4 weeks pay.

Judges:

Burke QC

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0391 – 12 – 0703

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Employment Rights Act 1996 86 87 88

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472852

Durrani v London Borough of Ealing: EAT 10 Apr 2013

EAT RACE DISCRIMINATION / DIRECT
An ET dismissed complaints that the Claimant had been discriminated against on the grounds of race. It did not when doing so distinguish between direct discrimination, harassment, and victimisation, under each of which heads the claim had been advanced. Although no appeal was made as to the conclusions in respect of direct discrimination or harassment, the Claimant appealed on the basis that he had referred often during his employment to having been discriminated against, and said he had suffered detriment as a result of doing so. Since, however, he had not used the word ‘discriminated’ in any sense other than that he had been unfairly treated, never linked it to race or another characteristic protected by the 1976 or 2010 Acts, and when given the opportunity to say it was on the ground of race effectively explained it was not, there was no complaint which could be understood as one of race discrimination and hence his claim for victimisation had rightly been dismissed.
An argument that the Tribunal should not have dismissed Ealing Borough Council as a Respondent to the proceedings because it was potentially vicariously liable for acts of discrimination which had allegedly been committed by someone who had been a co-employee of the Claimant in the service of Ealing Homes at the time of the acts, but had subsequently become an employee of Ealing Council pursuant to a transfer of undertaking, such that the Council was liable as her successor employer, had not been advanced to the ET, and could not properly be entertained on appeal.
The appeals were dismissed.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0454 – 2012 – 1004

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472857

Marl International Ltd v Dickinson: EAT 22 Feb 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Reasonableness of Dismissal – Although it rejected the Claimant’s case that dismissal was on a pretext, and concluded that the genuine and honest reason for dismissal was conduct, the ET decided a dismissal was unfair because the belief was not reached on reasonable grounds. In deciding this, it did not have regard to significant parts of the reasoning of the dismissing officer, nor explain why although the dismissal was because of a finding of guilt on four matters of conduct the ET had no express regard to any reasoning in respect of two of them. It was factually in error in the one aspect in which it appeared to think the investigation giving rise to that reasoning had been flawed. Accordingly, an appeal was allowed, and the case remitted to a fresh tribunal for a fresh hearing.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0447 – 12 – 2202

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472841

Ltrs Estates Ltd (T/A Orwells) v Hamilton: EAT 21 Feb 2013

EAT Practice and Procedure : Disposal of Appeal Including Remission – A division of the Employment Appeal Tribunal allowed an appeal on the two points an Employment Tribunal had determined in favour of an employee. The ET had also decided three points in favour of the employer, but these decisions were not appealed. The remission ordered by the EAT was for a ‘complete rehearing’ of the matter. An ET regarded this as meaning all 5 points.
Held: on facts of this case, having regard to the need for finality of litigation and the context within which the EAT decision was reached, the remission was for a complete rehearing of ‘the matter’ which was a reference to the matter which had been before the EAT, and not to the wider issues which had been conclusively determined by the first ET.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0230 – 12 – 2102

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472840

Patel v Llyoyds Pharmacy Ltd: EAT 6 Feb 2013

EAT Disability Discrimination : Direct Disability Discrimination
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Striking-out/dismissal
Whether or not the Employment Tribunal right to strike out direct disability claim as having no reasonable prospect of success – test to be applied – ET right to strike out claim where there was not evidence that interviewers and decision makers who decided to refuse to offer employment to the Claimant knew of his disability.

Judges:

Mitting J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0418 – 12 – 0602

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472843

Mumtaz Food Industries Ltd v Javed: EAT 30 Jan 2013

EAT Disability Discrimination : Justification – PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity
The Employment Tribunal found in favour of the Claimant on the basis of disability related discrimination; but the case was run wholly on direct discrimination. Remitted to ET – same Tribunal – to reconsider.

Judges:

Jeffrey Burke QC

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0397 – 12 – 3001

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472831

Wainwright and Cummins v Snowdon: EAT 5 Feb 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Contributory fault
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Sick pay and holiday pay
Whether Employment Tribunal should have reduced basic and compensatory award for unfair dismissal by reason of employee’s conduct – no basis for doing so. Whether ET should have refused to award unpaid holiday pay accruing more than one year before dismissal – argument not clearly advanced by employer before ET – dependant on findings of fact not made by ET – no basis for allowing issue to be explored on appeal.

Judges:

Mitting J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0386 – 12 – 0502

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472845

Shaw v The Cedar Tree Hotel and Others: EAT 13 Dec 2012

EAT Practice and Procedure : Striking-Out or Dismissal – Review
A response form was struck out for non-compliance with an unless order. No reasons were given in a subsequent hearing for restoring the Respondent. Without dissent, the EAT amended the proceedings to substitute the correct Respondent and restored the strike-out against it. Cocking v Sandhurst (Stationers) Ltd and Watts v Seven Kings Motor Co Ltd applied.

Judges:

McMullen QC J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0425 – 12 – 1312

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472830

Kelly v Fylde Community Link Ltd: EAT 5 Mar 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Procedural Fairness/Automatically Unfair Dismissal
Unfair Dismissal (UD) claim. Claimant dismissed for refusal to accept a 4 per cent pay cut which had been accepted by all other staff of the not-for-profit employer. Claimant had earlier brought a claim for unlawful deduction of the 4 per cent which the employer had compromised by paying the shortfall. Dismissal to avoid continuing liability for unauthorised deduction. New contract offered on the reduced rate. Claimant rejects that offer and brings UD claim alleging: (1) automatic UD because dismissal was for bringing unlawful deduction claim, and/or (2) ordinary UD because dismissal unfair – many other ways open to employer to reduce expenditure other than staff pay cuts.
Employment Tribunal rejects claim but does not explain why. No mention at all of auto UD claim or s104 ERA 1996. No mention of reasons for rejecting case based on other ways of saving money. ET simply thought it ‘fair’ to dismiss because all other staff had accepted the cut. Clear reasons challenge. Remit to another ET.

Judges:

Luba QC

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0444 – 12 – 0503

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472850

Foster v Cardiff University: EAT 27 Mar 2013

EAT DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Reasonable adjustments
The Claimant is employed as an academic at the Respondent university’s business school and suffers from Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, a recognised disability. The Employment Tribunal dismissed the Claimant’s complaints of disability discrimination and harassment. The core of the case concerned an alleged breach of the duty to make reasonable adjustments in the allocation of teaching requirements for the academic year 2010-11. On the appeal the Claimant argued that there were numerous errors in the approach taken by the Employment Tribunal. Two points of law in particular were emphasised. First, that the Tribunal had erred in not having regard to the effect which anxiety and stress had on the Claimant’s disability; and, secondly, that the Tribunal was wrong to conduct a comparison exercise between the Claimant and a person who did not have her disability. Although that approach was supported by domestic authority, it was argued that it was incompatible with the requirements of Council Directive 2000/78/EC, in particular Article 5, on the duty to make reasonable accommodation.
Held (1) The Tribunal was not required to examine the causes of the Claimant’s disability but only its effects. Anxiety and distress were not part of the Claimant’s disability although they could trigger it or exacerbate it.
(2) The Tribunal was correct to follow earlier decisions of the Employment Appeal Tribunal, which require a comparison to be done, in the context of the duty to make reasonable adjustments, between the Claimant and a person who does not have the relevant disability. Such an approach is not incompatible with Directive 2000/78/EC, in particular Article 5.

Judges:

Singh J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0422 – 12 – 2703

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Council Directive 2000/78/EC

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472849

Camden and Islington Foundation Trust v Boafo: EAT 19 Feb 2013

EAT Contract of Employment : Wrongful Dismissal – UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
The Employment Tribunal found that the Claimant was fairly but wrongfully dismissed following a disciplinary matter and awarded 12 weeks pay for loss of notice. Both sides appealed. Both appeal and cross-appeal allowed and the matter remitted to the same ET. On the unfair dismissal the ET had not expressly considered whether dismissal was ‘within the range of reasonable responses’ and in particular the relevance of C’s long service and good record. On wrongful dismissal the ET had made two apparently contradictory statements as to whether R had been entitled to dismiss summarily for repudiatory breach.

Judges:

Shanks J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0207 – 12 – 1902

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472835

El-Kholy v Rentokil Initial Facilities Services (UK) Ltd: EAT 21 Mar 2013

EAT JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Extension of time: reasonably practicable
Where a Claimant has retained a solicitor to act for him and failed to meet the deadline for presenting a complaint of unfair dismissal to an Employment Tribunal, the adviser’s fault will defeat any attempt to argue that it was not reasonably practicable to make a timely complaint to an Employment Tribunal. Dictum of Lord Phillips in Marks and Spencer plc v Williams-Ryan [2005] IRLR 562 and Dedman v British Building and Engineering Appliances Ltd [1973] IRLR 379 applied. The approach to ‘reasonably practicable’ in Employment Rights Act 1996 section 111 is that of the generous interpretation of ‘practicable’ in the predecessor provision given in Dedman. Porter v Bandridge Ltd [1978] ICR 943 applied. There is no difference in the approach to be taken to ignorance of the right to bring a claim of unfair dismissal and ignorance of the time limit for doing so save in the ease or difficulty of establishing the reasonableness of such ignorance. Wall’s Meat Co Ltd v Khan [1978] IRLR 499 applied. Each case turns on its own facts. The Employment Judge did not err in deciding that the Claimant had not established that it was not reasonably practicable for him to present his complaint of unfair dismissal in time.

Judges:

Slade J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0472 – 12 – 2103

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472848

London City Airport Ltd v Chacko: EAT 22 Mar 2013

EAT Trade Union Rights : Interim Relief
The Claimant’s claim was brought for unfair dismissal contrary to s152(1)(b) TULR(C)A 1992 (trade union activity) and Schedule A1 para 161(2)(a) (acting to secure union recognition).
An application for interim relief under s161 TULR(C)A 1992 and s128 ERA 1996 was supported by requisite certificates by TU officials.
Relief granted by Employment Judge.
Respondent’s (employer’s) appeal.
Appeal dismissed.
Judge applied the right test. In the context of a summary hearing, he made the required decision as to how matters ‘appeared’ to him. His finding that the Claimant was ‘likely’ to succeed in the underlying claim was not perverse and had been reached applying the correct principles.

Judges:

Luba QC

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0013 – 13 – 2203

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472851

The Carphone Warehouse Ltd v Martin: EAT 12 Feb 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Constructive Dismissal – DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Reasonable adjustments
Claimant suffered personality disorder and was disabled for the purposes of DDA. He was suspended for misconduct in November 2009 and was still suspended a year later when he resigned.
The Employment Tribunal found in his favour on disability discrimination claims based on ‘reasonable adjustments’ arising from a failure to pay him correct pay and failure to bring an end to suspension by July 2009. The EAT found that this was misconceived: neither the failure to exercise care on pay or to make proper progress on the suspension could be described as a ‘provision, practice or procedure applied by the employer’ and nor could the exercise of care or the speeding-up of the disciplinary process be described as the ‘taking of steps’ so as to bring the case within section 4A of the DDA.
The ET also found that he had been constructively (and unfairly) dismissed. The Respondent’s appeal against that finding was rejected: this was a classic case of a course of conduct culminating in a last straw which amounted to a repudiatory breach of contract in response to which the Claimant resigned, and the ET’s conclusions in this respect were not ones that no reasonable Tribunal could reach.
The Claimant’s cross-appeals on various other findings of the ET raised no points of law.

Judges:

Shanks J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0371 – 12 – 1202

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Disability Discrimination Act 1996 4A

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472836

Turner v South Central Ambulance Service NHS Trust: EAT 8 Feb 2013

EAT Disability Discrimination
A Claimant suffered from PTSD, diagnosed in 2004. She had suffered episodes of stress thereafter, causing symptoms, which she attributed to her PTSD. Psychiatric evidence differed as to whether these were recurrent episodes of PTSD or separate short-lived events of stress-related symptoms. The Employment Judge held it was the latter. However, though rejecting an underlying condition throughout the Claimant’s employment he indicated that she might have had sufficient symptoms for part of her time in employment to qualify as a disability, and on one reading of his Reasons rejected the conclusion that she did only because he adopted the wrong standard of proof. Held that in context he had not erred in that way, and had actually concluded that there was sufficient evidence for him properly to conclude that the Claimant had been disabled for part of the time, and indeed when she had been so.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0383 – 12 – 0802

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472844

C and D DH Ltd (T/A Elite Homecarers) v Revenue and Customs: EAT 12 Feb 2013

EAT National Minimum Wage : The Appellant appealed to the Employment Tribunal against a Notice of Underpayment served by the Respondent under section 19 of the National Minimum Wage Act 1998. The ET dismissed the appeal. It found that the Appellant paid travel expenses which required to be deducted from the total payment from employer to employee under the National Minimum Wage Regulations 1999, regulations 30 and 31. After making the reductions, the sums paid were less than the hourly rate for the minimum wage set by the regulations. The Appellant argued that the ET had erred in law in their construction of the contract between parties and had erred in categorising the payments made as including anything in respect of travel expenses. The Appellant argued that he had implemented an allowance for business mileage under the Income Tax (Earnings and Pensions) Act 2003. The EAT found that the ET had not erred in law and had correctly found that the Appellant made payments in respect of business mileage which had to be deducted for the purpose of ascertaining the hourly rate paid to the employees. The rate so calculated was less than the national minimum wage.

Judges:

Lady Stacey

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0039 – 12 – 1202

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472834

Esparon and Another v Roucou: EAT 15 Feb 2013

EAT Practice and Procedure : Review – Default Judgment. Review application. Employment Judge failed to take into account all material considerations; see Pendragon v Copus. Appeal allowed; case remitted for fresh review hearing.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0156 – 12 – 1502

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472837

New Eltham Conservative Club v Hazel: EAT 13 Feb 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Compensation – The Employment Tribunal found that Claimants had been unfairly dismissed rejecting Respondent’s case that the dismissal was for redundancy and finding that it was procedurally unfair in any event. In the course of the judgment on liability the ET made a finding that R ‘had determined that its dire financial problems meant that it needed to make savings in the form of reducing overheads the biggest of which were staff and in particular the costs of employing the Claimants’; it also remarked that it may have been a case where ‘some other substantial reason’ could have been argued successfully but that such a case was not advanced.
At the remedies hearing the ET made a compensatory award based on the proposition that if they had not been dismissed Cs would have remained in employment up to retirement and notwithstanding their findings in the liability Judgment they gave no consideration to any reduction to reflect the chance that the Cs could have been properly dismissed at the time they were in fact dismissed or at some time before retirement date. In so doing they rejected R’s case on balance of probabilities but failed to consider whether there was such a ‘chance’ and so erred.
The case is therefore remitted to the same ET on the question of compensation with a direction that the ET should consider the position in the light of any further submissions but that no further evidence should be received.

Judges:

Shanks J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0096 – 12 – 1302

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472842

JJ Food Service Ltd v Kefil: EAT 12 Feb 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Reasonableness of Dismissal – An argument that it was perverse (or substitution) for an Employment Tribunal to hold that a dismissal of a manager for behaving in an over-authoritarian manner towards junior staff was unfair was rejected. It was open to this ET to come to that conclusion.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0320 – 12 – 1202

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472839

Whyte v London Borough of Lewisham: EAT 28 Feb 2013

EAT Unfair Dismissal : Compensation
No error of law in Employment Tribunal’s approach to compensation for unfair dismissal. Observations on the correct approach by the DWP to the prescribed element in accordance with Regulation 7(2) of the Recoupment Regulations 1996.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0256 – 12 – 2802

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedDosanjh v Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Trust (Practice and Procedure : Amendment) EAT 3-Apr-2013
EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
Amendment
Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity
It is reasonably arguable that the Employment Judge overlooked the Claimant’s internal grievances when he held . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472847

AIB Group (UK) Plc v Fletcher and Others: EAT 8 Feb 2013

EAT Unlawful Deduction From Wages : CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT – Incorporation into contract
Term as to performance pay in collective agreement incorporated into individual contracts of employment. Whether varied by subsequent agreement. It was not. Employment Judge’s analysis upheld. Employer’s appeal dismissed.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0394 – 12 – 0802

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472833

Walker v Sita Information Networking Computing Ltd: EAT 8 Feb 2013

EAT Disability Discrimination : A claimant suffered from a constellation of symptoms, causing significant difficulty in his day to day life, which could not be attributed to a recognisable pathological or mental cause, but were regarded as functional overlay, accentuated by his being obese (at 21.5 stones). The genuineness of the symptoms and their effects were not challenged. An EJ was held in error in concluding that because no physical or mental cause could be identified, therefore there was no disability within the DDA. He should have had regard to the effect of the impairments, not their cause (though the absence of an obvious cause might have evidential significance in an appropriate case if the genuineness of the symptoms was put in issue); should have considered the Guidance in the Code; and wrongly relied on authority which dated from the time when a recognised mental illness had to be shown before a mental impairment could be regarded as a disability, which has not been the case since 2005.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0097 – 12 – 0802

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472846

Meliha Veli Mustafa v Direktor Na Fond’Garantirani etc: ECJ 18 Apr 2013

ECJ Protection of employees in the event of insolvency of their employer – Directive 80/987/EEC – Directive 2002/74/EC – Directive 2008/94/EC – Articles 2 and 3 – Obligation to provide a guarantee for employees’ claims – Possibility of limiting the guarantee to claims arising before the entry of the decision to open the insolvency proceedings in the register of companies – Decision to open the insolvency proceedings – Effects – Continuation of the employer’s activity)

Judges:

von Danwitz R

Citations:

C-247/12, [2013] EUECJ C-247/12

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Directive 80/987/EEC, Directive 2002/74/EC, Directive 2008/94/EC

European, Employment, Insolvency

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472724

George v The Ministry of Justice: CA 17 Apr 2013

The claimant appealed against rejection of his claim that the respondent had broken his contract of employment as a prison officer by changing the collective agreement for prisons officers. The judge had found that the respective terms were not incorporated into his contract.
Held: The appeal failed. It was difficult to extract from the Bulletin or Appendix referred to any intention that anything in it was intended to be individually enforceable by employees. It was intended to provide no more than general guidance as to the local arrangements that should be made.

Judges:

Maurice Kay LJ, VP, Rimer, Jackson LJJ

Citations:

[2013] EWCA Civ 324, [2013] WLR(D) 144

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedYoung v Canadian Northern Railway Company PC 25-Nov-1930
Manitoba – Collective agreements have a function and value of their own which exists wholly independently of any individual contract of employment. Lord Russell referred to a ‘Wage Agreement’ entered into between the appellant’s trade union and the . .
CitedNational Coal Board v Galley CA 1958
A colliery deputy was in breach of contract by refusing over several months to work on Saturdays. His refusal was part of wider industrial action involving several other deputies. Although the combined effect of the refusal to work by the defendant . .
CitedAlexander v Standard Telephones and Cables Ltd (No. 2) 1991
alexander_standard1991
The court considered under what circumstances a collective agreement between an employer and trades unions would be incorporated into an individual employee’s contract: ‘The so-called ‘normative effect’ by which it can be inferred that provisions of . .
CitedKaur v MG Rover Group Ltd CA 17-Nov-2004
The applicant was employed by the respondent who had a collective agreement with a trade union.
Held: Not all elements of the collective agreement need be intended to be legally enforceable. She complained that the collective agreement would . .
CitedMalone and Others v British Airways Plc CA 3-Nov-2010
The court was asked to consider whether the express incorporation into contracts of employment of the terms of a collective agreement resulted in a particular such term that impacted upon working conditions being individually enforceable by the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Prisons

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472635

Oreste Della Rocca v Poste Italiane Spa: ECJ 11 Apr 2013

ECJ Social policy – Directive 1999/70/EC – Framework Agreement on fixed-term work concluded by ETUC, UNICE and CEEP – Clause 2 – Scope of application of the Framework Agreement – Temporary employment business – Supply of temporary workers to a user undertaking – Successive fixed-term employment contracts

Judges:

E Jarasiunas P

Citations:

C-290/12, [2013] EUECJ C-290/12

Links:

Bailii

European, Employment

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.472565

Dooley v The Union of Construction Allied Trades and Technicians (Certification Officer): EAT 19 Apr 2013

EAT CERTIFICATION OFFICER
The Appellant was disciplined by the Respondent’s executive council. He argued that the decision was vitiated by breaches of the rules of natural justice, in that (1) members of the executive council were automatically disqualified by bias in the circumstances, alternatively (2) there was apparent bias on their part, such that some different body ought to have been constituted to hear the disciplinary proceedings. He further argued that the union must have misconstrued its own rules by finding a disciplinary matter proved when (it was argued) the Appellant was doing no more than asserting his rights, as he was entitled to do by virtue of article 10 and 11 of the ECHR. The certification officer decided against him.
Appeal dismissed. The certification officer was correct to find that there was no breach of the rules of natural justice and that the union had complied with its own rules.

Judges:

David Richardson J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0523 – 12 – 1904

