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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Larkin v Korean Airlines Co Ltd [1999] UKEAT 1241_98_2408 (24 August 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/1241_98_2408.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 1241_98_2408 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 12 July 1999 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR L D COWAN
LORD GLADWIN OF CLEE CBE JP
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR J MCMULLEN QC Hounslow Law Centre Ltd 51 Lampton Road Hounslow Middx TW3 1JG |
For the Respondents | MR M DUGGAN (of Counsel) Instructed By: Messrs Langley & Co Sun Court 66 Cornhill London EC3V 3NB |
JUDGE PETER CLARK: This is an appeal by the Applicant before an Employment Tribunal sitting at London (South) under the Chairmanship of Mr B A Kelly QC against that Tribunal's decision on remedies promulgated with extended reasons on 18th September 1998.
Background
The Complaint
The Employment Tribunal Decisions
Liability
(i) That although no guarantee had been given to the Appellant that she would eventually be promoted to the Sales Manager position, the Respondent was in fundamental breach of the implied term of mutual trust and confidence when Mr Cho told her on 18th August that was no longer in line for the Sales Manager post; alternatively, that was an anticipatory breach going to the root of the contract. She did not waive the breach. She resigned on 19th October 1997 in circumstances amounting to constructive dismissal.
(ii) In the absence of any potentially fair reason for dismissal advanced by the Respondent the dismissal was unfair.
(iii) The Respondent unlawfully discriminated against the Appellant on grounds of her sex, both by displacing her as a candidate for promotion to Sales Manager by a man due to her absence on maternity leave and by dismissing her.
Remedies
This Appeal
"The process is a three-stage one requiring initially factual quantification of loss as claimed: secondly, that equally importantly, the extent to which any or all of those losses are attributable to the dismissal or action taken by the employer, which is usually the same thing, the word "attributable" implying that there has to be a direct and natural link between the losses claimed and the conduct of the employer in dismissing, on the basis that the dismissal is the causa causans of the particular loss and not that it simply arises by reason of a causa sine qua non, ie but for the dismissal the loss would not have arisen. If that is the only connection the loss is too remote. The third part of the assessment in terms of the reference to the phrase "just inequitable" [in Section 123(1)] requires a Tribunal to look at the conclusions they draw from the first two questions and determine whether, in all the circumstances, it remains reasonable to make the relevant award. It must again be emphasised, however, that what is to be considered under the third test already has to have passed the second. Finally, it has to be observed that while the facts relating to a question of mitigation will frequently bear upon the question of causative link, mitigation is essentially an equitable plea to be judged in the context of reasonableness at common law and thus on not too fine a balance. Accordingly, the issue of mitigation will feature in the application of the third test rather than the second, and sub-section (4) of the Section merely directs the Tribunals to the proper approach to mitigation if that is what has been considered."
Conclusion