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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Freightliner Ltd v Derby [2003] UKEAT 0588_02_1501 (15 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0588_02_1501.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 588_2_1501, [2003] UKEAT 0588_02_1501 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J MCMULLEN QC
MR S M SPRINGER MBE
MR R N STRAKER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised 11 April 2003
For the Appellant | MR MICHAEL LAMONT (Employment Lawyer) The Caledonian Suite St Andrews House 141 West Nile Street Glasgow G1 2RN |
For the Respondent | MR GOWARD LEGARD (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Newbys with Thomas, Bingham & Spark Solicitors 100 Borough Road Middlesbrough Cleveland TS1 2HJ |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
1 "This is the preliminary hearing of two appeals by the employers, Freightliner Ltd, firstly against the decision of the Employment Tribunal sitting at Thornaby on Tees, chaired by Mr A. Fraser and sent to the parties on 3 April 2002, that the Respondent employee, Mr Derby, had been unfairly dismissed by his employers and, secondly, against the further decision at a remedies hearing of the same Tribunal which awarded compensation amounting to in excess of £9,000. We will deal first with the appeal against the finding of unfair dismissal and then turn to the appeal against the remedies decision.
2 Mr Derby was employed by the Appellants as a lorry driver from March 1997. He had a bad disciplinary record. He received a final warning in respect of his conduct on 18 August 1999 and a further final warning on 31 May 2000. He was subsequently again reprimanded. Both of those final warnings, it was not disputed, were alive when, in March 2001, three new allegations of misconduct were raised against him by his employers. Firstly, it was said that on a date in March he had left the employer's terminal to carry some goods to Doncaster (the terminal being in Cleveland) at 3:30 pm but had not arrived at his destination in Doncaster until five and a half hours had passed, when the journey time should have been much shorter. Secondly, it was alleged that he had failed to hand in his vehicle keys at the end of a shift, it having been a rule of the employers that vehicle keys, for reasons of security, should be handed in at the end of the shift. Thirdly, it was alleged that he had requested the supply of a pair of safety boots. He had permission or funding to buy such boots but had in fact bought and used for the purpose of his work non-safety boots. It should be explained that his duties included loading and unloading as well as driving.
3 Mr Derby replied to these allegations in a long letter in which he set out an explanation of the circumstances of each and in which he denied any misconduct. A manager who had not previously dealt with Mr Derby, Mr Duffy, was assigned to deal with the disciplinary process. The disciplinary procedure involved a formal hearing, if that is what the employee wished; and Mr Derby sought such a hearing. However, by the time the interview which formed part of that procedure between himself and Mr Duffy was to take place, Mr Derby was off sick suffering with depression which had previously caused him to be off sick for six weeks at the end of the previous year and the beginning of 2001.
4 On the day before the date scheduled for the interview, Mr Derby wrote to Mr Duffy asking him to proceed with the disciplinary procedure in Mr Derby's absence and that his letter should stand as his defence. Mr Duffy by return wrote to Mr Derby saying that his comments had been noted and asking Mr Derby to consider carefully what he had written and whether he still wanted to proceed on the basis which Mr Derby's letter had suggested. Mr Derby replied that he did and that he wanted the matter to be resolved as soon as possible and that delay in proceeding with the disciplinary allegations was adding to his depression and stress.
5 In these circumstances Mr Duffy went ahead with the disciplinary process and on 27 April 2002 sent a letter to Mr Derby advising him that Mr Derby's written explanation did not (to use Mr Duffy's expression) negate the charges for the reasons which Mr Duffy set out, in effect finding that the charges were proved and then saying that, in the light of the previous disciplinary record, he, Mr Duffy, was left with no option but to dismiss Mr Derby. He recommended Mr Derby to use his right of appeal which he did not in fact do.
6 The Tribunal found that Mr Derby had been unfairly dismissed. They concluded that Mr Duffy should have given Mr Derby longer to recover and should not have proceeded, as he did, in Mr Derby's absence. In the central paragraph on this issue in their decision, paragraph 24, the Tribunal said:
"Although the applicant had been quite clear in his letters that he wanted the matter to go ahead, he was signed off from work. Given that he had previously suffered a period of absence for the same reason, Mr Duffy should have given the applicant longer to recover, particularly when he was facing dismissal. Clearly at some point, Mr Duffy would have had to proceed, and then could have done so in the light of the medical evidence available to him."
7 The Tribunal then went on to decide that Mr Duffy had not fully investigated the matters raised by Mr Derby in his letter of explanation and concluded that the allegations, or at least some of them, did not appear to be misconduct or at least serious misconduct. They came to the conclusion on that basis that the dismissal was outside the band of reasonable responses.
8 Mr Lamont puts forward in his Notice of Appeal seven grounds of appeal against this decision. The first three can be summarised in this way. What in effect Mr Lamont is arguing on behalf of the employers is that, in deciding that the employers behaved unreasonably in failing to delay the process further and in failing to investigate it further, the Tribunal substituted their own view for the view of the employers, albeit they purported to say that they were considering the matter from the standpoint of the range of reasonable responses or alternatively that they came to a conclusion which no reasonable Tribunal could have reached and one which was therefore perverse."
10 "In the remaining grounds of appeal Mr Lamont attacks the Tribunal on the express basis that it could not and should not have reached the decision that the dismissal was outside the range of reasonable responses, the arguments being broadly those which we have already canvassed."
12 "We turn next to the attack made by Mr Lamont upon the Tribunal's decisions at the remedies hearing. The Tribunal ordered the employers to pay a total of £9,129 by way of compensation. Of that £8,463 was compensation for loss of earnings during the 12 months between the dismissal and the remedies hearing in May 2002. It is not necessary to go into detail, save to say that £2,613 of that sum was awarded in respect of loss of earnings during the period from 20 December 2001 to 8 May 2002, during which period Mr Derby was unable to work through depression. The Tribunal rejected the employer's argument that these awards should be reduced for the contributory fault on Mr Derby's part. Mr Lamont now seeks to appeal on behalf of the employers against the award in respect of the period from December 2001 to May 2002 and against the finding that there was no contributory fault.
13 The Tribunal found that there was no contributory fault on the basis that it was inappropriate to take into account previous misdemeanours for which Mr Derby had already received disciplinary sanction and on the basis that the offences which had produced the disciplinary proceedings which led to his dismissal were minor, if they were offences at all, and would scarcely have justified disciplinary action of this nature but for the previous warnings.
14 It appears to us logically that if we have allowed the employer's challenge to the decision on unfair dismissal to go forward to a full hearing, as we have, it would be right to allow this appeal against the finding of no contributory fault to go forward too. Furthermore, as Mr Lamont has pointed out, there appears to be a discrepancy between the approach to the previous misdemeanours and the previous record of Mr Derby as set out in the Tribunal's decision on unfair dismissal and that which they have adopted in relation to contributory fault."
"I would like you to supply me with a written explanation of the following
- Why after exiting the terminal at 15.30hrs on 13th March 2001 you did not arrive at Doncaster until 20.59hrs.
- Why your vehicle keys were not handed in at the end of your shift on Saturday 17th March 2001.
- When you requested a new pair of safety footwear you went and purchased non-safety boots whilst knowing this is against company policy."
"I feel you are adding to it with the delay in dealing with this matter. I can't say when I will be returning to work due to my illness and this is making me more depressed and stressed so please deal with me as you will."
"There is no defence based on another driver not handing in keys."
He indicated that the reasons the Applicant gave were irrelevant. It obviously is important in transport business that as soon as a vehicle ceases to be used by a driver the keys must be made available.
"The employer, not the Tribunal, is the proper person to conduct the investigation into the alleged misconduct. The function of the Tribunal is to decide whether the investigation is reasonable in the circumstances and whether the decision to dismiss in the light of the results of that investigation is a reasonable response."
Further reference was made to Iceland Frozen Foods Ltd v Jones [1982] IRLR 489; the band of reasonable responses.
"Mr Duffy should not have rejected the Applicant's explanation without giving him a further opportunity to be present and himself making further enquiries."
9 "It seemed to us that it was not appropriate to take into account previous misdemeanours, for which the Applicant had received some disciplinary sanction. As far as the present offences were concerned, these were minor (if indeed they were offences at all) and would scarcely have justified disciplinary action of this nature, but for the previous warnings. We do not consider that they caused or contributed to the dismissal."