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Natural Justice

Updated: 17 November 2022; Ref: scu.512141

Eweida And Others v The United Kingdom: ECHR 15 Jan 2013

ECHR Article 9-1
Manifest religion or belief
Disciplinary measures against employees for wearing religious symbols (cross) at work or refusing to perform duties they considered incompatible with their religious beliefs: violation; no violations
Article 14
Discrimination
Disciplinary measures against employees for wearing religious symbols (cross) at work or refusing to perform duties they considered incompatible with their religious beliefs: violation; no violations
Facts – All four applicants were practising Christians who complained that domestic law had failed adequately to protect their right to manifest their religious beliefs. The first applicant, Ms Eweida, a British Airways employee, and the second applicant, Ms Chaplin, a geriatrics nurse, complained that their employers had placed restrictions on their visibly wearing Christian crosses around their necks while at work. The third applicant, Ms Ladele, a Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages; and the fourth applicant, Mr McFarlane, a counsellor with a confidential sex therapy and relationship counselling service, complained that they had been dismissed for refusing to carry out certain of their duties which they considered would condone homosexuality, a practice they felt was incompatible with their religious beliefs.
Law – Article 9 alone and/or in conjunction with Article 14: There is case-law of the Court and Commission which indicates that, if a person is able to take steps to circumvent a limitation placed on his or her freedom to manifest religion or belief, there is no interference with the right under Article 9 – 1 and the limitation does not therefore require to be justified under Article 9 – 2. However, given the importance in a democratic society of freedom of religion, the Court considered that where an individual complains of a restriction on freedom of religion in the workplace, rather than holding that the possibility of changing job would negate any interference with the right, the better approach would be to weigh that possibility in the overall balance when considering whether or not the restriction was proportionate.
Where, as in the case of the first and fourth applicants, the acts complained of were carried out by private companies and were not therefore directly attributable to the respondent State, the Court must consider the issues in terms of the positive obligation on the State authorities to secure the rights under Article 9 to those within their jurisdiction.
As regards the applicable principles under Article 14 of the Convention, while generally for an issue to arise there must be a difference in the treatment of persons in analogous, or relevantly similar, situations, the right not to be discriminated against is also violated when States, without objective and reasonable justification, fail to treat differently persons whose situations are significantly different. Such actions are discriminatory if they have no objective and reasonable justification; in other words, if they do not pursue a legitimate aim or if there is not a reasonable relationship of proportionality between the means employed and the aim sought to be realised.
(a) The first applicant – The Court was satisfied that the first applicant’s insistence on wearing a cross visible at work was a manifestation of her religious belief, and that the refusal by British Airways between September 2006 and February 2007 to allow her to remain in her post while visibly wearing a cross amounted to interference with her right to manifest her religion. Since the interference was not directly attributable to the State, the Court examined whether the State had complied with the positive obligation under Article 9.
The Court did not consider that the lack of explicit protection in UK law to regulate the wearing of religious clothing and symbols in the workplace in itself meant that the right to manifest religion was breached, since the issues could be and were considered by the domestic courts in the context of discrimination claims brought by the applicants.
The aim of the British Airways uniform code, namely to communicate a certain image of the company and to promote recognition of its brand and staff, was legitimate. However, the domestic courts had accorded this aim too much weight. The first applicant’s cross was discreet and cannot have detracted from her professional appearance. There was no evidence that the wearing of other previously authorised items of religious clothing, such as turbans and hijabs, by other employees, had any negative impact on British Airways’ brand or image.
Moreover, the fact that the company was later able to amend the uniform code to allow for the visible wearing of religious symbolic jewellery demonstrated that the earlier prohibition had not been of crucial importance.
Therefore, as there was no evidence of any real encroachment on the interests of others, the domestic authorities had failed sufficiently to protect the first applicant’s right to manifest her religion, in breach of the positive obligation under Article 9. No separate examination of her complaint under Article 14 in conjunction with Article 9 was necessary.
Conclusion: violation in respect of the first applicant (five votes to two).
(b) The second applicant – The Court was satisfied that the second applicant’s determination to wear a cross at work was a manifestation of her religious belief and that the refusal by the health authority to allow her to remain in the nursing post while wearing the cross was an interference with her freedom to manifest her religion.
The restriction in question had a legitimate aim, which was to protect the health and safety of nurses and patients. The evidence was that the second applicant’s managers considered there was a risk that a disturbed patient might seize and pull the chain with the risk of injury, or that the cross might swing forward, and could, for example, come into contact with an open wound. The reason for the restriction in this situation was therefore inherently of greater magnitude than in the case of the first applicant. There was also evidence that another Christian nurse had been requested to remove a cross and chain; two Sikh nurses had been told they could not wear a bangle or kirpan; and that flowing hijabs were prohibited. The second applicant had been offered the possibility of wearing a cross in the form of a brooch attached to her uniform, or tucked under a high-necked top worn under her tunic, but she had not considered this would be sufficient to comply with her religious convictions.
This was an area where the domestic authorities had to be allowed a wide margin of appreciation. The hospital managers were better placed to make decisions about clinical safety than a court, particularly an international court which had heard no direct evidence. It followed that the Court was unable to conclude that the measures in question were disproportionate, and that the interference with the second applicant’s freedom to manifest her religion had been necessary in a democratic society. There had therefore been no violation of Article 9 alone or in conjunction with Article 14.
Conclusion: no violation in respect of the second applicant (unanimously).
(c) The third applicant – It was clear that the third applicant’s objection to participating in the creation of same-sex civil partnerships was directly motivated by her religious beliefs. The events in question therefore fell within the ambit of Article 9 and Article 14 was applicable. The relevant comparator in this case was a registrar with no religious objection to same-sex unions. The Court accepted that the local authority’s requirement that all registrars of births, marriages and deaths be designated also as civil-partnership registrars had had a particularly detrimental impact on her because of her religious beliefs. The requirement pursued the legitimate aim of protecting equal opportunities for those of different sexual orientation. In considering the proportionality of the measures, it was notable that the consequences for the third applicant were serious: she considered that she had no choice but to face disciplinary action rather than be designated a civil-partnership registrar and, ultimately, she lost her job. Furthermore, it could not be said that when she entered into her contract of employment she had specifically waived her right to manifest her religious belief by objecting to participating in the creation of civil partnerships, since this requirement had been introduced by her employer at a later date.
On the other hand, however, the local authority’s policy aimed to secure the rights of others which were also protected under the Convention and the Court generally allowed the national authorities a wide margin of appreciation when it came to striking a balance between competing Convention rights. In all the circumstances, the Court did not consider that either the local-authority employer which had brought the disciplinary proceedings or the domestic courts which had rejected the third applicant’s discrimination claim, had exceeded the margin of appreciation available to them. There had therefore been no violation of Article 14 in conjunction with Article 9.
Conclusion: no violation in respect of the third applicant (five votes to two).
(d) The fourth applicant – While employed by a private company with a policy of requiring employees to provide services equally to heterosexual and homosexual couples, the fourth applicant had refused to commit himself to providing psycho-sexual counselling to same-sex couples. As a result, disciplinary proceedings had been brought against him.
The Court accepted that the fourth applicant’s objection was directly motivated by his orthodox Christian beliefs about marriage and sexual relationships, and held that his refusal to undertake to counsel homosexual couples constituted a manifestation of his religion and belief. The State therefore had a positive obligation under Article 9 to secure his rights.
In deciding whether the positive obligation was met by achieving an appropriate balance between the competing interests, the Court took into account that the loss of his job was a severe sanction with grave consequences for the fourth applicant. On the other hand, he had voluntarily enrolled on his employer’s post-graduate training programme in psycho-sexual counselling, knowing that his employer operated an equal opportunities policy and that filtering of clients on the ground of sexual orientation would not be possible.
While an individual’s decision to enter into a contract of employment and to undertake responsibilities which he knew would have an impact on his freedom to manifest his religious belief was not determinative of the question whether or not there has been an interference with Article 9 rights, this was a matter to be weighed in the balance when assessing whether a fair balance was struck.
However, the most important factor to be taken into account was that the employer’s action was intended to secure the implementation of its policy of providing a service without discrimination. The State authorities had therefore benefited from a wide margin of appreciation in deciding where to strike the balance between the fourth applicant’s right to manifest his religious belief and the employer’s interest in securing the rights of others. In all the circumstances, the Court did not consider that that margin had been exceeded. There had therefore been no violation of Article 9 alone or in conjunction with Article 14.
Conclusion: no violation in respect of the fourth applicant (unanimously).
Article 41: EUR 2,000 to the first applicant in respect of non-pecuniary damage.
‘Given the importance in a democratic society of freedom of religion, the Court considers that, where an individual complains of a restriction on freedom of religion in the workplace, rather than holding that the possibility of changing job would negate any interference with the right, the better approach would be to weigh that possibility in the overall balance when considering whether or not the restriction was proportionate.’

Citations:

48420/10, 59842/10 – Legal Summary, [2013] ECHR 285, 36516/10, 51671/10

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights 9-1 14

Jurisdiction:

Human Rights

Citing:

At EATEweida v British Airways Plc EAT 20-Nov-2008
EAT RELIGION OR BELIEF DISCRIMINATION
The claimant was a Christian who objected to BA’s policy of requiring jewellery to be worn concealed by the uniform. There were exceptions for those whose religions . .
At CAEweida v British Airways Plc CA 12-Feb-2010
The court was asked whether, by adopting a staff dress code which forbade the wearing of visible neck adornment and so prevented the appellant, a Christian, from wearing with her uniform a small, visible cross, British Airways (BA) indirectly . .
Statement of FactsEweida And Chaplin v The United Kingdom ECHR 12-Apr-2011
Statement of Facts and questions to the parties . .

Cited by:

Legal SummaryEweida And Others v The United Kingdom ECHR 15-Jan-2013
Eweida_ukECHR2013
The named claimant had been employed by British Airways. She was a committed Christian and wished to wear a small crucifix on a chain around her neck. This breached the then dress code and she was dismissed. Her appeals had failed. Other claimants . .
CitedHarron v Dorset Police EAT 12-Jan-2016
EAT DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION
RELIGION OR BELIEF DISCRIMINATION
The Claimant had a belief (which the Employment Tribunal thought genuine) that public service was improperly wasteful of money. He . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Human Rights, Discrimination

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.472438

Addy and Others’ Application for Judicial Review: CA 18 Mar 1998

Citations:

[1998] EWCA Civ 478

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedPresident of the Methodist Conference v Parfitt CA 1-Oct-1983
The claimant sought to assert that he as a minister of the Methodist Church who had been received into full connection had a contract of employment with the church. Having that contract, he said hat he had been unfairly dismissed.
Held: A . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.143956

Banerjee v Royal Bank of Canada (Practice and Procedure): EAT 30 Oct 2020

In this case the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) was asked whether a party was entitled to ask the Tribunal to reconsider on ‘its own initiative’ (Rules 70 and 73 of the Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure 2013) when it had failed to apply for reconsideration and where any application, if made, would be substantially out of time. Held that the Respondent was entitled to submit that a Tribunal should reconsider ‘on its own initiative’ and that in doing so the Respondent ought not to be regarded as having made an application for reconsideration; Held further that the Tribunal had acted on its own initiative so as to vary an order it had pronounced as a result of a misunderstanding on its part of the law and which if uncorrected had the potential to cause injustice and that in so doing the Tribunal had not erred by failing to give effect to the principle of finality.

