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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Padhuker v. St Martin's Food Products Ltd [2000] EAT 1380_99_1701 (17 January 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/1380_99_1701.html Cite as: [2000] EAT 1380_99_1701 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COLIN SMITH QC
MR P DAWSON OBE
MISS C HOLROYD
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
PRELIMINARY HEARING
Revised
For the Appellant | MR M BARKLEM (OF COUNSEL) ELAAS |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE SMITH:-
"With reference to Zafar Miss Smith noted that while the Tribunal might consider the Respondents conduct unfair, that did not lead to a finding that the Respondent had discriminated against the Applicant on the ground of race. She submitted that there was no evidence to suggest there had been discrimination on the ground of race. In those circumstances she submitted that the complaint should be dismissed".
So that the Tribunal had in mind the importance proposition for which Zafar is properly cited, namely that it does not follow from unfairness that there is race discrimination. Of course it is a factor that can lead to a conclusion of race discrimination but one does not follow from the other.
"The Tribunal was of the view that the explanation for the Applicant's dismissal in those circumstances was inadequate or unsatisfactory".
There is no doubt in our judgment that the Employment Tribunal gave weight to that finding. The point that has been made to us is that having made that finding the way the decision reads is that in the very next breath, so to speak, there is this:-
"However, the Tribunal had no credible evidence before it either in respect of this matter or as background to suggest that the Respondent had ever discriminated against any employee on the ground of race."
The point is made to us forcefully by Mr Barklem that the Applicant feels a deep sense of injustice about that conclusion. We understand that. But, in our judgment, when one looks at the overall effect of the decision, there is no doubt that the Employment Tribunal had in mind the correct principles of law and there can be no doubt that over a very considerable number of days they had the clearest of opportunities to make their assessment as to whether or not the employers had been guilty of race discrimination against the Applicant. We have no doubt that they took into account the fact that the employer had acted in an adequate and unsatisfactory manner in relation to the dismissal and it was in those circumstances that they reached the conclusion that they did and we take the view that we cannot interfere with that conclusion and that it does not give rise to any arguable point of law by way of error in the approach for the Tribunal.