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Industrial Tribunals Northern Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Industrial Tribunals Northern Ireland Decisions >> Bricknell v JT Green & Sons Ltd [2004] NIIT 3165_01 (17 September 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NIIT/2004/3165_01.html Cite as: [2004] NIIT 3165_01, [2004] NIIT 3165_1 |
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CASE REF: 3165/01
APPLICANT: Marilyn Elizabeth Bricknell
RESPONDENT: J T Green & Sons Limited
The unanimous decision of the tribunal is as follows:-
1. The applicant's complaints of sex discrimination are not well founded and those complaints accordingly are dismissed.
2. The applicant's complaint of unfair dismissal is well founded and it is ordered that the respondent shall pay to the applicant the sum of £3,079.45.
Appearances:
The applicant was represented by Mr P Prenter, Solicitor, of Campbell & Caher, Solicitors.
The respondent was represented by Mr U Crothers, Solicitor, of Brangam Bagnall Solicitors.
REASONS
Introductory
The Complaints
The evidence
(1) On behalf of the applicant:
(a) The applicant herself;
(b) Mrs Patricia Young, (a former colleague of the applicant, at the respondent's supermarket); and
(c) Mr Paul Bricknell, the applicant's husband.
(2) On behalf of the respondent:
(a) Mr McCluskey (who is now the General Manager of the respondent company); and
(b) Mrs Lisa Gordon, an Assistant Supervisor in the supermarket.
(1) The applicant's bundle, consisting of seventy three pages.
(2) The applicant's letter of resignation.
(3) Various miscellaneous pay slips.
Our findings of fact
"I hereby terminate my employment with you. I have felt deeply humiliated and outraged by your arbitrary decision to terminate my position running the bakery department in favour of a male employee who has hitherto no experience in that department. As you know after the previous manager's position became vacant I was informed that no replacement would be appointed but I carried out that manager's duties effectively, efficiently and loyally in the intervening period until you chose to remove me without justification and then elevate this male to a manager's position in respect of which he enjoys a higher level of remuneration than me. I have been so devastated by the unfair treatment and what I consider to be gross discrimination as a result of my gender that I feel your conduct prevents me from considering returning to any form of employment with you, hence my resignation".
The submissions
The law and our conclusions (sex discrimination)
"(a) on the ground of her sex he treats her less favourably than he treats or would treat a man …".
The unfair dismissal liability issues: The law and our conclusions
(1) Was the applicant constructively dismissed?
(2) If so, has the respondent shown the reason (or, if more than one, the principal reason) for the dismissal and that the reason shown is a potentially fair reason?
(3) If so, was the dismissal actually fair or unfair?
(1) There must be a breach of contract by the employer.
(2) That breach must be sufficiently important to justify the employee resigning (or else it must be the last in a series of incidents which justify the resignation).
(3) The employee must leave in response to the breach and not for some other, unconnected reason.
(4) The employee must not delay too long in terminating the contract in response to the employer's breach, otherwise he may be deemed to have waived the breach and agreed to vary the contract.
Compensation
Interest on industrial tribunal awards
Chairman:
Date and place of hearing: 16 and 17 September 2004, Belfast.
Date decision recorded in register and issued to parties: