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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 >> Kell v Durham Police Authority [2012] EWCA Civ 809 (20 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/809.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 809 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
His Honour Judge Peter Clark
No: UKEATPA/0038/11/RN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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PHILIP KELL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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DURHAM POLICE AUTHORITY |
Respondent |
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The Respondent, the Durham Police Authority, was not represented
Hearing date: 31 May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Rimer :
'85. … Mr Kell's own pocketbook was not up to date and Inspector Wood required him to complete it. Mr Kell was then a Sergeant who was required to record evidential information in his pocketbook. Inspector Wood was not dealing with evidential material. Mr Kell found Inspector Wood's by going into Inspector Wood's office at night while Inspector Wood was not on duty. He took the pocketbook out of the drawer in his desk. We do not accept that the drawer was open and the pocketbook there for all to see. This was a deliberate act by Mr Kell to obtain some evidence against Inspector Wood for the purposes of, what he thought, his own protection. It was not done in good faith. It is therefore not a qualifying disclosure.
86. We do not accept that there were any protected disclosures upon which Mr Kell can rely. Even if there had been protected disclosures they were not a reason why his employment with [the Authority] was brought to an end. He did not suffer any detriment as a result of making a protected disclosure. It is for Mr Kell to show that there is a real issue as to whether the reason put forward by [the Authority] for his dismissal is not the true reason. Mr Kell has been unable to show that.
87. It is of course accepted that Mr Kell is a disabled person. He has been for a considerable length of time. We do not need to determine whether or not he was disabled for the period March 2004 until 4 December 2005. Further evidence of the disability has not been given to us in any event. However, because of our decision the question is somewhat academic.
88. The sequence of events leading to Mr Kell's dismissal can be summarised ….
89. After Mr Kell's position as a Sergeant was not confirmed, he served for a short time in Sedgefield Police Office. He then went on sick [leave] and never returned to work. [The Authority] sent Mr Kell to see an occupational health physician who sent him for psychiatric assessment. The various allegations that Mr Kell made against Inspector Wood and others were examined by senior officers and found to have no substance. That led to a psychiatric conclusion that Mr Kell was suffering from a paranoid state which made him incompatible to be a police officer.
90. Mr Kell, at the suggestion of Dr Callaghan, went down the path of medical retirement. There is a procedure that has to be followed. The employee wanting to take medical retirement has to be assessed medically. Mr Kell was totally uncooperative in the process. [The Authority] tried on numerous occasions to engage with Mr Kell but he resolutely refused to be engaged with them and to co-operate. Eventually they had to go down the road of dismissing Mr Kell because he would not co-operate. [The Authority bent over backwards to try and help Mr Kell. He refused all help offered to him. He was on the sick [sic] for nearly six years before his employment with [the Authority] was brought to an end.
91. The only conclusion that we can come to, taking all the evidence into account, was that [the Authority] had come to the end of the line. They could not take any further action against Mr Kell to try and alleviate his problems by medical retirement. Mr Kell was dismissed because he was uncooperative and was unable to perform the duties of a police officer, and was dismissed after all avenues had been explored.
92. We dismiss all of these claims for detriment and dismissal in regard to protected disclosure and also in respect of disability discrimination. A Police Officer having the same or similar disabilities to Mr Kell would have been dismissed in the same circumstances. He was not dismissed because of his disability. He was dismissed because of his uncooperative attitude towards [the Authority] and he was unable to continue as a police officer.'
'Since the appeal has been narrowed, if I may say so, with good common sense and professional expertise, by Mr Kibling, I am unable to accept his submission that the proposed amended grounds of appeal themselves raise a reasonably arguable point of law which ought to go forward to a further hearing before this Appeal Tribunal and consequently this application, and with it the underlying appeal, fails and is dismissed.'