Citations:

[2020] UKEAT 0189 – 19 – 3010, [2021] ICR 359

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.661654

Bourne Rail Ltd and Another v Ashton and Others: QBD 26 Jan 2018

The Claimants claimed Damages, an Injunction and other relief against the Defendants on the basis that they were all party to an Unlawful Means Conspiracy to take from the Claimants their work and operatives.

Judges:

His Honour Judge Forster QC

Citations:

[2018] EWHC 73 (QB)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Torts – Other, Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.604798

Cyprien v Bradford Grammer School: EAT 15 Mar 2013

EAT DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Exclusions/jurisdictions
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – Claim in time and effective date of termination
The Employment Tribunal found that the Respondent had failed to make two reasonable adjustments for the Claimant’s disability but that (1) the Claimant had not presented his claim within the primary time limit and (2) it was not just and equitable to extend time.
(1) There was no deliberate act or omission on the part of the Respondent. When did time begin to run in the case of a continuing negligent omission? The answer to that question is – time begins to run from the point at which the employer can reasonably be expected to have taken the step which was omitted. Matuszowicz v Kingston upon Hull Council (2009, Court of Appeal) followed. The ET applied the correct test; and their application of the correct test to the facts was not said to be perverse.
(2) The ET’s decision on extension of time contained no error or law; the high threshold for perversity had not been crossed.
Appeal dismissed.

Judges:

Jeffrey Burke QC J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0306 – 12 – 1503

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471780

Working Links (Employment) Ltd v Public and Commercial Services Union: EAT 12 Mar 2013

EAT REDUNDANCY – Collective consultation and information
The evidence to support a conclusion that a trade union has been recognised by an employer for collective bargaining purposes within the meaning of section 178 of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 must be clear. The Employment Judge erred in deciding that the Claimant was so recognised without identifying evidence which supported such a conclusion. Discussion is not negotiation. Also as illustrated by the use of the two different terms in section 178(2)(g), negotiation has a different meaning from consultation. NUGSAT v Albury Brothers Ltd [1978] IRLR 504 applied. Appeal allowed. Case remitted to a different Employment Judge to consider the issues relevant to whether the Claimant has standing to bring a claim under TULR(C)A section 189.

Judges:

Slade J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0305 – 12 – 1203

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 178

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

AppliedNational Union of Gold, Silver and Allied Trades v Albury Brothers Ltd EAT 1978
The tribunal was asked whether the employer had recognised the Trades Union even though there was nothing formal in place.
Held: Phillips J said: ‘First, the question of recognition is a mixed question of fact and law. Secondly, recognition . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471781

Fox Cross and Others v Glasgow City Council and Others: EAT 25 Jan 2013

EAT EQUAL PAY ACT
TRANSFER OF UNDERTAKINGS – Transfer
Glasgow Council decided it would no longer perform work of providing leisure and recreational services; of providing parking and parking enforcement services; and of providing care services by using directly employed labour. Its staff in each of the three areas were transferred to respectively a Community Interest company, Glasgow Life, and two LLPs – ‘Parking’, and Cordia. The employees wished to be able to compare their terms and conditions of employment with those still in the direct employment of Glasgow Council in other departments for the purposes of equal pay claims. To do so, the CIC and the two LLPs both needed to be ‘associated employers’ within the meaning of s.1(6) Equal Pay Act 1970, or their pay had to be attributable to a ‘single source’. A Tribunal held that whereas the CIC was an associated employer, neither LLP was, since an LLP was not a ‘company’ within the meaning of the statute. Nor, despite the extremely close control which Glasgow Council maintained over the personnel of the boards of each, and over their operations, which were subject to the power to require them to act as Glasgow Council directed, and to audit by Glasgow Council, was there a single source within the meaning the law attributed to that concept. Held A ‘company’ within the meaning of s.1(6) EqPA was not restricted to a limited company registered under the Companies Acts. It could mean a body persons, and since s.1(6) was to be seen as an anti-avoidance provision should purposively be construed to that effect, such that an LLP was within its meaning. Though obiter, in consequence of the decision on 1(6), the rejection of there being a ‘single source’ was also in error. The appeals by two of the groups of claimants was therefore allowed, but a separate appeal by GMB claimants on a different point (whether a Respondent should be discharged from the proceedings) was rejected.
Permission was granted to appeal to the Inner House of the Court of Session.

Judges:

Langstaff J P

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0027 – 12 – 2501

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Equal Pay Act 1970 1(6)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Scotland, Discrimination

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471779

Avia Technique Ltd v Kalia: EAT 23 Jan 2013

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Calculation of compensatory award
Having been unfairly dismissed, the employee took short term lower paid employment. But after a few weeks she fell ill and incapable of work. The Employment Tribunal made a compensatory award of 40 weeks from dismissal assessed at the difference between her old and new pay rates. On appeal, the employer argued:
(1) Supervening and incapacitating ill-health should have triggered a cut-off to the compensatory award; or
(2) After she became ill, the former employee suffered no loss because she received statutory sick pay from the new employer at same rate the old employer would have paid.
Appeal allowed on ground 2. Compensatory award reduced to actual loss (i.e. difference between old pay and new pay for the weeks the employee had been able to work).
Appeal did not succeed on ground 1 because the law recognised no such cut-off.

Judges:

Luba QC R

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0382 – 12 – 2301

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Damages

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471778

Clarence High School and Another v Boardman: CA 15 Mar 2013

The claimant school teacher had been dismissed, after a finding that she had assaulted a pupil. She denied the assualt.
Held: The School’s appeal against the decision of the EAT to re-instate the claim of unfair dismissal succeeded. The EAT had wrongly substituted its won veiw of the facts for that of the Tribunal. However on the claim for wrongful dismissal, the EAT had perversely allowed the school’s claim that a statement by the claimant had amounted to an admission. The claim for wrongful dismissal must be re-instated and that case remitted.

Judges:

Maurice LJ VP, Toulson, Jackson LJJ

Citations:

[2013] EWCA Civ 198

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Employment Rights Act 1996 98(4)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

First EATNugent Care v Boardman EAT 25-May-2010
EAT Reasonableness of dismissal
Procedural fairness/automatically unfair dismissal
Appeal by employers and cross-appeal by employee against Employment Tribunal’s finding of unfair dismissal for gross . .
Appeal fromBoardman v Nugent Care Society and Another EAT 10-Jul-2012
EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
Appeal by employee against Employment Tribunal’s finding (majority decision) that claims of unfair and wrongful dismissal fail. Teacher dismissed for gross . .
CitedBritish Home Stores Ltd v Burchell EAT 1978
B had been dismissed for allegedly being involved with a number of other employees in acts of dishonesty relating to staff purchases. She had denied the abuse. The tribunal had found the dismissal unfair in the methods used to decide to dismiss her. . .
CitedFuller v London Borough of Brent CA 15-Mar-2011
The employers had dismissed the employee for misconduct. The Tribunal found that the employers had a genuine belief in the misconduct alleged and there had been a reasonable investigation. The real issue was whether it was reasonable to dismiss for . .
CitedTurner v East Midlands Trains Ltd CA 16-Nov-2012
The employee, a train ticket conductor, was accused without direct evidence of manipulating her machine to produce false tickets which she was then said to have sold.
Held: Elias LJ said that the Tribunal: ‘has to ask whether the employer . .
CitedSinclair Roche and Temperley and others v Heard and Another EAT 22-Jul-2004
EAT Sex discrimination claim by former partners against the partnership and individual partners: direct discrimination (in both cases) and indirect discrimination (in one) found by ET.
(i) ET must, if . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471755

Zuijs v Wirth Brothers Proprietary Ltd: 1955

The court considered the extent of authority to be established to show the relationship of employer and employee: ‘What matters is lawful authority to command so far as there is scope for it. And there must always be some room for it, if only in incidental or collateral matters.’

