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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> George v. Lambeth [2002] UKEAT 0770_00_2609 (26 September 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/0770_00_2609.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 0770_00_2609, [2002] UKEAT 770__2609 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
MR RECORDER UNDERHILL QC
MR T HAYWOOD
MR G H WRIGHT MBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS NICOLA BRAGANZA (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Atkins Hope Solicitors 74-78 North End Croydon CR9 1SD |
For the Respondent | MR DRJEN BASU Instructed by: London Borough of Lambeth Legal Services Room 21 Lambeth Town Hall London SW2 1RW |
MR RECORDER UNDERHILL QC
(1) The Appellant, who is a woman of Nigerian origin, was employed by the Respondents as a Housing Officer between May 1992 and 11 April 1999.
(2) In December 1996 there was an incident in which she alleged that a colleague, Mr Jones, made a racist comment directed at her. The matter was investigated and Mr Jones was told to apologise. He did so. She believed that the apology was inadequate, but the Respondents decided otherwise and the matter was taken no further at that time. Although the term 'harassment' is perhaps inappropriate for a single incident we will refer to this for convenience as "the 1996 harassment complaint".
(3) On 25 August 1998 the Appellant went off sick with depression. She remained away from work for over five months, returning on 15 February 1999; but even on her return she was far from recovered.
(4) On 6 October 1998, while she was off sick, the Appellant made an informal complaint to her manager Mr Ebbett, who was visiting her at home as part of the Respondents' sickness procedure, of conduct by her colleagues in the months leading up to her going off sick, which she said amounted to sexual discrimination. It apparently took the form of some kind of sexual harassment.
(5) She repeated those allegations by way of a formal complaint on 20 January 1999 and also complained of what she regarded as the unsatisfactory resolution of the 1996 harassment complaint. We refer to her complaints about sexual harassment in the earlier part of 1998 as "the 1998 harassment complaints".
(6) Following her return to work she had a meeting on 25 February 1999 with Mr Bascombe who had been appointed to investigate both sets of complaints. She was extremely distressed at the meeting. It is plain that she had by no means recovered from her depression. Because of the difficulty in dealing with the matter in the context of the meeting she was asked to supply details of her complaints in writing, which she did sometime early in March.
(7) In the meantime she was finding her return to work extremely difficult as a result of her continuing ill health. On 12 March 1999 she submitted a letter of resignation giving four weeks' notice.
(8) Two days later she sought to withdraw her resignation, but the Respondents were not prepared to allow her to do so and her employment was treated as having expired at the end of her notice period.
That is the essential factual background.
A The Amendment Appeal
2 "At the commencement of the hearing the Applicant sought to amend or clarify her Originating Application to include complaints of race and sex discrimination and victimisation from 1996 to the present day. The Applicant had informed both the Tribunal and the Respondent of the intention to seek leave to amend the Originating Application to include the claim of sex and race discrimination and victimisation on 13 August 1999.
3 After listening to representations from both parties, the Tribunal concluded that the Respondent was fully aware of the Applicant's allegations of race discrimination and had been since 6 October 1998 and indeed an investigation had been undertaken by the Respondent into the allegations that the Respondent would not suffer prejudice in its ability to represent itself and answer the allegations, if the amendment to the Originating Application was permitted. The Respondents knew or ought to have known that the reference to 'harassment' in the Originating Application referred to the allegations of discrimination that had been made by the Applicant to them. This decision did not determine the time points issue, which the Tribunal would decide at the end of the hearing.
4 The Tribunal did not permit an allegation of discrimination in 1996 or allegations of discrimination from the period 1996 to August 1998 to be included in the amended Originating Application. Allegations of discrimination which post-dated the termination of the Applicant's employment and the lodging of the IT1 were not permitted to be included by the Tribunal: fresh proceedings would need to be brought for these allegations if the Applicant wished to pursue them.
5 Following the amendment the Respondent sought a postponement of the hearing, which the Applicant opposed. After retiring and considering the representations of both sides, the Tribunal concluded the case would proceed, but the Respondent be allowed any extra time for preparation necessary following the conclusion of the Applicant's evidence in chief and indeed that of her witnesses. It was apparent that the case would exceed the two days for which it was listed and there would be, of necessity, a postponement of at least part of the hearing which would provide the Respondent with additional preparation time.
6 The Respondent sought their costs, as they considered the conduct of the Applicant was vexatious or otherwise unreasonable in seeking a later amendment to the Originating Application. The Tribunal decided to order costs as the Applicant's conduct did amount to unreasonableness or vexatiousness and the Tribunal considered there was in any event no additional work incurred through the request for amendment having been made at the time when it was. The Respondent's only concern was the lateness of the amendment sought and this did not involve them in any additional work."
(1) As already noted, the claim was originally formulated as a pure unfair dismissal claim, with the harassment claims being referred to only by way of background.
(2) On 9 August 1999 the Appellant wrote to the Tribunal in the following terms:
"I am writing to request for an amendment for further claims in the above case. The amendment should include the following:
(1) A claim for unfair dismissal / constructive dismissal
(2) The amendments to include further claims of race discrimination and sex discrimination
(3) A further claim of victimisation under section 2 of the Race Relation Act 1976.
I look forward to hearing from you."
On 13 August 1999 a letter in very similar terms was sent to the Tribunal from the Lambeth branch of UNISON as her representative. Neither of the letters states what the acts of discrimination or victimisation relied on are. They were certainly wholly inadequate to raise any claim in respect of the 1996 and 1998 harassment complaints. Insofar as they could have been understood at all by the Tribunal or by the Respondents, it could only have been as putting different labels on the facts already alleged in the Originating Application. These applications were, it appears, dismissed by the Tribunal without a hearing, by letter dated 1 September 1999, though we have not seen that letter.
(3) On 29 September 1999 – that is, four days before the hearing – Mr Rogers of UNISON wrote a much fuller letter applying for permission to amend the application:
"to include a complaint of victimisation contrary to s4(2)(c) of the Race Relation Act 1976 read with s2(1)(d) of that Act."
The nature of the victimisation is not identified, but the obvious inference was that the Appellant wished to say that the reason why her request to withdraw her resignation was refused was that she had raised the 1996 and 1998 harassment complaints with the Respondent. The application is, on any view, only a request in relation to victimisation and only in relation to racial (as opposed to sex) discrimination. Various points were made in support of that request. We need not set them out in full here.
(4) The Respondents made it clear that that application would be opposed and that if persisted in it should be raised before the Tribunal at the start of the forthcoming hearing.
(5) At the beginning of the hearing, Mr Rogers for the Appellant submitted a manuscript draft of the amendment that he wished to make. Most regrettably, no-one made a copy of that document and the original apparently cannot now be found in the Employment Tribunal's file. The Tribunal does not, as we have seen, explicitly state what the application was. We accordingly do not know precisely what Mr Rogers was seeking. It is clear that his application went beyond the letter of 29 September in that he wished to claim that the Respondents' decision not to allow the Appellant to withdraw her resignation not only constituted victimisation but was itself taken directly on grounds of race or sex, and, as noted above, the amendment in that regard was allowed. However, it seems that he sought also to revive the 1996 and 1998 harassment complaints themselves in their own right, i.e. not simply as background to the unfair dismissal claim or as the subject matter of the complaints which constituted protected acts for the purpose of the victimisation claim. That such an application was made can be inferred from paragraph 2 of the Extended Reasons and in the first sentence of paragraph 4: it is possible that there was some confusion as to precisely what Mr Rogers was asking for, but it seems to us that the only natural reading of those two paragraphs is that a formal application to include the 1996 and 1998 harassment complaints was expressly made and was refused.
(1) The 1996 and 1998 harassment complaints had occurred, in the case of the former, three years previously and, in the case of the latter, over a year previously. They were therefore, on any view, stale. They were also formally out of time since the 1996 harassment complaint concerned a one-off incident, and even if the 1998 complaints comprised a continuing act, that act could not have continued beyond the time that the Appellant went off sick.
(2) Although the complaints had been raised with the Respondents by way of internal grievance, they had not been raised in the litigation as separate complaints notwithstanding two previous applications to amend. Indeed they were being raised for the first time on the morning of the hearing. Following on from that: –
(3) Most importantly, if the 1996 and 1998 harassment complaints had been allowed to proceed, entirely new factual areas would have had to be explored and new witnesses approached. It would have been necessary for the Respondents to interview and perhaps to call all those primarily involved in the 1996 and 1998 episodes. It is impossible to know how much work this would have involved, but on any view of the matter it radically changed the scope of the matters that would fall for decision in the hearing. It is one thing for those complaints to be part of the case as background, or as the subject matter of a protected act; it is quite another for them to be investigated by the Tribunal as complaints in their own right.
B The Comparator Issue
60 The Tribunal first considered whether the Applicant had been less favourably treated by the Respondent than employees who were not or Nigerian origin, the racial grounds relied on by the Applicant. The Tribunal reminded itself that a comparison with a person of a different racial group must be such that the relevant circumstances in the one case are the same, or not materially different, in the other. There was no actual comparator: the Tribunal was looking for an employee who had been off for five months with a long-term illness who is not of Nigerian origin and who had not been permitted to withdraw his or her resignation. In relation to the victimisation part of the claim, any actual comparator would need to have not performed a protected act. The racial origin of a comparator in the victimisation claim would not be relevant.
61 The Tribunal found that there is no evidence either direct or by inference, that the Applicant has been less favourably treated than a hypothetical comparator would be in the treatment of her resignation. The Tribunal consider that given the Respondent's concern about long-term sickness, any employee who had been absent from work for five months who then tendered their resignation, would have been treated in the same manner. The resignation would have been treated at face value and the Council would not have agreed to the resignation having been retracted. The Tribunal does not consider that the Applicant has been able to discharge the burden of proof required to establish (whether by direct evidence or inference) that Respondent or their officers were motivated either consciously or subconsciously by the Applicant's gender, ethnic origin, nor the fact that she had performed protected acts – either under the SDA or RRA.
62 Neither did the Tribunal consider that the Applicant had been treated less favourably than someone of a different gender, racial origin or someone who had performed a protected act under either the SDA or RRA, or both, in relation to the manner in which her complaint was investigated. It is unfortunate that Richard Bascombe was not appointed to investigate the Applicant's complaint until some two weeks after the Applicant had hand delivered her complaint. However, the Tribunal's conclusion is that the Applicant has not been able to establish, on the balance or probabilities that she was treated differently to those who had not made a complaint of race discrimination, or sex discrimination, or than a man would have been, or someone of a different racial origin to that of the Applicant.
63 Accordingly, the Tribunal finds that the Applicant's claims of sex and race discrimination and victimisation are not well founded."