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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Pereira v. Estate Management (UK) Ltd & Anor [1999] UKEAT 857_99_0810 (8 October 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/857_99_0810.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 857_99_0810, [1999] UKEAT 857_99_810 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOLLAND
MS S R CORBY
MRS R A VICKERS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | IN PERSON |
MR JUSTICE HOLLAND: This matter started with an IT1 of 20 October 1998. By way of that IT1 the Applicant raised complaints of respectively sex discrimination and race discrimination. The form itself asserted, no doubt correctly, that the dates of the relevant employment were from 9 December 1996 to 24 July 1998. Pausing there, one draws attention to the fact that the employment was for a period of less than two years. Turning then to the way in which the complaint was developed it was in these terms:
"I was dismissed by the Respondents on 24 July 1998, as a result of a incident that took place on 2 July 1998 when I was involved with a colleague. The punishment of dismissal was unfair in all the circumstances, and not one a reasonable employer would have arrived at. I allege the decision to dismissal was a discriminatory action of both sex and race. Their decision has denied me my statutory rights to maternity pay."
"The unanimous decision of the Tribunal is that the Applicant was not unlawfully discriminated against on grounds of her race or sex."
"Applying that comparator the Tribunal found that there was no difference in the way in which the Applicant was treated as compared with the treatment which would have been afforded to the comparator, comparing like with like. Even if the Tribunal had adopted Emelia Nartey as the comparator, when it would be clear that there was a difference in the treatment in that there was a decision to investigate one complaint and not another, the Tribunal would have asked what was the explanation. The explanation was the Respondents decided it was appropriate for them to defer the Applicant's complaint until she returned from her termination, whereas the complaint of violent conduct being made against her required immediate action. The Tribunal found that a reasonable explanation. Consequently the Tribunal did not find that the Applicant had been lawfully discriminated against in this matter."
"On 25 June 1998 Ms Pereira told Mr Bracken that she was pregnant and that she proposed to terminate the pregnancy on 30 June 1998. At the same time she complained to Mr Bracken at Mr Razaq's inefficiency. Mr Bracken's response was to say that he would look at it with her after she came back to work following the termination. In the event Ms Pereira decided not to terminate the pregnancy."
"This is a complaint by Ms Pereira of unlawful race discrimination contrary to Sections 1(1)(a) and 4(2)(c) of the Race Relations Act 1976 and unlawful sex discrimination contrary to Sections 1(1)(a) and 6(2)(c) of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975. The acts complained of were her dismissal and in particular that:
i) she was denied the right to bring a grievance;
ii) she was denied an investigation interview;
iii) the First Respondent failed to interview key witnesses;
iv) the Second Respondent made a dishonest statement at a disciplinary hearing;
v) that she was not believed because she was not "Black British" or of African racial origin."
2 In relation to the complaint of race discrimination, the issues to be determined by the Tribunal were: was the Applicant treated as she alleged and if so, was she treated less favourably than others were or would have been treated and if so, was that on the grounds of race. In relation to sex discrimination, the issues were: was she treated as she alleged, and if so was that treatment less favourable than a man was or would have been treated and if so, was that on the grounds of her sex."
"The Applicant has asserted that the pregnancy was a pre-text in order to dismiss her and that the Respondents did not consider her pregnancy, therefore the dismissal was on grounds of pregnancy since they would not have dismissed her had she taken that into account."
"In relation to a case where a less favourable treatment is alleged to have been based on the grounds of pregnancy, it is recognised in a line of cases from the European Court in Hertz v Aldi [1991] ICR 74 and Dansk [1997] IRLR 643 to the English case of Webb v EMO Air Cargo Limited [1994] ICR 770 that dismissal on the grounds of pregnancy is automatically unfair discrimination without the need for comparison with a man since pregnancy is a condition unique to women."
"Turning to the complaint of sex discrimination the issue to address was whether the Applicant's pregnancy was the cause of her dismissal."
And after discussing the matter it then concludes that it cannot find a causative link between the pregnancy and the decision to dismiss.