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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Fitch v. Durlston Court School Trust [2001] UKEAT 1121_00_0512 (5 December 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1121_00_0512.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1121__512, [2001] UKEAT 1121_00_0512 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE D PUGSLEY
MISS C HOLROYD
MR D NORMAN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR P FITCH (Husband) |
For the Respondent | MR R HOWARD (of Counsel) Instructed By: Messrs Rawlins Day Solicitors Rowland House Hinton Road Bournemouth Dorset BH1 2EG |
JUDGE D PUGSLEY:
"The dismissed employee's duty to mitigate a loss will be fulfilled if the employee can be said to have acted as a reasonable person would do if the employee had no hope of seeking compensation from the previous employer. This is the approach suggested by Sir John Donaldson in the case of Archbold Freightage Ltd v Wilson [1974] IRLR 10 NIRC. Whether an employee has done enough to fulfil the duty to mitigate depends on the circumstances of each case and is to be considered subjectively. The test is whether the employee's conduct is reasonable on the facts of the case. We asked ourselves the question whether the Applicant in this case had taken reasonable steps to minimise her loss. In all of this the burden of proof lies on the Respondent and it is the Respondent in this case who has alleged that the Applicant failed to mitigate her loss."
That is an excerpt from paragraph 10 of the Decision. We can find no error of law in that. The Tribunal then in paragraph 11 summed the position up thus:
"Thus, we have given careful consideration to the reasons given by the Applicant for not applying for other employment and these were as follows:
(a) That, as a result of the Respondent's breach of contract, which the Tribunal found resulted in the Applicant's resignation, she was psychologically not in a position to seek another job; she felt humiliated and very despondent. She did not, however, receive medical treatment.
(b) She had to undertake a good deal of preparation for the Tribunal hearing.
(c) She did not feel able to commit herself totally to a full-time job.
(d) She believed that she still had counts of misconduct on her file with the Respondent, so that she did not feel able to apply for a post until the conclusion of the Tribunal hearing.
(e) She not received a reference from the Respondent. On the other hand, she had not sought one."
"15 We have carefully considered the reasons given by the Applicant for her inactivity in seeking employment, but do not view them as a reasonable explanation for a total failure to seek employment over the relevant period. Her conduct was not reasonable in that she deliberately made herself unavailable for alternative employment. Her eyes were shut to any possibility.
16 Having considered all the evidence most carefully we are of the view that, had the Applicant sought employment shortly after her dismissal as she should have done, it is most likely that she would have found other comparable employment commencing in September 1999. There may have been a succession of supply positions leading to a full position, but whatever precisely would have happened we believe that it was more likely than not that, had she made a reasonable attempt to mitigate her loss, the Applicant would have found herself in comparable employment by September 1999.