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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Erhayiem v. Stockport and High Peak Tec Ltd & Anor [2002] UKEAT 705_01_2009 (20 September 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/705_01_2009.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 705_1_2009, [2002] UKEAT 705_01_2009 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE D SEROTA QC
MR P GAMMON MBE
MR N D WILLIS
APPELLANT | |
(2) MRS H SMITH |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR D McCARTHY (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Maidments Solicitors 5 Great Moor Street Bolton BL1 1NZ |
For the Respondents | MS R CRASNOW (of Counsel) Instructed by: Sinclair Abson Smith Solicitors 30 Greek Street Stockport SK3 8AD |
JUDGE D SEROTA QC
"…(2) the respondents failed to provide him with adequate feedback on his work and his work was under-marked;"
During the course of preparation for the proceedings, the Respondents have disclosed a number of documents. Some of those documents are relevant to the question of feedback. When those documents were seen by Mr Erhayiem, he examined them and saw in relation to six of those documents that his signature appeared to have been forged. He firstly took this matter up with the Employment Tribunal and he made arrangements to obtain a forensic report. The first, however, that the Respondent knew of the matter was when a letter from the Chairman of the Employment Tribunal to the Applicant, dated 20 March, was copied to them and the letter would not have disclosed very much to the Respondent in the absence of Mr Erhayiem's letter of 13 March. In that letter the Employment Tribunal state:
"You must make any application - for facilities to have any documents expertly examined - at the hearing."
And then:
"In any event if an Order is made you must make your own arrangements to find, instruct and pay a handwriting expert"
Mr Erhayiem then faxed solicitors acting for the Respondent on 2 April, in which he referred specifically to fake signatures appearing on certain document, and he states:
"It is apparent that my signature was forged on these documents"
"The Tribunal found all three witnesses to be honest witnesses."
That includes the Applicant, one might think.
"There was remarkable congruity in their evidence and basic agreement as to the chronological events. However, the witnesses did not agree upon the interpretation to be placed on those events. The Tribunal found the interpretation of events offered by Mrs Smith and Mr Keigher to be persuasive and compelling. This assessment is reflected in the Tribunal's findings of fact. That conclusion was not disturbed by the Respondents' admission during the course of the hearing that a temporary employee had added the applicant's signature to certain documents maintained as part of the Respondents' quality audit system. While that does not reflect well upon the Respondents, the documents in question are not central to the issues before the Tribunal, the forgery did not occur in the course of these proceedings, and neither of the Respondents' witnesses were aware of it".
"37 ………….The respondents have provided consistent and credible explanations for their actions and those explanations undermine any suggestion of direct race discrimination or victimisation. This is not a case where, having considered the matter, the Tribunal has felt able to draw any legitimate adverse inferences from the primary facts. In particular, the applicant was not treated any differently from the way in which other participants in the programme were treated (or would have been treated). Any differential treatment of the applicant is explicable by the different circumstances affecting him, rather than less favourable treatment on racial grounds. Standing back from the individual events, and looking at the picture as a whole, the Tribunal is unable to detect or infer racial discrimination (whether amounting to direct discrimination or victimisation by the respondents against the applicant contrary to section 13."