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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Lothian, Re A Decision Of The Employment Appeal Tribunal [2007] ScotCS CSIH_61 (15 June 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_61.html
Cite as: 2007 SC 777, [2007] CSIH 61, [2007] ScotCS CSIH_61, 2007 GWD 27-475

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EXTRA DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord Osborne

Lord Johnston

Sir David Edward, Q.C.

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 61

XA144/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by LORD JOHNSTON

 

in

 

APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL TO THE COURT OF SESSION

 

under section 37(1) of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996

 

by

 

DR. AILEEN P. LOTHIAN

Pursuer and Appellant;

 

against

 

a decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal

 

_______

 

 

 

Act: Napier, Q.C.; Allan McDougall, SSC

Alt: Strain, solicitor advocate; Biggart Baillie

 

15 June 2007

 

[1] This is an appeal to the Court of Session seeking both leave to appeal, and to appeal, against a decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal dated 22 June 2006 consequent upon an application by the current appellant to the Employment Tribunal seeking compensation for alleged sexual harassment and discrimination by her erstwhile employers, Edinburgh Pharmaceutical Processes Limited, in respect of the conduct of the second respondent Dr. S. Newlands. Both respondents were represented by Mr. Strain, solicitor advocate before us.

[2] The Employment Tribunal in a very lengthy judgment found in favour of the now appellant and made a compensation order. The respondents appealed that to the Employment Appeal Tribunal who dismissed the claim, both on the issue of time-bar and on the merits. The Employment Appeal Tribunal subsequently refused leave to appeal to this court.

[3] In this appeal the appellant challenges refusal of the Employment Appeal Tribunal to grant leave to appeal and also the decision on the merits.

[4] Before us counsel for the appellant restricted his submissions to the issue of time-bar, for reasons which will become obvious.

[5] The decision of the Employment Tribunal, which runs to a total of 699 paragraphs can only be described as lamentable. It simply rehearses at great length though not, apparently, completely or impartially, the evidence of all the witnesses. It makes no findings in fact. In so far as it purports to decide any issues of credibility, it gives no reasons for such decisions and, as Mr. Napier for the appellant accepted, it simply cannot be sustained on any point. To the extent, therefore, that the Employment Appeal Tribunal dismissed the claim on the merits, Mr. Napier at this stage did not challenge that result accepting that the Employment Tribunal's judgment was wholly inadequate. The Employment Appeal Tribunal also upheld a complaint of bias against the chairman, but that matter was not further pursued before us.

[6] Before us, Mr. Napier concentrated upon the issue of time-bar and invited this court to allow the appeal to the extent of remitting the case to a freshly constituted Employment Tribunal to consider initially the question of time-bar and thereafter, if appropriate, the merits of the case de novo.

[7] It was not disputed that the appellant was employed by the respondents as a laboratory manager from 1 December 1997. It was not clear whether her employment has ever been officially terminated, but she did not return to work after being admitted to hospital, having collapsed at work, on 21 March 2002. Accordingly, since that date the appellant has had no further contact with the respondents.

[8] The second respondent was the first respondents' Managing Director and the basic case made against the respondents related to his conduct. It was alleged that on numerous occasions the second respondent made remarks in the presence of, or directed to, the appellant of a sexual nature and furthermore subjected her at times to humiliating treatment in relation to attempting to cut hair from her head, making derogatory remarks about her fingernails and indeed, on one occasion it is alleged that he attempted to circle hairs on the appellant's leg by means of a pen.

[9] The law regarding sexual harassment and discrimination is contained in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 (the 1975 Act) in respect of which section 1(1)(a) provides:

"' ... a person discriminates against a woman if-

(a) on the ground of her sex he treats her less favourably than he treats or

would treat a man ... '

By virtue of the provision of section 5(3) a comparison of the cases of persons of different sex under section 1(1) must be such that the relevant circumstances in the one case are the same or not materially different, in the other.

Discrimination in the employment field is covered in Part II of the 1975 Act. By virtue of section 6(2)(b) it is unlawful for a person, in the case of a woman employed by him at an establishment in Great Britain, to discriminate against her by:

'subjecting her to ... detriment.'"

[10] With regard to the issue of time-bar the relevant section of the 1975 Act is section 76 which is in the following terms:

"(1) An employment tribunal shall not consider a complaint ... unless it is presented to the tribunal before the end of -

(a) the period of three months beginning when the act complained

of was done ...