Citations:

[1955] 93 CLR 561

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedReady Mixed Concrete Southeast Ltd v Minister of Pensions and National Insurance QBD 8-Dec-1967
Contracts of service or for services
In three cases appeals were heard against a finding as to whether a worker was entitled to have his employer pay National Insurance contributions on his behalf which would apply if he were an employee. He worked as an ‘owner-driver’
Held: The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.346604

EE and Brian Smith (1928) Ltd v Hodson and others: CA 23 Nov 2007

The defendants appealed grant of an interim injunction to enforce restrictive employment covenants. The second defendant had sold his interest in the claimant company in 2001, but after his consultancy ended, he set up another business, the third defendant. The first defendant had worked for the claimant, but left o work in the third defendant company. The employment contracts had contained non-compete clauses. A major customer switched to the new company.
Held: The order was rescinded and an undertaking accepted. There had been delay, and the form of order was too wide. The balance of convenience was in favour of accepting undertakings because of the shortened period now involved.

Judges:

Carnwath LJ, Moses Lj, Richards LJ

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Civ 1210

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedFilms Rover International Ltd v Cannon Film Sales Ltd 1987
The grant of an interlocutory injunction, whether prohibitory or mandatory, depends on what is sometimes called the balance of convenience but is more accurately an assessment of whether granting or withholding the injunction at that stage is more . .
CitedEnglish v Emery Reimbold and Strick Ltd; etc, (Practice Note) CA 30-Apr-2002
Judge’s Reasons Must Show How Reached
In each case appeals were made, following Flannery, complaining of a lack of reasons given by the judge for his decision.
Held: Human Rights jurisprudence required judges to put parties into a position where they could understand how the . .
CitedFlannery and Another v Halifax Estate Agencies Ltd, Trading As Colleys Professional Services CA 18-Feb-1999
A judge at first instance taking a view on an expert’s report should give reasons in his judgment for that view. On appeal, where no reasons had been given, he should be asked to provide reasons by affidavit for the appeal. An inadequately reasoned . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.261493

Fadipe v Reed Nursing Personnel: CA 19 Feb 2001

Failure to give proper reference for former employee.

Citations:

[2001] EWCA Civ 251

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedCoote v Granada Hospitality Ltd ECJ 22-Sep-1998
coote_granadaECJ1998
The employer had refused to provide a reference after the claimant had left the company after making a sex discrimination claim. She said this was victimisation.
Held: The state has a duty to protect workers against retaliation after . .

Cited by:

See alsoFadipe v Reed Nursing Personell CA 4-Dec-2001
Failure to give proper reference. ECJ judgment giving right to make complaint only if cause was result of complaint over health and safety matters.
Held: The appeal failed. The section did not protect former workers: ‘section 44 does not, on . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.200804

House of Fraser v Quist-Brown: EAT 27 Nov 1995

Citations:

[1995] UKEAT 1060 – 95 – 2711

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMeek v City of Birmingham District Council CA 18-Feb-1987
Employment Tribunals to Provide Sufficient Reasons
Tribunals, when giving their decisions, are required to do no more than to make clear their findings of fact and to answer any question of law raised.
Bingham LJ said: ‘It has on a number of occasions been made plain that the decision of an . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.209493

Warner v Adnet Limited: CA 26 Feb 1998

A dismissal of employees by administrative receivers just before the sale of a company as going concern was a redundancy outside the protection given by the TUPE provisions. ‘in view of the facts found by the tribunal about the appointment of the receivers, the dire financial straits in which Microsystems found itself and the urgent need to find a purchaser for this undertaking as a going concern, the requirement of consultation normally applicable did not apply. The Industrial Tribunal were entitled to find that there was a fair dismissal, despite the absence of consultation. Consultation could not have made any difference to the decision to dismiss.’

Judges:

Lord Justice Henry Lord Justice Potter And Lord Justice Mummery

Citations:

Times 12-Mar-1998, [1998] EWCA Civ 357

Statutes:

Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 1981 (1981 No 1794)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedAnderson v Dalkeith Engineering Ltd EAT 1985
The tribunal outlined the correct approach to article 8 of the regulations: ‘Regulation 8, however, is of significance in the present case. Regulation 8(1) provides for the case where an employee either of the transferor or the transferee is . .
CitedWheeler v Patel EAT 1987
The tribunal reviewed cases under the TUPE regulations. Having found: ‘There is no doubt that the transfer of the business from Mr Golding to Mr Patel was the reason, or was connected with the reason, for the employee’s dismissal. So the case prima . .
CitedLitster and Others v Forth Dry Dock and Engineering Co Ltd HL 16-Mar-1989
The twelve applicants had been unfairly dismissed by the transferor immediately before the transfer, and for a reason connected with the transfer under section 8(1). The question was whether the liability for unfair dismissal compensation . .
CitedDuffy v Yeomans and Partners Ltd EAT 7-Apr-1993
. .
CitedDuffy v Yeoman and Partners Ltd CA 15-Jul-1994
Redundancy decision without consultation where ‘no difference’ was found, and there was no alternative, was not unfair. . .
CitedMelon v Hector Powe Ltd HL 6-Nov-1980
Appeals on the ground of perversity will only succeed where it is shown that no reasonable Tribunal, properly directed in law, could have reached the decision made. The court set out the duties and powers of appellate courts in employment law: ‘It . .
CitedPiggott Brothers and Co Ltd v Jackson CA 1992
The court asked under what circumstances an appellate court could interfere with the decision of a lower court in employment cases: ‘What matters is whether the decision under appeal was a permissible option. To answer that question in the negative . .
CitedPolkey v A E Dayton Services Limited HL 19-Nov-1987
Mr Polkey was employed as a driver. The company decided to replace four van drivers with two van salesmen and a representative. Mr Polkey and two other van drivers were made redundant. Without warning, he was called in and informed that he had been . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.143835

London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham v Jesuthasan: CA 26 Feb 1998

A male part time worker in the public sector was entitled to the same protection as a female part time worker, and could amend his pleadings accordingly to allow for a decision reflecting a new understanding of EU Law.

Citations:

Times 05-Mar-1998, Gazette 18-Mar-1998, Gazette 16-Apr-1998, [1998] EWCA Civ 356

Statutes:

Employment Protection (Part-Time Employees) Regulations 1995 (1995 No 3)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Discrimination, Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.143834

Norris and Others v London Fire and Emergency Planning Authority: EAT 8 Mar 2013

EAT UNLAWFUL DEDUCTION FROM WAGES – Industrial action
Firefighter objects to being asked to ‘act up’ as watch manager but continues to do so under protest – Eventually refuses to do so in the context of official industrial action being taken by colleagues, where refusal to act up forms part of the action called by the Union; but continues to refuse on an individual basis following the conclusion of the action – Employer makes deductions in response to that refusal – Employee claims for unlawful deductions under Part II of Employment Rights Act 1996 – Tribunal holds that claim barred by section 14 (5) because the deduction was made on account of his having taken part in industrial action, being a continuation of the earlier official action
HELD, allowing the appeal, that on the Tribunal’s findings of fact the employee’s refusal to act up following the conclusion of the official action could not be regarded as a mere continuation of that action but constituted simply an individual refusal to undertake a task which he believed not to be required of him by the contract, and that accordingly the Claimant could not be regarded as ‘taking part in industrial action’ since (a) he was not taking action with a view to furthering any ulterior object and (b) he was acting on his own and not in concert with any other workers – Bowater Containers Ltd v Blake (EAT/552/81) followed; Lewis and Britton v E Mason and Sons [1994] IRLR 4 not followed.

Judges:

Underhill P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0146 – 12 – 0803

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Employment Rights Act 1996 1495)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedBowater Containers Ltd v Blake EAT 1981
EAT The employee who had an unresolved bonus query refused to work in a section of the employer’s plant different from where he normally worked until the query was sorted out. He was then dismissed. The employer . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471565

Vaughan v London Borough of Lewisham and Others: EAT 1 Feb 2013

EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Admissibility of Evidence
In support of a discrimination claim the Claimant sought permission to adduce in evidence 39 hours’ worth of covert recordings which she had made of contacts between herself and her managers or colleagues. The Employment Judge refused the application.
HELD, dismissing the appeal, that the Judge had been plainly right to refuse the application as made, since neither the recordings themselves nor any transcripts had been made available. However, it was open to the Claimant to make a more focused application, properly supported by transcripts of the material sought to be relied on.
‘the practice of making secret recordings in this way is, to put it no higher, very distasteful; . . The law is now established that covert recordings are not inadmissible simply because the way in which they were taken may be regarded as discreditable’

Judges:

Underhill J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0534 – 12 – 0102

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedAmwell View School v Dogherty EAT 15-Sep-2006
amwell_dogherty
The claimant had secretly recorded the disciplinary hearings and also the deliberations of the disciplinary panel after their retirement. The tribunal had at a case management hearing admitted the recordings as evidence, and the defendant appealed, . .

Cited by:

See AlsoVaughan v London Borough of Lewisham and Others QBD 11-Apr-2013
The claimant sought an order to restrain anticipated defamatory comments and evidence to be given to an employment tribunal.
Held: It could not be said as the claimant asserted that dfeences were bound to fail, and no determination should be . .
See AlsoVaughan v London Borough of Lewisham and Others (Practice and Procedure : Costs) EAT 6-Jun-2013
EAT Practice and Procedure : Costs – Tribunal orders that Appellant should pay Respondents one-third of their costs (estimated prior to assessment at andpound;260,000) on the basis that the claim was misconceived . .
CitedPunjab National Bank (International) Ltd and Others v Gosain EAT 7-Jan-2014
EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Preliminary issues – Whether court recordings of relevant meetings prior to Claimant’s alleged dismissal were to be admissible in evidence at trial insofar as they involved private . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Evidence

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471564

Rogers v The Deputy Commander and Another: EAT 1 Feb 2013

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Exclusions including worker/jurisdiction
An Employment Tribunal was entitled to find that section 94(1) did not apply to the wife of a serving soldier who was employed to manage a children’s play area in what was generally a NAAFI complex in Germany, where she was herself a German national, engaged to work wholly in Germany under an (oral) contract made in Germany for a trust which though linked to the Armed Forces operated wholly in Germany. Such a case should be approached as a matter of principle, and not by extrapolation from the facts of decided cases from categories such as set out in Burke. A decision of an ET which correctly set out the principles, and exercised its judgment as to whether the connection of the employee and employment outside the UK with Great Britain and British employment law was one of those exceptional cases in which it was sufficiently close, deserved considerable respect. The ET was entitled in the present case to reach the view it did.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0455 – 12 – 0102

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Armed Forces

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471563

Ministry of Defence v Kemeh: EAT 11 Mar 2013

EAT JURISDICTIONAL POINTS- Agency relationships
RACE DISCRIMINATION
Direct
Injury to feelings
Accepted, in line with EAT authority, that common law agency principles apply to Race Relations Act s32(1). On that basis employer appeal against agency finding upheld and set aside.
Injury to feelings award manifestly excessive and wrong in principle (see Vento). Award reduced from andpound;12,000 to andpound;6,000.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0249 – 12 – 1103

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Race Relations Act 1976 32(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedVento v The Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police (No 2) CA 20-Dec-2002
The claimant had been awarded damages for sex discrimination, including a sum of andpound;25,000 for injury to feelings. The respondent appealed.
Held: The Court of Appeal looked to see whether there had been an error of law in the employment . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Discrimination, Damages

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471580

Christou and Another v London Borough of Haringey: CA 12 Mar 2013

The appellants had been social workers involved in the care systems responsible for a child, baby P, who had been killed by his family. They challenged their dismissals.

Judges:

Laws, Elias, McCombe LJJ

Citations:

[2013] EWCA Civ 178, [2013] ICR 1007, [2013] WLR(D) 97, [2014] QB 131, [2014] 1 All ER 135, [2013] 3 WLR 796, [2014] 1 QB 131, [2013] IRLR 379

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedJohnson v Gore Wood and Co HL 14-Dec-2000
Shareholder May Sue for Additional Personal Losses
A company brought a claim of negligence against its solicitors, and, after that claim was settled, the company’s owner brought a separate claim in respect of the same subject-matter.
Held: It need not be an abuse of the court for a shareholder . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471582

Concepcion Maestre Garcia v Centros Comerciales Carrefour Sa: ECJ 21 Feb 2013

ECJ Article 99 of the Rules of Procedure – Directive 2003/88/EC – Organisation of working time – Entitlement to paid annual leave – Annual leave scheduled by the undertaking coinciding with sick leave – Entitlement to take annual leave at another time – Allowance in lieu of annual leave not taken

Judges:

M Berger, P

Citations:

C-194/12, [2013] EUECJ C-194/12

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Directive 2003/88/EC

European, Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471522

Rowstock Ltd v Jessemey: EAT 5 Mar 2013

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Polkey deduction
AGE DISCRIMINATION – Dismissal
VICTIMISATION – Post-employment
FACTS
The employee was dismissed on grounds of retirement, having reached an age over 65.
A failure by the employer to follow statutory procedures in relation to age-related retirement led to findings by an Employment Tribunal of unfair dismissal and of unlawful age discrimination.
The Employment Tribunal rejected a claim for victimisation (in the form of giving an adverse reference in consequence of the unfair dismissal claim being lodged) as the Equality Act 2010 did not make a remedy available for post-employment victimisation: section 108(7).
THE APPEALS
The employer appealed from the failure of the Employment Tribunal to make any deduction in the compensation awarded – to reflect the likelihood of the employee being fairly dismissed had the correct procedures been followed.
The employee cross-appealed from the rejection of the victimisation claim and the Equality and Human Rights Commission intervened in support of the cross-appeal.
RESULT
Appeal allowed for want of adequate reasoning by the Employment Tribunal as to why no reduction in the compensation had been made. Assessment of compensation remitted.
Cross-appeal dismissed. The 2010 Act provides no remedy for post-employment victimisation.

Judges:

Rec Luba QC

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0112 – 12 – 0503, [2013] IRLR 439, [2013] Eq LR 438, [2013] ICR 807

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Equality Act 2010 108(7)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedPolkey v A E Dayton Services Limited CA 1986
The employee had been made redundant with no attempt at consultation and in breach of procedures.
Held: His claim of unfair dismissal was dismissed because even if the procedures had been followed, the result would have been the same. What . .

Cited by:

Appeal fromJessemey v Rowstock Ltd and Another CA 26-Feb-2014
The court was asked whether a claim as to acts of victimisation could be sustained in connection with actions alleged after termination of employment.
Held: The appeal succeeded. The Act operated to proscribe such actions. However, this is one . .
AppliedAkwiwu and Another v Onu EAT 1-May-2013
EAT Race Discrimination : Direct
Indirect
Post Employment
UNLAWFUL DEDUCTION FROM WAGES
NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE
WORKING TIME REGULATIONS
The Claimant was a Nigerian woman who had . .
CitedOnu v Akwiwu and Another CA 13-Mar-2014
Two claimants, Nigerian women, came illegally to work as domestics. They suffered severe abuse by their employers. Whilst each received substantial awards, they appealed now from rejection of their claims for discrimination based upon the advantage . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment, Discrimination, Damages

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471352

Buzolli v Food Partners Ltd: EAT 7 Feb 2013

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
Employment Tribunal entitled to conclude that notwithstanding procedural defects the employer’s decision to dismiss was reasonable in all the circumstances of the case. Appeal dismissed.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0317 – 12 – 0702

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471351

Bancroft v Interserve (Facilities Management) Ltd: EAT 13 Dec 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
The Employment Tribunal erred in holding that the Respondent had taken all steps to seek to mitigate the injustice caused to the Claimant by his removal from the workplace at the behest of a third party without considering whether the Respondent had taken reasonable steps to inform themselves of the basis of and justification for the request. Henderson v Connect South Tyneside [2010] IRLR 468 applied.

