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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Bax Global Ltd & Anor v. Carvalho & Anor (t/a Mango Hair) [2002] UKEAT 812_01_2911 (29 November 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/812_01_2911.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 812_1_2911, [2002] UKEAT 812_01_2911 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 11 October 2002 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE WALL
MR D CHADWICK
MR K EDMONDSON JP
MRS F FRENCH |
APPELLANT |
T/A MANGO HAIR |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS NAOMI ELLENBOGEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Mayer Brown Rowe & Maw Solicitors 11 Pilgrim Street London EC4V 6RW |
For the Appellant | MISS ELAINE BANTON (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Levenes Solicitors Grove House 140/142 The Grove Stratford London E15 1NS |
MR JUSTICE WALL
(a) the Appellant had dismissed the Applicant (Mrs Frances French) by reason of redundancy;
(b) that dismissal was unfair; and
(c) the Appellant had discriminated against Mrs French, contrary to section 4(2)(d) of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, by dismissing her. Subject to the outcome of this appeal, a remedies hearing is due to take place on 18 and 19 December 2002.
The facts
Mr Greaves in a letter dated 14 June 2000. The Tribunal also had before it an undated psychiatric report from Dr Neil Brener of the Priory Hospital in North London (written following an examination of Mrs French on 2 May 2001) which stated in terms that Mrs French was suffering from a "major depressive illness, moderate to severe in severity, as defined as ICD 10". She scored 45/63 on a well known standardised questionnaire (the Beck Depressive Inventory) which, Dr Brener says, placed her in the "severe depressive range". It was clear to him that her life had been debilitated by her depressive illness; that it could be defined as "long term" and that she was clearly not well enough to work.
"The thought of returning to work at BAX Global after the treatment I have received is why I am finding it so difficult to overcome my depression. How can you possibly expect me to return to work at a company where I received no support from my superiors when I desperately needed someone to listen to me? I would find the whole ordeal too humiliating and degrading.
I am still finding it hard to believe and to come to terms with that after eleven years loyal service that past events have been allowed to happen and nothing was done."
"I refer to my letter to you of 10th October where I confirmed that your position with BAX Global was to be abolished. Since that letter we have exchanged correspondence and your most recent letter, dated 17th November, indicated that you do not wish to be considered for redeployment into a mutually suitable alternative role. It is therefore with regret that I must confirm that your contract of employment with BAX Global is terminated on the grounds of redundancy with effect from 21st November 2000."
The conclusions of the Tribunal
The arguments for the Appellant
"In brief, the legal position is that:
(1) Less favourable treatment of a disabled person is only discriminatory under s.5(1) if it is unjustified.
(2) Treatment is less favourable if the reason for it does not or would not apply to others;
(3) In deciding whether that reason does not or would not apply to others, it is not appropriate to make a comparison of the cases in the same way as in the 1975 and the 1976 Acts. It is simply a case of identifying others to whom the reason for the treatment does not or would not apply. The test of less favourable treatment is based on the reason for the treatment of the disabled person and not on the fact of a disability. It does not turn on a like-for-like comparison of the treatment of the disabled person and of others in similar circumstances.
(4) The act of dismissal from employment falls within s.5(1), but not within s.5(2) and s.6; but an employee who has been dismissed may bring a case under s.5(2) for pre-dismissal discrimination involving a breach of a s.6 duty.
(5) A s.5(2) claim for a breach of a s.6 duty is not dependent on successfully establishing a claim under s.5(1). They are different causes of action, even though, as recognised by s.(5)(3), they may overlap.
(6) The question whether treatment has been shown to be justified is a question of fact to be determined on a proper self direction on the relevant law. Such a self-direction includes taking into account those parts of the Code of Practice which a reasonable tribunal would regard as relevant to the determination of that question."
"There will, no doubt, be cases where the evidence given on the applicant's side alone will establish a total unavailability of reasonable and effective adjustments. But it does not seem to us to follow that because a former secretary, long absent from the firm and clinically depressed to the point of disability, and her general practitioner also (the latter at least being unlikely to know what office or other practicabilities were open to the employer) could postulate no useful adjustment, that the section 6 duty of the employer should, without more, be taken to have been satisfied. Indeed, in the course of argument before us, Mr Millar accepted that the doctor and the applicant were not the most appropriate persons to be asked as to what adjustments could be made."
Conclusions
The Cross-Appeal
"29 The Appellant said that the Applicant had been dismissed by reason of redundancy: the Applicant said there was no redundancy situation and she had been dismissed because of her disability, having been away from work because of her depression since March 2000. The Tribunal turned to the actual dismissal and considered whether or not there was a redundancy situation. By September 2000 the Appellant, by reason of some business difficulties, needed to cut costs; it was decided that at the Appellant's office at Feltham, the work previously carried out by the Applicant and Ms T Randall had diminished and that only one person was required instead of the previous two. The Tribunal decides that the requirements of the Appellant's business for employees to carry out work of a particular kind at Feltham (where the Applicant was employed) had diminished (Section 139(1)(b)(ii) of the Employment Rights Act 1996); the tribunal decides that the Applicant was dismissed by reason of redundancy."