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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Deman v Association of University Teachers [2003] EWCA Civ 329 (14 March 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/329.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 329 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL
TRIBUNAL (LINDSAY J)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TUCKEY
and
MR JUSTICE WALL
____________________
DEMAN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY TEACHERS |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr Thomas Linden (instructed by Patterson & Brewer) for the respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Potter:
Introduction
i) Dr David Triesman who at all material times was the AUT General Secretary,
ii) Mr Brian Everett, the AUT Assistant General Secretary who, over the material time period 1994–1996 was the AUT regional official with responsibility for Northern Ireland;
iii) Dr Geoffrey Talbot, who was at the material time the secretary to the AUT Legal Aid Standing Committee ("LASC") which heard appeals against decisions made by its Legal Aid Committee ("LAC"); and
iv) Dr Joanna De Groot, a lecturer at York University, a member of the AUT National Executive Committee ("NEC") and the President of the AUT during 1996-97.
"Where a member was in serious dispute with his local association, it was unfortunate that the member was then offered legal assistance only from a firm that regularly acted on behalf of the local association … There were understandable grounds why Mr Deman might have felt that there was indeed a conflict of interest."
The Decision of the Employment Tribunal
"[Dr Goldstrom's] advice that any allegation of race discrimination was likely, in the context of Northern Ireland, to result in a complaint of sex discrimination (harassment) against the applicant, displayed a degree of foreknowledge or prescience of coming events which would have only been gleaned from a discussion with Dr Jay who was Ms Carroll's representative. Dr Triesman was an impressive witness but he displayed a surprising degree of naivety and ignorance as to the reality of discrimination on the shop floor. His evidence that everything was satisfactory in race terms within the AUT apart from the applicant's complaint, displayed a surprising degree of ignorance and complacency: it does not follow from the fact that no one else had raised a racial grievance under the rules – unlike the applicant – that all ethnic minority members are happy with the state of affairs within the union. Dr Triesman should meet with and pay heed to the views of members like Dr Saha, who was a most impressive witness, who wanted to work with and not against the AUT, but who are very unhappy with the services provided by the AUT to ethnic minority members. When asked why he had not raised any internal grievance, his telling reply was, "Then I would have ended up like the Applicant", i.e. in the Tribunal against the AUT, which is not the situation he would like to be in. Of all the respondent's witnesses, only Mr Everett was able to demonstrate that he had an understanding of the problem."
Dr Mercer
Dr Goldstrom and Mr Lynch
"19. The picture that emerges is one of incompetence and cutting corners rather than any conspiracy as far as the national officials and officers were concerned. Nevertheless, the fact remains that the national AUT should have investigated the applicant's complaint against the QUB local AUT. It has to be said that the applicant could have been more co-operative with Mr Everett and Dr Triesman.
20. In the light of our findings, the Tribunal gave careful consideration to the issue as to whether the AUT and the other Respondents had discriminated against the Applicant on racial grounds or victimised him contrary to the provisions of the 1976 Act. There is prima facie evidence of less favourable treatment of the Applicant vis-à-vis Ms Carroll by the QUB local AUT (not by Mr Everett or Dr Triesman). However, the complaint is not against the QUB local AUT or its officers (in any event this Tribunal does not have jurisdiction over alleged acts of discrimination which might or might not have occurred at the material time). We also find that despite his advice to the Applicant not to proceed with the race discrimination allegations – which was given on tactical grounds – Dr Goldstrom, given his background, would not consciously have been a party to any act of race discrimination against the Applicant.
21. Although this Tribunal has reservations about the AUT's failure to investigate and about the manner in which the Applicant's Legal Aid application was handled by the AUT and its officials, the Tribunal is unable to find any evidence from which an inference of race discrimination or victimisation could be drawn against the Respondents.
22. It is the Tribunal's unanimous decision that the Applicant's complaints of race discrimination and victimisation under sections 1(1)(a), 1 and 11 of the 1976 Act against all the Respondents fail and those complaints are dismissed."
The Grounds of the Appeal
i) the ET did not give sufficient (or any) reasons for its conclusion that the Appellant's claims failed;
ii) the ET erred in law in holding that there was no evidence from which an inference of racial discrimination or victimisation could be drawn; and
iii) the ET had erroneously failed to consider unconscious racial discrimination and/or victimisation but had only looked for conscious discrimination
Jurisdiction
Analysis
i) that it is unusual to find direct evidence of racial discrimination; that few employers will be prepared to admit such discrimination even to themselves and that discrimination in some cases will not be ill-intentioned;
ii) as a consequence the outcome of the case will usually depend on what inferences it is proper to draw from the primary facts found by the Tribunal;
iii) at the conclusion of all the evidence the Tribunal should make findings as to the primary facts and draw such inferences as they consider proper from those facts.
Conscious and Unconscious Race Discrimination
The Argument on Reasons
"The Tribunal was surely saying that looking at the evidence as a whole, including that which it accepted as to incompetence and corner cutting, there was nothing left which was unaccounted for on those grounds from which the inference can be drawn. That is not a conclusion which, as to the first two key events, we can say was in error of law."
Case Management
Conclusion