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Industrial Tribunals Northern Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Industrial Tribunals Northern Ireland Decisions >> Wilson & Anor v Gillespie [2005] NIIT 1876_04 (23 June 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/nie/cases/NIIT/2005/1876_04.html Cite as: [2005] NIIT 1876_04, [2005] NIIT 1876_4 |
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CASE REF: 1876/04
CLAIMANT: Joan Gillespie
RESPONDENTS: Mr P Wilson and Mr B Anderson
t/a The Fairhill Bar
The unanimous decision of the tribunal is that the claimant was unfairly dismissed by the respondents and the tribunal orders the respondents to pay to the claimant the sum of £731.72 compensation.
Appearances:
The claimant appeared and represented herself for the first day of the hearing and for the second day was represented by Ms Quinn, Solicitor, of James Ballentine & Company, Solicitors.
The respondents were represented by Mr A Henry, an employee of the respondents.
REASONS
THE ISSUES
THE TRIBUNAL'S FINDINGS
(a) The respondents were the proprietors in partnership of licensed premises, the Fairhill Bar, situated at Church Street, Ahoghill, Ballymena, County Antrim. The claimant commenced employment with the respondents as a cleaner on 3 September 2001. No written terms and conditions of employment were furnished to her at any time. At the commencement of the employment she met with Mrs Ellen Wilson, mother of the first respondent, who showed her a typewritten list of duties for cleaning staff and briefly explained what duties were required to be performed by the claimant. The claimant also met with the bar manager, Mr Henry, who also discussed with her what duties were required of her. The claimant must have been clear as to these duties, in the tribunal's view.
(b) It was agreed that the claimant would be paid by the respondents a wage equivalent to the hourly rate applicable for the national minimum wage and that the claimant would be paid on a monthly basis and would customarily work on each Tuesday and Thursday from 8.00 am to 11.00 am. At the material time the claimant's gross weekly wage (which was also her net weekly wage) was £59.08.
(c) The tribunal regrettably was faced with a considerable conflict in the evidence between the claimant and the respondents' witnesses concerning whether or not the claimant received oral and written warnings in relation to the performance of her job duties during the course of her employment. It must be said that the tribunal was faced with the rather unsatisfactory situation of finding the evidence of both the claimant and of the respondents' witnesses, in many respects, to be unsatisfactory, ranging as it did from the vague and imprecise to evidence that was difficult to find at all convincing. The claimant's evidence was inconsistent and contradictory at times and there was also considerable doubt harboured by the tribunal as to whether or not it was receiving a true account from the respondents, including some doubt as to the provenance of some of the documentary evidence placed before the tribunal.
(d) With some difficulty, it must be said, the tribunal resolved the foregoing conflicts by finding that the respondents perhaps did have some issue with the quality of the claimant's performance of her work duties; however any perceived difficulties were certainly not brought to the claimant's attention in the express and unambiguous manner as claimed by the respondents. The tribunal does not accept that the claimant received from the respondents, whether that be by Mr Henry speaking with her or writing to her, nor by any of the partners doing the same, what could be termed any formal oral or written warnings concerning her job performance such as might have lead the claimant to a clear understanding that disciplinary proceedings could be, or were to be, or were being, taken against her.
(e) The claimant attended her employment on 24 April 2004. Mr Henry spoke with her and announced to her that she was going to be dismissed. Mr Henry wrote out in manuscript a note addressed 'To Whom It May Concern' which stated 'Joan Gillespie's job title as cleaner was terminated on Saturday 24 April 2004 as her services were no longer required'. The tribunal believes that that note was prepared by Mr Henry and was given to the claimant for the purposes of assisting her in claiming state benefits consequent upon her dismissal. The tribunal is in no doubt that the claimant was summarily dismissed by Mr Henry on behalf of the respondents on 24 April 2004 without any of the customary procedural formalities that would normally precede a summary dismissal and which would constitute good and proper industrial relations practice. Indeed, the tribunal noted that Mr Wilson conceded in his evidence to the tribunal that the decision to dismiss the claimant had been taken by him at a meeting with Mr Henry a few days before 24 April 2004 and that no thought whatsoever had been given either by him or by Mr Henry to the invoking of any customary disciplinary procedures, nor to the convening of any disciplinary hearing, prior to the decision as to whether or not to dismiss the claimant being taken by the respondents.
(f) After the dismissal had occurred the claimant sought state benefits but was not apparently entitled to any benefits. The tribunal shall comment below upon the situation regarding the claimant's endeavours to find alternative work after the dismissal had occurred. Again, it must be said that the tribunal found the claimant's evidence in regard to this somewhat unsatisfactory as will be mentioned below.
THE APPLICABLE LAW
(i) An industrial tribunal must consider the reasonableness of the employer's conduct, not simply whether they (the members of the industrial tribunal) consider the dismissal fair.
(ii) In many (though not all) cases there is a band of reasonable responses to the employee's conduct within which one employer might reasonably take one view, another quite reasonably take another.
(iii) The function of the industrial tribunal, as an industrial jury, is to determine whether in the particular circumstances of each case the decision to dismiss the employee fell within the band of reasonable responses which a reasonable employer might have adopted.
THE TRIBUNAL'S DETERMINATION
Basic Award
The claimant was employed by the respondents for a continuous period of two years and was aged forty five at the effective date of termination. The weekly wage both gross and net was £59.08.
£59.08 x 3 = £177.24
Compensatory Award
Loss of salary from date of dismissal for a period of six weeks thereafter to conclude the period of determined loss.
£59.08 x 6 = £354.48
There was no further loss determined and no deductions from the foregoing.
Loss of Statutory Industrial Rights
The tribunal makes an award of £200.00.
TOTAL - £731.72
No recoupment applies in this case as the claimant did not receive any benefits to which the recoupment provisions would apply.
The tribunal therefore orders the respondents to pay to the claimant the sum of £731.72.
This is a relevant decision for the purposes of the Industrial Tribunals (Interest) Order (Northern Ireland) 1990.
Chairman:
Date and place of hearing: 8 June and 23 June 2005, Belfast.
Date decision recorded in register and issued to parties: