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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Edward Mellor & Co v. Lonergan [2001] UKEAT 1461_00_0405 (4 May 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1461_00_0405.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1461__405, [2001] UKEAT 1461_00_0405 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
MS RECORDER COX QC
MR B M WARMAN
MR R SANDERSON OBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | Mr Martin West (Representative) Peninsular Business Services Ltd Riverside New Bailey Street Manchester M3 5PB |
MS RECORDER COX QC
" it is clearly established that at a stage shortly after the applicant had announced her pregnancy"
to her employers, which occurred in July 1999
" the respondents started to treat her as an employee who was no longer valued."
It is clear from the Decision of the Employment Tribunal that they drew a distinction between acknowledged changes in the organisation of the employers, and changes in the Respondent's role within the organisation. They draw a clear distinction between those earlier incidents which they do not suggest constituted a detriment, as far as the Applicant was concerned, and subsequent events which took place after she had told her employers about her pregnancy. These appear in paragraph 38. They say that they were satisfied that her employers were treating her as:
" an employee who was no longer valued …….on 31 August 1999, when they failed to assign the Applicant an office, having directed Ms Hudson to use the one which the applicant formerly occupied. From that moment, or before,"
they say,
"we find they were treating the applicant as no longer of great value to them"
They also observed that:
"Mr Mellor was unable to explain satisfactorily to us why that should be the case on the basis of the decisions which he said had been taken by that time."
They also criticise some of his answers as misleading and are satisfied that:
"replies to the questionnaire were not only evasive but misleading and wrong in a way which suggests to us that the respondents were reluctant to face the true position."
They conclude that:
"in those circumstances we do infer that the applicant's pregnancy caused the respondents to decide that she was no longer a valued employee. We infer that the respondents were at least subconsciously of the view that because the applicant was pregnant and was going to take maternity leave, she was no longer a reliable employee and they took the opportunity of her illness and absence on leave to redistribute her duties or to reinforce the previous redistribution which it had been intended would have been reversed once the IT manager was in post. We come to the conclusion that it was because of her pregnancy and therefore the inevitable maternity leave that they decided to redistribute those duties and to remove the post. We are not satisfied that the removal of the post was a consequence of a decision not to pursue ISO accreditation. We are not satisfied about the timing of that decision and that decision may have been a consequence of the removal of the post."
Finally they say that:
"We are satisfied that the respondents subjected the applicant to a detriment by removing her duties in relation to the procedures and changing her duties to temporary duties only and by requiring her to undertake menial tasks which were demeaning to her in the presence of former subordinates. We are also satisfied as a result of our findings that the respondents discriminated against the applicant on the grounds of her sex by dismissing her because the removal of the post was, in their view, a consequence of the applicant's pregnancy."
"…..this dismissal was unfair within the meaning of Part X of the Employment Rights Act 1996. Although we are satisfied that the respondents offered to the applicant some alternative positions which they had ……….we find that it was not reasonable for them to treat redundancy as a reason to dismiss because they had never listened to the applicant's representations about the removal of her role with an open mind. We are satisfied that they did not have an open mind because of their prejudice against her in view of her pregnancy."
"38 On the basis of those facts we have to decide what inferences we are prepared to draw about the Respondent's reasons for their actions."
"We have come to the conclusion that in those circumstances we do infer that the applicant's pregnancy caused the respondents to decide that she was no longer a valued employee."