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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Chand v. Hounslow [2002] UKEAT 1276_01_1005 (10 May 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/1276_01_1005.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 1276_1_1005, [2002] UKEAT 1276_01_1005 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE WALL
MR J HOUGHAM CBE
MR P R A JACQUES CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING EX PARTE
For the Appellant | MR GILL (Representative) |
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE WALL
"Following the presentation of a Parents petition regarding how the school was being run, the Applicant was questioned, and thereafter suspended from her job. The Applicant denies having contrived the Petition, and all of the allegations against her.
At a Disciplinary hearing, the Applicant was dismissed from her job for Gross Misconduct. At the subsequent Appeal hearing on 24/5/00 this decision was upheld.
The Applicant maintains that she was unfairly dismissed and the Disciplinary and Appeal hearings were not in the interests of fair justice as they included a statement from a vital witness who had asked for her evidence to be withdrawn. The Applicant also maintains that she was racially discriminated against."
The Respondent put in a detailed response to that application and the matter eventually came before the Tribunal.
"There was some unfairness in the procedure that was applied in the Applicant's case up to the point of the Disciplinary Hearing. However, this was cured by the appeal. It was not fair, in our view, that the Applicant was prevented from making contact – even through her representative – with parents other than by writing a letter to be forwarded by the Respondents, while Respondents were able to have completely free contact with parents. For example, they had contact with Mrs Danjal, who came forward as a witness later than the original five witnesses. The Applicant's representative was able to and did canvas parents for evidence at the appeal stage. None of them would attend the Appeal Hearing or co-operate. Although before us the Applicant began to raise the suggestion that witnesses had been deterred from coming forward on her behalf by the Respondents, this allegation was almost immediately and totally clearly and without reserve, withdrawn on the Applicant's behalf by her Counsel. The Tribunal took care to ascertain that Counsel and Applicant were fully in communication with each other so far as her instructions went on this point. We were assured that there was no communication confusion and that withdrawal was quite unequivocal. We find as a fact therefore that the parents' reluctance to appear on the Applicant's behalf at the Appeal or to appear at the Disciplinary Hearing was due to reasons of their own. Whatever those reasons were, it did not lie in the Respondent's power to compel them to attend on either occasion.
The Tribunal then dealt with the question of Mrs Raju's statement and were critical of the procedure in relation to that, describing it as prejudicial to the Applicant and also distorting the account of matters which were before the panel. Once again they said (I think now for a second time) that this had been cured by the appeal and the Applicant's representative had the opportunity to raise this fully and to air it fully before the appeal panel and did so.