...

(5) A ... tribunal may nevertheless consider any such complaint ... which is out of time if, in all the circumstances, it is just and equitable to do so.

(6) For the purposes of this section -

(a) ...

(b) any act extending over a period shall be treated as done at the

end of that period ... ".

[11] It was not disputed that the three month period provided for by section 76 in this case started on 20 March 2002. Accordingly, having regard to the date on which the application was presented to the Tribunal the application was time-barred unless what happened on 21 March 2002 could be regarded either as a single act of discrimination by the second respondent occurring on that date or a further act in a continuing course of conduct or series of acts by the respondent, which would bring the application within the scope of section 76(6)(b).

[12] As will become apparent we do not consider that authority plays any great part in the decision before us, but for the record we should record that Mr. Napier referred us to Strathclyde Regional Council v Porcelli 1986 SC 137; McLaren v National Coal Board 1988 ICR 370; Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis v Hendricks 2003 ICR 530 and Fearon v Chief Constable of Derbyshire 2004 UK EAT 0445021.

[13] The Employment Tribunal in a brief reference to the issue of time-bar held that the conduct of the second respondent while accompanying the first respondent to hospital on 21 March 2002 after her collapse at work amounted to an act of discrimination which therefore admitted jurisdiction (paragraphs 650 to 653).

[14] In seeking to consider this matter as focused before us we are prepared as regards events before 21 March 2002, to make the most favourable assumptions of fact in favour of the appellant as regards the evidence relating to the conduct of the second respondent and thus proceed upon the basis that at certain times during the period of employment the second respondent did behave in the manner complained of by the appellant. But it has to be pointed out at once that there is no evidence of any such incident occurring after the summer of 2001.

[15] Secondly, in relation to events on 21 March 2002, we proceed upon the basis of the summary of evidence by the Employment Tribunal in paragraph 648.

[16] Mr. Napier submitted to us that the conduct of the second respondent on that day did amount to an act of discrimination on a gender basis. But if he was wrong about that he submitted that in any event it was to be characterised as discriminatory by reason of the fact it was a further act in a long line of continuing conduct which accordingly would allow the three month jurisdiction to be admitted.

[17] The Employment Appeal Tribunal dealt with this matter in paragraphs 84 to 88 which are in the following terms:

"84. We propose to deal firstly with the critical issue of time bar. As we have already observed, given the date that the claimant lodged her application, it was not open to the tribunal to find that they had jurisdiction unless there was evidence on which they could be satisfied that the claim was for an act of discrimination no earlier than 20 March or that the claimant had been the victim of a continuing act which ended no earlier than that date. The tribunal concluded that the second respondent had, on 21 March 2002, treated the claimant less favourably on the grounds of her sex. The immediate difficulty is the lack of findings of fact to underpin that conclusion. We have three additional concerns. Firstly, we do not see how, on the basis of their consideration that the second respondent's conduct was intrusive in the two respects stated, it was open to them to conclude that any treatment was afforded to the claimant by the second respondent at all. The description given by the tribunal does not involve the claimant. Secondly, the tribunal's conclusion appears to conflict with the entry on the Accident and Emergency sheet to which we have referred. In these circumstances, it was incumbent on them to explain how and why they considered that they could properly proceed on the basis that the second respondent had misrepresented that he was the claimant's husband but they do not begin to do so; rather, they appear to ignore that adminicle of evidence. Further, and also significantly, we cannot, in the judgment, find any basis on which it was open to the tribunal to conclude that any treatment afforded to the claimant that day was gender specific at all. There is no inkling of any comparator evidence, for instance, nor of the construction of a hypothetical comparator. Accordingly, we conclude that it was not open to the tribunal to find that a relevant act of discrimination occurred on 21 March 2002.

