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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 >> Scott v Inland Revenue [2004] EWCA Civ 400 (02 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/400.html Cite as: [2004] IRLR 713, [2004] ICR 1410, [2004] EWCA Civ 400 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
HIS HONOUR JUDGE LEVY QC
EAT/0068/03/ZT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
MR JUSTICE PUMFREY
____________________
Mr J D SCOTT |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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COMMISSIONERS of the INLAND REVENUE |
Respondent |
____________________
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)
Christopher Jeans QC and Clive Lewis (instructed by Solicitors Office, Inland Revenue) for the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
This is the judgment of the court.
"The failure to take the point in the EAT would normally be fatal but it was unfortunate that the decision of the registrar was notified only 2 days before the hearing at the EAT and when it was known that the applicant was away on holiday. A factual point was raised in the reasons for refusal: the applicant's knowledge at the time of the remedies hearing. As a point of substance, the point merits the attention of the Court in the context of the ET's findings on unfair dismissal."
"(1) That the law and [sic: ?on] compensation applied at the date of the application to the Employment Tribunal and ongoing changes are not relevant. On the basis that no litigation would be finalised.(2) The evidential test is not fulfilled. The changes in the pension scheme were in the public domain by November 2002. The Registrar does not take the view that there has been concealment of this document."
• Is it in any case too late for Mr Scott to contest the Registrar's refusal, no application having been made to appeal it to the EAT?• Ought the Inland Revenue to have disclosed the new arrangement?
• If they were not required to do so, is it still sufficient if Mr Scott can credibly say he was unaware of it?
The appeal against the Registrar's refusal of leave to re-amend
The failure to disclose the change in retirement policy
"Normally, no. However your managers and Personnel Section will consider it in exceptional circumstances, for example, because you have particular skills or are needed to finish a project.For it to be allowed, you must be in good health, and working to a satisfactory standard."
"Under the terms and conditions of you employment, set out in TG 1, the normal retirement age for everyone in the Inland Revenue is 60. However, you now have the option of continuing to work up to the age of 65, so long as you continue to fulfil the health and efficiency criteria."
"… I discussed its potential relevance to the Appellant's case with the clients from Inland Revenue Central England. I was informed that employment after age 60 was conditional on satisfactory health and efficiency and as the Appellant was retired prior to his 60th birthday on ill-health grounds, he could not avail himself of that option…. The change in policy was therefore not relevant to the case put by the Appellant nor to his personal circumstances."
The Employment Tribunal's award
• That the sum of £15,000 awarded for injury to feelings was too low• That the sum of £15,000 awarded for personal injury in the form of psychiatric damage was too low
• That it was perverse of the employment tribunal in the light of its findings not to award Mr Scott his costs.
These look unpromising as appeal issues, especially when they have already been rejected by a specialist appeal tribunal. But Mr Rose submits with some force that they raise questions of general importance in modern employment law.
The tribunal's findings
"When talking to me at my desk he intentionally stands as close to me as he can. In fact so close he moves my chair.When I enter his room he often stares at me in a way that I find degrading and uncomfortable. Sometimes when talking to me I find him looking at my breasts.
In April when asking him to uncapture a tax return he said: 'You don't want to do that again because next time it would be a smacked bottom'.
Also in April I asked whether the conservatory that he was having built was a big one, he raised his eyebrows and replied 'Cor, yes!'
Again in April when asking him to uncapture a tax return he said 'Anything for you'.
On 19 May he said 'Ah, today we get the legs as well' whilst looking at me up and down.
Also on 19 May I caught him looking down my top when I was bending down to place files on his desk."
"…Without detailed explanation and elaboration and investigation we cannot for a moment believe that any reasonable person viewing matters objectively could or would view the allegations as serious. Some may have been worthy of censure; many were trivial in the extreme and relied almost totally on Miss Fitch's perception. Either those involved in giving equal opportunities advice in the Revenue were motivated by misplaced zeal or were keen to create as much discomfort for Mr Scott as they could."
The underlining is in the original. Similar sentiments are repeated later in the extended reasons.
Injury to feelings
The role of aggravated damages
Psychiatric harm
"Had it not been for Dr Lovett's assessment that there was a good chance that the majority of his symptoms of depression will disappear within twelve months, we would have put it at the top of the moderately severe and possibly into the severe category Although not at the top end, for reasons we have indicated, it comes well off the bottom rung, so to speak"
"Even if he showed a full recovery from his depression and anxiety and found a suitable job, the first episode of confusion, conflict or sense of something not being entirely [fair] would almost certainly cause a relapse in his condition."
This is not simply about Mr Scott's future employability: it is about his continuing emotional fragility, whether in or outside paid work.
Costs before the ET
Disposal
Employment with the Inland Revenue until 65
Venue
Order: