[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Hayat v. Red Star Parcels Ltd & Anor [2000] UKEAT 946_99_1602 (16 February 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/946_99_1602.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 946_99_1602 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE COLLINS CBE
LORD DAVIES OF COITY CBE
MR T C THOMAS CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | MS L BROOKS (of Counsel) Appearing under the Employment Law Appeal Advice Scheme followed by Mr Iqbal and the Appellant in person |
For the Respondent |
JUDGE COLLINS CBE
"As to the allegation that the dismissal of the Applicant, purportedly oh grounds of ill-health, was an act of racial discrimination, we are quite clear that the Applicant has never raised this for consideration by the Respondent or the Tribunal until the hearing of 5 November 1998; and that his legal advisers, as we set out in our previous decision, have deliberately avoided the issue. In these circumstances, we can only repeat our view that we consider that it would be neither just nor equitable for the Respondent now to have to meet this claim out of time when the claim has earlier been expressly and consciously put on an entirely different basis."
They went on to say
"We regard it as a vexatious claim and it ought to be struck out."
"…The Liverpool Street offer was put before the Applicant, Mr Sansum required an adjournment for the purpose of discussing this proposal with the Applicant Mr Sansum was called to give evidence by the Tribunal of its own motion, he produced notes which had been typed soon after the meeting . The evidence from Mr Crowther, Mr Bidwell and Mr Sansum was entirely consistent, namely that the Applicant and his father, after returning from the 20 minutes adjournment refused to consider the Liverpool Street job. We accept Mr Sansum's evidence as being entirely accurate, he advised acceptance of the Liverpool Street job and he denied any suggestion that he had advised the applicant not to take it''
and that finding is reiterated at page 13 of their reasons, paragraph
24 (iv)
"The Respondent's approach is illustrated by the offer of the part-time Liverpool Street Job. As we have found, the Applicant refused this. It was a proper and reasonable job to offer to the Applicant."
"Staff who are certified by the Railway Medical Officer as fit for restricted duties but for whom a suitable position in the Railway Service cannot be found to be dealt with as follows…
The man's name to be kept on the books for a period of up to 2 years…
If at any time during the period of 2 years, the man refuses to accept any reasonable offer of railway employment the arrangements will be terminated so far as he is concerned forthwith"
"When the Applicant and his father were called at Stevenage for a meeting the Applicant was not aware of any kind of meeting, it took us 1 hour to discuss with the Union Rep, he said not to be accepted (the Liverpool Street job) no good at all as it is a part-time job with back ache, it's no good to go from King's Cross to Liverpool Street…
On 12 June meeting it was agreed that the Applicant and the Union Rep will go to Liverpool Street and look at the job."
What is not apparent from paragraph 16 of the Tribunal's reasons is the version of the meeting which was being put forward by the Appellant. They recount the version being put forward on the part of the Respondents, namely that Mr Crowther and Mr Bidwell were saying that after a 20 minute adjournment to discuss it with Mr Sansum, Mr Hayat refused to consider the Liverpool Street job. They do not make clear whether the Appellant was saying 'I did not refuse the job' or 'I decided to temporise about the job until I have had a chance to go to Liverpool Street and look at it' or 'I refused to take the job'. The failure of the Tribunal to set out Mr Hayat's version of the facts has given us cause for concern. The most likely inference to be drawn from the way in which it is put in paragraph 16 is that Mr Hayat was refusing the job and doing it on the union representative's advice. No other reading can satisfactorily explain why the Tribunal called Mr Sansum of their own motion to give evidence. Having given evidence he rebutted the suggestion that he had advised the Appellant not to take the job. It seems to us that the most likely explanation of the Tribunal's need to call Mr Sansum was that the Appellant had said that he refused the job on Mr Sansum's advice. If we were wrong in drawing that inference and Mr Hayat and Mr Iqbal had made it clear to the Tribunal that he had not refused to take the job, it is regrettable in our view, that that version of the facts was not set out clearly in paragraph 16 of the reasons. But it does seem to us in the end that it would make no difference. Whatever version of the facts was in fact put forward to the Tribunal by Mr Hayat and Mr Iqbal the Tribunal rejected it and accepted the evidence that was called on behalf of the Respondents and the evidence which they called for themselves to the effect that Mr Hayat had refused the Liverpool Street job. In those circumstances it seems to us that even if the 1952 agreement did apply and the Respondents were bound by it, they had offered reasonable alternative employment to the Appellant and that he had refused it. Although Mr Hayat feels that the Tribunal were wrong in coming to that conclusion about the Liverpool Street job, it is not open to us to differ from them on a primary finding of fact. The result is that he is not entitled to benefit under the 1952 agreement.