85. Separately, even if it were the case that a relevant act of discrimination occurred on 21 March, it would only have had the effect of keeping earlier discriminatory conduct alive for time bar purposes, if what happened on 21 March could properly be regarded as the end of an ongoing act. Without that, the requirements of s.76(6)(b) cannot be satisfied. It is not enough that the subsection be referred to and nothing more, which is what the tribunal have done here. In any such case it is incumbent on a tribunal to assess the evidence and to determine whether any proven discrimination was of such nature, frequency, character and quality as to be regarded as a continuum that was ongoing up until the final day complained of, in this case 21 March 2002. To make such an assessment, the tribunal needs to have evidence not only of the general nature of the allegations made but of their detail and timing. There is no indication of there having been sufficient such evidence here. The general character of the allegations made is recorded, with some details of what was alleged to have been said and done by the second respondent. However, it is also indicated that at first, the relationship was, according to the claimant, a good one and there is no indication of when it deteriorated or when and with what frequency the matters alleged occurred thereafter. Whilst there are references to copies of diary entries for April 2000, May 2001 and August 2001, that which is referred to was not sufficient to show a continuing act that ended on 21 March 2002. There were, as we have indicated, problems with some of the entry dates, and there is no sign of the tribunal having analysed it as such. There is, in particular, no indication in the summary of evidence of how long prior to 21 March 2002 was the last allegation of the generally improper conduct complained of or of the nature of the last such allegation or of any other detail that would enable a link to be deduced as between it and what happened on 21 March.

86. Further and significantly, the tribunal at paragraphs 646 and 655 appear to confine their view that the claimant's account is to be accepted to what she told them about what was said to her by the second respondent. We note, however, that some of her allegations were to the effect that he had not only said inappropriate things but that he had also touched her inappropriately. The tribunal make no attempt, when dealing with the time bar issue, to identify the timing of that alleged touching; yet that is something that, having apparently declined to accept the claimant's evidence on that matter, they required to do so as to exclude it from any consideration of the course of events for s.76(6)(b) purposes.

87. In all these circumstances, we are readily persuaded that the tribunal have erred in law in their decision on time bar. It is perverse of them to conclude that a discriminatory act had occurred on 21 March and, for the reason above, also perverse of them to treat all the discrimination complained of as though it were part of a continuing act which came to a close on 21 March. Their decision is, we regret to say, evidently irrational. Even if the summaries of evidence were to be regarded as findings of fact, that would still be the case as support for their conclusion is not to be found in the evidence. Plainly, the conclusion they reached was wrong.

88. We are satisfied that this is not a case for a remit. The tribunal have provided lengthy summaries of the evidence and it did not contain sufficient material to support the claimant's case that her application was not time barred. There is no justification for giving her the chance to re-run her evidence on the hope that it might do so; in fairness to Mr Bathgate, he did not seem to suggest that that was his intention. Rather, his submissions were confined to seeking to persuade us that the tribunal's conclusion could stand which failing that the claimant should now be given a chance to present a case for an extension on 'just and equitable' grounds. As regards that, we do not consider that a remit for that purpose can be justified either. The claimant had the opportunity to present a case for an extension at first instance, before the tribunal. The written submissions lodged on her behalf stated that she did not seek to do so. Justice between the parties would not be achieved by allowing her now to do that which she expressly refrained from dong at that earlier stage."

[18] Despite Mr. Napier's valiant attempt to characterise the conduct of the second respondent as gender specific and discriminatory on 21 March 2002 we are entirely satisfied that the approach taken by the Employment Appeal Tribunal, which we have just quoted, is both justifiable and indeed correct. It is not, in our opinion, appropriate to characterise conduct as discriminatory in the sense of treating a woman less favourably than a man, where an employer accompanies an employee who has taken ill at the place of work to hospital and shows evidence of concern, even undue concern, about his or her welfare as narrated by the Employment Tribunal. It is not in any way gender specific. Accordingly, if the appellant's case is not time barred the issue to be determined is whether or not that conduct should be characterised as discriminatory because of the previous conduct which amounted to a continuous course of conduct. Mr. Napier's position was that that was not necessarily the case but there was sufficient in the issue for the matter to be re-determined on a remit to a freshly constituted Tribunal further to consider the matter against a proper basis of law and fact.

[19] The problem here, as we see it, is as stated by the Employment Appeal Tribunal in the context of there being no evidence of any continuing acts or indeed specific acts beyond August 2001 which were discriminatory. We entirely endorse the position adopted by that Tribunal in the last sentence of paragraph 85 to the effect that there was no link upon the evidence between any course of conduct which might have been discriminatory ending in August 2001 which would connect that with the conduct on 21 March 2002 so as to categorise the latter as possibly discriminatory.

[20] In these circumstances we are satisfied that there is no basis upon which it could be alleged there was a continuing act of discrimination persisting until 21 March 2002, even upon the most favourable view of the evidence that can be taken on behalf of the appellant.

[21] In these circumstances, for the reasons given by the Employment Appeal Tribunal this appeal must be refused.

 


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