Judges:

Slade J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0329 – 12 – 1312

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedHenderson v Connect (South Tyneside) Ltd EAT 1-Oct-2009
EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
Employee driving a school bus – Dismissed at the insistence of the local authority because of allegations of sexual abuse which he denied and in respect of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471287

Five Elms Medical Practice v Hayes and Another: EAT 7 Dec 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Constructive dismissal
Employment Tribunal finding breach of implied term of mutual trust and confidence leading to constructive dismissal. No error of law shown. Appeal dismissed.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0345 – 12 – 0712

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471290

Malekout v Ahmed and Others (T/A The Medical Centre): EAT 29 Jan 2013

EAT UNFAIR DIMISSAL
Reason for dismissal including substantial other reason
Polkey deduction
Procedurally unfair redundancy dismissal; 100 percent Polkey deduction. ET entitled to find (a) that reason for dismissal was redundancy (b) it was procedurally unfair and (c) it was inevitable that following a proper procedure a fair dismissal would have occurred at the same time as the original dismissal. Appeal dismissed.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0556 – 12 – 2901

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471282

Mental Health Care (UK) Ltd v Biluan and Another: EAT 28 Feb 2013

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of Dismissal
The Employment Tribunal held that dismissals following a redundancy selection exercise had been unfair principally because employees’ capabilities had been assessed entirely on the basis of a series of exercises designed for use in a recruitment context and had taken no account whatever of their past performance; the results had been acknowledged by the managers in question to be ‘surprising’ and to have led to the selection of some ‘very good workers’, but they had not been revisited because the process was thought to have been ‘robust’.
HELD, dismissing the appeal, that although some of the Tribunal’s subsidiary reasons for finding the dismissals to have been unfair (and in particular its criticism of the Appellant’s consultation) were flawed, its primary reason was unimpeachable.

Judges:

Underhill J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0248 – 12 – 2802

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471284

Simmonds v Milford Club: EAT 6 Dec 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Reasonableness of dismissal
The Employment Tribunal regarded the fact that the Claimant had been given a final warning as determinative of the question whether his dismissal for subsequent conduct was fair. Without the previous warning the dismissal would have been held unfair.
Held: if the Employment Tribunal has cause on the facts to consider that a material previous disciplinary sanction may have been manifestly inappropriate they should hear evidence to determine whether it was. The Employment Tribunal did not do so in this case. Appeal allowed. Case remitted to determine this issue. Co-operative Retail Services Ltd v Lucas [1993] UKEAT/145/93, Davies v Sandwell MBC UKEAT/0416/10/DA and Wincanton Group Plc v Mr Stone and Mr Gregory UKEAT/0011/12 considered.

Judges:

Slade J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0323 – 12 – 0612, [2013] ICR D14

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471293

Contract Security Services v Adebayo: EAT 11 Dec 2012

EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity
UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Compensation
Appeal against a finding of race discrimination by an employer on the grounds of prevention of cross-examination dismissed on the grounds that (a) there was only limited intervention by the Employment Tribunal and (b) such intervention was justified as the questioning amounted to a case not pleaded by the employer nor referred to in its evidence.
Appeal allowed on three points of compensation assessment and remitted to the ET for further consideration: Meek applied

Judges:

Birtles J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0192 – 12 – 1112

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471288

Budge (Was Known As Baker) and Another v McGinley Support Services Ltd and Another: EAT 15 Nov 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL
Constructive dismissal
Polkey deduction
Having concluded in its first Judgment that the Appellants had been unfairly dismissed, the Employment Tribunal erred in its law in failing to have regard to its reasons for reaching that conclusion when deciding, in its second Judgment, that the likelihood of the Appellants being made redundant if a fair redundancy procedure had been adopted was 100% applying the principle in Polkey v A E Dayton Services Ltd [1998] AC 344.

Judges:

Sullivan LJ

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0600 – 11 – 1511

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471285

Mohammed (T/A Mohammed and Co Solicitors) v Jackson: EAT 18 Dec 2012

EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity
The Employment Tribunal failed to make the appropriate findings of fact and explain its reasoning as to why it found the Respondent had failed to process the medical assessment – delayed it – to enable her return to work: Meek v Birmingham City Council [1987] IRLR 250 applied.

Judges:

Birtles J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0370 – 12 – 1812

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471291

Crossland v OCS Group Ltd and Another: EAT 17 Jan 2013

EAT PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Deposit order
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Reasonable adjustment
The Tribunal was entitled to decide that the Claimant, a diabetic employed as a night-watchman, had little prospect of establishing that it would be a reasonable adjustment for the Respondents to relieve him of his obligation to patrol the exterior of the premises.

Judges:

Underhill J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0340 – 12 – 1701

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471281

Russell v Fox Print Services Llp and Another: EAT 19 Dec 2012

EAT DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Disability
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Imposition of deposit
Appeal against a finding that the ET finding that Appellant was not disabled was a finding open to it on the evidence which included the Appellant’s witness statement as well as medical evidence.
Deposit order quashed on the ground that there was no adequate reasoning explaining why the ET considered the Appellant had little reasonable prospect of success: Meek applied.

Judges:

Birtles J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0544 – 12 – 1912

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment, Discrimination

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471292

CSC Computer Sciences Ltd v Mcalinden and Others: EAT 11 Dec 2012

EAT CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT- Implied term/variation/construction of term
An ET found that employees had established a right to an annual pay increase in line with RPI by custom and practice. The employees concerned were a group whose employment had transformed under TUPE to the Appellant employer in 2000. The Judge had said he would not have been prepared to find that a customary right had crystallised by then. The employer however believed there was such a right, originating before 2000, and behaved accordingly, inter alia attempting to buy out individual right to the increase in 2008 and to negotiate it away with what it (wrongly) thought was the appropriate Union. Each of 6 grounds of appeal was rejected: in particular, finding that the employer ‘believed’ there was such a right did not mean there was not; the fact that some employees had not been paid the award was capable of being contemplated by the alleged custom; it was not uncertain because amounts of pay award could vary; it was not inherently unreasonable; it was apt for incorporation and not merely aspirational; and specific evidential points were rejected.

Judges:

Langstaff P J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0252 – 12 – 1112

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471289

Onyango v Berkeley (T/A Berkeley Solicitors): EAT 25 Jan 2013

EAT VICTIMISATION DISCRIMINATION – Protected disclosure
Whether Claimant may rely on post-termination protected disclosure in ‘whistleblowing’ claim under s.47B Employment Rights Act 1996. He can. Appeal allowed against Employment Tribunal Judgment to the contrary.

Judges:

Peter Clark J

Citations:

[2013] UKEAT 0407 – 12 – 2501

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Employment Rights Act 1996 47B

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471283

Pybus v Geoquip Ltd: EAT 20 Nov 2012

EAT UNFAIR DISMISSAL – Compensation
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Bias, misconduct and procedural irregularity
Appeal allowed on the ground that the Employment Tribunal did not consider a submission of constructive dismissal at a remedies hearing or its application to the facts of the case. Case remitted to same ET.

Judges:

Birtles J

Citations:

[2012] UKEAT 0134 – 12 – 2011)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471286

LN v Styrelsen For Videregaende Uddannelser Og Uddannelsesstotte: ECJ 21 Feb 2013

ECJ Citizenship of the Union – Freedom of movement for workers – Principle of equal treatment – Article 45(2) TFEU – Regulation (EEC) No 1612/68 – Article 7(2) – Directive 2004/38/EC – Article 24(1) and (2) – Derogation from the principle of equal treatment for maintenance aid for studies consisting in student grants or student loans – European Union citizen studying in a host Member State – Paid employment prior to and subsequent to the start of studies – Principal objective of the person concerned at the time of entry on the territory of the host Member State – Effect on his classification as worker and on his entitlement to student grants

Judges:

M. Ilesic, P

Citations:

C-46/12, [2013] EUECJ C-46/12

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Directive 2004/38/EC

European, Employment

Updated: 14 November 2022; Ref: scu.471213